- But moooom, everybody is breathing fresh air outside the chemical soup! - You're not everybody! Now sit here and take your sulphur, my procario-baby-boy...
Dominant in which sense though? Numbers wise? Occupying the most land? That term is too general and vast for biology to be used in just one sense of the word. This is why I sort of agree with the OP, specifically the "think" part. We think so much that we forget to look at things in ways other than what we think.
@@akashiluddi Well they were already "eating" sunlight below the surface of the water long before then the big change was the whole ability to live on that silica rich floating raft of lighter weight rock we call continents. Of course that would take a few billion years but you got to start somewhere.
@@Soraviel Some anaerobic bacteria are more specifically known as "obligate anaerobes". This means they need an anaerobic environment, one without any oxygen, in order to survive. So yes, oxygen is toxic obligate anaerobes. In fact, use of pure O2 has been used to treat certain bacterial infections from obligate anaerobes, which can happen in deep puncture wounds like a tetanus infection from stepping on a nail.
*The 5 super important food groups for us Rotifers, revealed!* *5. Nannochloropsis* *4. Phytoplankton* *3. Microbial carrion* *2. Algae* *1. Cyanobacteria*
@@katyungodly Yeah! It's a brand new thing that I was waiting for since a long time. I've asked for it few times as 200X is not very evocative of the size as it will change a lot if you watch on a cell phone or a on a big tv screen. Now we can get how big microbes are!
I wish you'd talked about how oxygen took a long time to accumulate in the seas because as it was produced it reacted with carbon or free floating iron molecules or any of the things oxygen freely reacts to and was sequestered. It took fifty million years or so for that process reached equilibrium. After all, mid ocean vents or unwater volcanoes were continually adding more things to oxidize. Once everything was oxidized, finally, molecular oxygen started to accumulate in the oceans and leak out a bit into the atmosphere. As soon as it did it immediately formed oxides and was gone. Every rock surface, atmospheric methane, everything that could oxidize on land or in the atmosphere had to oxidize before free oxygen could begin to accumulate. That took a long time and you didn't mention any of it!
This video is now one of my favorites. Its not only illustrative of your weekly work, but also you try to explain these great biology facts, papers, and research... A real soothing and memorable experience. Keep it up!
Well we are tinkering with them to try and clean up our mess so maybe we will fix it with a little genetic engineering. The defining trait of humanity over everything else is advanced technology and the first species to literally intentionally override natural selection on a scale never seen before (plants, pandas, animals, bacteria, beer, ...). We are supposed to be able to look at the big picture but with our lifespans being only 80-120 years people are still very shortsighted as many just kick the can down the road which is a bad idea.
@@riakata We poluted the hell out of this planet when we had less technology in the plistocene. Human CO2 emissions back then whent through the roof. Luckily, as we avanced technologicaly our CO2 emissions came down as well as every other polutant, especially when we invented cars, planes and computers. Or was it the other way around? A scientist puts his personal preferences and beliefs asside and looks at the data. There is a clear correlation between technological progress and environmental destruction in the last 10.000 years and especially the last 200 years but most people don't have the intelectual courage to admit this. No, i'm not saying we should go back to the stone age (But i know i'm gonna be accused of that because it's a classical emotional response, a thought stoper). But if we are not going to be honest about this then we don't stand a chance to solve our environmental problems.
Nuno Foo CO2 is not a pollutant, it’s the gas of life. Greenhouse farmers are adding CO2 (600-800 ppm) for better growth. However, I do agree that humans do pollute Mother Earth in a ridiculous paste. A nice example can be found here on YT, search for words toxiest river or toxic farmed salmon. There is micro plastic in plankton today. The list can go on for ever. The hunt for global economical growth is the real killer. Search for how many percent CO2 there is in the atmosphere, then compare that with water vapour (that is a greenhouse gas) and make some conclusions. Cheers
@@chukwow5738 All your myths have been adressed multiple times, so much so that we just compiled a list of it as to not have to write the same thing over and over again. Here is the list: skepticalscience.com/argument.php "CO2 is not a pollutant, it’s the gas of life. Greenhouse farmers are adding CO2 (600-800 ppm) for better growth. " see nº42 and 43 on that list. "Search for how many percent CO2 there is in the atmosphere, then compare that with water vapour (that is a greenhouse gas) and make some conclusions." see nº 36 and nº77.
