Why Was the Great Dying So Bad?

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  • Опубліковано 11 бер 2023
  • The ending of the Permian Period marks the worst mass extinction event in the history of life - the Great Dying. But what made this extinction so severe?
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    Sources:
    www.nature.com/articles/s4301...
    www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/...
    www.science.org/doi/10.1126/s...
    www.nature.com/articles/s4301...
    www.sciencedirect.com/science...
    www.sciencedirect.com/science...
    royalsocietypublishing.org/do...
    www.sciencedirect.com/science...
    www.google.co.uk/books/editio...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 563

  • @proto-geek248
    @proto-geek248 Рік тому +2259

    I think the reason The Great Dying was so bad had a lot to do with all the dying.

    • @cymraegpunk1420
      @cymraegpunk1420 Рік тому +193

      Wouldn't have been so bad without it for sure.

    • @box2365
      @box2365 Рік тому +20

      💀

    • @rinkibiswas3364
      @rinkibiswas3364 Рік тому +40

      I think the animals died in the great dying 🤔

    • @davidgantenbein9362
      @davidgantenbein9362 Рік тому +98

      It would just have been „The Great“ without all the dying, sounds more like a good time, so I think your theory holds ground.

    • @urekmazino6800
      @urekmazino6800 Рік тому +11

      Genius turn it into the professor now lol

  • @hsdinoman2267
    @hsdinoman2267 Рік тому +519

    We have since built museums to celebrate the past, and spend decades studying prehistoric lives.
    And if all this has taught us anything, it is this: no species lasts forever. -Kenneth Branagh

    • @Alltime2050
      @Alltime2050 Рік тому

      Unfortunately, too many of certain type of person uses that sentiment as an excuse to continue creating our own mass extinction event. They same to think it's normal.

    • @realdaggerman105
      @realdaggerman105 Рік тому +38

      No species has ever been as narcissistic as us either, WE WILL LIVE FOREVER

    • @hsdinoman2267
      @hsdinoman2267 Рік тому +12

      @@realdaggerman105 dont think so, our narcissism will be our down fall

    • @rynemcgriffin1752
      @rynemcgriffin1752 Рік тому +22

      @@hsdinoman2267Well no because no other species is as amazing as us, hence we’re gonna live forever

    • @hsdinoman2267
      @hsdinoman2267 Рік тому +5

      @@rynemcgriffin1752 somebody seems to be high off their own gases

  • @Chompchompyerded
    @Chompchompyerded Рік тому +256

    Thanks for making your paper available for us. I wish I could give it an honest grade, but I was a professor of music, not palaeontology, so I'll just satisfy myself with learning from it. Thanks also for making such a wonderful channel for us all to learn from and enjoy.

  • @jeffthompson9622
    @jeffthompson9622 Рік тому +76

    Thank you for sharing this content. It includes more detail about the Siberian Traps activity and timing of its consequences than I had previously encountered.

  • @arkinyte13
    @arkinyte13 Рік тому +8

    “Because it was so ugly, everyone died!!”
    ~Patrick Star

  • @Tungdil_01
    @Tungdil_01 Рік тому +229

    The Permian extinction was sad of course. But if it never happened, the world would never see the more special organisms in the world's history: the dinosaurs.

    • @vernonfridy8416
      @vernonfridy8416 Рік тому +35

      Not to mention, “mammals” would probably look pretty different.

    • @MrCrunch808
      @MrCrunch808 Рік тому +23

      @@vernonfridy8416 Probably alot more synapsid groups would continue to exist to this day.

    • @vermillion8249
      @vermillion8249 Рік тому +9

      @@MrCrunch808 If the K-Pg extinction still happens the Cenozoic would possibly be the age of reptiles.

    • @UnwantedGhost1
      @UnwantedGhost1 Рік тому +2

      And humans who are literally the only species to remember what came long before us.

    • @davidgantenbein9362
      @davidgantenbein9362 Рік тому +12

      @@UnwantedGhost1 It’s less „remembering“ and more investigating or figuring out.

  • @katkath4996
    @katkath4996 Рік тому +24

    Thorough, clearly written and well researched. I give it an A .

    • @gunsol900
      @gunsol900 Рік тому +1

      WHO THE FUCK IS YOU?!

