How Bad Was The Great Oxidation Event?

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  • Опубліковано 19 гру 2020
  • Researched and Written by Leila Battison
    Narrated and Edited by David Kelly
    Art by Khail Kupsky
    Thumbnail Art and Art by Ettore Mazza
    If you like our videos, check out Leila's youtube channel:
    / @somethingincredible
    Music from Epidemic Sound and Artlist.
    References:
    www.bbc.co.uk/earth/story/2015...
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    science.sciencemag.org/conten...
    sci-hub.do/10.1126/science.16...
    • That Time Oxygen Almos...
    www.michigan.gov/documents/de...
    courses.lumenlearning.com/bou...
    sci-hub.do/10.2475/ajs.s4-23....
    www.scientificamerican.com/ar...
    books.google.co.uk/books?id=H...
    www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    bio.libretexts.org/Bookshelve...
    www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.c...
    Image Credits (in order of appearance):
    Doc. RNDr. Josef Reischig, CSc., CC BY-SA 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    By James St. John - Jaspilite banded iron formation (Soudan Iron-Formation, Neoarchean, ~2.69 Ga; Stuntz Bay Road outcrop, Soudan Underground State Park, Soudan, Minnesota, USA) 53, CC BY 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By James St. John - Jaspilite banded iron formation (Soudan Iron-Formation, Neoarchean, ~2.69 Ga; Stuntz Bay Road outcrop, Soudan Underground State Park, Soudan, Minnesota, USA) 53, CC BY 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    James St. John, CC BY 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    James St. John, CC BY 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    By Yanenming - Own work, CC BY 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By Bäras - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By McGhiever - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By Zosma - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By John Sweeney - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By Abrget47j - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By Mhsheikholeslami - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By James St. John - Tillite (Coleman Member, Gowganda Formation, Paleoproterozoic, ~2.3 Ga; Straight Lake West roadcut, north of Temagami, Ontario, Canada) 10, CC BY 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    James St. John, CC BY 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    James St. John, CC BY 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    By Oleg Kuznetsov - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Life restoration of Mimoperadectes. By Jorge González - Horovitz I, Martin T, Bloch J, Ladevèze S, Kurz C, et al. (2009) Cranial Anatomy of the Earliest Marsupials and the Origin of Opossums. PLoS ONE 4(12): e8278. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0008278.g006, CC BY 2.5, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 7 тис.

  • @HistoryoftheEarth
    @HistoryoftheEarth  3 роки тому +1883

    Hello all! Hope you are enjoying the video. Quick correction - the image of frozen Earth does indeed hide the shape of North America. Oversight on my part. Obviously wouldn´t have been under there back then! Apologies.

    • @daveanderson718
      @daveanderson718 3 роки тому +43

      This video starts out very good, but then ends abruptly. you want us to believe in the evil snowman that killed the earth?? then why don't you tell us how he was killed, as if you are not blind, but look out the window, he hasn't been seen for billions of years. Or is this video just a blathering cartoon?

    • @wenkeli1409
      @wenkeli1409 3 роки тому +183

      @@daveanderson718 dude, what?

    • @HistoryoftheEarth
      @HistoryoftheEarth  3 роки тому +470

      Your comment starts out very good...

    • @sallytomata1
      @sallytomata1 3 роки тому +31

      I was just preparing to comment on the point in the video at 24 minutes that shows the current outline of eastern North America that would have been erroneous to the period in discussion. Glad to see your comment, but wondering about your editing process.

    • @MrMAC8964
      @MrMAC8964 3 роки тому +26

      Its a frozen planet people !!! I can see gilligan and the skipper there if i look close . Do you realize you should be listening more and looking at the pictures less. lmfaro Its all "the deep state" fault , that put monsters under your bed .... and nuts in your education.

  • @johnmcnulty4425
    @johnmcnulty4425 3 роки тому +5505

    It takes a masterful narrator to make one feel empathy for anaerobic bacteria and cast oxygen as a villain. Well done, Sir!

    • @johngreenwood1610
      @johngreenwood1610 2 роки тому +21

      Dont worry Bill Gates wants to depopulate the Earth and that means you and me and right now that process has begun!

    • @aljohnson3717
      @aljohnson3717 2 роки тому +60

      @@johngreenwood1610 Bill Gates is so eager to save the Humankind, that he’s ready to have each individual human being to be wiped from the face of the Earth.

    • @aljohnson3717
      @aljohnson3717 2 роки тому +19

      @Michael Hawaiianstyle I will identify myself as an ash tray

    • @aljohnson3717
      @aljohnson3717 2 роки тому +7

      @Michael Hawaiianstyle don’t forget about yellow labs and panda cubs.
      The rest can go to hell

    • @bradhirsch4845
      @bradhirsch4845 2 роки тому +1

      lol

  • @gregbors8364
    @gregbors8364 2 роки тому +1635

    I used to know a lot about the Great Oxidation Event, but my memory is a little rusty

  • @fordxbgtfalcon
    @fordxbgtfalcon Рік тому +569

    The person responsible for this masterpiece is extremely talented. Better than what’s on Discovery for sure.

    • @JohnG-xu8uk
      @JohnG-xu8uk Рік тому +20

      discovery channel used to be good when i was a kid in the 90s. but now it is what it is just like more other things that are what they seem to be, utter crap

    • @yaqbulyakkerbat4190
      @yaqbulyakkerbat4190 11 місяців тому +4

      To be fair that's a low bar

    • @robertstack2144
      @robertstack2144 10 місяців тому +2

      I think it's god, a George Burns from ,........Great Britain or Less than Great Lesser America

    • @TheJoshuamooney
      @TheJoshuamooney 10 місяців тому

      Yes. Discovery was a good idea that was quickly turned into a needed money maker by the bottom-line people. Pre-internet/UA-cam/ etc. that was sadly predictable.

    • @robertstack2144
      @robertstack2144 10 місяців тому

      So you are sure it was a person? A god person?

  • @woodyforest2100
    @woodyforest2100 Рік тому +127

    What a great series! We are in the era when online content is more interesting than stale television. Great job!

    • @blucat4
      @blucat4 7 місяців тому +4

      Wow I figured that out 30 years ago. Welcome. 🙂

  • @daveslow84
    @daveslow84 2 роки тому +3050

    To all the microbes that died during the great oxidation event...
    Rust in peace 😔

    • @anonygent
      @anonygent 2 роки тому +132

      Angry upvote. Have it and get out.

    • @alanhonlunli
      @alanhonlunli Рік тому +63

      Pour one out for the microbes that didn't make it.

    • @tiddy671
      @tiddy671 Рік тому +61

      @@anonygent it’s called a like, this isn’t reddit

    • @anonygent
      @anonygent Рік тому +138

      @@tiddy671 It's called a joke. This isn't Facebook. 😏

    • @aggebojkalos6518
      @aggebojkalos6518 Рік тому +47

      Too soon.

  • @danaoconnor9523
    @danaoconnor9523 3 роки тому +1911

    thoughts and prayers go out to the families of the bacteria that were rusted to death

    • @shramo
      @shramo 3 роки тому +48

      F

    • @briannawarren4174
      @briannawarren4174 3 роки тому +50

      Um, aren't we the descendants of those families?

    • @Calamity_Jack
      @Calamity_Jack 3 роки тому +139

      RIP - Rust In Peace.

    • @eppurse
      @eppurse 3 роки тому +61

      That's the spooky thing about evolution- the tremendous amount of death required

    • @randyralls9658
      @randyralls9658 3 роки тому +8

      @@eppurse it is the spooky thing about life

  • @keesdevreugd9177
    @keesdevreugd9177 Рік тому +91

    Most of this I've read or heard before, but the realization how fragile life really is, shocks me every time. We're living on an unimaginable graveyard of billions of wiped out species. Think about that.

