When Life Nearly Died

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  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024
  • A large chuck of siberia covering an area larger than western Europe is taken up by ancient cooled lava like a wound in the earths crust. 250 million years ago this formation caused the worst extinction event known to have happened in the earths history.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 581

  • @cancellogout6468
    @cancellogout6468 Рік тому +3096

    Huge shoutout to Dmitry Bogdanov for seemingly drawing a picture of every animal to ever live.

    • @omarb7164
      @omarb7164 Рік тому +407

      I believe he’s a time traveler who simply publishes photographs he’s taken whenever a new animal is announced

    • @lofty7316
      @lofty7316 Рік тому +253

      him and nobu tamura are always on point with their paleoart and have done so many extinct animals!

    • @Jejfimwianfn
      @Jejfimwianfn Рік тому +121

      Let's not forget Julio Lacerda!

    • @birbdad1842
      @birbdad1842 Рік тому +50

      ​@@lofty7316 Nobu Tamuras art is only great when hand drawn. Most of his stuff is 3d and a little crude imo.

    • @alioramus1637
      @alioramus1637 Рік тому +40

      Joschua knüppe and Gabriel ugueto are the best paleoartists on the internet in my view

  • @Dankleberrrrg
    @Dankleberrrrg Рік тому +623

    "When life nearly died"
    "Do you have any idea how little that narrows it down?"

    • @nedludd7622
      @nedludd7622 Рік тому +8

      It is just a click bait title.

    • @DustyyBoi
      @DustyyBoi Рік тому +51

      @@nedludd7622 no shit

    • @luissanchez2067
      @luissanchez2067 Рік тому +3

      true!

    • @slavj
      @slavj Рік тому +58

      True... although, we can say this was perhaps the most devastating when it comes to the reduction in biodiversity.
      I am sure near extinctions occurred during the single cell era, but we have little records of these besides trace data, and the biodiversity diversity was probably less (once you eliminate multi-cellular life).

    • @freyala024
      @freyala024 Рік тому +9

      @@nedludd7622 It's not though.

  • @teawrecks1243
    @teawrecks1243 Рік тому +204

    Lystrosaurus 1: "Gee, what shall we do tonight?"
    Lystrosaurus 2: "The same thing we do every night, TRY TO TAKE OVER THE WORLD"

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf Рік тому +28

      by breeding..

    • @bliss6417
      @bliss6417 Рік тому +8

      They quite literally, colonized the entirety of earth, literally consisting of like 90% of terrestial animals.

    • @chrisi7127
      @chrisi7127 Рік тому +6

      ​@@bliss6417 damn brits were at it even before humanity

  • @US395Official
    @US395Official Рік тому +75

    I remember watching a documentary about this at like 3am when I was probably 5 years old and struggled to remember the name of the creatures. For whatever reason, I couldn't find information about this extinction and the creatures that lived during that time since then. Thank you so much for this video, I've always found this time period interesting!

    • @buttercxpdraws8101
      @buttercxpdraws8101 Рік тому +5

      What were you doing up watching tv at 3am when you were 5 years old?

  • @malcaniscsm5184
    @malcaniscsm5184 Рік тому +525

    Just wanted to chime in and say that I discovered your channel during 1st lockdown and I've been looking forward to new episodes ever since. Thank you for the calm, honest and straightforward presentation.

  • @LuciFeric137
    @LuciFeric137 Рік тому +118

    So fascinating realizing earth has gone through eons of life and huge climactic changes.

    • @evilstinkr1905
      @evilstinkr1905 Рік тому

      Don't reduce climate change to some natural phenomena

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 Рік тому

      @@evilstinkr1905 In the past... yes, natural causes. Most often quite slow too. But not the Permian or the K-Pg ones.
      Now however... since about 1750, it is pretty much human caused. This is a smoking gun locked in ice cores. Find vid on "Be Smart" channel for that.

    • @astrovarius543
      @astrovarius543 Рік тому +14

      Yeah, really helps put into perspective the current climate. I mean the numbers are right there and it seems we've got an impossibly high bar to meet before we get our promised climate apocalypse.
      Global social collapse is going to happen in the next few decades, but it won't be from a few extra hot summers.
      More those who're freaking out and destroying society in a desperate but misguided bid to save (????) it.

