Miracle Planet HD - Part VI: Life Indestructible

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  • Опубліковано 9 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 39

  • @MrAqr2598
    @MrAqr2598 3 роки тому +6

    I actually have the original Japanese version of this series. It was a late-night special by the NHK(Japan Broadcasting Corporation).

    • @mertcanduran9049
      @mertcanduran9049 Рік тому

      Where is the UA-cam video version of NHK Japan?

    • @MrAqr2598
      @MrAqr2598 Рік тому

      @@mertcanduran9049
      I did see someone post UA-cam vids of the whole series of the original Japanese version, but it got deleted.

  • @tfsheahan2265
    @tfsheahan2265 8 років тому +8

    The series as a whole was awesome. It is ahead of it's times, and head-and-shoulders above it's competition, and to think it dates to 2005! The graphics are superior to any I can remember. But, its treatment of human evolution is quite dated, and typical of the early 2000's. The FOSP2 gene was shown to be irrelevant in regards to Neanderthal speech (they had it too), but, hey, that was the best they could do at the time. I had heard of the series, but, because I'm lazy, I never searched for it. I stumbled on it with some HD videos last week, and finished it tonight with this low definition one. But I'm very impressed, and wish the same, or similarly talented individuals would do an update! Who knows how much more has been discovered. Christopher Plummer is a fantastic narrator, in his 90's, but still, apparently, quite active.

  • @josephwolfe1833
    @josephwolfe1833 5 років тому +1

    I wonder if there was any intelligent life forms on Earth before any of the total extinction events. There is probably no way of knowing if all surface life was incinerated. Interesting to consider!

  • @jeremykristoff7756
    @jeremykristoff7756 9 років тому +10

    This wasn't really a recap episode. they needed a new episode as the research that scientists do yielded new results. basically this is more of an update than a recap

  • @junezhang2128
    @junezhang2128 10 років тому +8

    This episode is the summary of all the prior episodes.

  • @jenmb2679
    @jenmb2679 4 роки тому

    Looks like there are two versions of this series. Theres 6 parts of both, but the titles are changed

  • @Bix12
    @Bix12 8 років тому +2

    The asteroid impact in this episode, said to be roughly the same size as the island of Japan, was so catastrophic it engulfed the planet in a flaming ball of fire. It also boiled the oceans away at a rate of 2 inches per second, crystalized and burned away the salt, even the melting and burning the ocean floor itself away. Yet, within a year or 2, the torrential rains ensued and the oceans began to rapidly refill, becoming full within 3+/- thousand years. Where did all that water come from? I understand there was water crystals/evaporated H2o, etc., in the rocks, in particular the deep bedrock...but even so, surely there wasn't enough to (re)fill entire oceans?

    • @Bix12
      @Bix12 8 років тому +5

      Aha! Due to the planet's size and gravity, the evaporated water crystals would NOT escape into space, but remain in the atmosphere, falling to the surface as rain once it was sufficiently cool enough to allow this....right?

  • @pinchmesh8642
    @pinchmesh8642 5 років тому

    Just a thought regarding photosynthesis and CO2. Plants also need O2, just as animals do. The first plants were very different from modern plants because they lived in a different environment with less O2. Sea water has less O2 also. One of the purposes of cultivation is to allow O2 to get to plant roots.

    • @squirrelfrendotcom
      @squirrelfrendotcom 2 роки тому

      I'm pretty sure that plants need CO2 to survive, but they do not actually need O2.. they take in CO2 and H2O for photosynthesis, and they produce sugar or glucose to use as food for themselves in this reaction...they expel O2 as a waste product of photosynthesis...thanks to the earliest 'plants', cyanobacteria, we have an ocean and atmosphere rich in oxygen...this set the stage for more complex life to evolve and flourish...

  • @jenmb2679
    @jenmb2679 4 роки тому +1

    YOU FORGOT CELL REPLICATION

  • @DroneGirl1
    @DroneGirl1 9 років тому +3

    Awesome! :) Love the footage and documentary! :) Thumbs up from me! :) Greetings from Ireland! Love bringing my Q500 for some aerial footage! :) Well done on your video! :)

  • @Aluminata
    @Aluminata 6 років тому

    They finally showed the planet- not as a smouldering ball of molten lava - but as covered in a fluffy white cocoon of asmospherically suspended ocean.

  • @PAULLONDEN
    @PAULLONDEN 4 роки тому +1

    This mostly has repeats from earlier episodes . 🖐🙄

    • @MrAqr2598
      @MrAqr2598 2 роки тому

      This is a final recap episode to look back at Earth's history, what our ancestors have gone through.

  • @sarahcoombs771
    @sarahcoombs771 9 років тому +1

    ...so the rest of this series (the first five segements) were fascinating, but I don't get why they made a sixth episode just to be a "recap" episode with about three minutes at the very end that was new footage about modern human evolution...they could have made the whole episode about that!

  • @mrc6301
    @mrc6301 5 років тому

    to believe this stuff is to have a real vivid imagination. and have a strong belief in we think , it might, maybe this happened.

  • @Aluminata
    @Aluminata 6 років тому +1

    Petrified footprints of one of the very first vertebrates to walk on land. ... The Tetrapod Trackway on Valentia Island have been dated to the Devonian Period and are between 350 million and 370 million years old. .. ( Google )

  • @tjam6097
    @tjam6097 5 років тому +1

    He says when sea creature first came on to land, they probably did it at night because it would be safer. Where is the danger? They were the first life on land. Nothing there to eat them.

    • @BronxBomber-mf9hl
      @BronxBomber-mf9hl 4 роки тому

      Yeah but did the animals know that they were the first on land? If not, then they would have erred on the safe side

    • @MrAqr2598
      @MrAqr2598 2 роки тому

      @@BronxBomber-mf9hl Yes, and to prevent their skin from drying too quickly.

  • @johnathancruz1458
    @johnathancruz1458 2 роки тому

    Hi dad remember me Suluxon Menan

  • @Aluminata
    @Aluminata 6 років тому +1

    " Foot steps on the west coast of Ireland may have been made at night when it was cooler..."
    What night? Thursday late night shopping? No mention of how old they are?

  • @jacobmartinelli7496
    @jacobmartinelli7496 5 років тому

    I already explained 2 ways for there to be enough food, completely explained a new engine design, explained linguistically.
    We.are.cavemen.

  • @Empr4evr
    @Empr4evr 8 років тому +1

    11:30; Hey look it's Hell. Let's go see if Satan is do there.

  • @russd6150
    @russd6150 7 місяців тому

    Thumbs down for being yelled at and blinded by a commercial !