    • @KayAteChef
      @KayAteChef 8 місяців тому +13

      Imagine if something evolved a new metabolism and dumped poison in the atmosphere and we all perished within a decade with no way to economically fix the issue.

    • @needlesandsonics5819
      @needlesandsonics5819 8 місяців тому +13

      @@KayAteCheflife will still go on with or without us. We aren’t anything special.

    • @KayAteChef
      @KayAteChef 8 місяців тому +3

      @@needlesandsonics5819 We are the only thing capable of caring. You are right of course but your argument is best made from the perspective of something that is already dead.

    • @blucat4
      @blucat4 7 місяців тому +1

      Not quite billions of species, certainly more than that in numbers of individuals, but not species.

    • @gloxxxkky6667
      @gloxxxkky6667 7 місяців тому +1

      ⁠@@blucat4billions of species def existed thorough the earth’s history

  • @fionagibson7529
    @fionagibson7529 9 місяців тому +31

    This is so well narrated that I didn’t even notice there were no subtitles, despite normally preferring them if at all possible. Masterfully crafted.

  • @williamreely3455
    @williamreely3455 3 роки тому +938

    Humans: We are the most disruptive species ever.
    Cyanobacteria: Hold my carbon dioxide.

    • @mnichols1979
      @mnichols1979 2 роки тому +81

      Humans are just getting warmed up.

    • @Pfhorrest
      @Pfhorrest 2 роки тому +14

      What if what we're doing to the planet now is comparable to this? We'll wipe most of ourselves out, over and over again in cycles, until some of us learn how to survive our own waste products... but then we'll be free to waste the rest of the life on the planet, and only the tiny fraction of life that can survive that newly transformed world will go on to populate it in the distant future.

    • @krunchy8118
      @krunchy8118 2 роки тому +22

      @@Pfhorrest Its not though. It's not comparable. Humans are not effecting climate to the level of causing extinction events or ice ages. The earth goes through cycles mostly driven by our own star. Our magnetosphere is weakening more than ever and all it takes is the right CME to create another Carrington Event. No electricity for some years after that. Also we are on the cusp of our stars cyclical micro nova event. This is real mass extinction. Imagine hot pieces of ejected plasma from the sun impacting around the world and much much more. Do you think Bezos is flying to space for fun? Elites know what is coming.

    • @mattiOTX
      @mattiOTX 2 роки тому +12

      @@mnichols1979 well played.

    • @NettiGaming
      @NettiGaming 2 роки тому +5

      Comment of the year.

  • @twothreebravo
    @twothreebravo 3 роки тому +2761

    As a person who likes oxygen, I don't think it was a bad thing at all.

    • @evertonporter7887
      @evertonporter7887 3 роки тому +76

      Yet our bodies are made to function in an oxidising environment.

    • @chancethompson8686
      @chancethompson8686 3 роки тому +186

      Strange fact, oxygen is the most carcinogenic substance on the planet..

    • @oo-uu9ez
      @oo-uu9ez 3 роки тому +31

      One thin that might' ve happen is that you would get oxygen toxicity.Luckily we could just get something to counteract it (like a breathing apparatus) to return it to normal levels.

    • @galenjones9529
      @galenjones9529 3 роки тому +14

      @@oo-uu9ez can't forget about the increased ignition point.

    • @galenjones9529
      @galenjones9529 3 роки тому +199

      Ironic fact: Oxygen, which we need to survive, also causes us to age further than peak performance aka: decay genetically.
      Getting old is a disease.

  • @ripwednesdayadams
    @ripwednesdayadams Рік тому +118

    It’s amazing what humans have been able to learn and accomplish in a very short period of time. I’m always blown away by the fact that the earth has lived billions of different “lives”.

    • @blucat4
      @blucat4 7 місяців тому +4

      Hardly billions, maybe dozens.

    • @bakielh229
      @bakielh229 3 місяці тому

      don't be delusional, we have no idea by looking at a piece of dirt that it's billions of years old. That's silly

    • @Dneptun4o
      @Dneptun4o 3 місяці тому

      Carbon dating has left the chat​@@bakielh229

    • @egay86292
      @egay86292 2 місяці тому

      primates are the goat!

    • @BlueInOrangeAgain
      @BlueInOrangeAgain Місяць тому

      @@bakielh229it’s silly to think that looking at a piece of dirt is how we know the Earth is billions of years old

  • @GraemePayne1967Marine
    @GraemePayne1967Marine 10 місяців тому +30

    I took a couple of college geology courses in the early 1970's, and the oxygen catastrophe was not mentioned. Therefore I assume this is newer science.
    The hot controversial topic of that time was a radical theory called "Plate Tectonics" - a process we humans experience many times per year on this planet.

    • @joerosen5464
      @joerosen5464 11 днів тому

      Few people realise just how recently the theory of Plate Tectonics became accepted! I thought this was obvious stuff that would have been worked out by those wealthy gentlemen scientist explorers of the 19th or 18th century.
      Then I stumbled across the story about how arduous the journey to get the theory accepted actually was, & that it took so long. It was in a lovely coffee-table book by Bill Bryson entitled "A Brief History of Everything" that I found in a Thrift Store for a few bucks, as it was already 10 years out of date... To
      think we'd already put men on the moon more than once & the scientific/geological communities were still giving its main proponent an incredibly hard time to the point of ridicule!😳

  • @jefflittle8913
    @jefflittle8913 Рік тому +682

    "In the beginning the Universe was created.
    This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move."
    - Douglas Adams

    • @davidcowan4705
      @davidcowan4705 Рік тому

      The only people that are angry are those that let their sins interfere with their science. I only trust Christian scientists because they have minds that are more open to the whole picture. This video is silly and nothing but ridiculous and worthless lies.

    • @nonbeliever5027
      @nonbeliever5027 Рік тому +5

      😂true though

    • @jennylee9278
      @jennylee9278 10 місяців тому +2

      Actually, I think Arthur Dent said that.

    • @grantfrith9589
      @grantfrith9589 10 місяців тому +1

      I love that quote.

    • @dasstraat
      @dasstraat 8 місяців тому +4

      It is a believe, not science. I'd rather put my money on Jesus' version.

  • @live4twilight4ever
    @live4twilight4ever 3 роки тому +387

    This sounds so much like a made-for-TV documentary. I've seen a fair number of long-form educational videos on UA-cam, and none of them made me feel like a kid watching the Discovery Channel the way this did.

    • @brentfarvors192
      @brentfarvors192 3 роки тому +3

      More like being FOOLED like a kid...He was doing good, until he tried to tie the Co2, to the destruction of methane...Which, is made up of Co2...Doh! 21stcenturywire.com/2020/09/05/global-cooling-noaa-confirms-full-blown-grand-solar-minimum/

    • @ZleFox
      @ZleFox 3 роки тому +10

      ​@@brentfarvors192 lol, this is what Big Oxygen wants you to think!

    • @in8187
      @in8187 2 роки тому +2

      Another false video on how the earth is billions of years old.

    • @kelseywilliams6561
      @kelseywilliams6561 2 роки тому +6

      @@in8187 dude stfu

    • @aaronkirchdorfer7779
      @aaronkirchdorfer7779 Рік тому +3

      @@in8187 so tell me what's up

  • @TheDragonCat99
    @TheDragonCat99 10 місяців тому +15

    "Ha ha! Stupid bacteria... imagine poisoning your own atmosphere out of greed and killing everyone including yourselves because of short sightedness! Sure glad we have brains to prevent that..."

    • @h14hc124
      @h14hc124 11 днів тому +2

      Exactly. The *planet* will survive whatever we humans throw at it. But whether we leave it habitable for the life that currently lives on it, is another matter entirely.

    • @sheldontucker4287
      @sheldontucker4287 День тому

      FAH. Funny as He..l

    • @dansmaaslet6623
      @dansmaaslet6623 День тому

      Your related to the survivors

  • @cosicave5179
    @cosicave5179 Рік тому +10

    Excellent!
    I've learned a lot more about the process - which I had a very vague idea of.
    Superb narration punctuated with timely pauses which leave the listener hanging on every word.
    Thankyou!

