How Trees Bend the Laws of Physics

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 27 чер 2024
  • Hope this was worth the wait! So many people helped with this video: Prof John Sperry, Hank Green, Henry Reich, CGP Grey, Prof Poliakoff, my mum filmed for me in beautiful Stanley Park and Jen S helped with the fourth version of the script.
    Prof John Sperry biologylabs.utah.edu/sperry/jo...
    Hank Green (SciShow) / scishow
    Henry Reich (minutephysics) / minutephysics
    CGP Grey / cgpgrey
    Prof Poliakoff (Periodic Videos) / periodicvideos
    Also thanks to the Palais de la Decouverte - they helped me with the whole vacuum pump setup in Paris. No, I could not actually suck water up 10m - I did about 4m, but the vacuum pump was easily able to do it and I saw spontaneous boiling on all of our various trials. Footage from this may end up on 2Veritasium.
    Trees create immense negative pressures of 10's of atmospheres by evaporating water from nanoscale pores, sucking water up 100m in a state where it should be boiling but can't because the perfect xylem tubes contain no air bubbles, just so that most of it can evaporate in the process of absorbing a couple molecules of carbon dioxide. Now I didn't mention the cohesion of water (that it sticks to itself well) but this is implicit in the description of negative pressure, strong surface tension etc.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 8 тис.

  • @leokovacic707
    @leokovacic707 5 років тому +7739

    Newton should have asked himself how an apple even got up there

    • @douggief1367
      @douggief1367 4 роки тому +154

      He might have got that wrong too.

    • @WireWeHere
      @WireWeHere 4 роки тому +83

      Newton feared apples were related to a wave.
      Peace.

    • @MrNicePotato
      @MrNicePotato 4 роки тому +53

      Exactly. How can the tree trunk get an apple worth of mass up there in the first place

    • @aurelia8028
      @aurelia8028 4 роки тому +7

      Looool

    • @biggiganticbones
      @biggiganticbones 3 роки тому +73

      He knew not to question those above him. But if they fall below him, he can ask whatever he likes and control their salary.

  • @ClamV2
    @ClamV2 3 роки тому +3002

    This video was so good I didn’t even realize it was 8 years old

    • @irfanbhuiyan620
      @irfanbhuiyan620 2 роки тому +20

      9*

    • @thejokestersquad3686
      @thejokestersquad3686 2 роки тому +14

      @@irfanbhuiyan620 says 8 years bro

    • @infected4kill
      @infected4kill 2 роки тому +8

      @@irfanbhuiyan620 You're a month and a half early

    • @element5377
      @element5377 2 роки тому +12

      so you are bad because you are more than 8 years old? good thing we dont erase all knowledge every 8 years, because bacteria would have higher IQ's

    • @sebastiangruenfeld141
      @sebastiangruenfeld141 2 роки тому +2

      @@infected4kill he is ahead of his time

  • @jvajdos
    @jvajdos 2 роки тому +214

    I’m a refrigeration technician, and I realized a while back that the water evaporates out of the bottoms of the leaves to refrigerate them, when water evaporates, the vapor pulls heat from the remaining source water, cooling it. This is necessary because sunlight has the potential to heat the leaves beyond the temperature they can still function for photosynthesis.

    • @robspiess
      @robspiess 9 місяців тому +15

      ... so trees sweat?

    • @gutrali
      @gutrali 4 місяці тому

      ​@@robspiessthey transpire

    • @karangupta3394
      @karangupta3394 2 місяці тому

      d​amn right they actually do@@robspiess

    • @WoefulMinion
      @WoefulMinion Місяць тому +4

      @@robspiess Yes! There is a tree near my house where you can feel the sweat on really hot days.

    • @yayawood8609
      @yayawood8609 Місяць тому +5

      And when multiple trees do the sweating thing, reverse rain can be seen and causes a cloud to form

  • @bruh-uq2zx
    @bruh-uq2zx 2 роки тому +324

    The height limit of the trees is 256 blocks

    • @dragonfury1565
      @dragonfury1565 2 місяці тому +9

      Wait this is actually kinda true though, there’s no tree taller than this
      Edit: Oops didn’t realize this comment is 2 years old, sorry my bad

    • @kudang6108
      @kudang6108 2 місяці тому +4

      It's okay

    • @ferdinandkuhn6975
      @ferdinandkuhn6975 Місяць тому +11

      We already got an update. This information is outdated.

    • @Walter_Hartwell_White_Senior
      @Walter_Hartwell_White_Senior Місяць тому +2

      Is this a Minecraft reference?

    • @TVkachu
      @TVkachu Місяць тому +1

      ​@@Walter_Hartwell_White_Senior yes

  • @mBUSHattack
    @mBUSHattack 5 років тому +715

    This ended up being way more interesting than I expected.

  • @johnwielding5151
    @johnwielding5151 3 роки тому +3213

    I think we've just found the most intense hype man for trees

    • @atteug439
      @atteug439 3 роки тому +42

      The lorax

    • @savg9671
      @savg9671 2 роки тому +8

      mr beast???

    • @larrymbouche
      @larrymbouche 2 роки тому +7

      I love trees. They give us reasons for writing poetry, and they give us oxygen when we don't destroy all of them.

    • @wessley4606
      @wessley4606 2 роки тому +2

      The perfect quamphf.

    • @tanaypatel2743
      @tanaypatel2743 2 роки тому +3

      Yeah he has 5 vid on it

  • @Drache832
    @Drache832 2 роки тому +176

    Its really amazing to think that this video is almost 10 years old. I didnt even notice until after watching it
    Compared to most other youtubers in 2012 this is god tier quality

    • @warrickburt7459
      @warrickburt7459 2 роки тому

      Does this mean trees can cool a city

    • @simonfreak5
      @simonfreak5 Рік тому +5

      @@warrickburt7459 Yes, obviously! Hence why urban greening is so important. Just look up the 'urban heat island effect', a large part is caused by concrete and other materials that fail to get rid of heat easily, but another by the lack of open space and green. Trees cool just about anything in their close vicinity (both through evaporative cooling and shade creation). They're nature's free air conditioning..