  • @GoodForYou4504
    @GoodForYou4504 Рік тому +36

    Somehow, I am thinking your coursework for degree is going to be an A, if it is even half as good as your channel content, well disserved. Very well done to give prospective to the history of life VS. modern times. Good luck in your studies, but you will go far no matter what you pursue. 👍

  • @GojiGuru
    @GojiGuru Рік тому +57

    Another excellent video, Ben. I especially like that typically, you guys share new insights or research with a measure of modesty. What I mean to say is, too often paleo-themed YT channels, blogs, tweets, etc., will jump onto every new bit of research or hypothesis or theory and excitedly proclaim it as a new “truth” of discovery. Of course, such information may eventually come to be accepted to an assumed truth given the evidence, but science doesn’t deal with absolutes-it deals with falsification and probabilities. So, even though it might seem like a very insignificant detail, just using small words like “might,” “maybe”, “possibly”, “perhaps”, “could have”, etc., when speaking of the possible conclusions such evidence or research or hypothesis might lead to, helps to remind the viewer that not ever detail about every subject is always known for absolute certainty. (Hence the reason for continuous research!) That is simply the very nature of the historical sciences, and I much appreciate that you all generally are good about doing this. It’s important for the scientific process to be as transparent as possible for the general public, which helps to clear up a lot of misunderstandings as well as to explain exactly why and how we draw the many conclusions that we do. So, good job, lads! -A Paleontologist

    • @patreekotime4578
      @patreekotime4578 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, there are WAYY too many "science" channels out there that are run by people who are scientifically illiterate. (And I include most science journalists in that desciption). But you dont have to have trained in the sciences to be scientifically literate... you just have to be able to review a paper and analyze the methodology. Is there a large enough sample size?if there is experimental data, how were the experiments constructed? was there a proper control? do the claims of the authors actually match the data they collected? how weak or strong is the hypothesis? are the results within the margin for error and therefore too weak to support the conclusion? Etc. And of course, like you said, the realization that science is a constantly unfolding revellation, not a dogmatic Truth... as well as the realization that nothing in science is taken as fact until the results have been independantly verified or reproduced. One paper doesnt change everything by itself.

    • @GojiGuru
      @GojiGuru Рік тому +4

      @@patreekotime4578 yes, exactly. But these facts are either a) not known/understood by most people, even those interested in science, or b) such persons are too lazy/lacking the training in critical thinking to scrutinize the data. Just because something appears in a scientific paper doesn’t mean there is no misinformation in it or that the authors didn’t make any mistakes. That’s why science is a communal effort. No one person can know everything or change everything. Even so, many science enthusiasts (especially it seems those lovers of paleontology), sometimes act more like the “fans” of a movie/book/TV franchise, treating each new piece of data like a “leak” from the studio and speculating about the next film or season. The enthusiasm is appreciated, but we must approach science and fiction differently. How many YT videos are out there that called “What X dinosaur really sounded like” or “Allosaurus’ Sounds Reconstructed” or “new discovers turns the field on its head!” Besides the fact that no one can reconstruct the sound of an Allosaurus or that very rarely does a single discovery “rewrite history”, such videos give the false impression that we have everything figured out, that nothing is forever unknowable, or that science is a straightforward venture. Any reasonably modest person who has ever gone through proper scientific trainer or even just been very well read will tell you: the more you learn, the more you realize how little we actually know, how much more there must be to know, and that most everything-past, present, and future-will forever be unknowable. In other words, humility is essential for doing good science, and that goes for those reporting on the sciences as well.

  • @harronator-2670
    @harronator-2670 Рік тому +25

    Because everyone died

    • @biomuseum6645
      @biomuseum6645 Рік тому +1

      You stole me the joke xD

    • @rursus8354
      @rursus8354 Рік тому +2

      Correction: because *_almost_* everyone died

    • @wayne5553
      @wayne5553 Рік тому

      and why are you here then

  • @davidboyle1902
    @davidboyle1902 Рік тому +10

    Maybe because I’m saddened by the loss of so many animals throughout earth history, I find these presentations particularly interesting. The Great Dying is an event that deserves your level of focus. An excellent presentation.

  • @Dr.Cosmar
    @Dr.Cosmar Рік тому +14

    Well, they don't call it, "the great awesome period", do they?
    Last I checked, dying sucks.

    • @biomuseum6645
      @biomuseum6645 Рік тому +4

      Death is actually kind of neutral, sometimes bad sometimes good

    • @nikobellic570
      @nikobellic570 Рік тому +1

      I think we're living through the great awesome period right now. Or great ok period

    • @Martin-yh7vi
      @Martin-yh7vi Рік тому +1

      ​@@nikobellic570 Great for some of us but bad for other creatures. 😅

  • @The_PokeSaurus
    @The_PokeSaurus Рік тому +3

    OH God! History is repeating!

