As someone raised in a religious household and was only taught what the young earth creationists wanted us to believe, THANK YOU! My mind is truly blown. There was so much I didn’t get to learn. Finding this video is better than Christmas morning.
Look up Hugh Ross. I am still a practicing Christian and I find nothing whatsoever that suggests faith and a science are mutually exclusive. Yes the Universe started 14 billion years ago through the big bang, yes the earth formed 4.5 billion years ago through accretion, yes life started as a single proto-cell and evolved into what we see today. God is simply the intelligence behind it all and those were simply His tools. I know many people can not accept this - for whatever reason they need that conflict. All I can do is keep an open mind and be willing to meet people half way. Some can not imagine a life where they don't look down their noses at the faithful. Many of the faithful can not imagine a world where they do not look down their noses at the atheist. Sounds like their problem to me.
The @DapperDinosaur channel here on UA-cam does interviews with people who left creationism. You might want to do an interview with him. I did one myself, "Leaving Young Earth Creationism with William D"
I like that you actually corrected the Dunkleosteus body length because that video was made before that paper came out that corrected its assumed body length.
@@Eye_Exist Well the new equation used to calculate body size is based on head measurements and has been proven to work for the living the fish. So it probably also applied to Dunk
@@Eye_Exist i am more inclined to trust the results of a research than a politician's word. One expands our knowledge of the world while the other one often serves their own self-interest and lines their own pockets.
@@Eye_Existwhat makes one guess more credible than the other is the amount of evidence for it, theories for prehistoric animals changes all the time as new evidence is discovered. And no you're right, it's not a fact, it never is with these sort of things, but it is the best guess of experts at this time
@@michaeltnk1135as a truck driver with a GED from southeast Georgia as well as an UA-cam video expert on paleontology, I can confirm that what you said is correct, that is how they measured it
Idk why, but out of all the species that died out in the late permian, the trilobites are always the one that dissapoints me the most. Those guys survived so long and through so much, they were little troops just chugging along. Wish they could've made it just a little longer to meet us. Or more accurately us meet them. They're also kind of adorable in some weird way
In a way they still exist, the horseshoe crab. Hopefully the bio industry don’t extinct them cause their blood is used in medicine. Climate change is another problem with more carbon getting absorbed in the ocean as it increases in the air, besides temperature.
@JJ-fq4nl I just saw a horseshoe crab on the beach 2 days ago. Unfortunately he was dead. 1:54 😔 Hoping it's just nature taking its course, but you always wonder if it's from something humans did. 😒😠
@@cv6442 A lot of scientists argue that we are currently going through a sixth mass extinction event in the Holocene Extinction due to human influence on the environment.
I made a super realistic clay sculpture of a trilobite for my earth science teacher. Turns out she had a fossil of one and she would rather have a trilobite sculpture than a t rex.
I don't understand why this video has become my "can't sleep" watch, but your voice has soothed me for countless nights over the last several months. Entertained me during my waking hours, too. I love your vids but man, I have really glommed onto this one. Thank you for all of your work!
Same here! Although it's also helped convince me to shift to geology/environmental science (that and Gutsick Gibbon's recent overview of the Big 5 Mass Extinctions).
This so much this, on any sleepless night I just flick this on, listen to a video I've listened to a couple hundred times now, and get soothed to sleep
The fact that you went and modified the part about Dunkleosteus for this extended video is amazing, and shows this is more than just "Take the old videos and stitch them together"
I haven’t got there yet, or watched the original but 1 update that’s like, a few minutes (guessing) out of 2:47+ minutes. So 🤷🏾 I you if a streamer watched it but only added that much content I bet they’d get an auto strike
I first viewed this video back in January or February. At the time, I lived a very day-to-day kind of life and never made the time to think too much about these things. This video changed that. I was so enamored and fascinated by how much we could say about the formation of our planet and life. Something inside me changed. I now have an entire shelf of books that cover the history of our planet, geology, and biology. I’m looking into going back to school and getting a degree. I want to be a part of earths story in some way shape or form other than through a passive existence. Thank you for researching and publishing this video. It really is an inspiration.
People like you are what keeps me going. I will be honest, 2024 has not been good to me. But it seems like every time I have a moment where I am feeling down one of you come in clutch to lift my spirits without even knowing it. Today that person is you, so thank you! ❤️ I hope you enjoy the content and just know more is coming soon.
@@LightBlueVans Thank you so much for all the support. I am trying to get back to it, I really am... I need to try to find a topic that I can get really excited about because those are the videos that come the most easy to me. ❤️
@@PaleoAnalysisThis year has been crap to me as well. I think I found your channel about a year ago,and I really enjoy what you do. I hope the year has started to treat you better,man.
As someone who can’t keep track of a single day, I plead with you to put together another “SUPERCUT “compilation of your history of earth videos;because I am not sure in what order to watch the ones you have posted. I absolutely love the way you explain your content.
I first binged this series when I was stuck in a terrible, terrible job and it gave me great appreciation for things before the dinosaurs. Now I'm at a better job but currently recovering from a bad stomach bug, watching this again while doing simple tasks. Those videos bring so much joy to me. Thank you once again!
@@BassGoBomb I mean, the time before the dinosaurs is definitely prehistoric, no arguing with that. Sort of how a map of pangea is technically a map of the world before 1945.
@@mikepencestoes it’s just a misuse of the word. Prehistory means before written language, so about 6K years ago. Pre-dinosaur is 65M+ years ago. Those numbers aren’t even in the same scale so it sounds weird to say that.
As a very interested non scientist I appreciate the content of your videos. I have watched many other videos and I find that your videos explain the subject that my 84 year old brain can understand .
