The "Boring Billion"- What Really Happened 1.8 to 0.8 Billion Years Ago? GEO GIRL

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  • Опубліковано 27 вер 2024

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  • @GEOGIRL
    @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +76

    Because this video is kind of terminology heavy and I am not sure I adequately defined everything, here is a list of definitions to guide you if there is a term you don't know! ->
    Definition of jargon:
    Prokaryotes: Simple, non-organelle containing cells (bacteria & archaea).
    Eukaryotes: Complex, organelle containing cells (can be unicellular, like protists, or multicellular, like animals).
    Protists: Single-celled eukaryotes (such as algae, foraminifera, & radiolarians).
    Proterozoic: Eon that ranges from 2.5 billion years ago to ~540 million years ago (between the Archean Eon & Cambrian period).
    Anoxic: Lack of molecular oxygen (O2).
    Oxic: Abundant O2.
    Proliferation: Rise in abundance & diversification.
    Tectonic rifting: Separation of tectonic plates (in this case: supercontinent break up).
    Subduction: Pull of an oceanic tectonic plate under another oceanic or continental plate.
    PAL O2: Present-day atmospheric levels of molecular oxygen.
    GOE: Great Oxidation Event (began around 2.4 billion years ago).
    NOE: Neoproterozoic Oxygenation Event (began around 800 million years ago).
    SRB: Sulfate-reducing bacteria (bacteria that ‘eat’ sulfate & produce sulfide).
    Euxinic: Anoxic & sulfide-rich.
    Chemocline: Transition in water column from upper well-oxygenated water to lower poorly-oxygenated water.
    Primary productivity: Production of organic food for life by autotrophs (organisms that use light and inorganic compounds (such as water and CO2) to produce organic carbon that feeds life below them)- At this time, major primary producers were cyanobacteria & algae. Anoxygenic photosynthesis: photosynthesis that produces non-oxygen products (such as sulfur compounds).
    “Boring”: Up to your interpretation ;)

    • @a.randomjack6661
      @a.randomjack6661 Рік тому +11

      Thanks! May I recommend you pin this comment?
      Have a nice day🖖

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +11

      @@a.randomjack6661 Thanks for noticing it wasn't pinned, I pinned it earlier, but sometimes it doesn't stay pinned for some reason. Anyway, hopefully this time is sticks :)
      Hope you have a nice day too! ;)

    • @footfault1941
      @footfault1941 Рік тому +2

      Perhaps, one-click glossary-like option somewhere on the screen, or floating, with a cute icon would be nice.

    • @delamr1
      @delamr1 Рік тому +1

      I know what an isotop is.. MS in health sci
      Thanks for reply. Where are the .8 billion year old rocks? I live outside Albany NY
      Thatcher Mt. Escarpment . Old ancient shallow sea the ancient Great lake. I collect many fosss there.

    • @frankr2246
      @frankr2246 Рік тому +2

      Very well synthesized.

  • @sjzara
    @sjzara Рік тому +34

    I love the connection between geology and biology. I never realised eukaryotes have been around for so long.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +13

      Yes, of all the connections between different science fields, geobiology is my absolute favorite! :D

    • @tomschmidt381
      @tomschmidt381 Рік тому +4

      I agree, it was only recently that I became aware how dramatically life has affected the chemistry of the planet. Truly fascinating, life does not just exist on a planet it shapes it.

  • @nw5524
    @nw5524 Рік тому +60

    Most of the general public is only familiar with Pangea, so it's great to see a video covering the supercontinents that came before.

  • @hdufort
    @hdufort Рік тому +22

    The ediacaran is so fascinating. There has been lots of fossil discoveries recently around the White Sea in Russia and other locations. Some of the animals are just weird. Others show early examples of muscle fibers, burrowing behavior, etc.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +19

      Couldn't agree more! The precambrian in general is my favorite time in Earth's history, in part because of the weird organisms that dominated this time, but also because there are still so many mysteries that we don't understand yet about that time and we get to keep learning new things about it ;D

    • @NelsonDiscovery
      @NelsonDiscovery Рік тому +7

      It's fascinating how life evolved from mostly unicellur creatures to creatures of 5 cm to a meter length and great complexity during that time.

    • @christian2967
      @christian2967 Рік тому +2

      Yes the Ediacaran kinda broke my creationism theory occuring with the Cambrian 🙄

    • @crackedemerald4930
      @crackedemerald4930 Рік тому

      It fucks me up that priapulida still exist

  • @steveferguson698
    @steveferguson698 Рік тому +8

    It may have been a seemingly boring time in earths geologic history. But you made it interesting and challenging to understand. I mean a good challenging. Thank you!

  • @joecanales9631
    @joecanales9631 Рік тому +12

    It seemed to me that the “boring billion” was perpetuated to speed up historical geology. Once you start to unravel it, it becomes more interesting.
    As I understand it, the lower sulfuric ocean layers made the oceans black and might have aided in keeping the climate warmer.
    The mountains visible from my backyard expose rocks from the bb, some of the oldest rock in NM.
    Keep up your good work!

    • @toweypat
      @toweypat 2 місяці тому

      Wow, black oceans. Amazing!