  • @loganskiwyse7823
    @loganskiwyse7823 Рік тому +28

    First time I have seen the information about the underlaying geological landscape prior to the formation of the traps. In a lot of ways this sounds like what would have become a major coal deposit explaining just how much carbon could have actually been released beyond just the volcanic events.

  • @SqwarkParrotSpittingFeathers
    @SqwarkParrotSpittingFeathers Рік тому +5

    Enjoyed that, entertaining and informative. An excellent combination.

  • @basilbrushbooshieboosh5302
    @basilbrushbooshieboosh5302 Рік тому +3

    Thank for covering the PETM, I've been hanging out for some good coverage to come along. And you guys did it. Cheers

  • @patora13
    @patora13 Рік тому +4

    Thank you for sharing. I really like your understandable explanations.

  • @petrairene
    @petrairene Рік тому +4

    Great detail info about this highly interesting period in earth history! Thanks!

  • @opposumness3107
    @opposumness3107 Рік тому +6

    This is so cool! To be able to get hands on your newly published work is such a treat. I really dig* your channel, and even though I'm not in this field, I appreciate the love and care you have for science.
    Cheers from a musically educated paleontology enthusiast.

    • @opposumness3107
      @opposumness3107 Рік тому

      *that's right, you know exactly what I meant by that.

  • @dukecity7688
    @dukecity7688 Рік тому

    This is the best, most comprehensive explanation of the Great Dying I've ever heard. I usually have to watch at least twice to absorb everything. I'm slow. You are my favorite UA-cam site.

  • @a.e.jabbour5003
    @a.e.jabbour5003 Рік тому +1

    Thanks a lot for this. It was definitely informative and fascinating. Excellent!

  • @hollyodii5969
    @hollyodii5969 Рік тому +3

    This was an excellent video on a cool subject! And I can’t wait to see more about South Africa!

  • @Shujao
    @Shujao Рік тому +1

    First video of yours I'm seeing and I absolutely enjoyed it. Your voice is great for this and your articulation is superb. I look forward to watching more!

  • @billbridge7458
    @billbridge7458 Рік тому +3

    Excellent episode!

  • @alioramus1637
    @alioramus1637 Рік тому +17

    Great job! Would have been nice if you included the capitanian extinction at the end of the middle permian. A lesser known extinction event during the permian.

  • @aldenconsolver3428
    @aldenconsolver3428 Рік тому +11

    Good Job there, I can see your work in Africa doing you good. Now as an old-time geologist/planetary scientist, I do reserve the right to softly laugh at two digits after the years (251.48). Still, heck you guys might be getting close on that (its been close to 50 years since I did any straight-up geology, looks like you have been carrying on excellently). I would love to see you make a Siberian Traps series, I think that it has a lot to say. Once more, good job. Oh I was one of the contributors to your African studies, I think it was clearly money well spent.

  • @rogerpartner2648
    @rogerpartner2648 6 місяців тому

    Always enjoyed your channel. Great work.

  • @emilye.8779
    @emilye.8779 Рік тому +3

    What an incredible article. I’m doing my master’s currently right now, this paper totally looks like one I would cite in my own writing hahaha. Very well done

  • @sassa82
    @sassa82 Рік тому +6

    Great video! Short and consice.

  • @davidgrech4574
    @davidgrech4574 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge and your enthusiasm and I hope you know how much I appreciate your videos 👍🌎

  • @dennis_mihaylov
    @dennis_mihaylov 7 місяців тому

    I´ve definetely learned something new! It is a great video! Thank you so much.

  • @eyemallears2647
    @eyemallears2647 Рік тому

    You guys are awesome
    Restoring my faith in the youth!

  • @liamd9497
    @liamd9497 Рік тому

    Excellent video

  • @matthewmorgan9269
    @matthewmorgan9269 Рік тому

    Nice work !

  • @whocares2214
    @whocares2214 Рік тому

    You have a good voice. Subbed....I fall asleep to these types of videos

  • @Turnil321
    @Turnil321 Рік тому +1

    Great Dying: only mass extinction to really impact insects.
    Humans: hold my beer.

