Chicxulub: The Asteroid that Killed the Dinosaurs

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 24 лют 2020
  • Get started with Curiosity Stream: go.thoughtleaders.io/165052020...
    → Subscribe for new videos two times per week.
    / @geographicstravel
    This video is #sponsored by Curiosity Stream.
    Our sister channels:
    Biographics - / @biographics
    TopTenz - / @toptenznettop10
    Credits:
    Host - Simon Whistler
    Author - Morris M.
    Producer - Jennifer Da Silva
    Executive Producer - Shell Harris
    Business inquiries to admin@toptenz.net
    Source/Further reading:
    Overview: www.atlasobscura.com/places/c...
    Discovery of the impact crater: www.bbc.com/travel/story/20181...
    Life in the Cretaceous period: www.nationalgeographic.com/sc...
    www.britannica.com/science/Cr...
    The day of impact: www.smithsonianmag.com/scienc...
    www.nationalgeographic.com/sc...
    The weeks after impact: www.smithsonianmag.com/scienc...
    www.bbc.com/earth/story/201604...
    Why the impact struck the worst possible place: www.bbc.com/news/science-envi...
    How the impact was good for bacteria www.nytimes.com/2020/02/01/sc...
    Quick re-emergence of life: www.space.com/36239-dinosaur-...
    Alternative, volcano theory: www.nationalgeographic.com/sc...
    www.theatlantic.com/magazine/...
    Permian-Triassic extinction: www.nationalgeographic.com/sc...
    Former theories for what killed the dinos: www.nationalgeographic.com/ne...
    www.smithsonianmag.com/scienc...
    First dino fossils discovered: www.bbc.com/earth/story/201506...
    Math on the yield of Chicxulub vs Tsar Bomba: / how_many_tsar_bombas_w...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,7 тис.

  • @geographicstravel
    @geographicstravel  4 роки тому +287

    Get started with Curiosity Stream: go.thoughtleaders.io/1650520200225

  • @ashleybrown4754
    @ashleybrown4754 4 роки тому +6535

    R.I.P. Dinosaurs. Can't believe it's been 66 million years already. Never forget.

  • @ToaArcan
    @ToaArcan 4 роки тому +2269

    Fun fact: The meteor hit so quickly that it was already carving out the crater before it even hit the ground. It also punched through the atmosphere at such a rate that it left a hole in its wake, and pieces of Earth's crust would've been ejected through this vacuum into space. It's estimated that some of these pieces could've made it as far as Jupiter's orbit.
    Part of the reason that the meteor impact theory was so contested was that humans simply... don't like the idea that something as random and uncontrollable as a rock from space could cause the extinction of 75% of all life on the planet, because it means it could happen to them, without warning, and with no recourse.

    • @swiss48coffsharbour
      @swiss48coffsharbour 4 роки тому +60

      Wow, thank you for that tidbit!

    • @person.w9780
      @person.w9780 4 роки тому +112

      Completely unrelated, but I see that you're a Bionicle fan.

    • @Dunkster74
      @Dunkster74 4 роки тому +109

      Well, we would have some measure of warning these days, thanks to the miracles of technology and tracking of objects in space... though, of course, it wouldn't be nearly enough.

    • @gumunduringigumundsson9344
      @gumunduringigumundsson9344 4 роки тому +5

      That explains why we will have found some rocks with familiar remnants.

    • @perrygriffin2371
      @perrygriffin2371 4 роки тому +4

      Asteroid

  • @DanFlorio
    @DanFlorio 3 роки тому +671

    Simon said, "It was a sound heard around the world."
    Actually, it was "heard" many times. I forget the specifics, but the shockwave traveled around the world many times and would have been audible for many of those passes.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal 3 роки тому +84

      Only heard if you were still alive

    • @scottwallace1
      @scottwallace1 2 роки тому +87

      Well…audible to everyone once for a blip before universal eardrum explosion rendered the whole world deaf.

    • @4450krank
      @4450krank Рік тому +49

      It is believed that the shock wave form krakatoa hit London 8 times, as seismograf were pressent and gave readings. This would have been so many times worse.

    • @4450krank
      @4450krank Рік тому +2

      @@nw932 Okay.

    • @wlonsdale1
      @wlonsdale1 Рік тому

      A worldwide provable flood is more likely

  • @christiankroemer4267
    @christiankroemer4267 3 роки тому +643

    “Wow, 65 million years since the Cretaceous Extinction and the dinosaurs. I miss them...”
    Birds: “Uh, I’m right here!”
    “I can almost still hear them.”

    • @harukrentz435
      @harukrentz435 3 роки тому +7

      Chickens feel left out.

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast 3 роки тому +19

      Yeah, you can hear them on social media: they invented Twitter.

    • @JamesSmith-op7yc
      @JamesSmith-op7yc 2 роки тому

      I get it, good call. thank you.

    • @DarkParagon
      @DarkParagon 2 роки тому +11

      **Me eating Turkey Dinosaurs which are actually dinosaurs** Yummy.

    • @haze6647
      @haze6647 2 роки тому +2

      British and japan kingdom still exist, but we think that there's no kingdom today.
      Just pretend that ostrict and emu didn't exist, saudi arabia is nothing but a sand domes.

  • @73THUNDERDOME73
    @73THUNDERDOME73 4 роки тому +1475

    “They had us in the first half, not guna lie”
    - Mammals

    • @paraboo8994
      @paraboo8994 4 роки тому +23

      Great, now I have coffee up my nose 😂😂😂

    • @blaidencortel
      @blaidencortel 4 роки тому +1

      Richard Foran How about “borgsaur”? Oooo, no, how about “borgosaur”? “Cysaur” seems bit tricky to say. Probably would’ve conquered the galaxy by now.

    • @Ometecuhtli
      @Ometecuhtli 4 роки тому

      But then we unleashed our secret weapon...

    • @TheWolfsnack
      @TheWolfsnack 4 роки тому +4

      given the title....I thought it was something your girlfriend bought at the "Love Shop".....

    • @davehallett3128
      @davehallett3128 4 роки тому +1

      @Lord ballsac the 2nd yes but dinosaurs believed in the jesus lizard

  • @SirSmithThe1st
    @SirSmithThe1st 3 роки тому +2177

    *75% of life wiped out, dinosaurs extinct*
    Mammals: “It’s free real estate”

    • @drpoundsign
      @drpoundsign 3 роки тому +7

      @Jay W Woody Allen's "Antz." Did you notice that the wasps...were WASPS?? What a Genius.

    • @Andrew-sv3ck
      @Andrew-sv3ck 3 роки тому +10

      Too soon bro

    • @jrus690
      @jrus690 3 роки тому +32

      Dinosaurs actually did not go extinct, they went from ruling the land to ruling the skies. Nothing since then has come close to challenging that dominance.

    • @astrosasha
      @astrosasha 3 роки тому +2

      reddit moment

    • @blcklstd6156
      @blcklstd6156 3 роки тому

      Lol

  • @the_once-and-future_king.
    @the_once-and-future_king. 3 роки тому +185

    Chicxulub town should build a memorial to the dinosaurs.
    Bring some much needed tourist revenue in!

    • @dieterrechenberg6981
      @dieterrechenberg6981 2 роки тому +7

      The monument would be reminiscent of the Marines-raising-the-flag-at-Iwo-Jima memorial. The plaque at the bottom could read: "They gave their lives, so we could thrive."

    • @picassoboy52
      @picassoboy52 2 роки тому +5

      kinda hard when the crater is under water. You can be the first to tour it

    • @Damarosa1111
      @Damarosa1111 2 роки тому +5

      In Mexico Yucatán town chicxulub

    • @christiankneupper7011
      @christiankneupper7011 3 місяці тому +1

      I think they're honoring their legacy by drilling for oil in the crater

    • @EZRiderYZ450F
      @EZRiderYZ450F Місяць тому

      Why the idiots from America would just come and tear it down anyway!

