One morning, when I was kid, I decided to go out and play in the garden, to my surprise, the grass was gray, my dad's red car looked black, and the whole outside was covered with ashes to the point I have this memory in black and white. It was scary for sure. The popocatepetl volcano had a burp lol. México in the 90's.
Good video but once again a misleading title. 95% of it is about the modern-day investigation of what caused it. There’s barely anything about what actually happened, how societies dealt with the famines, what wars occurred etc.
Because little is known about those aspects. As per the video there are very few actual accounts of climatic changes during the time frame. Its possible that most societies had little or no writing in the 500s. Most writing and education was reserved for the elite ie religious institutions and royalty.
Really felt cheated by that title. Looking at the effects of the eruption and the demographic consequences could have made for a much more interesting video.
I saw this 1999 documentary a few years ago and was very glad to be able to watch it again today. It seems a lot has been lost in a very short period (25 years!) in terms of quality of production and respect for viewers. This admirable film has no need for cute (and often misleading) computer graphics, "funny" asides, and dumbed-down, sensationalist content. Congratulations to Channel 4 and WNET, and thanks to those who give a new generation of viewers a chance to experience real science this way.
It's because these documentaries were made by a studio and team with a budget to film nearly endless b-rolls that don't really contribute much to the subject, just another flavor of eye candy... I think independent documentaries on youtube deserve a bit more respect than you have implied, especially when you consider that some of them are done by a team of maybe 1 or 2 people without a budget and rely on ad revenue, aka "clicks"
Reading about Krakatoa in 1883, is mind blowing that it was on the site of the original blast of 537. The most recent volcano recorded is the Tongan Volcano in 2020. Once you read the effects from a massive volcanic explosion, the information becomes more relatable. The lack of sunlight, acid rain, flooding and the populations around the world thinking it would be judgement day! The hard part as noted is finding any recorded mention of the event. Can it happen again, oh yes it certainly can! Can't remember if he determined a month? Tree ring mapping, brilliant, wonder if they mapped the big Redwoods of the east coast of America? Ice cores are really becoming totally important as well, saw a special on the investigation of the poles swapping and also the Gulf Stream stopping! The really scary thing is, not understanding this rock we live on, and what makes it tick.
It’s not if it can happen again, it’s when. One big volcanic eruption it’s all it takes for our planet to go haywire until the planet “resets” as the ash dissipates from the atmosphere. It’s pollution at a rate we can’t really imagine.
@@blastypowpow The USA maybe a young civilization, but the Redwoods are ancient in comparison. It would be interesting to see if the computer program has been applied to them as well and if there was any significance?
@mesakeratu2139 heard in New Zealand too. I was camping with some mates and we heard these low booms. 30 minutes later one of us, a geologist , got the update
1816AD is called "The year without a summer" because of a volcanic eruption, Mount Tambora. It wasn't as devastating as the 536AD event but it was pretty noticeable.
@@anntoureilles6389 That's a fascinating story. She and Lord Byron and some others has a competition to see who could write the best horror story while they were forced to stay indoors during the bad weather during the summer of 1816.
@@joycebrewer4150 I'm sorry for being a bit sceptic, but if your grandmother could remember that year, she'd need to to be born around 1806. It's seems highly impropable that you, in the year 2024 had a grandmother that was born 1806, unless you're basically ancient yourself. Even if you are now 100 years old, and managed to type this youtube comment, that would mean you were born to your parents in the yar 1924. If your mother was, say, 50 years old at the time (so really unusually late for a woman to be able to give birth, especially in 1924), that would mean, your mother was born in the year 1924-50=1874. So your grandmother, who remembers the year 1816, would have had to be .... how old to give birth your your mother? 1. I'm bad at math or 2. I'm really bad at spotting a joke and just wooshed really hard or 3. You're lying for no reason or 4. You're a bot making stuff up.
They did such a good job keeping the science visually relevant and the information clear and logical throughout the documentary, thoroughly enjoyable and well done!
@@tammysims8716 They officially did what they were doing anyway..Concerning UA-cam the content of the channel owner censor more than the UA-cam Bot..This comment applies to the host of the channel being viewed at this moment..
I moved to the upper Midwest, Minneapolis, from the West Coast in 1990. It used to rain almost every night in the summer. Not so much anymore, but we're out of a 4year drought thank goodness.
I saw this one several years ago and I think an updated documentary is due. New technologies have come into play making studies of vulcanism more precise.
There is a moment of confirmation bias evident in the last researchers report but I guess to get published, you have to cut a few corners. Not unknown in the scientific world. This is the kind of puff piece appropriate to UA-cam. It is entertaining enough to watch.
I'm always happy when a person shares a complicated thing that they figure out and helps humanity to understand life and history in retrospect. May God bless his soul and keep him. May people learn from his.life. I remember counting tree rings as a child. His knowledge must have been shown to the adults in my life
@@jeanettereno4045……have you watched UK tv series’, ‘Catastrophe’? It’s on YT. Mike Baillie is interviewed on it, by UK archaeologist, David Keys. He’s (D K) also written a book by the same name, which is my next hook to read………
@@elizabethroberts6215 I have not! I will look at it. I watch a guy who gets into the Tarteria aspects. I at first wasn't paying attention but I started looking at all the old maps. I also watched a couple things about the movement of our language and "word usage" and also on our writing. I watch information on giants and large structures. Each one seams to have a focus of one thing or another. E.T. or God. I just know love is better than anything else. And I TRUTH. 🙂 I will look up "Catastrophe".. thank you! 😊
I didn't know Mike by his name- just by his shows. I have loved looking at the historical information on how many have lived in the past..I have even learned much about composting toilets! It makes me happy to know and see others from all over wanting to gain knowledge. My journey has taken me to wish to know basic living skills, food and medical skills, how to use charcoal to clean water, make soap, and amend garden soil. All are amazing! Knowledge is powerful. The corporate machine doesn't want "us" to have any knowledge.
My impression has been that this event may have been caused by the creation of the strait between Java and Sumatra with the explosion of a 'grandfather' Krakatoa in the 530's AD. The most recent explosion in the late 19th century also brought on a dimming of the earth for a period yet not as bad as 1400 years ago.
That was the leading hypothesis by a team about 10 years ago. The recording of distant loud explosions in China was pretty compelling. Edit: didn't realize this was the tram I was talking about.
@@paulbriggs3072tambora was our last VeI 7. I've looked through much of the temp recordings on the east coast in 1816. Amazingly, savanna Georgia, which is typically in the low to mid 90's on July the 4th, stated in the 40's all day and had a high temp of 48°F. Since 1900, Savanah hasn't even had a low temp below 60 in July. 1816 the high was 12 degrees below whats the modern all time July low.
@@MVeans I understand that a similar Earth Event will take place when Yellowstone explodes! A super volcano is a climate altering period, of no sunshine, famine, and crippling transportation. There are 4 such volcanoes, throughout the world. One being close to Pompeii!
