Where Earth's Water Originally Comes From | Naked Science | Spark
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- Опубліковано 28 бер 2024
- Water is one of the building blocks behind the miracle of life on earth. It covers 71% of our planet and forms a key part of our daily lives. Where this important resource came from, however, is a mystery. Why does nobody know for sure where our water came from?
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We are treating this most precious miracoulous life sustaining resource with utter contempt.
I live in the UK where the untreated sewage and agricultural run off in all rivers and into the sea is a massive scandal.
So 60% of me is 4.5 billion years old
100% of you is even older than that-as old as the universe itself
Man ignores the given assignments that he can see all around him, and embarks on those that are not his, that no one will ever blame him for not doing.
Leviticus 8:3?
Great program. And if commercials are bothering someone, don’t forget that they pay so you can watch this excellent video for free.
Some idiot left a tap (faucet) running for 3 million years.
Ill save everyone 45 min. Where does earths water come from??? Your guess is as good as theirs, they don't know.¯\_(ツ)_/¯ The end.
It is the curse layed upon us....mankind...by.....to find answers to the big obvious questions noone can ever explain.
There are allways! many answers/solutions to a problem/question. As there are allways! many origins for problems/questions.
Like a 'sandclock'.
Yet, I wonder...are earth-like conditions really necessary? Or are the energetic creative forces in our universe capable of inventing life-forms from different materials on /in surfaces of other heavenly bodies/gasclouds?
In my non-scientific opinion, scientists think too strict within their 'territory'. As with 'language'. The flora and fauna here are stupid, because they do not speak! a language with a voice. That all those lifeforms communicate in a different way, each according to their species/needs/possibilities/surroundings does not count. They do not speak like humans. Excluding (happily not all scientists are misled this way by tradition and pride) all all other probabilities.
So newcomers in the scientific world do not have to fear jobloss, no new exciting research, no chance to write their name in history books, no chance for (short-lived) fame, but instead their are numerous fields and topics waiting to be explored. Not to find absolute answers, but to enhance our knowledge. Not to get rich, but to look up in amazement.
Haha thanks man
We. Dont. Know.
Im glad the first 30 seconds said as much! 👏👏👏
Thats why its called a theory! Nobody was there lol.
Scientists don't know anything, ask them what is electricity, or magnetism, watch the get panic attacks.
This is like the bibles explanation for creation
“God created the universe”
“Great but who created gif?”
Same thing
“Earths water came from comets”
“Great but where did the water in comets come form?”
“
But this is how we find out, and we may know someday. That's what counts. Early on, you don't know much of anything.
yay for clean water 💦
Aww Bummer, I thought there would be some new info.. its still the same, "We. Dont. Know."
God is the answer. Mystery solved
@@thelionofjudah77u82 yes, all hail Ometecuhtli and Omecihuatl. theres like tablets and stuff
@@rogerwilco1777 Every knee shall bow and confess that Christ is Lord
John 3:14-18 saves.
The correct answer is not "we don't know'... The answer is that we are still unsure as to the exact answer, the proof is still undetermined.
Science doesn’t know how God made the water and brought it to earth. Yet.
Hydrogens and oxygens are two of most of abundant elements of the universe. So it’s very natural to assume that waters are ubiquitous when the solar system was formed. The early earth, comets, astroids all were presumed to be washed in the water. I dare to say that most of water on our planet came from our earth itself. You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to understand this. Take it easy. It’s that simple. Don’t make it hard to solve problem.
It may be "natural to assume" and easy to "presume" but it's a bit of stretch to then say "problem solved."
What created a problem is the un-realistic question to be begin with. Creation had and has no problem.
Asteroids contain between 0 and 13.5 percent water which means there would have been an incredible amount of asteroid mass pounding the earth in order to fill the oceans. Also, considering the oceans cover about two thirds of the earth surface, makes the proposition more implausable.
Has any scientist done and presented a proper calculation as to how much asteroid mass it would take. I don't know, haven't seen any, but would it not be the initial obvious fact to check and present with the hypothesis to establish it?