  • @Tommy_6948
    @Tommy_6948 3 роки тому +141

    Imagine living in the historically most important place ever, which no one knows about

    • @gumaromebius
      @gumaromebius 3 роки тому +5

      It’s a pretty popular tourist spot for people from Mérida, and I’m pretty sure no one has a clue

    • @CazzyVR
      @CazzyVR 2 роки тому

      @@gumaromebius where is it exactly?

    • @gumaromebius
      @gumaromebius 2 роки тому +3

      @@CazzyVR not too far north of Mérida, in the state of Yucatán, there’s a port called Progreso. It’s right there

    • @randymillhouse791
      @randymillhouse791 3 місяці тому

      @@CazzyVR It's on a Planet called Earth. Crack a book.

  • @stimpy_thecat
    @stimpy_thecat 4 роки тому +553

    You know, when I was a kid I was always taught that the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs was 65 million years ago. But today it's always stated as 66 million years ago. Either scientists have revised their estimate or I'm a million years old.

  • @littleowl43
    @littleowl43 3 роки тому +2293

    Nothing more relaxing than having a poo and watching a great episode.

    • @silentkilla14
      @silentkilla14 3 роки тому +130

      Lol doing that right now and been sitting here for 40 minutes now.

    • @OldSkoolCarpMan
      @OldSkoolCarpMan 3 роки тому +380

      @@silentkilla14 dropping your own mini Chicxulub....

    • @bradbutterfield5935
      @bradbutterfield5935 3 роки тому +62

      How long does it take for you ta shit ? 😅🤣

    • @amandamcandrew263
      @amandamcandrew263 3 роки тому +30

      Good pooping entertainment.

    • @joeyjones4299
      @joeyjones4299 3 роки тому +11

      😂😂😂

  • @bycdbema
    @bycdbema 2 роки тому +342

    I've always been a dinosaur fan, so imagine my shock when I found out at age 7 that I lived 2 hours and a half from when the asteroid that extinct dinosaurs. Even if I'm from Yucatan, maybe out of respect I never went to Chicxulub in all the 25 years I lived there.

    • @estefaneoy3483
      @estefaneoy3483 2 роки тому +17

      I live in Yucatan and I've never been to Chicxulub neither.

    • @deadboy3646
      @deadboy3646 2 роки тому +11

      I live about 7 hours from Hiawatha crater almost as big as Chixculub, the one that ended the ice age and sent pretty much all of the ice age species to extinction 12,800 years ago.

    • @drewmadenew3000
      @drewmadenew3000 Рік тому +29

      You should go, I hear it’s a real blast.

    • @scene2much
      @scene2much Рік тому +8

      The Yucatan is a Cultural and Geological Treasure. From Pink Flamingo Hordes (not far from Chicxulub) to the Mayan Ruins, and the mysterious Cenotes, and the Place-Where-Time-Stood-Still that is Central Merida....yeah... great place.

    • @Chris-yi4pj
      @Chris-yi4pj Рік тому +14

      I live 1hr from the swamp Washington DC I wish something would blow up this swamp

  • @russellgilbert8625
    @russellgilbert8625 Рік тому +57

    I very seldom comment on videos, especially those of the two year old variety, but Simon, thank you for putting in words something I've felt for a very VERY long time about the uniqueness, the rareness, and the absolute marvel that is human existence. Here in the future, who knows how much longer it'll be around given how we seem incapable of comprehending how you marvelously ended this piece. It is the first time a UA-cam video has literally given me goosebumps (and I've watched a LOT of UA-cam). Thank you. Truly.

    • @notme2day
      @notme2day 5 місяців тому

      At the rate humans are going ... I highly doubt nature (or we) are going to give *us* the 170 million years that dino got.
      What it took for us to get here was massive and maybe a mistake. Look at all the possibilities of life and evolution we've already ended with our extinction level actions.

  • @alext2933
    @alext2933 4 роки тому +598

    One of the most amazing facts I heard, to help visualise the scale, is as the face made impact the top was still at the height of a cruising airliner. The image always stuck with me.

    • @deathbycheese850
      @deathbycheese850 3 роки тому +15

      Same.

    • @onlylikenerd
      @onlylikenerd 3 роки тому +124

      Yup. Since the asteroid was about 6 miles wide, what helps me visualize it is that is literally taller than Mount Everest. So basically, imagine Mount Everest flying at earth at 45,000 mph. Wicked

    • @OMGAnotherday
      @OMGAnotherday 3 роки тому +14

      Yep great image!

    • @mosapedoterrorist7529
      @mosapedoterrorist7529 3 роки тому +23

      onlylikenerd and some are made of solid metal just to make things worse,hyper sonic mountains slamming into us that are super dense,most will air burst in atmosphere,still will cause enormous destruction ,

    • @alexhodgson7254
      @alexhodgson7254 3 роки тому +5

      crazy that it just left a relatively small crater compared to earths size when you think about it like this ^ its hard not to think it should have just blown up the whole world

  • @odinkarrtheviking8274
    @odinkarrtheviking8274 4 роки тому +569

    With a name like that, better make sure it's not a Lovecraftian horror that killed the dinosaurs

    • @winterassassin22
      @winterassassin22 4 роки тому +52

      Gotta love the Mayan language

    • @blackshogun272
      @blackshogun272 4 роки тому +6

      Odinkarr the Viking it might have been the arrival of The World Razer...

    • @acolossalsquid
      @acolossalsquid 4 роки тому +15

      Cthulhu tossed it, before he decided to take his long nap.

    • @Hirvee5
      @Hirvee5 4 роки тому +21

      Chicxulub, a call to the ear of Azathoth. A halt in the dream of everything by the blind idiot god. In its magnificence the depth of true existence is seen. Humans were never meant to be. Chicxulub is the call who will stop the mad piping and wake up Azathoth from the dream of everything. Nobody know's when the final call will ring to open Azathoth's eyes and the true madness of everything is all that is left.
      -> To me that kind of sounds like it already is a lovecraftion horror that exists on some level of thought.

    • @odinkarrtheviking8274
      @odinkarrtheviking8274 4 роки тому +4

      @@Hirvee5 🤯

  • @HORRIOR1
    @HORRIOR1 2 роки тому +29

    As someone born in the 90s, it feels super weird to think that we didn't know the cause of extinction of Dinosaurs until the 80s.

    • @DivoGo
      @DivoGo 2 роки тому +4

      I was born in the 60’s and I thought it was strange. Also the science books that my school used were in HUGE error for just about everything.

    • @punkgrl325
      @punkgrl325 2 роки тому +6

      Yeah, for real. I guess kids today will never know there was a time when Pluto was considered a planet.

    • @brunoutechkaheeros1182
      @brunoutechkaheeros1182 8 місяців тому +3

      ​@@punkgrl325ah yes... the 9 planets of solar system 15 years ago... i remember reading that in school books... then, 8 planets 😂

    • @dogfaceponysoldier
      @dogfaceponysoldier 4 місяці тому +1

      When I was in school in the early 80s the whole comet/meteor theory was fringe. Like UFOs and Bigfoot

    • @davemurphy2774
      @davemurphy2774 4 місяці тому

      They tell us about "Climate Change" was man made the use of Automobiles. In 1927 USA had their worst flood... But they tell us it's worse floods today. Largest recorded forest fire in North America 1950.... They should have stopped Henry Ford in his tracks... No Model T and No V8's... Science changes....@@DivoGo

  • @maxblair3317
    @maxblair3317 9 місяців тому +9

    That ending was absolutely marvelous. I've always been dumbfounded by the number of incredible coincidences that had to line up for us to be here today, and you've explained it in such a beautiful way!