  • @oqsy
    @oqsy Рік тому +4

    Actual science in a UA-cam video. So refreshing. ❤

  • @thygrrr
    @thygrrr Рік тому +3

    Wow, these videos are excellent and go into much more detail than the average youtube fare! Thank you, GEO Girl. More stuff like this is needed.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +1

      Wow, thank you so much! You are too kind! I am so glad you enjoy my videos and appreciate the amount of info I stuff into them haha ;) Thanks again :)

    • @thygrrr
      @thygrrr Рік тому +2

      @@GEOGIRL You're welcome! I've been binging your videos and showing them to friends who really liked them!
      I admit I hated giving UA-cam 30% of this tip. If you haven't considered it yet - I can recommend ko-fi as a "tip jar".

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +3

      @@thygrrr I actually have a place on my website where you can donate if you want to forgo the 30% donation to UA-cam haha ;) you've given more than enough, but if you do want to give more here's the link: www.geogirlscience.com/support
      That's my bad for not advertising that better!
      Thank you again! :)

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth Рік тому

      Yup. It's not monotone, it's not dull, she has a steady rhythm, it's not mind numbingly simple yet not too complicated...and her microphone doesn't make her sound like a Spirit airlines pilot that dropped his mic in his whiskey

  • @TheRexisFern
    @TheRexisFern Рік тому +10

    😓 that was a heavy lesson! Boring or not, a billion years worth of learning is a hefty sum. And I would use the word 'calm' to describe it myself, especially comparing it to it's own bookcaps!

  • @lugnutdecepticon
    @lugnutdecepticon Рік тому +3

    Thank you for all these great videos GEO GIRL!!!

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому

      Of course! So glad you enjoy them ;D

  • @NomicFin
    @NomicFin Рік тому +2

    Interestingly I learned this week after the monthly meeting of the Geological Society of Finland that there is likely a large sequence of sedimentary rock dating to close to the middle of the Boring Billion (approximately 1,3 Ga) in the bottom of the Baltic Sea between Finland and Sweden. Problem is, nobody as far as I know has ever done a drill core of it (we know it's there because geophysical methods can detect a large rift-zone down there which seems to be an underwater continuation of the rift associated with the ~1,3 Ga Satakunta sandstone formation). I hope somebody will eventually study it, as it might tell us somethign more about the depositional environment at the time which we currently know very little of (the sedimentary sequence is estimated to be about 400 m thick so it would cover a long period of time. A 200 m long drill core has been recovered from another rift in the sea between Sweden and Finland, and seems to show cyclical changes between marine and fluvial environment, but I don't recall the age of that one).

  • @fungi8460
    @fungi8460 Рік тому +4

    You're the best. Thank you 💕

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +1

      Thank you! Also, love your username ;D

  • @calinradu1378
    @calinradu1378 Рік тому +2

    Rachel the Boring Billion stops becoming boring when you present it!

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +1

      Aw, this made my day, thank you!! ;D So glad to hear that!

  • @1969kodiakbear
    @1969kodiakbear Рік тому +3

    It is beautiful dream catcher. (The wife here: he wanted me to explain that he spotted the dream catcher on the wall behind you and ran out of the words he needed.)

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому

      Thank you so much! I've always loved dream catchers :)

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl Рік тому +1

    Anomalacarids have always been one of my favorite ancient sea critters. 😊 Thanks!
    ❤❤

  • @barbaradurfee645
    @barbaradurfee645 Рік тому +4

    Boring no, provocative yes. Nice job!!

  • @jonwashburn7999
    @jonwashburn7999 Рік тому +3

    Thank you. This was informative.

  • @whatabouttheearth
    @whatabouttheearth 6 місяців тому +1

    What Geogirl knows that we mere mortals do not realize is that Molybdenum is the secret to life, the universe and everything.

  • @artificercreator
    @artificercreator Рік тому +3

    Thanks for the Upload!

  • @shadeen3604
    @shadeen3604 Рік тому +4

    Thanks young geo scientists your presentation is excellent

  • @chochonubcake
    @chochonubcake 2 місяці тому +1

    I don't know about the BB, but GEO GIRL is definitely NOT boring. I want my granddaughters to grow up to be like her!

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  2 місяці тому

      You are too sweet! Thank you for the kind words ;)

  • @danielkunigan102
    @danielkunigan102 Рік тому +2

    I love your videos so much, thank you for making them!

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +1

      Thank you so much! I am so glad you enjoy them ;D

  • @billkallas1762
    @billkallas1762 Рік тому +6

    No time period can be called "boring". One of these days, we'll be able to determine when the first primitive sponges developed in the Neoproterozic.
    Just for fun, I pulled out my (old as dirt) 200 level Historical Geology Textbook and found that my memory was correct. There were no subdivisions in the entire precambrian era mentioned, at all. This was back in the 60's. I can't remember if divisions were discussed in later classes.
    Another "new" development that I never learned about, is Anoxygenic phototrophs in the Proterozoic.
    It just made me wonder if all of the life on an exoplanet, could develop, by using just H2S?
    Thank you.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +3

      Yes, there are a lot of hypotheses regarding the potential life on other planets and moons and some of them suggest that S-based life would be the primary type of life on some worlds without oxygen, such as in Europa's ocean, so it's possible!

