Something Strange Happens Every 30 Million Years as the Earth Passes Through the Galactic Plane

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  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 198

  • @fluxfaze
    @fluxfaze Před 13 dny +30

    Last passage through the plane was about 3 million years ago. Phew! We can self destruct at our leisure.

    • @Ezekiel903
      @Ezekiel903 Před dnem

      the Dino's big bang happened because these creatures produced too much methane and the plants couldn't break down enough of it. During a storm, lightning struck and that marked the end of the dinosaurs, that's the cruel truth

    • @dinomite592
      @dinomite592 Před dnem

      The most probable theory I've heard predicts that passage through the very crowded Thin Disk of the galaxy causes slight gravitational disturbances of the Oort cloud and Kuiper belt. About three million years after passage through the galactic plane somewhere around a trillion Oort and Kuiper objects will pass through the inner solar system. NOW is the time to expect the fireworks to start from our last passage.

  • @craigkdillon
    @craigkdillon Před 13 dny +16

    Your maps of the moving continents were wrong.
    India, Australia, Africa, and South America were part of Gondwana,
    and NA, EU, and Asia were part of Laurasia.
    Gaondwana and Laurasia split up.
    Pangea split up during the Triassic, I believe.

  • @christianmartin5854
    @christianmartin5854 Před 5 dny +5

    Why worry about this? We, as a species, evolve, and, by say 100,000 years, we will not be the same as we are today, IF we are still around, given the trigger-happy idiots that govern us and nukes!

  • @cybervigilante
    @cybervigilante Před 6 dny +4

    Damn, something else to worry about.

  • @hdufort
    @hdufort Před 11 dny +7

    Out of 5 major extinctions (and a dozen deadly but smaller scale ones), a single one was caused by an asteroid strike. The most frequent causes are major volcanic events (such as the Siberian traps) combined with continental patterns due to continental drift.

    • @alexbowman7582
      @alexbowman7582 Před 6 dny +1

      Was the Siberian Traps the result of a large object punching straight through the crust allowing magma to escape for many years?

    • @hdufort
      @hdufort Před 5 dny

      @@alexbowman7582 This hypothesis has been evoked quite a few times, and we even found major impacts that could have been the trigger. But further analysis showed that the impacts actually occurred after the traps eruptions began. Now, it is not impossible that the impact events kept the traps running for longer than they would have.

    • @johnsteel5347
      @johnsteel5347 Před 3 dny

      ​​@@alexbowman7582That mass extinction didnt kick off till 400,000 years after the siberean trap event ended. What it did do was set fire to a massive coal deposit that burned for 400,000 years, increasing CO2 levels at a rate much slower than what we're doing right now burning fossil fuels.

  • @digilyd
    @digilyd Před 5 dny +4

    You assert at about 3:30 that Chixalub was disaster "As never seen before". What about Theia?

    • @nickdiamond7595
      @nickdiamond7595 Před dnem +1

      Theia was 4 billion years ago. There wasn't life on earth yet

  • @ge2623
    @ge2623 Před 13 dny +8

    Fun Fact: The yellow side of a Rubiks Cube is the hardest side to complete.

    • @seibertmccormick184
      @seibertmccormick184 Před 20 hodinami +1

      I used to do Rubks Cubes decades ago. I bought a little booklet that showed how to do it. I wasn't a record setter or anything. My fastest time was 2 minutes and 26 seconds. But I never noticed anything about the yellow side being any harder than any other side. Besides, you have to complete all sides before it is done. And you can start with any color. So I don't think your "fun fact" is real.

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 Před 16 hodinami

      @@seibertmccormick184 👍

  • @mikewilliams9893
    @mikewilliams9893 Před 7 dny +1

    Enjoyed watching your video. Nicely put, with a very plausible conclusion on what may have, and what could possibly be.

  • @edstauffer426
    @edstauffer426 Před 11 dny +2

    There is a dark matter disk along the core of the galaxy. When we cross this gravity increases and subduction happens. When we leave the dark matter disk the gravity decreases and the earth expands. I suspect some sort of reaction similar to gas in graphene results in the expansion of something in the interior of most planets and moons. When the dark matter circulates outward along the galactic plane it does so in streams flowing from gravity well to gravity well. Once the galaxy forms an AGN then the dark matter begins to vaporize and the dark matter begins to flow from the outside back towards the center of the galaxy. As this happens the average gravity decreases in the areas with less liquid dark matter and the impact of crossing the plane is decreased. The average concentration of liquid dark matter in the universe has been dropping over time.