The algo recommended this series when you were on the Devonian period. I got hooked on all your other content, I've watched the series from the beginning, and the same for newer episodes as they came out. It blows my mind that an hour was dedicated to the Permian, looking at the supercut timeline. Forget the dinosaurs for a minute, I'm pretty sure epochs from the Cenozoic will end up being like 30 minutes to an hour long depending on how you split it up. I'm so excited for what comes next! Keep up the great work dude. I seldom interact with content creators I enjoy out of laziness; your content honestly made me break out of that habit and do the whole like+comment thing.
this series has carried me through a really deep depression this year. I've watched the whole thing at least 20 times. thank you for the hard work you put into these and all of your videos. thank you especially for going into the precambrian time periods. it is pretty hard to find decent information about it and the way you present it is so easy to digest and fascinating. I totally understand the perfectionism about this series but please know all of your content is amazing. don't be too hard on yourself. and thank you so much again
My 5 year old son is homeschooled, and you, my friend, just became his history teacher. Thank you for sharing your knowledge in such a digestible way. Your channel is awesome.👌
@@FreedomAndersonI did it because my husband and I were teachers, and both our kids were special needs and our extremely rural school system was legitimately inappropriate for them. Some homeschool because they travel a lot, and others prefer the full time remote option. Of course, there's also a lot who do it to isolate, which is not ideal.
The Great Dying in particular hit my younger self very, very hard. I attribute my learning of it to be one of the reasons I "sobered" up to mortality even in a family where tragedy was fairly common. Obviously it had no effect on my survivor's guilt, but it challenged the 11-year old me to truly absorb the definition of luck. It's been a painful ride for my human ancestors to make it to me, but something like the Great Dying just hit different in a way you don't really see outside of fiction.
I totally get that! I’ve been struggling to ditch my young-earth conditioning and learn real science. The extinction cycles have lately hit hard. But now I see them now as a wonderful story of how geology and biology interact from the beginning to shape our world. And we’re the first species to become aware of how we’re interacting with that cycle. And I’m feeling more empowered to make a difference in the planet’s future, to try to correct our mistakes and direct our activities in a more constructive direction!
you should think of mass extinctions as reshuffling the deck basically. if those hadn't happened, mammals, nevermind humans might not have ever come into existence. i will say that people that say we're overdue for another mass extinction are morons though. the universe doesn't operate on a time table.
Thank you so much for the support! The History of the Earth series is one of my biggest projects and I am thrilled to see so many people are enjoying it!
@@PaleoAnalysisIt's my absolute favorite paleontology video. I've watched it through about six times now. Thank you! The recent Triassic video was just as great. Can't wait to see the rest of your series, though the Mesozoic and Cenozoic!
I love this entire series, and yes I sat here and watched all 2 hours over again even though I watched all the original videos when they were first released. I can't wait for the next chapter
I’ve watched this about a dozen times now. I desperately want the next chapter, because I really love the Triassic!! We had two different farms in NC that coincidentally were within walking distance of two important sites for pre- and post-CAMP rift fossils! It’s an odd coincidence but probably explainable in that both places were specifically sheep farms- we tend to put sheep on land that’s inappropriate for crops and other livestock. Looking into this informally, sheep farming up the mid-atlantic, follows the ancient rift valley that’s interspersed with CAMP intrusions. The soil is thin and rocky and erodes SUPER fast, but grows pasture grass quite well. So the farms there favored sheep, horses, and tobacco. It’s absolutely hilarious to think now that when we were attempting to fence fields and cursing the ubiquitous rocks, that we were throwing around chunks of rock that contributed to one of the major mass extinctions. I actually saved some of these rocks from our last place, and use them to decorate my garden here where the native rocks look TOTALLY different. It’s absolutely WILD that our historic land use follows geology that was often laid down during, or shortly after the events in this video.
And to wake back up to. I woke up faster just to see what I had missed, even though I had stayed up most of last night, then finished watching through the description of the great dying and to the end of this superb video. Time for a rewatch real soon. I feel refreshed and I liked and subscribed 'All'.
I've watched a LOT of videos about the development of the earth (Chris White goes into a lot of detail) but I really like this one. I can read the descriptions, the fonts are large. The words are pronounced so I can try to learn the odd names. The pictures are good. There's good explanation of the ages, eons, periods, etc. Subscribed!
This is one of my top ten favourite UA-cam videos of all time. Seriously, I can sit down for the full video and watch it repeatedly without getting bored.
Thank you for this "Super Cut". Being close to 50, I've finally had questions that religion and school couldn't answer, but this did. The jokes in the video were on point, very entertaining.
TLC is all about midgets and hoarders, and "discovery" is a ahell of what it once was. They pander to the idiots that our species has become. Hey comet, WE'RE OVER HERE!!!!!! HIT US PLEASE!!!!!!
I love this man and this series. Aside from the podcasts I listen to about dinosaurs and paleontology, I am always waiting patiently to get more content, especially from someone who has great information, and shows a passion for what they do. Keep at it!
I have loved following this series; you've done a great job going through periods in Earth's history that frequently gets overlooked. I must admit even to getting a bit emotional about events like the end of the Permian, even knowing they were necessary events in the timeline that made modern life possible.
This is the single BEST video on all of UA-cam. I probably have watched it all the way through at least ten times. This is my go-to when I have an anxiety attack or get riddled with insomnia. Thank you for taking me on this journey through the history of our planet in such an insightful and entertaining style. I love both you and Tim-Tim. Thank you.
hey Steve, have you heard about this new study where scientists have managed to evolve yeast to being multicellular? In short, they've been trying to unlock the secrets of why multicellular life evolved and while they could get them to combine somewhat they couldn't get any real breakthrough until someone had the idea to reduce available oxygen, and when they did the cells began to join together with strong bonds and some even change to do specific function inside to structure itself. it's pretty interesting (if badly described by myself) so if I have my timeline correct then it's one more thing to thank the anoxic seas of the boring billion for; making multicellular life necessary enough for survival to get us to where we are today.