  • @ironhead2008
    @ironhead2008 Рік тому +1

    That tectonic stasis is probably part of the reason it's got the "boring" moniker. Tectonic stability means reduced fossilization.

  • @nukelewman
    @nukelewman Рік тому

    Fantastic characterization of a period I didn't know much about previously! Life is all about the avaliable conditions, so it makes sense that we don't see the evolution of animals for such a long time corresponding to the stable conditions such as oxygen. Really puts into perspective what humans are capable of now as the first social being on earth, being able to change the conditions to suit our independent and creative interests.

  • @Heavy-metaaal
    @Heavy-metaaal 3 місяці тому +1

    When I was 18 or 19 I thought Geology was linked to rock only, but now I see it's incredible it's linked to life. 😮
    I decide to study industrial engineering, but almost all sciences are very important for me.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  3 місяці тому

      So glad you had this realization! ;D I had a similar one years ago and now I am obsessed with the beauty of how connected the science fields are :)

  • @DavoidJohnson
    @DavoidJohnson Рік тому +1

    This was a top notch presentation covering a lot of less commonly covered issues. New to me were Euxinic: Anoxic & sulfide-rich. and SRB. So thankyou for that.

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse Рік тому +2

    Excellent, thank you.

  • @kirkwagner461
    @kirkwagner461 Рік тому +1

    I watched this largely because I've been watching videos about potential extraterrestrial life. Particularly, if/when life does emerge on other planets, how likely is it to progress from very simple forms to more complex forms? It seems a large part of that is what happened during this "boring billion" period, which, to me, makes it non-boring. Thanks!

  • @foxman2137
    @foxman2137 Рік тому +2

    Thank you geogirl.

  • @persimmontea6383
    @persimmontea6383 Рік тому +1

    wow, that was nice. Very clear and straightforward. One wonders what stromolites can tell us since they span the entire boring billion.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +1

      I know right! ;D

  • @Ironfootball69
    @Ironfootball69 Рік тому +2

    Very nice video...geo girl..✨✨👏

  • @stevenbaumann8692
    @stevenbaumann8692 Рік тому +2

    Yep. You explained it pretty well. Just one thing. Most non Precambrian geologists who don't focus on life make the same claim about tectonics. It's in no way a ding on you.
    Referring to a whole billion years as boring needs to be restricted to life and maybe the atmosphere. I don't know. I'm a structural geologist/geochronologist who dabbles in stratigraphy. I don't touch life.
    Actually, tectonically the earth was far from quiet. Laurentia alone had at least a dozen major events. Here's a list of a few. I hope I spelled everything right.
    Penokean Orogeny
    Yavapi Orogeny
    Baraboo interval
    Wolf River Event
    Mazatzal Orogeny
    Picuris Orogeny
    Ozark Interbal
    Belt-Purcell sediments
    Midcontinent Rift
    Grenville Orogeny
    The assembly and breakup of Nuna. As well as the assembly and breakup of Rodinia.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +2

      Ahh, that is crazy! Thank you so much for all this information! I was so surprised when reading my tectonics references that it was 'relatively quiet' but I didn't realize all these orogenies were going on. Thanks for bringing this to light!

    • @stevenbaumann8692
      @stevenbaumann8692 Рік тому +1

      @@GEOGIRL Condie rants about it the same way I do. I love your videos. Keep them coming!

  • @daniel.Armando
    @daniel.Armando Рік тому +3

    Rachel I admire her beauty and her intelligence 🥰🥰🥰🤩🤩😍😍😍😍❤️

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +2

      Thank you so much! :)

  • @christian2967
    @christian2967 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for tour detailed explanation

  • @AaronsLifeee
    @AaronsLifeee Рік тому +2

    I performed sub par on my school science results. Though I am and have always been facinated by Earth History and Evolutionary Biology (Richard Dawkins Books) its 3am lol. This video is very informative, thank you.

  • @adamwu4565
    @adamwu4565 Рік тому +1

    In the context of the Fermi Paradox, in Rare Earth scenarios, Earth's "boring billion" could be considered a potential Great or Medium Filter. If it is generally normal for Earth-like planets with a prokaryotic microbial biosphere to entire a boring billion equivalent (most young terrestrial planets should, after all, be expected to share features like a fairly warm mantle, and a fainter young sun) soon after the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis, rather than immediately transition to being an oxygenated world, and the events that trigger the end of said boring billion period are either stochastically unlikely, or need a significant time period of geological evolution of the planet before they can get going, then perhaps we may end up finding lots of inhabited planets in the galaxy with prevailing conditions analogous to Earth during the Boring Billion, populated by microbes up to eukaryotic grade, but with complex mullticellular lifeforms mostly absent.