  • @powwowken2760
    @powwowken2760 3 роки тому +440

    "what would it have been like to be there on the day of the impact?"
    I'm gunna go with bad.... it would've been bad

  • @mikefm4
    @mikefm4 4 роки тому +620

    The story of this impact always makes me sad. Hundreds of millions of years of evolution all erased in a single event.
    And what a horrific way for these animals to die

    • @geslinam9703
      @geslinam9703 3 роки тому +69

      Makes me feel sad too...and that we are very insignificant, that we too could be erased so completely.

    • @Absaroka
      @Absaroka 3 роки тому +48

      @Stella Hohenheim Lol

    • @Nick-eq8kq
      @Nick-eq8kq 3 роки тому +70

      @Stella Hohenheim spotted the mouth breather

    • @doesnotexist305
      @doesnotexist305 3 роки тому +19

      Not completely erased, otherwise there’d be no life today. Just incredibly slowed down

    • @Armando_Brown32
      @Armando_Brown32 3 роки тому +46

      @Stella Hohenheim You’re obviously confused. Creationism is a hoax, not evolution. 😁

  • @Gyrfalcon312
    @Gyrfalcon312 Рік тому +41

    This recounting of events was honestly chilling. I just learned of spherules, the things that burned up the atmosphere. As I listened, I wondered if any bigtime studio has done... a three-hour or so epic on the impact itself.
    Great chance to put computer graphics to use... make a disaster movie to shame even _2012_ , because this one actually happened. Thanks for the video, sir.

    • @robbie_
      @robbie_ Рік тому +2

      I would love it. There's a great UA-cam video showing graphs and so on of the impact as it happened and for the following 8 or so hours. You know, the heat pulse, the shock wave, the tsunamis, etc. Someone should give a cgi company $500 million to do a proper movie. One that lasts eight hours. Interactive, so you can choose from a series of "cameras", etc. I would so love that.

    • @sym9266
      @sym9266 11 місяців тому +1

      Soon with the use of AI it would be to recreate such harrowing spectacles with higher accuracy and fidelity than any artist could alone

  • @lisar3944
    @lisar3944 Рік тому +7

    thirty THOUSAND years of recovery...that is so far beyond my comprehension, I really can't wrap my head around it. Great episode!

  • @Googledeservestodie
    @Googledeservestodie 4 роки тому +507

    Dinosaurs: chilling for 170 million years
    Meteor: *COWABUNGA IT IS*

    • @darthXreven
      @darthXreven 4 роки тому +3

      Dinosaurs: why for you kill me like dis?? RAWR! [as he snaps at the meteor]

    • @3EBstudio
      @3EBstudio 4 роки тому

      craaaaash

    • @darthXreven
      @darthXreven 4 роки тому +5

      @@3EBstudio if a meteor crashes in the yukatan and nobody's around to hear it, does it make a sound??
      wom wom wom.....

    • @nicksalvatore5717
      @nicksalvatore5717 4 роки тому

      @Ethan Rhodes Do you have aspergers

    • @zanerkindardis8978
      @zanerkindardis8978 4 роки тому +2

      @Ethan Rhodes guess what, nobody cares nerd.

  • @deusexaethera
    @deusexaethera 4 роки тому +413

    Fun fact: At the speed the Chicxulub Meteor hit the Earth's atmosphere, it would've heated up enough to emit gamma rays. All life within line-of-sight of the meteor's entry plume was instantly vaporized by the heat and radiation and never even saw the impact itself.
    _(yes, I know heat and radiation are both electromagnetic waves, but it's still worthwhile to distinguish between high-frequency ionizing radiation that causes cancer vs. low-frequency thermal radiation that just sets things on fire.)_

    • @flamencoprof
      @flamencoprof 4 роки тому +7

      I thought the impact frequency was 1? :-)

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera 4 роки тому +2

      @@flamencoprof: I'm not sure what you're talking about.

    • @flamencoprof
      @flamencoprof 4 роки тому +1

      @@deusexaethera Let me know once you are :-)

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera 4 роки тому +41

      @UC5ruBjcvekHkhf1l_R7ypKQ: You don't actually hate to be that guy. 😉
      All hot plasmas emit ionizing radiation, all meteors generate hot plasmas during atmospheric entry, Chicxulub was unusually large and moving unusually fast, and so it generated an unusually large amount of unusually hot plasma during atmospheric entry. Keep in mind Chicxulub was so large that Earth's atmosphere would not have slowed it down significantly -- when the leading edge reached the ground, the trailing edge was still in the stratosphere -- possibly even higher, since the maximum estimated size is ~50 miles across. It had so much kinetic energy that the leading edge would've been traveling at full speed even as it pushed through the lower troposphere, and the plasma generated from that interaction would've been as hot as a thermonuclear explosion. I wouldn't be surprised if there were a small amount of actual nuclear fusion occurring in the compressed plasma between the asteroid and the ground in the instant before impact.

    • @iambiggus
      @iambiggus 4 роки тому +8

      Any gamma radiation being emitted by an asteroid would be immediately absorbed and scattered by the atmosphere between the ground and said asteroid.

  • @yourroyalhighness7662
    @yourroyalhighness7662 3 роки тому +8

    Just a note. Dreadnoughtous, while huge, was not the largest dinosaur. The biggest known was still likely Argentinosaurus, a beast so big that very large specimens may have been 115-130 ft long and weighed around 110 tons.
    Recently, bones of yet another huge titanosaur have been discovered but they need to be dug up before estimates of size can be made.

    • @justamicrowave2572
      @justamicrowave2572 2 роки тому

      I’m pretty sure the “new titanosaur” you are talking about isn’t super new, but its size can only be speculated due to the only bone that has been discovered being a single vertebrae. If it did scale up like other titanosaurs, it would easily be the heaviest dinosaur.

    • @yourroyalhighness7662
      @yourroyalhighness7662 2 роки тому

      @@justamicrowave2572 I believe the discovery I am referring to happened within the past year or so. This is a newer find than Patagotitan.
      Argentinosaurus seems to still be one to beat so this new one (if it is indeed a new type) will have to weigh over 110 tons to exceed Argentinosaurus.
      Not all paleontologists agree on the upper weight limits of Argentinosaurus. I am using the upper end of the scale when I refer to it's weight range.

  • @shopsshire9282
    @shopsshire9282 2 роки тому +19

    The sound waves from this impact was probably one of the loudest if not the loudest sounds ever heard dwarfing the collapse of the volcano of Krakatoa in 1883 which was heard around the world and the shock wave went around the world seven times.

    • @clamcrewcarclub6017
      @clamcrewcarclub6017 9 місяців тому +1

      Always wondered how a shockwave circles the earth multiple times because wouldn’t it be running into the shockwave traveling the opposite direction on the other side of the earth each time?

    • @thomastaylor6699
      @thomastaylor6699 4 місяці тому +1

      I think Krackatoa's sound reached about 163 decibels, which would cause you to lose your hearing perminatilly.

  • @alteredbeast7145
    @alteredbeast7145 4 роки тому +920

    Sure it might have been rough on the dinos, but Im willing to bet none of them ever stepped on a lego

    • @shamelessape1
      @shamelessape1 3 роки тому +99

      well, now they are the legos.

    • @stevenwilson6450
      @stevenwilson6450 3 роки тому +18

      Listen, legosauris was fairly small when compared with the heavyweights. So, yeah, the big ones could step on them.

    • @alteredbeast7145
      @alteredbeast7145 3 роки тому +38

      @@shamelessape1 thats a witty riposte. I doff my fedora and pledge my sword to you

    • @onlyme9254
      @onlyme9254 3 роки тому +12

      I would take asteroid over lego any day of the week! Micro machines weren't so nice to step on also back in the day according to my dad 30 years ago when he wished he hadn't! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @xAdorNexasYT
      @xAdorNexasYT 3 роки тому +5

      I've walked on Legos as a kid, y'all just bitches 😂 kiddin lol about y'all being bitches. Not the Lego walking thing. I did that shit.