I remember hearing the Tongan Volcano eruption from Auckland over 2000km away. Roughly 1.5 hours after the event. Outside in loud environment and still very clear. Won't forget it
Tongan eruption was 2022, though NZ in 2023 didnt have a summer, it poured down the entire season causing catastrophic floods in Auckland and Bay of Plenty in January, it was cold and windy all year. I suppose Krakatoa was on a much larger scale than that, would have been severely miserable.
@@DistinctiveBlend Gotcha!! After I posted that, I suspected that was the case and probably should’ve deleted it but didn’t actually follow that thought all the way through to the end and delete it!! Lol
This video has been published before, and it always generates a lot of comments. There has been recent research regarding this: Radiocarbon and geologic evidence reveal Ilopango volcano as source of the colossal ‘mystery’ eruption of 539/40 CE by Robert A. Dull.
So many natural disasters, so many cruel wars, so many destructive epidemics since humanity existed. And yet there are still people who prophesy Armageddon.
Imagine, the world gradually going dark with the ash, then cold due to lack of food, then starving and still not knowing it was a volcano on the otherside of the world.
I'm sure for every person that thought it was the end and didn't have a spirit of persistence, it was actually the end for them... so they weren't completely wrong😂😂😂
@@notsorare My thought is something like 2-3 years of cold weather and crop failures could have destabilized the region for many years. (Just two topics that interest me that I had never considered might be correlated.)
Funny that this is right around the time St Kevin is reputed to have lived in a cave for 7 years at Glendalough Ireland. He is reputed to have lived from 498 to 618, some guestimation and mythmaking poetic license with those dates for sure but either way places his prime years around the time of this event. Could he and his wider family (early irish Saints were usually from wealthy clans and those would have previously been on the fertile plains of dublin/meath/kildare etc) have moved to the lakeside site in wicklow to ride out the event hunting & fishing? Could their success in doing so have led to the subsequent growth of the community around them? People would have said he'd made the right choice by moving his clan there and thus attributed it to God being on his side. One two skip a few and you have a monastic City spring up.
@@HeirOfNothingInParticular: The full phrase is "one, two, skip a few, ninety-nine, one-thousand", but the full thing is only really useful as a reference.
@@DarrelLaBossiereWords are man made and they have meaning. History is the recorded events of the past. Prehistory is the time before writing was introduced
EXACTLY just like the balls found over Sodom and Gomorrah, just like the rock that NASA just recently ran over on Mars, that they commented "this shouldn't be here", bing bing bing they shouldn't be on Mars or doing any of the other ungodly things they've been doing on this planet and outside of it...
This is interesting but seems like there should be more documentary evidence from this period. Justinian became Emperor of the Romans in AD 527. That would put the disaster close to the beginning of his reign. Yet he was one of the most successful of the Roman/Byzantine Emperors, ruling until 565 if I remember right. I don't recall that Procopius, his court historian, even mentions any disastrous weather events. On the other hand, it's maybe more than coincidence that the "Nika Rebellion" hit Constantinople around that time (532).
……have just finished book, ‘Worst Year Ever: 536AD’, by Reece KIMBLE. The ‘domino effect’ of a huge volcanic eruption, latest knowledge being in Iceland, is monumental. An excellent read. So too, is David KEYS book, ‘Catastrophe’………
This is really relevant to the current threat in Italy right now with the Campi Flegrei caldera and Mt Vesuvius. On the Pulse with Silky is talking about this here on youtube.
I was 3 years old. My mom took a picture of me in front of the snowbank on the side of the driveway after my dad plowed and shoveled a little path out of the house. There was at least 6 feet of snow.
good but old...copyright date 1999. I think I saw this when it was released on tv. Definitely needs an updated documentary, what was right here, what was incorrect or too amorphous for good data at the time but newer tech can get more results?
I found this very interesting BUT terribly disappointing that you did not say how we survived or how it changed history. Please don't click bait anymore
When it ends, there are some of the little tiles to click for the next video that may cover it. Like the plague after wards. Or google aftermath of Krakatoa or The Year the Sun Disappeared. The aftermath and How it changed history is fascinating.
Human survival is insignificant in the scheme of things. More interesting is what caused it. This is a remarkable and most interesting detective story.
It all depends on the sustainability of life. A hundred people could probably survive the lack of food, by hunting down animals over time, but a few billion..
Yeah, even considering there was only a 200-300 million population around 500AD, mass starvation/death would seem likely. Game would have died off quickly as well, so probably wouldn't be much game to hunt. Costal communities might fare better with fish being the primary food source as oceans were probably less impacted by the eruption.
They now think the inner core of the Earth may oscillate with a roughly 70-year periodicity - switching directions every 35 years or so. There is so much happening beneath the surface we barely understand.
Having trouble adding to my comment. It was a stunning book. Memorable! The events that unfolded after the earlier Krakatoa, as described in Keye's book, are worth reading about. Quite incredible the consequences the world over.
Although "The Worst Year In History" may be hyperbole to entice people to watch this video, I certainly would not want to have existed during that time.
wow, this video is really informative and well-made! i appreciate how you broke down such a complex topic. but honestly, i wonder if we might be overemphasizing the significance of 536 AD. sure, it was tough, but throughout history, there have been countless years that were equally or even more devastating. maybe it's time to take a broader look at the resilience of humanity overall? just a thought!
@@elizabethroberts6215 : 100% agreed. Probably it wouldn't just be 'the end of humanity', but the catastrophic end of most anything alive in this planet🌏 as far as I can conceive...
The Nat Geo has an entire month's magazine dedicated to Yellowstone & what happens, when it blows. Vast areas of the US are annihilated. The world, in general, dies slowly. Horrific, sad to say. The billionaires are creating a subsurface community, with artificial suns, throughout the globe. EVERY SINGLE COUNTRY is in on it. You know won't get to go unless you're perfect ~ of mind & body and also, perfect for, experimenting ON. ALL Of our taxpayer dollars aren't going to the exploration of MARS, but for building the underground world. There's so much more. You have no idea 😢
@@hernandovillamarinbuenaven7476: Yellowstone is big, but not _that_ big, and in fact it's had major eruptions in the distant past that didn't achieve that level of destruction in North America, let alone across the entire world.
oh geez, it's the most annoying misconception about Yellowstone😑😑😑The most likely event to happen is a hydrothermal eruption or a lava flow. All the recent eruptions were boring lava flows though. Go visit the United States Geological Survey to learn more about the Yellowstone volcano.
This was well-done with the story and the presentation of research but evidence was presented at a conference in 2004 excluding Krakatoa from being the cause of 6th century weather, based on analysis of layers from drilling on the ocean floor surrounding Krakatoa. If there was an eruption at that time, it was not explosive enough to affect the entire world like it did in 1883. Doesn't mean it couldn't have been a volcano, but not Krakatoa. The splitting of Java from the Book of Kings was originally dated as 416AD but scientists have no support for the tale (geologic evidence points more to the land bridge between the islands being flooded at the end of the last Ice Age). I hope they keep searching for the evidence.