  • @Dragrath1
    @Dragrath1 Рік тому +1

    Oh fascinating video with a whole channel to dive into*when I have time) love to see someone active in the field discussing all the cool nuances and discoveries in the literature that rarely make it to the general public, especially the fascinating and grossly underrepresented/discussed multidisciplinary aspects.
    Yeah the conditions of this time are fascinating and insightful in the ways they are challenging our preconceptions And after all before you can really look for life elsewhere in the universe you really should have some understanding how life on Earth has developed in lockstep with tectonics and the Sun.
    The other kinds of anaerobic photosynthesis really get grossly neglected as there seems to not only have been heterogeneity in ocean conditions in this period of time but what you might almost term an revolutionary flux competition between Euxinic Ferruginous and Oxic environments and the life that lives there and helps perpetuate those conditions.
    One major factor that ought to be discussed more in this context is the amount of energy it takes to extract the molecular/atomic forms of hydrogen for carbon fixation since this quite likely serves as the single biggest handicap for aerobic life. After all the amount of energy needed at minimum to strip hydrogen electrons and all away from oxygen is significantly higher than what is needed to strip hydrogen from hydrogen sulfide, methane or by converting dissolved hydrogen ions(protons) into free hydrogen using dissolved ions as electron donors.
    In quantum mechanics the work by Albert Einstein on the photoelectric effect tells us that there is an absolute minimum energy which is needed per photon to jump energy eigenstates and thus in this case perform certain reactions needed to fix carbon. It is because of this reason that the blue portion of the electromagnetic spectrum is the lowest energy photons which can directly be used by aerobic photosynthesis with no chemosynthetic substitutes being possible because there aren't any readily available chemical reactions which can perform this.
    Note that cyanobacteria and their descendants have found a way to absorb 3 "red" photons to convert effectively them into a "blue" thus increasing the amount of usable light and consequentially causing the only visible light colors that go unused to be green hence why the familiar forms of chlorophyll are green. This still requires at least visible light and thus the original point still stands.
    Other forms of photosynthesis have much lower minimum energy requirements reaching down to in some cases ~1000 nm wavelengths. This means they can perform photosynthesis in deeper waters than are required by aerobic life. Of course the flipside is that their reaction products result in far less accessible energy for metabolism since more energy is needed to be invested into performing the reaction as the reactants have less electronegativity.
    This is what makes oxygen so good for respiration but it comes at a cost for the carbon fixation direction.
    From what I have been able to read these photosynthetic microbes particularly the ones using metal ions are still quite abundant even if they have had to swap out the use of iron for other metal cations which have forms stable in oxidized environments due to this clever adaptation they can access a best of both worlds approach relying on anaerobic photosynthesis (or in some cases only prototrophy) and aerobic respiration. Looking in the literature there was even a report from the 1980's documenting a species of copepod collected from the mid water depths oxygen minimum zone in the Caribbean which incorporated some of these anaerobic microbes into its tissues so there is fascinating albeit under studied life down there.
    The big point is that in open ocean far from land where slow passive upwards diffusion of nutrients is the main source of nutrients in the open water column this means anaerobic phototrophs performing carbon fixation can easily outcompete their aerobic counterparts by depleting the water column of scarce nutrients from the water.
    www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-10872-z#citeas
    As a consequence like you said the anaerobic metabolism and primary production can shut down its aerobic counterpart. Without some nutrient saturation or waters which have sunlit bottoms this is kind of a hard filter on aerobic proliferation.
    Its in this picture that I have come to suspect that the great supercontinent has had an underappreciated role in this whole picture which has some support based on the phylogenetic study of known extant cyanobacteria or cyanobacteria derived organelles which suggest they had limited if any tolerance for salinity particularly in the case of the line which chloroplasts appear to descend from for shallower more continental(freshwater) forms.
    As a potentially related bit of information the metagenomic surveys of continental waterways has identified new Asgard archaea which appear to be more closely related to Eukaryotes than the early examples we identified in the deep sea and recently cultured in 2020. That alone wouldn't mean much but together suggests that Eukaryotes or at least the endosymbiosis events associated with them likely happened on or adjacent to Columbia/Nuna.
    As for a geological factor which might be at play I have found the work related to mantle hydration particularly interesting especially the temperature dependence on the amount and structure of hydrated minerals that can form within the Mantle. There is suspiciously strong alignment between the timings of the Neoproterozoic Oxygenation Event and the cooling of the mantle enough to permit mobile upwelling hydrous mantle plumes to arise. In particular the chemistry of the Franklin Large Igneous Province which is associated with the break up of Rodinia and the onset of the Cryogenian glaciations has the sediment enrichment consistent with a hydrous source which notably includes phosphorus.
    www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-43103-y#citeas
    That combined with some of the ancient oxygen isotope studies which were used to assess the air to water based contributions to chemical weathering of rocks from 3 billion years ago also could be part of the story as if all that water in the mantle was once in the oceans then Earth very well could have been a total water world which would necessarily limit aerobic primary production until the ocean depths became shallow enough for aerobic photosynthesis to become ecologically viable.
    The newer Moon formation models which include a much more violent and dynamic volatilization of both Theia and the proto Earth and recoalescence as a system of fluid bodies could very well support this since there would have been so much water and heat that you would have supercritical water thus completely skipping the need for a discrete phase transition. Earth would just have emerged out of the collision a water world well before the first solid crust could have started to form. Given that life has been found living in hydrothermal systems on the deep sea where supercritical water exists I have to wonder if this might have even created the conditions for abiogenesis but I'm digressing here.
    And as for another thing which was probably important that occurred in the boring billion there is some fascinating stuff related to links between the Nucleolus and the Nucleo-Cytoplasmic Large DNA Viruses(NCLDV) which suggests that the structure likely evolved as a viral replication factory the complexes viruses form as part of the evolutionary arms race between prokaryotes and viruses. The viral Eukaryogenesis hypothesis has many forms and variations but thus far its the only model which can explain how the decoupling of transcription and translation could have occurred.
    My suspicion is that because continental waters are vulnerable to isolation that means any viruses which can persist in that environment must adapt to a limited reservoir of hosts which may have forced viruses to be more generalists and thus get bigger and incorporate more of their hosts genetic machinery into their structure as well as preserve their host reservoir, a.k.a. become less deadly else they risk going extinct.
    Given enough time under those selective pressures could have led to total codependence. Given that the cultured Asgard Archaea has a very unequal symbiosis with smaller prokaryotes where it uses unusual tentacle like appendages to snare onto the other smaller prokaryotes which it can metabolically influence using stolen genes to support its own growth, I wouldn't be surprised if the decoupling of transcription from translation was the critical element missing for endosymbiosis to occur. Will be hard to test here's hoping they culture these newer Asgard archaea soon. The first ones took over a decade due to the slow growth rate of archaea. They probably aren't prefect analogs since as far as I am aware cellulose and Lignin probably didn't exist in their familiar forms some 2 billion years ago but there is a lot of interesting stuff out there in this whole area.

