How a Meteor Killed the Dinosaurs and How we Know it Happened

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @minoadlawan4583
    @minoadlawan4583 Před 3 lety +1055

    I wonder how many years the non avian dinosairs survived after the meteor impact. There hasn't been a lot of popular media that talks about the events happening immediately after the kpg extinction. They just jump directly to age of mammals.

    • @ANTSEMUT1
      @ANTSEMUT1 Před 3 lety +26

      @Catwoman what about the small dinosaurs?

    • @bjorkmgork
      @bjorkmgork Před 3 lety +178

      Since most plants died, most herbivores died. Since there were not a lot of large herbivores, most carnivores died. Scavengers that could feed off of corpses and things that fed on dead plants (like insects) managed to survive. And small omnivores that could eat bugs etc also survived.

    • @chrisamon4551
      @chrisamon4551 Před 3 lety +104

      Catwoman I disagree. I bet you that the vast majority of dinosaurs were dead on Impact Day. Anything that couldn’t hide in a burrow was burned to a crisp by worldwide wildfires set off by rain showers of molten glass striking every part of the planet. Add in the regional tsunamis, and earthquakes and literally nothing bigger than a squirrel or roadrunner, or iguana survived on land, with the exception of crocodiles but they probably survived Impact day by diving deep underwater.

    • @chrisamon4551
      @chrisamon4551 Před 3 lety +66

      Anthony Ngu It seems like the only dinosaurs to survive were small flightless burrowing birds who ran underground on Impact Day. Small dinosaurs who didn’t have burrows suffered the same fate as their larger cousins: burned to death mostly in global wildfires.

    • @ANTSEMUT1
      @ANTSEMUT1 Před 3 lety +5

      @@chrisamon4551 makes sense.

  • @scalpingsnake
    @scalpingsnake Před 3 lety +1037

    I love this channel because of how the events are described. Saying that the Meteor was about the size of Everest and how it would have vaporised everything within 500 miles in 10 second really puts it into perspective.

    • @NGRevenant
      @NGRevenant Před 3 lety +45

      he forgot to mention that it hit the earth at 50,000 miles per hour

    • @kennethsatria6607
      @kennethsatria6607 Před 3 lety +16

      The description of 10 kilometers wide from Walking with Beasts still shakes me.

    • @cerridianempire1653
      @cerridianempire1653 Před 3 lety +10

      @@NGRevenant nobody knows how fast it really was

    • @BoopSnoot
      @BoopSnoot Před 3 lety +81

      But we shouldn't speak with certainty though. The meteor may have just been one of many factors affecting the large dinosaurs. For example, if they were having large pride parades and too many dinosaurs were identifying as the opposite gender, gay, or incel gamers, the birth rate could have plummeted and threatened the species.

    • @cerridianempire1653
      @cerridianempire1653 Před 3 lety +8

      @@BoopSnoot not sure if this is a joke but, good theory I guess?

  • @timhake6956
    @timhake6956 Před 3 lety +900

    I really enjoyed this video. Can you do another one on the other two mass extinctions? This would be awesome!

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Před 3 lety +39

      Did you know that the current mass extinction is being caused by animal agriculture ?

    • @ethanwesterfield6478
      @ethanwesterfield6478 Před 3 lety +32

      There's 4 more, hey, more content.

    • @briank592
      @briank592 Před 3 lety +46

      @@isupportthecurrentthing.1514 caused by *current yet antiquated* animal agricultural practices. Dont blame the animals, blame the old systems still in place. check out permaculture and regrarians. we need herding animals. cant have prairies with out buffalo, homie.

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Před 3 lety +14

      @@briank592 We are currently using 80% of the earth's arrable land to feed the 70 billion land animals we eat each year . Most of them are raised in factory farms .
      Since regenerative agriculture takes far more land than factory farming , it's not a viable option .
      This was covered in chapter five of the IPCC report .

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Před 3 lety +12

      @@briank592 Natural grasslands are not the same as managed pasture . They support a fraction of the biodiversity .
      Prairies and buffalo are not dependent on us farming animals

  • @zenebean
    @zenebean Před 3 lety +135

    These videos are relaxing even when they're about instantaneous vaporization and apocalyptic catastropes

    • @brookzerai615
      @brookzerai615 Před 3 lety +10

      It's the sound behind his narration , u can barely hear it, beautiful meditative music

    • @Rhiannonganon
      @Rhiannonganon Před 2 lety +2

      I agree! I only found this channel today and I'm addicted!

  • @waranontwiwaha9385
    @waranontwiwaha9385 Před 3 lety +244

    Actually, I heard that flight isn’t actually the thing that saved birds from extinction, as most of the flying birds at the time also went extinct along with non avian dinosaurs. It might actually be the ground dwelling birds that survive, since they don’t waste a lot of energy in flight and can hide in burrow and hole under ground similar to mammals. Only after the extinction event that they start to radiate and many of their descendants evolved to fill the more airborne niche left by the extinct birds.

    • @greyjedi7005
      @greyjedi7005 Před 3 lety +5

      Nice

    • @amniote69
      @amniote69 Před 3 lety +38

      My take on this is that insectivorous animals survived, and a few predators that could prey on insectivores. Insects can exploit pretty much any food source and are able to reproduce quickly enough to take advantage of it, so there would have been a relative abundance of them in the years following the impact.

    • @waranontwiwaha9385
      @waranontwiwaha9385 Před 3 lety +30

      Malcolm Sewell
      Don’t forget seed eaters. Seeds are basically everywhere in a healthy ecosystem prior to the catastrophe and many species are fire proof, water proof and ice proof. A seed bank burried around can feed these small animals for decades. Freshwater ecosystem also seemed to be less affected as well since many organisms inhabiting it are used to low level of oxygen and ph.

    • @amniote69
      @amniote69 Před 3 lety +4

      @@waranontwiwaha9385 True, though post catastrophe we would have mostly hidden/buried seeds, many lying under a thick layer of ash. I guess the majority of these would be eaten by invertebrates. Most seed eaters today get their food directly from the plants, only those plants able to survive in low-light habitats would make it through. So some seeds in the ground and a few seasonal seeds. Hardly enough to sustain a pure seed eater, but good for omnivores. ;)

    • @gusolsthoorn1002
      @gusolsthoorn1002 Před 3 lety +1

      How can birds be descendants of dinosaurs if they existed with dinosaurs?