Also, if water did come by asteroid, then where did that water come from? So the question about origin of water still remains.
A far more probable hypothesis would be that it manifested here on earth as part in the stages of all further manifestations. For example then, where did the first live cell come from? Or should the question moreso be "how", on earth.
A philosophical investigation to the hypothesis of manifestation, leads back to the birth of the star, or sun, whereby it can likened in principle, to a seed or egg that germinates or births into the subsequent developments of a far more complex organism, more than the parts of the seed or egg itself to begin with.
To the true scientist, the term "synergy" would now come to mind ~ "more than the sum of its parts" ought to ring some bells. Like the bells of Big Ben.
With adequate philosophical approach in scientific endeavour, deduction by way of translation or transposing of concepts in nature that are well known, scientists may make greater strides, by virtue of not creating a problem when there isn't one. In other words, the question itself is in need of question, rather than frame the hypothesis without substantiation and then ensue upon a never ending trivial pursuit.
The inherent limitation of science is it relies on physical evidence only, because it has to, to begin with, so in regards to the questions of origin, it gets to the point, or realm, that unless you were there at the time, over time, to observe the occurrence, one cannot know. Other than by logical deduction, translated or transposed in concept or principle from what we do know. At least to be in the realm of certainty and not remain in mystery.
For example, "infinity" is a logical deduction from mathematical principle, that a number can be continuously divided by half and never get to zero, but can you prove it with evidence, or even comprehend it? We can only put down a definition of infinity as something that goes on forever, or something not finite, what it is not.
More about MAN I FESTATION, is a well recognised and established concept about intention, being an aspect of human consciousness. So, is it not more plausible that creation and/or evolution of matter, and matters, be a manifestion of a universal consciousness? Although beyond our current comprehension, this is not a problem, rather is to recognise what pertains, or is relevant, to our particular intents and purposes here on earth.
There is way too much "pie in the sky" stuff, typically caused by celebrity science, rather than working from our foundation, learning from the ground up.
@@russell62790 As computer chips are getting more powerful it can contain more information in a given space. Then what is the ultimate destination. One infinitesimal point contains all the information. That is nature of the beginning. Creation of everything.
You are 100 percent correct because inside the earth crust you have more water than we have outside
@@russell62790Very Brilliant sir! Thank you for that!
This is one of those ones you know will be a waste of time. Good to fall asleep I guess
The information train left a long time ago and is never coming back !!! 😅😂😅😂😅😂
commercials make me stop watching..i pay to not see them now they show up in videos..bs
That's capitalism for you.
@@maynardjohnson3313oh shut up. I’ll take annoying ads (that I’m not forced to buy the product for) over starving and working to death in the gulag and “reeducation” camps. Nothing kills and gathers wealth and power in the hands of an elite few quite like socialism!
What a shame.
Your inability to tolerate a few seconds of extraneous information caused you to miss a really good show. Sucks 4 u.
Ron I feel you bro
@@natehurst4329what commercials?
Earth is not the only Solar System body with water: both Europa and Titan (moons of Jupiter) are thought to have significant water.
It's the only one known for a fact to have liquid water.
Titan is a moon of Saturn containing lakes and rivers of methane.
@@kylewilliams2648 Depends on your standard for evidence. Bear with me, it's going to be long. Do you think the Earth is flat? If you do, tell me so and our conversation is done. If you think Earth is a sphere (more or less), why do you think so? Is it not clear from your own observation that Earth is flat? When you look out your window, don't you see a flat landscape? But you think Earth is a sphere, right? Yet that conclusion is contrary to your own experience and you have never seen Earth from space and never seen for yourself that Earth is a sphere. But you accept multiple evidences and logic and think (without your personal experience) that Earth is a sphere. Similarly, the argument for liquid water on Europa and water ice on Titan is extremely strong. Without direct experience of same. So, what constitutes a fact? Do you require direct personal observation to conclude that something is a 'fact'? If that's the case, then you have no confidence in atomic theory, cell phones, and all the things which you use, exploit, and enjoy every day. Cheers.