  • @Grumpyoldman037
    @Grumpyoldman037 Рік тому +2

    The topic may be about a boring event, but your presentation, as always, was far from boring. Thank you for some more quite interesting education.

  • @roberto8650
    @roberto8650 10 місяців тому +1

    This channel rocks! 😂 (I'll see myself out).

  • @Heavy-metaaal
    @Heavy-metaaal 3 місяці тому +1

    Now I understood the weathering brings phophorus to the soil. And rivers carry as well to the oceans. 🤔

  • @stevengill1736
    @stevengill1736 8 місяців тому +2

    Hey, a term list, cool!

  • @davidanderson9664
    @davidanderson9664 Рік тому +1

    Great video/ Thank you! D.A., J.D. NYC

  • @chegeny
    @chegeny Рік тому +1

    Thanks for the very interesting discussion, not boring in the least. I believe that the warm stable time in the Mid Proterozoic was essential for gradual evolution from prokaryotic life to eukaryotes. It implies that life needs a very long, stable period to evolve into animals. Maybe this explains the Fermi Paradox. We may have a universe of Cyanobacteria, but no Mos Eisley Cantinas. 👽

  • @mornnb
    @mornnb 8 місяців тому +1

    Eukaryotic cells. Multicellular organisms. Evolution of sex. These are probably the most important things to happen to life making the boring billion the most interesting time in earth's history.

  • @ogrejd
    @ogrejd Рік тому +3

    ...or we clicked on this video because we're one of your 25.5k subscribers who watches pretty much every video of yours. :P

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +1

      I suppose that is an okay reason as well ;) haha Thank you!!

  • @stevegagnon1539
    @stevegagnon1539 Рік тому +1

    GEO GIRL you did an excellent describing this time period , very science based.
    I wonder if you would consider doing a video debunking young earth geologists arguments. Especially their claims against Radiometric dating ?

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +4

      Thank you!
      Currently, the answer is no to debating or debunking anyone because I just feel it gives them more of a voice than they deserve, and it's also very difficult to argue with someone when one side is using real data and the other is only using conjecture, faith, and fake or disproved data... I just feel as though it's futile because they are no going to change their opinion because of anything I say because I will just say the same things as all the other scientists who told them before lol, so I just don't feel like I should give that argument the time of day. My purpose on UA-cam is to educate those who want to learn more about Earth either to pass a class or just for fun, but it's not to debate people who will never agree with me. Hope you understand ;)

    • @paulperkins1615
      @paulperkins1615 Рік тому

      @@GEOGIRL I agree, debunking religion-based anti-science is just letting them set the agenda for science education, something they have not earned.

  • @footfault1941
    @footfault1941 Рік тому +2

    Geological scale, it is called. Something beyond our ordinary perception. Much, much imagination required? Here's the series of videos which would help you have a great time intellectually! Accessible, no need to worry about!

  • @ashajacob8362
    @ashajacob8362 Рік тому +7

    Not boring as my life 🙂

  • @komousch
    @komousch Рік тому +1

    wtf - this was really happennign on our planet? Love it and thnx for the video!

  • @nyoodmono4681
    @nyoodmono4681 Рік тому +1

    The days got longer and the moon moved away. Life adepted to this, i dont remeber exactly but there were mats (?) that were purple at night and white at day. Maybe this is also reason for some important changes in microbiology.

  • @Michael-kb9qt
    @Michael-kb9qt Рік тому +1

    Good job

  • @andrejmucic5003
    @andrejmucic5003 Рік тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @lpetrich
    @lpetrich Рік тому +3

    I’m disappointed in the lack of discussion of fossils of early eukaryotes like the red alga Bangiomorpha pubescens (1.2 Gya) and the green alga Proterocladus antiquus (1 Gya). Also of acritarchs, likely some one-called eukaryotes, though it’s hard to say much more. With fossils like those, the Boring Billion was not quite as boring.