Finally, time to watch this yet over again... I appreciate the changes like the smoother transitions, the Dunk update and the removal of the sponsor section in the Carboniferous video, overall great job.
Update, still curing my insomnia 1 eon at a time! I've trained myself to fall asleep to this! Please for the love of my mental health never take this down!!!!! ❤❤❤ thank you so so much for amazing content
When I was a kid there was nothing like this. Nothing. You could not learn this outside of specific academia and years of study. This is so phenomenal.
I learned more through this video than I ever did in school. I never knew if any periods prior to the Permian except for the Cambrian and Carboniferous. Earths’ past is so interesting
I'm really glad you decided to make this super cut. I love this series and your narration skills are superb. I've watched this video at least 10 times over by now in the span of 2 weeks. Your work is much appreciated man
This new measure of fish is kinda cool. Sure it halved the horror factor of the Dunkleosteus, but it's a rule that all fish lineages inherited from the first fish.
One of the greatest tragedies of life on earth is that trilobites didn't survive to modern day. I want a pet trlobite so bad, they're such cool little guys
@@alexanderstavroulakis335 You probably shouldn't, considering the apparent impossibilities of breeding them or maintaining them long-term and the damage that collecting does to wild populations. Firefly larvae have a similar look, and are much easier to keep.
I found your channel around the new year and quickly fell in love with it. A clear enthusiasm with an injection of fun with your videos. I had to catch up on many from this series but watched the others on release. I've re-watched this supercut anyway and have enjoyed it just as much as the first time I watched them. Your videos are so accessible to people with any level of interest. Fantastic.
I've downloaded the video so I can watch it whenever I want to with or without internet. And it's one of my favorite videos on UA-cam. Excellent work. Please give us more like this one. And I've lost count on how many times I have watched it. But if I'm having a rough day, it's something that watches, and I know I'll be smiling soon.
@@kalinmirI think they’re saying that a young earther would look at all this and say, “Nah, the real explanation is that: 1) Everything was created in six days 2) All those creatures lived at the same time, and 3) The Permian extinction is actually Noah’s flood.” Which is absolute garbage but hey look, our new US House Speaker (2nd in line to Presidency), is one of the ones who believe that nonsense.
This is my favorite supercut to return to again and again. Perfect for background play when I need to focus or on very low volume when I need help falling asleep.
I casually scrolled down my YT feed and barely paid attention to it. I was just waiting for something to catch my eye... I've almost said ok nothing interesting for now let's get back to listening to my audiobook... but in the very last second I noticed TimTim!!! :D Super excited to watch the entire history in one video... tomorrow lol
This whole series Super Cut is so amazingly done. I could easily see this being shown in schools, your entertaining narration, including your little characters (yay Tim Tim) made it even more engaging. Couldn't stop watching. Can't wait for more. How you don't have more subs is beyond me. (subbed of course)
Hey, I just wanted to say I really love your history of the earth series and I often come back to watching this super cut while playing games or working on stuff ^^
I've read some comments below; very sorry 2024 has not been the best for you. I hope this helps - I've watched almost all AND recommended your videos to friends and co-workers. Keep up the great work - Your efforts matter!!!
This was so good! I hope you receive many great rewards for this. I have been following this channel for around 2 year and I continue to wait for each new video. Thank you💙
I just wanted to add, I accidentally held up the line at the pharmacy, because me and the tech were talking about how much we love your channel. We love your googly eyed avatars, and we got on the subject of the evolutionary benefits and disadvantages of radial symmetry. Echinoderms and their initial lack of symmetry was being discussed, when the other pharmacy patrons, behind me, let themselves be known. I felt pretty bad, at the time, but it made me happy too, because someone in my town also enjoys your content. It made me feel connected to others.
Thank you for the individual videos and compilation. It's nice to see the changes the Earth has gone through and mind-boggling to comprehend the amount of time that has passed.
This is such a fantastic series. One of the true gems of youtube. Its so informative and there's so much there that i've watched through it several times and I still pick up something new every time. ==chefs kiss==
It took several bites to watch it all but I did…and I enjoyed every minute! Highly entertaining, educational and fun (the evolving bit was super effective and cute). I really want to see right up until now. I enjoyed it so much that I subscribed. I don’t know why your channel took so long to find me but I’m glad it did 💕
This is my nightly fall-asleep-video, love your work ❤ I know you're hanging out for 200k subs, but I will watch every video multiple times to make up for it 😭 pls give us more (when you have the time to make it)!
I love this series, so much fun to watch and fascinating to learn all this natural history. I would love to see a video explaining how carbon dating works, to have a better understanding of how all the fossils are placed in time.
Carbon-14 dating is a form of radiometric dating that compares the ratios of Carbon-14 to Carbon-12 and Carbon-13 in a sample. Since living beings breathe those ratios would remain the same as the ratios in the atmosphere when the being was alive but after it dies the Carbon-14 starts to decay and thus the ratios are skewed. So if you know the decay rate of Carbon-14, which is easy to establish experimentally in a lab, and you know the historic concentrations of Carbon-14 in the atmosphere, which we know from ice cores, you can calculate how long ago that thing died. This method is called radiometric dating since we rely on radioactive decay for it. However Carbon-14 dating is limited in it's range and only works for fossils younger than around 40k years IIRC. For dating older fossils or non-organic finds other dating methods like Caesium dating and Light Exposure dating are used. Caesium dating and other forms of radiometric dating work the same as Carbon-14 dating, you can figure out how much of the unstable isotope should be present in the initial sample and then with an experimentally verified decay rate you can calculate how old it is. Light Exposure dating is a method by which we can calculate when an atom was last exposed to light, which is insanely cool but I think the explanation for how it works relies on Quantum mechanics and I don't understand quantum mechanics.
