Things I personally found interesting 1. Almost all of Netherlands will vanish from maps if sea level rises by just 3-5 metres. 2. By the end of it the only landmasses left were Tibetan plateau and Andes mountain range. 3. Australia was quick to join with Papua as soon as water level dropped a little making the ancient continent of Sahul 4. NZ got a huge chunk of land kinda showing the continent of Zelandia 5. A new significant landmass popped up in southern Indian ocean Kerguelean. 6. All the extra land acquired by island nations like Maldives, Seychelles, Fiji etc. 7. English channel got drained at around 40m and UK finally got connected with the mainland Europe (directly to France) 8. Sea level rise resulted in a small sea in the middle of Australia 9. The increase in sea level can be easily traced in South America as you can clearly see Amazon river starting to flood and expand. 10. By the end of sea level fall you see a land ridge in Indian ocean (west of Indonesia) which is basically the land that India left behind as it was moving from Africa to collide into Asia
The Netherlands are actually already mostly below sea level, they just have a sea wall. This does provide some level of hope for the future since we can invent ways to prevent the ocean from swallowing the land. However, this could fail at any moment and does of course reduce the natural beauty of the coastline in most cases.
Mega respect for the cameraman who went to space, filmed sea levels rising, and then came back in time to show us. Edit: I should not have gotten so many likes tf you guys on it’s not even that funny
It's pretty amazing that Africa still looks like Africa between -100m and +1000m. It seems that there is a very clear boundary between land and sea there.
@@meganuke4x241 I don’t even know why Greenland is portrayed as having high elevation. If the sea level were to rise by 100m, Greenland would turn into an archipelago.
0:24 if all the ice melted 1:16 if see levels rose by 10% 1:43 if see levels rose by 26.8% 1:59: if see levels rose by 50% 2:18: if see levels rose by 100% 2:36: if see levels rose by 200% 5:48: if see levels drop by a 100% Please take in consideration that in the video, several meters rose or drop in the same second, and as such, is impossible to pinpoint exactly the moment, the average see level is 3730m deep
It's pretty interesting that Antartica is one of the last landmasses before the mountain ranges to get submerged. This is because with that Icesheet ontop of it, Antartica is actually the highest continet in the world with an average altitude of 2.5k meters. Which is also why it's interior is colder that the coast because of the altitude.
Also remember Antarctica land mass is pressed under all those ice, when all ice will melt the pressure might release abruptly and make the dormant volcanoes of Antarctica to erupt all at once making even more land for Antarctica!
I’ve wanted to see a simulation like this show the effect of falling sea levels for years. There were so many stupid discussions in my textbooks talking about all these mysteries of how civilization moved across continents and built all these cities and monuments that are underwater but I always said “Well when the earth was covered in ice during the last ice age, where do you think the ice came from? Think it just appeared? No the sea levels had to have gone down” and a map like this easily explains it.
There’s a series called drain the oceans that I basically exactly the kind of thing you’re talking about. They discuss lost ancient cities and then use computers to drain the ocean water so they can show what the city would have looked like in the past.
Yes, and imagine the sea level rise when the glaciers melted after the ice ages. No wonder they find whale bones in the Atacama Desert and whale fossils in the Sahara. I've never heard the theory that the Sahara turned from jungle to desert from being submerged for years, killing all vegetation. But I bet that's the case. If sea levels rose and fell again there would be nothing green left - no animals or birds. Just fish. Imagine the civilizations buried beneath the sands of the Sahara that they will never find. So many exciting things to imagine.
Fascinating how quickly the connection between Alaska and Russia appears even with a tiny drop in sea level forming the Beringia Land Bridge between North America and Eurasia.
That explains why during Ice Age (When the sea level was around 50-60 meters below current sea level) was possible for humans to travel between Eurasia and America
Or the Doggerland bridge between the UK and the rest of Europe which is now the North Sea and the English Channel. During the last Ice Age that was all land and even today they find ancient human remains and ruins at the bottom of the North Sea.
At 2400-2600 m of the falling sea levels, you can clearly see the new proposed 'Zeelandia' continent, which is buried underwater below New Zealand, which means that New Zealand is just a mountain range of the continent. Plus, it has every propriety of a normal continent too
@@haven216 Check the facts not the media hype. Category FIVE hurricane history - almost extinct. Since Al Gore’s “Inconvenient Truth” (a melodrama posing as a documentary) it’s been about 17 years. During that time there have been TWO C5s to touch the USA but none in the last six years. In the 16 years prior to I.T. there were EIGHT C5s. 1990-2006 (8) Andrew, Mitch, Isabel, Ivan, Emily, Katrina, Rita, Wilma. 2006-today (2) Michael, Irma - none since 2018 Looks like they’re disappearing - thank you “climate change” The ratios are the same no matter which category of hurricane size you choose.
In the movie waterworld, the plot revolved around finding the last piece of land in an oceanworld, The main character were around the New York area as shown during some underwater scenes. In the movie they found a small japanese island with long dead inhabitants. Looking at this map at 2:06 -2400 meters there is indeed a straight path from New York towards Japan at a northwest angle. I love it when movies include such detail!
To be fair there isn't enough water even in ice to have sea levels that high. Actually most of the water on earth is in the mantle and slowly the earth sequesters water. Though not fast enough to be a problem since the expanding sun will boil away the oceans before they can be absorbed by the mantle.
Idk why I got the biggest sense of fear when the sea levels started rising in the beginning, and the biggest sense of relief when the water started filling up in the end, knowing both were probably never going to happen anywhere close to now.
You gotta love how freaking massive Lake Superior is in northern Michigan. it's like one of the most outstanding land changes for miles around when the water is drained. Like a little indent in a flat plane
The fact that the Great Lakes aren’t full of water when this simulation begins really saps all the credibility out of this video for me. Like, why does Florida have to sink before the St. Laurence Seaway is present? As a side note, I can’t wait for Florida to sink.
Personally, i fell that having 0080m of low sea level would be perfect. Since, not only would new zealand be a new continent, but also that parts of the ancient world that is currently under water would finally be able be viewed by the public and allow us to study them.
This would render the Panama and Suez canals unusable, close up the Bering Strait, fuck with weather patterns and make places have less rain, and create wars for people trying to claim the new land.
What's interesting here is that the sea before the last ice age was about 120 meters or something lower. So 4:30 is pretty much how it was. You can see where "Doggerland" used to be, same as the Sumatran peninsula, "Sunderland". Then all got swallowed up by the sea
We have been in cyclic ice ages for about the past million years or so, but be advised but the current sea level is roughly 300 feet ("100 meters") *lower* than the average over the last 500 million years, and down *1200ish feet* ("400 meters") from the peak over Phanerozoic time. Basically, the sea levels during the time that humans have been around is wildly out of character low for the earth and is highly anomalous. And thus very unlikely to stay that way, humans or not. I also note that the 1200 feet is about as high as it can possibly be, once you have melted all the ice, there is no more water, the continental crust is also finite, going past 1200 feet is not physically possible.