    • @ellenmcgowen
      @ellenmcgowen Рік тому +1

      Early on, I think during the GOE, there are some strange macrofossils called the Francevillian biota. They're bigger than acritarchs. It's as if life was ready to become complex that early if the O2 levels had supported it, but then O2 dropped back down during the Boring Billion. I think geology and ocean chemistry, not biology, was the limiting factor for complex life.

    • @lpetrich
      @lpetrich Рік тому +2

      Bangiomorpha was named from its close resemblance to present-day Bangiaceae, which include Pyropa, the nori alga. These two algae indicate that the endosymbiosis of a cyanobacterium happened earlier in the Boring Billion, and maybe even near the end of the Great Oxidation Event.
      An upper limit can be found from the evolution of thylakoids in cyanobacteria, what plastids also have. That happened not long before the GOE, as did cyanobacterium multicellularity. Much of the early evolution of cyanobacteria was early in the BB, however, as was much of the early evolution of eukaryotes.

    • @lpetrich
      @lpetrich Рік тому +2

      I would also have liked mention of our ancestors back then. Late in the BB, they were choanoflagellates (collar flagellates), and some time in the BB, their ancestors started growing those collars around their (single) flagella.
      I mention single because some protists have two, looking alike in some organisms, like some green algae, and looking different in some others (heterokonts). Some of them are covered with these structures: the ciliates.

    • @robertab929
      @robertab929 2 місяці тому +2

      Also fungi were ignored. There were developing in parallel to animals. Opisthokonts appeared somewhere 1.3 Ba.

  • @captaincodpiece3263
    @captaincodpiece3263 Рік тому +2

    I know all about Boring, I live in Norfolk, England. That really qualifies as boring.

  • @stephenelberfeld8175
    @stephenelberfeld8175 Рік тому

    Naturally when you mention molybdenum as necessary for early life forms to function, I think of all the molybdenite occurrences in the New England area, and their associations. Sanford, ME with vesuvianite, Franconia, NH with magnetite and epidote, Lyme, NH with powellite and bismuthenite. Westmoreland, NH with apatite, Shrewsbury, VT with powellite. I have to wonder we're any of these associations related to the fixing of nitrogen or other processes at one time?

  • @chrisperry4774
    @chrisperry4774 26 днів тому

    As life existed before the boring billion there was undoubtedly a huge amount of evolution in this huge amount of time ...we just don't know exactly what it was...but biology hints

  • @Hellbender8574
    @Hellbender8574 Рік тому +4

    The Boring Billion wasnt boring to anyone with a microscope 🔬. Bacteria and archea are cool, but they're not much fun to watch compared to the busy, bustling, wiggly world of protists. Our tiny eukaryotic friends are ecosystems of their own with every niche and lifestyle you could imagine-- micro sized.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +2

      Yes! Microbes don't get enough credit, they are so incredible! The pure diverisity in metabolisms is amazing compared to animals that pretty much only do the one lol

    • @barbaradurfee645
      @barbaradurfee645 Рік тому +5

      @@GEOGIRL My compost pile LOVES microbes :)

    • @Hellbender8574
      @Hellbender8574 Рік тому +3

      @@barbaradurfee645 So does the pond!

    • @robertab929
      @robertab929 2 місяці тому +1

      @@GEOGIRL Also, multicellular red algae (Rhodophyta) appeared way before 1 Ba. Also other eukaryotic algae developed multicellularity, but latter that red algae.
      Fungal multicellularity were developing in parallel to metazoan multicellularity.

  • @mazerguru3891
    @mazerguru3891 Рік тому +1

    At .75 speed this is perfect.

  • @rebeccawinter472
    @rebeccawinter472 4 місяці тому

    So in short, our ancestors evolution was basically slowed down greatly by sulphate reducing bacteria - for the better part of a billion years.
    If the deep water conditions were less toxic, it would have increased oxygen availability. There still would have been decreased nutrient availability, but I blame the bacteria.

  • @TagiukGold
    @TagiukGold Рік тому +3

    This video was super boring, I mean extra boring, no no, I mean outside of boring. This video was interesting.

  • @KitemanTV
    @KitemanTV 13 днів тому

    If it looks boring, that means no one is looking close enough.

  • @josepablolunasanchez1283
    @josepablolunasanchez1283 Рік тому

    Even middle age was "boring". No economic crisis, no rush hour, no traffic jams. It had less slaves than today, and you knew that your grand sons could live with the skills you had and you could pass them. Buying a house and having a family was not a luxury.

  • @markgrayson7514
    @markgrayson7514 Рік тому

    Actually, I clicked on this video because I watched it a long time ago, gave no opinion, and it keeps wanting me to watch it again, showing it in the first position. It does the same thing even to thumbs down videos!
    Get it right UA-cam! (GeoGirl, keep doing what you do - not exactly in my interests)

  • @georgestewart9001
    @georgestewart9001 Рік тому +2

    Thankyouforagreatvideoiddidlikedthisalot

  • @christopher3d475
    @christopher3d475 Рік тому

    So the big question seems to be what spurred eukaryotes to suddenly form into early animals around about 550 million years ago (the Cambrian explosion that is).