    • @KougaJ7
      @KougaJ7 11 місяців тому

      I didn't even notice it was 10 years old, wow!

    • @ericgol7
      @ericgol7 18 днів тому

      I only noticed its age when I saw the double person effect.

  • @SimonWoodburyForget
    @SimonWoodburyForget 3 роки тому +1112

    The goal of evaporation is to cool down the leaf. The reason leafs are green is to avoid absorbing too much radiation. The sun produces a lot of energy, and similar to humans a tree needs to protect himself from sunlight. Think about how hot it gets at solar noon, and the fact that the tree needs to sit in direct sunlight for the entire day. The tree is literally cooling itself down through evaporative cooling, similar to how humans do it through sweating. This process is known as evapotranspiration.

    • @KendrixTermina
      @KendrixTermina 3 роки тому +93

      thanks for the extra info!
      It makes sense, dead wood burns so easily, but living trees don't randomly catch on fire.
      I've also heard that leaves are white on infra red film - since they're optimized to reflect heat.

    • @mijkolsmith
      @mijkolsmith 3 роки тому +46

      Tree sweat

    • @nancymatro8029
      @nancymatro8029 2 роки тому +52

      thanks for completing the explanation that should have been in the video

    • @fpgamer4566
      @fpgamer4566 2 роки тому +9

      The reason leaves are green is cuz of chlorophyll no?

    • @mijkolsmith
      @mijkolsmith 2 роки тому +14

      @@fpgamer4566 tree leaves containing chloroplasts don't absorb the green light but reflect it, and that's probably because radiation often emits green light. At least that's what I gather from the main comment

  • @mrplop38
    @mrplop38 5 років тому +1683

    how to bend the youtube algorithm into recommending old videos will be the next video

    • @torb1trick415
      @torb1trick415 5 років тому +2

      yeah maybe october 31 2012

    • @lordnord9526
      @lordnord9526 5 років тому +1

      Torb 1 Trick nice date

    • @imanalius7691
      @imanalius7691 4 роки тому +1

      I’m glad because somehow I’d missed this video and it’s fascinating!

    • @aurelia8028
      @aurelia8028 4 роки тому +1

      I actually seached for the videos myself, lol. UA-cam definitely doesn't recommend old videos anymore

    • @Walter_Hartwell_White_Senior
      @Walter_Hartwell_White_Senior Місяць тому

      ​@@aurelia8028it did recommend to me

  • @JCdied4Uall
    @JCdied4Uall 5 років тому +5590

    His next video must be on how to make a 7 year old video go viral.

    • @Fangornmmc
      @Fangornmmc 5 років тому +28

      Are you talking about the one with the shade balls? I had an uncanny feeling I'd seen it before.

    • @benjamind7290
      @benjamind7290 5 років тому +123

      @@Fangornmmc This video! This video is nearly 7 years old having been published on Oct 30, 2012, yet here it is showing up in people's feeds today, June 3, 2019.

    • @Fangornmmc
      @Fangornmmc 5 років тому +14

      @@benjamind7290 Oh right, I didn't notice that at all haha. I'm still having an uncanny feeling about the shade balls though. I think I must've seen some other video about it before then... it gave me a strong case of deja vu.

    • @rodrigoalmendro3118
      @rodrigoalmendro3118 5 років тому +6

      Benjamin Damm literally just saw it for the fifth time since it was published

    • @tudorgramada4164
      @tudorgramada4164 5 років тому

      Agree

  • @Johnnysboy3987
    @Johnnysboy3987 Місяць тому +10

    Out here in 2024 and trees sucking up water still goes hard

  • @omeregekocademir3426
    @omeregekocademir3426 3 роки тому +34

    how can this be produced in 2012? quality is crazy

  • @psykodactyle
    @psykodactyle 5 років тому +2388

    2012: super sucked
    2019: S U P E R S U C C

    • @tuhmitsu
      @tuhmitsu 5 років тому +35

      i immediately flew in to the comment section when that came up. was not disappointed.

    • @skipbellon4342
      @skipbellon4342 5 років тому +19

      My wife is going to hear about this!

    • @invader_ren5974
      @invader_ren5974 5 років тому +1

      Supper such??? That doesnt sound right

    • @user-qg1tq4bg2u
      @user-qg1tq4bg2u 5 років тому +5

      Can Somebody explain this meme?

    • @eac-ox2ly
      @eac-ox2ly 5 років тому

      I came here just to comment this lmao

  • @Mr_Soleo
    @Mr_Soleo 3 роки тому +1087

    Hank saying "right?" was just praying to the gods of physics that there wasn't a pure vacuum in tree leaves.

    • @shinyray6927
      @shinyray6927 3 роки тому +36

      Seeing Hank on Veritassium video made my day

    • @ALBINO1D
      @ALBINO1D 2 роки тому +14

      Right, Hank.

    • @MASTERSAIS
      @MASTERSAIS 2 роки тому +6

      If there is a vacuum inside of leafs you would hear a big giant pop every time you snapped one in half this is just ridiculous nonsense

    • @dismalthoughts
      @dismalthoughts 2 роки тому +33

      @@MASTERSAIS And that's what made the "...right?" so perfect :D There's so much "ridiculous nonsense" that ends up being true! His reaction was perfect. He pointed out the ridiculousness followed by a humble acknowledgement that he is human and nature does what it will regardless of whether we can make sense of it :)

    • @scarmackd1498
      @scarmackd1498 2 роки тому +1

      @@MASTERSAIS I can't answer that, but I assure you, this guy does his research. If you want to try to disprove it, go ahead, but if you have no evidence, I believe him :D

  • @ericsophiea6481
    @ericsophiea6481 Рік тому +17

    In the late 90's the research pointed to only osmotic pressure as the mechanism that allows plants to move water up a long column. I love that new understanding has developed. As more and more physicists cross over to various biology sciences, I suspect a lot of our understandings will get modified.
    Great video! Thanks!