As others have described, iron "captured" a lot of the oxygen (forming the banded iron formations) prior to atmospheric oxygen levels rising. One reason why multicellularity could have developed is that, by being multicellular, an organism could more effectively "protect" itself from toxic levels of oxygen. (A great book that describes these processes is, "Oxygen: the Molecule that Made the World", by Dr Nick Lane. Book is still remarkably relevant and current, in spite of being published in 2002).
they're more than just delicious ... they're the most nutrient dense and averrable food we have.. easily the answer to ALLL human malnutrition situations..
Absolutely love what y'all are doing. Presenting this vast amount of knowledge in such high quality which is absolutely free is unbelievable. For people like me who love learning new things such platforms are heaven. Thank you🙏
Welcome to the post-apocalyptic world we live in. Several times over really. At least once due to a massive rock hitting the earth. Around 11 times due to "flood basalts" which is a nice way of saying that suddenly large areas of land became lava fields, the sun was blocked by ash, and acid rain fell all over the planet due to enormous quantities of sulfur and CO2 emitted into the air. Around 12 times due to the sea-level falling, concentrating the oceanic brine and uncovering coral reefs and continental shelves. These could be due to volcanism, or ice-ages? Some of these times it seems to be related to global warming (from volcanic gasses or maybe methane clathrates) reducing the solubility of oxygen and CO2. So depending on how you count it is somewhere between post-post-post-post-post-apocalyptic and post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-apocalyptic.
The Earth as we know it wouldn't exist at all if it had not been for the prior "suicide" of some massive star in a supernova explosion, or maybe even a plural number of supernovae. No supernovae equals few of the elements heavier than oxygen.
Wonder what life will be after our own apocalypse. Imagine if they grew and evolved extra fast because they managed to use ionizing radiation as an energy source.
Thank you guys. I have taught my grand Cyanobacteria when they were around three hrs of age. So I am very pleased to come across this video and forwarded it to them at this very special time of Covid -19 period. My grand children who are now 8-4 yrs olde will digest this information even more than ever before. So I thank you from my heart. For such a wonderful video. I have also FB this video. With love and respect and peace.
Fantastic video! As someone deeply involved in the cultivation of fresh spirulina, a form of cyanobacteria, I found this video particularly enlightening. It's fascinating to learn about the historical significance of cyanobacteria and their monumental role in shaping our planet's ecosystem. In our spirulina farm, we witness daily how these simple organisms are not just a part of history but continue to be a vital source of nutrition and sustainability in the modern world. Their ability to photosynthesize and contribute to environmental health is as relevant today as it was billions of years ago. This video beautifully ties together the ancient past and the sustainable future that cyanobacteria, like spirulina, offer. Thank you for sharing this insightful journey into the microcosmos!
I enjoyed this episode because I have always really loved learning about the GOE, very interesting topic. But my favorite part by far was the microscopy work- SO beautiful!! This James guy has some major talent!
Actually they carry hepatotoxins and neurotoxins. They are called blue green algae but are actually bacteria and can be dangerous, DO NOT CONSUME and avoid swimming in a lake where they arr found.
yep they are extermely dangerous, do not buy the stuff. They are marketing it as a nutrious supplement. Most companies do NOT follow proper guidelines and have found to contain cyntoxin levels. Researchers also they block b12 receptor sites preventing cells from in taking b12 causing deficiencies.
The more I learn about microorganisms, the more amazed I am by life in general, as well as the ability and maybe luck that any complex organisms exist at all. Absolutely amazing.
What a fantastic and inspiring channel!!!! Great work to you and your team. When I was a kid, the only story I heard of Cyanobacteria was that they were poisoning our water with their algae blooms. So I dismissed them as a pest. Recently, I have been studying desert soil crusts and I am so facisnated by how they are so important to their ecosystem. They are the pioneer species that allows almost all desert life to thrive. After seeing this, I realize that my understanding of them is just the tip of the iceberg!! Thank you for going into the philosophical aspects of biology in this video! It’s really exciting!!