    • @robertab929
      @robertab929 2 місяці тому +1

      Animals appeared 0.9-0.7 Ba (billion years ago).
      Cambrian explosion is another funny name like boring billion. This "explosion" was possible because of minerals in their external skeletons. Read about Ediacaran fauna. Read about opisthokonts (1.3 Ba).

  • @AlmostEthical
    @AlmostEthical Рік тому +2

    From what I can gather (you are too clever for my ancient brain), while there are many interconnected factors, the ultimate key to the stability of the BB was the cooling of the mantle, resulting in low tectonic activity ...?

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +2

      Yea, since making this video, I've tried to read up a little bit more on precambrian tectonics, and I agree, I think that is one of the most significant factors because tectonics is often what kicks off major climatic and environmental changes. However, the more I read about precambrian tectonics the more I see that we have multiple ideas and we still don't have it nailed down completely, so it'd be interesting to see if our idea of the boring billion changes the further we understand ancient tectonic styles! :D

    • @AlmostEthical
      @AlmostEthical Рік тому

      @@GEOGIRL Thanks for replying. So mantle cooling is only one factor? Funny thing, cooling can cause earthquakes but it can also quell volcanism.

  • @zdenekvalek1538
    @zdenekvalek1538 Рік тому +1

    Right, I know/knew what's that :-)

  • @wcdeich4
    @wcdeich4 Рік тому

    What caused the start of the isotopic stability? I've never hard an answer for that. I heard a lot of ideas for why it ended, but not why it began.

    • @wcdeich4
      @wcdeich4 Рік тому

      Why was Kenorland able to break up but Columbia was not?

  • @jamesharmer9293
    @jamesharmer9293 Рік тому +2

    It would definitely been boring to actually be there. What you gonna do? Sit on a beach and watch the tide go in and out for a billion years ?

  • @wavemaker54
    @wavemaker54 9 місяців тому

    Nothing is boring, it’s your own outlook that determines what is interesting and what is boring. The more you learn the more interesting everything becomes. Boring is for people who drill holes or have no education. Boring = ignorance.

  • @NelsonDiscovery
    @NelsonDiscovery Рік тому +2

    I agree. It's a mysterious period. I wonder if there were loads more microorganisms than there are now. On account of nobody eating them but other microorganisms. Or maybe that's a stupid idea lol I mean there weren't any filter-feeders back then. That started in the Ediacaran. So I wonder if that had an impact on their numbers then compared to now.
    It's a difficult timescale to imagine without much change. You can't imagine human society surviving for a billions years without going through dramatic upheaval.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +4

      I am sure it did heavily impact their numbers once larger animals and filter feeders evolved in the Ediacaran. I think the way I've most often heard it explained is that it's not that the Precambrian supported a crazy high amount of microorganisms, but rather that the post-Cambrian has caused their numbers to decrease because once Ediacaran fauna appeared and all other large complex life snowballed from that until today, the microbes were largely displaced and therefore had no choice but to decline in numbers to make room for the rest of life. A similar thing happened to stromatolites built by cyanobacteria. These cyanobacterial mats require warm, calm, shallow water, which is now occupied by other benthic animals, so they were displaced and dwindled in numbers. Thank goodness there are still some corners of the world we can find them though because they are so cool!! ;D

    • @jpjohns23
      @jpjohns23 Рік тому

      Bacteria and archaea have probably always been preyed upon by viruses. Of course viruses will never leave fossil traces but we can probably see ancient evidence of the biological ways prokaryotes defended themselves against viruses in mechanisms like endonucleases.

    • @NelsonDiscovery
      @NelsonDiscovery Рік тому +3

      @@GEOGIRL Thank you for your answer, Rachel 😊 Must take up a lot of your time to make all of these videos and reply to viewers. It's nice to see someone really love what they study and what they do for a loving.

  • @johnkelly7757
    @johnkelly7757 Рік тому

    The relaxing billion.

  • @rursus8354
    @rursus8354 Рік тому +2

    Yay! My favourite billion! (OK, I'll confess! I'm a nerd.) UPDATE: Yes it was boring! It was so boring that we should erect a new eon called "the Boringian eon".