    • @DJFracus
      @DJFracus Рік тому +69

      @@astrovarius543 the bar you're comparing it to is the literal worst mass extinction in Earth's history, being less bad than it isn't exactly hard to do lmao

    • @mikadofxx9030
      @mikadofxx9030 Рік тому +10

      @@DJFracus but, we are trying are best

  • @Ptaku93
    @Ptaku93 Рік тому +75

    Permian Traps during their eruption must've been the worst hellscape imagineable, a gigantic Mordor stretching beyond horizon

    • @drts6955
      @drts6955 Рік тому +1

      Or just like Hawaii now

    • @Ptaku93
      @Ptaku93 Рік тому +7

      @@drts6955 no, Hawaii hotspot is magnitudes smaller than Siberian Traps

    • @drts6955
      @drts6955 Рік тому +4

      @@Ptaku93 I mean in the sense that eruptions weren't necessarily all at same time. A huge area but not necessarily all active at one time

    • @abduking.
      @abduking. Місяць тому +1

      @@drts6955 nope multiple eruptions were happening at the same time bak then

  • @Ballistics_Computer
    @Ballistics_Computer Рік тому +117

    It's been wonderful seeing the Permian get so much love lately

  • @WaterShowsProd
    @WaterShowsProd Рік тому +89

    This was a great overview. Far too little of The Permian and even The Triassic gets mentioned in popular media, despite their tremendous importance.

    • @pocketmarcy6990
      @pocketmarcy6990 Рік тому +10

      The Triassic is severely over Shadowed by The two periods following it, for obvious Dino related reasons,

  • @paulvavro5452
    @paulvavro5452 Рік тому +106

    The permian period episodes are some of my favourites, please keep em coming :)

  • @rl9217
    @rl9217 Рік тому +93

    I love how straightforward the title is.
    “Ya know life?”
    “Yeah?”
    “Remember that time it almost died?”
    “…uh…what?”
    “Yeah, good times. Good times.”

    • @sltslt5153
      @sltslt5153 Рік тому

      According to Evolutionist life's almost not existed several times lol farfetch right

    • @brahimdiop5506
      @brahimdiop5506 Рік тому +3

      @@sltslt5153 How is it far-fetched?

    • @sltslt5153
      @sltslt5153 Рік тому

      @@brahimdiop5506 not only did life spontaneously generate from a pool of chemicals into single-celled life that then evolved into everything that is and is to come
      But
      a repeated cycle of life nearly going extinct and bouncing back not to mention chemical and cosmic evolution
      it's all ridiculously impossible and extremely imaginative to think we would be here right now after all that and not just us but the extreme diversity of living organisms we have
      and like I said thats not mentioning chemical and cosmic evolution

    • @brahimdiop5506
      @brahimdiop5506 Рік тому +5

      @@sltslt5153 Why am I not identical to my dad then? If we are as we always were, why is my skin paler than my dad, but lighter than my mom? Shouldn't it have just picked one or the other to prevent deviation from the original?

    • @sltslt5153
      @sltslt5153 Рік тому

      @@brahimdiop5506 well you're not a duplicate of your mom or dad your their offspring
      There's plenty of facts that support that earth is Young like slowing in the rotation of the Earth the moon gradually getting further and why do dinosaur bones and diamonds have detectable carbon-14?
      Evolution is instilled in our brain at a young age starting with kid TV shows and from elementary to college it's taught and governmentally funded

  • @joshuastrittmatter4188
    @joshuastrittmatter4188 Рік тому +130

    Just shows you how truly resilient life on earth really is.

    • @kx7500
      @kx7500 Рік тому +12

      Life yes, but the ecosystem, no

    • @ethanbrock5453
      @ethanbrock5453 Рік тому +50

      @@kx7500 They go hand in hand, as long as life survives in some form, new ecosystems will be created and stabilize according to the current environment. Ecosystems are constantly evolving.