This video is as grand as all the previous ones, Thanks for improving our Mondays! (P.S. the music, while delightful, did compete just a bit today with hearing the narration).
This is one of the best episode of Journey to the Microcosmos yet, There's just this sense of wonderment and awe that makes you really think. An idea of history and scale that really comes over you.
Gah your videos are just so engaging and calm !!! This channel sparked my interest for micro organisms, and now I wanna get a good microscope just to look at them!!
Great now whenever I hear the song it's the end of the world as we know it I'm going to picture cyanobacteria singing to other microscopic organisms as they slowly die
"Country roads, take me hoooooome, to the plaaaaaaace, where I belooooooooonnngg! west virginiaaaaaa, mountain mommaaaaaaaaa... take me hooooooommmeee, country roooaddds!"
in this vast event of promoted mental annihilation in this era, and while human sourced corruption is destroying our home planet, the story of life here is just so deep and moral, one of its kind. We lose ourselves in depictions of imagery lifestyles including the very powerful people who prevent and do not care about nature's capacity to evolve. It's just so beautiful to be ever witnessed. Thank you home, and everyone even though I get scared and act aggressively sometimes, I love you all.
Cyanobacteria are prevalent with Blue-Green Algae which are everywhere. They bloom together throughout the weather patterns of the US. Making toxic, Blue-Green algae almost present at the same time for warmer months.
The science here is one of the most important events in Earth's history of life, and so full of mystery and wonder I defy anyone to dig into it and not have their breath taken away. (As opposed to having their breath given to them, which is what it also did.) But - and this is what I love about this channel, this is so beautifully presented, one long abstract stained-glass piece leavened with moments of manic action and washed with that superb music. Such a treat. Thank you.
Great video. Awesome educational value. I'm a better rounded and more informed person for having watched it. Also, the choice of musical accompaniment was outstanding, and quite starkly displays the fact that you want to ensure that *all* of your viewers throw their viewing device into the nearest panel of drywall, never to recall your names in a pleasant or flattering context. If you TRULY hate people who watch UA-cam videos, and if you TRULY want them to wish ill fortunes upon you, I urge you to PLEASE continue selecting music exactly like the acoustic bile and vomit that we are subjected to in this video. Bravo, and congratulations.
Awesome. The Great Oxygenation Catastrophe is one of my favorite subjects for some reason and to find new perspective on it on Microcosmos? Just awesome.
I remember reading something about the great oxygenation which claimed it didn't really take off until all the iron and other stuff that could be oxidized got oxidized - basically that there was a rise in oxygen but it couldn't build up to modern concentrations due to reacting and being fixed.
I think you will find that the expanse of duckweed during the summer stops algae blooms from happening whilst making the environment more favourable for the bacteria which is also a food source for aquatic fauna. This growth of duckweed and bacteria also limits available nutrients for diatoms and their death improves the water quality because as their dead bodies settle to the bottom they also clarify the water.
Just to clarify the multicellularity part - Those "strands" of bacteria have a specialized cell that fixes nitrogen in a reaction that doesn't happen in the presence of oxygen. That cell is shielded in a way that doesn't let oxygen in. Nitrogen is very important for all cells, so until cyanobacteria found a way to fixate it in an oxygen rich environment their own waste product (oxygen) would've inhibited their growth
It would be great to have a time machine to actually sample the early biota. Amazing what we're learning. Your microscopy is breathtakingly clear and vibrant!
Cyanobacteria are extremely beautiful, both physically and in their role. It is the most important species in the history of life as we know it (except for the universal ancestor). This is one of the most fascinating things I've ever learned about as well. It's amazing how much impact a single microscopic species can have.
The great oxidation event is my favorite mass extinction. It proves wrong those who say that we cannot be changing the climate. Cyanobacteria are so small and innocuous but they had the ability to catastrophically change the entire world's climate and chemistry to an even greater extent than we have so far. If they can do it then we can too. It's sad to think that after billions of years of evolution and the rise of consciousness that we are not more able to control our impact on the world as a bunch of green goop floating around.