@@mariusmatei2946 Yes, that was the point. The implication being that we are not "normal" now, trying to keep it at an abnormally low level is probably not realistic.
This was a simulation of god dumping unlimited water on the world, plate movement is kinds itrelevant. The ice all melting would only raise the ocean like 70 meters or something
I guess one would need to include both changes in sea level and motion of plates and elevation of different land masses. Would love to see it! Ice ages, continental drift, mega volcanoes.
Interesting that Lake Eyre in almost Central Australia grows quickly early, this is definitely created based on altitude levels not sea levels rising, that region is totally surrounded by higher ground and its very dry most of the year, it is fed by rivers from the east that empty into it rather than it being possible for sea rise to back up a river from the sea.
I find it interesting how when the sea levels are dropping, strips of land start to appear everywhere and sort of start to look like how the tectonic plates are arranged especially around the americas
Great video! But I feel like the second scenario is infinitely more worse than the first. Even at its most extreme. With more water, we still have a chance (boats, fish, etc.). With no water though... we're finished. That, in a way, makes me worry a little less about rising sea levels.
Also we should remember about magma pressure and the thickness of Earth crust under the oceans. There is quite possible to die due to massive planet eruption
@@blueglassesguy1 If that. One of our US presidents obsessed with climate change (not specifying who) bought a beach front mansion. If the ocean even rose 5m, he'd notice. Behaviours like that make the validity of their concern questionable.
@@joshuagross3151The most sea levels could EVER rise is 68 meters, and thats IF somehow ALL ice on earth melted, which is highly unlikely due to antarctica and greenland surviving with ice in far warmer climates
Reference points: 0:29 - water level increase 69 meters - level if all ice melts 4:33 - water level decrease of 130 meters - level during ice age 20,000 years ago
Very useful simulation. The important range is from -120 meters below the current sea level during ice ages to +80 meters above when all of the polar ice melts. Would have been nice if the simulation also illustrated the estimated ice cover over land as it changes with the sea level
Would be useful to include a 'lights out' feature, where the city names disappear once that location is underwater. Lima and Kathmandu would, I think, be last to flicker out. Also interesting is the latter part of the video, which I suppose is what happens when the magnetic field around the planet fails or weakens to the point that the sun's radiation begin stripping away atmosphere and water -- until there's no life left, and no possibility of it either.
The simulation is very useful, indeed; but it highlights, solely, the level of the land above, and below the sea level, not the land flooded/inundated as a result of the melting glaciers, or the sea level drop as a result of the glaciations (hence the sea levels rise, and fall above/below 8000 meters).
@@michaelthibault7930yeah, a mere 10 meters rise in the sea levels, and cities like Tokyo, Shanghai, Bombay, Calcutta, Jakarta, London, Amsterdam,... would be submerged (by water)/go "lights out". Of course, the scenario/simulation featured in this video, is (purely) hypothetical, as, even if all the glaciers in the World (including Antarctica) melted, the sea levels would, still, not rise more than 70 meters; and, so, cities far away from the sea (shores)/shorelines, especially those that are located, at least, at a modesty high altitude (at least, 100 meters above the sea level), would be unaffected by the rise of the sea levels in itself.
The video is pretty cool, you should do another of this thing! It’s really satisfying! I like how Greenland survived really long! That was really cool!
Ignoring water crises the map around the 5:40 mark would be such an interesting world to live in and see the history of A few predictions: 1. Coastal Antarctica (which would be a bit greener as its land would reach further north) would be settled by the people who reached Tierra del Fuego in our world with a culture similar to Greenland’s developing there. 2. Polynesia or Phoenicia-style seafaring and island hopping empires all over the world.
3. Japanese Empire could more easily conquer the rest of asia bc how easy it is to transport minerals (key meaning : better logistics for japan either for war or for goods)
@@chalkp Japan wouldn't be anywhere near the same as today. The isolated civil wars, safe from outside interference, are what made Japan what it is. I think Japan would likely be 2nd Tibet in this world. A mountainous area dominated by the Chinese heartland.
I think it would be interesting to see how nations take on new borders with sea levels dropping. Would war break out between France and Britain over land disputes with the new land bridge from the British Isles to mainland Europe. What about the new territory connecting Australia and New Guinea? Russia and the U.S now having a border would led to disaster. Or what about the closing Mediterranean Sea? Would new nations rise? What about the the new large islands formed in the Atlantic? So many possibilities for this kind of world.
Australia and PNG already have a border that extends almost all the way to the PNG coastline. When I was a kid I used to stand on Daru island and I would look to the next island and it was officially Australia.
@@riverinaremedies7894??? Daru island isnt anywhere near australian islands . no way you could see australia . the closest australian territory to daru island is saibai island . over 50 km away . you could be seeing bristow island and mistaking it for australia . but ig its possible if there is a large peak on daru island and Saibai island has tall hills it could be possible but very unlikely
One positive point that I see in your illustration, is the ease with which anyone left, will be able to take a boat ride to Mt. Everest. Has your video included any compensation for volumetric conversation of snow and ice into a liquid form? The 8k meter figure, is I am assuming a representation of the increased ocean depth from today’s current surface level. It is puzzling to see most of the Earth’s surface inundated, and yet there is still snow and ice on Greenland and Antarctica. Those should have slipped beneath the surface before Kathmandu.
The most terrifying of the four scenarios to me is of the previously inhabited continents being revealed by the receding water level. You'd find the dead remains of all sorts of alien like sea creatures littering the soaking ground, massive abandoned heaps of steel and concrete where cities used to be, and billions of human bodies strewn in places they don't belong. The eerie sense that people used to live here... and that it was once covered by thousands of meters of water, in total darkness.
Don't fret it's not going to happen, sea levels ain't rising, it's the ground that's sinking in some place's and rising in other's, Glacial isostatic adjustment, then along comes another ice age and it will all change again over the next several hundreds of million years 😊
Sulawesi / Celebes. really hard to drown it down, and really hard to unite with closest island. what a special one. sukar ditenggelamkan, dan sukar disatukan bahkan dengan pulau terdekat. pulau yg istimewa 👏
Fun fact. During the Late Cretaceous period America was sliced in the middle by a north-south sea named the Western Interior Seaway. It was populated by plesiosaurs, mosasaurs and large carnivorous fish and separated the western continent that had Triceratops, T. rex and other famous dinosaurs from the eastern continent that had other species.
It’s amazing that the big island of Hawaii stayed above water longer than most of the rest of the world. Mauna Kea is ridiculously tall (4,207.3 m / 13,800 ft).
@@JakeKoenig just because a mountain is mostly underwater doesn't mean it's not the tallest If Everest was this way it's height not changed at all and was partially underwater it wouldn't be considered tall either
There is one problem: A area under the actual sealevel will not fill automatically. There are a lot of areas under the 0 Level at the moment that are not filled with ocean water. Death valley or the death sea.
Did you take into account the movement of the tectonic plates ? Maybe the continents drift to form new ones ? Even if all the ice bergs melt, there would still be land.