Love this series, I've watched it all many times. Its really nice to have it all in one place!! A suggestion for you that I hope you will find interesting: how about a video on the evolution of jaws? I have no idea how all of the radiodonts were such big predators without them, and so forth. It might be fun!! Thanks again for an excellent video, looking forward to more weirdos of the Triassic!!
I'm a historian. When i teach my 101 course which starts with the ancient world, the first thing i always show is a time line from the big bang to now, zoom in on the beginning of Hadeam Earth, then zoom in on the Paleolithic, then finally on the historical period. The effect on students is quite something to see. All of recorded history and human civilizations is an intense burst of the creative mind of just one species in a minuscule fraction of time. I find that it helps focus their minds on how lucky they are to exist as human beings in these past several millennia.
New this this channel and am enjoying this so much! Great job with the writing, delivery and visuals. And the animation is genuinely cute and funny without being overbearing. 1/4 of the way through and I have already learned so much. Thank you.
I can't tell you how many times I've watched this. For some reason it just starts playing after a different video ends. And if I have the time, I just go ahead and let it play. Thanks for being informative and entertaining enough that I'm willing to listen to it countless times. You're awesome
As someone raised in a religious household and was only taught what the young earth creationists wanted us to believe, THANK YOU! My mind is truly blown. There was so much I didn’t get to learn. Finding this video is better than Christmas morning.
Welcome to the wonderful world of Science, friend.
Haha this makes me so nostalgic. My childhood rebellion was looking up videos on human evolution too! Always look for knowledge!
@@hollyh4061I read encyclopedia articles! Like, actual books haha
Look up Hugh Ross. I am still a practicing Christian and I find nothing whatsoever that suggests faith and a science are mutually exclusive. Yes the Universe started 14 billion years ago through the big bang, yes the earth formed 4.5 billion years ago through accretion, yes life started as a single proto-cell and evolved into what we see today. God is simply the intelligence behind it all and those were simply His tools. I know many people can not accept this - for whatever reason they need that conflict. All I can do is keep an open mind and be willing to meet people half way. Some can not imagine a life where they don't look down their noses at the faithful. Many of the faithful can not imagine a world where they do not look down their noses at the atheist. Sounds like their problem to me.
The @DapperDinosaur channel here on UA-cam does interviews with people who left creationism. You might want to do an interview with him. I did one myself, "Leaving Young Earth Creationism with William D"
I like that you actually corrected the Dunkleosteus body length because that video was made before that paper came out that corrected its assumed body length.
@@Eye_Exist There's sadly only so much you can do if all you have are fossils of the _head_
@@Eye_Exist Well the new equation used to calculate body size is based on head measurements and has been proven to work for the living the fish. So it probably also applied to Dunk
@@Eye_Exist i am more inclined to trust the results of a research than a politician's word. One expands our knowledge of the world while the other one often serves their own self-interest and lines their own pockets.
@@Eye_Existwhat makes one guess more credible than the other is the amount of evidence for it, theories for prehistoric animals changes all the time as new evidence is discovered. And no you're right, it's not a fact, it never is with these sort of things, but it is the best guess of experts at this time
@@michaeltnk1135as a truck driver with a GED from southeast Georgia as well as an UA-cam video expert on paleontology, I can confirm that what you said is correct, that is how they measured it
The distant chanting of the cyanobacteria at the end of the Archean segment + the faint background music would be a hilariously great ambience video
POV: you're in a Precambrian cyanobacteria colony ambience
Idk why, but out of all the species that died out in the late permian, the trilobites are always the one that dissapoints me the most. Those guys survived so long and through so much, they were little troops just chugging along. Wish they could've made it just a little longer to meet us. Or more accurately us meet them. They're also kind of adorable in some weird way
Every time I see an oval, armored bug curl up because I disturbed it, I think, trilobites still exist.
In a way they still exist, the horseshoe crab. Hopefully the bio industry don’t extinct them cause their blood is used in medicine. Climate change is another problem with more carbon getting absorbed in the ocean as it increases in the air, besides temperature.
@JJ-fq4nl I just saw a horseshoe crab on the beach 2 days ago. Unfortunately he was dead. 1:54 😔
Hoping it's just nature taking its course, but you always wonder if it's from something humans did. 😒😠
@@cv6442 A lot of scientists argue that we are currently going through a sixth mass extinction event in the Holocene Extinction due to human influence on the environment.
I made a super realistic clay sculpture of a trilobite for my earth science teacher. Turns out she had a fossil of one and she would rather have a trilobite sculpture than a t rex.
I don't understand why this video has become my "can't sleep" watch, but your voice has soothed me for countless nights over the last several months. Entertained me during my waking hours, too. I love your vids but man, I have really glommed onto this one. Thank you for all of your work!
As I sit here and toil away on the next installment of this series, I really appreciate seeing comments like this. ❤️ Thank you so much!
Same here! Although it's also helped convince me to shift to geology/environmental science (that and Gutsick Gibbon's recent overview of the Big 5 Mass Extinctions).
@@PaleoAnalysisthat's generous of you. I'm not sure how I would feel if someone told me, essentially, "your hard work helps me to fall asleep.". 😂😂
@@RobespierreThePoof once you learn how watch time works here on UA-cam, you'll understand my appreciation. 👀
This so much this, on any sleepless night I just flick this on, listen to a video I've listened to a couple hundred times now, and get soothed to sleep
The fact that you went and modified the part about Dunkleosteus for this extended video is amazing, and shows this is more than just "Take the old videos and stitch them together"
Is it really more than that??
@@BridgeStamford He just showed you how?
Pretty funny how you dorks call out a guy who knows his stuff. Maybe your girlfriends can help settle your debate...I'll wait...