  • @bjh7924
    @bjh7924 Рік тому

    Really interesting video & best of luck with your degree - I'm sure you'll do great 👍🎓

  • @bbbenj
    @bbbenj Рік тому

    Very very interesting, bravo 👏

  • @MrVeryfrost
    @MrVeryfrost 8 місяців тому

    Awesome video

  • @thereisnonebesideshim
    @thereisnonebesideshim Рік тому +1

    Love your channel and the great clarity and style of your presentation 😁 Where exactly in South Africa did you visit that boundary layer? I live in SA and need to plan a trip there! Looking forward to watching the SA series of videos 😊

  • @greensteve9307
    @greensteve9307 Рік тому

    Linking your paper is a nice touch.

  • @liam90210
    @liam90210 Рік тому +1

    Thank you ❤

  • @rileyernst9086
    @rileyernst9086 Рік тому +17

    "I've stood on this boundry."
    Ben stood before the scene of carnage. Ash blanketed the landscape as UVR bombarded the earth through a destroyed ozone layer. Nothing stirred but the wind blowing streams of ash and cinder into the air. They were standing on aftermath of perhaps the most terrible event in the history of life on earth, it was awefilling and terrible at once. But heartening to know that no matter how bad it was now some things would persevere. Life would continue.
    Eye-patch Doug stepped up next to him throwing up clouds of volcanic ash with each step, skin greasy with sweat and sunscreen.
    "I love the smell of volcanic ash in the morning," Eyepatch Doug said through his respirator, he stopped for a moment considering the scene with satisfaction, "it smells like victory."

  • @LDrosophila
    @LDrosophila Рік тому +1

    Wow the loss of insects is scary as that is occuring today

  • @NawDawgTheRazor
    @NawDawgTheRazor Рік тому

    Fascinating!

  • @JohnPaul-yf9xd
    @JohnPaul-yf9xd Рік тому

    Great work. Aim High

  • @Piperdogloveshats
    @Piperdogloveshats 8 місяців тому

    Great break down

  • @nyft3352
    @nyft3352 Рік тому +2

    I rememeber telling my best friend about this event that he had no clue about, I barely showed him the wikipedia article and as he went through the various environmental changes, one by one his face turned from "whats this all about?" to outright "HOLY FUCK!", needless to say I couldn't stop laughing at that expression.

  • @Magmafrost13
    @Magmafrost13 Рік тому +4

    This is a little thing but it always bugs me, the Great Dying was the worst _Phanerozoic_ mass extinction. We dont really know what mass extinctions occurred in previous eons, or how bad they were (we can obviously infer a pretty bad one with the Great Oxygenation, for example), but that's like 7/8th of the history of life.

    • @jamesaron1967
      @jamesaron1967 Рік тому +2

      The P-T event is undoubtedly the largest extinction since the evolution of multicellular life. That's what most people envision when mass extinctions are compared in severity. The Great Oxidation Event caused a massive extinction although few people excluding scientists know about it.

  • @_TheCollective
    @_TheCollective Рік тому +4

    Life had experienced mass exctions before but those exctions were largely unicellular. This was just the first time that larger animals were put through the grinder. Everything after couldn't be as severe cos by definition they were the survivors of that great dying

  • @Indy44636
    @Indy44636 23 дні тому

    The great dying is a cautinary tale . Of how mass eruptions can occurr and theres sometimes no warning

  • @anngo4140
    @anngo4140 Рік тому

    Ben looks like he comes straight out of a Nolan movie. Which is cool!

  • @babyboomercritic1119
    @babyboomercritic1119 Рік тому

    Thank you.

  • @Bonjevalien
    @Bonjevalien Рік тому

    Really enjoy hearing a truly interesting segment by namesake Ben G. Thomas and less of the stupidity of 7DOS

  • @Fomites
    @Fomites Рік тому +4

    Great video with the implications for current possibilities for extinction due to human activity. Thank you.

  • @TragoudistrosMPH
    @TragoudistrosMPH Рік тому +1

    Haha when you work hard on an assignment and realize only 1 other person will see it... It's good to have an appreciative audience!

  • @sheila3348
    @sheila3348 Рік тому +1

    Man. That’s a tough time.

  • @strangevision99
    @strangevision99 Рік тому +1

    Took me a minute to work out what the title meant. Good video anyway.

  • @fabianbuenrostro7425
    @fabianbuenrostro7425 Рік тому

    This man’s jawline can cut diamonds

  • @gushutchinson8758
    @gushutchinson8758 Рік тому +2

    I was taught the oxygen die off was the biggest extinction in terms of biomass and percentage of, "species" lost... Mainly single celled so boring?