  • @ashtonsanchez1069
    @ashtonsanchez1069 Před 3 lety +112

    I absolutely love seeing illustrations of the meteor impact minutes after or minutes before the impact

  • @xydya
    @xydya Před 3 lety +220

    Please do another video on synapsids, especially some of the weird ones. I feel like they're a hugely unappreciated group of animals.

    • @Sea_Leech
      @Sea_Leech Před 3 lety +4

      Synapsids are for nERDS, Evolve breasts later in life nErds and maybe cut back on the motherly instict lmao

    • @jayfeatherthesnarkymedicin8160
      @jayfeatherthesnarkymedicin8160 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Sea_Leech
      What?

    • @lenowin
      @lenowin Před 3 lety +26

      @@Sea_Leech Speaking of evolution, it seems you have some more to do.

    • @EvilSnips
      @EvilSnips Před 3 lety +2

      YES pleaseeeee that'd be so cool, they are so underrated

    • @chrisofstars
      @chrisofstars Před 3 lety +1

      @@Sea_Leech CZcams app is for ages 13+ only if you read the app store

  • @Germanyduck
    @Germanyduck Před 3 lety +39

    I love the way this is narrated, it really made me emotionally invested on the events and it put the whole ordeal in a new perspective

  • @dimetrodon2250
    @dimetrodon2250 Před 2 lety +23

    Its always beautiful when something proposed through mathematics is discovered, and fits perfectly with how the mathematics predicts it.

  • @milu3779
    @milu3779 Před 3 lety +18

    Wow i never realised the Chicxulub crater had been discovered so recently!
    i think it's kind of deep how utterly random this extinction was. it feels like it so easily could have not happened, if that meteor had for whatever reason shot through this suburb of the Milky Way a little later or a little to the left or whatever, you know? it's kind of humbling.

    • @pocketmarcy6990
      @pocketmarcy6990 Před rokem

      I mean the meteor most likely came from the solar system

  • @__tragn5465
    @__tragn5465 Před 3 lety +84

    Imagine the last moment of the last dinosaur. It's a story that lost in the universe forever...

    • @Sub4CarClips
      @Sub4CarClips Před 3 lety +18

      Well I don’t think there was a last dinosaur since they never truly died off (I think?) They just evolved into birds and I’ve even heard people go as far as saying birds are dinosaurs

    • @AifDaimon
      @AifDaimon Před 3 lety +3

      @@Sub4CarClips yes, they are descended from avian dinosaurs.. wtf are you on?! meth?!

    • @bradleymenezes6196
      @bradleymenezes6196 Před 3 lety +2

      Its crazy to really think about it

    • @mr.purple250
      @mr.purple250 Před 3 lety +8

      Dinosaurs still exist. We call them birds nowadays

    • @datgio4951
      @datgio4951 Před 3 lety +1

      @@AifDaimon chill, that’s just some dumb kid

  • @headlessspaceman5681
    @headlessspaceman5681 Před 2 lety +17

    100-meter-high tsunami. That is a horror story in four words. Absolutely terrifying. And then there would have presumably been 30-50-meter-high ripples and back-ripples, etc. That site in North Dakota is amazing, especially when considering the location in its context along the ancient sea there. I believe they have found saltwater and freshwater fossils mixed together there with lots of signs of sudden burial. Very cool to learn about the cenotes: had seen photos of these before but didn't know about the relation to the impact... but as soon as the map of their locations is rendered, the circular shape among the scatter is obvious.

  • @foxsparrow8973
    @foxsparrow8973 Před 3 lety +23

    I would love to see a video about the survivors of the asteroid impact and the first thousand years afterward.

    • @komradentomolog7701
      @komradentomolog7701 Před 3 lety +6

      Not sure they know,they may know the first million,but thousand is a bit too specific

  • @mlkiggen3911
    @mlkiggen3911 Před 3 lety +164

    What can’t my dude make fascinating?
    This channel is well named! I am drawn to this media like a month to light.
    Edit: meant moth! Leaving it tho

    • @slavsquatsuperstar
      @slavsquatsuperstar Před 3 lety +14

      Brilliant observation! I can't believe I only just realized what the name "Moth Light" meant! xD

    • @chrisofstars
      @chrisofstars Před 3 lety +1

      Your first sentence is not a sentence and idk wtf you are trying to say there.

    • @yas-ob4hd
      @yas-ob4hd Před 3 lety

      @@chrisofstars huh

    • @samuelsontraining
      @samuelsontraining Před 3 lety

      @@chrisofstars His first sentence makes perfect sense.

    • @boop99
      @boop99 Před 3 lety

      Moth, right?

  • @kimgiver5756
    @kimgiver5756 Před 3 lety +136

    The last time I was this early rising atmospheric O2 levels almost killed all life on earth

    • @cattibingo
      @cattibingo Před 3 lety +8

      This comment has way fewer likes than it should

    • @pmboston
      @pmboston Před 3 lety +2

      @@cattibingo Why, because it is absolutely meaningless?

    • @Duar1503
      @Duar1503 Před 3 lety +1

      @@pmboston exactly

    • @pmboston
      @pmboston Před 3 lety

      @@LESLEY484 no it’s meaningless because you either can’t spell or you don’t re read your comments before you post them. Rising O2 levels means more oxygen which was very bad for the anaerobic bacteria but since that was pretty much it for life at the time, bacteria only, life carried on. Rising CO2 levels on the other hand, trap the suns light and heat by turning visible light into infra red light which adds energy (heat) to the atmosphere we all live in. For now.

    • @LESLEY484
      @LESLEY484 Před 3 lety

      @@pmboston still dont understand how events that happened on our planet is meaningless though but get to each their own

  • @pastaconnoisseur8441
    @pastaconnoisseur8441 Před 2 lety +11

    6:11 "This happens after a large die-off because the survivors have a brief time where there is little to no competition, so they will quickly spread and grow where the other plants have fallen"
    Same thing happens with bacteria. It's why you have to take so much medicine even after the symptoms go away, because if enough survivors are around, they can re-emerge stronger and more drug-resistant diseases.

  • @Law0086
    @Law0086 Před 3 lety +27

    "So if they were outside of blast radius, they would've had a much better chance at survival..."
    Alligators and iguanas in Florida, "Hold my beer."