I haven’t got there yet, or watched the original but 1 update that’s like, a few minutes (guessing) out of 2:47+ minutes. So 🤷🏾 I you if a streamer watched it but only added that much content I bet they’d get an auto strike
@@BridgeStamfordapqqq😅
I first viewed this video back in January or February. At the time, I lived a very day-to-day kind of life and never made the time to think too much about these things. This video changed that. I was so enamored and fascinated by how much we could say about the formation of our planet and life. Something inside me changed. I now have an entire shelf of books that cover the history of our planet, geology, and biology. I’m looking into going back to school and getting a degree. I want to be a part of earths story in some way shape or form other than through a passive existence.
Thank you for researching and publishing this video. It really is an inspiration.
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
i love deep dives like this from people clearly passionate about the subject
People like you are what keeps me going. I will be honest, 2024 has not been good to me. But it seems like every time I have a moment where I am feeling down one of you come in clutch to lift my spirits without even knowing it.
Today that person is you, so thank you! ❤️ I hope you enjoy the content and just know more is coming soon.
that means so much to me! i’m actually back on this video for the third time since the first viewing. please keep going!!! 🙏🏻💜
also gained a lifelong sub with this
@@LightBlueVans Thank you so much for all the support. I am trying to get back to it, I really am... I need to try to find a topic that I can get really excited about because those are the videos that come the most easy to me. ❤️
@@PaleoAnalysisThis year has been crap to me as well. I think I found your channel about a year ago,and I really enjoy what you do. I hope the year has started to treat you better,man.
As someone who can’t keep track of a single day, I plead with you to put together another “SUPERCUT “compilation of your history of earth videos;because I am not sure in what order to watch the ones you have posted. I absolutely love the way you explain your content.
I just keep rewatching this one because I have no idea what order to watch the newer videos in
This video has become my comfort video that I listen to every night to help me overcome my insomnia and fall asleep. I love it so much
I first binged this series when I was stuck in a terrible, terrible job and it gave me great appreciation for things before the dinosaurs. Now I'm at a better job but currently recovering from a bad stomach bug, watching this again while doing simple tasks. Those videos bring so much joy to me. Thank you once again!
Im a super fan of prehistory (before the dinosaurs). So much life and variety of just... what would feel like alien creatures. Its amazing!
Pre-history being before the dinosaurs ... Good man .. your own timeline ... :-)
@@BassGoBomb
I mean, the time before the dinosaurs is definitely prehistoric, no arguing with that. Sort of how a map of pangea is technically a map of the world before 1945.
I
@@BassGoBombi think they meant prehistory specifically before the dinosaurs not that prehistory mesnt before the dinosaurs
@@mikepencestoes it’s just a misuse of the word.
Prehistory means before written language, so about 6K years ago. Pre-dinosaur is 65M+ years ago. Those numbers aren’t even in the same scale so it sounds weird to say that.
GET THE POPCORN! we're on a binge watch tonight
HELL YEAH
Woooo!
😮Fer 🎉🎉😢🎉
Back for more!!!😅🤣😂
Don't be a Popcorn scrooge and pass the bag!
I have a Fan Theory: TimTim was the water molecule that Steve showed us in the Hadean Eon video. IT WAS DESTINY!!!!!
😮😮
@@mehodrums you know, I can see that!
you mean it was desTimmed!
I thought that was the case all along? Like... he has been hanging around steve ever sinch.
Unfortunately Tim Tim is eventually going to go extinct unless I'm wrong
As a very interested non scientist I appreciate the content of your videos. I have watched many other videos and I find that your videos explain the subject that my 84 year old brain can understand .
Do you watch NICK ZENTNER OR MYRON COOK.. I think you will like them.
The algo recommended this series when you were on the Devonian period. I got hooked on all your other content, I've watched the series from the beginning, and the same for newer episodes as they came out. It blows my mind that an hour was dedicated to the Permian, looking at the supercut timeline. Forget the dinosaurs for a minute, I'm pretty sure epochs from the Cenozoic will end up being like 30 minutes to an hour long depending on how you split it up.
I'm so excited for what comes next! Keep up the great work dude. I seldom interact with content creators I enjoy out of laziness; your content honestly made me break out of that habit and do the whole like+comment thing.
this series has carried me through a really deep depression this year. I've watched the whole thing at least 20 times. thank you for the hard work you put into these and all of your videos. thank you especially for going into the precambrian time periods. it is pretty hard to find decent information about it and the way you present it is so easy to digest and fascinating.
I totally understand the perfectionism about this series but please know all of your content is amazing. don't be too hard on yourself. and thank you so much again
Same here:)
A year later, and I'm still falling asleep to you at least once a week. Your new vids are fantastic, too, but this one just keeps drawing me back.
My 5 year old son is homeschooled, and you, my friend, just became his history teacher.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge in such a digestible way.
Your channel is awesome.👌
I bet he's having fun!
Genuine question, what makes people prefer homeschooling over public schooling?
@@FreedomAndersonI did it because my husband and I were teachers, and both our kids were special needs and our extremely rural school system was legitimately inappropriate for them. Some homeschool because they travel a lot, and others prefer the full time remote option. Of course, there's also a lot who do it to isolate, which is not ideal.
The school system in the UK sometimes does not fit every child.
The Great Dying in particular hit my younger self very, very hard. I attribute my learning of it to be one of the reasons I "sobered" up to mortality even in a family where tragedy was fairly common. Obviously it had no effect on my survivor's guilt, but it challenged the 11-year old me to truly absorb the definition of luck. It's been a painful ride for my human ancestors to make it to me, but something like the Great Dying just hit different in a way you don't really see outside of fiction.
Sounds like a "Could Be Worse" mentality but on a cosmic scale
As.699$
I totally get that! I’ve been struggling to ditch my young-earth conditioning and learn real science. The extinction cycles have lately hit hard.