  • @ErikHare
    @ErikHare 4 роки тому +617

    "Every act of creation is first an act of destruction."
    - Pablo Picasso

    • @justinh6651
      @justinh6651 4 роки тому +4

      Pretty true tbh

    • @RudyCantGame
      @RudyCantGame 4 роки тому

      Is this from Prometheus?

    • @pacco9532
      @pacco9532 4 роки тому

      He never actually said that, it’s a myth

    • @nebtheweb8885
      @nebtheweb8885 4 роки тому +6

      _"It took me four years to paint like Raphael, but a lifetime to paint like a child."_
      Pablo Picasso

    • @user-ef1qr5dy2i
      @user-ef1qr5dy2i 4 роки тому

      @Ethan Rhodes what

  • @thewanderingfloridian8162
    @thewanderingfloridian8162 2 роки тому +6

    I’ve been a fan of this channel for over two years. THIS one gave me goosebumps. And it was all because of Simon’s monologue at the end. Bravo.

  • @aneesanusret7242
    @aneesanusret7242 2 роки тому +8

    Simon, you legend, I've never discovered a podcast better in my entire life up until this point and this show is what I now live for.

  • @chancebelcher7163
    @chancebelcher7163 4 роки тому +330

    "life, uh, finds a way"
    Dr. Ian Malcolm 1993

    • @whynottalklikeapirat
      @whynottalklikeapirat 4 роки тому +13

      Ah ... uh... yah.... and later there'll be running and-uh screaming ....

    • @Ometecuhtli
      @Ometecuhtli 4 роки тому +1

      God destroys dinosaurs ...

    • @whynottalklikeapirat
      @whynottalklikeapirat 4 роки тому +5

      @@Ometecuhtli
      Dr. Ian Malcolm, "God creates dinosaurs, God destroys dinosaurs. God creates Man, man destroys God. Man creates dinosaurs"
      Dr. Ellie Sattler, "Dinosaurs eat man..... Woman inherits the earth”
      Me: "woman creates kids, kids rule the internet, virus destroys mankind, tardigrades inherit the universe, entropy wins out in the end"

    • @ForgingThought
      @ForgingThought 4 роки тому +3

      "Thats alot of shit."

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 3 роки тому +1

      Ah yes the obligatory jurassic park quote...
      I also love- "your scientists are too preoccupied thinking about whether they could, they didn't stop to think whether they should?"

  • @redlancelot2634
    @redlancelot2634 3 роки тому +245

    I can't imagine how the remaining 30% of living things survive in this event of impact and decades long winter

    • @Bitchslapper316
      @Bitchslapper316 3 роки тому +38

      It was basically just rats, bugs and small fish.

    • @kdburner7356
      @kdburner7356 3 роки тому +4

      @@Bitchslapper316 what about birds?

    • @kdburner7356
      @kdburner7356 3 роки тому +2

      @Michael Rogers yeaaa i know it wasn’t a question i just thought he missed out on birds

    • @paulgibbon5991
      @paulgibbon5991 3 роки тому +35

      Bear in mind that just because a species survived doesn't mean that MANY of them survived. Species that would go on to resettle the world and number in the billions might well have owed their existence to a couple of dozen scarred survivors cowering in a sheltered valley or lake.

    • @cab8866
      @cab8866 2 роки тому +5

      If 75% was wiped out, only 25% remain.

  • @jamesf2571
    @jamesf2571 3 роки тому +17

    I love his voice! He sounds like a young David Attenborough, same deep accent but more spry and edgy >:)

  • @lindyhensley2946
    @lindyhensley2946 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for haaving so many great channels with great stories to tell and for having such a great voice and manner when telling them.

  • @LickMyRainbow77
    @LickMyRainbow77 4 роки тому +80

    I remember learning about the asteroid impact from watching Walking With Dinosaurs on the BBC when I was 7. I remember the baby T-rex's getting blown away and bawling my eyes out for something that had been dead for 65 million years

    • @jakealter5504
      @jakealter5504 4 роки тому +2

      Strong Amazon the only thing that walking with dinosaurs got wrong was that it was an asteroid that hit earth, not a comet

    • @joshuahunt3032
      @joshuahunt3032 4 роки тому

      Jake Alter Are you saying it was portrayed as a comet, but leading theories actually say it was an asteroid, or the other way around?

    • @jakealter5504
      @jakealter5504 4 роки тому +2

      Joshua Hunt the final episode said it was a comet when it was really an astroid, they got most of it correct though

    • @jakealter5504
      @jakealter5504 4 роки тому +1

      Joshua Hunt bbc said it was a comet when it was really an asteroid, I was only pointing out that error

    • @joshuahunt3032
      @joshuahunt3032 4 роки тому +5

      Jake Alter No worries, you just worded it just weirdly enough that my brain didn’t register which classification was the error. I haven’t seen the ending to Walking With Dinosaurs in a while (Walking With Beasts and that other series that focused on archaic humans are more my style, anyway)

  • @edwardrawn8157
    @edwardrawn8157 4 роки тому +248

    "We don't know if it landed in morning, noon or night" - Pretty sure it was all three.

    • @macmedic892
      @macmedic892 4 роки тому +12

      Edward Rawn It’s 5:00 somewhere.

    • @darthXreven
      @darthXreven 4 роки тому +2

      which just proves even if you land in the tropics you won't know if you're coming or going.....lolz

    • @jarrodbarker5050
      @jarrodbarker5050 4 роки тому +3

      Ha! Intellectual burn!

    • @Zarcondeegrissom
      @Zarcondeegrissom 4 роки тому +5

      yeah, I would not want to be close enough to that thing that it's 13km wide shadow made it look like night, or where the plasma ball from it going through the air made it look like midday, or when at the moment of impact the fireball made it look like a sunrise. Agreed, all three.
      And that is rather 'modest' compared to events like Caloris Planitia or the much larger Theia event.

    • @christianyepez1016
      @christianyepez1016 4 роки тому +5

      This is a perfect comment, I applaud you sir.

  • @mousermind
    @mousermind 2 роки тому +6

    "I never made a deal with Chicxulub!"
    "Tell that to Chicxulub."

  • @TheRealDaveRamos
    @TheRealDaveRamos Рік тому +5

    As much as I enjoyed the video and as much as the whole series of events gave me goosebumps, what shocked me the most was the final philosophical speech. Had the variables changed even slightly, there would be no we to notice we never existed. Wow.

  • @comiccat4650
    @comiccat4650 3 роки тому +99

    Imagin you're a dinosour in (what is now) europe and you hear a bang and a few minutes later you get set ablaze by falling pebbles

    • @mastercharlesdiltardino8058
      @mastercharlesdiltardino8058 3 роки тому +13

      More like falling sand. It would be like the entire world was getting blasted with bird shot, I imagine.

    • @stevenwilson6450
      @stevenwilson6450 3 роки тому +1

      Pebbles Flintstone???

    • @SeanVintin
      @SeanVintin 3 роки тому +3

      It was more about the PM2.5 and PM10 particulates blocking out light I imagine. Pebbles and sand don't generally stay airborne for longer than the escape velocity of the initial blast.

    • @Gigipretty64
      @Gigipretty64 3 роки тому +1

      It would ruin the rest of the day for sure.

    • @danielplainview926
      @danielplainview926 3 роки тому +1

      Seems like the town could do educational and tourism opportunities around the area.

  • @nabeelahmed2413
    @nabeelahmed2413 4 роки тому +96

    Long ago, the dinosaurs lived together in harmony. Then, everything changed when the Fire ball attacked.