It’s amazing how deadly bacteria can be, and also this highlights how good and bad can be subjective, as these Cyanobacteria are probably saints to us but literally Hitler to the very ancient microcosmos
When all your friends decide to photosynthesise and you still like sulphur. :(
- But moooom, everybody is breathing fresh air outside the chemical soup!
- You're not everybody! Now sit here and take your sulphur, my procario-baby-boy...
That's personality.
😂
@@sophiarose03 For real, this is funny 😂
I regret that I can only give this one thumb up.
0:35
*Awwww, a moss piglet eating his veggies!*
:)
@Louis Gedo - Aw, so endearing ^_^
@@wiwaxiasilver827 Did you see those little moss piglet feetsies and toes?.......precious!
:)
@Louis Gedo - Yeah, so cute 💕
😍
Gotta watch his weight now that he’s a celebrity.
omg i LOVED the transition between the rotating shot of oscillatoria and the banded iron formations. a delightful surprise!
JTTM is full of these things, support them on patreon!
Indeed
This is one of the more beautiful science channels.. their microcinematography skills are unparalleled
Its just bacon bro
7:45 for those who want the timestamp
I love how we think we are the dominant species, yet there is a creature that holds the evolutionary foundation for our existance.
We stand on the shoulders of giants
i love how some of us think we unnaturally alter the environment, meanwhile these guys accidently set life on fire some time ago
We are not THE dominant species. We are CURRENTLY the dominant species.
@Saraneth the Binder If science went by opinion, it would be no different from religion.
Dominant in which sense though? Numbers wise? Occupying the most land? That term is too general and vast for biology to be used in just one sense of the word.
This is why I sort of agree with the OP, specifically the "think" part. We think so much that we forget to look at things in ways other than what we think.
*T H E S U N I S A D E A D L Y L A Z E R*
not anymore there's a blanket!♪♪♪
YES!!!! I thought the exact same thing!!!
@@nerysghemor5781 Now you can eat sunlight!
@@akashiluddi Well they were already "eating" sunlight below the surface of the water long before then the big change was the whole ability to live on that silica rich floating raft of lighter weight rock we call continents. Of course that would take a few billion years but you got to start somewhere.
t a s t e t h e s u n
@@Dragrath1 Bill wurtz is good stuff amirite?
Anaerobic bacteria: I'm dying, you're killing me!
Cyanobacteria: Oh.
Anaerobic bacteria: No, it's O2.
which is toxic to some bacteria I'm guessing or assuming
Moses Jonson well toxic to everything lol
@@Soraviel Oxygen is one of the reasons we "age", or more accurately, oxidize.
@@Soraviel Some anaerobic bacteria are more specifically known as "obligate anaerobes". This means they need an anaerobic environment, one without any oxygen, in order to survive. So yes, oxygen is toxic obligate anaerobes. In fact, use of pure O2 has been used to treat certain bacterial infections from obligate anaerobes, which can happen in deep puncture wounds like a tetanus infection from stepping on a nail.
@@Bernholesurfer Master Therion's joke is making me feel "oxidized"
*The 5 super important food groups for us Rotifers, revealed!*
*5. Nannochloropsis*
*4. Phytoplankton*
*3. Microbial carrion*
*2. Algae*
*1. Cyanobacteria*
Thx rotifer, hope you are well.
That was such a Buzz Feed comment!
Stop by for a feast on my Cyanobacteria, Mr. Rotifer, sir
@@kinglyzard I’ll bring the algae!
Phytoplankton is the same as algae
There's a joke in here about this channel being a breath of fresh air.. but I'm not gonna make it.
Just like most of the anaerobes.
Then I'm not going to laugh at it.
@@smartestmoronx19 F
smartestmoronx19 f
I'm not gonna like and comment.
I reallyl like the visual scale at the bottom right corner.
Grosse Fée i think they only recently added that!
@@katyungodly Yeah! It's a brand new thing that I was waiting for since a long time. I've asked for it few times as 200X is not very evocative of the size as it will change a lot if you watch on a cell phone or a on a big tv screen. Now we can get how big microbes are!