  • @JonathanBridenNZ
    @JonathanBridenNZ Рік тому +42

    All that evaporated water is also what makes trees such an important part of the water cycle. The fact that trees do this means that they make a huge contribution to moving water inland from the ocean. When we have major deforestation on large continents, the result is a break in that conveyor belt and the interior of the continent suffers drought and eventually desertification.

    • @Robbyrool
      @Robbyrool Місяць тому +1

      So clearly trees were designed by an intelligent creator. To marvel at the design and not acknowledge the designer is folly.

  • @francobuzzetti9424
    @francobuzzetti9424 9 років тому +350

    i love how they all know eachother

    • @cypress1337
      @cypress1337 5 років тому +5

      There is a word for that, business ;)

    • @marcuschiu8615
      @marcuschiu8615 5 років тому +12

      @@cypress1337 how about networking

    • @cypress1337
      @cypress1337 5 років тому +3

      @@marcuschiu8615 Yeah, that.

    • @Anankin12
      @Anankin12 5 років тому

      Na robba incredibbile

    • @fyukfy2366
      @fyukfy2366 5 років тому +9

      Yeah, trees are very social

  • @lukenfoci
    @lukenfoci 5 років тому +2296

    So in short, trees do not bend the laws of physics, trees use the laws of physics cleverly...

    • @JustinL614
      @JustinL614 5 років тому +91

      Sounds like an engineering problem lol

    • @Annibals
      @Annibals 5 років тому +16

      Yes
      They have BRAAAAIIINNNNZZZZ

    • @hazelalexander663
      @hazelalexander663 5 років тому +61

      Still technically bending the laws of physics, just not braking them xD But yes Cleverly using physics.

    • @DANGJOS
      @DANGJOS 5 років тому +10

      What about deciduous trees that lose all their leaves??

    • @dunzek943
      @dunzek943 5 років тому +5

      Trees succc

  • @spottenn
    @spottenn Рік тому +8

    Rewatching 10 years later. Thank you for all the science lessons! And hopeful outlooks!

  • @Ethan7s
    @Ethan7s 2 роки тому +10

    All these years, and this is still one of your best videos.

  • @benjaminfisk7832
    @benjaminfisk7832 8 років тому +381

    I love the video. What I would add is what all that extra 95% of water is doing. It keeps the tree cool by evaporating out like sweat, especially on hot days. And this means the trees regulate temperature around them by absorbing heat energy that would have baked the ground, and putting it into evaporating water molecules. And this extra water vapor that trees gradually put into the atmosphere helps make for more stable cloud formation, rainfall, and climate around them. So the magic of the trees is that a forest actually generates its own rainfall over and over. And cutting down forests removes this stable predictable rainfall. Could you do a video on the water cycle and cutting many trees leads to local climate instability.

    • @Egregius
      @Egregius 5 років тому +24

      I'm surprised noone is mentioning how the transport of water into the tree roots takes with it some dissolved minerals. Sure the tree has active ion pumps for that, but the automatic flow of dissolved salts together with the evaporation is not insignificant!

    • @suprvideo
      @suprvideo 5 років тому +29

      4:29 Why do trees transport so much water if they only use 5% of what they transport?
      The leaves have to have openings to let CO2 in, which also allows water to escape by evaporation, and leaves have to remain moist to transport nutrients and sugars, so the price they pay for survival is to transpire huge amounts of water they never use.
      "To make sugars, plants must absorb CO2 from the atmosphere through small pores in their leaves called stomata. However, when stomata open, water is lost to the atmosphere at a prolific rate relative to the small amount of CO2 absorbed; across plant species an average of 400 water molecules are lost for each CO2 molecule gained. The balance between transpiration and photosynthesis forms an essential compromise in the existence of plants; stomata must remain open to build sugars but risk dehydration in the process...The amount of water lost via transpiration can be incredibly high; a single irrigated corn plant growing in Kansas can use 200 L of water during a typical summer, while some large rainforest trees can use nearly 1200 L of water in a single day!"
      www.nature.com/scitable/knowledge/library/water-uptake-and-transport-in-vascular-plants-103016037

    • @brokentombot
      @brokentombot 5 років тому +5

      Would you say there is a beneficial solvent effect from water doing this? As water is run from roots to leaves it will carry vital nutrients and other molecules the roots have collected and the leaves need. When the water leaves via transpiration it won't take the cargo. So it's a great solvent elevator of sorts.

    • @suprvideo
      @suprvideo 5 років тому +6

      I would think that nature tends to be efficient, and there would have to be very good reason to waste 95% of the water taken in by the roots. Yes, this water would transport solutes, but probably an excess of them that would accumulates in cells and cell walls, using up valuable energy dealing with the excess. ("Excess calcium ions can be accumulated as calcium oxalate crystals in the obliterated phloem or in vacuoles, e.g., in leaf cells - academic.oup.com/treephys/article/30/9/1140/1637967)
      And yes, evaporation would cool the plant, but plants are homeothermic and I don't know if they would be any healthier if cooler. So, I'm no expert, but I think that the main reason plants transpire such an excess of water relative to their needs is to maintain hydration despite the large holes needed to access carbon dioxide which is in very low concentrations in the atmosphere, not to transport adequate solutes or to cool the plant.

    • @haveiszalfaroqie1628
      @haveiszalfaroqie1628 5 років тому +2

      I don't even care if this theory is false and get debunked, somehow. I'd never see trees the same again.

  • @onelazynoob15
    @onelazynoob15 5 років тому +194

    So, here's a follow up question. Can you make a tree explode by injecting air into the xylem tube?

    • @lukaslagter5594
      @lukaslagter5594 4 роки тому +10

      maybe, it would be fun to watch...

    • @asktheetruscans9857
      @asktheetruscans9857 4 роки тому +54

      They explode sometimes when lightning hits them because all that water expands into water vapor and steam.

