The Antarctic Ocean is WEIRD

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  • Опубліковано 28 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 371

  • @MinuteEarth
    @MinuteEarth  Рік тому +146

    Dr. Virginia Schutte* and Dr. Holly Bik were fabulous to work with - go check out their fascinating icy adventures at virginiaschutte.com and hollybik.com 🐋🪱
    (*We made a spelling error at 3:06)

    • @vgwschutte
      @vgwschutte Рік тому +8

      Our pleasure- we LOVE this video!!

    • @alphaapple1375
      @alphaapple1375 Рік тому +2

      At 0:00: Kingdra, the Dragon Pokémon, and Clamperl, the Bivalve Pokémon, from the Pokémon franchise, are featured in this video.
      At 0:41: There is an old starfish that resembles Patrick Star from the SpongeBob SquarePants franchise, except he is not wearing his green-colored, purple-flower-patterned underwear.

    • @aaronstanley6914
      @aaronstanley6914 Рік тому

      So the grand line does exist, does that mean one piece is the anti artic?

    • @this_is_patrick
      @this_is_patrick Рік тому +4

      0:55 This is an error too. I looked it up on Wikipedia and its estimated lifespan is 1.5k years, not 15k.
      The Wikipedia article was revised (15:22, 13 June 2023). The revision summary says the 15k figure was a misquote from the cited paper.
      The relevant passage in the cited paper says: "...largest hexactinellid sponges on the eastern Weddell Sea shelf can be more than 1,500 years old."

    • @spontaneousadventurouskid
      @spontaneousadventurouskid 11 місяців тому

      @@this_is_patrick i think the narrator meant to say fifteen hundred. that would have made more sense.

  • @csernobillahun
    @csernobillahun Рік тому +867

    This was the first time someone explained to me why the waters around Antarctica is so full of nutrients. I heard it repeated in documentaries and whatnot, that it is, but never the WHY
    Thank you!

    • @sultan9givewey
      @sultan9givewey 10 місяців тому +14

      This is where laughtale resides

    • @presidentcamacho
      @presidentcamacho 7 місяців тому +11

      It happens a lot and that irks me too. It's like it's suppose to be common knowledge and whenever I ask why, I get blank stares or negative feedback, as if I were the problem.

    • @bugonboris6681
      @bugonboris6681 9 днів тому +1

      I think it's more like HOW, but yah.

  • @xislomega242
    @xislomega242 Рік тому +275

    I discovered sea spiders just now. I don't know exactly what they do, but I know they eat tiny soft-bodied invertibrates that are slow, which means they probably can't even damage human skin, if you even let them touch you and won't shake them off immediately. Besides, they live far away from humans, so you'd have to go out far and dive quite deep to find them.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Рік тому +50

      The weirdest thing is that their central bodies are so small, their guts have to extend into their legs.

    • @vgwschutte
      @vgwschutte Рік тому +31

      I got to touch a few on the expedition. Their legs are pointy and a little sharp (they're not actually spiders) so the shaking off thing was the biggest danger IMO : )

    • @ImieNazwiskoOK
      @ImieNazwiskoOK Рік тому +5

      @@pattheplanter I mean, not to this level but guts of regular spiders also almost do that

    • @user-od6ur7nl5k
      @user-od6ur7nl5k 10 місяців тому +5

      People who dont know what sea spiders are:im not safe now😨 people who know what sea spiders are:meh💁

    • @sultan9givewey
      @sultan9givewey 10 місяців тому +1

      This is where laughtale resides

  • @babilon6097
    @babilon6097 Рік тому +1486

    Man... that pun at the end. It was cold. But I guess it has a deep meaning. I just can't sea it.

    • @Crausy
      @Crausy Рік тому +48

      I see what you did there 😂

    • @ninjadragongamer6861
      @ninjadragongamer6861 Рік тому +95

      ​@@CrausyYou mean you SEA what they did there?

    • @Crausy
      @Crausy Рік тому +32

      @@ninjadragongamer6861 stop it 😂

    • @mishka1138
      @mishka1138 Рік тому +35

      Bro just rewhaled the bottom of the iceberg

    • @luinerion
      @luinerion Рік тому +17

      You can hear him barely able to control his laughter as he says that!