@@TX_BoomSlang Thanks for correcting me! Not admitting a mistake is worse than making a mistake!
@@richardpark3054 We learn more from failure than success.
And most recently they have discovered there is more water deep below the Earth's crust than all the water in all the oceans on the surface. Which is just phenomenal
Really? 😮
An awesome video for encourage my students to love science by watching scientists at work practically implementing the scientific process. A must-see for teachers Highly recommended. Thanks Spark!
Well said. Great example of how "We don't know" becomes new questions with some now answered, and the process that works to perform that miracle.
Be ready to take a nap 15 minutes in.
That’s exactly why these programs are great 😂
it is also the time to get that espresso
I found it OK. You are just not a nerd.
I found that bit extremely interesting!
@@maynardjohnson3313 🤣🤣
Thea was a ice world.. that delivered the water.. 🤔
Haileys comet ☄️ looked like a fuzzy 🥔 when it passed by 😂
Girl stop ✋️ 🫸 😆
This is nothing but a whole lot of "theories" by different scientists, but we'll never know the answer.
And oh please tell us all Mr. Science; WHERE DID THE "ICY COMETS" GET THEIR WATER"? 😂😂😂😂
And why have they stopped coming 😒
Cuz there's a thing called the atmosphere now mate@@hernandezparkes7772
Good question, science is working on it. It takes time to find answers especially if you don't fall for easy, oversimplified stories. Better to keep questions open rather than giving invented explanations
Next question, where did the comets get the water?
Good question. Can i have u to think about this? If in the beginning there was absolutely nothing, then there shouldn't be anything now. The fact that there is something now must mean it had to come from something, and that something must have the power to originate it. It is the creator. Next question, who is that creator, I can help you with that if you wish👍
@@sunUK20sure ain't God
@@sunUK20 nothing is not nothing, matter comes in and out of existence all the time thhey can even watch it happen in a lab
@@davidivey9257 you might like to believe..
@mvsmvs8428 u cant get matter from nothing. Not in a billion years..
The question is Not we’re the water came from, the water was already here as what your wrongly calling earth, is actually a water planet. The Question should be, we’re did the earth or earths crust come from ?.
Isn't hydrogen plentiful in the Solar System? And in the universe so the question should be where did the oxygen molecules atoms come from? I don't know, I'm guessing. Thanks for listening Tom.
Interesting point, i had to look it up. Oxygen is top 3 abundant elements in the universe so its a no brainer that the planet is covered in hydrogen and oxygen
well if the volcanoes spewed hydrogen sulfide, methane and carbon dioxide and the oxygen in the atmosphere didn't form til life came along that needed that water to produce oxygen and hmm, I wonder how abundant of an element oxygen really is out there in the universe?
@@thegoldensnitch6312 oxygen is an abundant element but as a solid or liquid in the form of various oxides. Oxygen gas is extremely uncommon due to its highly reactive nature. Only planets with life can have atmospheric oxygen like Earth.
Oxygen was first created in SUPER GIANT stars that exploded but only formed neutron stars or pulsars. However, oxygen likely first arrived onto the Earth as liquid water then the plants give off oxygen as a byproduct. Thus water arrived on Earth from comets and asteroids over billions of years. Every single element in the periodic tale was created from the inside of a stars end called a SUPERNOVA.
Great question, then the next question would be how hydrogen even got there in the first place.......we ARE the aliens
This video is a testament to the power of scientific inquiry and collaboration. The journey it takes you on, from the formation of our solar system to the birth of Earth and beyond, is nothing short of awe-inspiring. A fantastic blend of education and entertainment that leaves you with a newfound appreciation for the wonders of the cosmos!
My imaginary friend done it. He's the goodest bestest fix all answer I've ever known 🤣
Something to ponder. So balances as the Sustainer created it
Ooo! I know this one!. Space. The water came from space.