  • @gaston8512
    @gaston8512 Před 3 dny +1

    You lost me at Panspermia. Roddenberry's wild imagination couldn't even think that one up.

    • @AlanEmmons-qw6bg
      @AlanEmmons-qw6bg Před dnem

      Bevis: He said sperm huh-huh-huh
      Butthead:yeah yeah yeah!!😳

  • @mkogrady6078
    @mkogrady6078 Před 13 dny +12

    Where are we with respect to the us passing through the midplane?

    • @bluebook709
      @bluebook709 Před 13 dny +1

      55 light years above the plane, but without knowing the speed of the solar system through this up and down wobble cant say how long till we pass through the plane again and remember this is theoretical anyway.

    • @actionjaxxson1749
      @actionjaxxson1749 Před 9 dny

      Well i know nothing about the subject, but i can infer from the video that it's less than 1 million years from that. 8:23 it says, "even if the bounce effect were to cause a global catastrophe, we wouldn't come fact to face with it for hundreds of thousands of years."
      I would assume that to mean we've got a few hundred thousands years before finding out. If that's the case, we're fine. We'll be LONG gone by the time that happens!

    • @cybervigilante
      @cybervigilante Před 6 dny

      @@bluebook709 Well, since the speed of light is an absolute limit, we have At Least 55 years, and since I'm 74 I'll be dead by then so I'm not concerned 🤪 However, being too lazy to calculate it, Bing Chat AI says we are moving away from the plane, so we have about 30 million years. Whew. Back to worrying about Old Joe getting us into a nuclear war.

    • @johnsteel5347
      @johnsteel5347 Před 3 dny

      The galactic plane is just slightly more dense in middle compared to the top and bottom edges. We would probably see a higher increase during times we pass through a galactic arm.

  • @stevej7139
    @stevej7139 Před 13 dny +1

    Gamma increases every 30 million years but not while we pass through the plane but after we pass through and rise above the galactic plane. The galaxy acts as a shield for a lot of the gamma but as we move above and below the plane we get more gamma.

  • @MrElwoodCaudill
    @MrElwoodCaudill Před 2 dny

    Wonder if the disappearance of ice at the poles caused Pangea to break into pieces?

  • @mikesbarn1858
    @mikesbarn1858 Před 5 dny

    The asteroid wasn’t alone. We were hit by several smaller ones causing additional destruction.

  • @Kommander_Rahnn
    @Kommander_Rahnn Před 6 dny +1

    Taurid meteor stream has entered the chat.

  • @fido2644
    @fido2644 Před 6 hodinami

    First everything was bigger because of the amount of oxygen, second we don't even know if we are the first advanced civilization to walk the Earth as any evidence of a civilization would be wiped away within a few thousand years.
    But think about this the Earth is billions of years old that's more than enough time for several spices to evolve and become a industrialized civilization.🤔

  • @robmoore7708
    @robmoore7708 Před 13 dny +2

    Everyone knows about the dinosaurs. 66 million years ago. So if our solar system crosses the galactic plane every 30 million years, what happened 30 million years ago? Nothing?

    • @ZenStrive52
      @ZenStrive52 Před 13 dny +3

      Previously Unknown Mass Extinction Occurred 30 Million Years Ago in Africa and Arabia. Nearly 63% of Afro-Arabian mammalian species went extinct approximately 30 million years ago (Oligocene epoch), after Earth's climate shifted from swampy to icy.8 Oct 2021

    • @user-rw2uh5bv3o
      @user-rw2uh5bv3o Před 13 dny

      Ah ha

  • @jimellis936
    @jimellis936 Před 7 dny +4

    The layer of iridium that covers the globe can only be left by asteroids not comets.

    • @twostate7822
      @twostate7822 Před 4 dny

      Every authoritative source says that comets contain iridium.

    • @phillipbampton911
      @phillipbampton911 Před 2 dny

      There is rock as well as ice in a comet. What would be the difference between comet rocks and asteroids?

  • @joebobku
    @joebobku Před 4 dny

    Interesting idea. I wonder if they think that Oumuamua object is part of passing through this plane.