  • @rumi2005
    @rumi2005 Рік тому +324

    Just imagine the undiscovered wonders of the earth.

    • @matthewboire6843
      @matthewboire6843 Рік тому +8

      One can only imagine

    • @nothisispatrick9778
      @nothisispatrick9778 10 місяців тому +12

      @accelerationquanta5816there’s always got to be that one jackass that ruins a good and wholesome comment

    • @sultan9givewey
      @sultan9givewey 10 місяців тому

      This is where laughtale resides

  • @GreatBigBore
    @GreatBigBore Рік тому +766

    I have an older sponge than that in my shower, and I could argue that it’s alive

    • @marcopohl4875
      @marcopohl4875 Рік тому +35

      Has it been alive the whole time?

    • @christopherg2347
      @christopherg2347 Рік тому +45

      Or is it alive _again_ ?

    • @aswalchitra
      @aswalchitra Рік тому +25

      Or is it mind controlling you to think it's not alive, but it's gone old & tired doing this, so his powers are getting weaker day by day , & the truth unfolds before you?

    • @neo-filthyfrank1347
      @neo-filthyfrank1347 10 місяців тому +3

      Wow nobody understood the joke

    • @macekreislahomes1690
      @macekreislahomes1690 10 місяців тому +2

      I understood the joke. Good work y'all.

  • @michaelbaker7499
    @michaelbaker7499 Рік тому +42

    So, if the organisms in the southern ocean have been isolated for so long, is the Antarctic blue whale a different species than the blue whale?
    Or is it an exception to your rule in that it can pass the barrier?
    I want to know more.

    • @cosmopoiesecriandomundos7446
      @cosmopoiesecriandomundos7446 10 місяців тому +34

      They are the same species.
      Blue whales are, as you know, huge. This means they have a lot of muscle and inertia, which allows them to swim through strong ocean currents. Still, each population usually migrates around a certain region instead of travelling across the world.

  • @garg4531
    @garg4531 Рік тому +108

    Antarctica in general is unique, being a continent sitting on the South Pole, leaving its entire surface covered in frozen ice, compared to the diverse range of habitats seen in every other landmass

    • @machfassett5749
      @machfassett5749 10 місяців тому +13

      And it used to be a temperate rainforest back when it was connected to Australia and South America! It acted as a land bridge that allowed animals to travel between the two continents, which is why there's marsupials in Australia nowadays.

    • @garg4531
      @garg4531 10 місяців тому +4

      Very true!
      It's interesting to think that Antartica used to be a more lush biome and I have to wonder what sort of creatures may have lived there that we don't know about, since I imagine that most fossils that might've formed were either destroyed by glaciation or simply buried under sheets of ice.

    • @eeveeofalltrades4780
      @eeveeofalltrades4780 8 місяців тому

      Well, it seems it's not all ice and things are being hidden from us....

    • @adamstanton5313
      @adamstanton5313 5 місяців тому

      Okay, so Antarctica is a humongous, continental sized mountain range covered in ice due to it being at a pole. It used to be a rainforest, parts of a frog were even found!

  • @luinerion
    @luinerion Рік тому +129

    One sponge to age them all, one squid to size them, one blue whale to eat them all, and in the Southern Ocean bind them.
    In the land of Antarctica, where the weird things lie.

    • @Tornnnado
      @Tornnnado 10 місяців тому +9

      Lord of the Seas

    • @Embermonmon
      @Embermonmon 3 місяці тому

      Maybe I should go there and take a nap

  • @Prepper_iscool
    @Prepper_iscool 9 місяців тому +62

    NO PATRICK DIED

    • @Ogy_the_gallade
      @Ogy_the_gallade 6 місяців тому +6

      Well...spongebob have the oldest bikini bottom citizen here

  • @dibenp
    @dibenp Рік тому +39

    Love the sneaky cameos by doctors Shutte and Bik at 2:33

    • @vgwschutte
      @vgwschutte Рік тому +5

      they didn't tell us they were going to do that and we were so delightfully surprised to see it!! ❤

  • @TheRavenLilian
    @TheRavenLilian Рік тому +26

    I have never been interested in studying marine biology before this. This is so cool!!!!!🤩

  • @realmless4193
    @realmless4193 Рік тому +48

    The southern Ocean: the most ocean like ocean that looks like a random stretch of coastal water.