    • @Prada_GT
      @Prada_GT Рік тому +18

      “Life, uh, finds a way.”

    • @sarcastaball
      @sarcastaball Рік тому +7

      It actually shows that God is good.

    • @silverjade10
      @silverjade10 Рік тому +6

      Yup. Which is why the earth will be fine after the current extinction event.... Humans, maybe not.

  • @philswift6550
    @philswift6550 Рік тому +39

    OH MY GOD HE UPLOADED, THIS IS THE BEST DAY OF LIFE

  • @icycrusader1947
    @icycrusader1947 Рік тому +8

    3:59 Aw, what an adorable pup.

  • @frostyglass3738
    @frostyglass3738 Рік тому +59

    Seeing this guy's videos saved me from stupid anxiety. Thank you brother, all the health to you!!!

    • @thatoneweirdbish6364
      @thatoneweirdbish6364 Рік тому +2

      His voice and videos in general are so soothing! Hope you're doing better, anxiety is such a bitch

    • @willowdigger617
      @willowdigger617 Рік тому

      @@thatoneweirdbish6364 one time I was watching one when I was very tired and it put me straight to sleep 😭💀

    • @thatoneweirdbish6364
      @thatoneweirdbish6364 Рік тому +1

      @@willowdigger617 It's the best, this way you can start the video all over again until you made it through! Lmao

    • @willowdigger617
      @willowdigger617 Рік тому +4

      @@thatoneweirdbish6364 it’s not that it was boring. It was as interesting as his voice and the music is soothing, and I just relaxed and drifted off…

    • @thatoneweirdbish6364
      @thatoneweirdbish6364 Рік тому +2

      @@willowdigger617 don't worry i meant it in exactly that way. They're never boring but i also just start drifting off bc it's just so relaxing to listen to.

  • @6099x
    @6099x Рік тому +152

    Thank you moth! Your work is incredibly interesting, and well presented

  • @eardwulf785
    @eardwulf785 Рік тому +8

    For me the best thing about this channel is just how thought provoking it is. Trying to imagine the scene of the description of a sea of dead trees being exploited by opportunistic fungi was both epic and alien.
    Moth Light Media is unquestionably one of the better presented prehistory channels.

  • @naverilllang
    @naverilllang Рік тому +6

    It's a damn shame that trilobites didn't survive. They'd be such cool creatures today

  • @Zveebo
    @Zveebo Рік тому +20

    I’m so damn glad to have another video to listen to as I go to sleep - thank you! I just about know all the other ones off by heart at this stage…

    • @franzroth2830
      @franzroth2830 Рік тому +1

      istg these videos keep me sane, i find it really hard to fall asleep without watching at least one of these in bed

    • @mattmorehouse9685
      @mattmorehouse9685 Рік тому

      Ah, yes, that time life on Earth almost died. Great bedtime watching.
      Then again I'm watching this after 7:30, so maybe I shouldn't be talking.

  • @ivechang6720
    @ivechang6720 Рік тому +17

    I like your style of disseminating information. It's very peaceful in a way that doesn't dissuade enthusiasm for the subject.

  • @firelifeblizzard8782
    @firelifeblizzard8782 Рік тому +12

    Right when I needed him most... He uploaded.

  • @bustavonnutz
    @bustavonnutz Рік тому +19

    Graduating today in Zoo & I couldn't imagine a better channel to send me off.

    • @Gildedmuse
      @Gildedmuse Рік тому +3

      Congratulations!
      Your bachelor's, I assume. Are you planning on going back for a master's?

    • @bustavonnutz
      @bustavonnutz Рік тому +1

      @@Gildedmuse Maybe going for post-grad but I wanna go straight into conservation work. I'm pretty controversial (as evidenced by my channel) so I don't think I fit in well in academia lol, but thanks! I'm actually lined up for my ceremony as we speak :)

    • @dinohall2595
      @dinohall2595 Рік тому +1

      Congratulations and good luck in your conservation career!

