That Time Oxygen Almost Killed Everything

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,1 тис.

  • @iafozzac
    @iafozzac 7 років тому +4162

    Yeah, yeah, life is much more beautiful and all that but let's admit it, a planet covered in blood-red oceans is metal as hell

    • @niallreid7664
      @niallreid7664 7 років тому +254

      When she said the oceans went blood red I heard Nathan Explosion at the back of my head saying "Brutal."

    • @Edgewalker001
      @Edgewalker001 7 років тому +161

      Technically, rust as hell =p

    • @carlgman7420
      @carlgman7420 7 років тому +58

      Reminds me too much of DOOM.

    • @vincentfalcone8802
      @vincentfalcone8802 6 років тому +40

      I KNOW WHO YOU AAAAAARRRRE!
      -William Murderface, Blood Ocean

    • @Deastrow
      @Deastrow 6 років тому +33

      Literally

  • @meow9426
    @meow9426 7 років тому +1974

    The title sounds like a story the elements would tell at thanksgiving
    “Hey, Oxygen.”
    *”What now, carbon?”*
    “Hehehe...”
    *”What?!”*
    “Remember that time you almost killed everything?”
    *”Shut up.”*

    • @dpatrickst170
      @dpatrickst170 7 років тому +83

      Actually it is still killing us. Not as fast and not as obviously, but it does.

    • @yeehaw289
      @yeehaw289 6 років тому +52

      dpatrickst170
      Yep, oxygen produced free radicals, which can damahe DNA, and cause cancer

    • @ΠανωραίαΓιαννούτσου
      @ΠανωραίαΓιαννούτσου 6 років тому +7

      @@yeehaw289 Are you sure about that?

    • @peanutcruncher1349
      @peanutcruncher1349 5 років тому

      @@fahmieyzs engrish

    • @guifdcanalli
      @guifdcanalli 5 років тому +57

      It should end with carbon saying "well now is my turn of almos killing everything hehe"

  • @leiaandjocelyn7232
    @leiaandjocelyn7232 6 років тому +1142

    I bet all the other planets are like OMG Earth keeps dying her water..first green then red now blue like what is going on?!?

    • @midnightgear2616
      @midnightgear2616 5 років тому +36

      Like hair

    • @loog8621
      @loog8621 5 років тому +54

      Midnight Gear
      What a great intelligent observation that none of 123 other people made

    • @DreckbobBratpfanne
      @DreckbobBratpfanne 5 років тому +77

      Seems like earth was a punk in it's youth. xD

    • @MrKross-tc9yy
      @MrKross-tc9yy 5 років тому +5

      Edgy

    • @thatone646
      @thatone646 5 років тому +90

      iTs NoT a PhAsE mIlKy wAy

  • @merubindono
    @merubindono 7 років тому +480

    What a time to be alive.

    • @jeanbarrios4217
      @jeanbarrios4217 6 років тому +28

      Literally.

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 6 років тому +18

      i would have loved to be one of those bacteria, or maybe i was, who knows

    • @chelseacomps829
      @chelseacomps829 6 років тому +7

      Luis Sierra You wouldn’t even be able to see the world lol

    • @driversetup6483
      @driversetup6483 6 років тому +4

      Luis Sierra you wouldn’t even be conscious lol.

    • @phabidz
      @phabidz 6 років тому +1

      @@LuisSierra42 maybe you were your essence to be exact

  • @AshenDruid
    @AshenDruid 5 років тому +739

    Earth: takes a billion years to form an ozone layer
    Humans: puts a hole through it in less then a thousand

    • @darrylweathers7361
      @darrylweathers7361 5 років тому +31

      Earth already has a hole in the ozone layer its called the northern and southern lights.

    • @ryrysofly09
      @ryrysofly09 5 років тому +85

      Darryl Weathers that doesn’t mean that human didn’t also put a hole through it in less than a thousand.

    • @darrylweathers7361
      @darrylweathers7361 5 років тому +21

      @@ryrysofly09 wasnt any humans on mars or venus either. Didnt stop them from turning into a barren wasteland and a hellhole.

    • @ryrysofly09
      @ryrysofly09 5 років тому +65

      Darryl Weathers that doesn’t mean that humans didn’t put a hole in the ozone layer in less than 1000 years.

    • @rontayan
      @rontayan 5 років тому +80

      @@darrylweathers7361 The northern and southern lights are not holes. They are disturbances from solar radiation. It doesn't penetrate or cause holes in the ozone, it just distortion patterns that diminish after the event passes.

  • @Phlebas
    @Phlebas 7 років тому +560

    One of my fantasies would be to have a time machine (with a decent life support system) to visit Earth at any stage in its history. Earth was a rocky and volcanic hellhole, a hot green water world, a hot red water world and a giant snowball. These sound like cool sci-fi locations for an epic space opera and it delights my inner geek.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 7 років тому +45

      Animals of the Cambrian era are more alien than anything I've ever seen in big sci fi movies. Opabinia is my favorite.

    • @fernandodealbapineyro4667
      @fernandodealbapineyro4667 7 років тому +5

      That would be most of people's dreams, including me. yet you need to travel faster than light do to it. but it doesn't means that is impossible. they have proved time travel is "mathematically possible", not because we don't create time machines means that is impossible. but really hard.