  • @thesjkexperience
    @thesjkexperience 4 місяці тому

    Thanks, I studied this 30 years ago and there was so little known about any of this and it was also fashionable to have asteroids do all the mass extinctions as well lol.

  • @stuffystuffsityas6302
    @stuffystuffsityas6302 Рік тому

    You’re actually so cute Ben best of luck with your further studies and career ❤

  • @johndole9810
    @johndole9810 Рік тому

    You should do a video on oceanic acidification.

  • @imperialguardproductions
    @imperialguardproductions Рік тому

    I first learned about the Great Dying from the Walking With Monsters documentary.

  • @Digmen1
    @Digmen1 Рік тому +1

    I used to like Paleontolgy many years ago when I was young.
    But it all got too complicated for me
    Good video

    • @akaroth7542
      @akaroth7542 Рік тому +2

      Wouldn't say that: just doesn't get explained step-by-step well. Hard to dig into a topic when you're focused on work/survival. Don't assume you're unable to learn it, just a matter of time needed.

  • @437cosimo
    @437cosimo Рік тому

    Very interesting.

  • @klunni6834
    @klunni6834 Рік тому

    The question answers itself

  • @kaltneta6704
    @kaltneta6704 Рік тому +1

    Knowing how much died back then is haunting.

    • @dangerousdays2052
      @dangerousdays2052 Рік тому +1

      We're currently in the greatest mass extinction in history.

  • @UnwantedGhost1
    @UnwantedGhost1 Рік тому

    You should make a video on the sixth mass extinction event that's still ongoing today.

  • @friedrichjunzt
    @friedrichjunzt Рік тому +1

    Next: "is unbearable, excruciating pain really that painful?"

  • @peterolbrisch8970
    @peterolbrisch8970 Рік тому +1

    I'm going to take a wild guess here, because lots of things died. And dying really messed you up. It messes you up so bad that when you finish dying, you are now dead. And that's messed up.

  • @akaroth7542
    @akaroth7542 Рік тому

    It would be mind-shattering to see the extinction. I don't think I'd be able to handle the visuals of it. The skies would be terrifying

  • @thinking_toomuch
    @thinking_toomuch Рік тому +2

    the grade I would give you is G, for a great job😁

  • @osmosisjones4912
    @osmosisjones4912 Рік тому +1

    Was it slower or maybe temperature shift so fast in geologic history it's hard pick out

  • @biomuseum6645
    @biomuseum6645 Рік тому +3

    Guys, I think Ben referred to “how” not that much “why” the great dying was bad

    • @stevenschnepp576
      @stevenschnepp576 Рік тому +1

      Did you miss the part about the geology involved?

  • @roachdoggjr1940
    @roachdoggjr1940 Рік тому +1

    Without watching any of this, I gotta say that this video has a magnificent title.
    Like, "huh... The Great Dying? Bad? No way!"

  • @sekritengineeringprojekt2101
    @sekritengineeringprojekt2101 Рік тому +11

    This is so insanely important. I get a feeling that the cosmic web shockwaves and gravitational waves are the culprits and also the position of the solar system inside the galaxy may have placed the earth in a higher energy space which caused the increases in temperature that lead to this since earth and the solar system move sinusoidally through the galaxy. I can't prove any of what I wrote here, but we'll see if it's true when the e-lisa gravitational array goes up.

    • @Vicus_of_Utrecht
      @Vicus_of_Utrecht Рік тому

      Nikilov & Zeller 2017 already explained how planetary climate works.

    • @a5cent
      @a5cent Рік тому +4

      Mind sharing some of whatever you're smoking? 😅

    • @Decodedvirus
      @Decodedvirus Рік тому +1

      Ye the blue meth really hits hard

    • @akaroth7542
      @akaroth7542 Рік тому

      Oof

  • @TyrannosaurusRex5027
    @TyrannosaurusRex5027 Рік тому +2

    Why was the great dying so bad? I suppose if it wasn't that bad it would be the "mediocre dying" or perhaps the "average dying" instead of "the great dying"

    • @fede98k54
      @fede98k54 Рік тому +2

      The Mild Living, perphaps?

  • @nicksievers1664
    @nicksievers1664 Рік тому +1

    What’s up with that giant impact crater in Antarctica that was dated to 250 mya?

  • @myleswelnetz6700
    @myleswelnetz6700 10 місяців тому +1

    Because the planet’s climate became unrecognizable, which killed so many creatures.