  • @ChalcedonXXX
    @ChalcedonXXX Рік тому +221

    I am a microbiologist and studied anaerobes and Clostrida in particular. I wrote my Ph.D thesis on the effects of oxygen on these bacteria. There is a spectrum of oxygen tolerance amongst these bacteria. They are all Eubacteria, modern microbes not Archea. I enjoyed you presentation very much.

    • @nothuman3083
      @nothuman3083 8 місяців тому

      My theory is the bacteria would spore and be taken up my evaporation, be rained on the land multiplying and oxidation of the land, released more nutrients flowing in the streams to the mouth of the oceans staining the seas red. Leaving the open and deep ocean to absorb the dead bacteria and oxygen.
      My hypothesis is the seas of iron where turned to rust, removing a central nutrient from the environment wiping out most of the organisms that soaked up the oxygen or diluted it, spiking oceanic oxygen, whilst the land was turned the air oxygenated by the puddles, ponds, streams, and rivers.
      Oxidation of nutrients limited the outflow, until glacier craved out sediments booming the oxygen producing life forms into dooming themselves as glaciers advanced to the poles.

    • @brazilianbastard3992
      @brazilianbastard3992 8 місяців тому +37

      @@theskyizblue2day431why so rude

    • @lilmilos5176
      @lilmilos5176 8 місяців тому

      @@theskyizblue2day431i do

    • @SergyMilitaryRankings
      @SergyMilitaryRankings 7 місяців тому

      ​@@brazilianbastard3992he's a loser who's never achieved anything

    • @KapiraytX
      @KapiraytX 7 місяців тому

      ​@@theskyizblue2day431oh look guys, a pathetic human

  • @chessdad182
    @chessdad182 2 роки тому +275

    The concept of 2.4 billion years ago is difficult to imagine. That we are lucky enough that this blue planet has been safe for this long is hard to believe.

    • @cheezeball6109
      @cheezeball6109 Рік тому +16

      we are in a unique part of the universe where not too much asteroids, etc activity....

    • @swisstroll3
      @swisstroll3 Рік тому +20

      We are also largely protected from comets and meteors by Jupiter.

    • @kevinmckay5052
      @kevinmckay5052 Рік тому +9

      its not hard to believe if you accept your consciousness would not exist otherwise ;)

    • @venniethompson8473
      @venniethompson8473 Рік тому

      @@swisstroll3 Jupite doesn't protect us. It draws junk i.n

    • @jordandavies6847
      @jordandavies6847 Рік тому +7

      This little green planet hasn’t been safe for 2.4 billion years.. it’s like you forgot about the most well known event where an Astroid hit earth and killed 70%+ of all life being the end off the dinosaurs. Literally a few 100 meters bigger and I doubt anything would have lived.. people don’t realise how fragile our existence is all it takes is a 1-2 mile wide astroid and humans will be gone

  • @patriciawatson3293
    @patriciawatson3293 11 місяців тому +3

    Wow you are very talented! It was clear and beautifully presented without any of the usually anomalous clips that are used by other creators to bulk up their videos.

  • @mikecroly4579
    @mikecroly4579 Рік тому

    Thank you so very much! What a wonderful show!...In all seriousness: so very informative and enjoyable and beautiful! Wow! (I'm truly so overwhelmed I've tears!)...Whoever put this show/video together...your absolutely amazing/wonderful!

  • @Peter-gq4ww
    @Peter-gq4ww 2 роки тому +573

    The first few videos I saw of this channel I assumed were taken from somewhere like the discover channel, I couldn't believe and am still amazingly impressed that these videos are privately made! I'd just like to say thanks this content is golden and I'm actually learning something about the ancient world compared to other docs that only focus on the popular events, incredibly well made my friend!

    • @cancerskryptonite
      @cancerskryptonite Рік тому

      All freemasonic occult lies using gematria to place spells over the subconsciousness of the drugged/pharmekia human mind. Wake up! Demon/reptile worshipping humans run the world. G in freemason = 7

    • @DeuceGenius
      @DeuceGenius Рік тому +14

      dudes better than discovery

    • @jonathanweinbaum5012
      @jonathanweinbaum5012 Рік тому +6

      The difference is that, although not flawless, these people use actual science as opposed to the Discovery Channel, which is only interested in entertaining vs. educating people...nice work!

    • @HerohammerStudios
      @HerohammerStudios Рік тому +2

      What an incredible indictment of the Discovery Channel

    • @GogiRegion
      @GogiRegion Рік тому +7

      @@jonathanweinbaum5012 Discovery used to have good stuff. They got bought out at some point, which led to their decline, if I remember correctly.

  • @douglashenri5017
    @douglashenri5017 3 роки тому +247

    This here is a hiddem gem. One of the absolute finest channels.
    I did not know just how massive those changes were, it sure gives a whole new perspective.

    • @jamiejudd7146
      @jamiejudd7146 3 роки тому +8

      It's humbling, in my opinion. Just to be here now, in this moment despite the current state of affairs....I feel lucky to exist. Like I was gifted something truly sacred. Idk how many people can relate but still.

    • @melvinshelton8448
      @melvinshelton8448 3 роки тому

      You betcha. Kind of puts a different focus on the word "pandemic".

    • @in8187
      @in8187 2 роки тому

      Another false video on how the earth is billions of years old.

    • @mickxymic9514
      @mickxymic9514 Рік тому

      First time of watching this channel for me and I have subsribed with great enthusiasm.

  • @bonniehoke-scedrov4906
    @bonniehoke-scedrov4906 Рік тому +2

    This is my first time enjoying your UA-cam channel. Great content! Looking forward to hearing more from you! Your video was so informative. Thank you so much!

  • @philipsmith3697
    @philipsmith3697 8 місяців тому +1

    Take a me a bit of a while to discover your channel, but I find it brilliant. Perfectly narrated and excellent visually. Thank you

  • @noeldenever
    @noeldenever 3 роки тому +415

    What a fabulous work. As always, your video felt like professionally produced documentary. From writing to narration and visuals, it's a work of art. Thank you for educating us and letting us enjoy it for free.

    • @lindamaemullins5151
      @lindamaemullins5151 3 роки тому

      Isn’t it ❤️

    • @bluceree7312
      @bluceree7312 3 роки тому +10

      And most importantly, the science behind it.
      I have known bits a bobs about many of the facts presented but never thought to look at its entirety the way this video summarised it. Very well done.

    • @dankachilles9356
      @dankachilles9356 3 роки тому

      He getting paid. He ain't doing this for free guy lmao

    • @robotempire
      @robotempire 3 роки тому +4

      We pay by giving UA-cam access to our viewing preferences, which they in turn use to sell advertising

    • @DrPlatypus1
      @DrPlatypus1 3 роки тому +2

      He didn't say he was doing it for free, he said thank you for making the video free for the public. 🤨

  • @Bobbydazzlla
    @Bobbydazzlla Рік тому +133

    Now this is a history lesson stripped back to the bones of time. Presentations like this are mesmerising

    • @cancerskryptonite
      @cancerskryptonite Рік тому

      More like spellbinding.
      All freemasonic occult lies using gematria to place spells over the subconsciousness of the drugged/pharmekia human mind. Wake up! Demon/reptile worshipping humans run the world. G in freemason = 7

    • @Bobbydazzlla
      @Bobbydazzlla Рік тому +1

      @FRANKLIN WILSON So what have you got......not much I'm betting

    • @davidreinhart418
      @davidreinhart418 Рік тому +1

      Except it still talks about evolution as a proven theory. Evolution is an antique science.

    • @jamesstevens2362
      @jamesstevens2362 Рік тому +2

      It is mesmerising! It gives my scrambled brain cells something to focus on.
      I’m thinking of it as a history lesson everyone needs to watch, because now we are the microbes!