    • @asdf30111
      @asdf30111 7 років тому +15

      Faster then light travel making you go back in time is a fictional idea. From the observer's point of view if an object traveled faster then light towards them it would seem like the object is going back in time. They will see the object arrive 1st and then "travel" backwards as earlier and earlier light hits the viewer. These is disregarding all the weird things that will happen with ftl travel but going back in time is not one of the things even though to an observer it looks like the object split into two, one object that traveled towards them and one object that is traveling away from them and going "back" in time.
      However, if you could go faster then light, you can still travel away from Earth to see what it looked like in the past. So do not be too disappointed.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 7 років тому +3

      FTL must allow time travel to be actual FTL. Please ask physicists to explain it to you.

    • @asdf30111
      @asdf30111 7 років тому +4

      If FTL travel does anything to time you won't travel backwards in time, rather you will travel forward in imaginary time.

  • @cyclingcycles7953
    @cyclingcycles7953 7 років тому +602

    Weather update:
    Meteors are falling from the sky.
    Weather update:
    The floor is no longer lava.
    Weather update:
    ... It's raining...

    • @trent800
      @trent800 5 років тому +60

      Flooding alert:
      the entire world is now a ocean
      Volcano alert:
      thats land

    • @cameronallen5995
      @cameronallen5995 5 років тому +30

      The sun is a deadly lazer

    • @Sgrunterundt
      @Sgrunterundt 5 років тому +29

      @@cameronallen5995
      Not anymore there's a blanket

    • @cringeusername9961
      @cringeusername9961 4 роки тому +11

      oh look a place to live! no they dont have legs

    • @orionthewildhunt9173
      @orionthewildhunt9173 4 роки тому +3

      *Quotes intensifies*

  • @DontMockMySmock
    @DontMockMySmock 7 років тому +2225

    THE SUN IS A DEADLY LAZER
    not anymore, there's a blanket!

    • @olliebear535
      @olliebear535 7 років тому +13

      DontMockMySmock *laser

    • @calebr7199
      @calebr7199 7 років тому +96

      *Lazer

    • @KhanhNguyen-rf2nf
      @KhanhNguyen-rf2nf 7 років тому +55

      Nicholas Bohmer he was referring to a viral video called, "History of the world, I guess."

    • @minifridge337
      @minifridge337 7 років тому +81

      DontMockMySmock hey, we could make a religion outta this!

    • @pedroscoponi4905
      @pedroscoponi4905 7 років тому +24

      Exactly what I thought when ozone layer was mentioned. Praise the Wurtz!

  • @kamelalex8336
    @kamelalex8336 5 років тому +456

    When she said “they were basically being suffocated by their own waste” I laughed, because that’s basically what humans are doing

    • @JimmyMon666
      @JimmyMon666 5 років тому +28

      Not really, we still have plenty of oxygen, and that's in no danger. And there's no reason we can't survive global warming either. These doom and gloom people say global warming will kill everything forget how life flourished back on Earth when CO2 levels were above 400ppm. But things will get nastier with more disease, more storms and higher mortality rate all around.

    • @f.a.458
      @f.a.458 4 роки тому +41

      @@JimmyMon666 Hence being "suffocated by our own waste"... Even if some of us make it through the other end alive, humanity as we know it will still perish 🤷

    • @daylightbright7675
      @daylightbright7675 4 роки тому +17

      Patterns, patterns. We evolved to seek them for a reason. Why? Because observing them works pretty well 😅 We're going to kill off a huge amount of species and probably most (if not all) of our population, then everything will adjust and bounce back.

    • @doctorcrafts
      @doctorcrafts 2 роки тому

      And UA-cam comments

    • @Sus-nr2op
      @Sus-nr2op 2 роки тому +6

      I like how Millions of people talk like there not even Humans

  • @Hypatia4242
    @Hypatia4242 6 років тому +133

    Interesting phrasing at 1:41, "when these little microbes started farting out oxygen..."

    • @topsecret1837
      @topsecret1837 4 роки тому

      One Drop
      You don’t like What? Your farts clearly smell of methane and of disturbing amounts of rotten flesh.

    • @AEARArg
      @AEARArg 4 роки тому

      I had to rewind and replay in order to make sure I didn't misheard her. Yes, she said that.

    • @rainfallen7574
      @rainfallen7574 3 роки тому

      I about spat my drink out hearing her say that

  • @Ancientlaws
    @Ancientlaws 7 років тому +2472

    for a second there i felt like a kid listening in wonder at the story of our world

  • @acapellascience
    @acapellascience 7 років тому +2117

    🎶 NOW YOU CAN EAT SUNLIGHT 🎶 using a revolutionary technique you can convert sunlight into food 🎶 TASTE THE SUNNNN ☀️

    • @gutsjoygian5634
      @gutsjoygian5634 6 років тому +77

      History of the world I guess right???

    • @frxxky5787
      @frxxky5787 6 років тому +184

      THE *SUN* IS *A* DEADLY *LAZERRRRR*

    • @SansFrancisco0
      @SansFrancisco0 6 років тому +114

      U can make religion out off this

    • @aestheticallypleasingaesth8941
      @aestheticallypleasingaesth8941 6 років тому +20

      acapellascience You can also taste rainbows. *COUGH* Skittles *COUGH* “Taste The Rainbow.”

    • @awoodenkiwitoy6293
      @awoodenkiwitoy6293 6 років тому +31

      I wonder if I can eat *BLAAAAADES of GRAAAAASSSSS*

  • @Alexaflohr
    @Alexaflohr 7 років тому +310

    You know what would be an interesting episode? Could you guys please go through the rock layers in a place with well-known strata and explain the geological periods that created them? Many people have heard that "this era happened so many years ago", but not as much "the remnants of this era can be seen so many meters down from the surface".