Two corrections. The word _asteroid_ does not mean a very large meteor, it refers to the same object as long as it remains in space. Once it enters the atmosphere of a planet, striking the surface, it then *becomes* a _meteor._ Second, the individual who said that a large meteor striking the ocean would produce a tsunami miles high is mistaken. The same amount of kinetic force released by an earthquake underwater is at least one order of magnitude greater than that of an object striking the water's surface. I learned this years ago using meteor impact modeling software at the Liverpool University in London. Even a rather large meteor of 4-5 miles would only create a water wall up to about 120 feet. I enjoyed the video and found that it captured the dismay and dread that humanity must have felt not knowing such conditions were only temporary.
Thank you AH. Not sure it's the right niche but if anyone's very much into the Justinianeaen period I strongly recommend Schwerpunkt's relative playlist. It deals with such deep changes. Keep up with the amazing work
As entrenched is the eschatological fetish is in the modern zeitgeist, it's unimaginable how much greater the apocalyptic mood of those years must've been. At the time logical thinking would not doubt have led most to assume this change to be permanent. It's amazing there wasn't an enormous spike in suicides at the time...
Me too. I majored in chemistry and took a few geology courses. I discovered too late that this subject was my greatest intellectual love. Well, I was never the sturdy kind of person who can hike up mountains carrying monitors, and hike back down carrying rock samples.
Krakatoa - according to my recherches - has definitely been excluded from the possible candidates for this event and I'm somewhat surprised to hear from this hypothesis. On the other hand this is mentioned on Wikipedia: David Keys suggested the volcano Krakatoa by shifting a cataclysm in AD 416 recorded in Javanese Book of Kings to AD 535.[15] Drilling projects in Sunda Strait ruled out any possibility that an eruption took place during this time period.[29]' -> see: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanic_winter_of_536
Long range sound travel.... Study Krakatoa 1883. HEARD as far away as Ceylon as the sound of distant cannon, and in Manilla the same. And that one DID effect global weather for months but not years. In London fires were reported at Sunset for months because the sunsets were so red.
what an insightful video! i really appreciate the depth of research you put into it. however, i can't help but wonder if the focus on 536 AD is a bit exaggerated. i mean, there have been other years throughout history that also brought about significant challenges for humanity, like 1347 with the Black Death. maybe it's worth comparing how we handled those years too?
I'm not surprised that they did NOT find any charcoal in that layer. Remember the book of kings...The day Java split up (in current Java and Sumatra). I suppose nothing would have been left above water in that region. Which makes charcoal deposit impossible ....as told in this video...they could ony search in the small parts above water. About ancient krakatoa...the Charcoals foubd in the layer above (1216) could be the layer created when blowing up ancient krakatoa. Because that drawing seems to be a volcano in water (island vulcano). Also because that book of kings. In 535 (435) AD the volcano must have been situated on land, not in the water. Also to create the straight of Sunda....in one blow (book of kings)....I cannot imagine how much czarbomba explosions big that has been. No wonder that the could hear this in Chnia as an exceptional loud boom...on 5000 km distance. Even the "small" eruption (only a vei6) in 1883 was heard in Perth Australia....also a 5000 km away. Someone mentipned the tamboras, year without summer...this , as this story says...was in a lot of places a decade without a (real) summer. If this would happen today even our modern civilization would not be able to feed the current number of people living. And the worldwide food storage will not last for >10 years Which makes sure that de population would diminish... Only question remaining...Was this a super eruption (VEI 8) as mount toba 75000 years ago? Could they calculate if the amount of vulcanic deposits reacht that vei 8 size?
I think it was the summer of 93, or something. I lived in Mancelona Michigan in the woods. I remember it as the year without a summer. Awhile after that I heard of a big volcano, I think it was way over in Indonesia. Struggled to get to 70 degrees F. Blue skies sun shining down, didn't warm it up very well for summer temperatures!
Yellowstone? It's a place where the ground is always pipping the ground. There is a lake that is being moved as of someone is lifting up a plastic sheet. Yes the history of that time of 536 AD is an eye opener. This is why I started dehydrating foods and storing flour. (Freeze it for a few days, so bread weevils will die.)
1250 - 1100 B.C. Was also considered the dryest years of the bronce age. And way later the justilian plaque was likely the result of a vulcanic eruption in India.
If Borneo separated in two and now a separate new island appeared in 537 AD called Sumatra, then continental drift occurs in spurts way faster than scientists ever imagined and it answers many questions such as how so many small portions of continental plates ended up so jumbled and far from their parent plates. Indeed the shapes of the two now separate coastlines form a positive and negative matching shape
He said they went without agricultural foods, that they hunted and fished, (and very likely cannibalised - my add in due to other references). They survived. And here we are.
My father remembers his grandmother telling him of how it was dark as night for three days when Krakatoa erupted. She would have been 19 at the time. I'm also sure the story goes that the noise was heard as a loud bang or crack. But they were in Sydney, so not sure if that is embellishment. She told how the sunsets were red for a year afterwards.
The biggest worst year in history is the 1620 BCE explosion of Thera/Santorini island, creating a Mediterranean tsunami that wiped out the majority of all western and central Mediterranean shorelines (saving Syria-Haran, Canaan, and Egypt. The refugess from Europe (the western Hebrews of ABRAHAM'S BLOODLINES - Ur of the Chaldees - Europe of the Celts), and the esatern Hebrews (Hyksos, Catal Huyuk), and the shoreline people (Sea Peoples), all moved out of the area into the Mideast, the Nile delta region, and others migrated further east into the Tigris-Euphrates valley (and even into India). The explosion overcast the skies, creating drought, crop failures, starvation, disease, and deaths.
@@brosephbroman7564I personally still use the BC/AD convention because it’s what I grew up with and I’m a Christian and I kinda like the Christ-centereness of those Latin phrases, but OP is also correct; BCE/CE (Before the Common Era and Common Era) are a modern way of delineating the turn.
We recently had an eruption of Taal Volcano in the Philippines in the last 4 years or so. Surely this is related to this discussion, as we are relatively close to the equator. At least, as close as I have ever been 😅 We had a layer of volcanic dust on everything 1cm thick around our house and street. We are 35-40 km away from the volcano.
You're right they don't live that long. But wood is surprisingly hardy and has been used in construction for thousands of years. Also in the right ecological conditions it can be almost perfectly preserved even longer. By finding and cataloging many thousands of samples from many sources. You can reliably construct such a timeline. Scientists aren't relying on one tree or even a dozen but hundreds or thousands collected over a wide area. Looked at not by one scientist or group but many that serve to further verify the findings.
@@michaelharris8598 "By finding and cataloging many thousands of samples from many sources. You can reliably construct such a timeline." This is one sentence, not two.
oldest trees ever dated don't go back beyond 5,000-5,500 years ago of course, there are several examples that haven't been dated that the so called "experts" like to assume longer time periods, but you know what they say about assumptions... In short, there is no scientific evidence via Dendrochronology prior to 3500-3000BC coincidentally, which is about the same time period of the great/biblical flood...
The title is misleading. I did not notice the title just the year. I knew from Randle Carlson, that this was a period without summer. So it was what I wanted to know. I think it should have been called "the dark ages , the years with almost no Sun."
This is an interesting theory: it wasn't the collapse of the Roman Empire that caused the Dark Ages, but a natural disaster near the end of that empire that truely left the world in darkness for another 500 years.