    • @vgwschutte
      @vgwschutte Рік тому +11

      sometimes I got nauseous on the icebreaker bc the sea ice looks like a coastline with little waterways running through it, and then we'd turn left and beach ourselves on the coastline, only of course we wouldn't it was all just ice and like a thousand feet of water at least, and it was very weird

  • @this_is_patrick
    @this_is_patrick Рік тому +20

    0:55 Is this an error? I looked it up on Wikipedia and its estimated lifespan is 1.5k years, not 15k.
    The Wikipedia article was revised (15:22, 13 June 2023). The revision summary says the 15k figure was a misquote from the cited paper.
    The relevant passage in the cited paper says: "...largest hexactinellid sponges on the eastern Weddell Sea shelf can be more than 1,500 years old."

  • @MrR2TheZ
    @MrR2TheZ Рік тому +31

    1:23 "Antarctic Sea Spiders are the size of dinner plates."
    Antarctic WHAT?!?

    • @pedroMiguel0_0
      @pedroMiguel0_0 10 місяців тому +4

      Well, never going to Antarctica now!

    • @Ogy_the_gallade
      @Ogy_the_gallade 6 місяців тому +2

      Antartic sea spider

    • @bugonboris6681
      @bugonboris6681 9 днів тому +1

      TBF, I don't think they count as true spiders.

  • @PunkHerr
    @PunkHerr Рік тому +44

    But is a slow living creature also experiencing time like we do? In other words: Are they living "more time" or just slower?

    • @vgwschutte
      @vgwschutte Рік тому +9

      I love this question! Animals that live longer often take longer to get to reproduction age, so I've been thinking of them as living slower, not more time, without ever actually being conscious of thinking of it like that

    • @yashwardhansingh4787
      @yashwardhansingh4787 Рік тому +9

      This isn't time dilation. Those creatures aren't moving at light speeds. They just live longer.

    • @jasonwalker9471
      @jasonwalker9471 Рік тому +9

      @@yashwardhansingh4787 Right... but many chemical interactions necessary to sustain Earth-based life occur slower at colder temps. And even being a few C colder than the rest of the ocean (which is possible because of the higher salt level) means that these reactions will occur noticeably slower. Just as an inebriated human thinks slower than their sober counterpart, a colder animal with slower chemistry taking place might experience life (and thoughts) at a slower rate than their warmer cousins a few hundred km away.

    • @yashwardhansingh4787
      @yashwardhansingh4787 Рік тому +1

      @@jasonwalker9471 you are talking about an individual's perception of time. Which isn't the same thing as "living slower". Think about the days when you feel like time is flowing slowly. Regardless of what you felt on that day, you will still say you have lived only one day.
      Also, i have absolutely no idea what you are talking about slow chemical reactions somehow effecting time itself.

    • @jasonwalker9471
      @jasonwalker9471 Рік тому +13

      @@yashwardhansingh4787 Your brain is a computer that is ultimately based on chemical reactions. Slow those reactions down, and processing speed slows down proportionately. The slower processing speed is, the faster events around you will seem to be moving with respect to you. You'll "live slower", but if you live twice as long due to reduced metabolic activity (which happens), but with half the processing speed, you'll experience the same amount of subjective time as a creature with half the lifespan but double the processing rate.

  • @Crausy
    @Crausy Рік тому +26

    0:41 thats the granny from SpongeBob, and old patrick, i loce these references 😂

    • @wyattwhitsampsom8826
      @wyattwhitsampsom8826 10 місяців тому +5

      Chocolate I remember when they invented chocolate, sweet sweet chocolate. I ALWAYS HATED IT!

  • @thejellyfishmeister4081
    @thejellyfishmeister4081 Рік тому +54

    A small quibble about the video at 1:15 : defining what is the "largest" animal, since the Lion's Mane Jellyfish can get up to 36 metres long, so in that sense it can get larger than both the Colossal Squid and the Blue Whale! Weight wise though, it is outclassed, and the blue whale and colossal squid are both the heaviest animal and heaviest invertebrate, respectively.

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Рік тому +16

      The longest jellyfish hardly has much claim to being the "largest animal". That one jellyfish (which was the largest one ever recorded) is long due to its tentacles and is still nowhere near the width of a blue whale and, thus, can't be said to be bigger than them. Size is more than a singular dimension.