    • @bustavonnutz
      @bustavonnutz Рік тому

      @@dinohall2595 Thanks fam, I'll try my best to make a difference :)

  • @kevinpotts123
    @kevinpotts123 Рік тому +18

    You make the best short form science based videos. Between you and The History Of The Earth and The History Of The Universe doing long their form videos, UA-cam is such an entertaining educational experience.

  • @itsokrocklee8252
    @itsokrocklee8252 Рік тому +25

    Thank you for all your hard work

  • @mirrorblue100
    @mirrorblue100 Рік тому +12

    Always a pleasure to view these programs - thanks.

  • @bombidil3
    @bombidil3 Рік тому +6

    Those CO2 levels are _FRIGHTENINGLY_ close given the rate at which we are emitting.

    • @bigpuma444
      @bigpuma444 Рік тому +2

      While current CO2 levels are concerning, we’re still not nearly as close to levels at the end of the Permian as you believe. That of course doesn’t negate the fact that we should still reduce our carbon footprint

    • @bombidil3
      @bombidil3 Рік тому

      @@bigpuma444 We're not now, obviously. My point was that, given we've emitted more in the last 30 years than in our existence prior to 30 years ago, it won't take that much time to reach that level, or a seriously devastating level at least, at our current emission rate. That is what's important.

    • @bigpuma444
      @bigpuma444 Рік тому

      @@bombidil3 Once again, while current emissions are heavy, we’re still not going to see those same levels at the end of the Permian in 30 years. Even with heavy volcanism producing much heavier CO2 emissions than we, ourselves, produce it still took thousands of years (possibly more) until global temperatures and lack of breathable oxygen finally killed off most life on this planet. We have more than enough time to come up with solutions, contrary to corporate-funded fear-mongering

  • @Leitis_Fella
    @Leitis_Fella Рік тому +13

    I read an interesting hypothesis somewhere about the PME where chemical reactions from contact metamorphism from intruding lava produced a considerable amount of greenhouse gases on top of what was being released from the Siberian traps.

    • @shakti666
      @shakti666 Рік тому

      i call bs on that

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 Рік тому +1

      @@shakti666 got any REAL evidence?

    • @jamestang1227
      @jamestang1227 Рік тому +1

      Yeah basically to get the numbers of CO2 needed to cause the estimated warming, a researcher in the 90s the Siberian traps intruded on coal beds and basically started burning them. Similar to what we do today but on a much longer timescale (thousands to tens of thousanda of years)

  • @xikikazklok6249
    @xikikazklok6249 Рік тому +2

    Love it when people talk about the Great Dying, it was probably one of the greatest shifts in the direction of evolution.

  • @illuslipfoot274
    @illuslipfoot274 Рік тому +20

    I love these videos so much, an amazing addition to my day

  • @marwanhamze6329
    @marwanhamze6329 Рік тому +4

    I think this is the best video I've ever seen on the Permian extinction. Thank you.

  • @NotDuncan
    @NotDuncan Рік тому +7

    I hope people start finding this channel and you get the million views per video you deserve

  • @apfelstrudeldk5130
    @apfelstrudeldk5130 Рік тому +6

    U are one of my favorite channels on UA-cam ❤️ thank you for uploading and educating me on all of those amazing topics/time periods

  • @altaccount9101
    @altaccount9101 Рік тому +7

    1:23 "giant insects and arthropods" ... Sir, that's a cat.

    • @eatshitlarrypage.3319
      @eatshitlarrypage.3319 Рік тому +1

      Yes, for comparison. Good job. Don't expect a medal for pointing out the obvious.

  • @krankarvolund7771
    @krankarvolund7771 Рік тому +10

    There's also evidence of extinction events before the Permian crisis, meaning that the biodiversity was already in decline, for example, one species of Gorgonops disappeared from South-Africa, and recently scientists discovered that a russian Gorgonops had replaced him just before the extinction ^^

    • @a.randomjack6661
      @a.randomjack6661 Рік тому

      There's also plenty of evidence we are currently in a mass extinction event but who care about that 🤷‍♂

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 Рік тому +4

      The Permian extinction is the most devastating that we know of. Biodiversity stagnates in times of stability and then jumps after extinction events.