I think this is a documentary I've been look for for years. I just didn't think it was this old. But some of the stylized shots, like the dim light shinning only partway down a staircase. Weird the bits of video that I remember. But it didn't have all the info in it that I was expecting.
@clintoncyrilvoss4287 Tell me, do you think chemical warfare is worse now than it was in 1917? Do you think humanity is worse now than at ANY other point in the last 10,000 years?
nice to see the trip to Krakatau. thanks channel 4. beautiful place when it's not the worst place to be! black sand and tropical greenery. nice big ship to stay on. digging by hand for thousand year old charcoal not so easy. getting a backhoe in there would blow the budget totally.
What makes this video so intriguing is the fact that a natural disaster could happen at any point in our lives. We know that we could all be wiped out in seconds. It’s terrifying and inspiring at the same time. That’s why religions that worship Jesus, god, Muhammad are here at all.
Meteors do not travel through space. Rocks traveling through space *become* meteors when they enter the atmosphere, and meteors become meteorites when they strike the ground.
One morning, when I was kid, I decided to go out and play in the garden, to my surprise, the grass was gray, my dad's red car looked black, and the whole outside was covered with ashes to the point I have this memory in black and white. It was scary for sure. The popocatepetl volcano had a burp lol. México in the 90's.
I have a memory of the moon being red, very close to the earth and fire everywhere on the grass, black dirt
@@SummerSun-sg3wfmy friend also remembers this red moon. Said he got up in the middle of the night and stepped outside and the moon was HUGE and RED
Oh really. SNAP
Wtf was going on, I'm from NY I've never seen anything like that.
It happens? I don't recall that in my youth.... Unless it was the time I was sleeping in the backyard lawn chair while covering myself until sunset.
Good video but once again a misleading title. 95% of it is about the modern-day investigation of what caused it. There’s barely anything about what actually happened, how societies dealt with the famines, what wars occurred etc.
Dark ages... refers to lack of history.
Because little is known about those aspects. As per the video there are very few actual accounts of climatic changes during the time frame. Its possible that most societies had little or no writing in the 500s. Most writing and education was reserved for the elite ie religious institutions and royalty.
Changes history to suit the narrative. Sad world.
It's all explained in the video. Very few people were taking notes in 500 AD. Try again pedant.
@@jsutin423The Romans were actually documenting quite a lot then.
Should've changed the title. This is the discovery of what caused the worst year, not how it was survived.
Yes,absolutely. I had known about Krakatoa; I wanted to hear the rest!
Yes. I doubt they ordered freeze dried food from prepper sites and chlorine tabs to clean their water.
@@SafetySpooon Was just thinking the same thing!
Climate change , 101
Really felt cheated by that title. Looking at the effects of the eruption and the demographic consequences could have made for a much more interesting video.
I saw this 1999 documentary a few years ago and was very glad to be able to watch it again today. It seems a lot has been lost in a very short period (25 years!) in terms of quality of production and respect for viewers. This admirable film has no need for cute (and often misleading) computer graphics, "funny" asides, and dumbed-down, sensationalist content. Congratulations to Channel 4 and WNET, and thanks to those who give a new generation of viewers a chance to experience real science this way.
It's because these documentaries were made by a studio and team with a budget to film nearly endless b-rolls that don't really contribute much to the subject, just another flavor of eye candy... I think independent documentaries on youtube deserve a bit more respect than you have implied, especially when you consider that some of them are done by a team of maybe 1 or 2 people without a budget and rely on ad revenue, aka "clicks"
That computer mapping tree rings is really amazing. Thank you. That's kinda like when the magnesium direction change is seen in crystals growth.
You can always tell how all in and manic a nerd is, by the disaster zone of a work space and research library! This man is all in... Passionate.
One geochemist I knew had about 80% of the office stacked 2' high with articles. That was a sight and site to behold.
I was just imagining if he had a spouse what they thought about the disaster and the time spent or wasted on this topic on this topic
Reading about Krakatoa in 1883, is mind blowing that it was on the site of the original blast of 537. The most recent volcano recorded is the Tongan Volcano in 2020. Once you read the effects from a massive volcanic explosion, the information becomes more relatable. The lack of sunlight, acid rain, flooding and the populations around the world thinking it would be judgement day! The hard part as noted is finding any recorded mention of the event. Can it happen again, oh yes it certainly can! Can't remember if he determined a month? Tree ring mapping, brilliant, wonder if they mapped the big Redwoods of the east coast of America? Ice cores are really becoming totally important as well, saw a special on the investigation of the poles swapping and also the Gulf Stream stopping! The really scary thing is, not understanding this rock we live on, and what makes it tick.
It’s not if it can happen again, it’s when. One big volcanic eruption it’s all it takes for our planet to go haywire until the planet “resets” as the ash dissipates from the atmosphere. It’s pollution at a rate we can’t really imagine.
The big redwoods are the West coast of America.
@@blastypowpow The USA maybe a young civilization, but the Redwoods are ancient in comparison. It would be interesting to see if the computer program has been applied to them as well and if there was any significance?
That boom from the Tongan Volcano was heard all the way here in Fiji.
@mesakeratu2139 heard in New Zealand too. I was camping with some mates and we heard these low booms. 30 minutes later one of us, a geologist , got the update
Such an amazing documentary to sleep to. The speakers voidce, the images... So sleepy... So calm , so beautiful....
1816AD is called "The year without a summer" because of a volcanic eruption, Mount Tambora.
It wasn't as devastating as the 536AD event but it was pretty noticeable.
My grandmother remembered that year. Hard times.
Also a catalyst for Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein"
@@anntoureilles6389 That's a fascinating story. She and Lord Byron and some others has a competition to see who could write the best horror story while they were forced to stay indoors during the bad weather during the summer of 1816.
@@bob456fk6 "The Monsters" was a fascinating book if you haven't read it. Have a great weekend! :D
@@joycebrewer4150 I'm sorry for being a bit sceptic, but if your grandmother could remember that year, she'd need to to be born around 1806. It's seems highly impropable that you, in the year 2024 had a grandmother that was born 1806, unless you're basically ancient yourself. Even if you are now 100 years old, and managed to type this youtube comment, that would mean you were born to your parents in the yar 1924. If your mother was, say, 50 years old at the time (so really unusually late for a woman to be able to give birth, especially in 1924), that would mean, your mother was born in the year 1924-50=1874. So your grandmother, who remembers the year 1816, would have had to be .... how old to give birth your your mother?
1. I'm bad at math
or
2. I'm really bad at spotting a joke and just wooshed really hard
or
3. You're lying for no reason
or
4. You're a bot making stuff up.
They did such a good job keeping the science visually relevant and the information clear and logical throughout the documentary, thoroughly enjoyable and well done!
Thanks. Now I'll feel confident watching.
@@tammysims8716yeah, if you don’t want to know anything at all about what the title suggests. It barely touches on how or what they dealt with
@@tammysims8716 They officially did what they were doing anyway..Concerning UA-cam the content of the channel owner censor more than the UA-cam Bot..This comment applies to the host of the channel being viewed at this moment..