    • @hamidhamidi3134
      @hamidhamidi3134 10 місяців тому

      It started from microbes, but how did these microbes come into being ?

  • @boozolini4465
    @boozolini4465 6 місяців тому +2

    This was a hell of an explanation, magnificent piece of work, bravo!

  • @MrProElectrician
    @MrProElectrician Рік тому +2

    Superb quality of education. I have never benefited from such a beautiful presentation of elaborate specific information in such simple yet complete terms. . Thank you

  • @Valdagast
    @Valdagast 3 роки тому +524

    "The bacteria do not have protection against the oxygen they produce..."
    This is what is technically called an oopsie.

    • @florianpeter7045
      @florianpeter7045 3 роки тому +45

      Well we don’t have an protection against carbon dioxide, oopsie

    • @earlwarner4404
      @earlwarner4404 3 роки тому +52

      @@florianpeter7045 We do actually. It takes a surprising amount of it in the air to become toxic, especially if there is still enough oxygen present. If that were not the case, we would not survive submarines.

    • @izzyplusplusplus1004
      @izzyplusplusplus1004 3 роки тому +4

      I find it interesting that your statement is true, and that it destroys the evolution genesis hypothesis.

    • @Valdagast
      @Valdagast 3 роки тому +33

      @@izzyplusplusplus1004 Not really. They don't produce large amounts of oxygen and it diffuses away pretty quickly. The dose, as we know, makes the poison. It's a problem when you get exponential growth but those are extraordinary circumstances.

    • @florianpeter7045
      @florianpeter7045 3 роки тому

      @@earlwarner4404 i didn't say it takes a small amount

  • @KarleneE
    @KarleneE 2 роки тому +177

    The writer who came up with ice "...spreading like freezing corruption..." is a genius. That's a brilliant turn of phrase: well-stated by the presenter too! Cheers!

    • @alexanderSydneyOz
      @alexanderSydneyOz 2 роки тому +5

      Except that it belongs in a child's fantasy story, not in a scientific presentation.

    • @KarleneE
      @KarleneE 2 роки тому +21

      @@alexanderSydneyOz Without presentation skills, the most brilliant scientist will neither reach nor sway anyone, even if they are demonstrably correct in what they know.

    • @HkFinn83
      @HkFinn83 Рік тому +2

      @@alexanderSydneyOz kind of agree

    • @LatinoLover
      @LatinoLover Рік тому +5

      @@alexanderSydneyOz come on I can totally see that phrasing be used in a David Attenborough nature documentary or something

    • @EconAtheist
      @EconAtheist Рік тому +2

      @@alexanderSydneyOz I thought he was talking about Vanilla Ice. Was perfect.
      now though you made me totally rethink everything

  • @johngraves6878
    @johngraves6878 11 місяців тому

    EXTREMELY well done. The VO is incredibly nuanced.

  • @juliamacdonald3767
    @juliamacdonald3767 Рік тому +3

    This is an excellent video, informative, well paced, concise, nicely voiced, with good graphics.

  • @darth856
    @darth856 3 роки тому +298

    The Great Dying almost wiped out all advanced life on Earth. But the Oxygen Catastrophe almost wiped out life completely, even the simplest of forms.

    • @BJETNT
      @BJETNT 2 роки тому +26

      It amazes me how many things had to happen for us to be here. Makes you wonder if any dinosaurs evolve to the point where they had intelligence. We can't get DNA out of them so we wouldn't know or maybe would be DNA we didn't even recognize or know what did at the time. There was even sci-fi shows based on this theory.

    • @duckdodgers.8419
      @duckdodgers.8419 2 роки тому +8

      @@BJETNT aw yeah like that one show with the frying pan wielding baby

    • @BJETNT
      @BJETNT 2 роки тому +3

      @@duckdodgers.8419 Butch!! Lmfao yeah Porky said the book didn't work and the mother said maybe you didn't use it right and spanks the baby with it. That was awsome!

    • @craigb8228
      @craigb8228 2 роки тому +2

      Life cannot be destroyed, only recreated.

    • @Draugluin999
      @Draugluin999 2 роки тому

      didnt know thanks for the info!

  • @alexanderplatypus3664
    @alexanderplatypus3664 2 роки тому +260

    It's interesting to note how amazing and powerful photosynthesis seems. Like when we think of plants (or algae, etc.) it's almost magical, because they generate energy and grow without needing to harm other organisms (directly anyway). So it makes sense that when this process first started evolutionarily, it was extremely unstable and TOO powerful and sort of got into some cascade effects.

    • @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641
      @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641 Рік тому +1

      Plants may make simple sugar through photosynthesis, but make no mistake, plants need dead things to get the nutrients to grow. You can't put a plant in sterile soil and think it's not going to die. Not to mention, there's around 750 different species of carnivorous plants alone, nevermind the thousands of parasitic plants like strangler figs that directly harm other organisms as part of their life cycles. Life feeds on life.

    • @kettelbe
      @kettelbe Рік тому +6

      Perhaps we can remake it powerful quite a bit to take more co2?

    • @Anotherguy1st
      @Anotherguy1st Рік тому +12

      I suppose it depends on how you view power. It's pretty amazing but considering how long photosynthesis has been around you would think plants would develop better ways to avoid being eaten. Perhaps that in itself shows the limitation of what plants can do really, they can make their own food but not defend it, at least not from other creatures which can move and consume.

    • @technicolormischief-maker5683
      @technicolormischief-maker5683 Рік тому +32

      @@Anotherguy1st “Defense” is the product of a scarcity that plants don’t really deal with. Because they get their energy from the sun, plants don’t need to defend themselves; they make more of themselves faster than any animal could ever eat them, and most plant species don’t really come into conflict with other plants. Not to mention that in many cases, being eaten by animals is to the plants’ benefit.
      You can bet that if it were efficient, plants would defend themselves more actively, but often they just resort to passive measures like thorns and needles. What does it say about power that it’s more efficient for plants to make more plants? That no matter how many die, there will always be more, like cutting off the heads of a hydra?

    • @benjaminparent4115
      @benjaminparent4115 Рік тому

      @@Anotherguy1st Plant do have defense mechanism even against animal. They release toxin when they detect they are eaten, to reduce digestability, mess with the herbivore metabolism, or straight up poison him, a shit load of psychoactive substances like caffeine or nicotine are actually insecticide produced by plants. And there is also torn and spine, those are defenses too despite being passive.

  • @rossr100
    @rossr100 Рік тому +3

    I don't think I've ever seen this explained so well. Fantastic, thanks. Subscribed today

  • @lynnotwell995
    @lynnotwell995 Рік тому +2

    Bloody brilliant. Loved every moment. Wonderful narration.

  • @richardmarty9939
    @richardmarty9939 3 роки тому +172

    As a trained Geologist, I would like to compliment you on a job well done. Good explanation of a rather difficult period.

    • @sandiboots123
      @sandiboots123 3 роки тому

      What would the peak ppm of carbon dioxide been? God this is interesting....!

    • @irw4350
      @irw4350 2 роки тому +1

      my GF had one of those

    • @samconagher8495
      @samconagher8495 Рік тому +3

      @@sandiboots123 In the neighborhood of 4000ppm in the Cambrian ca 500 Ma. to a low of 180ppm Quaternary glaciation (which by the way caused a considerable die-off) which is nearing the cessation point for photosynthesis and O2 generation. Of course the IPCC won't tell you that as they push for that level. They also don't tell you what happened during the Eocene.....life bloomed, new species (especially hardwoods), etc etc., very warm and high CO2 levels far more than today.

    • @antoniomv9444
      @antoniomv9444 Рік тому +3

      The big difference is the time it took for big changes during these mass extinctions.
      Now we have concrete pouring across all areas, all forests and high diversity zones being choped and hunted down. Yes carbon levels may have been higher many years ago, but we are destroying the basic chains for any ecosystem to survive with no time to adapt.
      The thing was not only about CO2, it is about our disgusting consuming practices with no regards for others, we must be fficient in the way we obtain and protect the natural resources, and we already failed.