  • @mudelta4068
    @mudelta4068 Před dnem

    WOW at 2:49 as the dinosaur killer meteor hurtles towards the earth it's clear to see the dinosaurs had terraformed at least the European continent into its current shape, and powered up the electricity grid as well. Nevertheless, a beautiful little film, revealing the pettiness of my eye for detail.lol :-))

  • @marijkevissers8023
    @marijkevissers8023 Před 5 dny

    Let us be happy that we' re not to blame for this events to come! And take care for the recent problems on earth we can handlle, if it's in your own surroundings, with the help from mother nature 🦋🌿🦎🕊

  • @pymarathon
    @pymarathon Před 13 dny +5

    Not a scientist, but basically everything I've ever heard on this suggests that after redating the Chixalub crater it's *mostly* been divorced from the mass extinction (not saying it didn't have an effect, only that if one were to contract the length of the extinction to 24 hours then the crater would have been formed about 5 minutes before the end), the amount of energy required to catapult something out of *our* orbit (given the mass and presence of atmosphere) would require so much energy it would vaporize even the hardiest of tardigrade, and I'll have to check out the paper you mentioned, but the idea that our planet passing some imaginary virtually empty plane (even the densest of asteroid clouds are practically a void) could practically ignore the surface but somehow supercharge the core sounds outright preposterous.
    If anything, I'd think THAT would be the interesting video to make out of this, cause the physics of that sounds like it would be f'ing wild.

  • @Brian-kl1zu
    @Brian-kl1zu Před 3 dny

    That was "30 million years" ago last Thursday?

  • @mrjeff2396
    @mrjeff2396 Před 13 dny +1

    If I live long enough to experience this, I’ll tell the whole world!

    • @cybervigilante
      @cybervigilante Před 6 dny +1

      If you live long enough to experience it you will be in the NY Times as the 30 million year old man (give or take a few years)

  • @elimgarak7330
    @elimgarak7330 Před 13 dny +1

    Good thing correlation equals causation!

  • @robertbate5790
    @robertbate5790 Před 13 dny +1

    I certainly dont think we need to worry about it, 🤣🤣. Seriously, this is s new theory to me. I was born in 1956, when many earth sciences were still in their infancy. I read a great deal in my teen years and kept up an interest ever since. So much has been learnt and theorised since then, we are even questioning the theories anew. JWST is standing us on our heads. Even the big bang is under scrutiny.

  • @turnt0ff
    @turnt0ff Před 14 dny

    With the advent of AGI and eventually ASI, AI will pair excellently with quantum computing, leading to new technological discoveries and advancements. We’ll be spacefaring in no time.

    • @robertbate5790
      @robertbate5790 Před 13 dny +1

      If mankind hasn't been superceded by it's own AI inventions.

  • @phillipbampton911
    @phillipbampton911 Před 2 dny

    All the simulations that I have seen of the Yucatan strike show a more or less modern day world. How far away though, might Yucatan have been from where it is now? IE Continental Drift?

  • @jimcottee9187
    @jimcottee9187 Před 6 dny

    So this Bounce Effect must apply to all planets passing through the galaxy's plane.
    Or does it just single Earth out because we're the pretty blue one.?

  • @javastream5015
    @javastream5015 Před dnem

    Was there any 2nd or 3rd disaster which happened when cross the plane?

  • @cjames9320
    @cjames9320 Před dnem

    Science-fiction is a strange religion

  • @stevenswitzer5154
    @stevenswitzer5154 Před 4 dny

    You know I always worried that we might be able to kill our planet by abusing Geothermal... Granted we would need Billions of years to do it; Its just a cool thought that our Battery Earth gets "recharged" with a core heating when we passthrough the universal hood

  • @Jason_g_kennedy
    @Jason_g_kennedy Před 11 dny +2

    People will believe in any BS nowadays.

    • @garyradtke3252
      @garyradtke3252 Před 6 dny +1

      When these people make videos that look nearly real and everything literally come from the mind and not hard evidence, people tend to believe this stuff. Every bit of this video is speculation presented as fact.

    • @GordoGambler
      @GordoGambler Před 3 dny

      Especially the LEFTY crap indoctrinated into 5 year old kids in kindergarten and on up.

  • @nickdiamond7595
    @nickdiamond7595 Před dnem

    Wasn't carbon a big factor in the extreme sizes of dinosaurs?

  • @nikosalexopoulos6542
    @nikosalexopoulos6542 Před 8 hodinami

    Yes, i remember..