    • @july9566
      @july9566 Před 3 lety +1

      @U D imagine the Florida cave man , uuuffff.

    • @eybaza6018
      @eybaza6018 Před rokem

      @@july9566 Not even the most primitive primates lived at that time, let alone Humans.

    • @july9566
      @july9566 Před rokem

      @@eybaza6018 it was a joke my friend. I am a huge fan of dinosaurs since I was a child , I am well aware of the what? 64.7 million years between us ?

  • @lufsolitaire5351
    @lufsolitaire5351 Před 2 lety +6

    That chart really helped to put into scale just how catastrophic the Permian mass extinction was.

  • @bigblue6917
    @bigblue6917 Před 3 lety +6

    I have read that with the largest dinosaurs the difference in size of a new born hatchling and a full grown adult was such that the adult was some 28,000 bigger than the hatchling. That's a lot of vegetation it needs to eat.

  • @nathanielhellerstein5871
    @nathanielhellerstein5871 Před 3 lety +50

    What slew the mighty saurian lords?
    A mountain falling from the sky
    And all that lived were verminous hordes
    The ancestors of you and I.

  • @naciremasti
    @naciremasti Před 3 lety +8

    I'm late to the party. Since I'm not too late, I was able to watch the majority of your channels catalog this afternoon. Top notch content. Channels like yours need to be promoted more. 🍻.

  • @nopeno9130
    @nopeno9130 Před 3 lety +21

    "Instantly vaporizing every plant and animal, up to 500 miles away...."
    Wow! 500 miles instantly!?
    "... in under 10 seconds."
    Wo... wait, what?
    (Yes, I know he must mean they were instantly vaporized when hit by a blast wave that took about 10 seconds to travel)

    • @rogeriopenna9014
      @rogeriopenna9014 Před 3 lety +6

      the ones vaporized by the light, could only be vaporized IF they were hit by the light. Meaning... if they were behind a mountain, the light would not hit them.
      even a thin carbord wall can protect you from the light of a nuclear blast... (which will provoke severe burns otherwise). But the incoming shockwave will kill you.

  • @karm65
    @karm65 Před 3 lety +5

    I use to be an underground utility contractor and was one of the many people who installed the U.S. fiberoptics loops and have dug all over the U.S. and every ware we dug in undisturbed earth we would find the layer of iridium rich silt/clay the further north the thinner the layer but it was always there.

  • @Xnaut314
    @Xnaut314 Před 3 lety +35

    The circumstances of the K-PG Extinction event and the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs as a result of it is a supporting point for the Mesotherm Dinosaur hypothesis to me. Mesotherm animals are extremely rare nowadays, and that's probably no coincidence. Mesothermy has been proposed as a contributing reason for how dinosaurs were able to get so massive; generating some body heat to accelerate and control metabolism and growth but still relying on some environmental heat stimulus so that body heat generation would not overheat their core bodies and internal organs.
    The K-PG Extinction would have complicated this metabolic strategy on both fronts, reducing solar radiation and food availability. Full ectotherms could survive by letting their body temperatures, and metabolisms by extension, drop so low that their dietary needs had equally low requirements until the environment stabilized and warmed up again. Full endotherms could also find ways to survive because their total reliance of internal body heat generation meant that they retained full body stamina and cognitive awareness regardless of environmental temperature, so as long as the body was small enough that the meager food availability in the extinction aftermath was still sufficient enough to fulfill dietary needs an endotherm would've practically always been able to claim any food over animals with other metabolic strategies. Mesotherms, however, had metabolic weaknesses exploited on both ends of the spectrum. Lower global temperatures would have meant that dinosaurs couldn't have maintained an optimal body temperature to reach full physical stamina or mental responsiveness that endotherms could, yet their dietary needs were great enough that they couldn't just suppress their metabolism or enter a state of torpor like the ectotherms could. Mesotherms would have received the worst of both worlds under the circumstances, and could be why not a single species made it out the other side, despite their great diversity right before the incident.

    • @ExtremeMadnessX
      @ExtremeMadnessX Před 3 lety +2

      Or they went extinct simply because they ecosystems get destroyed. Especially when you know that many birds and mammals ALSO get extinct with the dinosaurs.

    • @sampagano205
      @sampagano205 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ExtremeMadnessX yeah but the specific groups that were entirely eliminated also being the predominately mesothermic groups seems like it's indicative of some kind of pressure specifically against them. This isn't asserting mesothermy as the only factor, but it would point to a significant hurdle facing mesotherms in particular.

    • @juanausensi499
      @juanausensi499 Před 2 lety

      That's very interesting

    • @Midgert89
      @Midgert89 Před 2 lety +1

      @@sampagano205 do not underestimate how bad it can go if a foodweb gets a major disruption. Even stuff like the end permian which was a quick extinction relatively speaking was caused by a runaway greenhouse effect that messed up the foodweb.

  • @manuelpena3988
    @manuelpena3988 Před 3 lety +9

    Thank you, finally someone that explains the "circle of holes" in yucatan thing. Usually other channels are like "an there are signs of a huge asteroid impact..." but... what signs?!
    I really like your style, less frequent videos, but reaaaally good quality!

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety

      You mustn't be good at finding good science channels on youtube then. I've never seen any fail to show the crater location, it's so widely known now, I even learned it in high school. But it seems you're still not good at finding good science channels, cause this video completely fails to mention the volcanic activity going on in the Deccan at the same time, another thing i also learned in high school

    • @manuelpena3988
      @manuelpena3988 Před 3 lety +2

      @@samarkand1585 you did not understand me

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety

      @@manuelpena3988 I'm sorry then, I'm all ears

  • @Iceican
    @Iceican Před rokem +6

    The amount of misinformed people in the comment section is bizzare, some of the things i'm seeing people type are the kinds of stuff i thought people only joked about.

    • @ChrisField-rh2ck
      @ChrisField-rh2ck Před 4 měsíci

      Never underestimate the amount of stupidity in the world

  • @davis4555
    @davis4555 Před 3 lety +7

    I think that the time just after the K-Pg event would be a great "scary" Pixar movie. The protagonists could be a family of small mammals searching for food in a destroyed world populated by starving dinosaurs. A bit dark, but so are Wall-E and Finding Nemo. It could be great if done right!