    • @jakistam1000
      @jakistam1000 Рік тому +14

      @@SgtSupaman What I think OP was getting at is that "size" is just an inprecise word.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Рік тому +4

      A 45 metre siphonophore has been seen, that would be the longest invertebrate and not very large or heavy. I would always assume that large referred to total volume, even when a picture giving length is used to illustrate the statement.

    • @foxwaffles
      @foxwaffles Рік тому +5

      ​@@pattheplanterI believe siphonophores don't get to claim biggest organism because they're technically a colony that all work together? 😅 Life is so cool!

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Рік тому

      @@foxwaffles We are all colonies.

  • @skyfeelan
    @skyfeelan Рік тому +37

    edit: it's indeed 15000 years old, see comment for detail
    slight correction 0:53 giant sponge estimated age is 15 hundred years old (1500) not 15 thousand (15000), still very impressive tho

    • @Croz89
      @Croz89 Рік тому +1

      It wouldn't beat out plants for oldest living thing, but could still win for animals.

    • @luckyblockyoshi
      @luckyblockyoshi Рік тому +4

      15,000 seems to be correct, from wikipedia:
      “A 2002 study in Antarctica calculated that this sponge and another antarctic sponge, Anoxycalyx joubini, have amazingly long lifespans surpassing 1,550 years in C. antarctica and 15,000 years in A. joubini.”

    • @skyfeelan
      @skyfeelan Рік тому +4

      @@luckyblockyoshi I stand corrected

  • @terramater
    @terramater Рік тому +11

    Very interesting, nature can be indeed weird! Our team gathered ten weird moments of nature, and it's fascinating to see it in real life!

  • @missnaomi613
    @missnaomi613 Рік тому +13

    1) Well done, as always!
    2) It took me a minute to recover from "I squid you not." I forgive you.

  • @oberonpanopticon
    @oberonpanopticon Рік тому +8

    The weird things are all around us, in every place that we rarely look closely enough at.

  • @Pottery4Life
    @Pottery4Life Рік тому +7

    Thank you. Did not know about the spiral nature of the current.

  • @rumi2005
    @rumi2005 Рік тому +9

    I love weird things .

  • @HarpaxA
    @HarpaxA Рік тому +3

    Not to mention, hardly any human "the apex predator" down there.
    So wild life thrives

  • @miaomiao1167
    @miaomiao1167 10 місяців тому +2

    I like the size comparison with onjects instead of just the numbers

  • @cerosis
    @cerosis Рік тому +4

    Love that ending pun!

  • @matthewboire6843
    @matthewboire6843 Рік тому +3

    Revenge is a dish best served cold, it’s also sweet. So revenge is ice cream.

  • @ryushogun9890
    @ryushogun9890 6 місяців тому +1

    Just a question, can we dump water in the poles to make more ice artificially in response to global warming?

  • @macsnafu
    @macsnafu Рік тому +14

    I can't see Patrick living to be 100 years old unless it's from dumb luck!

    • @yawg691
      @yawg691 9 місяців тому +1

      That's the only kind of luck Pat has!

  • @awesomefeldmanfamily
    @awesomefeldmanfamily Рік тому +1

    Dude this is literally the coolest thing ever

  • @danaduarte5813
    @danaduarte5813 Місяць тому

    This video makes me very excited about places like Europe and Enceladus

  • @alexanderx33
    @alexanderx33 Рік тому +3

    3:03 I heard recently that alot of natural science funding is almost entirely contingent on studying relevance to climate change, so when he mentioned sampling nematodes I was just waiting for the words climate change to crop up and then at 3:49 Presto!

    • @nmmeswey3584
      @nmmeswey3584 Рік тому +5

      well yeah its the biggest concern in the field wether justified or not

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Рік тому +1

      Everything is going to be affected by climate change, so it is easy to work into virtually any grant proposal.