    • @haroldinho9930
      @haroldinho9930 4 роки тому +20

      ask the Etruscans Euclayptus Trees explode when it has contact with fire,that’s how it spreads it’s seeds

    • @asktheetruscans9857
      @asktheetruscans9857 4 роки тому +7

      @@haroldinho9930 Thanks for the kick a$$ fact...amazing!

    • @mehdiksibi5087
      @mehdiksibi5087 4 роки тому +31

      @@asktheetruscans9857 i reckon most things explode if you hit them with a lighning bolt

  • @suspicioussand
    @suspicioussand 2 місяці тому +2

    This was published 11 YEARS AGO, and he still makes good content

  • @woutervanr
    @woutervanr Рік тому +9

    Awesome. Every tree is a piece of art! Knowing this and how good trees are for cooling down cities it's insane that we put concrete and asphalt everywhere and think we can substitute the genius that is a tree with AC.

  • @KieranLeCam
    @KieranLeCam 8 років тому +226

    Maybe we find the conclusion to these video so amazing because we vastly underestimate the complexity of all the things arounds us.

    • @KieranLeCam
      @KieranLeCam 8 років тому +5

      And the universe is vaslty more complex than humans. Goes to show how much we think we know.

    • @Dotoctovo
      @Dotoctovo 8 років тому

      +Kieran Le Cam a video like this but about dark matter. Maybe in hundred years so we won't see it. That fact kills me.

    • @KieranLeCam
      @KieranLeCam 8 років тому

      Dotoctovo We have to learn to let go of what we can't know. Besides, it may take less than 100 years to figure it out. :)

    • @oldm9228
      @oldm9228 5 років тому +1

      @@KieranLeCam "the universe is vaslty more complex than humans" depends on how you look at it. The human brain can be considered the most complex object currently known in the universe.

    • @KieranLeCam
      @KieranLeCam 5 років тому +2

      @@oldm9228 True. But is the universe not the brain + the rest of the universe? What I meant was despite how we consider things to be complex, the fact we know so little about what's out there goes to show our idea of what is complex may simply be utterly wrong.

  • @DraRed73
    @DraRed73 5 років тому +262

    One of my favourites. I'm glad youtube threw it back at me again.

    • @NoSkates
      @NoSkates 5 років тому +4

      The algorithm in effect. I've ended up here again, along with those giving you a thumbs up.

  • @WeLoudMusic
    @WeLoudMusic 3 роки тому +7

    Dude I love you videos I watch every single one of them on every occasion because I learn so much out of them. Now that that is said , I noticed a left/right ear balance default in a lot of em , making watching it troublesome when doing so with headphones . Not here to bitch around you're great and I love your channel keep up the good work and thank you for the amazing content!

  • @KCphilippi
    @KCphilippi 2 роки тому +2

    Found this channel about a year ago 2020. So cool to find these and see the growth. Love this vid!🥰🤓

  • @code913.
    @code913. 3 роки тому +2009

    "Why should there be a height limit?"
    _Minecrafters liked that_

    • @ethanlawrence5973
      @ethanlawrence5973 3 роки тому +28

      Then crashed

    • @jarblewarble
      @jarblewarble 2 роки тому +6

      I wish the Cubic Chunks mod were included in vanilla Minecraft.

    • @TekExplorer
      @TekExplorer 2 роки тому +6

      @@jarblewarble preformance is a real concern... though - height limit is no longer capped at 256 - It can be changed now. not sure if there is a limit at how high that customizable range can be though

    • @Qwerty-nj9jc
      @Qwerty-nj9jc 2 роки тому +15

      @@TekExplorer well cubic chunks makes the Hight limit form -infinity to infinity, and makes chunks 16x16x16 instead of 16x256x16, it also allows chunks to on top of each other, also, just for some context of how it would load, lets say you have a render distance of 16, horizontally it would load 16 chunks in every direction, loading the full 65536 blocks in that chunk, but with cubic chunks it also loads 16 chunks vertically, loading only 4096 blocks per chunk, so with cubic chunks you load 131072 blocks on spawn, and in vanilla minecraft you load 2097152 blocks on spawn, and because of this cubic chunks makes the game run better AND makes the build height infinite.

    • @kitycatrggaming5228
      @kitycatrggaming5228 2 роки тому

      @@TekExplorer coooolllllll :DDDDDDDD

  • @thenew4559
    @thenew4559 5 років тому +261

    So, in short...trees are the most powerful straws on Earth.

    • @Jusjamin
      @Jusjamin 3 роки тому +13

      タメル that sounded weird...

    • @WoWhistorian
      @WoWhistorian 3 роки тому +6

      @@whannabi "sup bb. you can't believe how hard I can suck." - Ents meetings the hobbits, probably.

    • @jdog7668
      @jdog7668 3 роки тому

      I will make trees blow me now

  • @davidbudd3789
    @davidbudd3789 2 роки тому +5

    Brilliant. As a hobby woodworker I’m fascinated by trees and how they grow and how each one has unique grain patterns. This is another amazing aspect of trees. Thank you for making this!

  • @alexross367
    @alexross367 Місяць тому

    All these old videos started popping up on my feed, I’m pleased

  • @bloodaid
    @bloodaid 5 років тому +157

    Me at 2AM: Time to go to sleep
    UA-cam: Before you do, learn about why trees are tall
    Me: But why?
    UA-cam: You gotta

    • @Marksman123771
      @Marksman123771 5 років тому +6

      Can confirm, currently 2:30 and just learned it's not capilary action.

    • @ryanvess6162
      @ryanvess6162 5 років тому +1

      @@Marksman123771 reading this at 2:30.

  • @Metallislayer1
    @Metallislayer1 5 років тому +457

    S U P E R S U C C
    "I will never look at trees the same way again."