  • @JHorsti
    @JHorsti Před 3 lety +35

    6:10 this canyon instantly reminded me of the one in Walking with Dinosaurs Time of the Titans episode.

  • @rasmusn.e.m1064
    @rasmusn.e.m1064 Před 3 lety +6

    I always watch these videos twice. One time before bed and a second time as I wake up in the morning :)

  • @likira111
    @likira111 Před 3 lety +75

    Apocalypse movies are wrong, the apocalypse has already happened so many times.

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Před 3 lety +15

      Did you know there's a current mass extinction event happening ? It's being caused by animal agriculture

    • @JaegerLeMaserati
      @JaegerLeMaserati Před 3 lety +1

      And will probably happen again! Humans go extinct next time?

    • @doburu4835
      @doburu4835 Před 3 lety

      @@JaegerLeMaserati nah, unlike before us, we are smart and possibly able to prevent our early extinction

    • @Dino-lemon265
      @Dino-lemon265 Před 3 lety +7

      @@doburu4835 well you see ..... The human population increases drastically and very soon were gonna run out of resources to keep up with insane demand for agriculture

    • @doburu4835
      @doburu4835 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Dino-lemon265 those rules don't apply to us, we can change our environment as we please, for better or for worse. If some of the negative effects started to surfsce in a big way in the future. I'm sure majority of the population will act quickly and fix everything else. And stop undermining our specie's resiliency, and our unique skill none of the other animals both dead or alive possess, our intelligence and high level of awareness.

  • @nick6666
    @nick6666 Před 3 lety +20

    The music 'Ross Bugden - Ascension' was the best fit

    • @rufusfauxnom5737
      @rufusfauxnom5737 Před 3 lety

      I liked this one better personally :
      czcams.com/video/LV_BV3KcOu8/video.html
      They're all nice though, they have that tranquil, nostalgic feeling to them. I guess I like feeling melancholic about long extinct species.
      Maybe alternate between them ?

    • @emperorzerstorer4360
      @emperorzerstorer4360 Před 3 lety

      @@rufusfauxnom5737 what the background music name?

    • @rufusfauxnom5737
      @rufusfauxnom5737 Před 3 lety

      @@emperorzerstorer4360 Couldn't find the name sorry, so I linked a video with it instead

    • @emperorzerstorer4360
      @emperorzerstorer4360 Před 3 lety

      @@rufusfauxnom5737 ok, because I love the music so much

  • @mysterious7215
    @mysterious7215 Před 3 lety +26

    This channel is my favorite
    Thank God I CZcams recommend this channel to me 😍

    • @Jesse__H
      @Jesse__H Před 3 lety +3

      check out PBS Eons too, if you haven't already!

    • @kinkhoest
      @kinkhoest Před 3 lety

      @@Jesse__H and Ben G Thomas

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Před 3 lety +2

      So you guys are into nature ? Did you that there's a mass extinction event happening and that we've lost over half of our vertebrates since the 70s ?
      It's being caused by animal agriculture . If you're an environmentalist , you must go vegan.

    • @kinkhoest
      @kinkhoest Před 3 lety

      @@isupportthecurrentthing.1514 I MUST do nothing.... MUST is where scary things begin.

    • @mysterious7215
      @mysterious7215 Před 3 lety

      @@Jesse__H I love that channel also but thanks for telling

  • @SplotchTheCatThing
    @SplotchTheCatThing Před 3 lety +9

    Could be interesting to speculate how much about the kpg extinction might have changed if the meteor had struck Earth in the middle of an ocean instead of partly on land -- certainly some factors would have stayed the same and there would still have been a mass extinction, but the particulars of that extinction might have been very different, and we might even be living on a very different planet right now.

  • @kaiden7063
    @kaiden7063 Před 3 lety +3

    Really proud of your growth. Been a sub since May of 2019 and have enjoyed every video you've uploaded, incredible job.

  • @Vates104
    @Vates104 Před 3 lety +34

    I wonder: if the meteor had never hit the Earth, what kind of life would be here today.

    • @tlotpwist3417
      @tlotpwist3417 Před 2 lety +14

      We would be sentient dinosaurs, drinking Raptorade, posting on Jawsbook, voting between Democratosaurus and Republicarnotaurs (for US lizards at least), and gather around the end of the year to celebrate T-rexmas

    • @fuanasantuary1277
      @fuanasantuary1277 Před 2 lety +2

      There wouldn't hominids species that's for sure.

    • @dinosaurus598
      @dinosaurus598 Před 2 lety

      Anything larger than an Dog would die.

    • @RuskiVodkaaaa
      @RuskiVodkaaaa Před 2 lety +3

      we wouldn't exist lol

    • @eybaza6018
      @eybaza6018 Před rokem

      There's a speculative evolution project by Dr.Polaris called ,,alter Earth'' that explores this idea.

  • @paulantony1056
    @paulantony1056 Před 3 lety +12

    Can you make a video on the evolution of praying mantis and mantidflies and how even though they're from different groups they look so similar

  • @josq81
    @josq81 Před 3 lety +5

    I just want to say that i really like this channel. Keep up the good work. 👍

  • @alinursayat3854
    @alinursayat3854 Před 3 lety +17

    Amazing content! Thanks

  • @hallamhal
    @hallamhal Před 3 lety +5

    Purgatorius is such a poetic name for a mammal in this period

  • @Mr.PR2000
    @Mr.PR2000 Před 3 lety +12

    It was Lord Beerus he confirmed it .. its canon.

  • @themarquess
    @themarquess Před 3 lety +10

    Thank you for answering a question I've been asking myself for a long time, regarding what happened to the small dinosaurs.

  • @TheFreshSpam
    @TheFreshSpam Před 3 lety +4

    Love these videos. They really get me dreaming and imagining other worlds. Amazing stuff

  • @tagfat
    @tagfat Před 3 lety +24

    Best nature show on the net!

  • @status101-danielho6
    @status101-danielho6 Před 3 lety +8

    I was in my first year geology class just a few hours after the meteor impact site was announced. The professor spent about 5 minutes discussing the findings, and how nobody in paleontology was particularly surprised that the k/T extinction was extraterrestrial. What surprised me was that even he knew that the worst possible spot to hit the Earth and create the most massive extinction event possible was to hit a carbonate platform in the ocean, maximizing CO2 aerosolization and the resulting dust cloud and acidity.