  • @mikesbarn1858
    @mikesbarn1858 Před 5 dny

    Additionally we aren’t from this galaxy. We were scavenged from another smaller galaxy.

    • @Demane69
      @Demane69 Před 4 dny

      Go back to your anime.

  • @greenman8
    @greenman8 Před 13 dny +4

    Why would the Earths Core Heat up when passing the plane? Does it affect the clockwise vs counter clockwise spin of the earth core? (I am now thinking of direction of spin - flushing toilets in North America Vs Australia.)

    • @phillipbampton911
      @phillipbampton911 Před 2 dny

      That's a myth. Coriolis Effect just isn't noticeable in a sink or bowl. Australian and American toilet bowls are very different designs which alters flow. I have never actually seen an American bowl but I assume that the water jets also point in different directions.

    • @greenman8
      @greenman8 Před dnem

      @@phillipbampton911 czcams.com/video/QTTJJAiQFRc/video.html

  • @rajk-qk7ne
    @rajk-qk7ne Před dnem

    the astroid must have been ice astroid....if it were rock of a mountain size, it would create a huge crate visible even now....ice astroid could be reason for new form of life very different from what was there here....

  • @michaelholt7994
    @michaelholt7994 Před 13 dny

    No its 50 million years .and sometimes 250 million years.

  • @SleepyMountains-sq2lx

    The real question is have we reached Robin Hanson proposed Great Filter? We humans have a lot of issues to overcome here. Global climate change, is but one big one, before we can venture beyond our Solar System to seed other galaxies with thinking monkeys.

    • @GordoGambler
      @GordoGambler Před 3 dny

      GloBULL warming?? 😄😄😄😆😆😅😅🤣🤣😂😂

  • @chrisa7832
    @chrisa7832 Před 13 dny +2

    My cats breath smells like cat food

    • @willtricks9432
      @willtricks9432 Před 2 dny

      Ralph how did you get the password to your dads work computer?

    • @phillipbampton911
      @phillipbampton911 Před 2 dny

      I reckon that is probably as deep and meaningful as anything else in the comments section. Except for my comments, of course.

  • @SonOfTheDawn515
    @SonOfTheDawn515 Před 14 dny +2

    Meh. We'll have died out as a species by then.

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 Před 13 dny

      LONG before then.

    • @cybervigilante
      @cybervigilante Před 6 dny

      Old Joe is ramping up with Russia in his proxy war, so we could be dead and radioactive next week. I can recall Peace and Prosperity, but I guess some folks actually like Poverty and War.

  • @hectornonayurbusiness2631

    Why arent animals as big as the dinosaurs today?

    • @jamesholmstrom5837
      @jamesholmstrom5837 Před 13 dny +5

      Less oxygen.

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 Před 13 dny +1

      Less food.

    • @joshuarich7527
      @joshuarich7527 Před 13 dny +1

      Gravity grew stronger as well

    • @cybervigilante
      @cybervigilante Před 6 dny +1

      It's unaffordable. At the cost of a Big Mac these days, it would take four billion dollars a year just to feed one Tyrannosaur.

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 Před 5 dny

      @@cybervigilante Excellent point.

  • @Christophoros-it1qt
    @Christophoros-it1qt Před 2 dny

    At the end of the day, The Creator Created all - but in this context "when and how, etcetera" are irrelevant! Veritatis Missio

  • @X00000370
    @X00000370 Před 2 dny

    30 million years ago in a place in space far, far away...Sounds like the beginning of a fairy tale. Oh, by the way Pangea didn't happen 30 + million years ago! There is evidence the continents separated maybe 10,000 years ago arriving at their general locations in months not millions of years. A common mistake you are making is assuming today's continental drift (of cm/year) was the same right after the rift began. Big false assumption as Dr. Brown's Hydroplate Theory demonstrates.

  • @MargaretLeafe
    @MargaretLeafe Před 13 dny

    IF it happens every 30 thousand years it isn't strange, but it is interesting, that is it is interesting if it actually happened.

    • @steelrain79
      @steelrain79 Před 13 dny

      35 to 40 million years.

    • @GordoGambler
      @GordoGambler Před 3 dny

      There's a new theory that our Sun and Sirius are binary, with a loop of 26,000 years, exactly like the axis circuit.