  • @John-92
    @John-92 Рік тому +14

    Love your videos and the info! I live in Southern Colorado in the US near the K-T boundary exposure, and it's fascinating how it's shown the results of such an event along with the crater! Thanks for your videos!

  • @milk4675
    @milk4675 3 роки тому +32

    dam, us Australians deal with this on the daily

    • @intenselycurious3912
      @intenselycurious3912 3 роки тому +1

      You guys are built tough !

    • @serratedbeanstalk6089
      @serratedbeanstalk6089 3 роки тому

      You mean an hourly basis

    • @spade3779
      @spade3779 2 роки тому

      including the giant asteroid? lol

    • @milk4675
      @milk4675 2 роки тому

      @@spade3779 well we have about 6-7 asteroids the size of the one in the video every hour

  • @BenWoods
    @BenWoods 3 роки тому +304

    I just wanted to say how much I appreciate this channel, your other channels, and the information that they provide. I grew up in a fundamentalist Christian household and unfortunately my science education was absolutely abysmal. Because of channels like yours, biographics geographics mega projects and the others, I have learned so much. It is truly a wonderful experience and I cannot explain to you how grateful that I am.
    This video was fantastic, thank you so much!

    • @sidusgekst
      @sidusgekst 3 роки тому +24

      Hey count me in bro! These are exactly my words. Now we're free to discover what really is going on with this planet, and IT is so much bigger than any ancient bible writer could have imagined!

    • @westzed23
      @westzed23 2 роки тому +22

      Keep learning the truth. As a Christian who believes in science, I say to fundamentalists "God can create the world in anyway he wants to."

    • @nono-fb8tr
      @nono-fb8tr Рік тому +2

      Exact same upbringing here. These sorts of videos have done miles of work to bring me up to snuff with my peers education wise.

    • @DixtunBabyAngel
      @DixtunBabyAngel Рік тому +6

      Funny though that my one problem with the video is he mentions the Bible as if it's a good thing humanity had it. Pfft. Christianity really is the worst religion to happen to humanity. Educational videos like these need to stop perpetuating the Bible's undeserved status in our current society.

    • @midgetydeath
      @midgetydeath Рік тому +3

      Then your fundamentalist parents were not fundamentalists and ignored the fact the Church considers scientific study to be a literal form of worshipping God, having a scientific branch for that very reason and creating a huge number of scientific fields of study in the first place.

  • @Daveman973
    @Daveman973 4 роки тому +40

    I just love listening to Simon Whistler talk. He could read the grocery sales ad and I'd be mesmerized, the wealth of information in these videos is just a plus.

  • @tazahawk
    @tazahawk 2 роки тому

    That outro Simon, that outro. Hats off to Morris for writing that or you if that was your little addition. It was so profound and beautiful. It's something to always come back to and remember.

  • @charlesmares4143
    @charlesmares4143 2 роки тому +1

    This video was amazing! And very informative! Earned a subscription. Can’t wait to see more! Thank you!

  • @bartoszkosmowski7149
    @bartoszkosmowski7149 4 роки тому +367

    "Nuke the lizards" - God

    • @DannL18
      @DannL18 4 роки тому +13

      Bartosz Kosmowski I like this but dinosaurs weren’t technically lizards. They were reptiles sure but not lizards. Lizards hold their legs out from their bodies while most dinosaurs held them under their bodies kind of like you and me.

    • @calebtovar6408
      @calebtovar6408 4 роки тому +8

      Lol! I tought about that meme too!

    • @NoobPTFO
      @NoobPTFO 4 роки тому +12

      DannL18 It’s a meme, bud. Take it easy

    • @DannL18
      @DannL18 4 роки тому +3

      Noob PTFO I didn’t know it came from a meme, my bad. I still liked it

    • @fuzzyhair321
      @fuzzyhair321 4 роки тому +2

      @@DannL18 they're not even reptiles otherwise what are birds. Therapods theyre

  • @DragonKittyCombi
    @DragonKittyCombi 4 роки тому +91

    I'm 36 years old and still to this day I get sad when I think about the poor dinosaurs.

    • @spaceman081447
      @spaceman081447 4 роки тому +3

      @
      DragonKittyCombi
      RE: "
      I'm 36 years old and still to this day I get sad when I think about the poor dinosaurs."
      Why? Remember that it was the extinction of the dinosaurs that allowed our mammalians ancestors to eventually evolve into human beings. If the ecology hadn't been drastically rearranged, we would still be little rat-like creatures scurrying around at night trying not to get stepped on or eaten by dinosaurs.

    • @yourroyalhighness7662
      @yourroyalhighness7662 3 роки тому +3

      I’m 62 and feel the same.

    • @kloschuessel773
      @kloschuessel773 2 роки тому +9

      Im happy
      Would be nasty having those beasts buggering around

    • @kloschuessel773
      @kloschuessel773 2 роки тому +1

      @@Madame.de.Polignac i think i can speak for "most of us" when i say: we dont care how you feel about us, the world doesnt revolve around you.
      Go swim with crocs and have a shark bite your head of to experience how to shill ancient predators are.

    • @SnidgetAsphodel
      @SnidgetAsphodel 2 роки тому +1

      Dinosaurs are cool af. Never too old to be interested in them!

  • @lilgnomey
    @lilgnomey 3 роки тому

    I watch with the captions on and OMG you guys never disappoint!
    ‘A handful of dinos chilling out in India (unspoken cc:doing some yoga and finding themselves), well that depends on who you ask.’
    Your captions person needs a medal. 😂

  • @Aeradill
    @Aeradill 2 роки тому +4

    Why does this video have some beeping alarm in the background for a lot of scenes? someone forget to take the hotpockets out?

  • @Superuser009
    @Superuser009 4 роки тому +167

    "Where's the kaboom?! There was supposed to be an Earth-shattering kaboom!"

    • @CaptHollister
      @CaptHollister 4 роки тому +14

      Does this make you very angry, very angry indeed ?

    • @geslinam9703
      @geslinam9703 3 роки тому +11

      Haha...Marvin the Martian, right? “I’m going to blow up the earth. It’s blocking my view of Mars”

    • @stormysampson1257
      @stormysampson1257 3 роки тому +2

      "If a tree falls in a forest with no one around to hear, was there ever a sound"?

    • @UnknownSoulGuy
      @UnknownSoulGuy 3 роки тому +5

      I thought you were referencing android 16 from DBZA there for a second

    • @joanneoliver8610
      @joanneoliver8610 3 роки тому

      Well done! :D

  • @TheAschwittek
    @TheAschwittek 4 роки тому +197

    *Chicxulub smashes into earth*
    The Earth: "Harder!"

    • @jamiebarba5701
      @jamiebarba5701 3 роки тому +19

      Ok Darkness.

    • @TheDennys21
      @TheDennys21 3 роки тому +13

      Chicxulub: what?
      Earth: what?

    • @rodneyk6913
      @rodneyk6913 3 роки тому +1

      Kinky..

    • @Grey11s
      @Grey11s 3 роки тому

      Taboo

    • @nordic24
      @nordic24 2 роки тому

      I just know this was illustrated but I dont want to search it up

  • @ruthwalker7846
    @ruthwalker7846 Рік тому

    Brilliant. Love the philosophical commentaries with balanced commentary.

  • @jamesmcpherson1590
    @jamesmcpherson1590 2 роки тому +1

    I've had a few criticisms about accuracy, but I absolutely love Simon's presentation. He is extraordinarily articulate and I think he does a great job of adding just the right amount of wit to make the information more entertaining. I've seen dozens of these videos and I don't think I have yet seen him trip over his own tongue, use filler phrases or stall with "um" or "ah" (think Justin Trudeau) while he was formulating how to communicate a point. He is an absolute virtuoso of oratory and that really is exceedingly rare. Kudos to the whole team who do these videos. I absolutely love them!