I knew Halley's comet was going to pass earth during my lifetime, and I was looking forward to it (born in '55). The Van Gogh painting "Starry Night" is of Halley's comet over a French town; I thought it would be big and bright like that. Unfortunately, it appeared on the southern horizon and there was too much air pollution to see it clearly. But I did see it.
I had some ideas but after a few I decided I didn't know Didly-Squat and erased it
the end of the day , no matter where it come from , life just go on as usual even as before the earth form
**( My FAVORITE • "Scientific" • Expression : " WeLL, We USE To Think ******* ;-- But, NOW We Know ******* " ! )**
Some other Theories says "water is already on earth while it is forming. The Icy comets from outer solar system was drawn by Jupiters gravity and cuptured by earths.... The liquid mantle where water comes from thru volcanic activities...."
It's still a true mystery...
Water is an amazing molecule. It’s a light molecule yet is liquid because of the polar nature of the molecule where the oxygen has a strong negative charge and the hydrogens a weak positive charge. If it didn’t get lighter as it froze the Earth would be an ice ball.
I agree. It is much more going with this apparently simple molecule. It has a community relationship.
Ok guys I confess I brought the water. There was a good sale I couldn't resist
I think the 7th day Adventist came then,, leaving a 6pk of water each trip,,,till,, WALLAAA,,, an ocean sprang forth when the lil baggies or bottles all eroded enough to burst open
I never understood how meteors/comets could have delivered the amount of water earth has. It just doesn't seem feasible.
Exactly.
My theory…
The Sun emits ionized hydrogen solar winds which interacts with our oxygen rich atmosphere thus creating a condensate mixture of hydrogen and oxygen forming H2O or in simple terms… Water.
The water on our planet is older than the planet, itself. It wasn't created on the planet.
Water cannot be reliably dated. It’s merely a theory that heavy water is older than the earth. That being said… There is no definitive age of earth. 4.5 billion years is an educated guess at best
@@Magistrate17lol....stop it.😂
@@brandonleesanders we all know the Earth is 6,000 years old and there's bottled water in my refrigerator that's older than that so you tell me 😉
The only thing that makes sense is via chemistry: an acid + an alkali results in water & salt, basic chemistry. What on Earth isn’t chemistry?
..maybe there was some miraculous magic involved..like merlin, Prometheus Jesus, God...etc.. it's still beyond our wildest imagination..it's indeed a supernatural elements.. holy water.. the fire that did not burn..
Water is as important for life as oxygen
no, its more! life can exist without oxygen!
@@Troutcatchahow? If water is H2O, can’t have water without oxygen
Dogs are more important than both. 💚
@@Steveriknows very true
38:40 dude is surfing near rocks 😂😂
"Ice cube comets" hit earth & melted 🧊 🌎 LOOOL 😆
Pour water into your hands and hold it as long as you can three times while thinking about first how the people before you have protected the water, the second while thinking about how YOU protect the water and finally the third while thinking about how those in the future will protect the water. A water protection and consciousness ritual...
Why do they assume earth got water from other sources? Then you have to ask, where did those sources get their water from and so on. Personally I think earth formed its own water and only received a small percent water from external sources.
The other source is space, full of stars creating heavy elements. The earth had to form, water probably didn't form on earth. So we think it may have come to earth over time.
Interesting! And, how exactly, did Earth form its own water?
It cried @@richardpark3054
The reason is that the early Earth would have been too hot to retain it's water. It would have quickly evaporated out to space. It's collision with Theia would have further resulted in the Earth losing it's water (because that collision would have heated the Earth up tremendously, and exposed it's core to space even more). Also consider how different materials 'settle' into different orbits -- closer or further from the sun. The 'rocky' planets are closer to the sun. The 'gaseous' planets further. And the 'icy' planets seem to be all furthest from the sun. Earth is a 'rocky' planet, and water is NOT a rocky substance. And finally, water existed in space, in that dust/gas cloud from which our entire solar system formed. And THAT dust came from a star going supernova, and all the chemical reactions that occurred in space, forming all kinds of basic molecules [edit: including water]. Does that all make sense?