  • @GordoGambler
    @GordoGambler Před 3 dny

    Who knew? Dinosaurs have evolved into psycho dummysaurs with a weather change religion. LOL.

  • @Richter-hr7oj
    @Richter-hr7oj Před 16 hodinami

    Plausible answers and deniability

  • @grahamrich3368
    @grahamrich3368 Před 7 dny

    Good video! But so many "maybes".... 🌎

  • @Absaalookemensch
    @Absaalookemensch Před 5 dny

    I just need to know what year this will happen and will I have to file my tax return that year?

    • @phillipbampton911
      @phillipbampton911 Před 2 dny

      If it happens within the next 7 years would you have to file any. I once missed 5 years in a row. The only person who cared was my wife.

  • @dustinchase9187
    @dustinchase9187 Před 3 dny

    I remain skeptical. I have not heard of passing through the galactic plane as being a destructive event before. I need evidence from reliable sources. (CZcams videos are not evidence and most are unreliable)

    • @robertredditt7973
      @robertredditt7973 Před dnem +1

      How about the galactic current sheet/ and Our sun will soon experience a mini nova. every 12 to 15 thousand years earth can and does experience great changes. There are hours and hours of very good info on the internet. so start looking. I did and I have learned .

  • @mrsmith8224
    @mrsmith8224 Před 12 dny

    Nemesis theory

  • @broderguy
    @broderguy Před 14 dny +2

    So could the bounce effect contribute to the release of CO2 and methane creating the greenhouse effect?

    • @GordoGambler
      @GordoGambler Před 3 dny

      WUT?? 😄😄😆😆😅😅🤣🤣😂😂

    • @broderguy
      @broderguy Před 3 dny

      @@GordoGambler Around 6:10 in the video, a study describes that passing through the galactic plane (a part of the bounce effect?) can cause Earth's core to become superheated. Since that would probably melt permafrost and heat the ocean floor, it would probably contribute to the release of CO2 and methane, and therefore ratchet up the greenhouse effect (in addition to human causes).

    • @willtricks9432
      @willtricks9432 Před 2 dny

      Green houses do not bounce they would shatter.

  • @seandonahue8464
    @seandonahue8464 Před 14 dny +3

    Maybe we will return to the mean….dinosauer like environment. One thing though since dinos died 65 million years that means the planet passed through 34 mill years ago with no big problem.

  • @garyradtke3252
    @garyradtke3252 Před 6 dny

    Maybe we need more real scientists instead of fiction writers!

  • @jeremyhares979
    @jeremyhares979 Před 7 dny

    What about haemorrhoids ?

  • @Ezekiel903
    @Ezekiel903 Před dnem

    we can't become an ultra planetary race, bcs our body is not made for different or low gravity, lose of bones structure, weaken immune system, muscle lose, brain effects ect. we need far more years! Elon is a dreamer with his Mars project! we need decades before we are able to solve all this issues!

  • @MargaretLeafe
    @MargaretLeafe Před 13 dny +1

    The continents are still drifting around like puzzle pieces.

  • @zinncomicsandart8811

    so if the dinosaurs were wiped out then how did they evolve into birds ? And why do they always do these things with a British accent ? Oh we sound smarter while were making crap up if we say it all British........

  • @jackman6256
    @jackman6256 Před 8 dny

    If you read the first book of the Bible it tells you plainly at one time
    The land was all in one place ?
    Not trying to get non beilvers to
    Accept that but isn't that what
    They say ? One land mass
    After the great flood it came apart
    Looking like it does today
    It also says it the days of peleg earth was divided

    • @willtricks9432
      @willtricks9432 Před 2 dny

      If you read the first book of the bible you have wasted a lot of time.

  • @aracoixo3288
    @aracoixo3288 Před hodinou +1

    ...

  • @MargaretLeafe
    @MargaretLeafe Před 13 dny +1

    Interesting that this is a 30 thousand year cycle, some think humans were here at least through one cycle, but it only interesting and its still to worry about there is no control over. We are not going into space that is sci Fiction and will always be sci fiction.

  • @OliveWhisperingEye
    @OliveWhisperingEye Před 13 dny

    Sh!t Happens 🫡

  • @xtheflabeox8813
    @xtheflabeox8813 Před 6 dny +1

    Right now we are a type zero civilization we use fossil fuels we need to evolve to a type 1 civilization in order to survive which means we need to harness our planet's resources the safest way possible

    • @JW-mb6tq
      @JW-mb6tq Před 5 dny

      Yes we need large amounts of nuclear energy.