Actually, maybe some Nepalese communities eventually have this exact situation happen to them in the span of maybe 10k years in the future. That would be terrifying to hear recountings of it generation by generation and yours is the last one to tell the tale. Of course by then I would hope we'd be far from Earth and on another, much better off planet.
Something interesting that the data isnt accounting for is the rebound effect. As the water enters certain areas it is pretty heavy but when its ice its super heavy.
True, but that takes many thousands of years. Much of North America is still rebounding from the last Ice Age. That's why sea level doesn't appear to be rising here than in many other areas.
Wow!!! Africa seems to be the last continent to start having major changes.... I forgot the name of the movie but at the last part of the movie it shows the survivors in very large ships heading towards Africa.
If, as someone said, the maximum rise would be about 68 meters, then I would assume that much of Antarctica and Greenland would be uncovered by ice yet still possibly under water. I would like to see a simulation of that as well.
Chile is largely located along the Andes, which is a high mountain range. The peaks of those mountains would likely help the Chilean government survive the massive floods, probably making it the last pre-flooding civilization on Earth realistically. While China and India have the Himalayas, the majority of their population and governmental centers aren't close enough to the mountains, while Chile's are. All in all, that is how Chile MIGHT survive the end of the world, if they don't collapse from riots and the like before the floods even happen
Así es, la primera gran barrera natural de Chile es la poco conocida "Cordillera de la costa" que en su punto más alto pasa los 3 mil metros de altura en el norte del país.
Majority of the world: submerged Santiago, Nairobi, Tehran, and Kathmandu: *(sips) This is fine!* Chile loved the ocean so much that the ocean returned the favor by sparing Santiago till the end. And on the bright side, at least we survived a bit longer than the southern government
The great lakes were gone WAY too early in the dry up period, at ~50 Meters (~150 feet) I know from sonar fishing that they are EXTREMELY deep from glacial carving, we used to have sonar returns never come back in relatively close to shore areas with sonar set at the ~250 foot range (~83 meter).
Most of these sea level simulations I've seen seem to assume that if sea level was at exactly the same level it is today, large swathes of the Caspian that are verifiably not flooded would be flooded. I wonder if there's any out there that take any factors other than terrain height into consideration.
Would humanity survive this happening, in the same scale of time as it happens in the video? If so, how far back would we be set in terms of technology and population?
For the first one, kinda. If enough diving equipment is either salvaged or saved from before the floods in working condition, then people could scavenge for resources to rebuild the large rafts that humanity likely lives on. Fish could provide food, and even limited farming could occur if they had the raft space. However, with rising sea levels, the atmosphere would be compressed into a space exactly 8848m smaller than before, and since phytoplankton now have a lot more room to breed, its unlikely that humans and other animals would survive the higher concentrations of oxygen alone, even without considering the atmospheric pressure. And once all the creatures that feed off of oxygen and produce carbon dioxide are gone, there wouldn't be any CO2 left for plants to subside on, leaving all life on Earth dead. Well, maybe fish and other water based organisms could survive, but I dunno. And the second event, no chance at all. Without water, there are no more phytoplankton, and no more humans either. The only sources of H2O of any kind would be located deep within the Earths crust, maybe even down in the mantle where even the most robust of modern submersibles wouldn't be able to endure the extreme heat and pressure. After this, Earth would look something like Mars, only a lot warmer due to the proximity to the sun. Without any water, there are no organisms of any kind. Even in some kind of super-plant that was dwelling in some forgotten cave would die, since the carbon dioxide produced by living creatures would've been long gone. Maybe there are some pockets of CO2 left dotted here and there that seeped up from the cracked and dry ground, but that would only last for so long before it ran out. All in all, both mass-extinction events either kill almost all land-based organisms at best, or all life in general, period. And I haven't even taken into account what all the things that humans left behind would do to the planet. Nuclear reactors being flooded is one thing, but if they dried up, then prepare for a nuclear winter where the snow is made from frozen nitrogen and dead cells, because patrolling the Mojave sure will make you wish for one. But HEY, thats just a Theory, A FILM THEORY!! Thanks for reading . . .
Tenía miedo en general acerca de la subida del nivel del mar, pero me quedo un poco más tranquilo viendo que donde vivo el proceso tardaría bastante. Lo malo serían los refugiados climáticos.
Decho vi por un sitio de Google, que si toda la Antártida se descongelara, el nivel del mar solamente subiría unos 7 metros (no es mucho a comparación de los edificios y la tierra en general)
Notice the crazy speed at which Florida withers away. This is why it's a huge mistake to live there long term. All it takes is the most modest of increases and the whole of the southern coasts on both sides becomes a loss. Central Florida and the Panhandle will take longer but they won't be far behind. As for the rest of the world, it's needless to say that ALL sea coastlines are also at sea level, with varying degrees of grade but all of them will be consumed at the same time, forcing human activity ever further inland. Rivers and deltas will likewise be inundated as a new normal level pushes them back and back. Eventually, the vast majority of the human population becomes displaced since the vast majority live close to water. Meanwhile, the further inland you go, the more struggle you encounter with droughts, poor land and lack of misc resources becoming an increasing problem. You're damned from within and damned from without, two unlivable forces crushing hundreds of millions into an ever more narrow band of survivability. We should have paid attention several decades ago. Now we pay for that. Edit: Another thing people don't seem to even consider let alone discuss with any importance... Submerged civlilzation does not just go away. What happens to thousands of miles of human infrastructure when it is in constant exposure to salt water? It rots away, exactly. It's not just concrete, steel, wood and sheet rock you have to worry about. It's all the other things we produce and store. Chemicals of all kinds, waste materials of all kinds, misc materials of all kinds that are stable until you throw them in the ocean, mass losses of livestock like what happened during Hurricane Florence, millions of coffins popping up out of submerged cemetaries, the list of things that will end up in the ocean is LENGTHY and horrible. This mass dissolution of lost human civilization into the oceans will massively compound our situation.
@@TheShadowBall16 Yep the crazy part is that anything that is already below sea level becomes SUPER vulnerable to sudden inundation. You'll see this play out as the rise actually begins to threaten low lying places. They'll scramble to create complex wall and pump systems which then need to ABSOLUTELY be maintained on ever dwindling resources, then one little slip and boom there it all goes. That's what happened with Katrina and New Orleans.
The simulation of a global deluge is interesting, even in real life it surpassed and tripled the level of evil 3 times more. To such a point of disappearance the highest mountain in the world and modified relief and geography (atmospheric, terrestrial, aerial, maritime, fluvial) upon reaching its current state.
Never been happier to live near Denali in Alaska! I'd get waterfront property lol. Damn this video is soooooo cool!! It also shows that with a drop of 150 meters in sea levels due to glacier ice, how easily early humans were basically able to walk to any continent on earth without getting their feet wet! So cool!
No. If all of Earth's ice melted, the sea level would rise ~68 meters (which would be catastrophic), but not thousands of meters. Scientists in the 90s obviously already knew this.