    • @spliter88
      @spliter88 7 років тому +33

      You're saying that like if a crash course for geologic record was a bad idea.

    • @NoraInuG
      @NoraInuG 7 років тому +9

      It might be a good idea - that way people might know what words like "Ordovician", "Hadean" and "Eocene" mean without having to enroll in a Historical Geology course at their local University.

    • @ReaperEOD
      @ReaperEOD 7 років тому +2

      This would be wonderful!

    • @alopiaspelagicus1628
      @alopiaspelagicus1628 7 років тому

      Yes please

    • @maju404
      @maju404 6 років тому

      yesssss pls

  • @eshkeitt8523
    @eshkeitt8523 6 років тому +345

    Intelligent being from the future:”that time humans almost killed everything”

    • @pphyjynx8217
      @pphyjynx8217 5 років тому +13

      almost?

    • @JimmyMon666
      @JimmyMon666 5 років тому +51

      @@pphyjynx8217 trust me, we won't kill everything. Maybe ourselves, and life will continue on after us.

    • @Kalorag
      @Kalorag 5 років тому +17

      @@JimmyMon666 never underestimate humanity's stupidity.

    • @caykroyd10
      @caykroyd10 4 роки тому +13

      @@Kalorag never underestimate stupidity's humanity

    • @vanaik
      @vanaik 4 роки тому +14

      @@caykroyd10 never humanize stupidity's underestimation

  • @TheMiels
    @TheMiels 7 років тому +756

    green oceans indicate low oxigen, oh the irony
    sorry, had to make it

    • @kennethultimate02
      @kennethultimate02 5 років тому +7

      Nice one

    • @fobbitoperator3620
      @fobbitoperator3620 5 років тому +9

      Stupid people won't get it. Thus, so few comments.
      It's nice being rare...

    • @notareallin620
      @notareallin620 5 років тому

      Lol. That's hilarious!

    • @winstonsmith11
      @winstonsmith11 5 років тому +53

      @@fobbitoperator3620 Stupid people? You're definitely not one of those people, though. Right? I'm sure there's a lot that you don't know. In reality, everyone is stupid. Just depends on the subject. Shakespeare once said, " The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool". Chew on that for a minute, smart guy.

    • @SilentKiller-fh4ev
      @SilentKiller-fh4ev 5 років тому +2

      ha
      It was a lil bit funny

  • @57hound
    @57hound 7 років тому +749

    Fascinating story, excellent presentation.

  • @SupLuiKir
    @SupLuiKir 7 років тому +465

    Why did you skip the idea that the reason life on Earth survived the Oxygen Catastrophe is because aerobic bacteria evolved before the cyanobacteria could've gone extinct. Aerobic Bacteria are able to use oxygen + eating sugars from cyanobacteria for respiration, as opposed to making sugars with carbon dioxide + sunlight to then use. The existence of both in tandem is what causes our current atmosphere to balance somewhere other than completely CO2 or completely O2.

    • @cokelackingice
      @cokelackingice 7 років тому +8

      Because science.

    • @mikicerise6250
      @mikicerise6250 7 років тому +5

      They sure took their sweet time though. ;)

    • @__prometheus__
      @__prometheus__ 7 років тому +6

      · 0xFFF1 Well Cyano Bacteria existed for only 300 million years when this was happening which possibly meant that they had a lot of work to do in using it up

    • @smithsmitherson9449
      @smithsmitherson9449 7 років тому +1

      you dont know how to cater to your audience. that is why you are confused.

    • @PoochieCollins
      @PoochieCollins 7 років тому +26

      +. 0xFFF1 : thanks for the comment. It occurred to me at the end of the video that it wasn't thoroughly explained why the oxygen didn't just continue to get greater to the point of complete mass extinction.

  • @seamuscallaghan8851
    @seamuscallaghan8851 7 років тому +378

    Always remember folks, humans aren't the first organisms whose rise resulted in a mass extinction. It's happened before, and it's happening again.
    But also know this:
    Though many things we know and love may soon come to an end, when nature finds its new equilibrium, if things go well, life may evolve to be more diverse and beautiful than ever before.

    • @Demonslayer20111
      @Demonslayer20111 7 років тому +12

      Seamus Callaghan and know this. Barring nuclear extermination, it won't happen in our lifetimes

    • @seamuscallaghan8851
      @seamuscallaghan8851 7 років тому +19

      The recovery part - sadly not. At least, not under any normal definition of lifetime. I wouldn't rule out the emergence of technologies that could indefinitely extend lifespans, store people in a dormant state for the long term, or both. The mass extinction is already very much underway though, and has been for a while. We will see that part ramp up noticeably within our lifetimes.

    • @Demonslayer20111
      @Demonslayer20111 7 років тому +9

      Seamus Callaghan not even 1 percent of species in last 150 years does not constitute a mass extinction. A good portion of those extinctions have happened without any human intervention.

    • @seamuscallaghan8851
      @seamuscallaghan8851 7 років тому +30

      Mass extinctions rarely happen in as few as 150 years. Most have taken thousands, as far as we can tell. Current extinction rates are 1000 to 10,000 times higher than normal background rates - the highest they've been since the K-T extinction. That

    • @keithdurant4570
      @keithdurant4570 7 років тому +5

      Unfortunately because of their semi-permeable skin the amphibians are on the front line...our toxins transfer directly through their skin and cause horrific genetic mutations.