  • @GerardWay4President
    @GerardWay4President Před 3 lety +3

    Wonderful video! I’ve always had questions about this. You should consider doing videos like this about other extinction events as well. I’d love to learn more about the Permian extinction event since it’s probably the biggest.

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety

      I wouldn't trust him with getting the other extinctions right as he got this one wrong or misleadingly incomplete. He completely failed to mention the volcanism going on in the Deccan at the same time, I don't know where he got his information for this video but they seem outdated by a good 20 years

  • @ethribin4188
    @ethribin4188 Před 3 lety +25

    What you forget is that the preiod before the impact was a heavily tectonicly active period, this already creating a more poisonous planet then usually, because of vulcanic poisons.
    Not to mention climat chaos due to regular tectonic shifts.

    • @sampagano205
      @sampagano205 Před 3 lety +8

      Okay, but we'd not be talking about the kpg extinction event in the way we do if not for the asteroid. Like. Undoubtedly those things played a part, but emphasizing the decisive factor here seems pretty important, because without that we'd probably be looking at a much less severe extinction event that would likely have very different selection pressures for what survives and what fails.

    • @eybaza6018
      @eybaza6018 Před rokem +2

      @@sampagano205 Yes, without the asteroid this would have been much less severe.

  • @safyaomarjee1019
    @safyaomarjee1019 Před 3 lety +2

    This is my first time checking in after a good few months. I'm SO happy to see you've surpassed 100k subs! You deserve it so much

  • @isaakvandaalen3899
    @isaakvandaalen3899 Před 2 lety +2

    People: Man 2020 was a really bad year.
    Dinosaurs: Dude if you think *that* was bad, lemme tell you about this one time...

  • @Drago1995
    @Drago1995 Před 3 lety +7

    why is it said 66 million years ago now when did a million year pass without me knowing ?

    • @ratreptile
      @ratreptile Před 3 lety +2

      It was like 65.5 million years ago or something, people usually just round it up to 66 million.

  • @matthewmarx9251
    @matthewmarx9251 Před 3 lety +3

    I have got to admit, this video was very well made. Recently, I did some research on the animals that survived the K/T event such as Purgatorius and Thoracosaurus and it turns out that these guys made it up to the early Paleogene era. This made me wonder if some dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus, pterosaurs like Quetzalcoatulus, and extinct sea reptiles like Mosasaurus would have made it to the early Paleogene era if the mass extinction did not occur.

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety

      Very well made yet he completely skipped the Deccan trapps? Without this mention his whole description of the extinction is completely misleading

    • @matthewmarx9251
      @matthewmarx9251 Před 3 lety +3

      Perhaps, however the latest research has shown that the dinosaurs were doing just fine until the asteroid struck the Earth. Even with the eruptions from the Deccan Traps the dinosaurs still would have prevailed.

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety +1

      @@matthewmarx9251 Yeah that's why now the admitted theory is that it was the added effects of these two cataclysms that caused the extinction, and that a single one of them might have not been enough to cause such a loss. After all, all the major extinction events and most of the minor ones have been linked to large Igneous provinces like the Deccan Trapps, the same cannot be said about asteroid impacts. In any case my main gripe about this video is that he completely skipped this part, you can't talk about this extinction and mention one without the other

    • @matthewmarx9251
      @matthewmarx9251 Před 3 lety +1

      @@samarkand1585 You know what? You're right, he should have mentioned the Deccan Traps in this video.

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety +1

      @@matthewmarx9251 watch?v=st_2C_Wrw4A
      there's this video that I love about large igneous provinces and how they cause extinctions, and he's got another one that goes more in depth about mantle plumes, and it's fascinating

  • @Dryermalt
    @Dryermalt Před 3 lety +2

    Fantastic video, and thank you for continuing to upload so frequently. Your videos impart to me a sense of understanding about the prehistoric world that few other sources ever had.
    I’m thankful to pbs digital studios and eons for causing algorithms to bring me here because I now get way more excited when you upload a video.

  • @seanmadison6360
    @seanmadison6360 Před rokem +1

    If I ever build a time machine, that's one event I'd love to go back and see. Just imagine?

  • @dynamosaurusimperious6341
    @dynamosaurusimperious6341 Před 3 lety +16

    "The More You Know".

    • @firegator6853
      @firegator6853 Před 3 lety

      @Elizabeth Frantes of course it is...we humans as species love knowledge and have a big curiosity that we want to cover...it's obvious from the technology we developed and the scientists that studied the laws of nature and other things..if we were not curious about anything and just did not care about knowledge we would most likely live on trees just like the animal humans evolved from did

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Před 3 lety

      Did you know that animal agriculture is responsible for the current mass extinction event ?
      If you're an environmentalist , you must be vegan .

    • @firegator6853
      @firegator6853 Před 3 lety

      @@isupportthecurrentthing.1514 going vegan is not enough

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Před 3 lety +1

      @@firegator6853 Not if global warming takes hold but environmental destruction is a separate issue and not being vegan is the cause of it . We currently use 80% of our land to feed animals. 60% of earth's mammals ,by mass , now live on farms and they consist of a handful of speicies . Veganism is imperative for environmentalists .
      So why aren't you vegan yet ?

    • @audreydunbar402
      @audreydunbar402 Před 3 lety

      @@isupportthecurrentthing.1514 widespread veganism would alleviate habitat clearing for agriculture as you say, but it wouldn't prevent clearing that occurs for industry - just two examples being forestry monoculture for your paper and cotton monoculture for your clothes

  • @eurosonly
    @eurosonly Před 3 lety +6

    6:09 looks exactly like the spot from walking with dinosaurs and Jurassic Park 2 where that one dude gets eaten by a pack of little dinos.

    • @casper6405
      @casper6405 Před 3 lety +1

      That's cause it is from walking with dinosaurs
      I still wanna know where it is

    • @AifDaimon
      @AifDaimon Před 3 lety

      those little dinos were from a Triassic species called Compsognathus

    • @bee-yq3wb
      @bee-yq3wb Před 3 lety

      That’s because it is. It’s fern canyon, California.

    • @ustanik9921
      @ustanik9921 Před 3 lety

      Wasn't it that place where the stegosaurus got paranoid and killed a little apatosaurus? And then two allos came along

  • @TroubledTrooper
    @TroubledTrooper Před rokem +2

    It's crazy to me that we are looking at the exact rock layer that killed off the non-avian dinosaurs...