Amazing how quickly the North and Baltic seas disappear with the water drop. Same for the Arctic ocean, it's gone after 400 meters... And then nothing moves until we're at 4k meters under sea level 😊
@@gpsc thank you! Very good output for a self-made program. Can I ask you to show a simulation of the Mediterranean and Black Sea regions (+/- 150m) in one of your upcoming videos? When you have the time of course! Keep up the great work!
@@gpsc btw I am doing some research on my own regarding mesolithic and neolithic culturee in the Balkan region, from some 12, 000 years ago and I have very good reason to believe that sea levels in thr Mediterranean and Black Sea were much lower than they are now, 30-40m at least. But I don't know how would that affect all the sea basins, so that's the reason I asked you. 😉
For now, it's difficult to deal with. sorry. The accuracy of the topographical data is also rough, so I don't think it is suitable for research purposes in each region.
The worst case scenario for rising sea levels is about 68 meters. That is if all of the ice on Earth melted.
Toki pona.
i live in Tennessee to and i didn't know we were that high above sea level
so close.....
0:29
new beach town ayyy
Things I personally found interesting
1. Almost all of Netherlands will vanish from maps if sea level rises by just 3-5 metres.
2. By the end of it the only landmasses left were Tibetan plateau and Andes mountain range.
3. Australia was quick to join with Papua as soon as water level dropped a little making the ancient continent of Sahul
4. NZ got a huge chunk of land kinda showing the continent of Zelandia
5. A new significant landmass popped up in southern Indian ocean Kerguelean.
6. All the extra land acquired by island nations like Maldives, Seychelles, Fiji etc.
7. English channel got drained at around 40m and UK finally got connected with the mainland Europe (directly to France)
8. Sea level rise resulted in a small sea in the middle of Australia
9. The increase in sea level can be easily traced in South America as you can clearly see Amazon river starting to flood and expand.
10. By the end of sea level fall you see a land ridge in Indian ocean (west of Indonesia) which is basically the land that India left behind as it was moving from Africa to collide into Asia
As it was moving from australia*
I’m not reading that
This video is really good if one is studying plate tectonics and sea floor spreading
@@mrthatsit4266 nobody cares
The Netherlands are actually already mostly below sea level, they just have a sea wall. This does provide some level of hope for the future since we can invent ways to prevent the ocean from swallowing the land. However, this could fail at any moment and does of course reduce the natural beauty of the coastline in most cases.
Mega respect for the cameraman who went to space, filmed sea levels rising, and then came back in time to show us.
Edit: I should not have gotten so many likes tf you guys on it’s not even that funny
Cringe*
@@ranjeetkumre276 🤓
@@ranjeetkumre276 🤓
😎
Wait...the Earth is flat. I mean, the Water
-1680 would literally be so cool,
Oceans not dried up, but so much more land
Well, most of it will be a desert. Rivers and lakes is dried up too, you know?
hey and russia and usa (alaska) connect!!
@@Campbloxxerwar
And you can go abroad without a plane
@@Xsqber1234 UH OH
It's pretty amazing that Africa still looks like Africa between -100m and +1000m. It seems that there is a very clear boundary between land and sea there.
much of Africa is a high plateau.
And it has no navigable waterways into the interior
You mean Greenland?
@@meganuke4x241 I don’t even know why Greenland is portrayed as having high elevation. If the sea level were to rise by 100m, Greenland would turn into an archipelago.
Yeah… everyone else is drowning while Africa manages to hold on
Humans in 18000BC: TOO MUCH LAND
Humans in 2500AD: TOO MUCH WATER
Humans between 18000bc and 2500ad:perfectly balanced,as all things should be.
@@HackerMan203 yes
Things came full circle
Ye
That depends on whether the next glaciation hits or not.
0:10 Start: Sea Levels Rise
2:34 Everything is Under
4:08 Sea Levels Drop
6:19 Dry, the desert?
old zealand.
Dry dessert? Not that you can still see green thing the water is under but the higher thing is desert
@@Oxygen2311desert*
Dry, The Desert a.k.a. Mad Max
7:07 it looks like the country dodger land is back
Maldives after sea level increases 0.0001 Millimetre: HEEEEELLLLLLLLLPPPPPPPPPPPP
And netherlands
And Florida
Erm… aktually it’sh 100 picometers
@@tbird2013 land inking
@@Sasani5832 land sinking
0:24 if all the ice melted
1:16 if see levels rose by 10%
1:43 if see levels rose by 26.8%
1:59: if see levels rose by 50%
2:18: if see levels rose by 100%
2:36: if see levels rose by 200%
5:48: if see levels drop by a 100%
Please take in consideration that in the video, several meters rose or drop in the same second, and as such, is impossible to pinpoint exactly the moment, the average see level is 3730m deep
Jusr 10% rise and nearly half of the landmasses are gone.It's high time for us to act or else this might turn in reality someday
I mean, the current sea level is 0 meters above sea level
@@imperialofficer6185 yup
"see levels" 😂😂😂
See levels eh.. revise that shit
It's pretty interesting that Antartica is one of the last landmasses before the mountain ranges to get submerged. This is because with that Icesheet ontop of it, Antartica is actually the highest continet in the world with an average altitude of 2.5k meters. Which is also why it's interior is colder that the coast because of the altitude.
*its
@@octopus_72 waste
@@WaveForceful wdym waste
@@ABoxIsMyHome being an ass.
Also remember Antarctica land mass is pressed under all those ice, when all ice will melt the pressure might release abruptly and make the dormant volcanoes of Antarctica to erupt all at once making even more land for Antarctica!
I’ve wanted to see a simulation like this show the effect of falling sea levels for years. There were so many stupid discussions in my textbooks talking about all these mysteries of how civilization moved across continents and built all these cities and monuments that are underwater but I always said “Well when the earth was covered in ice during the last ice age, where do you think the ice came from? Think it just appeared? No the sea levels had to have gone down” and a map like this easily explains it.
There’s a series called drain the oceans that I basically exactly the kind of thing you’re talking about. They discuss lost ancient cities and then use computers to drain the ocean water so they can show what the city would have looked like in the past.
Omg thank you! I totally agree!
Yes, and imagine the sea level rise when the glaciers melted after the ice ages. No wonder they find whale bones in the Atacama Desert and whale fossils in the Sahara. I've never heard the theory that the Sahara turned from jungle to desert from being submerged for years, killing all vegetation. But I bet that's the case. If sea levels rose and fell again there would be nothing green left - no animals or birds. Just fish. Imagine the civilizations buried beneath the sands of the Sahara that they will never find. So many exciting things to imagine.
4000m drop my sci fi
or maybe 500m drop
Finally, a rise and fall video that doesn't have to do with a celebrity!
Fascinating how quickly the connection between Alaska and Russia appears even with a tiny drop in sea level forming the Beringia Land Bridge between North America and Eurasia.
Alaska and Chukotka, or Russia and USA.
That explains why during Ice Age (When the sea level was around 50-60 meters below current sea level) was possible for humans to travel between Eurasia and America
The best thing about this place has the same thing happened with this type
Because Beringia isn't very deep from the sea
Or the Doggerland bridge between the UK and the rest of Europe which is now the North Sea and the English Channel. During the last Ice Age that was all land and even today they find ancient human remains and ruins at the bottom of the North Sea.