    • @joeshmoe7967
      @joeshmoe7967 Рік тому +1

      @@samconagher8495 Yup. If we go to low on the co(2), we will be done like dinner....frozen dinner.....

  • @lavapix
    @lavapix 3 роки тому +725

    One of the reasons I enjoy exploring ancient lava tubes. The layers of rock tell stories of a violent past. Well done. On to your next video.

    • @scottcantdance804
      @scottcantdance804 3 роки тому +10

      @Controversial Chris because of your comment, I looked at his channel. Lol, looks pretty cool. I've never thought of exploring a lot of tubes. Thank you.

    • @lavapix
      @lavapix 3 роки тому +2

      @@ErronBlack_Outlaw 🤙

    • @lavapix
      @lavapix 3 роки тому

      @Controversial Chris 🤙

    • @lavapix
      @lavapix 3 роки тому

      @@scottcantdance804 🤙

    • @matthewsutton2615
      @matthewsutton2615 3 роки тому

      Excuse me it 2021

  • @tynewcombe136
    @tynewcombe136 Рік тому +2

    Wtf ... blew my small mind in half.... thank you so much for all the hard work it took to bring this amazing information to life .... beyond interesting

  • @technoadmin
    @technoadmin Рік тому +4

    Really enjoyed it, please do more of these, loved it!

  • @69ElChistoso
    @69ElChistoso 3 роки тому +349

    "Suffocated by their own waste gasses."
    No big deal. I do that to myself in the bathroom all the time.

    • @vvFanboy
      @vvFanboy 2 роки тому +4

      #stopkinkshaming

    • @carolmiller5713
      @carolmiller5713 2 роки тому +3

      TMI.

    • @uhadme
      @uhadme 2 роки тому +3

      eaten by their lover soon as done mating... (plants give off toxic oxygen 'waste' from their point of view)
      Nature is strange.. cherry picking and taking things out of context in the name of science is shameful.

    • @in8187
      @in8187 2 роки тому

      Another false video on how the earth is billions of years old.

    • @in8187
      @in8187 2 роки тому

      @Michael Hawaiianstyle the thumbnail did.

  • @choimdachoim9491
    @choimdachoim9491 3 роки тому +244

    One of the most interesting videos I've seen in my 73 years.

    • @jimgill1181
      @jimgill1181 3 роки тому +4

      I find, as another, I too, must agree!

    • @adimunir216
      @adimunir216 3 роки тому +9

      You should read "A Short History of Nearly Everything - Bill Bryson". This video's script is heavily inspired by material in the book.

    • @choimdachoim9491
      @choimdachoim9491 3 роки тому +13

      @@adimunir216 I just ordered it from ebay. Thanks.

    • @michealtaylor7745
      @michealtaylor7745 3 роки тому +12

      I enjoyed it too. Watched it from my hospital bed in Cardiff Cancer Unit, only just saw it but thoroughly enjoyed it. 60 yrs old in a couple of weeks time. Greetings, UK.

    • @uscovenant2350
      @uscovenant2350 3 роки тому +2

      There's always so much information available on the internet nowadays. Some people even find it over whelming. We aren't exactly use to this as a species but I'm sure we will catch up.
      As for extinction, it could easily happen to us. It's happened several times before.

  • @nuggitron
    @nuggitron 8 місяців тому +5

    Beautifully narrated. A real pleasure to listen to. Some other videos have presentors who speak way too quickly. Love your work.

  • @johnvaldez1444
    @johnvaldez1444 9 місяців тому +4

    Masterfully written and articulated. Very engaging, intelligible and full of references. Congrats. Keep it up!

  • @Imbalto
    @Imbalto Рік тому +221

    I’m a geologist and really didn’t get much more than a refresh from this video. However. You got me to watch the whole thing. Incredible video. Very good science communication

    • @Deridus
      @Deridus Рік тому +23

      Curious. Historians I have met consume media related to their specialization with vigor, even if it is 'just a refresher.' On the offchance you read this, do you do the same? I cannot claim to be a scientist, merely an interested soul who loves learning new things and looking at old knoledge in a new light. I earnestly wish I could spend my life wandering the halls of universities, thinktanks, research facilities, archeological digs, and the like. This world of ours is so utterly beautiful, so rich in wonders, I am always in awe. I live for sunrises, for new discoveries, and yet, a good refresher every once in a while does me a solid boost. My father was a geologist, taught me many things. Showed me how interconnected everything is. My own interests lead me to electronics, but every once in a while, I'll find myself staring at a hill or a mountain and think to myself, "What's in there? How old is it?" I've only traveled a little, but what I have seen will last my life. The Bighorn Mountains hardly deserve the name compared to the Rockies, but even so, standing atop them gave me a sense of scale that simply took my breath away. Standing atop Mt Hood a few years later gave me a sense of scope that I simply cannot put into words. Somewhere in one of my footlockers I have some fist-sized rocks from my travels. Rocks gathered from the St. Laurence River, red and white stones fron the Bighorns, granite from southern Oregon, even some Obsidian from multiple sources. Each one is a story in and of it's self, each ranging in age from a billion years to only a handful. It is a sensation of itself to hold one and think, "where did this come from?" Hmm. I think I need to get back out there.

    • @admiralsfleet2668
      @admiralsfleet2668 Рік тому

      ​@@Deridus Don't ever eat magic mushrooms and explore nature. You'll be ranting and ranting nonsense for paragraphs and paragraphs.
      I'm not a geologist, historian, or scientist but your shite talk made me respond.
      Be curious. It's great. Keep it to yourself

    • @zombone2012
      @zombone2012 Рік тому +4

      @@Deridusshhh...

    • @Deridus
      @Deridus Рік тому +1

      @@zombone2012 I find it odd that an entire conversation was deleted... I think I just need to get off youtube.

    • @jamesjamison3463
      @jamesjamison3463 11 місяців тому

      rock man

  • @soulfuzz368
    @soulfuzz368 3 роки тому +264

    Learning about extinction events makes you feel really small

    • @ProfessorCheeba
      @ProfessorCheeba 3 роки тому +21

      nah bruh. im 6'5

    • @superduper9357
      @superduper9357 3 роки тому +9

      We are small and probably not as special as we think we are?

    • @StayFractalesque
      @StayFractalesque 3 роки тому +3

      @@superduper9357 our intelligence is remarkable even if other intelligent life is out there, or rather, _was_ out there..

    • @fritglassware9165
      @fritglassware9165 3 роки тому +16

      its the amount of time that gets me. the extinction of the dinosaurs took 30,000 years! some of those iron layers took hundreds of millions of years.. and we are out here freaking out over the shit going on during our measly 70-100 year long lives. 🤯

    • @sybillestahl8646
      @sybillestahl8646 3 роки тому +3

      @@missengineer2782 Makes me wonder if there really are any more technological civilizations in the galaxy. How many crises did we just squeak through in the last 5 billion years?

  • @ziomudru
    @ziomudru Рік тому

    I am in awe. This is outstanding. Thank you!

  • @lynnsbomb
    @lynnsbomb 6 місяців тому +1

    Definitely won my subscription. That was great, I like the way you tell the stories. Can’t wait to learn more. Thanks.

  • @LeoDragon34
    @LeoDragon34 3 роки тому +70

    Now that is how to spend 30 minutes on UA-cam. Wonderful content, well narrated and produced. Thank you. Happily subscribed!

  • @DanielWSonntag
    @DanielWSonntag 8 місяців тому +4

    I'm glad we made it through that one!