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect 4 роки тому +31

    I love how in the last few decades the story of "snowball earth" has grown from a little fringe theory and I've got to watch more and more details cone together.

  • @moofymoo
    @moofymoo 7 років тому +150

    10'000'000 years later: "That time plastic almost killed everything"

    • @El1society
      @El1society 4 роки тому +5

      Ha we won’t be around by then

    • @ozgursaydir
      @ozgursaydir 4 роки тому +3

      @@El1society it's amazing to think how rare intelligent life is yet how delicate it is. we need a way out of this planet before we go extinct.

    • @damienthonk1506
      @damienthonk1506 3 роки тому +1

      Plastics? No. Other human pollution? Also no, but they will likely cause an anthropecene extinction event.

  • @Banditomojado
    @Banditomojado 7 років тому +18

    I've enjoyed every episode so far. I would really like you to discuss the evolution of grasses. I remember my introduction to agriculture professor pointing out that they haven't been around all that long. I always try to imagine a world without grass and what that would really look like.
    Also, as a geologist, thank you for talking about BIFs. They're the coolest.

    • @LincolnDWard
      @LincolnDWard 3 роки тому +2

      A brief answer to "what would that look like": lots and lots of ferns and other small leafy ground cover.

  • @LeatherNeck1833
    @LeatherNeck1833 6 років тому +25

    Lol, I turned into my long past 10 y/o self when she said, "...farted out oxygen."!
    I love how this channel saves the "big words" for naming names and the rest of the time uses a language all ages can understand and relate too. :)

  • @Looserkid13
    @Looserkid13 7 років тому +277

    The more i know about earth, the more i realize how rare it will be to find life on another planet.

    • @Bryan-Hensley
      @Bryan-Hensley 6 років тому +33

      Yeah you only have several trillion trillion chances of life being out there somewhere else

    • @slinkerdeer
      @slinkerdeer 5 років тому +38

      The more and more I study life and how incredibly tough it is, AND the fact that life *terraformed* this planet and enabled life as we know it. The more I realize how easy it would be to start elsewhere in the universe, and in no small degree

    • @septianrico4141
      @septianrico4141 5 років тому +4

      Sometimes it makes u wonder, where did its all started ? Does unbiological thing enable life or did life actually is not only the concept that we know. Does inanimate things actually has life, omg my brain :((

    • @gabrielsoares8366
      @gabrielsoares8366 5 років тому +13

      @@slinkerdeer think you should study more then. The chances of the existence of life at some point in time in another planet is veeeery slim and the chances of it actualy surviving is almost to none.

    • @stefthorman8548
      @stefthorman8548 5 років тому +2

      Septian Rico Hernawan life is organic, rocks don’t life, inanimate things life coral and sea shells do.

  • @durpddurke4633
    @durpddurke4633 7 років тому +695

    To think, your average houseplant could have wiped out millions of lifeforms......

    • @MrBronkz
      @MrBronkz 6 років тому +90

      always knew that bean plant I had on my kitchen cabinet as a kid wanted to kill me!

    • @arianna2684
      @arianna2684 6 років тому +4

      Dang I never knew my elephant ear plant is so dangerous

    • @giovannahiggins5903
      @giovannahiggins5903 6 років тому +2

      Da Dragon Durp I SEE YOU EVERY WHERE

    • @elirane85
      @elirane85 6 років тому +4

      So maybe M Night Shyamalan was on to something with "The happening"? :)

    • @shotgunman1000
      @shotgunman1000 6 років тому

      Well after all that testing it better wipe out milions!

  • @bellamckinnon8655
    @bellamckinnon8655 4 роки тому +9

    This channel is just so fascinating. I love that I have the opportunity to watch an Eons video at any point of the day, and that I can learn so many things I don’t get a chance to while at school. Thanks so much for teaching me new things every day!

  • @ABaumstumpf
    @ABaumstumpf 7 років тому +82

    "That Time Oxygen Almost Killed Everything"
    I would rearrange this to -
    "That Time Oxygen killed almost everything"
    Cause it didn't just "almost kill", oxygen killed a lot and almost everything.

    • @martinivers489
      @martinivers489 5 років тому +7

      I understand it in a way that life itself came close to its end, so the original word order is more fitting.

    • @jurajvivana
      @jurajvivana 4 роки тому

      THIS

  • @ln14517
    @ln14517 7 років тому +676

    If the ocean was green, and what color was the sky? 1:08

    • @tiagotiagot
      @tiagotiagot 7 років тому +288

      I think the atmosphere was still made of mostly nitrogen like today, it was probably already blue (cyan, to be precise).

    • @patstaysuckafreeboss8006
      @patstaysuckafreeboss8006 7 років тому +19

      MakoRuu
      I hope you're trolling

    • @patstaysuckafreeboss8006
      @patstaysuckafreeboss8006 7 років тому +2

      MakoRuu
      Either that or you responded to a comment that someone deleted

    • @niramay8899
      @niramay8899 7 років тому

      Luis Navas I

    • @thesevensoul8221
      @thesevensoul8221 7 років тому +4

      Luis Navas yellow or same as green

  • @marteenyo
    @marteenyo 5 років тому +70

    Her: imagine dying crushed by your own waste
    Humanity: heh... imagine that...