At 2400-2600 m of the falling sea levels, you can clearly see the new proposed 'Zeelandia' continent, which is buried underwater below New Zealand, which means that New Zealand is just a mountain range of the continent. Plus, it has every propriety of a normal continent too
Make New Zeeland great again!
New Zeeland
You mean new Zealand? 🤣
Thanks for sharing this information
zealand not zeeland
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There's not enough water to do that
People enjoy fiction -- refer Netflix
I love how Florida is one of the first pieces of land to vanish
no sign of that -- the sea is not rising and hurricanes are almost extinct -- but yes, YOU stay away from Florida
And Australia that’s the second but I live there
@@Boogs2747 Australia will not be affected -- trust me
@@derekhough-jm9gc The last 3 out of 4 years are the most active hurricane seasons on record.
@@haven216 Check the facts not the media hype.
Category FIVE hurricane history - almost extinct.
Since Al Gore’s “Inconvenient Truth” (a melodrama posing as a documentary) it’s been about 17 years.
During that time there have been TWO C5s to touch the USA but none in the last six years.
In the 16 years prior to I.T. there were EIGHT C5s.
1990-2006 (8) Andrew, Mitch, Isabel, Ivan, Emily, Katrina, Rita, Wilma.
2006-today (2) Michael, Irma - none since 2018
Looks like they’re disappearing - thank you “climate change”
The ratios are the same no matter which category of hurricane size you choose.
In the movie waterworld, the plot revolved around finding the last piece of land in an oceanworld, The main character were around the New York area as shown during some underwater scenes. In the movie they found a small japanese island with long dead inhabitants.
Looking at this map at 2:06 -2400 meters there is indeed a straight path from New York towards Japan at a northwest angle. I love it when movies include such detail!
They found mount everest not a japanese island
And they were in Denver, Colorado, not NYC
To be fair there isn't enough water even in ice to have sea levels that high. Actually most of the water on earth is in the mantle and slowly the earth sequesters water. Though not fast enough to be a problem since the expanding sun will boil away the oceans before they can be absorbed by the mantle.
*Not* Japan.
I cannot understand this comment. What path?
Idk why I got the biggest sense of fear when the sea levels started rising in the beginning, and the biggest sense of relief when the water started filling up in the end, knowing both were probably never going to happen anywhere close to now.
I HAVE THAT TOO
Sea levels are already rising. It's slow but steady.
@@CordeliaWagner We could do without Florida
ROFL, according to the alarmists Florida was supposed to be underwater 10 years ago...
Same
You gotta love how freaking massive Lake Superior is in northern Michigan. it's like one of the most outstanding land changes for miles around when the water is drained. Like a little indent in a flat plane
The fact that the Great Lakes aren’t full of water when this simulation begins really saps all the credibility out of this video for me. Like, why does Florida have to sink before the St. Laurence Seaway is present?
As a side note, I can’t wait for Florida to sink.
D. Smith Florida is lower than the Great lakes region, and the great lakes are more recent formations, thus not that deep.
The music you used is truly beautiful
*Listen to **00:54**. Sounds close to the Seymour theme.*
It's "The Chapeltown Rag" by Slipknot
South America is the first continent that's hugely affected but one of the last continents to remain as a "continent"
Personally, i fell that having 0080m of low sea level would be perfect. Since, not only would new zealand be a new continent, but also that parts of the ancient world that is currently under water would finally be able be viewed by the public and allow us to study them.
I love the new archipelago off the argentine coast as well
This would render the Panama and Suez canals unusable, close up the Bering Strait, fuck with weather patterns and make places have less rain, and create wars for people trying to claim the new land.
I think we can guess you are from new Zealand
@@MatthewBaka what about 0010m?
It would kind of wreck…all shipping infrastructure
What's interesting here is that the sea before the last ice age was about 120 meters or something lower. So 4:30 is pretty much how it was. You can see where "Doggerland" used to be, same as the Sumatran peninsula, "Sunderland". Then all got swallowed up by the sea
4:32,4:31
We have been in cyclic ice ages for about the past million years or so, but be advised but the current sea level is roughly 300 feet ("100 meters") *lower* than the average over the last 500 million years, and down *1200ish feet* ("400 meters") from the peak over Phanerozoic time. Basically, the sea levels during the time that humans have been around is wildly out of character low for the earth and is highly anomalous. And thus very unlikely to stay that way, humans or not. I also note that the 1200 feet is about as high as it can possibly be, once you have melted all the ice, there is no more water, the continental crust is also finite, going past 1200 feet is not physically possible.
@@brettbuck7362it's "lower" because we/the Earth is actually going through/in an ice age!
@@mariusmatei2946 Yes, that was the point. The implication being that we are not "normal" now, trying to keep it at an abnormally low level is probably not realistic.
@@brettbuck7362 what's/what do you mean by "normal"?
fun fact; 6:07 / 6000m lower than current is the "hadal zone", aka the layer of water usually only found in trenches like the Mariannas.
Would love to see one with predicted plate movements over time, past and future. Probably much more difficult but would be very interesting!!!
This was a simulation of god dumping unlimited water on the world, plate movement is kinds itrelevant.
The ice all melting would only raise the ocean like 70 meters or something
I guess one would need to include both changes in sea level and motion of plates and elevation of different land masses. Would love to see it! Ice ages, continental drift, mega volcanoes.
We’ll have all evolved into fish by the time plate movements are significant.
@@Skyprince27 🤣🤣🤣
@@Skyprince27umm. what..
Chileans and Nepalese: I sleep 😴
Mount Everest: 😴me too😴
Pilot and Passenger: Also me 💤🛏️
Hollanders: real sh*t
@polandball5 bro mt everest is in nepal
greenland : me too 😴😴
Interesting that Lake Eyre in almost Central Australia grows quickly early, this is definitely created based on altitude levels not sea levels rising, that region is totally surrounded by higher ground and its very dry most of the year, it is fed by rivers from the east that empty into it rather than it being possible for sea rise to back up a river from the sea.
You thought of rain?
@@FuneralProcession it's a sea level rise map.
@@gusdrivinginaustralia6168yea but Rian can also do that
The irony is that Greenland and Antartica are largely unaffected. I didnt know they are so elevated.
I find it interesting how when the sea levels are dropping, strips of land start to appear everywhere and sort of start to look like how the tectonic plates are arranged especially around the americas
Which South or North America, why do you have to be specific?
They said “the americas” which means both
Great video! But I feel like the second scenario is infinitely more worse than the first. Even at its most extreme. With more water, we still have a chance (boats, fish, etc.). With no water though... we're finished.
That, in a way, makes me worry a little less about rising sea levels.
Also we should remember about magma pressure and the thickness of Earth crust under the oceans. There is quite possible to die due to massive planet eruption
@@AntonVelibor Or even air pressure. If all the land was covered by water, the atmosphere would become condensed.