I wish you'd talked about how oxygen took a long time to accumulate in the seas because as it was produced it reacted with carbon or free floating iron molecules or any of the things oxygen freely reacts to and was sequestered. It took fifty million years or so for that process reached equilibrium. After all, mid ocean vents or unwater volcanoes were continually adding more things to oxidize. Once everything was oxidized, finally, molecular oxygen started to accumulate in the oceans and leak out a bit into the atmosphere. As soon as it did it immediately formed oxides and was gone. Every rock surface, atmospheric methane, everything that could oxidize on land or in the atmosphere had to oxidize before free oxygen could begin to accumulate. That took a long time and you didn't mention any of it!
This video is now one of my favorites. Its not only illustrative of your weekly work, but also you try to explain these great biology facts, papers, and research... A real soothing and memorable experience. Keep it up!
I have never missed an episode.
I have never been disappointed.
I am NEVER unsubscribing.
I love this channel.
Man: I can change the chemistry of the atmosphere and change the climate.
Cyanobacterium: Hold my chlorophyll.
Well we are tinkering with them to try and clean up our mess so maybe we will fix it with a little genetic engineering. The defining trait of humanity over everything else is advanced technology and the first species to literally intentionally override natural selection on a scale never seen before (plants, pandas, animals, bacteria, beer, ...). We are supposed to be able to look at the big picture but with our lifespans being only 80-120 years people are still very shortsighted as many just kick the can down the road which is a bad idea.
@@riakata be careful because they could turn this planet into a snowball again
@@riakata We poluted the hell out of this planet when we had less technology in the plistocene. Human CO2 emissions back then whent through the roof.
Luckily, as we avanced technologicaly our CO2 emissions came down as well as every other polutant, especially when we invented cars, planes and computers.
Or was it the other way around?
A scientist puts his personal preferences and beliefs asside and looks at the data. There is a clear correlation between technological progress and environmental destruction in the last 10.000 years and especially the last 200 years but most people don't have the intelectual courage to admit this.
No, i'm not saying we should go back to the stone age (But i know i'm gonna be accused of that because it's a classical emotional response, a thought stoper). But if we are not going to be honest about this then we don't stand a chance to solve our environmental problems.
Nuno Foo
CO2 is not a pollutant, it’s the gas of life. Greenhouse farmers are adding CO2 (600-800 ppm) for better growth.
However, I do agree that humans do pollute Mother Earth in a ridiculous paste. A nice example can be found here on YT, search for words toxiest river or toxic farmed salmon. There is micro plastic in plankton today. The list can go on for ever.
The hunt for global economical growth is the real killer.
Search for how many percent CO2 there is in the atmosphere, then compare that with water vapour (that is a greenhouse gas) and make some conclusions.
Cheers
@@chukwow5738 All your myths have been adressed multiple times, so much so that we just compiled a list of it as to not have to write the same thing over and over again. Here is the list:
skepticalscience.com/argument.php
"CO2 is not a pollutant, it’s the gas of life. Greenhouse farmers are adding CO2 (600-800 ppm) for better growth. " see nº42 and 43 on that list.
"Search for how many percent CO2 there is in the atmosphere, then compare that with water vapour (that is a greenhouse gas) and make some conclusions." see nº 36 and nº77.
I love every single one of your episodes, but I think this one might be your best yet.
As others have described, iron "captured" a lot of the oxygen (forming the banded iron formations) prior to atmospheric oxygen levels rising. One reason why multicellularity could have developed is that, by being multicellular, an organism could more effectively "protect" itself from toxic levels of oxygen. (A great book that describes these processes is, "Oxygen: the Molecule that Made the World", by Dr Nick Lane. Book is still remarkably relevant and current, in spite of being published in 2002).
That was an incredible book! I learned a lot from it.
6:54- "Hey, guys! Can I be in the shot, too? Can I? Uh... no? Okay, I'll, uh... I'll leave, then... sorry...."
they're more than just delicious ...
they're the most nutrient dense and averrable food we have..
easily the answer to ALLL human malnutrition situations..
Lol 😂
Absolutely love what y'all are doing. Presenting this vast amount of knowledge in such high quality which is absolutely free is unbelievable.
For people like me who love learning new things such platforms are heaven.
Thank you🙏
This might be the prettiest and most well shot video so far. I love you guys, keep up the good work!