  • @videofan006
    @videofan006 Рік тому +2

    Just found it, and after only a moment of watching this film subscribed instantly! What a marvel of documentary film production. This narration is a masterpiece! This film should go to schools, as well as to the film schools. Thanks, now getting back to watching the rest ;-D

  • @TearDownGenesis
    @TearDownGenesis 3 роки тому +573

    The Great Oxidation Event? I'm a bit rusty on that one.......

    • @kevindice1092
      @kevindice1092 3 роки тому +76

      That’s a ferrous-essment.

    • @Richard-zc1cj
      @Richard-zc1cj 3 роки тому +50

      That's an iron-clad statement

    • @toddkurzbard
      @toddkurzbard 3 роки тому +10

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

    • @anonygent
      @anonygent 3 роки тому +8

      50 lashes! (Opus the penguin reference for those who are curious.)

    • @JEANSDEMARCO
      @JEANSDEMARCO 3 роки тому +15

      HAHA! Rock solid man!😀

  • @haroldburrows4770
    @haroldburrows4770 3 роки тому +263

    I just love this stuff, even billions of years ago success breeds demise

    • @alexandragamingronyno2275
      @alexandragamingronyno2275 3 роки тому +24

      Not only that, demise itself was the foundation for future successes.
      We search for complex alien life but life itself is an unending chain of failed attempts and fateful recoveries. What are the chances for a similar outcome? While greater than zero, I'd say it's incredibly improbable.
      The Universe is not teeming with life in spite of fat chances for life to appear. That's simply not good enough. Life constantly needs catastrophe to recover from and also evolve further. Without any failings, life will wither away when the inevitable tragedy will come.
      Thus, the meek will once again inherit the world, unless even they are too proud facing their doom.

    • @stormysampson1257
      @stormysampson1257 3 роки тому +6

      Demise? Decimation? Destruction? 'I don't think so, Tim'...Success breeds more success. Selecting out any life that is unable to adapt quickly enough. Is that what you mean?

    • @rhedinrage1601
      @rhedinrage1601 3 роки тому +10

      @@alexandragamingronyno2275 I'd argue against that, success can come from catastrophe. We survive because the earth was terraformed but if we keep convincing ourselves that using the abundance of food an energy from that is wrong to do so, we will expire ourselves and from that, birds would probably rise. Chemistry has a few likely outcomes and things keep evolving in relatively predictable directions, especially where a medium like water, Co2, nitrogen, sulfur, heat etc are concerned. If you want to see what happens when things stop succeeding, look at sharks, they never failed so they never adapted and they never changed now they're as dumb as bricks and die if they sleep too long :p

    • @DownhillAllTheWay
      @DownhillAllTheWay 3 роки тому +9

      Harold Burrows - "success breeds demise"
      Success? You mean like the mining of fossil fuels? The internal combustion engine and mass transport? The improvement in living standards (well ... for humans)? The Internet? Population expansion beyond the proportions of any other animal ever?
      Those are the measures of success - and they could *_never_* lead to demise .... could they .... ?
      The dinosaurs were here for 300 million years. Cockroches have been here for 400 million. We have been here for about half a million. There have been species far more successful than we are, and now, there's not much of a trace of them. Who will last longer - us or roaches? Roaches have a good track record. Primates ... not so much.

    • @florianpeter7045
      @florianpeter7045 3 роки тому +2

      @@rhedinrage1601 i dont think an animal living for 400 million years has failed in any way so what it might be dumb but how far ahead are we intelligent wise? Id say only a tiny bit concidering AI and superintelligent aliens (which are most likely technological beings that have evolved from biological ones). Every step in evolution is necessary for the next one to occur for if a ladder was missing one step you wouldn’t be able to get up

  • @tomthebomb557
    @tomthebomb557 Рік тому +10

    I have learned more about the history of life on this planet in the 26:39 then I have from any other source. Well done sir. A masterful mini documentary.

  • @rowan1able
    @rowan1able Рік тому

    This wonderful documentary drove me to heavy tears, God~Bless You my friend.

  • @tscott6843
    @tscott6843 2 роки тому +58

    Truly professional content like this is hard to find as it gets buried under content that uses video clips only remotely associated with the narration. Thank you for your time and effort. This is a superb video.

    • @cancerskryptonite
      @cancerskryptonite Рік тому

      That begs the question, who's paying and why?
      All freemasonic occult lies using gematria to place spells over the subconsciousness of the drugged/pharmekia human mind. Wake up! Demon/reptile worshipping humans run the world. G in freemason = 7

  • @tomgore9696
    @tomgore9696 2 роки тому +211

    Brilliant and haunting. The antiquity of life on Earth is mind-boggling and strangely familiar at the same time. We stand on the shoulders of microbes.

    • @kailawkamo1568
      @kailawkamo1568 2 роки тому +16

      Well not shoulders but maybe plasma membranes hahaha

    • @robertsmith3672
      @robertsmith3672 2 роки тому +3

      So the earth IS. Older than 4000 years.

    • @Misses-Hippy
      @Misses-Hippy 2 роки тому +1

      Love it!

    • @noox13
      @noox13 2 роки тому +6

      @@robertsmith3672
      ...yes...much older...

    • @robertsmith3672
      @robertsmith3672 2 роки тому +6

      @@noox13 I knew the bible was fiction even as a child

  • @2msvalkyrie529
    @2msvalkyrie529 Рік тому

    Excellent narrator .! Pace / Timing / Enunciation ....all perfect . A pleasure to listen to .

  • @jb71488
    @jb71488 Рік тому +7

    I had no idea this happened!! Thanks for the info and narration! Incredibly interesting and gives a sense of scale to our planets evolution!

  • @matteb859
    @matteb859 3 роки тому +69

    “Creatures suffocating in their own waste” Sounds like me after a takeaway

  • @Trev0r98
    @Trev0r98 3 роки тому +142

    The asteroid that caused the K-Pg extinction event 66 million years ago was *not* "80 kilometers wide". Most authoritative estimates place it between 10 to 16 kilometers wide.

    • @cancerskryptonite
      @cancerskryptonite Рік тому +1

      All freemasonic occult lies using gematria to place spells over the subconsciousness of the drugged/pharmekia human mind. Wake up! Demon/reptile worshipping humans run the world. G in freemason = 7

    • @lazynow1
      @lazynow1 Рік тому +15

      6 miles or 18445 Egyptian Cubits

    • @MaGuFer
      @MaGuFer Рік тому

      Trev, I read that as well.

    • @rutvikrs
      @rutvikrs Рік тому +5

      It was only 3.7 inches. The jig was up after the angry ex started gossiping that the previous measure of 16 kms was a charade to gain academic clout of researching an "important event".

    • @lazynow1
      @lazynow1 Рік тому +1

      @@rutvikrs so are we talking about some bad porn movie or asteroids

  • @angeluomo
    @angeluomo Рік тому +12

    At 2:50, the video states that the Chicxulub impactor was 80km wide. Consensus today puts that size at roughly 10km in diameter (e.g., about the size of Everest).

  • @davethebrahman9870
    @davethebrahman9870 Рік тому

    Beautiful production, thank you!

  • @orehas45
    @orehas45 2 роки тому +70

    Accidentally stumbled on this channel, this was the first video I watched, and I immediately subscribed. Excellent quality overall, well structured text, wonderful narration and very appropriate video. So refreshing to have the information delivered in a laconic and informative manner, without the usual filler blah, blah, blah, mixed with dramatic pauses, distracting music and useless sound effects. Thank you very much! Pleas keep making such high quality content.

    • @pavel9652
      @pavel9652 2 роки тому +1

      There are a few mistakes in the video. For instance, the K/T extinction impactor had a diameter of about 10km.

  • @simtexa
    @simtexa 3 роки тому +127

    This is fascinating in how all life on Earth has adapted in some way to survive in the otherwise toxic atmosphere. Indeed, many lifeforms are downright reliant on it.
    This carries with it the implication that potential alien lifeforms that would have evolved in vastly different ways may find our atmosphere to still be extremely toxic to them.