Sea levels won’t rise but 50 - 60 meters in the next 750 years
@@blueglassesguy1 If that. One of our US presidents obsessed with climate change (not specifying who) bought a beach front mansion. If the ocean even rose 5m, he'd notice.
Behaviours like that make the validity of their concern questionable.
@@joshuagross3151The most sea levels could EVER rise is 68 meters, and thats IF somehow ALL ice on earth melted, which is highly unlikely due to antarctica and greenland surviving with ice in far warmer climates
sea level : rises by barely any meters
thailand and netherlands : we are drowning
Bangladesh and Kuwait : am i joke to you
new zealand:first time?
Yeah, Philippines took a while more to fully submerge
Maldives: adios brotha
the artic:oh yeah,its all coming together
Reference points:
0:29 - water level increase 69 meters - level if all ice melts
4:33 - water level decrease of 130 meters - level during ice age 20,000 years ago
Very useful simulation. The important range is from -120 meters below the current sea level during ice ages to +80 meters above when all of the polar ice melts.
Would have been nice if the simulation also illustrated the estimated ice cover over land as it changes with the sea level
Там у человека New York не тонет =)) , это самая смешная симуляция .
Would be useful to include a 'lights out' feature, where the city names disappear once that location is underwater. Lima and Kathmandu would, I think, be last to flicker out.
Also interesting is the latter part of the video, which I suppose is what happens when the magnetic field around the planet fails or weakens to the point that the sun's radiation begin stripping away atmosphere and water -- until there's no life left, and no possibility of it either.
The simulation is very useful, indeed; but it highlights, solely, the level of the land above, and below the sea level, not the land flooded/inundated as a result of the melting glaciers, or the sea level drop as a result of the glaciations (hence the sea levels rise, and fall above/below 8000 meters).
@@michaelthibault7930yeah, a mere 10 meters rise in the sea levels, and cities like Tokyo, Shanghai, Bombay, Calcutta, Jakarta, London, Amsterdam,... would be submerged (by water)/go "lights out". Of course, the scenario/simulation featured in this video, is (purely) hypothetical, as, even if all the glaciers in the World (including Antarctica) melted, the sea levels would, still, not rise more than 70 meters; and, so, cities far away from the sea (shores)/shorelines, especially those that are located, at least, at a modesty high altitude (at least, 100 meters above the sea level), would be unaffected by the rise of the sea levels in itself.
A slider indicating a base elevation is not evidence of global warming y ou cultist.
imagine the possibilities of new places being made when sea levels dropped
Imagine the realities of living during those times
Imagine war
@@abjaanebhido5350 imagine 'dragons'
if see levels drop,island we didnt know existed will exist,im looking at you zealandia or should i say,old zealand
@@HackerMan203 old Zealand is Zeeland in the Netherlands
Please comment in your native language.
アフリカが割と強くて笑った。
Ok I’m an American
Salut
Filipino ako
Why
The video is pretty cool, you should do another of this thing! It’s really satisfying! I like how Greenland survived really long! That was really cool!
Ignoring water crises the map around the 5:40 mark would be such an interesting world to live in and see the history of
A few predictions:
1. Coastal Antarctica (which would be a bit greener as its land would reach further north) would be settled by the people who reached Tierra del Fuego in our world with a culture similar to Greenland’s developing there.
2. Polynesia or Phoenicia-style seafaring and island hopping empires all over the world.
3. Japanese Empire could more easily conquer the rest of asia bc how easy it is to transport minerals
(key meaning : better logistics for japan either for war or for goods)
@@chalkp Japan wouldn't be anywhere near the same as today. The isolated civil wars, safe from outside interference, are what made Japan what it is. I think Japan would likely be 2nd Tibet in this world. A mountainous area dominated by the Chinese heartland.
Wouldn't the new lands be desert?
@@biharek7595 it's not sand under the sea... duh
@@chalkp well desert are mostly rocks not Sand.
And yes with so little water most land AT all would be arid.
I think it would be interesting to see how nations take on new borders with sea levels dropping. Would war break out between France and Britain over land disputes with the new land bridge from the British Isles to mainland Europe. What about the new territory connecting Australia and New Guinea? Russia and the U.S now having a border would led to disaster. Or what about the closing Mediterranean Sea? Would new nations rise? What about the the new large islands formed in the Atlantic? So many possibilities for this kind of world.
Australia and PNG already have a border that extends almost all the way to the PNG coastline. When I was a kid I used to stand on Daru island and I would look to the next island and it was officially Australia.
@@riverinaremedies7894??? Daru island isnt anywhere near australian islands . no way you could see australia . the closest australian territory to daru island is saibai island . over 50 km away . you could be seeing bristow island and mistaking it for australia . but ig its possible if there is a large peak on daru island and Saibai island has tall hills it could be possible but very unlikely
Doggerland is rightful British clay
I Don't think there would be any humans left to make wars seeing as As the water has disappeared.
even with a slight drop in sea level, Russia would gain a LOT of new territory in the north.
One positive point that I see in your illustration, is the ease with which anyone left, will be able to take a boat ride to Mt. Everest. Has your video included any compensation for volumetric conversation of snow and ice into a liquid form?
The 8k meter figure, is I am assuming a representation of the increased ocean depth from today’s current surface level. It is puzzling to see most of the Earth’s surface inundated, and yet there is still snow and ice on Greenland and Antarctica. Those should have slipped beneath the surface before Kathmandu.
50 m water level rise is ideal, the unwanted cities will be flooded
@@1mol831 What are the unwanted cities ?
2:31
How does it keep flooding? I no longer see a country, one missing?
6:19
grass planet
The most terrifying of the four scenarios to me is of the previously inhabited continents being revealed by the receding water level. You'd find the dead remains of all sorts of alien like sea creatures littering the soaking ground, massive abandoned heaps of steel and concrete where cities used to be, and billions of human bodies strewn in places they don't belong. The eerie sense that people used to live here... and that it was once covered by thousands of meters of water, in total darkness.
This kinda reminds me of a game called iron lung
Don't fret it's not going to happen, sea levels ain't rising, it's the ground that's sinking in some place's and rising in other's, Glacial isostatic adjustment, then along comes another ice age and it will all change again over the next several hundreds of million years 😊
barcos antiguos de guerra romanos vikingos barcos de la segunda guerra mundial etc
I like how Greenland always survives, no matter if it’s an pandemic or ecological catastrophe
Possibly a reason for the international seed storage vault up there
Plague Inc.
The ocean falling was cool because it revealed all the underwater land masses
2:27 Kathmandu, the last capital city in the sea world 😁
the last capital city in the world will be La Paz (Bolivia, 3593m)
Sulawesi / Celebes.
really hard to drown it down, and really hard to unite with closest island.
what a special one.
sukar ditenggelamkan, dan sukar disatukan bahkan dengan pulau terdekat.
pulau yg istimewa 👏
Fun fact. During the Late Cretaceous period America was sliced in the middle by a north-south sea named the Western Interior Seaway. It was populated by plesiosaurs, mosasaurs and large carnivorous fish and separated the western continent that had Triceratops, T. rex and other famous dinosaurs from the eastern continent that had other species.