Pretty wild that an apocalypse paved the way for us...in fact many.
Anyway, thanks little buddies!
Welcome to the post-apocalyptic world we live in.
Several times over really.
At least once due to a massive rock hitting the earth.
Around 11 times due to "flood basalts" which is a nice way of saying that suddenly large areas of land became lava fields, the sun was blocked by ash, and acid rain fell all over the planet due to enormous quantities of sulfur and CO2 emitted into the air.
Around 12 times due to the sea-level falling, concentrating the oceanic brine and uncovering coral reefs and continental shelves. These could be due to volcanism, or ice-ages?
Some of these times it seems to be related to global warming (from volcanic gasses or maybe methane clathrates) reducing the solubility of oxygen and CO2.
So depending on how you count it is somewhere between post-post-post-post-post-apocalyptic and post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-post-apocalyptic.
@Robert C. Christian Hey, we need to correct all the damage those cyanos did!
The Earth as we know it wouldn't exist at all if it had not been for the prior "suicide" of some massive star in a supernova explosion, or maybe even a plural number of supernovae. No supernovae equals few of the elements heavier than oxygen.
Wonder what life will be after our own apocalypse. Imagine if they grew and evolved extra fast because they managed to use ionizing radiation as an energy source.
"That Time Oxygen Almost Killed Everything"--PBS Eons. XD Still one of my fave episode titles.
Thank you guys. I have taught my grand Cyanobacteria when they were around three hrs of age. So I am very pleased to come across this video and forwarded it to them at this very special time of Covid -19 period. My grand children who are now 8-4 yrs olde will digest this information even more than ever before. So I thank you from my heart. For such a wonderful video. I have also FB this video. With love and respect and peace.
Fantastic video!
As someone deeply involved in the cultivation of fresh spirulina, a form of cyanobacteria, I found this video particularly enlightening. It's fascinating to learn about the historical significance of cyanobacteria and their monumental role in shaping our planet's ecosystem. In our spirulina farm, we witness daily how these simple organisms are not just a part of history but continue to be a vital source of nutrition and sustainability in the modern world. Their ability to photosynthesize and contribute to environmental health is as relevant today as it was billions of years ago. This video beautifully ties together the ancient past and the sustainable future that cyanobacteria, like spirulina, offer. Thank you for sharing this insightful journey into the microcosmos!
"You do not need to be complicated to be important." Okay I'm crying? That's so motivational.
always beautiful! The photography is stunning plus, I learn something every time
Tiny plant spaghettis! ♥️
Except they aren't plants!
Were eating that make you a non vegan?
I nearly shed tears at the end. I hope we leave this place better than we found it.
I enjoyed this episode because I have always really loved learning about the GOE, very interesting topic. But my favorite part by far was the microscopy work- SO beautiful!! This James guy has some major talent!
*Also a little known fact, they're magically delicious!*
Actually they carry hepatotoxins and neurotoxins. They are called blue green algae but are actually bacteria and can be dangerous, DO NOT CONSUME and avoid swimming in a lake where they arr found.
@@artemisqueen2 Exactly.
You’re thinking of actual algae that people harvest for consumption (which is a plant). Blue green “algae” is a bacteria.
yep they are extermely dangerous, do not buy the stuff. They are marketing it as a nutrious supplement. Most companies do NOT follow proper guidelines and have found to contain cyntoxin levels. Researchers also they block b12 receptor sites preventing cells from in taking b12 causing deficiencies.
Yall didn't see that op is a Rotifer?
What makes this guy's voice so ridiculously soothing
The editing transitions on this one are next level 👌🏽 props to the editor and the people filming this for hours
Those lines of Oscillatoria are mesmerizing
The description feels like a guided meditation. I'm loving this.
The more I learn about microorganisms, the more amazed I am by life in general, as well as the ability and maybe luck that any complex organisms exist at all. Absolutely amazing.
Oh wow, the transition from Nostoc to Archean Earth, and the transition from Oscillatoria to the banded iron formations, just- ::chef's kiss::
Someone mustve accidently hit the dislike because......how. I just love this channel ❤
Yeah, actually I would really like to see an explanation why would anyone consider dislike these videos.