    • @Blutwind
      @Blutwind 2 роки тому +8

      i once read a joke story about how aliens don´t want to contact us because we breathe/drink Rocket fuel and shurg oxidation of as something completly normal

    • @Blutwind
      @Blutwind 2 роки тому +12

      @DESI EDM BEATS yeah i mean humanity is kindof scary if you think about it.
      One moment we bash our heads in with our neighbor and if a biggger group approaches we stand next to same guy we just punched a moment before.
      We had to make a study if using a nuke would self immolate our Atmosphere because we realy wanted to use a nuke.
      We threaten ourself with mutial assured destruction.
      We have more working ideas on how destroy our biosphere then how to save it.
      We depend on a chemical compound of Natrium and Chloride.
      In terms of Stamina we can basicaly outpace anything if the person in question is modrratly fit (as in we wont catch a deer in a sprint but the deer will lose a marathon)
      Humanity is hella scary and irrational if you think about it in a neutral way. Makes it fun though beeing one of those scary apes!
      Also we are curious af i mean wich african animal would see the arctic circles and think "imma cross tha mf of an ice desert" or who intheir right mind would think sitting atop a selfsustained semi controled permanent explosion is a good idea because you realy want to touch the white stone thingy in the night sky

    • @seantaggart7382
      @seantaggart7382 2 роки тому +1

      @@Blutwind yeah

    • @seantaggart7382
      @seantaggart7382 2 роки тому +1

      @@Blutwind yeah
      Its our gift
      Our imagination
      Its what powers us

    • @hendrikdependrik1891
      @hendrikdependrik1891 2 роки тому +4

      It also shows life will find a way after us. As long as we're not able to create climate control for our own, but instead destroy everything while polluting the atmosphere with CO2 that's going to suffocate is, other life forms will take our place. And maybe might take a few hundred million years, life will restore itself in ways we can't even imagine.

  • @davidwootton683
    @davidwootton683 Рік тому

    Brilliant! Many thanks for sharing this with us.

  • @jimetzel2971
    @jimetzel2971 2 місяці тому

    That was very interesting to watch and listen to. Thank you for creating this.

  • @busybillyb33
    @busybillyb33 3 роки тому +145

    2:51 Needs a correction. The asteroid impactor that hit the Yucatan peninsula was not 80km, but more around 10km. 80km would have absolutely demolished that entire face of the earth.

    • @remijugier6806
      @remijugier6806 2 роки тому +37

      yup, saying 80km instead of 10km might not feel like a huge difference but the asteroid mass is actually 512 times more since its about volume, so a 80km asteroid would amount to 512 dinosaur extinction asteroids.

    • @artor9175
      @artor9175 2 роки тому +33

      @@waynefay8210 What makes you think anyone cares about your opinion, since volumetric math seems to be beyond your grasp?

    • @jonka1
      @jonka1 2 роки тому +15

      @@artor9175 I suggest that a lot more than volumetric math seems to be beyond his grasp.

    • @jaik195701
      @jaik195701 2 роки тому +4

      Depends on the speed.

    • @e1wdawg
      @e1wdawg 2 роки тому +4

      If some 80 km hit the Earth We would know about it today It would have a massive of change on the face of the Earth

  • @Iknowtoomuchable
    @Iknowtoomuchable 3 роки тому +807

    Other Microbes: "NOOOO YOU CAN'T JUST CREATE ALL THAT OXYGEN, YOU'LL KILL US ALL!!!"
    Oxygen-farting Microbe: "Ha ha photosynthesis goes brrrrrt."

    • @ETCABEZON
      @ETCABEZON 3 роки тому +74

      * REEEEs in suffocation *

    • @nowthatsjustducky
      @nowthatsjustducky 3 роки тому +74

      Perhaps this event should be called the Great Finger Pull

    • @stoyanb.1668
      @stoyanb.1668 3 роки тому +5

      @@nowthatsjustducky lol

    • @worfoz
      @worfoz 3 роки тому +42

      RIP (Rust in peace)

    • @kchuk1965
      @kchuk1965 3 роки тому +28

      @@nowthatsjustducky the great planetary flatulence event

  • @Minimalist11Guy
    @Minimalist11Guy 10 місяців тому +14

    That gave me a real appreciation of our constantly changing planet.
    I have never see such a well explained description.

  • @vanbistrow7145
    @vanbistrow7145 Рік тому +1

    Beautifully done and very informative!

  • @Rafaga777
    @Rafaga777 3 роки тому +50

    What a great channel! I can remember that once National Geographic and Discovery Channel had beautiful documentaries but these days are gone so I am very glad to stumble upon your channel very recently. Please keep on the good work!

    • @mbvoelker8448
      @mbvoelker8448 3 роки тому +3

      Yes!
      I used to love those channels and TLC too. But they've gone downhill and the good stuff is coming from independent content creators like this.

    • @lindamaemullins5151
      @lindamaemullins5151 3 роки тому

      ❤️

    • @henrirousseau9541
      @henrirousseau9541 3 роки тому +3

      The place that needs more thought is: where and how did photosynthetic bacteria survive the 400-million years of Snowball Earth with its mile-thick ice sheets everywhere? On volcanic cones?

    • @Egilhelmson
      @Egilhelmson 3 роки тому +1

      NatGeo has decent UA-cam videos.

  • @Laserblade
    @Laserblade 3 роки тому +107

    I'm 65, and a student of science all my life. You filled several holes in my understanding. Very well written and presented. Thank you!

    • @myjizzureye
      @myjizzureye 3 роки тому +6

      Not the first time you have thanked a bloke for filling your holes is it.

    • @Laserblade
      @Laserblade 3 роки тому +9

      @@myjizzureyeSo easily entertained by adolescent humor? That accurately reflects your intellect.

    • @myjizzureye
      @myjizzureye 3 роки тому +1

      @@Laserblade I'd say its a stronger reflection on your lack of personality.
      Also I am not easily entertained, your dad had to push back and moan for me to finish.

    • @benderisback619
      @benderisback619 2 роки тому +2

      @@myjizzureye disgusting and disgraceful

    • @myjizzureye
      @myjizzureye 2 роки тому

      @@benderisback619 You want my number?

  • @stephenm8270
    @stephenm8270 Рік тому +2

    fantastic film. im a geologist and that was the most vivid explanation of the precambrian iron stones i have ever heard. fantastic

  • @Deepthought-42
    @Deepthought-42 Рік тому

    Watched this again several months after the first time. Just as enthralling 👍

  • @kurtisgonzales37
    @kurtisgonzales37 3 роки тому +9

    I love this channel. I never realized I was so interested in geology. This channel, covers in detail, all aspects, of what we know, about our earths formation. I'm always waiting for a new vid!!!!

  • @fredb2022
    @fredb2022 3 роки тому +7

    Marvelous! A big thank you to our host. Learned a lot. Life is precious.

  • @darrenhepperle4854
    @darrenhepperle4854 7 місяців тому

    I love this video. I can't wait to see more episodes.

  • @twistedbuilder
    @twistedbuilder Рік тому

    That was a wonder filled presentation that I am thankful to y'all's evolutionary contribution. Mahalo!

  • @pjacobsen1000
    @pjacobsen1000 3 роки тому +16

    I was just recommended this channel. This is just what I have been hoping for: A more detailed history of earth's geology and biology. In fact, once this series is over, I would be happy to see more episodes about early chemistry, thus binding the physics, geology and biology. Altogether, this is excellent viewing!

  • @6z0
    @6z0 3 роки тому +283

    This is such an underrated channel. I can’t believe you only have 50k subs...

    • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
      @gaslitworldf.melissab2897 3 роки тому +25

      50k is no small task, however. It's enough for YT to recognize you. Besides, there are literally hundreds more covering similar topics, many in short bursts, like EONS, a PBS project, for instance. With time, it will grow as the algorithm directs viewers to the channel.