    • @vgwschutte
      @vgwschutte Рік тому +8

      we struggle with this a bit, honestly, bc Holly just wants to study the worms- she loves them SO MUCH. but then yeah, everybody wants to know why they should care and "it fills in the tree of life", "taxonomy is an important buy dying art", and "it's the coolest thing I've ever seen" don't have quite the same ring as "if we don't figure it out now, we may never get the chance" and "maybe it can help with how we understand things elsewhere"

  • @muhamadimran7194
    @muhamadimran7194 Рік тому +3

    so the southern ocean is All Blue

  • @kaito-126
    @kaito-126 Рік тому +3

    I love the Spongebob references😆

  • @LavenderLushLuxury
    @LavenderLushLuxury 11 місяців тому +4

    Nice video again 💙

  • @honeyjuice219
    @honeyjuice219 Рік тому +3

    guys the grand line does exist, just it's a ring

  • @TheJmiktutt
    @TheJmiktutt 7 місяців тому

    What limits a creature's size?
    Ability to dissipate heat
    Availability of oxygen
    Availability of food
    Antarctic Ocean provides excellent values for all of these factors.

  • @marvinochieng6295
    @marvinochieng6295 Рік тому +2

    i have always loved the cute animations and soothing narration. I might not have much money to donate but i wish this channel the best. Maybe a collab with Ted ED for a feature length film about life on earth ?

  • @Usrr11
    @Usrr11 Рік тому +6

    1:23 "Antarctic Sea Spiders are the size of dinner plates."
    - Wait, WHAT?!

  • @jfu5222
    @jfu5222 Рік тому +1

    Home of my favorite marine mammal, the Leopard Seal!

  • @AMCoffee
    @AMCoffee 3 місяці тому

    Well, then. Normally when I watch fun science videos, I already know at least half of what they talk about, and I end up learning one or two new things.
    Basically every single thing in this video was completely new to me. I had no idea the Antarctic ocean was such a huge blind spot for me!

  • @jin_cotl
    @jin_cotl 10 місяців тому +1

    I love Antarctica now

  • @RJ_Ehlert
    @RJ_Ehlert Рік тому +3

    Nice.

  • @jamesmnguyen
    @jamesmnguyen Рік тому +2

    Looks like another example of Bergmann's Rule in action in these cold waters.

    • @ГеоргиГеоргиев-с3г
      @ГеоргиГеоргиев-с3г Рік тому

      Alternatively, get away with most of the heat gone, and live at lower body temperature, heat is a factor in the speed of chemical processes so just having lower body temperature is enough to age you slower, also the carnage of ice freezing critters mid swim would speed up evolution just a tad bit resulting in greater chance of randomly breeding an immortal, a smaller version and a larger version.
      Temperature is one reason why food spoils slower in the fridge even if not sterile and it works at 4 degrees C, not -1.5 C.

  • @mypianoschat9475
    @mypianoschat9475 8 місяців тому +10

    So Spongebob is actually real?

    • @wallrider4194
      @wallrider4194 7 місяців тому +1

      Sorta.

    • @Nuclei_Breaddo4
      @Nuclei_Breaddo4 4 місяці тому

      There's a fungi too, it acts like a sponge and is called Spongiforma Squarepantsii

  • @Retrofire-47
    @Retrofire-47 Рік тому

    i love the cute illustrations :)

  • @yancgc5098
    @yancgc5098 10 місяців тому

    More dissolved oxygen in the water isn’t a factor for the bigger sizes at all, there’s enough of it in the warmer oceans as is. Animals down in the Southern Ocean get bigger because of more nutrients in the water (example: way more krill for blue whales to eat there than in warmer waters), and the longer lifespan is because of there being less predators than in warmer oceans.

    • @GORP83847
      @GORP83847 9 місяців тому

      Oxygen 100% helps with size, just look at the biggest animals to ever exist, they are in time periods characterized by extremely high oxygen levels.

  • @universemaps
    @universemaps Рік тому +2

    Thanks to the writer and to minute Earth for this amazing video 🙏🙌🐟🐳🐋

  • @WetbackNoSetback
    @WetbackNoSetback 10 місяців тому

    What a great minute, my ADHD thanks you

  • @knpark2025
    @knpark2025 Рік тому +2

    Remember the time when the anime "Cells at Work" came out and doctors made us sad by telling half of all characters in the series won't actually survive the whole season? Rest assured, the cast of Spongebob Squarepants might theoretically outlive us. Let's just say all the radiation gave them the same longevity mutations as their cousins living in the South Pole have.