But now I see them now as a wonderful story of how geology and biology interact from the beginning to shape our world. And we’re the first species to become aware of how we’re interacting with that cycle. And I’m feeling more empowered to make a difference in the planet’s future, to try to correct our mistakes and direct our activities in a more constructive direction!
you should think of mass extinctions as reshuffling the deck basically. if those hadn't happened, mammals, nevermind humans might not have ever come into existence. i will say that people that say we're overdue for another mass extinction are morons though. the universe doesn't operate on a time table.
Also, can you make those guys in the background? So so so distracting m. I love the documentary
Thanks. This is exactly what I wanted. It puts everything into a logical sequence. It’s clearly a big effort to make.
Thank you so much for the support! The History of the Earth series is one of my biggest projects and I am thrilled to see so many people are enjoying it!
@@PaleoAnalysisIt's my absolute favorite paleontology video. I've watched it through about six times now. Thank you! The recent Triassic video was just as great. Can't wait to see the rest of your series, though the Mesozoic and Cenozoic!
@@PaleoAnalysis Keep at it dude! If I has more spare $$$, I'd join your Patreon...
I love this entire series, and yes I sat here and watched all 2 hours over again even though I watched all the original videos when they were first released. I can't wait for the next chapter
Same here & seconded. Nearly three hours actully..
It's great to see it as a supercut. I'm hoping he will do the next installment soon but it seems like he has alot on his plate.
I’ve watched this about a dozen times now. I desperately want the next chapter, because I really love the Triassic!! We had two different farms in NC that coincidentally were within walking distance of two important sites for pre- and post-CAMP rift fossils! It’s an odd coincidence but probably explainable in that both places were specifically sheep farms- we tend to put sheep on land that’s inappropriate for crops and other livestock. Looking into this informally, sheep farming up the mid-atlantic, follows the ancient rift valley that’s interspersed with CAMP intrusions. The soil is thin and rocky and erodes SUPER fast, but grows pasture grass quite well. So the farms there favored sheep, horses, and tobacco.
It’s absolutely hilarious to think now that when we were attempting to fence fields and cursing the ubiquitous rocks, that we were throwing around chunks of rock that contributed to one of the major mass extinctions. I actually saved some of these rocks from our last place, and use them to decorate my garden here where the native rocks look TOTALLY different.
It’s absolutely WILD that our historic land use follows geology that was often laid down during, or shortly after the events in this video.
The perfect ASMR video for either a long trip and/or to fall asleep to (not at the same time of course!)
You can have both happen at the same time so long as you are not the one driving. ;)
And to wake back up to. I woke up faster just to see what I had missed, even though I had stayed up most of last night, then finished watching through the description of the great dying and to the end of this superb video. Time for a rewatch real soon. I feel refreshed and I liked and subscribed 'All'.
Or for online gaming
Perfect for nighttime falling asleep vid! And my algo knows to play more science doc type stuff. Perfect lol
I love waking up to "80.000 PSI?!!!" every night
I've watched a LOT of videos about the development of the earth (Chris White goes into a lot of detail) but I really like this one. I can read the descriptions, the fonts are large. The words are pronounced so I can try to learn the odd names. The pictures are good. There's good explanation of the ages, eons, periods, etc. Subscribed!
Yeah. Christopher White rocks. I wish i could study at that University in his classes. Sigh.
This is one of my top ten favourite UA-cam videos of all time. Seriously, I can sit down for the full video and watch it repeatedly without getting bored.
It’s like Dragon Ball Z
I've rewatched this series so many times, can't wait for this
Thank you for this "Super Cut".
Being close to 50, I've finally had questions that religion and school couldn't answer, but this did.
The jokes in the video were on point, very entertaining.
Great work! This could literally get picked up by Animal Planet or Discovery channel and be shown unedited.
Sadly those networks aren't what they used to be. 😅
Smithsonian Channel is still legit. 😊
It's too smart for those channels
TLC is all about midgets and hoarders, and "discovery" is a ahell of what it once was. They pander to the idiots that our species has become. Hey comet, WE'RE OVER HERE!!!!!! HIT US PLEASE!!!!!!
@@ryanstatt9910Too smart and not sensational enough sadly ... Luckily we have it here
It’s super annoying that Netflix funded someone like Graham Hancock, while creators who present actual science have to struggle with the YT-verse.
I love this man and this series. Aside from the podcasts I listen to about dinosaurs and paleontology, I am always waiting patiently to get more content, especially from someone who has great information, and shows a passion for what they do. Keep at it!
Anything to put off the Triassic video, huh? I kid. I kid. This will be a fun watch.
Early Triassic out now
This should be in a every high school natural science class. Seriously excellent work. Meaningful, educational and really fun and entertaining. ✌🏻
I have loved following this series; you've done a great job going through periods in Earth's history that frequently gets overlooked. I must admit even to getting a bit emotional about events like the end of the Permian, even knowing they were necessary events in the timeline that made modern life possible.
This is the single BEST video on all of UA-cam. I probably have watched it all the way through at least ten times. This is my go-to when I have an anxiety attack or get riddled with insomnia. Thank you for taking me on this journey through the history of our planet in such an insightful and entertaining style. I love both you and Tim-Tim. Thank you.
hey Steve, have you heard about this new study where scientists have managed to evolve yeast to being multicellular?
In short, they've been trying to unlock the secrets of why multicellular life evolved and while they could get them to combine somewhat they couldn't get any real breakthrough until someone had the idea to reduce available oxygen, and when they did the cells began to join together with strong bonds and some even change to do specific function inside to structure itself. it's pretty interesting (if badly described by myself)
so if I have my timeline correct then it's one more thing to thank the anoxic seas of the boring billion for; making multicellular life necessary enough for survival to get us to where we are today.