    • @shogun8376
      @shogun8376 3 роки тому +6

      That's the tragedy. People aren't interested in expanding their knowledge, they just want entertainment and fun.

    • @michaelloedel750
      @michaelloedel750 3 роки тому +7

      @@shogun8376 how do you know that? Also what’s wrong with that if entertainment is also a form of expanding your knowledge?

    • @resileaf9501
      @resileaf9501 3 роки тому +5

      We just have to keep watching every video, and over time more and more people will be attracted to this channel. :D

    • @nancyf.8185
      @nancyf.8185 3 роки тому +1

      @@michaelloedel750 I agree 100%.

  • @Astrofrank
    @Astrofrank Рік тому

    Great video with good narration. I will watch the next one now.

  • @catalyst429
    @catalyst429 4 місяці тому

    every time I'm in a stressful point in my life content like this brings me so much peace

  • @rogerhinman5427
    @rogerhinman5427 2 роки тому +34

    3:09 The extinction of the dinosaurs took "...a mere thirty thousand years..." Let's just stop and think about that on a Human scale shall we?

    • @imyourmaster77
      @imyourmaster77 2 роки тому +4

      Its crazy, we're BY FAR closer in terms of time to the T Rex than they were to the earliest dinosaurs.

    • @jamesa901
      @jamesa901 2 роки тому +5

      So I don't think there's any evidence on how long after the asteroid impact the non-avian dinosaurs survived. 30K years? Or 30? Or 3? Or were they all wiped out when the Earth became an oven at 800 degrees, during the first 24 hours after the impact. Since there are almost no fossils for the first 10K years after the impact, it's pure speculation.
      Also, as has been mentioned, avian dinosaurs were nearly indistinguishable from modern birds before the impact. There were many types (species) of avian dinosaurs, with fundamental differences but all pretty much looking the same, of which only one species survived the impact. Birds really are an entire Class of animal descended from that single species of dinosaur that made it thru. The same goes for mammals. Every mammal alive today is descended from the very few species of mammal that made it through.

    • @Tanrer
      @Tanrer 2 роки тому +1

      @@jamesa901 yeh I was going to say, non-avian dinosaur fossils have only been found below the KPg boundary and even then not touching the boundary, and to take it further any dates are just dates of specific eatable rock, not the fossils, saying the extinction took x amount of time just seems like a flawed statement.

    • @user-mh2bw4hu3o
      @user-mh2bw4hu3o 2 роки тому +1

      They burrowed deep underground in the cool, moist soil.

  • @jensastrup1940
    @jensastrup1940 3 роки тому +31

    Finally, an explanation of why the iron formations are banded.

    • @Achill101
      @Achill101 3 роки тому +12

      I think the explanation has been around for sixty years but hidden in scientific articles. It's good to see it explained in laymen's terms.

  • @davidknisely3003
    @davidknisely3003 10 місяців тому +10

    The asteroid that killed off the dinosaurs was estimated to be 10 to 15 km in size, not 80 km as is stated at 2:52.

  • @michaeladolf4237
    @michaeladolf4237 6 місяців тому

    Phantastic, what level of information and narration 👍👍👍

  • @CloudyMason
    @CloudyMason 3 роки тому +5

    I'm only 3 minutes in and I'm so utterly hooked to this video. I've seen quite a lot of your documentaries -most are great, but this one is SO GOOD. One hell of an intro

  • @jennyjen7000
    @jennyjen7000 3 роки тому +96

    I don't think I've ever been this excited for a new video. ❤️

    • @brymstar333
      @brymstar333 3 роки тому +4

      RIGHT!.....pre Permian anything is like crack! ...terminal geek....

    • @charlesseymour1482
      @charlesseymour1482 3 роки тому

      Best geology film ever made and just 27 minutes. Tight edit, exciting script and great videography. I stand in awe! Pulsing oxygen rock spanning 200 million years.

    • @charlesseymour1482
      @charlesseymour1482 3 роки тому +1

      I have taught this story in chemistry class with 1/2 the class sleeping. What a story line of sun lovers...

    • @toperd965
      @toperd965 3 роки тому +1

      @@charlesseymour1482 hhaha never been interested like this before, now i feel like i could be a geologist!

    • @Honorablebenaiaha
      @Honorablebenaiaha 3 роки тому

      Hey Jenny, how often you hit the fentanyl or meth pipe?

  • @IanMorgan-cw1tn
    @IanMorgan-cw1tn 10 місяців тому

    Superb. Absolutely brilliant. Thank you very much.

  • @JPHarringtonJr
    @JPHarringtonJr Рік тому

    Hanging out with this video while drawing. Thanks for making it-

  • @Snowstar837
    @Snowstar837 3 роки тому +54

    I wonder if this is the Great Filter - emerging microbial communities will almost always end up changing their environment and wiping themselves out. Maybe Earth was very, very lucky that anything survived.

    • @mecha-sheep7674
      @mecha-sheep7674 3 роки тому +11

      I doubt it.
      1) Every star radiates more and more heat as it ages. So oxygenation and global ice age are needed to escape runaway greenhouse effect, like what happened on Venus.
      2) This happens slowly enough that some life will survive somewhere until the planet warms, thanks to geological activity and the star heating more and more. After all, frost does not kill most simple life forms. They just have to wait.
      So, I think it's rather the opposite : IF photosynthetic life does not appear soon enough on a planet, THEN volcanic activity and increased solar radiation send the greenhouse effect into overdrive. And while it's possible to exit an ice age, it's impossible to exit a runaway greenhouse effect : the ocean boils away, CO2 accumulate in the atmosphere and you end up with a venusian world, where life is mostly impossible.

    • @someone2973
      @someone2973 3 роки тому +1

      ​@no no The Universe has a number of stars that we would consider vast, but we don't know how many planets are needed for it to be more likely than not that at least one of them has a technological civilization at least advanced as ours. It may be that the number of planets needed to make a technological civilization more likely than not is so large that it makes even the number of planets in the observable universe seem small in comparison.

    • @BenoHourglass
      @BenoHourglass 3 роки тому

      @no no So what if the chances of one of those planets getting life is 1 in 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000? We should expect the universe to be completely lifeless, then, making us improbable.

    • @BenoHourglass
      @BenoHourglass 3 роки тому

      ​@no no "Sheer numbers alone make other life a statistical probability."
      If, statistically, the chances of life emerging on a planet are 1 in 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 then statistically we shouldn't expect any life in the observable universe at all, making us a rarity.

    • @KateeAngel
      @KateeAngel 3 роки тому

      Considering their fast rates of evolution, it is very unlikely for the while biosphere of microbes to wipe itself out

  • @nathanblack4103
    @nathanblack4103 3 роки тому +5

    Amazing video, powerful narration. I don't think I have ever watched a documentary that is 27 minutes long, but I watched the whole thing without any skips.

  • @TheDrRJP
    @TheDrRJP Рік тому +10

    I never learned anything about how this extinction occurred from my sicence classes until just now. This is a wonderful series that hopefully is being taught in schools today

    • @user-hs5me4dw4n
      @user-hs5me4dw4n 2 місяці тому

      In school?I don't know if I'm a boy or girl 😂

  • @user-hm6bn6kw6k
    @user-hm6bn6kw6k 5 місяців тому

    Brilliant. I have never seen anything as good as this and its explanation of bif and the world at that time.

  • @mv11000
    @mv11000 2 роки тому +5

    Well-written, well-narrated, detailed. What an excellent channel this is.

  • @ArleneDKatz
    @ArleneDKatz 3 роки тому +15

    This is the best thing I have seen on UA-cam. Simply wonderful. You have imparted the poetry of science. gorgeously clear Musically spoken

  • @spaniardecn7841
    @spaniardecn7841 Рік тому

    Brilliant exposition. Thank you

  • @TranzVangal
    @TranzVangal Рік тому

    What an awesome channel about Earth's history thank yoooouuuu