@@ginvama5304 clickbait
?
@@wallegg1499 you think this video used clickbait?
What a fantastic and inspiring channel!!!! Great work to you and your team. When I was a kid, the only story I heard of Cyanobacteria was that they were poisoning our water with their algae blooms. So I dismissed them as a pest. Recently, I have been studying desert soil crusts and I am so facisnated by how they are so important to their ecosystem. They are the pioneer species that allows almost all desert life to thrive. After seeing this, I realize that my understanding of them is just the tip of the iceberg!! Thank you for going into the philosophical aspects of biology in this video! It’s really exciting!!
This may be the best one yet. All of the shots are just amazing.
I cried haha... So grateful to be alive, being here to watch this video, early in the morning, tired and extremely happy to be here.
Thanks to Crime Pays But Botany Doesn’t for directing me to this channel; marvellous content, and duly subscribed.
Global Gardener same here
Thanks for helping out Steve!
This video is as grand as all the previous ones, Thanks for improving our Mondays!
(P.S. the music, while delightful, did compete just a bit today with hearing the narration).
7:07 these two branches: *are moving in the opposite direction*
The rest: why ar u runing
This is one of the best episode of Journey to the Microcosmos yet, There's just this sense of wonderment and awe that makes you really think. An idea of history and scale that really comes over you.
Gah your videos are just so engaging and calm !!! This channel sparked my interest for micro organisms, and now I wanna get a good microscope just to look at them!!
This might just be the best UA-cam channel yet.
"Life reflects the environment it fills" (3:03)
Fascinating!
Best channel on biology so far! along with the microscopic footage the narration is amazing too.
Our story is so amazing, thank you for telling us this part of it.
1:09 this looks like a solar panel. So cool
Great now whenever I hear the song it's the end of the world as we know it I'm going to picture cyanobacteria singing to other microscopic organisms as they slowly die
"Country roads, take me hoooooome, to the plaaaaaaace, where I belooooooooonnngg! west virginiaaaaaa, mountain mommaaaaaaaaa... take me hooooooommmeee, country roooaddds!"
been watching from episode one and been loving it ever since. keep up the great videos!
Thank you so very much for linking the music 🙌🏽 a lot of big channels don’t do that
I love the shot at 4:27! The Aphanizomenon is nicely framed to appreciate its intricacies, and in the background are happy looking spinny-ball-things!
This video is so high quality like oh my gosh you just earned yourself a subscriber
Never miss these vids. Great series guys!
in this vast event of promoted mental annihilation in this era, and while human sourced corruption is destroying our home planet, the story of life here is just so deep and moral, one of its kind. We lose ourselves in depictions of imagery lifestyles including the very powerful people who prevent and do not care about nature's capacity to evolve. It's just so beautiful to be ever witnessed. Thank you home, and everyone even though I get scared and act aggressively sometimes, I love you all.
This is probably my favorite channel atm. Good stuff.
You guys should make an in-depth video on how to prepare slides to look at the micro cosmos. And how to focus/use the microscope correctly.
I love your voice. It gives me chill, relaxing state. 🥰
the visual transitions are really nice on this one :)
I think this is probably the fastest I've ever clicked on a video, ever. Seriously. It must be the magic of the bacteria
Cyanobacteria are prevalent with Blue-Green Algae which are everywhere. They bloom together throughout the weather patterns of the US. Making toxic, Blue-Green algae almost present at the same time for warmer months.
Came here because ‘Crime pays but botany doesn’t”
Same
Another great channel!
Anaerobic creatures: Noooo you can't just make oxygen you're gonna kill us all
Cyanobacteria: Haha funny air machine go whoooooosh
The science here is one of the most important events in Earth's history of life, and so full of mystery and wonder I defy anyone to dig into it and not have their breath taken away. (As opposed to having their breath given to them, which is what it also did.) But - and this is what I love about this channel, this is so beautifully presented, one long abstract stained-glass piece leavened with moments of manic action and washed with that superb music. Such a treat. Thank you.
If you unfocuse your eyes starting at 11:16 it gets very trippy and looks like universes spinning.
🎵anaerobic girl, in anoxic world
life this Eon, it's Archean!🎵
(Had to butcher the grammar to make it scan...)