    • @stormisuedonym4599
      @stormisuedonym4599 9 місяців тому

      There are always extinctions going on. Mass extinctions are an increase in the background extinction rate, not the exclusive manifestation of an otherwise unknown phenomenon.

  • @CIS101
    @CIS101 Рік тому +2

    Eruptions lasting for 50+K years ? Wow !

  • @ObeseCutie
    @ObeseCutie Рік тому +3

    Wow 0:01. I knew I’d seen and been past that house before. It’s in Scotland in the west. Near Oban and Glencoe. I was there a few days ago and I have a picture when we drove past it. Just crazy to see it randomly appear.

  • @PunishedFelix
    @PunishedFelix Рік тому +51

    Okay but hear me out: everything that survived is badass

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 Рік тому +13

      No. Just HAPPENED to be lucky. Right combo of traits at the right time.

    • @PunishedFelix
      @PunishedFelix Рік тому +20

      @@rickkwitkoski1976 no fun allowed on the internet huh

    • @erynn9968
      @erynn9968 Рік тому +3

      @@PunishedFelix It wasn't clear you understood it's not true. And it might not be clear for thousands dumber than you to understand it either. So the ones that never expanded this thread would 'learn' that only the badass survived. Here's how myths are born - out of ambiguous jokes.

    • @PunishedFelix
      @PunishedFelix Рік тому +10

      @@erynn9968 I'm pretty sure nobody is going to believe biology works on a badass scale

    • @badomen7199
      @badomen7199 Рік тому +2

      @@erynn9968 No one is going to believe that but a few people, and the second they say it to anyone they will be corrected and laughed at. Let people make figures of speech or jokes, it's not the end of the world

  • @zap_cat8912
    @zap_cat8912 Рік тому +3

    Been watching your videos for a while and really enjoy them! I have one request.. can you increase the volume of your voice in future videos? An ad just came on and blasted my ears 🎧😵‍💫 thank you and keep up the good work

  • @firstletterofthealphabet7308
    @firstletterofthealphabet7308 Рік тому +4

    It’s always a good day when moth light media uploads.
    Also look at that! 25 minutes in and here I am with the 25th comment.

  • @Niinque
    @Niinque Рік тому +1

    This was todays exact topic of the class I'm curently taking at university and then this video is uploaded TODAY. It's the wildest coinsidence I've ever experienced

  • @richardhall1667
    @richardhall1667 Рік тому +10

    Awesome channel, I’ve been following since about 25k subscribers. I’m so glad to see the channel take off. Considering how well the channel is doing, might you perhaps consider investing in a new mic?

  • @Sizdothyx
    @Sizdothyx Рік тому +2

    Death: Did you die?
    Life: Yes.
    Death: *gasp*
    Life: BUT I LIVED.

  • @Mr77ethan77
    @Mr77ethan77 Рік тому +4

    I bet this guy gets so stressed out when he plays ARK like 'no no no these creatures would've never been alive at the same time!'

  • @ximec.r.2643
    @ximec.r.2643 Рік тому +5

    Always nice to watch a new video here, I really appreciate the way you narrate and the beautiful picture used.

  • @awfullawful549
    @awfullawful549 Рік тому +3

    I see this hit and I'm like, "YES PLEASE HIT ME WITH AN EXISTENTIAL CRISIS THIS EVENING."

  • @m00rtin4
    @m00rtin4 Рік тому +5

    what a perfectly timely upload! i have been looking into the permian extiction for some days and it always fascinates me cus its so unknown to the wider audience. thanks for sharing

  • @Lembo101
    @Lembo101 Рік тому +5

    I'm going to shout-out Michael Benton's book on the same topic with the same name as this video. If this video piqued your interest in the Permian Mass extinction I wholeheartedly recommend giving it a read. It's an excellent summary of the event, and how paleontologists figured it all out.

  • @BinroWasRight
    @BinroWasRight Рік тому +2

    Probably the most succinct video I've seen on the Great Dying. Fantastic work!