    • @lumi2030
      @lumi2030 5 років тому +6

      S U P E R Z U C C

    • @maxbrinker9333
      @maxbrinker9333 4 роки тому +3

      Mackenzie Coombe It sure is amazing how it was designed, what are the chances?-Impossible it’s literally an arrow in the ground pointing to a creator

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 4 роки тому +5

      @@maxbrinker9333 Not really. It's many arrows pointing out many small things that come together in a big way. You start with a small plant that works with the same basic mechanisms but operates within reasonable margins for error. Then you let the small plants compete for sunlight, and over millions of year, one of the plants will find one change that allows it to grow just a bit higher than the other ones. This plant will get more light, reproduce, and pass on the change. At the end you have a finely tuned mechanical masterpiece that reliably uses capillary action to bring water straight up for 100 m.
      A creator would have used compartments.

    • @DanKoning777
      @DanKoning777 3 роки тому

      @@maxbrinker9333 // Amen; to God be the Glory [Romans 1 v20]

    • @DanKoning777
      @DanKoning777 3 роки тому

      @@eljanrimsa5843 // Who initiated the *arrows* existence, then dictated its ability and function? Where did the *first small plant* even come from? Who designed the *basic mechanisms* you speak of? Who set the boundaries, of *reasonable margins for error* to function? Who created the sun Eljan; Who *allows* its placement to literally be set the perfect distance away so that "all" that has life can be sustained as they *reliably* use *sunlight* and *reproduce to pass on the change* which is seen in the *"finely tuned mechanical masterpieces"* all around us; Who, chance? *Not really.*
      Oh, lets not forget the *"theory"* of evolution: "...and over millions of year, one of the plants will find one change that allows it to..."
      If you're not afraid to watch here are some college profs, and their students defending evolution [please don't move the goal post acknowledging what the actual definition of evolution is/was: one species evolving into a completely different species]; all else is adaptation.
      *Evolution vs. God:* ua-cam.com/video/U0u3-2CGOMQ/v-deo.html
      *The Truth About Darwin/The Eyewitness Account of Creation:* www.gty.org/library/sermons-library/80-431
      *Battle For The beginning:* www.gty.org/library/topical-series-library/255/the-battle-for-the-beginning [series]
      *The Theology of Creation:* www.gty.org/library/sermons-library/90-359
      Over the years people have discovered literally millions of everyday fossils, but why doesn't anyone ever find the *"intermediate fossils"* that would prove evolution; why is that? If evolution is true, then there should've literally been millions of intermediate fossils already found by now b/c of the 14 known specie groups identified. When speaking on the "Imperfections in Geological Records" even Darwin complained in his own book, "Origin of Species" where he said quote: there is a "COMPLETE LACK of fossil intermediates in ALL geological records." This is what I'm speaking to, so it begs the question; why are there SO MANY *other* fossils found *everywhere* of all the oldest "known" extinct species, yet there are "ZERO" showing the transition between any of the 14 know species?
      It takes more faith to believe in mans "theory" of evolution than this: In the beginning GOD. Genesis 1 v1 *Truth is a stubborn thing.*
      *The Gospel of Jesus Christ:* www.gty.org/library/sermons-library/81-96 - www.gty.org/library/sermons-library/47-39/

  • @Talalx17
    @Talalx17 Рік тому +2

    I remember being taught about the water cycle, and how things as complicated and energy intensive as desalination and cold storage were being done virtually free of cost in nature. The convention was that the major source of water vapour is evapourated sea water (desalination) and other water bodies. Thinking back, it blows my mind that millions and millions of trees are also contributing to rain and snow (nature's cold storage system). It really puts things into perspective.

    • @Shvetsario
      @Shvetsario 10 місяців тому

      I already knew trees had to release moisture, that's how we get clouds on hot days.

  • @_ChatSoCute_
    @_ChatSoCute_ Місяць тому

    11 years ago and his content is still goated.

  • @OG_Hera
    @OG_Hera 8 років тому +177

    I really wish these people were the celebrities of our time. They are really smart! Derek, John and Hank Green, Vsauce guys....the whole bunch of people who share knowledge with the world on UA-cam. You guys are the true heroes of our day.

    • @Christian_Prepper
      @Christian_Prepper 6 років тому

      Grace Owino is Hank Green related to Laci Green?

    • @vryow9086
      @vryow9086 2 роки тому

      Your wish came true my friend hank is a celebrity now

    • @screwyourhandle
      @screwyourhandle 2 роки тому +1

      @Hubert Jasieniecki Not being Christopher Columbus is one of the traits I most admire in people

    • @screwyourhandle
      @screwyourhandle 2 роки тому +1

      We idolize actors and pop stars, people who take us out of our reality rather than leading us deeper into it

  • @Kerbhunter_Alex
    @Kerbhunter_Alex 9 років тому +758

    Negative pressure?... Mind blown? naaah
    *mind sucked*

  • @AKG58Z
    @AKG58Z 2 місяці тому +3

    I took 11 years for UA-cam to be advanced enough to recommend me this vid.

  • @thephilosopher13
    @thephilosopher13 2 місяці тому

    I really wish this were a longer video. 10/10. Revisit, recommended.

  • @Wordsnwood
    @Wordsnwood 9 років тому +146

    what an amazing world we live in...
    thank you for explaining!

    • @JohnzeeMr
      @JohnzeeMr 6 років тому

      Imotep: Nice but kids this days are just playing expand more on the explanation, site a scientific journal and show hi-tech stuff to back real equations if possible, without mathematics the beauty of your claims is hallow. Why back in my days we had a vacuum not just for measuring columns in Egyptian temples but transporting huge blocks of stones up the pyramid. Check out how the pyramid where build theories. Science needs to be taken seriously otherwise when people just play we have a health care industry out of control because people are just going to use drugs and even stimpacks to assassinate NPC instead of doing the real quest and have fun in the process. Oh where is the humanity. Merry Christmas Syria thankfully Santa is no longer dropping Yuletide bombs over there.

  • @vanncio2262
    @vanncio2262 5 років тому +940

    0:15 height limit is 256 blocks,duh.
    Do your research before making such baseless accusations.