Is this Jamicrocosmos
I love it.
That's awesome
And we are living in a microbial world
And I am a microbial girl
Great video. Awesome educational value. I'm a better rounded and more informed person for having watched it.
Also, the choice of musical accompaniment was outstanding, and quite starkly displays the fact that you want to ensure that *all* of your viewers throw their viewing device into the nearest panel of drywall, never to recall your names in a pleasant or flattering context. If you TRULY hate people who watch UA-cam videos, and if you TRULY want them to wish ill fortunes upon you, I urge you to PLEASE continue selecting music exactly like the acoustic bile and vomit that we are subjected to in this video. Bravo, and congratulations.
Literally best content on UA-cam
This should have a million hits. Wow beautiful.
Thank you Patreons!!
The last bit - the green algae and cyanobacteria - just... breathtaking, mesmerizing, calming...
Awesome. The Great Oxygenation Catastrophe is one of my favorite subjects for some reason and to find new perspective on it on Microcosmos? Just awesome.
Can we talk about what an amazing shot 11:17 is? Absolutely breathtaking.
HANK! You the MAN!!! love these
Content aside- this is a simply breathtaking video. Exceptional.
Thank you for your podcast which has reignited my interest once again in my favourite topic of evolution of our ecosystem 👏👏👏
I remember reading something about the great oxygenation which claimed it didn't really take off until all the iron and other stuff that could be oxidized got oxidized - basically that there was a rise in oxygen but it couldn't build up to modern concentrations due to reacting and being fixed.
That was great, clear and not giddy.
I think you will find that the expanse of duckweed during the summer stops algae blooms from happening whilst making the environment more favourable for the bacteria which is also a food source for aquatic fauna. This growth of duckweed and bacteria also limits available nutrients for diatoms and their death improves the water quality because as their dead bodies settle to the bottom they also clarify the water.
The visual comparison between the spherical algae Nostoc and the ancient earth is awesome!
I’ve never been more excited about an upload in my life
His soothing voice made it 100 times better.
Just to clarify the multicellularity part - Those "strands" of bacteria have a specialized cell that fixes nitrogen in a reaction that doesn't happen in the presence of oxygen. That cell is shielded in a way that doesn't let oxygen in. Nitrogen is very important for all cells, so until cyanobacteria found a way to fixate it in an oxygen rich environment their own waste product (oxygen) would've inhibited their growth
This channel calms me a lot
This is truly beautiful! We owe everything to them ❤
I don't know how to explain it but this video felt like an existential crisis
Your work is so beautiful. Both imagery and knowledge. I would love to see you switch to 4K.
It would be great to have a time machine to actually sample the early biota. Amazing what we're learning. Your microscopy is breathtakingly clear and vibrant!
Cyanobacteria are extremely beautiful, both physically and in their role. It is the most important species in the history of life as we know it (except for the universal ancestor). This is one of the most fascinating things I've ever learned about as well. It's amazing how much impact a single microscopic species can have.
Fantastic sound mixing! from early to 2:11!
This is humbling 🙏
I'm pretty sure that I'm accidentally growing cyanobacteria in a non cleaned culture container that's been long dead.
Newt Scamander probably. I’ve got them growing in my potted plants
thanks. it's the best explanation of cyanobacterias' part i have ever seen. Go on, don't leave us pls
The great oxidation event is my favorite mass extinction. It proves wrong those who say that we cannot be changing the climate. Cyanobacteria are so small and innocuous but they had the ability to catastrophically change the entire world's climate and chemistry to an even greater extent than we have so far. If they can do it then we can too. It's sad to think that after billions of years of evolution and the rise of consciousness that we are not more able to control our impact on the world as a bunch of green goop floating around.
Love your channel, never imagined this could be so intriguing.
1:01 Smol solar panel
It’s amazing how deadly bacteria can be, and also this highlights how good and bad can be subjective, as these Cyanobacteria are probably saints to us but literally Hitler to the very ancient microcosmos
The microcaust
Literally Hitler lol
They got gassed
i adore your soothing voice over
Captivating and fascinating, as habitual for this channel. Congrats.
well done!! this channel is great