  • @taytemusic7750
    @taytemusic7750 3 роки тому +129

    Quetzalcoatlus: say my name
    Simon: Ket-zal-co-lat-i-koss

    • @promethbastard
      @promethbastard 3 роки тому +25

      Sometimes I think he purposely mispronounces things straight faced just to mess with us.

    • @swrennie
      @swrennie 3 роки тому +1

      😁

    • @literallyanangrymoose7717
      @literallyanangrymoose7717 3 роки тому +6

      Simon: mangles easily pronounceable words
      Me: so you have chosen... dEaTh

    • @willmfrank
      @willmfrank 3 роки тому +2

      @@promethbastard He probably scans the comments just to see if we were listening...

  • @michaelwillis80
    @michaelwillis80 4 роки тому +78

    I wasn't aware that the asteroid even had an official name. Thank you for the continuous great videos.

    • @Erin-Thor
      @Erin-Thor 4 роки тому +4

      But is chickenclub a "REAL" name? 🧐

    • @2cawks
      @2cawks 4 роки тому +1

      @@Erin-Thor for a sandwich, yes.

    • @michaellesak6912
      @michaellesak6912 4 роки тому +4

      not sure the asteroid has an official name, chicxulub is the name of the crater it left behind. it shares its name with a town near the rim of the crater

    • @archstanton6102
      @archstanton6102 4 роки тому +3

      Its original name was Barry

    • @UnchainedAmerica
      @UnchainedAmerica 4 роки тому

      In schools, they simply just call it the Asteroid that kills almost everything on earth... The crater itself was called the Yucatan Crater. Not sure why they didn't go with that namesake.

  • @jaynehorn151
    @jaynehorn151 3 роки тому

    Simon Thank you for this and your other channels. They inform and educate unlike so many other sites.
    Watching from Kangaroo Island, South Australia

  • @Shaolin9424
    @Shaolin9424 2 роки тому

    Thank you Simon and team! Superb video!

  • @ichigokarasu
    @ichigokarasu 3 роки тому +317

    Can someone hold this asteroid? My armageddon tired.

    • @kyleglenn2434
      @kyleglenn2434 3 роки тому +6

      Good one 👍👍

    • @mr.beanman9816
      @mr.beanman9816 3 роки тому +1

      ichigokarasu heckin hecking good one

    • @BenWoods
      @BenWoods 3 роки тому +3

      I hate you. 😭🤣

    • @Killer_Turnip
      @Killer_Turnip 3 роки тому +2

      Wow, just wow. I actually chuckled.

    • @swrennie
      @swrennie 3 роки тому +14

      Pretty funny comet, but it could have been meteor...

  • @KEVMAN7987
    @KEVMAN7987 4 роки тому +190

    Fry: "What killed the dinosaurs?"
    Giant Brain: "ME!"

  • @craigscott1261
    @craigscott1261 Рік тому

    Yeah you got me. Like 4th video I've binge and now I'm subscribed. Well done, well produced, and great brain fuel. Thank you

  • @jssomewhere6740
    @jssomewhere6740 3 роки тому +2

    Great video, yes it is information I was already aware of. You put it together in a way that made it very watchable. So thanks for the great video.

  • @hexwolfi
    @hexwolfi 3 роки тому +566

    This man: "The Chicxulub impact wiped out the dinosaurs."
    Birds, who are technically dinosaurs: "Are we a joke to you?"

    • @Roadhouse1997
      @Roadhouse1997 3 роки тому +5

      @@gamestation2690 and you know this comment was a joke.

    • @aahiadhanus6290
      @aahiadhanus6290 3 роки тому +3

      U skip some portion 😂 lol atmosphere also heated up man then how they will sustain

    • @biggstavros5876
      @biggstavros5876 3 роки тому +9

      You know exactly what he means. He is talking about them being the dominant species on the planet. Smart arse mummy`s basement boy.

    • @Payable_Upon_Death
      @Payable_Upon_Death 3 роки тому +6

      That’s like saying a shark is technically a whale.

    • @gravytrain74
      @gravytrain74 3 роки тому +25

      He's talking about all non avian dinosaurs went extinct. Birds are actually part of the avian dinosaur group

  • @david9783
    @david9783 3 роки тому +185

    I've always felt bad for the dinosaurs. Just minding their own business and...BOOM!

    • @Psyfi85
      @Psyfi85 3 роки тому +3

      They had warning, unlike humans with our fancy technology they couldn’t tell what the brightening light coming at Earth was..bummer.

    • @david9783
      @david9783 3 роки тому +4

      @@Psyfi85 But even WITH warning it was over for them. Bummer is right. I'd sure like to time travel and see them for myself1

    • @Psyfi85
      @Psyfi85 3 роки тому +2

      @@david9783 For sure, be interesting seeing the impact from afar.

    • @HidrogenoyMau
      @HidrogenoyMau 3 роки тому +5

      The cat in your photo is freaking gorgeous

    • @david9783
      @david9783 3 роки тому +4

      @@HidrogenoyMau Thanks. He will be 3 years old this June. My wife and I rescued him and his brother.

  • @setaside2
    @setaside2 3 роки тому

    This was excellent work, kids. You're pretty good, on the regular but this was even better than most. Nice.

  • @eldritchyarnbeing3295
    @eldritchyarnbeing3295 Рік тому

    You probably get this a lot, but you have an immaculate voice. I watch your videos while I knit cause they're so easy to listen to. Just wanted to throw that out there and thank you for creating such good content!

  • @Crurned
    @Crurned 4 роки тому +219

    A bruised Earth: Look how they massacred my boys

  • @jubi400
    @jubi400 4 роки тому +139

    My thoughts are that we humans, being here and alive, is like winning a lottery.

    • @ryaffus7208
      @ryaffus7208 4 роки тому +23

      Humans (Homo-sapiens or at least the earliest form of Ho-Sappy as I like to call us) have been around for 100-300 thousand years, Think of all the Near world ending events that have happened in recorded history (War, Disease, Famine etc.) then imagine the ammount across the 300,000 years... Plus the numerous events that we are yet to face (Asteroids, Solar Flare, Pandemics, More War... Yay Humans), I think we done more than win the Lottery so far, Just hope our unfathomable luck continues :D

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 3 роки тому +11

      Intelligent life is extremely rare for this very reason, we've only been about doing for 200,000 years or so, no wonder we can find any aliens yet.

    • @theknifeman7097
      @theknifeman7097 3 роки тому +5

      It is a gift, none of this was by accident.

    • @theobserver9131
      @theobserver9131 3 роки тому +3

      Winning? I'm not so sure about that. In my studies of history, and our likely future, it doesn't look like what I'd call winning.

    • @jubi400
      @jubi400 3 роки тому +2

      @@theobserver9131 You know what? I'm thinking I might agree with you.

  • @GuntherRommel
    @GuntherRommel 3 роки тому +11

    That ending was poetically beautiful. Well done, Mr. Whistler.

  • @courtneygardner9798
    @courtneygardner9798 2 роки тому

    U rock, amazing work, impressive that you are here today, very interesting as always

  • @CaliforniaBushman
    @CaliforniaBushman 4 роки тому +47

    At 53, I can clearly remember the Geologic paradigm shift after the worldwide iridium layer was confirmed at 65My ago, later corrected to 66My ago. The geologic agumment of Catastrophism vs Uniformitarianism was still being taught in American Universities in the late 80's. Both are a fact of the geologic record.

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 4 роки тому

      _Randall Carlson has entered the chat._

    • @jamesdriscoll9405
      @jamesdriscoll9405 4 роки тому +3

      @Intellectual Ammunition Science is a dialog between the data and the consensus.