  • @chadeagleplume8950
    @chadeagleplume8950 Před 2 lety +3

    Hey I’ve found ammonite fossils lol just on the edge of my Rez lol beautiful gem stones and fossils

  • @iwasadeum
    @iwasadeum Před 3 lety +13

    Man, what I would give to be able to see that asteroid impact. It's so mind-blowing trying to imagine what that would look like!
    Also, any chance you could do a video on trilobites (or any of those early Cambrian animals)? As a kid, I was always fascinated by dinosaurs. But I have recently become infatuated with organisms from the Cambrian/Ordovician/Silurian - animals that existed for hundreds of millions of years are absolutely incredible. I would even go as far to say that early life is more interesting to me than dinosaurs.

    • @yourfinalhiringagency3890
      @yourfinalhiringagency3890 Před rokem

      Some people have a really hard time imagining things. It’s called aphantasia. Most people find it really easy.

  • @joaopedromeireles7210
    @joaopedromeireles7210 Před 3 lety +9

    It is very confusing when you mix imperial and metric units. Please be consistent and use metric (the system recognized in science)

    • @THIS---GUY
      @THIS---GUY Před 3 lety

      I'm sorry I thought this was America?

    • @baijiwastaken
      @baijiwastaken Před 3 lety +1

      @@THIS---GUY bruh u ain’t gotta be in America to watch this

    • @THIS---GUY
      @THIS---GUY Před 3 lety +1

      @@baijiwastaken I'm not from USA is a south park joke

    • @baijiwastaken
      @baijiwastaken Před 3 lety

      @@THIS---GUY shit my bad

  • @bobconnor1210
    @bobconnor1210 Před rokem

    Another piece of the puzzle: A geologist examining rock samples from an exploratory bore hole at Chixilub, Yucatán noted that all of the ancient quartz was shattered. This “shattered zone” turns out to be huge.

  • @phampshire6864
    @phampshire6864 Před 3 lety +1

    As well as short videos like this you could do longer hour long versions for those more interested in details.

  • @rksmiths2773
    @rksmiths2773 Před 3 lety +4

    Great channel. Simon Conway Morris made a list of all things that happened after the impact, from the span of minutes to years.

    • @regular-joe
      @regular-joe Před 3 lety

      Thanks! I always read the comment sections, just for gems like this! Edit: was it in written form or recorded, do you recall?

    • @rksmiths2773
      @rksmiths2773 Před 3 lety

      @@regular-joe I do not know if you mean it in an ironic or sarcastic way. But you can find that list in one of Stephen Stearn's lectures on evolution.

    • @regular-joe
      @regular-joe Před 3 lety

      @@rksmiths2773 No, I was absolutely in earnest. Thank you very much for the additional info.

  • @ast8177
    @ast8177 Před 3 lety +4

    Just imagine the thoughts of the animals that experianced this event.
    They never knew that they just experianced the, most likely, most segnificant natural event in earths history.

    • @eybaza6018
      @eybaza6018 Před rokem

      The most significant event complex life experienced was the Permian exitinction 252 million yers ago, and that made even the K-PG exitinction look not that bad, it was a literal armageddon.

  • @dustinwillis3261
    @dustinwillis3261 Před 3 lety +2

    You guys have to visit South Dakota ! The black hills and the badlands ! I love that state. One of my favorite places to go .

  • @mayday6916
    @mayday6916 Před 2 lety +2

    Very interesting and well told! Thank you! Are you going to do one about the permian-triassic extinction?

  • @firegator6853
    @firegator6853 Před 3 lety +3

    imagine being one of these animals that survived the mass extinction....living secretly under the shadows of weird looking giants and in a blink of an eye suddenly the whole environment around you changes and becomes almost empty....it's scary when after all these things that happened on the open surface suddenly all the big creatures became super rare and slowly going extinct it's even scarier if a small creature the size of a mouse grew with no dinosaurs (since small creatures usually grow super fast and have short lifespan) wandering in the open and a giant (for the small creature) surviving non avian dinosaur suddenly appears out of nowhere and live in fear for the rest of it's short life even if they all went extinct when it's still alive
    well i know their intelligence maybe was not high enough for that but still in our mind it's scary

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Před 3 lety +1

      What do you think will remain after the current mass extinction has run its course ?
      Humans will of course never see any new animals evolve , so it's gonna be pretty lonely.
      It's being caused by animal agriculture which is why the world needs to go vegan ASAP to save what we can .
      Have you gone vegan yet ?

    • @firegator6853
      @firegator6853 Před 3 lety +1

      @@isupportthecurrentthing.1514 the most dangerous things is the pollution of nature and destroying wildlife for products not eating what we farm we can actually choose what to eat if we only choose what we raise and not what we get from the wild it's gonna be reduced
      And my comment has nothing to do with humans i just try to imagine the psychology of a small animal that survived after the mass extinction which was used to be surrounded by giants and it's suddenly free to roam around but still lives in fear due to what it experienced and thinks they may still around but if any last dinosaur was left it's children which never were used to live around giants would find that terrifying if they met a last surviving dinosaur or even a corpse with rotten flesh on it

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Před 3 lety +1

      @@firegator6853 Animal agriculture is the main polluter of nature. The runoff destroys waterways and creates ocean dead zones . It is also the main cause of deforestation and habitat loss .
      We currently use 80% of our land to feed the 70 billion animals we raise and kill each year. 60% of earth's mammals , by mass , now live on farms and they only consist of a handful of speicies.
      It takes far more land to raise animals than it does to eat the plants directly , this is why a vegan diet could support the population of the world on a fraction of the land we currently use . The rest could be rewilded and provide the habitat earth's creatures so desperately need .