  • @poissonCHA1
    @poissonCHA1 Рік тому

    'What? They're selling chocolate?! Ahh, I remember when they first invented chocolate' [...] loved the spongebob easter egg minute earth, youre the best

  • @cqdrian
    @cqdrian 10 місяців тому

    So glad y’all showed these cute illustrations instead of photos deep sea fish make me uncomfortable

  • @fierdrages6523
    @fierdrages6523 5 місяців тому

    This makes me wonder. Is there something similar in the Arctic Ocean? Like Near Greenland? Which could explain why the Greenland shark can also live tor hundreds of years?

  • @Troe1505
    @Troe1505 Рік тому

    the circumpolar current is a nice reference to the second pokemon movie with lugia !

  • @flipsolo
    @flipsolo Рік тому

    The colossal squid couple is so cute❤

  • @zhujessie-ns2ku
    @zhujessie-ns2ku Місяць тому

    0:42 the right of the “Patrick” is literally the old sea creature from Chocolate with Nuts

  • @DinoGoofHybridHero7531
    @DinoGoofHybridHero7531 10 місяців тому +2

    Ok did anyone else think the thumbnail had Patrick-?

  • @therealohead
    @therealohead Рік тому +2

    What causes the antarctic circumpolar current?

    • @gigabyte2248
      @gigabyte2248 Рік тому +1

      At a guess, Coriolis force. The southern ocean is the only place in the world where a longitude line doesn't intersect any land or ice sheets, allowing the water and air currents from the Coriolis force to build into such a substantial thing.

  • @marcopohl4875
    @marcopohl4875 Рік тому +2

    2:13 isn't the southern ocean low on iron? How does that work?

    • @MinuteEarth
      @MinuteEarth  Рік тому +6

      The Southern Ocean is quite iron-limited but has an abundance of other nutrients. So while The southern ocean is surprisingly productive (tons of plankton and stuff) it's iron limitation that seems to keep the plankton from going completely wild.

  • @user-ib2fs5gg2s
    @user-ib2fs5gg2s 7 місяців тому +1

    i wonder if any flying creatures have flown over the atlantic waters?

    • @user-ib2fs5gg2s
      @user-ib2fs5gg2s 7 місяців тому

      hey! I just have a question , is there a way that i can get a job here?

  • @Techydad
    @Techydad Рік тому

    Sea spiders the size of dinner plates?
    *Flees in terror from the Southern Ocean!*

  • @G55544
    @G55544 7 місяців тому +4

    1:18 squidward

  • @G55544
    @G55544 7 місяців тому

    1:51 skull island storm but for sea creatures the Antarctic sea is the skull island of the sea

  • @AlexanderErickson-p9o
    @AlexanderErickson-p9o 6 місяців тому

    Have you guys talked about the Sargasum sea yet.

  • @jaypaans3471
    @jaypaans3471 Рік тому +1

    Those animals in desolate areas are *ice-olated*

  • @spontaneousadventurouskid
    @spontaneousadventurouskid 11 місяців тому

    very interesting and amazing. i learned a lot.

  • @matthewjones6786
    @matthewjones6786 10 місяців тому

    Thanks to the illustration, I now know how to identify the age of a sponge: beard length!

  • @Writerscabin
    @Writerscabin 7 місяців тому

    Great video ❤

  • @Fahrenheit4051
    @Fahrenheit4051 9 місяців тому

    Nice Pokémon cameos in the intro.

  • @winstoncantwait102
    @winstoncantwait102 Рік тому

    Name 1 minute earth video that doesn't end in a pun

  • @andregunts5292
    @andregunts5292 7 місяців тому +1

    Today I learned that the largest animal isn’t just a “blue whale” but an “Antarctic blue whale” it’s like I’ve been lied to my whole life

  • @rfvtgbzhn
    @rfvtgbzhn 4 місяці тому

    Couldn't the high ages be explained by a lower metabolic rate because of low temperatures? Metabolic rate correlates with aging.

  • @EeveeAsPie
    @EeveeAsPie Рік тому +2

    2:25
    if more oxygen exposes you to a greater amount of free radicals, how would it help slow aging?

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Рік тому +4

      Not that much oxygen, just more than usual underwater. Nowhere near the 1/5th of air.