  • @KingzofSwing
    @KingzofSwing Před 4 dny

    Nonsense

  • @Markbell73
    @Markbell73 Před 11 dny

    I am wearing clean underpants.......gnomes.

    • @willtricks9432
      @willtricks9432 Před 2 dny

      did the Gnome mind you borrowing them?

    • @Markbell73
      @Markbell73 Před dnem

      @@willtricks9432 quite a bit. By I made them an offer they couldn't refuse.
      I gave them six pairs of Christina Aguilera's previously worn underpants.
      (Don't ask)

  • @generator6946
    @generator6946 Před 13 dny +9

    One thing for sure. As we fill in more of the puzzle, that old story about a Hebrew god making everything gets less and less plausible.

    • @robertthomas1286
      @robertthomas1286 Před 13 dny +6

      Strange how the the creation study looks almost exactly as our best models show the creation of the solar system. Maybe you are wrong…

    • @Debbie-henri
      @Debbie-henri Před 9 dny +1

      I never thought there was anything remotely plausible about a magic person making everything in the first place anyway - the fossil record is all the proof you need.
      Compare transition fossils to the bible's telling of animals being created as they are, and it's clear it's all supposition by Bronze Age people who didn't know better, their fairy stories sadly reinforced by umpteen generations of humans who rather liked having power over the masses.
      Had Ancient Greeks not simply considered the Aeolipile as simply a steam-powered toy, but took the invention seriously, investigating the possible uses of steam power in everyday life, thus fast tracking their way towards technology thousands of years earlier, it's very likely that religion would never have achieved the stranglehold on humanity that it still has.

    • @Kommander_Rahnn
      @Kommander_Rahnn Před 6 dny +1

      Ah. Mocking religion. I remember those days.
      When I was 14 years old.

  • @ibmibm691
    @ibmibm691 Před 3 dny

    This was Pangea befire ut broke apart. It was on the flat earth. Around it was ocean and ice.
    Earth is still flat. It looks spherical because the landmass developed landscapes of valleys, rivers, basins, mountains, ranges, etc.

  • @user-rw2uh5bv3o
    @user-rw2uh5bv3o Před 13 dny

    I forgot the author but there was a book called2012 that touched on this

  • @nelsangelin9667
    @nelsangelin9667 Před 7 dny

    36million years - as though you where there, liar

  • @chrisduhaime5689
    @chrisduhaime5689 Před 13 dny

    Our sun is not steady state it isolates in power a little bit

  • @JungleJargon
    @JungleJargon Před 14 dny +1

    It was the world before it was destroyed by the global flood.

    • @SonOfTheDawn515
      @SonOfTheDawn515 Před 14 dny +1

      Lol what?

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon Před 14 dny

      @@SonOfTheDawn515 We are living on top of the world that was destroyed.

    • @rawnchydeard4669
      @rawnchydeard4669 Před 13 dny +2

      There is not a single shred of evidence of a global flood. I bet you got great marks in science class, huh?

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon Před 13 dny

      @@rawnchydeard4669 I was the best in my science class. Geology is the result of the global flood.

    • @GordoGambler
      @GordoGambler Před 3 dny

      @@rawnchydeard4669 LOL. The ocean went down 430 feet. The Black Sea half dried out. The Scab Lands are PROOF that Lake Agassiz dumped a LOT of water all at once. There had to be a hell of a tsunami affecting ALL the world's coastal cities.
      Lefty Myrons like AL GORE are fritzing out about a MAYBE 6 feet rise at 3 mm a year. LOL. Hilarious.
      Even morso is historians saying Nan Madol was built around 1000 AD with dugout canoes, 9000 years ATER the flood. LOL.

  • @ukmartin2569
    @ukmartin2569 Před 3 dny

    No such thing as " Millions of years" so I won't watch anymore of this nonsense.

  • @BlackOutTV_US
    @BlackOutTV_US Před 13 dny +3

    lol. Americans. The dinosaurs are not that old. They were called dragons once upon a time. Something else happened

  • @athenaathena675
    @athenaathena675 Před 14 dny +34

    Not a single scientist knows anything

  • @mygodisyahweh8634
    @mygodisyahweh8634 Před dnem

    TRUST THE SCIENCE
    LOL
    Derp.. Derp.