I moved to the upper Midwest, Minneapolis, from the West Coast in 1990. It used to rain almost every night in the summer. Not so much anymore, but we're out of a 4year drought thank goodness.
I saw this one several years ago and I think an updated documentary is due. New technologies have come into play making studies of vulcanism more precise.
Probably don't make any money. I don't think documentary junkies are a large population. The people want silly tic toc videos it seems.
There is a moment of confirmation bias evident in the last researchers report but I guess to get published, you have to cut a few corners. Not unknown in the scientific world. This is the kind of puff piece appropriate to UA-cam. It is entertaining enough to watch.
But where does the funding come from to gather and analyze new data?
This video was produced in 1999. An updated one is not only due, but OVERdue. I'd love to see one.
Core sampling has been around a long time
RIP, Mike Baillie (1944-2023).
I'm always happy when a person shares a complicated thing that they figure out and helps humanity to understand life and history in retrospect. May God bless his soul and keep him. May people learn from his.life. I remember counting tree rings as a child. His knowledge must have been shown to the adults in my life
@@jeanettereno4045……have you watched UK tv series’, ‘Catastrophe’? It’s on YT. Mike Baillie is interviewed on it, by UK archaeologist, David Keys. He’s (D K) also written a book by the same name, which is my next hook to read………
@@elizabethroberts6215 I have not! I will look at it. I watch a guy who gets into the Tarteria aspects. I at first wasn't paying attention but I started looking at all the old maps. I also watched a couple things about the movement of our language and "word usage" and also on our writing. I watch information on giants and large structures. Each one seams to have a focus of one thing or another. E.T. or God. I just know love is better than anything else. And I TRUTH. 🙂 I will look up "Catastrophe".. thank you! 😊
@@jeanettereno4045 ……you’re welcome! Have started reading book, ‘Catastrophe’, & am really enjoying it!
I didn't know Mike by his name- just by his shows. I have loved looking at the historical information on how many have lived in the past..I have even learned much about composting toilets! It makes me happy to know and see others from all over wanting to gain knowledge. My journey has taken me to wish to know basic living skills, food and medical skills, how to use charcoal to clean water, make soap, and amend garden soil. All are amazing! Knowledge is powerful. The corporate machine doesn't want "us" to have any knowledge.
My impression has been that this event may have been caused by the creation of the strait between Java and Sumatra with the explosion of a 'grandfather' Krakatoa in the 530's AD. The most recent explosion in the late 19th century also brought on a dimming of the earth for a period yet not as bad as 1400 years ago.
The same area produced a climate disaster in 1815 called the year without a summer.
That was the leading hypothesis by a team about 10 years ago. The recording of distant loud explosions in China was pretty compelling.
Edit: didn't realize this was the tram I was talking about.
@@paulbriggs3072tambora was our last VeI 7.
I've looked through much of the temp recordings on the east coast in 1816.
Amazingly, savanna Georgia, which is typically in the low to mid 90's on July the 4th, stated in the 40's all day and had a high temp of 48°F.
Since 1900, Savanah hasn't even had a low temp below 60 in July. 1816 the high was 12 degrees below whats the modern all time July low.
@@MVeans I understand that a similar Earth Event will take place when Yellowstone explodes! A super volcano is a climate altering period, of no sunshine, famine, and crippling transportation. There are 4 such volcanoes, throughout the world. One being close to Pompeii!
Well... that's what the video says
50 minutes and you never answer the bloody question.
Awesome timing. I just got off work and just heard about this year not too long ago. Time to relax and learn
that's what she said! ha ha lol
@@Mrch33ky Hay'oooo! Lol
I remember hearing the Tongan Volcano eruption from Auckland over 2000km away. Roughly 1.5 hours after the event. Outside in loud environment and still very clear. Won't forget it
you heard it a year after it happened? lol
Tongan eruption was 2022, though NZ in 2023 didnt have a summer, it poured down the entire season causing catastrophic floods in Auckland and Bay of Plenty in January, it was cold and windy all year. I suppose Krakatoa was on a much larger scale than that, would have been severely miserable.
@@DistinctiveBlendWhat caused you to ask that?
@@luanneneill2877 OP has edited their comment, originally they claimed to had heard it in 2023. That's also why Ryan's comment mentions the years imo.
@@DistinctiveBlend Gotcha!! After I posted that, I suspected that was the case and probably should’ve deleted it but didn’t actually follow that thought all the way through to the end and delete it!! Lol
This video has been published before, and it always generates a lot of comments. There has been recent research regarding this: Radiocarbon and geologic evidence reveal Ilopango volcano as source of the colossal ‘mystery’ eruption of 539/40 CE by Robert A. Dull.
I can imagine people thinking : ' Right, this is it.The end of time is upon us ! '
So many natural disasters, so many cruel wars, so many destructive epidemics since humanity existed. And yet there are still people who prophesy Armageddon.
Imagine, the world gradually going dark with the ash, then cold due to lack of food, then starving and still not knowing it was a volcano on the otherside of the world.
I'm sure for every person that thought it was the end and didn't have a spirit of persistence, it was actually the end for them... so they weren't completely wrong😂😂😂
@@meettheworld6241 it reminds me of the book On The Beach, when they are waiting for the clouds of radioactive material to reach them.
The part about the tree rings. Just made me wanna look for a time lapse video of a tree growing.
Mike Baillie ROCKS ❤❤
6:16 this is amazing, the guy is a silent Hero
Humanity should be prepared for these recurring events
Humanity can barely manage its way out of a pandemic these days without starting a conflict
If the government would stop messing everything up
We are, it's every man for himself, so just the same as any other day or time.
I've already started stocking up on toilet paper.😂
We are more prepared than the people that us here today. We came from survivors.
Remarkable that this lines up exactly with cliff dwellings in the US Southwest like Mesa Verde. I’ve never heard this as a possible explanation.
What explanation would you give for the people of the time to adopt this style of living because of a volcano
@@notsorare My thought is something like 2-3 years of cold weather and crop failures could have destabilized the region for many years. (Just two topics that interest me that I had never considered might be correlated.)
Funny that this is right around the time St Kevin is reputed to have lived in a cave for 7 years at Glendalough Ireland. He is reputed to have lived from 498 to 618, some guestimation and mythmaking poetic license with those dates for sure but either way places his prime years around the time of this event. Could he and his wider family (early irish Saints were usually from wealthy clans and those would have previously been on the fertile plains of dublin/meath/kildare etc) have moved to the lakeside site in wicklow to ride out the event hunting & fishing? Could their success in doing so have led to the subsequent growth of the community around them? People would have said he'd made the right choice by moving his clan there and thus attributed it to God being on his side. One two skip a few and you have a monastic City spring up.
One two, skip a few…. I love that! Filing it away for future use!
@@HeirOfNothingInParticular: The full phrase is "one, two, skip a few, ninety-nine, one-thousand", but the full thing is only really useful as a reference.
@@absalomdraconis I like it!
99 100, not thousand.@@absalomdraconis
Thanks, Absolute History.
Worst year in history!
Dinosaurs: Hold my gypsum.