Interesting
That was honestly very interesting keep up the awesome work!
The moment i saw Appalachia get swallowed up i knee it was over for me. Cool video.
Water begins to rise
Florida: I’m out
Mw Ta Er rises 1m
Netherlands by eh
I just died instantly
It’s amazing that the big island of Hawaii stayed above water longer than most of the rest of the world. Mauna Kea is ridiculously tall (4,207.3 m / 13,800 ft).
"Ridiculously tall" is a bit of a stretch. It's not even in the Top 50 US peaks, and probably not in the Top 500 highest peaks on Earth.
@@JakeKoenig there are 1310 peaks above 6000m in nepal alone
@@JakeKoenig Mauna Kea is the largest mountain on earth (larger than Everest).
All mountains will flatten out over time by erosion.
@@JakeKoenig just because a mountain is mostly underwater doesn't mean it's not the tallest
If Everest was this way it's height not changed at all and was partially underwater it wouldn't be considered tall either
There is one problem: A area under the actual sealevel will not fill automatically.
There are a lot of areas under the 0 Level at the moment that are not filled with ocean water.
Death valley or the death sea.
Caspian Sea
@@Владимир_Питун Заметил какой низкий Урал.
How much does the sea level need to rise, to overflow into the Caspian & Dead Seas ?
Indio, CA is 90+ feet below sea level in the Coachella valley Southwest of Palm springs, CA. Let's not forget the Salton Sea...
Not if it's inland .
Did you take into account the movement of the tectonic plates ? Maybe the continents drift to form new ones ? Even if all the ice bergs melt, there would still be land.
I have a suggestion to keep you all occupied: learn to swim.
I already learned how
ok😂
Why not to improve the scuba attitude?
TOOL REFERENCE how did anyone not get this?
See you down in Arizona bay@@LLCDG
Imagine you relocated at the top of mount everest and you see the sea reaching you
Elon Musk found it 😂😂😂 mission mars
Actually, maybe some Nepalese communities eventually have this exact situation happen to them in the span of maybe 10k years in the future. That would be terrifying to hear recountings of it generation by generation and yours is the last one to tell the tale. Of course by then I would hope we'd be far from Earth and on another, much better off planet.
1:43 water rises by 1000m
Most of the world is under water
Greenland: " I don't feel any different"
also greenland at 2100m:i dont feel so good
netherlands : oh no i disappear at 10m
maldives: *oh hello there*
Something interesting that the data isnt accounting for is the rebound effect. As the water enters certain areas it is pretty heavy but when its ice its super heavy.
True, but that takes many thousands of years. Much of North America is still rebounding from the last Ice Age. That's why sea level doesn't appear to be rising here than in many other areas.
OMG... that's sooooo accurate, I Live In Australia, and the higher mountain (1000m) and the details are so precise. Well Done.
Same mate!
5:00 , nice seeing all the forgotten continents arise up.
4:21 doggerland:i am always come back
Wow!!! Africa seems to be the last continent to start having major changes.... I forgot the name of the movie but at the last part of the movie it shows the survivors in very large ships heading towards Africa.
2012?
Was it 2017 movie called Ocean Rising?
It is 2012
if anything, africa is the happiest when sea levels start rising :>
2012 cape of good hope
If, as someone said, the maximum rise would be about 68 meters, then I would assume that much of Antarctica and Greenland would be uncovered by ice yet still possibly under water. I would like to see a simulation of that as well.
I’ve read about 100 meters
For me its crazy how Chile survives a lot even tho its literally a really big coast
Chile is largely located along the Andes, which is a high mountain range. The peaks of those mountains would likely help the Chilean government survive the massive floods, probably making it the last pre-flooding civilization on Earth realistically. While China and India have the Himalayas, the majority of their population and governmental centers aren't close enough to the mountains, while Chile's are. All in all, that is how Chile MIGHT survive the end of the world, if they don't collapse from riots and the like before the floods even happen
@@oi-cj1pzbig flood
Chile has the highest average land above sea level in America, 1871 m. And also many peaks above 6000 m.
ackchually in this scenario chile is not protected by the andes, which is in its "back". the protection comes from the lesser known "coastal range"
Así es, la primera gran barrera natural de Chile es la poco conocida "Cordillera de la costa" que en su punto más alto pasa los 3 mil metros de altura en el norte del país.
Many thanks for this 3D globe !
The second part is something I have never expected or seen before. Really interesting!
2:49
live footage of me drinking all the sea water (i am very thirsty)
then panicking because seawater makes you thirstier
SLORP SLORP SLORP
Majority of the world: submerged
Santiago, Nairobi, Tehran, and Kathmandu: *(sips) This is fine!*
Chile loved the ocean so much that the ocean returned the favor by sparing Santiago till the end. And on the bright side, at least we survived a bit longer than the southern government
sashei shi e lé
@@yordanespinoza8566 shi shi shi
Santiago is only 500 m above the sea level. La Paz, Quito and Bogota are much higher. Even Brasilia is at higher altitude.
Хотел поинтересоваться: а у нас есть столькотводы на планете, чтобы уровень моря поднялся аж на 5 км?
The great lakes were gone WAY too early in the dry up period, at ~50 Meters (~150 feet) I know from sonar fishing that they are EXTREMELY deep from glacial carving, we used to have sonar returns never come back in relatively close to shore areas with sonar set at the ~250 foot range (~83 meter).
My home state looks weird at 0m
Great. Now i want to rewatch Waterworld
As someone on Vancouver island the fact that almost nothing happened to our part of the map for a while made me feel safe
Victoria
Wow, this was both incredibly interesting and all around terrifying.
At 4:13 u can see a land between uk and denmark. Its original name is doggerland and it flooded over time
5:17 1000m
5:31 2000m
5:39 3000m
5:50 4000m
6:00 5000m
6:06 6000m
6:11 7000m
6:13 8km
6:15 9km
10000km
こういう時に流れるBGMはなんか心に来る
スマブラforのレインボーロードとマジカント足して割った感じ
Most of these sea level simulations I've seen seem to assume that if sea level was at exactly the same level it is today, large swathes of the Caspian that are verifiably not flooded would be flooded. I wonder if there's any out there that take any factors other than terrain height into consideration.
Would humanity survive this happening, in the same scale of time as it happens in the video? If so, how far back would we be set in terms of technology and population?
No
For the first one, kinda. If enough diving equipment is either salvaged or saved from before the floods in working condition, then people could scavenge for resources to rebuild the large rafts that humanity likely lives on. Fish could provide food, and even limited farming could occur if they had the raft space. However, with rising sea levels, the atmosphere would be compressed into a space exactly 8848m smaller than before, and since phytoplankton now have a lot more room to breed, its unlikely that humans and other animals would survive the higher concentrations of oxygen alone, even without considering the atmospheric pressure. And once all the creatures that feed off of oxygen and produce carbon dioxide are gone, there wouldn't be any CO2 left for plants to subside on, leaving all life on Earth dead. Well, maybe fish and other water based organisms could survive, but I dunno.