@@djbenje4019 could that earth/thea collision have been very slow and low energy? Enough to tilt the new larger earth into its seasonal axis. A Swirl of silica, aluminium, water etc that gradually coalesced with minimal boiling away into space?
I was 14 when Halley's Comet was visible, and I was at boarding school. Our housemother was awesome enough to take us outside to look at it, or at least what we thought was it. My school was in a rural area and seeing the milky way and a sky full of stars was the norm, but I do recall seeing sth that wasn't the usual so I'm sure it was the comet. Either way, I'm glad to have been alive to witness something not many do.
Yeah I was 26 years old at the time Halley was visible - on an island in the middle of the Caribbean Sea. But it didn’t come close to the 1997 comet Hale-Bopp which was so bright you could see it even in the middle of a city!
Hale-Bopp
Discovered: 23 juli 1995
Age: 4,503×10^9 years
Next perihelion: 4380
Orbits: The sun
Last perihelium: 1 april 1997
cool story. got time to tell it again. you are beautiful its true
Still I need to ask, how is water made?
thanks
I believe that the Thing that made us Was in That ice like a Spacecraft carrying us here As microscopic organisms
That's called panspermia :)
I think Thea was originally an icy satellite of Jupiter. When Jupiter migrated inwards, Thea and early Earth slowly collided forming the moon, an original continent, plate tectonics and the abundance of water. Silly?
It’s a reasonable hypothesis.
Where did the water on mars come from though? (Or the water that at least used to be on mars?) Or maybe earth’s water was a combo of Thea and comets?
Our planet is not the only one with water. It may be the only one with liquid water (although there appears to be evidence that even this is not the case), but it's NOT the only one with water.
Pretty sure it’s more than a thought at this point based on spectrum analysis
Yes that's what they said. The only planet with liquid water.
Believing that there is no liquid water on any other planet in the universe is as dumb as beleiving in god.
@@KingBritishthey clearly said "in our solar system".
@@OvelNick The original comment in which I'm replying to did not state "our solar system" at all.
One expect was not explored in this documentary about water is that . Where did water came from on mars ?
Given we see oxygen in various nebulae, it makes sense that as temperatures reached oxygen hydrogen combustion in the vicinity of the proto sun, it made all of the inner solar system water.
I just started this and I hope there’s new evidence, because last I checked there’s not enough evidence to be sure.
Sure of what?
@@Soacwiththaface To be sure of how earth got its water.
@@travisinthetrunk the maker himself...
@@Soacwiththaface Do you have any evidence to support your claim?
@@travisinthetrunk these fools will probably tell you some fake trickster god like Jesus's dad, Yahweh or whatever.. but we all know it was Ometecuhtli and Omecihuatl that created everything.. trust me, theres like tablets that prove it or somethin
Without watching this documentary I can tell you water is everywhere in our universe , the form is different due to distance from the host star etcetera
Absolutely brilliant video!
One thing is clear to me, and that is the importance of water to life. There are many stars like our Sun, and many planets like our Earth, in our own galaxy, but there is no water, at least none in the planets we've discovered so far, and that realization brings forth the misstreatment we subject our water to. Victor Schauberger thought of water as the earths blood, and he understood how vital it is to have clean water that's alive, oxigenated, like running water down a mountain stream, as opposed to stagnant water inside tanks and pipes mix with chlorine to kill the 'bacteria' that develops in stagnant water. He was ridiculed by his peers for his lack of formal education, and now he is vindicated by trained scientist, 50 years after his death, on his intuitive understanding of the nexus between water and the earth, and human disregard for water as a comon mineral when it is really live!!
We are not the only one with water as the narrater claimed.
Simple answer but very confusing for the scientists, the creator of the earth created the water too.
Very interesting and fascinating events 😀
I understood that after the collision, that resulted in our moon, that same collision caused Earth to tilt, and that tilt resulted in hot and cold zones, which caused condensation in sections. I am disappointed that that wasn't addressed.