    • @garymingy8671
      @garymingy8671 4 роки тому

      No shift , the the catastrophically inclined are Bible thumpers mostly they gave up in1880s. Not 1980s , it's a very large smack , rare are comits , common are asteroids,,, big ones hitting should have been resolved by Jupiter long ago , or the moon, oh and it hit water moistly that alone mellowed it out some but added live steam to your "vaccume"

    • @CaliforniaBushman
      @CaliforniaBushman 4 роки тому +4

      No. Multiple 1000 foot tall tsunamis have a way of evicserating everything worldwide. A 6 mile diameter meteor moving at 50+ miles per second will see a liquid or solid as equally vaporizable just like a body hitting water or land will be equally dismembered while falling from the sky. Six miles is about 32,000 ft. So as one side of the meteor hit water in the Gulf Of Mexico, the other was simultaneously at the cruising altitude of a commercial jet! Furthermore, the sedimentary layers, under the water instantly vaporized into a plasma on impact, were chock full of sulpherous rock layers - forming noxious sulpher gas. Micro dust in the stratosphere which reflects the Suns Ray's just like sulpher particles do for years after a large volcanic eruption.
      This has no bearing on religion. Geologic history is rife with incomprehensibly vast Catastrophic events over a 4 billion year period. But also, a uniform history of long steady erosion at the same time over billions of years. It's not either/or like Geologist used to argue. It's both.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 3 роки тому +25

    1:50 - Chapter 1 - The Lost world
    5:40 - Chapter 2 - The day of armageddon
    9:05 - Chapter 3 - Armageddon
    12:10 - Mid roll ads
    13:25 - Chapter 4 - Aftermath
    16:10 - Chapter 5 - Recovering the past
    19:55 - Chapter 6 - The endless controversy

  • @brendadefazio8497
    @brendadefazio8497 Рік тому

    I love all your videos, Simon 😊 No matter what channel you're on💜💜💜

  • @joshuasill1141
    @joshuasill1141 3 роки тому +2

    I saw a documentary on this awhile back. Interesting stuff. One thing that stuck out to me was if you drew a line from the center of the impact crater to Phoenix, AZ and then drew a circle that everything within that circle would've been vaporized almost immediately. Pushing into Canada and South America life had about mere minutes left and life on the European, African, and Asian land masses had about 2 hours left to live.

  • @Metallica4Life92
    @Metallica4Life92 4 роки тому +329

    so this rock was so huge, that wen it hit solid rock, while flash boiling an entire sea, its back-end was still 10km up in the sky o.O

    • @bored.in.california2111
      @bored.in.california2111 4 роки тому +42

      That is a scary thought.

    • @danielsummey4144
      @danielsummey4144 4 роки тому +45

      ... perspective. Thank you for that.

    • @Mewithabeard
      @Mewithabeard 4 роки тому +30

      Bloody terrifying, and it's likely to happen again

    • @bueb8674
      @bueb8674 4 роки тому +45

      At ~13km/s, so yeah it's back end was there, for a second. It's insane to imagine something literally the size of a mountain going that fast..

    • @Metallica4Life92
      @Metallica4Life92 4 роки тому +33

      @@bueb8674 for a split second, both ends were simultaneously on bedrock and in the upper atmosphere. Space rocks are terrifying.

  • @Zatsuiki
    @Zatsuiki 4 роки тому +80

    I tried Curiosity Stream and wow. I haven't found a single documentary that was as good as the videos the UA-camrs I watch (you included) create. The information density was always very, very low and they seemed super *overthetopomglookatthis*.

    • @gtbkts
      @gtbkts 4 роки тому +14

      Charlotte Lörowan same here. I can find better, and more docs on UA-cam. Lol

    • @bluespy4050
      @bluespy4050 4 роки тому +17

      here’s a rule of thumb you should remember:
      *Never try something that a UA-camr is trying to sell you*

    • @ncommino
      @ncommino 4 роки тому +2

      I tried it and cancelled it with 2 weeks. There was nothing great about it. I never buy anything a UA-camr is selling but I thought I'd help the show and it sounded good. But like someone previously said they're better biographies and documentaries on UA-cam.

    • @sellers737
      @sellers737 4 роки тому +3

      wow I had the exact opposite experience. their documentaries on WWI & WWII are amazing. also anything space related. it's one of the few streaming services I'm happy to pay for

    • @evilsharkey8954
      @evilsharkey8954 4 роки тому

      Steve S, I bought it for a couple shows, but my BFF loves it! She’s into history, so there’s lots for her to enjoy.

  • @regnarecaps
    @regnarecaps 3 роки тому +2

    The faint beeping sound that starts at 14:03 is really aggravating.

    • @NZobservatory
      @NZobservatory 2 роки тому +1

      Heh, yeah. I thought it was my 'phone, then I thought it was my wife's 'phone, and then I thought I was going nuts. "Ding... ding... ding... ding... ding... ding... ding... ding... ding... ding... ding...."

  • @davidgrech4574
    @davidgrech4574 3 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing your wonderful insights and your positive energy and hope that you know how much I appreciate your channel 👍

  • @gibblesglobe991
    @gibblesglobe991 4 роки тому +119

    “Part time genius, full time jerk” - best summary I’ve ever heard of Richard Owen.

    • @somethinglikethat2176
      @somethinglikethat2176 4 роки тому +10

      This is going to send me down a wikipedia rabbit hole

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 3 роки тому +3

      If I may ask why...

    • @peachyykeen80
      @peachyykeen80 3 роки тому +7

      @@livethefuture2492 Owen had a pretty bad reputation amongst his peers, was described as vindictive, sadistic and a liar, and was accused of plagiarism and claiming credit for other peoples work several times, for which he was eventually removed from the Royal Society's zoological council.

    • @jamiebarba5701
      @jamiebarba5701 3 роки тому +1

      Richard Owen
      Job
      Full time jerk
      Part time genius.

    • @nunyabidness117
      @nunyabidness117 3 роки тому +3

      Every time Simon says Cheecha-lube you gotta take a drink.

  • @hahapack5308
    @hahapack5308 3 роки тому +48

    Hit was at 2am, local time.Most dinos were asleep except for Chuck Norris, riding the tsunami.

  • @mwhitelaw8569
    @mwhitelaw8569 2 роки тому +1

    In 1978 I was still in grade school
    It was absolute massive news to us kids the finding of the impact scar.
    Still seemingly fascinated by geology
    I find myself prey of Simon's humor

  • @mrmojomajestic8317
    @mrmojomajestic8317 2 роки тому

    One of the best videos, not only on this channel but any channel, presented by Simon ever.
    IMHO, blah blah, of cousre but I liked this one a lot.
    *ALL PRAISE BE TO THE ONE THEY CALL ... THE WHISTLER*

  • @mattelwood980
    @mattelwood980 4 роки тому +73

    "And then it rained molten glass"

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 4 роки тому +14

      It was a bad day overall.

    • @williamcrisp6032
      @williamcrisp6032 4 роки тому +14

      someone probably jinxed it by saying "it can't get any worse can it"

    • @IrishCarney
      @IrishCarney 4 роки тому +3

      @@williamcrisp6032 Or "Phew made it, unlike this continent sized field of corpses. Lucky me"

    • @henryfleischer404
      @henryfleischer404 4 роки тому

      Challenge: next time this happens make a window from the falling molten glass.

  • @cs7725
    @cs7725 4 роки тому +83

    Simon- the best voice on UA-cam.

    • @Erin-Thor
      @Erin-Thor 4 роки тому +4

      Shhhhh! We don’t want Simon to know how awesome his voice is! It’ll go to his head! He's already lost his hair, who knows what happens next! 😁

    • @2cawks
      @2cawks 4 роки тому +2

      Damn near lulled me to sleep

    • @agent_meister477
      @agent_meister477 4 роки тому +4

      The best beard too.