  • @frankalvinbaguio9146
    @frankalvinbaguio9146 5 років тому +13

    "Things just got to get worse, beofre they get better."
    And that has become my new motto

  • @li-lan5776
    @li-lan5776 5 років тому +130

    Climate change deniers: "little humans couldn't possibly be having such a drastic effect on the planet"
    Microscopic bacteria: *"I'm about to ruin this man's whole career"*

    • @oldtimergaming9514
      @oldtimergaming9514 4 роки тому +3

      "Climate change deniers", Snotty words from so called intelligent people determined to prove they are right at any cost. But hey, get rid of your computer, phone, car and anything else and I will join you in misery in a cave you twat.

    • @li-lan5776
      @li-lan5776 4 роки тому +1

      @Dixie Ten Broeck we may never no ;)

  • @CAcationu2
    @CAcationu2 7 років тому +11

    So glad you covered this! This is one of my favorite stories from Earth's history and who doesn't like Iron Banded Formations?

  • @jkross9432
    @jkross9432 6 років тому +18

    After watching this, i got a goosbump and it feels like Earth is a living organism.

  • @vigilantsycamore8750
    @vigilantsycamore8750 7 років тому +22

    *Oceans turn blood red*
    Me: Dammit Moses!

  • @IslandInsanity
    @IslandInsanity 3 роки тому +3

    I can’t even tell you how much I love this channel :)

  • @marissaojeda7517
    @marissaojeda7517 7 років тому +9

    This is what makes me believe that life on different planets don't have to have the same chemistry as Earth for there to be life. Earth wasn't always covered in Carbon Dioxide and Oxygen.

    • @spindash64
      @spindash64 5 років тому +4

      Marissa Ojeda
      I do think that complex life would probably require a similarly powerful energy source to O2, however. Aerobic respiration produces several times more energy than anaerobic processes, so without it, life would have to run on much thriftier energy strategies, possibly forbidding the development of multicellular life

  • @AlexisKende108
    @AlexisKende108 7 років тому +22

    This episode took my BREATH away!
    Ok I'll take my leave.

  • @houston137
    @houston137 7 років тому +197

    I like how she says the time line like 2 millon years is nothing.

    • @rafaelalodio5116
      @rafaelalodio5116 7 років тому +96

      In comparison with the whole existence of universe or even earth it is really nothing.

    • @shpageltheduck6098
      @shpageltheduck6098 7 років тому +4

      Miss Houston she said billion

    • @TriggaHappy00121213
      @TriggaHappy00121213 7 років тому +19

      Earth is like what 4.5Billion years old? so ye 2million is basically nothing.

    • @AngryKittens
      @AngryKittens 6 років тому +4

      It kinda is. In terms of how old the Earth is.

    • @jasoncougar194
      @jasoncougar194 6 років тому

      To think we have any kind of a grip on how long any of this has been around is nuts.

  • @germanjimenez5336
    @germanjimenez5336 7 років тому +72

    Can you make a video about the time there were giant insects, and how would an average mammal would fare in that environment?

    • @seamuscallaghan8851
      @seamuscallaghan8851 7 років тому +2

      It would be an interesting thought experiment, though mammals hadn't evolved yet.

    • @april8it
      @april8it 7 років тому +2

      German Jimenez THERE WERE GIANT INSECTS ?! I really want to believe you but I'm afraid to Google it because I surely I'd be disappointed.

    • @seamuscallaghan8851
      @seamuscallaghan8851 7 років тому +16

      April.6_6 Dragonflies the size of eagles, and just as predatory. Millipedes 10 feet in length. Those were the arthropods of the Carboniferous.

    • @april8it
      @april8it 7 років тому +1

      Wow. That is SO COOL. What did the Carboniferous dragonflies eat? Amphibians?

    • @seamuscallaghan8851
      @seamuscallaghan8851 7 років тому +10

      Some, probably, as well as primitive reptiles and other insects.

  • @turpialito
    @turpialito 5 років тому +2

    One of the finest channels on UA-cam. Sincere kudos.

  • @Meowzaz6
    @Meowzaz6 7 років тому +10

    Great work!You've earned a subscriber!

  • @mustafaaalmosawi
    @mustafaaalmosawi 7 років тому +36

    Can we use the same Cyanobacteria to reduce CO2?

    • @faceoctopus4571
      @faceoctopus4571 7 років тому +24

      I don't think that would be terribly different than using some other photosynthetic organisms like algae or plants to reduce CO2.

    • @Banditomojado
      @Banditomojado 7 років тому +26

      M Mustafa one of the best ways to reduce CO2 is through carbon sequestration. Either through pumping it deep into the earth or through more natural methods. I like the idea of creating and restoring more wetlands. They do an incredible job of trapping CO2. Sadly we've converted a lot of them into crop land since that soil is also nutrient dense.

    • @mustafaaalmosawi
      @mustafaaalmosawi 7 років тому +1

      Thanks Dave.

    • @SuperDipMonster
      @SuperDipMonster 7 років тому +25

      We could plant trees and stop chopping down all the ones that are there.

    • @faceoctopus4571
      @faceoctopus4571 7 років тому +6

      SuperDipMonster I think I read that chopping them down and then treating them and using them in buildings might help, under the grounds that dead trees biodegrade in a fashion that release green house gasses. Of course you probably want to put more trees where you chopped down trees, and I'm not sure how much you can do this sort of thing before the soil nutrition becomes a concern.