    • @firegator6853
      @firegator6853 Před 3 lety +1

      @@isupportthecurrentthing.1514 the deforestation is mostly for human expansion and wood products greenhouses (plant food) and animal factories for animal products are a problem too the biggest problem is burning fossil fuels which causes both climate change and destroys the environment and throwing trash is also a massive problem
      food product factories both plants and meat are the 15% of the destruction we cause
      a solution for making less food factories is actually protect the food products more and use only what we raise not wild food sources 50% of the food products (animals and plants) die so if they are raised properly we have both increase in food and money for those who make it and also less factories made
      385.000 babies are born each day so what we really must do is make less babies
      the babies we make now are so many that if we stop making babies on the planet for one week which is in total 2 million babies will not affect our population at all and this is very crazy
      in some words our whole existance is a problem except if we control OUR population and let the animals which people say must be controlled like seagulls alone our expansion is a problem if we protect our planet as much as possible and most importantly control our population we will maybe exist long enough for space travelling *(i personally believe this will never happen)*

  • @alexbowman7582
    @alexbowman7582 Před 3 lety +3

    It’s possible that after the strike when the nuclear winter hit then the plant eaters died out because of lack of plants, then the carnivores died because of lack of meat there were still enough dinos left to eventually make a comeback but small mouse like mammals became omnivorous scavengers surviving on whatever they could find including Dino eggs eventually finishing them off. The Hindi word for mouse and thief are the same.

  • @paulford9120
    @paulford9120 Před 3 lety +1

    I'd love to see a video on the Chesapeake Bay impact crater. Half the size of the
    Chicxulub crater, but would have devastated everything along the US east coast.

  • @weareallbornmad410
    @weareallbornmad410 Před 3 lety +2

    Everyone else: focussing on actual topic of the video
    Me: Father and son scientists, that's so cool!

  • @jasepoag8930
    @jasepoag8930 Před 3 lety +3

    Those poor dinosaurs had their vacations in Cancun completely ruined!

  • @Hurricayne92
    @Hurricayne92 Před 3 lety +4

    Birds are dinosaurs, Chickens are even classed as theropoda like T-Rex.

  • @Jdjdbxdj
    @Jdjdbxdj Před rokem

    It’s always mind boggling to think about just how old the earth is….human civilization has been around for maybe 10 thousand years and yet life had been flourishing for hundreds of millions of years…..can’t even comprehend that length of time.

  • @Loris71734
    @Loris71734 Před 3 lety +1

    Congrats on hitting the 100k

  • @testbenchdude
    @testbenchdude Před 3 lety +3

    Ooh. Next do a video about the Deccan traps please.

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety +2

      It should have been mentioned at the same time in this video. Even if just as a sidenote thing, since the asteroid impact was the focus of this video, you can't talk about this extinction and mention one without the other

  • @YY-ug9mv
    @YY-ug9mv Před 3 lety +14

    Fate is whimsical.Because of that asteroid we are here watching this video.

  • @rooty
    @rooty Před rokem

    The most interesting thing I've realised is that the meteor explanation for the extinction of the dinosaurs is so recent that Land Before Time, probably the most popular dinosaur movie before Jurassic Park, showed the dinosaurs dying out because of a draught.

  • @banishedbutcher-haloinfini3329

    Love your videos, great work man!

  • @ShadowblastX69
    @ShadowblastX69 Před 3 lety +8

    Amazing!! Can we have a video about The Great Dying next????

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety

      I wouldn't trust him with explaining the other extinctions right, since he completely failed to mention the volcanism going on in the Deccan at the same time, I don't know where he got his information for this video but they seem outdated by a good 20 years

    • @paleoleft
      @paleoleft Před 3 lety +2

      @@samarkand1585 this was about the meteor not the extinction

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety +1

      @@paleoleft 'The meteor that killed off the dinosaurs'
      -'this wasn't about the extinction'
      Man you have real issues with reading I swear

    • @paleoleft
      @paleoleft Před 3 lety +2

      @@samarkand1585 the subject of the sentence and video is the meteor itself. you can't seem to read yet you critique me lmao

  • @penzman
    @penzman Před 3 lety +3

    Look at James Bay, north of my province. The lower right side really looks like a what would be our biggest crater. Look at the rim and a glacier worn peak farther out in the bay. No one still has pronounced themselves officially, some say it is, some say it's a natural formation. I've personally considered it a crater for 45 years.

    • @eybaza6018
      @eybaza6018 Před rokem

      It might be a crater from a different, albeit smaller impact.

  • @luudest
    @luudest Před 2 lety +1

    I would love to see a video about: How did the world look like 10 years after the Chicxulub event? And how did the world look like 10 Mio. years after the impact?

  • @calogerohuygens4430
    @calogerohuygens4430 Před 3 lety +1

    Alvarez father and son studied the iridium anomaly layer in Gubbio, Italy. It's a wonderful place, come to see it.

  • @CosmicCaribbean
    @CosmicCaribbean Před 3 lety +3

    Should point out that there was a study that suggest that all modern birds might have derived from a lineage of generalized ground dwelling birds based on a study of how birds survived the K-Pg mass extinction (Answer: barely...). This would imply that most if not all the Cretaceous flying/arboreal birds, Eniantornithes mostly, did went extinct and that arboreality or long distance flight may have been re-evolved in an entirely derived lineage, I.E. Aves probably because of the blocked sunlight and polluted air quality perhaps.

    • @isaacbruner65
      @isaacbruner65 Před 2 lety

      This doesn't seem right, because ratites, which emerged shortly after the extinction, all descend from a flying ancestor, and convergently evolved flightlessness up to 6 times in different lineages. So if all surviving birds were flightless, flight would have had to evolve again in proto-ratites only to then be lost. Flight is not easy to evolve, it's only happened a few times.

  • @trvth1s
    @trvth1s Před 3 lety +6

    I love it, i would just have added that pterosaurs died off because in the late cretaceous most species were relatively large thus needed a lot of calories to survive, the smallest late cretaceous pterosaurs we have found were pretty big, as large as sea gulls. Pterosaurs were more diverce late cretaceous than we previously thought: blog.everythingdinosaur.co.uk/blog/_archives/2018/03/15/pterosaurs-more-diverse-at-the-end-of-the-cretaceous-than-previously-thought.html
    In the Mediterranean they found an island full of different species dated to the late cretaceous, but again the smallest species was pretty large, birds filled the niche of small generalist late cretaceous.

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 Před 3 lety

      Yeah thank you for pointing this out in such a nice concise reply. I tried to address this in a post as well but with other things as well in a long err wall of text.
      Also probably worth noting that the loss of thermals would have hit them quite hard.

    • @trvth1s
      @trvth1s Před 3 lety

      @@Dragrath1 I'm no expert on thermals but from my understanding pterosaurs dinosaurs mammals and some aquatic reptiles were all warm blooded.