I don't get the problem: when you mix one cup of coffee with one sugar and another cup, with three sugar, you get a mug with with two sugar per cup, that's it.
😂😂😂❤
Surely you would need a moon around a planet to move the oceans like ours to support life
Most Informative,Interesting & Exciting ! One of the significant
reasons for the Earth's source of water is the temperature of the sun & the distance of the planets of our solar system lying farthest away from the sun forming ice crystals over such vast periods of time !
38:54....now there's some scientific terminology
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
"How can water survive?" seems to me a stupid question: "How can water survive in cosmos?" - it freaking exists there! Hence the only question would be if the water "leaves the premises".
What if Earth was tightly locked until the moon struck it? There would be ice on the dark side for billions of years
There is😂
Now that they haven't solved that they can move onto more important mysteries like the Curse of Oak Island.
😂
check luna rock/dust grains for water content...don't we have samples?
Water ice is everywhere on the moon poles
i think it comes from comets small amounts of water hear and there but the atmosphere keeps the water here unlike the others so i suggest all planets has or had water. its our goldilocks zone that keeps the water here and not float away in the solar winds. it is blowing away just at a slower rate than its coming so were kinda slowly flooding if that water collection is still acting on us. if you calculate the amount of water that comes from space vs the water here you can kinda use that to calculate the age of the earth once the water collection started
Very interesting!
I disagree with the assumption that comets didn't bring water to earth.. or that it's impossible.. you have to have more samples from other comets. Also have to take into account what happens to the water from comets when they impact earth or travel through the atmosphere.. there are other sources of water, of course.
Jeeeèeeeez, why didn't they just read the Bible
It tells exactly how water appeared
Thanks
Great video
All praises to the 🌞
We don’t know what we don’t know.
29:10 - Dorie!:-D 🐠
Ok. So why are we receiving these icy comets now? Are you full and waiting for a top up later down the track?
Moon tears.
👍😉
Thanks, ravi yadav lakhanadon
4.5 minutes in and yeah
Leaving 😂
Just say WE don’t know
maybe if you'd watched the whole thing you'd know where water came from like I now do
@@dandrechesterfield5411
Ops my bad . I should have watched it till the end .
Well know that you know where Earths water comes from you should do a documentary on it.
I’ll be the first to watch it 🙂
Can’t wait for it 👍🏼
it's so cool there are guys getting paid to do these kind of work full time, despite there is 0 profit to be make. as the result, we all get to learn some cool facts
Yeah and imagine if religion called the shots, we would not have people with curious minds tracking down the truth of reality.
I think our planet condenses water based on it's temperature at high altitudes...
Earth was originally similar to a gas giant. It's slowly becoming smaller in regards to gas
Great informative video about too many commercials😢
lmaooo
These people, they got water on the moon FOOO
Never really thought about it.......I would say over the billions of years the earth sweated it's way to oceans.
Mars has got water (albeit frozen) 😂
I believe those astroides are full of water because those in the astroide belts are huge ice blocks that are moving together.
No water....no beer
Thank you 🙏 🧬 🌊
Interesting video...
I've got one for you. What if you flew through 10 comets tails and collected 10 samples and averaged the ratios of hydrogen to deuterium and found that ratio to equal what is found on earth?
They would never follow their own axioms of science.
Might be a mixture of all the ideas/solutions/conclusions, but also a never-ending search. In my non-scientific fantasies, water comes from Mars, after an almost-clash.
Could the oblique hit ( collision) with the smaller planet be the momentum cause of the first quick rotation of the Earth ? Comet ice not the same as our sea surprises me though .
Very interesting.
Meteor storms over and over, over time ...
H2O was part of the accreting protoplanet; the Sun's initial nuclear flash only blew off part of earth's water. This situation is @ the start of the process
* life as WE know life. other forms of life may exist... that don't require H2O.
I finally found found the source, it came from the Universe after the big bang!!! bang bang!!!
In the beginning!