Which paper is this? I would love to read it, nice connection there 👍🏼
@@nudibranchluvr”Oxygen suppression of macroscopic multicellularity” Bozdag 2021 😊
@@irenafarmcould ya share a link to it please
How fascinating!
Finally, time to watch this yet over again... I appreciate the changes like the smoother transitions, the Dunk update and the removal of the sponsor section in the Carboniferous video, overall great job.
I have now watched this to fall asleep for 10 days now, love the content awake and asleep! I'm convinced this is fixing my insomnia one eon at a time❤
Update, still curing my insomnia 1 eon at a time! I've trained myself to fall asleep to this! Please for the love of my mental health never take this down!!!!! ❤❤❤ thank you so so much for amazing content
Still curing my insomnia!
When I was a kid there was nothing like this. Nothing. You could not learn this outside of specific academia and years of study. This is so phenomenal.
I learned more through this video than I ever did in school. I never knew if any periods prior to the Permian except for the Cambrian and Carboniferous. Earths’ past is so interesting
I'm really glad you decided to make this super cut. I love this series and your narration skills are superb. I've watched this video at least 10 times over by now in the span of 2 weeks. Your work is much appreciated man
Me too I think I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve watched it by now hahah
I love all of the info, but my favorite parts of these videos are when you evolve lol. I love your videos my friend. Keep doing what you do.
This new measure of fish is kinda cool. Sure it halved the horror factor of the Dunkleosteus, but it's a rule that all fish lineages inherited from the first fish.
How do you not have 1,000,000+ subscribers yet? This is a masterpiece, I look forward for the continuation.
I love how you show images of the things you’re talking about, please don’t switch up the format it work perfectly!
I feel like I could just watch this over and over again on repeat forever
"Earth lore" I'm going to use this to refer to my geology degree from now on, thanks.
Please continue these series. They are the best videos on your channel!
One of the greatest tragedies of life on earth is that trilobites didn't survive to modern day. I want a pet trlobite so bad, they're such cool little guys
RIP trilobites. At least trilobite beetles exist, so we can pretend that we can have prehistoric animals for pets.
We do have horseshoe crabs, they're kind of close.
@@alexanderstavroulakis335 You probably shouldn't, considering the apparent impossibilities of breeding them or maintaining them long-term and the damage that collecting does to wild populations.
Firefly larvae have a similar look, and are much easier to keep.
I found your channel around the new year and quickly fell in love with it. A clear enthusiasm with an injection of fun with your videos. I had to catch up on many from this series but watched the others on release. I've re-watched this supercut anyway and have enjoyed it just as much as the first time I watched them. Your videos are so accessible to people with any level of interest. Fantastic.
Watching the whole video and then hearing you talk about the Permian is like watching the MCU and then getting to Infinity War knowing what's to come
I've downloaded the video so I can watch it whenever I want to with or without internet. And it's one of my favorite videos on UA-cam. Excellent work. Please give us more like this one. And I've lost count on how many times I have watched it. But if I'm having a rough day, it's something that watches, and I know I'll be smiling soon.
I'd so watch this in a movie theater. Thank you very much for this compilation!
This series made me want to get Triops again. I got them, and the one that made it to adulthood I named Tim Tim. He is the ultimate survivor
This is the epic comeback story we all deserve.
I like how you, from episode to episode, set up the gimmick of pokémon creature changes was …. evolving!
Wow, this wasn't just a video, it was a visual podcast! Great work!
Loved this super cut! It's been a great listen during work. Looking forward to future videos about Earth's past!
I'm laughing hysterically at the idea of someone watching this whole thing and being like "nah it's actually all 6000 years old"
It's weird, I have yet to find a young earth creationist in the comments section
The comments for the original vids have a few :D
whats the 5head argument contained in this video that would convince anyone like that?
Word
@@kalinmirI think they’re saying that a young earther would look at all this and say, “Nah, the real explanation is that:
1) Everything was created in six days
2) All those creatures lived at the same time, and
3) The Permian extinction is actually Noah’s flood.”
Which is absolute garbage but hey look, our new US House Speaker (2nd in line to Presidency), is one of the ones who believe that nonsense.
This is my favorite supercut to return to again and again. Perfect for background play when I need to focus or on very low volume when I need help falling asleep.
I casually scrolled down my YT feed and barely paid attention to it. I was just waiting for something to catch my eye... I've almost said ok nothing interesting for now let's get back to listening to my audiobook... but in the very last second I noticed TimTim!!! :D Super excited to watch the entire history in one video... tomorrow lol
I love 5 minutes away from Smithsonian Museum of National History and this video is a God sent. Thank you for making this video.
Yes the Greek God of the Underworld... James Woods
😂😂
Once this is complete, this could legitimately be used to supplement public school science!
Not enough mentioning of transexuals and not enough anti white racism for that
@@DaytonaRoadster Man you're really butthurt that you can't be a bigot in public anymore.
I love this series! Great to have it all one place. Thanks :)
I honestly love this compilation. Its fun and very informative. The animation is actually what makes it very interesting. Keep it up!!
Funny little accidental anachronism around 2:44:30 of a car or some vehicle driving through the desert lol (amazing content btw)
There’s birbs flying along one of the rocky coast shots, too! But I just pretend it’s time traveling aliens 😂
A 2 HOUR VIDEO?????
*hops in bed and gets comfy*
Time to binge this until I fall asleep!
This whole series Super Cut is so amazingly done. I could easily see this being shown in schools, your entertaining narration, including your little characters (yay Tim Tim) made it even more engaging. Couldn't stop watching. Can't wait for more. How you don't have more subs is beyond me. (subbed of course)
This is my comfort video. It has helped me sleep so many times.
I'm watching this in hospital after surgery counting my lucky stars I didn't have my procedure 2 months earlier. thank you for this!