Dinosaurs = prehistory, not history
I think it would have been a Tree Fern Mint Julep…
Prehistory? Every second is now history. Pre is a man made stupid prefix
@@DarrelLaBossiereWords are man made and they have meaning. History is the recorded events of the past. Prehistory is the time before writing was introduced
@@TheDarknightkillerHistory is history. Recent history should be called recorded history. Not prehistory. How can you precede history? You can't.
Absolutely facinating, thank you
Yellow dust sounds like Sulpher, from a Huge Volcano
EXACTLY just like the balls found over Sodom and Gomorrah, just like the rock that NASA just recently ran over on Mars, that they commented "this shouldn't be here", bing bing bing they shouldn't be on Mars or doing any of the other ungodly things they've been doing on this planet and outside of it...
This is interesting but seems like there should be more documentary evidence from this period. Justinian became Emperor of the Romans in AD 527. That would put the disaster close to the beginning of his reign. Yet he was one of the most successful of the Roman/Byzantine Emperors, ruling until 565 if I remember right. I don't recall that Procopius, his court historian, even mentions any disastrous weather events. On the other hand, it's maybe more than coincidence that the "Nika Rebellion" hit Constantinople around that time (532).
Really underrated comment I didn't even think of that.
Comet hit Britain and Brazil (562 AD)
ua-cam.com/video/Kg_BvT6AI18/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/fZQKpsy2OgM/v-deo.html
Regards
……have just finished book, ‘Worst Year Ever: 536AD’, by Reece KIMBLE. The ‘domino effect’ of a huge volcanic eruption, latest knowledge being in Iceland, is monumental. An excellent read. So too, is David KEYS book, ‘Catastrophe’………
This is really relevant to the current threat in Italy right now with the Campi Flegrei caldera and Mt Vesuvius. On the Pulse with Silky is talking about this here on youtube.
Most of those channels are embellishing stuff to push an "end of days" narrative to their religious audience
That computer 🖥️ it's absolutely a 90's model. This guys gotta be in his 80's at least. Corey Chalmers is probably organizing a show at his house.
When is the show?
@@HighSpeedNoDrag 😆
2000 or XP!
A video on the week long blizzard of 1977/1978 would be interesting
I was 3 years old. My mom took a picture of me in front of the snowbank on the side of the driveway after my dad plowed and shoveled a little path out of the house. There was at least 6 feet of snow.
Hmm
That's when I was born.
We got off of school - it was great! What else do you want to know?
@@dwilson6769dwilson the blizzardborn, first of their name, titles, titles you know how it goes
@@derentius 🤣🤣 I guess it could be worse. I mean, it does sound like lizardborn. But...hey. Jurassic Park was a huge hit.
good but old...copyright date 1999. I think I saw this when it was released on tv.
Definitely needs an updated documentary, what was right here, what was incorrect or too amorphous for good data at the time but newer tech can get more results?
I found this very interesting BUT terribly disappointing that you did not say how we survived or how it changed history.
Please don't click bait anymore
When it ends, there are some of the little tiles to click for the next video that may cover it. Like the plague after wards. Or google aftermath of Krakatoa or The Year the Sun Disappeared. The aftermath and How it changed history is fascinating.
⅝😂Âreeér Rd is àE0 a😂😂😢 we@ 31:12 @@FadedStar05
Human survival is insignificant in the scheme of things. More interesting is what caused it. This is a remarkable and most interesting detective story.
@@Jakez408 misleading title thu
It all depends on the sustainability of life. A hundred people could probably survive the lack of food, by hunting down animals over time, but a few billion..
Yeah, even considering there was only a 200-300 million population around 500AD, mass starvation/death would seem likely. Game would have died off quickly as well, so probably wouldn't be much game to hunt. Costal communities might fare better with fish being the primary food source as oceans were probably less impacted by the eruption.
That's why I have a huge stash of canned food and dried food stuff. I'm glad I live in America and can survive a crisis like this.
Bravo for an exceptional video! Well produced, intriguing. Provcative but not definitive. A good story well told.
They now think the inner core of the Earth may oscillate with a roughly 70-year periodicity - switching directions every 35 years or so. There is so much happening beneath the surface we barely understand.
We will break the land and make new volcanoes.
Amen
Having trouble adding to my comment. It was a stunning book. Memorable!
The events that unfolded after the earlier Krakatoa, as described in Keye's book, are worth reading about. Quite incredible the consequences the world over.
Although "The Worst Year In History" may be hyperbole to entice people to watch this video, I certainly would not want to have existed during that time.
Yeah, the Wi-Fi was really spotty back then. Only started improving in. 720BCE, fully recovering in 1080BCE...
Uncle colin from the show Derry Girls explaining the trees to me.
The Sun didn't go dark, the atmosphere went dark.
wow, this video is really informative and well-made! i appreciate how you broke down such a complex topic. but honestly, i wonder if we might be overemphasizing the significance of 536 AD. sure, it was tough, but throughout history, there have been countless years that were equally or even more devastating. maybe it's time to take a broader look at the resilience of humanity overall? just a thought!
Scary thing is the caldera in Yellowstone is unstable and estimated to be as devastating to the earth as Krakatoa if it were to erupt!
……IF Yellowstone erupts from its’ huge caldera, it’ll make Krakatoa look like a damp squib… … & will end humankind as we know it………
@@elizabethroberts6215 : 100% agreed. Probably it wouldn't just be 'the end of humanity', but the catastrophic end of most anything alive in this planet🌏 as far as I can conceive...
The Nat Geo has an entire month's magazine dedicated to Yellowstone & what happens, when it blows. Vast areas of the US are annihilated. The world, in general, dies slowly. Horrific, sad to say. The billionaires are creating a subsurface community, with artificial suns, throughout the globe. EVERY SINGLE COUNTRY is in on it. You know won't get to go unless you're perfect ~ of mind & body and also, perfect for, experimenting ON. ALL Of our taxpayer dollars aren't going to the exploration of MARS, but for building the underground world. There's so much more. You have no idea 😢
@@hernandovillamarinbuenaven7476: Yellowstone is big, but not _that_ big, and in fact it's had major eruptions in the distant past that didn't achieve that level of destruction in North America, let alone across the entire world.
oh geez, it's the most annoying misconception about Yellowstone😑😑😑The most likely event to happen is a hydrothermal eruption or a lava flow. All the recent eruptions were boring lava flows though. Go visit the United States Geological Survey to learn more about the Yellowstone volcano.
0:52 War: Guys, where did go? Guys? Helloooo...
This intro is more scary than most horror movies these days
Amazing documentary!!!!
This was well-done with the story and the presentation of research but evidence was presented at a conference in 2004 excluding Krakatoa from being the cause of 6th century weather, based on analysis of layers from drilling on the ocean floor surrounding Krakatoa. If there was an eruption at that time, it was not explosive enough to affect the entire world like it did in 1883. Doesn't mean it couldn't have been a volcano, but not Krakatoa. The splitting of Java from the Book of Kings was originally dated as 416AD but scientists have no support for the tale (geologic evidence points more to the land bridge between the islands being flooded at the end of the last Ice Age). I hope they keep searching for the evidence.
if its in the ocean floor, it probably got washed away by the waves.