  • @TufteMotorsport
    @TufteMotorsport Рік тому +1

    I loved the intro, and how it fitted with rest of the video. Almost Critchton like. 10/10

  • @paulbennett7021
    @paulbennett7021 Рік тому +2

    Minor mistake - the Caucasus mountains are shown too far north

  • @Danin4985
    @Danin4985 Рік тому +3

    Please look up ‘The Wilkes Land Crater’. Antipodal to the Siberian traps. Giant asteroid estimated at 30 miles wide! Way bigger than the KT extinction asteroid.

  • @BOAYang
    @BOAYang Рік тому +2

    Thanks to this, I now have to pay rent.

  • @JSRMax
    @JSRMax Рік тому +10

    Love the channel man keep it up 👍

  • @therealzilch
    @therealzilch Рік тому +1

    Another great video. I know the basics from my paleo minor at UC Berkeley many years ago, but you have managed to explain current research very well.
    Thanks from rainy Vienna, Scott

  • @1Cr0w
    @1Cr0w Рік тому +11

    Your videos are great. One thing that always bugs me however, is when you use sentences like "The ancestors of mammals that lived at this time *were* known as synapsids" -- no. they _were_ not. They now _are_ known as synapsids.

    • @ericvulgate
      @ericvulgate Рік тому +5

      Ok. You're correct.

    • @pseudoplotinus
      @pseudoplotinus Рік тому +2

      I used to be a photographer. I still am, but I used to too.

    • @truereaper4572
      @truereaper4572 Рік тому +2

      Both ways of saying it are correct and understandable so I have no idea why you're trying to make an issue of it.

  • @lives8767
    @lives8767 Рік тому +2

    You have a very calming voice

  • @kqueic5930
    @kqueic5930 Рік тому +8

    amazing videos! keep going

  • @pipedreamlp2662
    @pipedreamlp2662 Рік тому +1

    Awesome video! So glad I found this channel

  • @cate_blanchett
    @cate_blanchett Рік тому +3

    the way the earth just obliterates different periods of life no matter what is fascinating, I think we're in the starting point of our extinction, we've had an ice age and now it's time for the earth to start heating

    • @bodeeangus9957
      @bodeeangus9957 Рік тому

      We are directly responsible for the heating that is being caused.

  • @thenewguyinred
    @thenewguyinred Рік тому +6

    The Great Dying is proof that even in the most bleak of circumstances life always finds a way. For were there is life there is hope.

  • @penguingod5673
    @penguingod5673 Рік тому +1

    this was really intresting and i enjoyed the video

  • @JuicyJam
    @JuicyJam Рік тому +1

    DRINKING GAME!!!
    Take a sip of your drink when there is:
    - a time lineage
    - a genetic tree
    - a new illustration
    - a size comparison
    Take a shot when:
    - the narrator says "however"

  • @cancel1913
    @cancel1913 Рік тому +4

    Really enjoying your vids a lot! Paleontology fascinates me.

  • @noeditbookreviews
    @noeditbookreviews Рік тому +1

    For those who don't know, When Life Nearly Died" is the title of a really cool book by Michael Benton. Get it.

  • @sieltan5618
    @sieltan5618 Рік тому +15

    What I always find fascinating is the sheer scale of mass deaths our planet has seen, multiple times, and how difficult life is to kill off. I can't help but wonder if humans and their coming and going will be just another runaway freak accident of nature.

    • @kx7500
      @kx7500 Рік тому +7

      Humans are extremely hard to wipe out. It’s the ecosystem, and civilization that is much more delicate. There’s always gonna be one couple of humans in their super bunker even with nuclear war lol. But it’s more a question of how bad are things going to get before it starts to bounce back into stability

    • @bodeeangus9957
      @bodeeangus9957 Рік тому +1

      @@kx7500 you are wrong. Humans very nearly went extinct multiple times, some relatively recently on the evolutionary timescale. This is why genetically we are all much more related than other species of animals. It is estimated that there have been as little as 10,000 humans on earth multiple times in the last 2 million years. If anything, we are a very fragile species.

    • @louisj2256
      @louisj2256 Рік тому +1

      ​@bodeeangus9957 But surely the fact that we faced near extinction so many times and yet still find ourselves here speaks to resilience, rather than fragility? I dunno, like most things I guess it is a matter of perspective.