Finally. I’ve been looking for a video exactly like this but none I found were long enough to cover things properly.
just completed this supercut. Honestly - a absolutely gem - I loved watching it over the last few days!
I just love this series , i watched every Episode multiple Times, so this Video is going to make Things even easyier ❤
This is the first time that I taught myself how to use the UA-cam notification bell.
Keep doing epic stuff. The world needs more people like you!
I’m genuinely curious what Tim Tim is going to become by the end of this series
Probably a dog or something
The amount of work and dedication put into this is staggering, and all while keeping it lighthearted and easily digestible. My respects! 👍🏽👏🏽😉
Thank you!! Just got home early, 10 days off started 5 min ago and now this🥳
Hey, I just wanted to say I really love your history of the earth series and I often come back to watching this super cut while playing games or working on stuff ^^
I've read some comments below; very sorry 2024 has not been the best for you.
I hope this helps - I've watched almost all AND recommended your videos to friends and co-workers.
Keep up the great work - Your efforts matter!!!
Thank you for the like - I killed it by accident with an edit :)
LOVED this! thank you for your fun commentary and making what could be a dry subject extremely engaging!
This was so good! I hope you receive many great rewards for this. I have been following this channel for around 2 year and I continue to wait for each new video. Thank you💙
I just wanted to add, I accidentally held up the line at the pharmacy, because me and the tech were talking about how much we love your channel. We love your googly eyed avatars, and we got on the subject of the evolutionary benefits and disadvantages of radial symmetry. Echinoderms and their initial lack of symmetry was being discussed, when the other pharmacy patrons, behind me, let themselves be known. I felt pretty bad, at the time, but it made me happy too, because someone in my town also enjoys your content. It made me feel connected to others.
What a coincidence! I have JUST finished watching the separate videos!
I'm ready to binge it again 👀
I will play the “evolving” sequences over a few times. I just LIVE for that 8-bit PC speaker sound…
After he asked where Tim Tim was an old spice commercial played and I thought he was put in to the bottle.
Thank you for the individual videos and compilation.
It's nice to see the changes the Earth has gone through and mind-boggling to comprehend the amount of time that has passed.
This was fantastic seeing all the parts one after the other. Thank you!
I've watched this video like 4 times in the last 6 months and i keep coming back to it for some reason. I really like this video a lot
I'm so happy to have this! Can't wait to see the series continue. :)
This is such a fantastic series. One of the true gems of youtube. Its so informative and there's so much there that i've watched through it several times and I still pick up something new every time.
==chefs kiss==
Ya got me! Doing my bit to aid evolution (specifically yours...) Love the quirkiness of your videos.
I love that you talk a story and dont just tell it. Thanks
It took several bites to watch it all but I did…and I enjoyed every minute! Highly entertaining, educational and fun (the evolving bit was super effective and cute). I really want to see right up until now. I enjoyed it so much that I subscribed. I don’t know why your channel took so long to find me but I’m glad it did 💕
This is my nightly fall-asleep-video, love your work ❤ I know you're hanging out for 200k subs, but I will watch every video multiple times to make up for it 😭 pls give us more (when you have the time to make it)!
I love this series, so much fun to watch and fascinating to learn all this natural history. I would love to see a video explaining how carbon dating works, to have a better understanding of how all the fossils are placed in time.
Carbon-14 dating is a form of radiometric dating that compares the ratios of Carbon-14 to Carbon-12 and Carbon-13 in a sample. Since living beings breathe those ratios would remain the same as the ratios in the atmosphere when the being was alive but after it dies the Carbon-14 starts to decay and thus the ratios are skewed. So if you know the decay rate of Carbon-14, which is easy to establish experimentally in a lab, and you know the historic concentrations of Carbon-14 in the atmosphere, which we know from ice cores, you can calculate how long ago that thing died. This method is called radiometric dating since we rely on radioactive decay for it. However Carbon-14 dating is limited in it's range and only works for fossils younger than around 40k years IIRC. For dating older fossils or non-organic finds other dating methods like Caesium dating and Light Exposure dating are used. Caesium dating and other forms of radiometric dating work the same as Carbon-14 dating, you can figure out how much of the unstable isotope should be present in the initial sample and then with an experimentally verified decay rate you can calculate how old it is. Light Exposure dating is a method by which we can calculate when an atom was last exposed to light, which is insanely cool but I think the explanation for how it works relies on Quantum mechanics and I don't understand quantum mechanics.
From Mustafar to Hoth is a great description, by a SW Fan! You are a genius for this rich and funny explanation. ❤
Love this series, I've watched it all many times. Its really nice to have it all in one place!!
A suggestion for you that I hope you will find interesting: how about a video on the evolution of jaws? I have no idea how all of the radiodonts were such big predators without them, and so forth. It might be fun!!
Thanks again for an excellent video, looking forward to more weirdos of the Triassic!!
I'm a historian. When i teach my 101 course which starts with the ancient world, the first thing i always show is a time line from the big bang to now, zoom in on the beginning of Hadeam Earth, then zoom in on the Paleolithic, then finally on the historical period.
The effect on students is quite something to see. All of recorded history and human civilizations is an intense burst of the creative mind of just one species in a minuscule fraction of time.
I find that it helps focus their minds on how lucky they are to exist as human beings in these past several millennia.
Back again, sleep routine. Thank you for making this!!!!!
New this this channel and am enjoying this so much! Great job with the writing, delivery and visuals. And the animation is genuinely cute and funny without being overbearing. 1/4 of the way through and I have already learned so much. Thank you.
This is a fantastic video! Very well done and I like the humor❤
I can't tell you how many times I've watched this. For some reason it just starts playing after a different video ends. And if I have the time, I just go ahead and let it play. Thanks for being informative and entertaining enough that I'm willing to listen to it countless times. You're awesome