  • @princessmaly
    @princessmaly Рік тому

    The kind of weasely way you talk about the time periods involved is just stronger supporting the fact that the periodization of the Precambrian is just plain not done yet. The ICS chart isn't it, or lit, or good, but then that's kinda the whole issue is that the jury is still out on so much of this. While overall we can view the boring billion as relatively stable, there is some evidence for types of variation within it, you pointed out some here, and it's likely and I personally believe that even though it was a very stable period comparitively, our perception of it is heavily biased towards the data we have. For perspective, you talked about the Grenville orogeny causing a phanerozoic-like change in oxygen levels, but we don't talk about the phanerozoic as if it's "boring," and that's been going on for over 500 million years. Of course we don't, right? Because it has animals, like dinosaurs and trilobites and people, those things aren't boring. But what do we really know about Mesoproterozoic life? We got some acritarchs, some things that might be eukaryotes, some things that probably are, chemical evidence of stem groups, etc., but this stuff is difficult to interpret and understand.
    So I don't think that the actual events of that time were boring, I don't think Earthlings will sit still even under the most stable of circumstances and over the course of that time there may have been lots of radiation events and whole bizarre clades of organisms we have no remnants of today, and there were probably geologic events both local and world wide which we either just haven't yet gotten evidence for or do and maybe just haven't seen it for what it is yet. That said, until we have a large enough body of evidence to understand what was really going on back then, it... it's gonna look kinda boring from where we're standing. But also? Compared to the GOE, *EVERYTHING* is boring, so that is in no way a fair comparison.
    To take it back to periodization for a bit, the 2021 proposal kind of took this attitude to not fix what isn't broken (even though it's very much broken) and kept the current ICS Mesoproterozoic periods in place, chronometric boundaries and all. It's bad, it's a bad idea that doesn't work and isn't good... but at the same time, their reasoning is sound. Maybe we don't need four periods, maybe we do, whatever, but it's probably better to assume that there's more to the story than we know, than to assume a lack of evidence implies an evidence of absence. Kind of a thing. You know what I mean. I just can't believe the boring billion was actually boring, we just haven't fully figured out what the most exciting parts are yet. But until we do? Yeah it just... it sounds kinda boring I'ma be honest.

  • @isaacfraser4082
    @isaacfraser4082 Рік тому

    You know that they found phosphine. 45 to 75 miles above the ground in the atmosphere of Venus I think you know what that might mean

  • @johnvl6358
    @johnvl6358 Рік тому +2

    😎😎

  • @azorthegreat2112
    @azorthegreat2112 Рік тому

    Good enough for the "golden stallion person"

  • @SyIe12
    @SyIe12 Рік тому +2

    👍⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @mikestiles811
    @mikestiles811 7 місяців тому

    What are your thoughts on the great unconformity?

  • @cremasca
    @cremasca Рік тому +1

    ❤❤❤👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️

  • @tyapca7
    @tyapca7 Рік тому +1

    Nothing in science is boring, IMHO ;-)

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому

      Could not agree more ;)

    • @tyapca7
      @tyapca7 Рік тому

      @@GEOGIRL Thank you!

  • @Valjurai
    @Valjurai Рік тому

    Alas, missed opportunity to call it the slimy billion

  • @stevoplex
    @stevoplex Рік тому +1

    😑 I was so Benthic all that time. I'm better now.

  • @1963charmaine
    @1963charmaine Рік тому +1

    Not so boring.

  • @josepablolunasanchez1283
    @josepablolunasanchez1283 Рік тому

    Can you talk about how DANGER becomes FOOD? For example, name a corrosive substance. Oxygen? We have evolved to turn oxygen into food, we cannot live without it. So oxygen was a danger, but life turned it into food.
    So if we go to Jupiter, which as magnetic fields that could kill us, could it be possible to find life that eats magnetism?

  • @dadsonworldwide3238
    @dadsonworldwide3238 9 місяців тому

    Its still better than the Missing billion + lol

  • @curtisblake261
    @curtisblake261 Рік тому +1

    Geo Girl seems to rattle off her knowledge as if she has completely memorized it. And she has visual aids to go along with it. What the heck?

  • @curiouscatlabincgetsworrie7755

    Boring billion? Maybe animals and plants by then thought they knew ... the drill? :D
    ...
    Sorry ... I'll get my coat?

  • @royaleblizzard2460
    @royaleblizzard2460 Рік тому

    I'm bored 😪

  • @danielalexander799
    @danielalexander799 Рік тому +1

    I was bored out of my mind.

  • @ElicBehexan
    @ElicBehexan Рік тому +1

    I think just about anything is interesting, until you throw in math and then I'm done. Numbers, ages, things like that don't bother me, just math.

    • @GEOGIRL
      @GEOGIRL  Рік тому +1

      Trust me, I understand, I feel the same way lol!

  • @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515
    @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515 Рік тому +1

    molybdenum
    Not mo lib denim 🤣

  • @thearmchairspacemanOG
    @thearmchairspacemanOG Рік тому

    aye.. i clicked because i know what it means.. but mostly because I hate the term.. it's not fitting for science to call any history ''boring'' .. that's the remit of journalists and thugs... paint me ecologist.. nothing is boring about ecology.. ever.

  • @eljanrimsa5843
    @eljanrimsa5843 Рік тому

    Boring? It was the time when sex was invented

  • @GodlyAtheist
    @GodlyAtheist Рік тому

    Wtf is going on. All these simps donating LMFAO

  • @greeceuranusputin
    @greeceuranusputin Рік тому

    Ask Joe Biden, he was there.

  • @TomTom-rh5gk
    @TomTom-rh5gk Рік тому

    Reading becomes boring. Sorry not interesting.

  • @steppingonmytoes
    @steppingonmytoes 6 місяців тому +1

    Love from Milwaukee

  • @wardamn3agle
    @wardamn3agle Рік тому

    What’s the woman onlyfans page