    • @bodeeangus9957
      @bodeeangus9957 Рік тому +1

      @@louisj2256 When it comes to an evolutionary timescale, a species being reduced to such low numbers multiple times is a very bad thing. There are animals out there who have survived multiple extinction events much worse than any of the events that humans have survived, without a dramatic decrease in genetic diversity. Take alligators for instance, these animals have been around for much longer than humans and have survived because they are generalists. They can eat anything and survive in many different environments while also remaining apex predators. Humans on the other hand, especially in the last ten thousand years, are becoming very, very specialized for a way of living that is not sustainable. Modern medicine and high quality food remove evolutionary selectors that would otherwise improve our survivability in nature. This trend will continue until we are entirely reliant on technology for survival, effectively autodomesticating our own species.
      This could be avoided if we are ever able to alter our genetic code artificially, but until that point we can expect the human genome to become less fit for survival in the wild over time.

    • @stormisuedonym4599
      @stormisuedonym4599 9 місяців тому

      @@bodeeangus9957 Except we don't have that shallow of a gene pool. You're confusing our gene pool - which is unusually shallow for mammals our size - for one that's inbred. We're not. We don't even start showing deleterious consequences for inbreeding significantly faster than other animals. We can expect our gene pool to continue to diversify through the usual mechanisms, and our evolution to continue to adapt us to living in our present circumstances. That we are less fit for survival in the wild is irrelevant, as we no longer live in the wild - and there are _billions_ of people still fully suited for living in the wild, far more than ever actually lived in the wild at any given time.
      Contrast that with some of the other mammals who also show those genetic bottlenecks from the near-extinction events we faced, most of whom are now on the verge of extinction. Cockroaches _wish_ they were as resilient as we are.

  • @Tostilocos.
    @Tostilocos. Рік тому +2

    Now we gotta pay bills

  • @ChristineInNornia
    @ChristineInNornia Рік тому +1

    Thank you for the mention of the Giants Causeway👏🏼

  • @KingofGeo
    @KingofGeo Рік тому +3

    Can you do a video on the Amniotes common ancestor? did the Synapsids and Sauropsids separate in the water or out of the water?

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl Рік тому +1

    What a fascinating time! I watch any video about that era!
    ❤️❤️

  • @BobbyOps
    @BobbyOps Рік тому +1

    Nothing like a new moth light media video.

  • @eseseis7251
    @eseseis7251 Рік тому +1

    10:06 there is something running from left to right in the desert, at the base of the hill/mountain

    • @CG-xb1kh
      @CG-xb1kh Рік тому

      Yes, thank you, came to comments to check on this.

  • @WAMTAT
    @WAMTAT Рік тому +3

    Very cool video. Keep up the great work.

  • @rismosch
    @rismosch Рік тому +4

    Life almost died back when I ripped a large one. Most devestating biochemical warfare to have ever graced this planet.

  • @peterjanson1058
    @peterjanson1058 Рік тому +2

    Great content as always. But I have one quibble this time: I can't think of any metric by which the permian extinction was worse than the great oxygenation event. Heck even the worst hit segment in the permian, marine life, had a 10x better survival rate than all life on the planet during the great oxygenation event. Please correct me if I am overlooking something about the severity of the permian.

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 Рік тому +4

      “The sudden injection of toxic oxygen into an anaerobic biosphere may have caused the extinction of many existing anaerobic species on Earth. Although the event is inferred to have constituted a mass extinction,[7] due in part to the great difficulty in surveying microscopic species' abundances, and in part to the extreme age of fossil remains from that time, the Great Oxidation Event is typically not counted among conventional lists of "great extinctions", which are implicitly limited to the Phanerozoic eon. In any case, isotope geochemical data from sulfate minerals have been interpreted to indicate a decrease in the size of the biosphere of >80% associated with changes in nutrient supplies at the end of the GOE[8].” Wikipedia

  • @Coyote1.618
    @Coyote1.618 Рік тому +1

    The title of your video is like everyday when I leave from work. "When life nearly died"

  • @PaulDMcKay
    @PaulDMcKay Рік тому

    Perfect distraction from my work right now *chef's kiss*

  • @matttcoburn
    @matttcoburn Рік тому +1

    I think the traps may have been an impact site that just kept bleeding mantle. World ocean temps went to 40 to 50 degrees Celsius world wide. Sorry ive got no sources of this.