@@rizkyadiyanto7922 fail
Never knew people of Ephesus experienced this…. Kind of cool to learn about this especially bc I was born 50 miles from actual location of Ephesus
Two corrections. The word _asteroid_ does not mean a very large meteor, it refers to the same object as long as it remains in space. Once it enters the atmosphere of a planet, striking the surface, it then *becomes* a _meteor._
Second, the individual who said that a large meteor striking the ocean would produce a tsunami miles high is mistaken. The same amount of kinetic force released by an earthquake underwater is at least one order of magnitude greater than that of an object striking the water's surface. I learned this years ago using meteor impact modeling software at the Liverpool University in London.
Even a rather large meteor of 4-5 miles would only create a water wall up to about 120 feet.
I enjoyed the video and found that it captured the dismay and dread that humanity must have felt not knowing such conditions were only temporary.
Thank you for the corrections! Fascinating stuff all around.
Lituya Bay, Alaska July, 9, 1958 1,700 Foot wave
Dickson Fjord, Greenland September 2023 650 foot wave
Interesting. I''ve read abou this in the chronicles of our village here, near the German / Swiss boarder. About the very difficult times.
I remember when this happened, man, it was dark and cold.
🐌 ~ our snaily ancestors merely tucked into our shells and estivated through the whole kerfuffle...
You remember???😂
I find this really hard to believe. Mainly because I don't see anyone else at the support meetings.
I was there fishing when this happened
Congress must have been out of session at the time because only fossils in congress are that old
Well done. Thank you.
That was a very interesting video. But how did they survive it?
Wow, referencing Turner watercolors as perhaps evidence is extraordinary. Who would surmise such a thing? Brilliant.
Thank you AH. Not sure it's the right niche but if anyone's very much into the Justinianeaen period I strongly recommend Schwerpunkt's relative playlist. It deals with such deep changes. Keep up with the amazing work
As entrenched is the eschatological fetish is in the modern zeitgeist, it's unimaginable how much greater the apocalyptic mood of those years must've been.
At the time logical thinking would not doubt have led most to assume this change to be permanent. It's amazing there wasn't an enormous spike in suicides at the time...
Like roaches. Humanity survives every thing.
But what about muh climate change? That's an existential threat that's going to kill us all.
So you liken yourself to a roach, interesting. Did you hate your parents?
That makes your ancestors roaches.
One of the scarier documentaries.
The worst event in human history was Toba eruption that occurred about 74,000 years ago. It almost wiped out humankind.
That’s not human history, it’s prehistory.
Fascinating - thanks.
In the words of a famous dwarf: "Talking trees... what do trees have to talk about, hmm? Except the consistency of squirrel droppings."
Doesn't sound like Tolkien - is it?
We need this now
I'll always regret not going into volcanology, It fastinates me
@@arturofuente4832 that's what I said
@@arturofuente4832 BOO HOO!! and you are triggered?? See a shrink
@@arturofuente4832………’Volcanology’ is correct in English language…………
@@elizabethroberts6215 I stand corrected. Thanks.
Me too. I majored in chemistry and took a few geology courses. I discovered too late that this subject was my greatest intellectual love. Well, I was never the sturdy kind of person who can hike up mountains carrying monitors, and hike back down carrying rock samples.
I would have thought, if the volcano spewed enough ash to go around the world, there would be layers that could be dated on Java and Sumatra.
The 90's provided the best documentaries!
This guy needs someone to buy him some books
Krakatoa - according to my recherches - has definitely been excluded from the possible candidates for this event and I'm somewhat surprised to hear from this hypothesis.
On the other hand this is mentioned on Wikipedia:
David Keys suggested the volcano Krakatoa by shifting a cataclysm in AD 416 recorded in Javanese Book of Kings to AD 535.[15] Drilling projects in Sunda Strait ruled out any possibility that an eruption took place during this time period.[29]'
-> see: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanic_winter_of_536
This was originally aired on TV in the late 1990's, so it's merely a snapshot into what researchers were seeing at that time.
Long range sound travel.... Study Krakatoa 1883. HEARD as far away as Ceylon as the sound of distant cannon, and in Manilla the same. And that one DID effect global weather for months but not years. In London fires were reported at Sunset for months because the sunsets were so red.
Watching from Mackinac Island Michigan
What are the two things Mackinac Island is famous for making? Fudge and horse poop! 😄
@@SkyBlue-qn8me And my walking tour 😆
My favorite place on Earth.
@John.Flower.Productions
Great to know !
Look me up next time you're on Island
what an insightful video! i really appreciate the depth of research you put into it. however, i can't help but wonder if the focus on 536 AD is a bit exaggerated. i mean, there have been other years throughout history that also brought about significant challenges for humanity, like 1347 with the Black Death. maybe it's worth comparing how we handled those years too?
I'm not surprised that they did NOT find any charcoal in that layer.
Remember the book of kings...The day Java split up (in current Java and Sumatra).
I suppose nothing would have been left above water in that region. Which makes charcoal deposit impossible ....as told in this video...they could ony search in the small parts above water.
About ancient krakatoa...the Charcoals foubd in the layer above (1216) could be the layer created when blowing up ancient krakatoa. Because that drawing seems to be a volcano in water (island vulcano). Also because that book of kings. In 535 (435) AD the volcano must have been situated on land, not in the water.
Also to create the straight of Sunda....in one blow (book of kings)....I cannot imagine how much czarbomba explosions big that has been. No wonder that the could hear this in Chnia as an exceptional loud boom...on 5000 km distance. Even the "small" eruption (only a vei6) in 1883 was heard in Perth Australia....also a 5000 km away. Someone mentipned the tamboras, year without summer...this , as this story says...was in a lot of places a decade without a (real) summer.
If this would happen today even our modern civilization would not be able to feed the current number of people living. And the worldwide food storage will not last for >10 years
Which makes sure that de population would diminish...
Only question remaining...Was this a super eruption (VEI 8) as mount toba 75000 years ago? Could they calculate if the amount of vulcanic deposits reacht that vei 8 size?
I think it was the summer of 93, or something. I lived in Mancelona Michigan in the woods. I remember it as the year without a summer. Awhile after that I heard of a big volcano, I think it was way over in Indonesia. Struggled to get to 70 degrees F. Blue skies sun shining down, didn't warm it up very well for summer temperatures!
536 AD sounds so severe, and so widespread that I'm picturing a supervolcanic eruption.
Yellowstone? It's a place where the ground is always pipping the ground. There is a lake that is being moved as of someone is lifting up a plastic sheet. Yes the history of that time of 536 AD is an eye opener. This is why I started dehydrating foods and storing flour. (Freeze it for a few days, so bread weevils will die.)
@@jeanettereno4045: Yellowstone seems unlikely to erupt in the near future, one of the other super-volcanos may well come first.
Dutchsince follows earthquake movement, magnitudes, and speaks of volcanic activity only from time to time. Yet all have patterns. Great into source!
@@jeanettereno4045and who told you that Yellowstone will erupt in our lifetime?
The last super volcano eruption within human history was in Indonesia 50kyears ago.