    • @Erin-Thor
      @Erin-Thor 4 роки тому +3

      2CAWKS - Yup, been there done that, falling asleep while listening to someone is my specialty. 😎 I work for a cellular communications company and have done my best at our system recordings when no other official recordings were available. Simple stuff like "Sorry, but the number entered does not match a mailbox on this platform, please re-enter the number now or try your call again later thirty eight four." Seems simple but so much harder than you would expect, multiple attempts to get it right to your ears, then you hear people are complaining it’s too slow, sounds mumbled, too fast, too... something, and so you start the process all over again. What Simon does, and I’m sure there’s a lot of re-takes... he does it well. To do a whole video, staying on topic, intelligible and articulate and not running your words together... his work deserves respect.

    • @remalm3670
      @remalm3670 4 роки тому +3

      ... Simon could narrative the drying of paint ... And most of us would listen in 'rapt' attention ... Simon ... If you 'Got IT' 😁 ...

  • @Hurricane0721
    @Hurricane0721 Рік тому +4

    I once read that throughout the Continental US the shockwave blast of such a meteor impact would be the equivalent of an EF-5 tornado across the entire continent. The shockwave would essentially destroy almost every building from Miami to Seattle. Moreover, there is a theory that massive flood basalt volcanic eruptions are directly associated with massive meteor impacts. So it’s quite possible that the mass extinction was due to a mixture of a meteor impact cataclysm, and super massive volcanic eruptions.

  • @laschicasRloca
    @laschicasRloca 6 місяців тому

    Wow this video was amazing. Telling a historic mass extension story and ending it on a positive note. Bravo!

  • @Contessa6363
    @Contessa6363 4 роки тому +75

    This year is the 40th anniversary of Mt.Saint Helens in May. Remember well it was the week I graduated from High School. Would be a good Geographics Video.

    • @Contessa6363
      @Contessa6363 4 роки тому +1

      @Okami_No _Heishi Hi yes it finally knocked the Iran Hostage Crisis off the front pages at the time. Was definitely a big deal

    • @jamesfracasse8178
      @jamesfracasse8178 4 роки тому +4

      Yellow Stone National Park is set to explode and would be a global disaster for all 7 billion people.

    • @Contessa6363
      @Contessa6363 4 роки тому +1

      @@jamesfracasse8178 Yes it is way overdue

    • @rikosaikawa9024
      @rikosaikawa9024 4 роки тому

      Ha old people and their subpar volcanoes

    • @Contessa6363
      @Contessa6363 4 роки тому +2

      @@rikosaikawa9024 Snakes and you are a malignant narcissist missy

  • @lrballistics
    @lrballistics 4 роки тому +277

    Dinosaurs: "We're the apex predators of this planet, nothing can stop us!"
    A weird space rock: *"Chacha real smooth"*

    • @Lakhshamana
      @Lakhshamana 4 роки тому +10

      Or rather
      *_Astronomia intensifies_*

    • @steveblanchard777
      @steveblanchard777 3 роки тому +2

      Chicxulub Meteorite: Watch this. Hold my beer.

    • @notmenotme614
      @notmenotme614 3 роки тому +6

      Dinosaurs: “We’re the apex predators of this planet”
      Raccoon: “hold my fern leaf”

    • @Andrew-sv3ck
      @Andrew-sv3ck 3 роки тому

      Too soon dude

    • @mrhalos6770
      @mrhalos6770 3 роки тому

      I just Not Me Not Me

  • @theloverlyxxx7161
    @theloverlyxxx7161 Рік тому

    I've watched this video countless times and it never gets boring

  • @ToporkestraVeteran
    @ToporkestraVeteran Рік тому

    I love your videos, thanks so much man! Really.

  • @jamesjimenez8698
    @jamesjimenez8698 3 роки тому +48

    "Part time genius and full time jerk" 😂😂 i love your channel so much

    • @bcm8984
      @bcm8984 4 місяці тому

      I have to look up Richard Owen now. I need to understand that zinger 😂

  • @Chris-ys4te
    @Chris-ys4te 2 роки тому

    I especially liked your ending words and makes wonder...what other things will happen in our future to shape that future.

  • @sana-cm7oc
    @sana-cm7oc 2 роки тому

    I love your channels. Reminds me of watching Cosmos with Carl Sagan. Terrifying wonders with a kind touch of humanity. Thank you for helping make the world a better place. 😊

  • @FuckYoutubeCensorship
    @FuckYoutubeCensorship 3 роки тому +110

    ... I spent my entire life hearing 65 million years.
    Are you legitimately telling me that this giant anniversary has reached 66 million years in the past decade?

    • @faulknersealock5575
      @faulknersealock5575 3 роки тому +3

      Wow that's interesting

    • @jeffthompson9622
      @jeffthompson9622 3 роки тому +32

      Probably a refinement of the previous estimate based on new evidence or improved processing of it.

    • @lustrazor44
      @lustrazor44 2 роки тому +4

      are you trying to use around 50 years to compare to an estimate of millions?

    • @svenmorgenstern9506
      @svenmorgenstern9506 2 роки тому +3

      Nah - it was the switch to the metric system that did it. 65 million years in Imperial units = 66 million years in metric. 😎
      You're welcome. 👍

    • @multiyapples
      @multiyapples 2 роки тому +1

      @@svenmorgenstern9506 no idea what you’re talking about. All countries use the same calendar.

  • @NKA23
    @NKA23 4 роки тому +132

    Even back then the Earth rotated, so whenever the Asteroid hit Earth, somewhere it was morning, somewhere it was afternoon, somewhere it was night.

  • @darenyoung1872
    @darenyoung1872 2 роки тому

    Great episode Simon

  • @esmeraldatotoro4646
    @esmeraldatotoro4646 2 роки тому +1

    this has to be the second video that features the dinosaur exhibit from the Museum I worked for! I always liked being there, you can literally spend the whole day there and just scratch the surface.

  • @franzferdinand2240
    @franzferdinand2240 4 роки тому +77

    The moment we've all been wating for.... no one? ok. At least I have.

    • @MrCinosargo
      @MrCinosargo 4 роки тому +11

      I figured you'd be waiting for a left turn 😉

    • @NiskaMagnusson
      @NiskaMagnusson 4 роки тому +1

      but it didn't kill the entente?

    • @franzferdinand2240
      @franzferdinand2240 4 роки тому +2

      @@NiskaMagnusson shhhhh....they might hear us.

    • @NiskaMagnusson
      @NiskaMagnusson 4 роки тому +1

      @@franzferdinand2240 Jawohl mein Erzherzog!

    • @Soloyologaming
      @Soloyologaming 4 роки тому

      Too bad it didnt get Gavrilo

  • @ZankuroMinazuki
    @ZankuroMinazuki 4 роки тому +48

    When Simon said "The Day of Impact" I thought he said "The Dave Impact." From this day forward the Extinction Level Event that wiped out the dinosaurs will be known to me as "The Dave Impact." It must be so. ;)

    • @BaronVonQuiply
      @BaronVonQuiply 4 роки тому +8

      The dinosaurs in a desperate bid to stay alive:
      "Dave's not here, man."

    • @lorettamowell8764
      @lorettamowell8764 4 роки тому +2

      @@BaronVonQuiply Hey man, let me in!

    • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
      @Allan_aka_RocKITEman 3 роки тому

      I thought "The Karen Krunch" might be a good moniker for it...😉

    • @michaelnoyola7971
      @michaelnoyola7971 3 роки тому +2

      Asteroid Dave...gets my vote in the astronomical object naming poll.

  • @AverageYTer
    @AverageYTer 5 місяців тому

    The ending of this video is so amazing. I love perspective.

  • @danielschmidt2541
    @danielschmidt2541 2 роки тому +3

    There's no way you'd be able to witness this and survive the blast, but it would have had a terrifying and yet spectacular awe to it.