  • @legendofloki665i9
    @legendofloki665i9 Рік тому +1

    Second only to the great oxigenation extinction event, though infinitely more spectacular.

  • @Infernoraptor
    @Infernoraptor Рік тому +6

    Can someone explain the part about only 2 mass extinctions effected plants and only 1 severely impacted insects?
    Is this the consensus view, or is this the only a "based on the limited fossil record"? Or were there actually a bunch of large insects familys that died out during the PT extinction?

    • @jessehunter362
      @jessehunter362 Рік тому +2

      9 or 10 orders went entirely extinct, 10 were greatly reduced in diversity, we’ve seen no other loss in insect diversity near that scale.

  • @xAlphaTrotx
    @xAlphaTrotx 6 місяців тому

    7:10 - was the Lamprey feasting on the sharks EYE really necessary for that artist? Jeez

  • @iplayeddsharpminor
    @iplayeddsharpminor Рік тому +1

    1:57 - “No doubt this was a terrible time to be alive”.
    2020s: hold my beer

  • @sebastianbroscheyoga
    @sebastianbroscheyoga Рік тому

    I want Hollywood videos that base the script on events like the great dying. replacing animals with humans, speeding time up by 20000x, but keeping the order and implication of the events. I'd go back to school to watch that!

  • @johnnysheen9615
    @johnnysheen9615 Рік тому

    I think that`s the first time i`ve heard mentioned.
    That the Ozone Layer collapsed.

  • @prototropo
    @prototropo Рік тому +2

    Great video. Proxies are important tools in medical diagnoses and epidemiology, as well.

  • @KKloeps
    @KKloeps Рік тому

    Why have I been bricked up since watching this video 2 days ago

  • @thomasperri5316
    @thomasperri5316 Рік тому

    Great video, very informative.

  • @pukulu
    @pukulu Рік тому

    I suppose that the sheer size of the Siberian trappes contributed to the Permian-Triassic extinction. The igneous province was gigantic, considerably larger than the Deccan trappes, which was also quite large. The size of the trappes is probably proportional to the length of time of the volcanic activity, or at least that is a worthwhile conjecture.

  • @ColdHawk
    @ColdHawk Рік тому +6

    04:00 That is hysterical. “Evaporite” is a term my 7 year old would come up with while chattering away about a topic where he has actually memorized only half of the factual information he wants to convey that he knows.

    • @Deailon
      @Deailon Рік тому +1

      That is what makes it a perfect name: even a child can get, what it means.

  • @Kittyclysm
    @Kittyclysm Рік тому +3

    I clicked SO damn fast

  • @raycavazos8927
    @raycavazos8927 Рік тому

    LSP (Lumpy Space Princess) >LIP
    Edit: jokes aside, stellar video mate.

  • @sparkyfromel
    @sparkyfromel Рік тому +1

    to state that ~90% of species died is actually underestimating the carnage
    it seems pretty obvious that of the ~10% surviving species they themselves loss ~90$ of their living individuals
    that would result in about 99% death of all living organism for the whole event

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 Рік тому

      Genera, not species. That's just the metric used.

    • @sparkyfromel
      @sparkyfromel Рік тому +1

      @@rickkwitkoski1976 yes , I know
      species however is the fossil evidence

  • @alexbowman7582
    @alexbowman7582 Рік тому +1

    Was the eruption caused by a rising plume of hot magma or by a massive object from space punching a huge hole in the crust?

  • @Snarethedrummer
    @Snarethedrummer Рік тому

    1:09 The Audacity!

  • @DragonFae16
    @DragonFae16 Рік тому +1

    The asteroid that caused the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs is another case of a perfect storm of geology causing a mass extinction. Only in the very specific place the asteroid hit was it able to cause a mass extinction. It came down to literal seconds. If the asteroid had hit 10 seconds before or 10 seconds after, the rotation of the Earth would have meant that the asteroid wouldn't have hit that specific spot and while there would have been a local extinction, the rest of the planet would have been mostly unaffected.

  • @conspiracytherapist1869
    @conspiracytherapist1869 Рік тому

    Let’s see some receipts pal!

  • @cantran7119
    @cantran7119 Рік тому

    Imagine the thousand of animal generations living during this apocalyptic wasteland that lasted for so long. If they were sentient do you think they would have any hope for it to end?

  • @ldmtag
    @ldmtag 2 місяці тому

    Everyone saying how terrible of a time to be the permian-triassic border is, but the whole thing lasted like a million years. You can live your entire lifetime without noticing anything weird