  • @carringtonmiles4489
    @carringtonmiles4489 7 років тому +34

    Suffocated by thier own waste🤔 Sounds familiar.. Like humans

    • @kkrvsh
      @kkrvsh 4 роки тому

      funny i laugh

  • @juanmarcuslopez3018
    @juanmarcuslopez3018 6 років тому +8

    Sometimes, things gotta get worse before they get better- best quote I've heard so far!!

  • @indrajrosandi1806
    @indrajrosandi1806 6 років тому +18

    She explains everything lightly and by the simplest of words. Love it!

  • @Leto85
    @Leto85 7 років тому +4

    Brilliantly done. I really like how you bring all this awesome information with such an enthousiasm that it's contagious.

  • @vanaik
    @vanaik 4 роки тому +4

    3:41 "They needed CO2 to survive. So they were basically being suffocated by their own waste (oxygen)" I'm sure there is a lesson here for humanity but I'm not the one to figure it out.

  • @TheRealGigachad1848
    @TheRealGigachad1848 4 роки тому +10

    "Too much of a good thing can ruin everything for everybody."
    Maybe I'm just too good for the world.

  • @PMAngst
    @PMAngst 7 років тому +14

    No doubt. One of the best channels

  • @lukeh140
    @lukeh140 7 років тому +7

    It's crazy to think that there are so many planets out there that we could have found already but it's just in one of these stages from a pic it would look lifeless

    • @iamtenzin4409
      @iamtenzin4409 7 років тому +1

      Luke - Or consider that life might have formed....and been snuffed out. And we'll never know.

  • @Loftur1172
    @Loftur1172 6 років тому +1

    Okay I love PBS Eons! How had I not heard of it earlier?

  • @Dunkle0steus
    @Dunkle0steus 7 років тому +25

    Wait, so you guys said that the early earth had very low oxygen concentrations and because of that, Iron rusted green more commonly than red. If that's the case, why is Mars red? Wouldn't you need a lot of oxygen (like when life created it on Earth) to produce all of that red rust?

    • @scaper8
      @scaper8 5 років тому +32

      Remember that rust, typical red rust anyway, is iron _oxide._ There _was_ plenty of free oxygen on Mars. It has mostly escaped into space as Mars's atmosphere wasted away or was trapped in the rocks and dirt as iron oxide, i.e. rust. Thus a red, and now free oxygen deficient, Mars.

    • @eindrideslife96
      @eindrideslife96 5 років тому +1

      shut up, *placoderm*

  • @tkdyo
    @tkdyo 7 років тому +41

    what caused the glaciation to end? The forming of the ozone layer?

    • @marvintpandroid2213
      @marvintpandroid2213 7 років тому +6

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huronian_glaciation

    • @tkdyo
      @tkdyo 7 років тому +13

      Thank you, but all the wiki says is that volcanic activity would replenish some of the CO2. But it doesn't state that it was enough to end the age. It would imply, but doesnt state, that eventually enough of the oxygen producing bacteria died so that C02 from volcanic activity could catch up with the bacteria and even things out.
      Either way, probably should have been a part of the video.

    • @azmanabdula
      @azmanabdula 7 років тому +1

      Considering all the extra tension these layers of ice would cause on the crust, volcanic activity would probably increase....
      Redistribute the weight of the entire planet....

    • @moiquiregardevideo
      @moiquiregardevideo 7 років тому +9

      The snow/ice became dirty with volcanic ashes over time, thus absorbing more sun energy. Some volcano where ejecting CO2, helping creating a welcome heat blanket

    • @Mostlyharmless1985
      @Mostlyharmless1985 7 років тому +1

      We don't know! That's why it wasn't in the video, the thawing of snowball earth is a bit of a mystery. I find "volcanic activity" to be the geologists go-to as to why something happened, i think it's their way of thinking of something plausible to make the idiot asking hard questions to go away so they can figure out "important stuff"

  • @viccolasvic9461
    @viccolasvic9461 7 років тому +83

    Microscopic plankton friggin terraformed the earth??

  • @herohamza1196
    @herohamza1196 3 роки тому +1

    "That Time Oxygen Almost Killed Everything
    "
    Arthropods: you are wrong I am getting stronger

  • @RealU178
    @RealU178 4 роки тому +13

    Did earth's hydrosphere, atmosphere, and geosphere coevolve with earth's biosphere?

  • @DracarmenWinterspring
    @DracarmenWinterspring 7 років тому +19

    0:29 - wait what, how could there be so much less dry land than now? The planet didn't lose water, did it? Or was the land much smoother, so a thinner layer of water could cover most of it?

    • @ProfessorEGadd
      @ProfessorEGadd 7 років тому +21

      I didn't understand that either. The best I can find is that there is some debate amongst geologists about how and when the continents appeared. The Oxygen catastrophe occurred at the end of the Archean Eon, which was the first eon after the Earth's solid crust formed. Some geologists hold that the continental crust floated to the Earth's surface during the Hadean Eon, while the Earth was still entirely molten. However, other geologists maintain that the continents were nucleated over oceanic hotspots only after the end of the Hadean.
      Either way the continental crust, being denser than water, could only emerge above the surface of the sea once it was thick enough to float high out of the denser mantle. This process would have to take some time, so might have been still on-going throughout the Archean. Unfortunately (but perhaps not coincidentally) no known rocks are now to have survived from the Hadean to now, so a clearer answer is some way away.