    • @jasonk.
      @jasonk. 5 років тому +31

      Minecraft jokes 😂

    • @mojoo215
      @mojoo215 5 років тому +37

      But 1 meter is 1 mc block. So he's not doing no wrong. But them trees that go over 256meters.... them bastards

    • @mojoo215
      @mojoo215 5 років тому +11

      @@edencastillo4417 NO.. YOU HAVE FOUND MY SECRET. DON'T BAN ME FROM YOUR CHRISTIAN MINECRAFT SERVER. I WON'T SAY F-R-E-A-K OR H-E-C-K AGAIN. AND I WON'T USE MODE I PROMISE

    • @vanncio2262
      @vanncio2262 5 років тому +5

      @@edencastillo4417 IQ 256

    • @nzfoy3568
      @nzfoy3568 5 років тому +1

      @@jasonk. Oh really?

  • @brett2themax
    @brett2themax 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for a fantastic explanation of Tugor Pressure. Ive known about this for years but have never taken the time to understand the mechanics of how it works. The best visual depiction is droopy leaves of thirsty plants.

  • @mikeperks1175
    @mikeperks1175 Рік тому

    top quality - I am a tree ecophysiologist scotland, Prof Sperry is one of my academic heroes - well done in explaining these difficult concepts in an open and clear way

  • @neelparmar6690
    @neelparmar6690 7 років тому +79

    I love how this channel takes a simple concept most science students/academics feel they know an the answer to and then goes in detail to find the actual explanation

  • @ashishsharma-og4nl
    @ashishsharma-og4nl 5 років тому +71

    Watching this after 6 years and still a damn fine video

  • @frostjune6072
    @frostjune6072 10 місяців тому +1

    they do all that and then communicate and share resources through fungi too. life is genuinely incredible

  • @wesmartin8081
    @wesmartin8081 2 роки тому

    I think this is my favorite video you've ever made thumbs up for all the hard work man you always do great keep it up

  • @slimhey
    @slimhey 5 років тому +389

    UA-cam 2012: Nobody cares about trees
    UA-cam 2019: BRO CHECK OUT THIS VID, ITS LIT AF

  • @IanChristopher
    @IanChristopher 5 років тому +61

    See, even trees work so hard to purify the air

    • @johanandhira5429
      @johanandhira5429 4 роки тому +4

      And I'll work even harder so trees wouldn't ran out of carbon dioxide

  • @LoblueHaze
    @LoblueHaze 11 місяців тому

    I'm so glad that this guy learned how to equalize audio levels in the video.

  • @muhanuzimark3189
    @muhanuzimark3189 2 роки тому +1

    Dude all along uv been on utube. .what have I been missing ? ?...big respect.

  • @logic_playz500
    @logic_playz500 8 років тому +139

    how exactly did I end up here at 2 AM?

    • @pinglers
      @pinglers 8 років тому

      I know right? Me too

    • @inuyasha1389
      @inuyasha1389 7 років тому

      I can tell you don't like trees

    • @Attlanttizz
      @Attlanttizz 7 років тому +1

      Because you couldn't sleep?

    • @joaquinclavijo7052
      @joaquinclavijo7052 7 років тому +1

      I'm here at 2:37 am

    • @YOM2_UB
      @YOM2_UB 7 років тому +7

      You had the combination of tiredness and curiosity. I find that curiosity tends to take over in those situations.

  • @pseudogamer6685
    @pseudogamer6685 8 років тому +272

    trees are amazing

    • @dehspaaps1290
      @dehspaaps1290 8 років тому

      k

    • @melvin2136
      @melvin2136 6 років тому +1

      My rhyme of the day:
      Trees are amazing.
      We littered breathe the air they are creating.

    • @0-Kirby-0
      @0-Kirby-0 6 років тому +2

      I think trees suck.
      I'll see myself out, thanks.

    • @JohnzeeMr
      @JohnzeeMr 6 років тому

      Imotep: Nice but kids this days are just playing expand more on the explanation, site a scientific journal and show hi-tech stuff to back real equations if possible, without mathematics the beauty of your claims is hallow. Why back in my days we had a vacuum not just for measuring columns in Egyptian temples but transporting huge blocks of stones up the pyramid. Check out how the pyramid where build theories. Science needs to be taken seriously otherwise when people just play we have a health care industry out of control because people are just going to use drugs and even stimpacks to assassinate NPC instead of doing the real quest and have fun in the process. Oh where is the humanity. Merry Christmas Syria thankfully Santa is no longer dropping Yuletide bombs over there.

  • @raventerrorz6302
    @raventerrorz6302 Місяць тому

    11 years later and it’s still good

  • @YamaKinoko
    @YamaKinoko 2 роки тому

    one of my favorite videos youve made, thank you!

  • @tomnicoll7904
    @tomnicoll7904 5 років тому +438

    Exam Question - *'Why are trees so tall?'*
    Me - 0:11

    • @soberhippie
      @soberhippie 5 років тому +29

      Trees are tall by definition. If it ain't tall, it ain't a tree.

    • @Wowluckylolz
      @Wowluckylolz 5 років тому +9

      3:10

    • @ahexagonian1800
      @ahexagonian1800 5 років тому +5

      Me : 4:46

    • @jonathanlange1339
      @jonathanlange1339 5 років тому

      @@soberhippie
      By wich definition? Wikipedia?
      What is with bonsai trees?

    • @soberhippie
      @soberhippie 5 років тому +1

      Jonathan Lange Fair point. However, bonsai trees are meant to look as if they are full-sized trees. Again, if you plant a bonsai in open soil and stop trimming it, it will grow into its natural shape

  • @rezahoque8655
    @rezahoque8655 3 роки тому +57

    I try to learn something new everyday. This was today's lesson. Even after 7years it still blew my mind!

  • @manuelmejiagonzalez2870
    @manuelmejiagonzalez2870 2 роки тому

    This is just great at pointing out the high level of proccessing specialization plants have with our atmospehere. It's the 3rd time i'm watching it and its still pretty great.