I remember the year after Mt St Helens erupted (much smaller than this) there was hardly a day with a clear sunny sky in the Seattle area.
A major eruption in Iceland likely started the migration of the Sea Peoples and caused the Bronze Age Collapse.
1250 - 1100 B.C. Was also considered the dryest years of the bronce age.
And way later the justilian plaque was likely the result of a vulcanic eruption in India.
If Borneo separated in two and now a separate new island appeared in 537 AD called Sumatra, then continental drift occurs in spurts way faster than scientists ever imagined and it answers many questions such as how so many small portions of continental plates ended up so jumbled and far from their parent plates. Indeed the shapes of the two now separate coastlines form a positive and negative matching shape
Good vid, but it *in no way answers the question in the title*.
can you please do more in line with the TITLE? more about how people survived....
You did not tell us how people survived.
In the dark. They survived in the dark.
He said they went without agricultural foods, that they hunted and fished, (and very likely cannibalised - my add in due to other references).
They survived. And here we are.
Flashlights and making sure they kept plenty of batteries handy as well as stock piling tinned food in case of a disaster.
@@jandrews6254correction - some survived. But in the grand scheme of things, that is enough.
@@jandrews6254I likesyo answers
My father remembers his grandmother telling him of how it was dark as night for three days when Krakatoa erupted. She would have been 19 at the time. I'm also sure the story goes that the noise was heard as a loud bang or crack. But they were in Sydney, so not sure if that is embellishment. She told how the sunsets were red for a year afterwards.
The biggest worst year in history is the 1620 BCE explosion of Thera/Santorini island, creating a Mediterranean tsunami that wiped out the majority of all western and central Mediterranean shorelines (saving Syria-Haran, Canaan, and Egypt. The refugess from Europe (the western Hebrews of ABRAHAM'S BLOODLINES - Ur of the Chaldees - Europe of the Celts), and the esatern Hebrews (Hyksos, Catal Huyuk), and the shoreline people (Sea Peoples), all moved out of the area into the Mideast, the Nile delta region, and others migrated further east into the Tigris-Euphrates valley (and even into India). The explosion overcast the skies, creating drought, crop failures, starvation, disease, and deaths.
Looks like somebody forgot to take their cheery pills this morning!
BC*
@@brosephbroman7564 BCE stoopid ! And stay off the comment line.
@@deepdrag8131 you have mty permission to sit atop a volcano when it blows off
@@brosephbroman7564I personally still use the BC/AD convention because it’s what I grew up with and I’m a Christian and I kinda like the Christ-centereness of those Latin phrases, but OP is also correct; BCE/CE (Before the Common Era and Common Era) are a modern way of delineating the turn.
Good show, but the constant commercials thrown on this by UA-cam is a pain!
This same video gets released year after year by multiple channels for as long as I can remember.
Probably public domain or a channel network. 🤔🤷🏼♂️
Dumb comment !
Wake Up !
We recently had an eruption of Taal Volcano in the Philippines in the last 4 years or so. Surely this is related to this discussion, as we are relatively close to the equator. At least, as close as I have ever been 😅
We had a layer of volcanic dust on everything 1cm thick around our house and street. We are 35-40 km away from the volcano.
"Anak" is the word for "child" in Tagalog. Obviously the languages are related in some way.
7.5k years?? How? They can't be THAT old?!
You're right they don't live that long. But wood is surprisingly hardy and has been used in construction for thousands of years. Also in the right ecological conditions it can be almost perfectly preserved even longer. By finding and cataloging many thousands of samples from many sources. You can reliably construct such a timeline. Scientists aren't relying on one tree or even a dozen but hundreds or thousands collected over a wide area. Looked at not by one scientist or group but many that serve to further verify the findings.
@@michaelharris8598 "By finding and cataloging many thousands of samples from many sources. You can reliably construct such a timeline." This is one sentence, not two.
Think in terms of thousands of history books from old to recent in a stack that overlap, covering the entire span of time.
oldest trees ever dated don't go back beyond 5,000-5,500 years ago
of course, there are several examples that haven't been dated that the so called "experts" like to assume longer time periods, but you know what they say about assumptions...
In short, there is no scientific evidence via Dendrochronology prior to 3500-3000BC
coincidentally, which is about the same time period of the great/biblical flood...
The title is misleading. I did not notice the title just the year. I knew from Randle Carlson, that this was a period without summer. So it was what I wanted to know.
I think it should have been called "the dark ages , the years with almost no Sun."
So, because of this, the "dark ages" was born! Literally, because it went dark...
This is an interesting theory: it wasn't the collapse of the Roman Empire that caused the Dark Ages, but a natural disaster near the end of that empire that truely left the world in darkness for another 500 years.
So wrong
metaphors. look them up.
I think this is a documentary I've been look for for years. I just didn't think it was this old. But some of the stylized shots, like the dim light shinning only partway down a staircase. Weird the bits of video that I remember. But it didn't have all the info in it that I was expecting.
2022 was the worst year on record ,mass global chemical warfare and the demise of humanity
@@clintoncyrilvoss4287 yes... The worst of evil people are doing things and cleaning up monetary wise in go to gain control of the world.
If you think 2022 was the worst year, I would recommend you review your history lessons more studiously.
@@paladin_83 you wouldn't know the difference between your arse and your face then
@clintoncyrilvoss4287 Tell me, do you think chemical warfare is worse now than it was in 1917? Do you think humanity is worse now than at ANY other point in the last 10,000 years?
Just because news of a thing is more available, that doesn't mean the prevalence of the thing has increased, only exposure to it.
nice to see the trip to Krakatau. thanks channel 4. beautiful place when it's not the worst place to be! black sand and tropical greenery. nice big ship to stay on.
digging by hand for thousand year old charcoal not so easy. getting a backhoe in there would blow the budget totally.
People in the 6th century were far better at surviving what happened than the people today.
I beg to differ. Last year was crap for crops in northern europe, yet we survived ;)
@@Mongolicious only Nth Europe. What if it's everywhere.
@@evandawson4862 not very likely. Most often disasters like that are confined to either northern or southern hemisphere.
All Tree Rings. Bet you got some Exiting Ice Cores as well.
OK, but how did people survive that time?
even without the jab
@@robroy5352 heeheee 😆
They ordered pizza's. They arrived by drone. 🐝
Ask John Snow
The likely answer is most did not.
Initially, Cracka Toke Ah came to mind Circa 1883 which has been traditionally referenced as a model for Nuclear Winters/Cold War Era.
I'm so sorry but Mike Baillie is Uncle Colm from Derry Girls
Love that show
What makes this video so intriguing is the fact that a natural disaster could happen at any point in our lives. We know that we could all be wiped out in seconds. It’s terrifying and inspiring at the same time. That’s why religions that worship Jesus, god, Muhammad are here at all.
I mean it was a pretty bad year in 2239 BC when the Great Flood of Noah hit
ship length 6 km width 2 km rivet-like nail 15 tons.42.94494 47.46900 googl map
Meteors do not travel through space. Rocks traveling through space *become* meteors when they enter the atmosphere, and meteors become meteorites when they strike the ground.