  • @mturzanski
    @mturzanski Рік тому +1

    Just random but does anyone know if the background music in these videos is available to listent to somewhere?

  • @hugosalerno7414
    @hugosalerno7414 Рік тому +1

    Good stuff as always

  • @celebrity292
    @celebrity292 Рік тому +2

    There was no other formation before pangea ? Or we don't have information saying that it was possible? Curious. Your channel rocka

    • @stormisuedonym4599
      @stormisuedonym4599 9 місяців тому +1

      There were, but they're not as famous due to geology - especially deep-time geology - not being as famous or sexy as paleontology.

  • @danieltocci136
    @danieltocci136 Рік тому +2

    If I was there it wouldn’t have gone down the way it did

  • @Majima_Nowhere
    @Majima_Nowhere Рік тому +1

    Ah yes, 60,000 years of constant volcanic erup-
    60 THOUSAND YEARS?
    Yeah, we'll be fine

    • @bodeeangus9957
      @bodeeangus9957 Рік тому

      At the current rates of pollution we will achieve similar levels much faster than 60,000 years.

  • @catarinacorreia2747
    @catarinacorreia2747 Рік тому +1

    If anyone is interested, please read the book by Michael J.Benton of the same name. I'm reading it now, it is a great science book, very well written

  • @Freddie_Dunning-Kruger_Jr.
    @Freddie_Dunning-Kruger_Jr. Рік тому +1

    With every disaster there is ample opportunity.

  • @lindahudson6685
    @lindahudson6685 Рік тому +1

    Enjoyed the information. Very well done.

  • @stax6092
    @stax6092 Рік тому +2

    Awesome.

  • @suchendelokidottir5673
    @suchendelokidottir5673 Рік тому

    I've spent months trying to find this information for my novel. Thank you. I now know how to move forward

  • @flightlesslord2688
    @flightlesslord2688 Рік тому +1

    Would love to see you do a video on the Carnian Fluvial Episode, which seems to have helped life get back to thriving after it was stilling hurting from the Dead Times

  • @viccolasvic9461
    @viccolasvic9461 Рік тому +2

    Every day i weep because I'll never see a trilobite in action

  • @RyanTheSenpai
    @RyanTheSenpai Рік тому +2

    I thought those rocks were only in ark

  • @SketchyDonut
    @SketchyDonut Рік тому +2

    God I wish it would’ve

  • @Epidombe
    @Epidombe Рік тому +3

    Nice

  • @thesharkormoriantm274
    @thesharkormoriantm274 Рік тому +4

    Deberían también hacerse peliculas basadas en otras eras geológicas, no solo la de los dinosaurios.

  • @Poliostasis
    @Poliostasis Рік тому +1

    You missed talking about the most popular group of synapsids in the Middle Permian, Dinocephalians, who only lived in the Middle Permian unfortunately.

  • @mr_brown5974
    @mr_brown5974 Рік тому

    Yeah I have no idea why UA-cam stopped recommending me your videos. Haven't seen one video from your channel for like 7 months, until this one popped up now.

  • @DreadEnder
    @DreadEnder Рік тому +2

    I still think the GRB theory is the coolest!

  • @elijahmerchant246
    @elijahmerchant246 Рік тому +1

    2:55 small nitpick, but I think using “the ocean we call Panthalassa” instead of “the ocean KNOWN as” is preferable since it implies a historical understanding of a name created by Suess in the 1900s 🙂

  • @_Solaris
    @_Solaris Рік тому +1

    What a good channel.

  • @Edlar89
    @Edlar89 Рік тому

    Shout out to Arthur Weasley for finding time around his job at the Ministry of Magic to draw the Archæothyris

  • @moshdee456
    @moshdee456 Рік тому

    That preview feature at the beginning was cool