    • @DracarmenWinterspring
      @DracarmenWinterspring 7 років тому +4

      Hmm...I don't know any more about the planet's geology than what I've picked up from channels like this. The way I see it, if the amount of water on Earth only ever increased (from meteorite impacts?), and if as you say the crust was solid at this point, and if gravity pulls water towards the center of the planet everywhere so it mostly ends up in the "lowest" areas, then geometrically the planet would have to be smoother to have a larger % of the surface covered by water than now. Am I missing something in that regard?

    • @DracarmenWinterspring
      @DracarmenWinterspring 7 років тому +2

      Unless...maybe some water getting mixed into the layers under the crust during subduction, so that the surface actually loses water over time?

    • @moiquiregardevideo
      @moiquiregardevideo 7 років тому +1

      Water is made of the lightest element, hydrogen. We receive extraterrestrial water every year. If hydrogen would not oxydize, it would leave the planet as helium do. Life need so many elements, including the dangerously reactive phosphorus for DNA... Life took so long to reach our level because a delicate balance slowly established

    • @Vidiri
      @Vidiri 7 років тому +20

      We would have a lot less dry land if all the glaciers melt. Right now, a lot of that water is at our poles in the form of ice.

  • @whoeveriam0iam14222
    @whoeveriam0iam14222 7 років тому +13

    oxygen is really dangerous yet there are people that inhale it daily. don't do drugs, kids

  • @Ett.Gammalt.Bergtroll
    @Ett.Gammalt.Bergtroll 5 років тому +6

    Earth: Covered-in an never ending blood-red ocean.
    Nathan Explosion: Brütal.

  • @Penguin_Tree
    @Penguin_Tree 7 років тому +2

    this is the type of stuff that just shows how difficult it must be for complex life to get started. people always worry about great filters when talking about the fermi paradox and wondering if the filters are behind or ahead of us, there seem to be a lot we got through with pure luck. honestly any filters ahead of us are ones we are putting there ourselves.

  • @metamorphiczeolite
    @metamorphiczeolite 7 років тому +6

    I love banded iron formations! And this channel.

  • @nerdssirmic9347
    @nerdssirmic9347 2 роки тому +3

    So nobody gonna talk about those bacteria who literally farted the ozone into existence

  • @ItsScottJones
    @ItsScottJones 5 років тому +3

    I love that there seems to be no end to things that will blow my mind.

  • @shubhamshukla7645
    @shubhamshukla7645 5 років тому +15

    PBS eon 4080: Time when humans killed almost everything

  • @flappetyflippers
    @flappetyflippers 4 роки тому +1

    That dramatic music at the end tho...
    I LOVE IT!

  • @mrreyes5004
    @mrreyes5004 4 роки тому +1

    Tfw you were murdering everybody alive but then became everyone's best friend and literally the pillar of aerobic life itself.

  • @genessab
    @genessab 7 років тому +14

    I always thought it was crazy how one of the most chemically reactive elements filled our atmosphere, if we had life XD

  • @Eraughtan
    @Eraughtan 5 років тому +4

    0:18 - "His palms are sweaty, knees weak, arms are heavy. There's vomit on his sweater already, mom's spaghetti,"

    • @dolanpanda6851
      @dolanpanda6851 5 років тому +1

      He's nervous but on the surface he looks calm and ready

  • @acuriousmind7458
    @acuriousmind7458 6 років тому +3

    I am in love with this channel.

  • @47mko
    @47mko 7 років тому +1

    Great episode! Added a lot more information to my understanding of that period in earth's past. Thanks!

  • @RohitKumar-ow2zt
    @RohitKumar-ow2zt 7 років тому +1

    Excellent Representation including host, animation and script (also remarcable nice-soothing background music)

  • @juanmartinBB92
    @juanmartinBB92 7 років тому +19

    Could you do an episode about gorgonopsids?

  • @McHeisenburger
    @McHeisenburger 7 років тому +7

    Oxygen stole my wife once.
    Damn Oxygen.

  • @blackbox3008
    @blackbox3008 3 роки тому +3

    so basically, Earth used to be Kamino from Star Wars

  • @doodelay
    @doodelay 3 роки тому +2

    300 MILLIoN YEARS! why am I just now hearing about this?

  • @davidhkrose
    @davidhkrose 7 років тому +110

    Woah, it's almost like what is happening these days; but instead of oxygen, it's carbon dioxide :o

    • @swishersweets727
      @swishersweets727 7 років тому

      Jonathan David hmm good point. Total opposite I wonder what effects would happen

    • @naturegirl1999
      @naturegirl1999 7 років тому +4

      The Carbonation Event is happening at a much faster rate than would be expected without the burning of fossil fuels. I wonder if there will be a way to survive and study the effects

    • @SimonsDiscoveries
      @SimonsDiscoveries 7 років тому +3

      Only we don't have +/- 300 000 000 years to wait until the climate finally gets back to what it was (is) when humans thrived.

    • @Silverwind87
      @Silverwind87 7 років тому +29

      A billion years from now, plant people will make a video titled "That Time Carbon Dioxide Almost Killed Everything".

    • @prismaticbeetle3194
      @prismaticbeetle3194 6 років тому +1

      cycle of life :D

  • @Kalexandrian1010
    @Kalexandrian1010 7 років тому +65

    I’d like to think mars died from oxygenation. After all it has a CO2 atmosphere but a red rust surface? Where’d the oxygen come from ;)

    • @TheAnantaSesa
      @TheAnantaSesa 7 років тому +4

      From the comet water that broken into hydrogen and oxygen while solar wind blew off the hydrogen component.