And the second event, no chance at all. Without water, there are no more phytoplankton, and no more humans either. The only sources of H2O of any kind would be located deep within the Earths crust, maybe even down in the mantle where even the most robust of modern submersibles wouldn't be able to endure the extreme heat and pressure. After this, Earth would look something like Mars, only a lot warmer due to the proximity to the sun. Without any water, there are no organisms of any kind. Even in some kind of super-plant that was dwelling in some forgotten cave would die, since the carbon dioxide produced by living creatures would've been long gone. Maybe there are some pockets of CO2 left dotted here and there that seeped up from the cracked and dry ground, but that would only last for so long before it ran out.
All in all, both mass-extinction events either kill almost all land-based organisms at best, or all life in general, period. And I haven't even taken into account what all the things that humans left behind would do to the planet. Nuclear reactors being flooded is one thing, but if they dried up, then prepare for a nuclear winter where the snow is made from frozen nitrogen and dead cells, because patrolling the Mojave sure will make you wish for one.
But HEY, thats just a Theory, A FILM THEORY!!
Thanks for reading . . .
Tenía miedo en general acerca de la subida del nivel del mar, pero me quedo un poco más tranquilo viendo que donde vivo el proceso tardaría bastante.
Lo malo serían los refugiados climáticos.
yo soy de cusco, los andes del Perú supongo por la altitud no nos pasara nada XD
Decho vi por un sitio de Google, que si toda la Antártida se descongelara, el nivel del mar solamente subiría unos 7 metros (no es mucho a comparación de los edificios y la tierra en general)
Tranquilo amigo, vas a estar muerto cuando el mar llegue a esos niveles xd
@@tObIIII_ no,en realidad subiría 68 metros xdd
I would love to see this synchronized to the predicted tectonic plate movement as well. Great work!
There are mountains in the sahara?
Notice the crazy speed at which Florida withers away. This is why it's a huge mistake to live there long term. All it takes is the most modest of increases and the whole of the southern coasts on both sides becomes a loss. Central Florida and the Panhandle will take longer but they won't be far behind.
As for the rest of the world, it's needless to say that ALL sea coastlines are also at sea level, with varying degrees of grade but all of them will be consumed at the same time, forcing human activity ever further inland. Rivers and deltas will likewise be inundated as a new normal level pushes them back and back. Eventually, the vast majority of the human population becomes displaced since the vast majority live close to water. Meanwhile, the further inland you go, the more struggle you encounter with droughts, poor land and lack of misc resources becoming an increasing problem. You're damned from within and damned from without, two unlivable forces crushing hundreds of millions into an ever more narrow band of survivability.
We should have paid attention several decades ago. Now we pay for that.
Edit: Another thing people don't seem to even consider let alone discuss with any importance... Submerged civlilzation does not just go away. What happens to thousands of miles of human infrastructure when it is in constant exposure to salt water? It rots away, exactly. It's not just concrete, steel, wood and sheet rock you have to worry about. It's all the other things we produce and store. Chemicals of all kinds, waste materials of all kinds, misc materials of all kinds that are stable until you throw them in the ocean, mass losses of livestock like what happened during Hurricane Florence, millions of coffins popping up out of submerged cemetaries, the list of things that will end up in the ocean is LENGTHY and horrible. This mass dissolution of lost human civilization into the oceans will massively compound our situation.
The same goes for the Netherlands too.
@@TheShadowBall16 Yep the crazy part is that anything that is already below sea level becomes SUPER vulnerable to sudden inundation. You'll see this play out as the rise actually begins to threaten low lying places. They'll scramble to create complex wall and pump systems which then need to ABSOLUTELY be maintained on ever dwindling resources, then one little slip and boom there it all goes. That's what happened with Katrina and New Orleans.
Genial, siempre me ha gustado imaginar ambos escenarios
Excellent video!
4:33 is what the world looked like during the Ice Age 12,000 years ago
00:29 is what the world would look like if all the ice melted.
very cool! thank you very much for making this
The simulation of a global deluge is interesting, even in real life it surpassed and tripled the level of evil 3 times more. To such a point of disappearance the highest mountain in the world and modified relief and geography (atmospheric, terrestrial, aerial, maritime, fluvial) upon reaching its current state.
you believe in noah's flood?
5:39
海抜が3000m下がる→海嶺が出てくる→プレートテクトニクスを行うための水が無くなる→プレートテクトニクスが止まる→地球磁場が消える→宇宙線に晒される→人が死ぬ
それって…これ?
ua-cam.com/video/GPdLEKzHd1g/v-deo.html
800 years ago during the void century. the water level rose by 200meters.
Never been happier to live near Denali in Alaska! I'd get waterfront property lol.
Damn this video is soooooo cool!!
It also shows that with a drop of 150 meters in sea levels due to glacier ice, how easily early humans were basically able to walk to any continent on earth without getting their feet wet! So cool!
What? You're an American and you can understand a world map? That's more rare than a world flood.
Mega respect to the guy who was able to unfold the planet, turned on the water reservoir and then used the pump to suck it back.
Turkey was a champ, it took 1k+ meters just for there to be a serious effect on it
This looks like the 1990's predictions of 2020.
Interesting.
No. If all of Earth's ice melted, the sea level would rise ~68 meters (which would be catastrophic), but not thousands of meters. Scientists in the 90s obviously already knew this.
This is really amazing. How did you do this simulation? I'd like to learn.
By now, I'll save this video. It's very good...
Amazing how quickly the North and Baltic seas disappear with the water drop. Same for the Arctic ocean, it's gone after 400 meters... And then nothing moves until we're at 4k meters under sea level 😊
Note to self: Don’t let the sea level rise by 5000 meters.
I love how before it even starts the Caspian Sea begins expanding
2:00 Antarcica - best place for live!
Everest be like: 💀💀
Nice video!
Which software have you used for the simulation, if you don't mind me asking?
The terrain data uses "SRTM30", and the program is self-made.
@@gpsc thank you! Very good output for a self-made program. Can I ask you to show a simulation of the Mediterranean and Black Sea regions (+/- 150m) in one of your upcoming videos?
When you have the time of course!
Keep up the great work!
@@gpsc btw I am doing some research on my own regarding mesolithic and neolithic culturee in the Balkan region, from some 12, 000 years ago and I have very good reason to believe that sea levels in thr Mediterranean and Black Sea were much lower than they are now, 30-40m at least. But I don't know how would that affect all the sea basins, so that's the reason I asked you. 😉
For now, it's difficult to deal with. sorry. The accuracy of the topographical data is also rough, so I don't think it is suitable for research purposes in each region.
@@gpsc no problem. Thank you for your time!
Представил оба варианта развития событий, жутко до мурашек
да. С 0:41 до 1:03 - затопление Москвы, столицы РФ.
@@Andrey495340also Soviet
@@Andrey495340а это тут причем идиот?
Brilliant! Thanks. It would be great if we could see each region a little bit larger.