  • @Rhyex
    @Rhyex 2 роки тому +5

    my left ear liked this video

  • @agentstache135
    @agentstache135 5 років тому +109

    “Trees need to transport water from roots into their top most branches to survive”
    *California Redwoods (and some other species):* hold my -beer- fog.

  • @viktorlazarev2.099
    @viktorlazarev2.099 8 років тому +929

    i learn more in the internet than at school

  • @lufaol
    @lufaol Місяць тому

    This is literally one of my favorite videos

  • @reme7903
    @reme7903 11 місяців тому

    To say this is AMAZING is an understatement. I've never even thought about this. Thanks for bringing this to my attention. Nature is truly incredible!

  • @Froggability
    @Froggability 3 роки тому +193

    The second amazing thing is : how do the roots pump moisture out of what can be half dry soil ?
    What human pump could duplicate that?

    • @koborkutya7338
      @koborkutya7338 3 роки тому +75

      ...and all that mechanism, know-how, capability, resilience and miracle is in the 1 inch seed dropped on the forest floor.

    • @stephengere3937
      @stephengere3937 2 роки тому +15

      @@koborkutya7338 makes ya wonder, doesn't it?

    • @astgfrallah771
      @astgfrallah771 2 роки тому +5

      "The example of those who take allies other than Allah is like that of the spider who takes a home. And indeed, the weakest of homes is the home of the spider, if they only knew." (Quran 29:41)
      This is the tafsir point of view.
      Scientific research showed lately that it is the female spider who builds the home not the male, and in the Verse of the Quran the female conjugation of the verb to take/to make (a dwelling/a home) in Arabic ( اتَّخَذَتْ).
      After that the female spider search for a male to fertilse her then she kills and eats the male.
      Therefore some scholars say this is the reason why this home is weak. Its weakness isn't a material weakness because the material of the web is one of the strongest in nature. A synthetic copy of it is known as Kevlar. But the weakness mentioned here is the lack of peace, mercy and love which makes a good and strong home according to the Verse 21 in Surat Ar-Rum (Surah 30).

    • @vulekv93
      @vulekv93 2 роки тому +32

      @@astgfrallah771
      Get that trash out of here. Muhammad was an illiterate pedophile.

    • @aloedg8058
      @aloedg8058 2 роки тому +15

      @@astgfrallah771 big leap on tbe spider thing also no one converted from a youtube comment

  • @AndyChamberlainMusic
    @AndyChamberlainMusic 5 років тому +62

    While I miss the old title and thumbnail, getting more people to see this is a win

    • @deathbeast2439
      @deathbeast2439 5 років тому +2

      What did it use to be

    • @AndyChamberlainMusic
      @AndyChamberlainMusic 5 років тому +8

      @@deathbeast2439 "The most amazing thing about trees" and the thumbnail was a picture looking straight up through a circle of ~8 trees on a sunny day, no text or anything, just the photo

    • @deathbeast2439
      @deathbeast2439 5 років тому +1

      @@AndyChamberlainMusic Ok, I can see why you miss it then

    • @itsdonaldo
      @itsdonaldo 5 років тому +1

      @@AndyChamberlainMusic When I see "amazing" in a title, I think it's bad click bait, because it's an overused word on youtube. "Amazing" videos never are. But this video was very well done, and to be honest it was amazing. I like the new title better though. I especially enjoyed the on camera hypotheses'.

    • @bobafettjr85
      @bobafettjr85 5 років тому +2

      I was wondering why this had a clickbaity title. He didn't use to have clickbaity titles.

  • @JRischill
    @JRischill Рік тому

    No matter how old a Veritasium video is, it's always consistent with its quality and alwasy relevant

  • @mrgj7025
    @mrgj7025 Місяць тому

    What a good video made over a decade ago. Great content!

  • @Haitchpeasauce
    @Haitchpeasauce 8 років тому +38

    I was hoping CGP Grey's face would be revealed in this episode.

    • @carultch
      @carultch 3 роки тому

      He has revealed his face before
      i.imgur.com/qg5bmEN.jpg

  • @unicornpoop20
    @unicornpoop20 5 років тому +71

    This is called the cohesion tension model and it was first proposed by two Irish scientists, John Joly and Henry Dixon! :) ☘️

    • @AJAYKUMARSAGAR
      @AJAYKUMARSAGAR 4 роки тому

      yeah it was a theory to explain the 'Ascent Of Sap'

    • @JeanMarceaux
      @JeanMarceaux 4 роки тому

      These Irish scientists were later beaten up for being too smart for Dublin.

  • @christianxfb
    @christianxfb 3 роки тому +6

    that was amazing! I respect nature more than ever before!

  • @numberjack2286
    @numberjack2286 2 роки тому

    Fantastic video, congratulations! Keep up this great work!

  • @ale.salas.m
    @ale.salas.m 5 років тому +93

    I saw this video a long time ago. It just came up again and watched it. Really amazing video. Is it possible to re-subscribe? Haha

    • @nihonsuki
      @nihonsuki 3 роки тому

      Same here. I watched it, wrote a comment, then UA-cam reminded me I had commented 7 years ago!

  • @ChungRts
    @ChungRts 5 років тому +6

    I think this is my favorite video of yours. Still come back to it.

  • @REDv350
    @REDv350 2 роки тому

    So beautiful how a small detail can have such a large influence

  • @barakgooroo5082
    @barakgooroo5082 2 роки тому

    NO I CANNOT BELIEVE HOW AMAZING THIS IS MATE

  • @geeklemeanikens
    @geeklemeanikens 3 роки тому +141

    Hank can tell that his answer is wrong before he even says it. He knows Derek is going to give some wild explanation haha

  • @DustinBoden
    @DustinBoden 10 років тому +14

    taught me more than highschool ever did

  • @kemarbuchanan2657
    @kemarbuchanan2657 2 місяці тому

    This video is now 11 yrs old in 2024 and it's still amazing. I learned more than I expected.

  • @davidletasi3322
    @davidletasi3322 3 роки тому +1

    Impressive! Amazing presentation. Loved tree before but even more now! Great physics versus biology lesson.