    • @ALEX-jr1pb
      @ALEX-jr1pb 7 років тому +6

      And Venus became hell because of to much Co2 anyway it goes the balance is so fragile

    • @mattevans1643
      @mattevans1643 6 років тому

      Something happened to mars to make it the way it is. Mars wasn't always a dusty rock, something caused it to become the way it is. Possibly something to do with why there is an asteroid belt just beyond it. But if you've seen picture of mars there is very severe damage to the planets surface, and it isn't natural.

    • @TheloniousBosch
      @TheloniousBosch 6 років тому +2

      Matt Evans in what way do you me “isn’t natural”?

    • @campkira
      @campkira 6 років тому

      Mars is cooler than earth. The reason why We managing because the sun.

  • @monikaruwaimana123
    @monikaruwaimana123 7 років тому +4

    May I request video about Ediacaran biota? They have much less coverage, are they are really boring-soft-bodied creatures, or is there something interesting about them?

  • @epauletshark3793
    @epauletshark3793 3 роки тому

    I like that ending message. Sometimes things get worse before they get better, with awsome hopeful music in the background.

  • @sameerafzal6305
    @sameerafzal6305 5 років тому +1

    Amazing video .I can't find words to appreciate your efforts

  • @Mazequax
    @Mazequax 7 років тому +28

    Thank you, tiny, farting friends!

  • @GlobalGaming101
    @GlobalGaming101 6 років тому +4

    Thank you microbes for giving us oxygen, and ultimately allowing for the existence of doggos!

  • @saad12357
    @saad12357 6 років тому +4

    Hence clear that nature does not created life but life created nature

  • @LisaSimpsonRules
    @LisaSimpsonRules 6 років тому +2

    "Life became more complex and suddenly... here we are!" What a summary!

  • @SpartanBerseker
    @SpartanBerseker 6 років тому +1

    this channel is so awesome

  • @opalthediloalt9595
    @opalthediloalt9595 7 років тому +3

    Sometimes history has better stories further back than our battles and our stories, and school doesn’t tell us about history correctly anymore, schools be outdated in history, they could do with an update.

  • @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person
    @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person 6 років тому +3

    If oxygen was that low,does that mean that fire was rare at the time?

    • @edgeeffect
      @edgeeffect 4 роки тому

      With most of the earth under water, you would think so.

  • @YokaiX
    @YokaiX 5 років тому +3

    Earth almost looked like Namek

  • @frankieeteuati1713
    @frankieeteuati1713 5 років тому

    yo! I love this channel. Just found you guys and I have been binge watching you guys for weeks.

  • @calebk9111
    @calebk9111 3 роки тому

    The background music in this episode could not be more perfect for the story. Kudos!

  • @DesolateGrunt
    @DesolateGrunt 7 років тому +4

    green earth, red earth, blue earth, two earth

  • @sorepinky4712
    @sorepinky4712 7 років тому +4

    This is amazing. Thank you for this. 😄

  • @introspection461
    @introspection461 7 років тому +3

    Poop jokes aside, considering the chances of life starting at all, and the barley surviving that shows why finding life in the universe is so valuable.

  • @nishithpatnaik7006
    @nishithpatnaik7006 Рік тому

    The last line was so wonderful... sometimes things gotta get worse before they get better...❤❤

  • @TheXerocado
    @TheXerocado 6 років тому +1

    Man, I do love this channel

  • @morganalabaster2765
    @morganalabaster2765 7 років тому +8

    hmmm, not sure anyone sees the irony here; climate change being caused by living entities, earth learning to adapt to it, life learning to adapt after suffering consequences, a new world evolves for better or worse in response to it, new life thrives and flourishes from it -- story sound familiar...

    • @NicholasAlm
      @NicholasAlm 7 років тому +6

      Yag but you also caught the part about almost everything dieing right? Yes the Earth would survive but should we really go ahead and kill 99% of all life including humans... I don't see that as a good thing.

    • @puncheex2
      @puncheex2 7 років тому +2

      The difference here is that the change is coming on at a hugely larger rate than ever before, much higher than evolution can adapt to.

    • @strangeclaims
      @strangeclaims 6 років тому

      Morgan Alabaster
      If you're worried about humans "killing" the planet, dont be.
      They'll only kill themselves and some other species, but life will continue as it always had.

  • @MSTRCMDR
    @MSTRCMDR 7 років тому +5

    was the sky really blue in the phase with nearly no oxygen in the atmosphere? also - why was this just 5 mins long :( i like your content, give me moar

    • @Banditomojado
      @Banditomojado 7 років тому +13

      MasterAlke the atmosphere was mostly made up of nitrogen then as it is now. Both nitrogen and oxygen scatter blue light more than they do other colors in the visible spectrum. So that probably makes sense.

  • @m33p0
    @m33p0 7 років тому +4

    Imagine what the climate change conventions were like back then.

  • @thomasratliff9278
    @thomasratliff9278 Рік тому

    Thank you, for another great presentation. I enjoy learning things I didn't know , that I didn't know

  • @ylstorage7085
    @ylstorage7085 6 років тому

    the background music is spot on. transitioned quite well.

  • @jvgfhftdrhdrgtfhtf
    @jvgfhftdrhdrgtfhtf 6 років тому +3

    That time when oxygen almost killed everything
    haha yeah i remember that lmaooo