  • @SIZModig
    @SIZModig Рік тому +4

    Basically, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current is the Calm Belt in One Piece. I never though the geography(?) of One Piece would make sense, but here we are!

  • @jamielishbrook2384
    @jamielishbrook2384 6 місяців тому

    Did you really sneak a small image of kingdra into the beginning of this?

  • @rogerszmodis
    @rogerszmodis 2 місяці тому

    I think we should maybe actually find life on titan before comparing it to anywhere on earth. Either way it’s not going to be similar because there’s no photosynthesis under that atmosphere. Also methane isn’t water.
    If anything it would be similar to Europa but again let’s find life first. Also no photosynthesis.

  • @JosephNicanorGalit
    @JosephNicanorGalit Місяць тому

    "Time Role By Joseph Nicanor Galit.

  • @jasonpatterson9821
    @jasonpatterson9821 Рік тому +2

    The water is slightly saltier and better oxygenated than the rest of the world's oceans, so its conditions are more like Titan's than the rest of Earth's? Seems a bit of a stretch.

    • @vgwschutte
      @vgwschutte Рік тому +2

      the isolation also matters. things have been evolving there cut off from the rest of the world for tens of millions of years. So it's still Earth, but if we have to pick SOMEWHERE that might help us understand other planets, there's nowhere better on our planet that we can do it!

    • @mossofthemoon
      @mossofthemoon 10 місяців тому

      Titan doesn't even have liquid water

  • @chopczyk374
    @chopczyk374 Рік тому

    so basicly the antarctic ocean is the grand line and it has a cold belt instead of a calm belt.

  • @TheBilgepumper
    @TheBilgepumper Рік тому +2

    This feels like One Piece worldbuilding.

  • @Jeremy-ws4xb
    @Jeremy-ws4xb 10 місяців тому

    I got a question how did them animals survive if they were warm blooded for example if I got a lion or elephant or probably a human and keep them for millions or thousands of years would they look different or evolve or does it die that my question

  • @Ali_loves_isekai
    @Ali_loves_isekai 8 місяців тому

    what if the comet is somewhere in the southern ocean and thats the reason?

  • @tysondennis1016
    @tysondennis1016 8 місяців тому

    Watching this for worldbuilding ideas.

  • @hpgramani
    @hpgramani Рік тому

    Is this applicable to Arctic ocean too?

  • @harishankar-cz9tx
    @harishankar-cz9tx Рік тому +1

    Did this remind of "Calm Belt" to any One Piece lover?

  • @Brydav_Massbear
    @Brydav_Massbear 6 місяців тому

    I guess that's the thing about ice, it slows everything down.

  • @brittneyziegler5742
    @brittneyziegler5742 Рік тому

    Was anyone else expecting Lugia to be doodled into that shot of the current….?

  • @skydai8220
    @skydai8220 Рік тому

    liked for the pun
    also i did not know that the southern ocean is like a prison, very cool

  • @PhysicsPolice
    @PhysicsPolice Рік тому

    Great video! Music is too loud.

  • @blobbertmcblob4888
    @blobbertmcblob4888 9 місяців тому

    "While most fish have red blood thanks to the tiny eyeballs on their bloodcells"

  • @mrlee9213
    @mrlee9213 10 місяців тому

    What about the ice wall?

  • @moycorbin4750
    @moycorbin4750 9 місяців тому

    Remember Cthulhu sleeps between Antartic and South America

  • @thedude7319
    @thedude7319 10 місяців тому

    So it is like the all blue ?

    • @SevenPr1me
      @SevenPr1me 10 місяців тому

      >Sanji would like to know this location

  • @firstplayers396
    @firstplayers396 10 місяців тому

    Scale worms look like the type of animal that wants to take control over your body

  • @LincolnPeddle
    @LincolnPeddle 10 місяців тому

    That “20 Arm starfish” only has 13 arms

  • @yujunglim5943
    @yujunglim5943 10 місяців тому

    When I saw the thumbnail my first reaction was Patrick is that u

  • @humblesloth
    @humblesloth Рік тому

    Thanks scientists!

  • @Jokeras77
    @Jokeras77 Рік тому

    I live super close to that place :>

  • @tsg4376
    @tsg4376 18 днів тому +1

    Is that spongebob