  • @ConnorNorng
    @ConnorNorng 9 років тому +52

    *"It just, evaporates."*

    • @ConnorNorng
      @ConnorNorng 8 років тому

      David S. *Is it really?*

    • @ConnorNorng
      @ConnorNorng 8 років тому

      David S. I guess I'll use the ellipses then. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

    • @ConnorNorng
      @ConnorNorng 8 років тому +1

      David S. I don't know how to edit a comment so I'll just leave it.

    • @brokenmatrix366
      @brokenmatrix366 8 років тому +1

      +Connor Norng Hover over your comment and to the right there will be a circle with a triangle in it, then click on that and it shows an edit option! :)

    • @mtnmotoadv
      @mtnmotoadv 8 років тому +1

      +Connor Norng It's as if trees are nature's water purifiers

  • @CabelCabelCabel
    @CabelCabelCabel 5 років тому +57

    Only one question remains: Why the audio of this video is louder in the left channel?

    • @GeneralSorrow
      @GeneralSorrow 4 роки тому +7

      Yes, it was annoying. Headphone user.

    • @kaiwalpanchal5872
      @kaiwalpanchal5872 3 роки тому +2

      some cheap point shoot camera didn't probably have program to separate them or just a stupid codec

    • @mcharbo8726
      @mcharbo8726 3 роки тому +4

      Yup.... made me check my earbuds..

  • @HouseDadLife
    @HouseDadLife 2 роки тому

    9 years later, still blowing me away.

  • @ngcastronerd4791
    @ngcastronerd4791 2 роки тому +2

    A true marvel of engineering and it's been around for over 300 million years.

  • @flywithholyspirit
    @flywithholyspirit 6 років тому +13

    I have been asking this question for years, thank you.

  • @steffliot3788
    @steffliot3788 5 років тому +11

    Thanks a lot Derek. I was searching for this answer only for a month.

  • @thaleslenin
    @thaleslenin Місяць тому

    It is about asking questions that leads us to understanding what prevents us for answering it in the first place. In one word: learning.

  • @tylercole7481
    @tylercole7481 Рік тому +1

    I'm an arborist / tree climber
    , and this is inspiring me to spread information on this . Taking into account the season when trees are pulling more water ( summer v. Winter ) and spread more safety in my Industry. Crazy this ten years old and I haven't heard this theory tbh

  • @klot2675
    @klot2675 5 років тому +15

    the evaporation of water is quite important, this helps make clouds!

    • @jeffborders5526
      @jeffborders5526 3 роки тому +1

      Water vapor is the most potent greenhouse gas. Replacing a few co2 for orders of magnitude more greenhouse effect. Trees cause global warming

    • @jamesramplin8124
      @jamesramplin8124 3 роки тому

      @@jeffborders5526 I feel like theres always a constant amount of water vapor in the atmosphere. If it's too humid then water can't evaporate. Without trees this would happen anyway. In actuallity they probablu store some of the water for a while so there is less in the atmosphere.
      Also I don't think it is a "stronger" greenhouse gas. I think theres just a lot more of it

  • @25ksubswithnovideoschallen26
    @25ksubswithnovideoschallen26 5 років тому +46

    2012: Super Sucked
    2019: SUPER SUCCED

  • @jasonhorn901
    @jasonhorn901 Рік тому +1

    Great video! LOVED IT!

  • @whatsup7033
    @whatsup7033 3 роки тому +1

    Very good quality, even in 2021.

  • @ammarnanaa6657
    @ammarnanaa6657 5 років тому +6

    Amazing video. I always thought it was capillary action. Never knew it was this complex. Nature never ceases to amaze us. Keep up the flow of quality videos. Thanks.

  • @redhahabib4693
    @redhahabib4693 5 років тому +7

    I really appreciate what you made us learn here. Thank you very much for these efforts.

  • @ThatCat-aclism
    @ThatCat-aclism 2 роки тому

    I was just discussing how to use negative pressures the other day, this was incredible in it's simplicity. Thanks for yet another important science moment.

    • @astronomical5959
      @astronomical5959 2 роки тому +2

      Me who still didn’t understand the whole negative pressure thing😬😬

  • @SaMusz73
    @SaMusz73 Рік тому

    Had missed this one and it's great.

  • @drabberfrog
    @drabberfrog 5 років тому +86

    Tree: Grows 100 meters tall
    Gravity: Am I a joke to you?

    • @endi3386
      @endi3386 5 років тому +7

      Andrew Siegel: shitty overused joke
      Originality: Am I a joke to you?

    • @Bjarhur
      @Bjarhur 5 років тому +1

      Did you know there are trees higher then 100 meters ;p they can't get water bey the way its said in this vidio. They get water from the mouist in the air. They live close to the sea where there is often fog evry morning and drink it. #facts!

    • @Bjarhur
      @Bjarhur 5 років тому +1

      @@johnperic6860 awesome facts. I will do my best to rember them :D

    • @mightyatom1404
      @mightyatom1404 5 років тому

      @@Bjarhur good point. Dew!

    • @mightyatom1404
      @mightyatom1404 5 років тому

      @@johnperic6860 do the crevices in the bark allow moisture to travel evenly down the trunk, maybe?

  • @TheFidgetmaster
    @TheFidgetmaster 10 років тому +12

    If the trees contain this huge negative pressure, and the only thing keeping the water from boiling is the absence of an air pocket, would cutting into the upper reaches of an extremely tall tree cause a spontaneous explosion of steam as air breaches the xylem tubes?

    • @Sarthex
      @Sarthex 10 років тому +2

      I was just wondering this myself as well... :p

  • @abdirisaqjacda9305
    @abdirisaqjacda9305 Місяць тому

    Surprising how 11 yrs old video is much simpler and informative than ours now

  • @clementboutaric3952
    @clementboutaric3952 11 місяців тому

    I had a physic exam once where we had to model this. It was so hard that I did not realize the implication of all of this before today. Thank you !