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 Před 3 lety

      @@trvth1s Yeah exactly to varying degrees there were also some crocodillian relatives that had some degree of endothermy

    • @trvth1s
      @trvth1s Před 3 lety

      @@Dragrath1 I'm no expert and haven't been able to find information on it but maybe you know; do we know pterosaur or nonavian dinosaurs body temperature? I've done sky diving and paramotor in hot Florida weather and it is freezing cold up there. I know modern birds maintain a higher body temperature than mammals because of this, from my understanding pterosaurs were better marathon flyers than any vertebrate, I would expect a low metabolism would not suffice for such animals but idk

    • @ExtremeMadnessX
      @ExtremeMadnessX Před 3 lety

      You know maybe there was many species of small pterosaurus, but their bones were too fragile to fossilize...

  • @kevinrossi3557
    @kevinrossi3557 Před 3 lety +1

    For a more detailed explanation of the Imapct or Alvarez Theroy, I recommend the fourth part of PBS's old documtary The Dinosaurs. It has the people that discovered the crater and made the theroy. It also explains what actually could have made a crater that large.

  • @jeoffischer1164
    @jeoffischer1164 Před 3 lety

    Been waiting for an upload, great as always, keep up the great content

  • @wynnschaible
    @wynnschaible Před 3 lety +3

    The Deccan Traps erupted about the same time. Considering that the larger Siberian Traps are now the common culprit for the Great Dying, I think we need to factor in the role the Deccan had on the K-T extinction. One extraterrestrial cause is simple and sexy, and for that reason alone probably wrong!

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah his failure to even just mention that makes his video incomplete and misleading

  • @DankestDestroyer1098
    @DankestDestroyer1098 Před 2 lety +5

    "How a meteor killed the dinosaurs and how we know it happened."
    Creationists: That sign can't stop me because I can't read.

  • @random4life197
    @random4life197 Před 3 lety +2

    This channel is awesome

  • @katiebug217
    @katiebug217 Před 3 lety

    I love you channel so much its amazing how much you know and how much detail and work you put into your videos! Very impressive!

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 Před 3 lety

      Not really, he failed to mention the volcanism going on in the Deccan in the same period, meaning his version of the extinction is incomplete and outdated by 20 years

  • @neilcreamer8207
    @neilcreamer8207 Před 3 lety +3

    Isn't it a bit of a claim to say that we know this? It's a strong hypothesis. That's not the same as knowing.

    • @THIS---GUY
      @THIS---GUY Před 3 lety +2

      Pretty irrefutable evidence at this point

    • @neilcreamer8207
      @neilcreamer8207 Před 3 lety +1

      @@THIS---GUY I understand what you're saying but can we ever know that our inability to refute an idea isn't just a failure of our being able to imagine a better alternative explanation? There is a gap between theory and reality which we always seem to forget when we rush to claim that we know something. Knowing is a very particular thing which is different from strongly believing. Humans once 'knew' that the Sun went round the Earth.

  • @koolas_9429
    @koolas_9429 Před 3 lety +7

    Did the new album from "the Ocean" inspire this video? :D

  • @dragonniz
    @dragonniz Před 3 lety +2

    Beautiful! Thank you for doing this video ❤️

  • @tessat338
    @tessat338 Před 3 lety +1

    Louis Alverez's book is called "T-Rex and the Crater of Doom." It is a interesting and engaging read. The audio book is pretty good too.

  • @TacticusPrime
    @TacticusPrime Před 3 lety +9

    Dinosaurs didn't have a space program, but they also didn't cause their own climate change. Here's hoping that humanity becomes a species on more than one planet sooner rather than later.

    • @Newbmann
      @Newbmann Před 3 lety +2

      Saddly humanity is not united yet so preventing climate change is impossible since I doubt Ethiopia,Russia,Brazil ETC will implement reforms in the same way parts of the west wants to especially since well the west is having internal strife over said reforms cough cough yellowvest mouvment american politics Do I need to go on?

    • @likira111
      @likira111 Před 3 lety

      You never heard of the sauropod fart hypothesis for why the atmosphere was like that?

    • @TacticusPrime
      @TacticusPrime Před 3 lety

      @@Newbmann That's just ridiculous. The developed world uses the vast majority of the carbon-based energy in the economy. When the developed world can transition away from fossil fuels, then it can demonstrate to developing economies how they can do the same. Don't tell the women of Ethiopia that they can't having washing machines because of climate change. Are you going to stop using yours?

    • @Newbmann
      @Newbmann Před 3 lety

      @@TacticusPrime yeah guess what russia,japan are both in the "developed world" not to mention turkey and iran are both industrializing right now
      When japans efforts cause stuff like this
      www.google.com/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/environment/2020/mar/30/campaigners-attack-japan-shameful-climate-plans-release do you honestly belive there going to lissen when there called SHAMEFUL FOR TRYING?
      Stop treating this as a western issue its a global one go so go and protest in Iran oh wait I forgot that would cause a hostage crissis.
      Edit and keep in mind russia is INTENTINALLY TRYING to speed up global warming to make siberia more hospitable so good luck with getting russia onboard.

    • @Newbmann
      @Newbmann Před 3 lety

      @@TacticusPrime oh also I really think your underestimating ethiopia I mean just look at stuff like this www.tralac.org/news/article/13204-industrial-policy-and-late-industrialisation-in-ethiopia-the-structure-and-performance-of-the-manufacturing-sector.html
      Yeah and also there about as comitted as china or india when it comes to increasing industrial output.

  • @Newbmann
    @Newbmann Před 3 lety +4

    But the real question is did a meteor/comet cause the The Younger Dryas?

    • @jeffersonwagnerdessordi8958
      @jeffersonwagnerdessordi8958 Před 3 lety

      The best explanation for the Younger Dryas is the disintegration of a comet as proposed by Clube and Napier in 1984. There are many evidences of the falling of those fragments in successive passages: Abu Hureyra, Gobekli Teppe, Cape York and Willamette meteorites... There are a lot of metallic fragments in bison and mamooth bones dated from 30,000 years ago, before YD, found in Alaska and Siberia - and hundreds of suspicious elliptic lakes around Cheliabinsky, all of them oriented towards the region where the Alaskan bones were found.

    • @Newbmann
      @Newbmann Před 3 lety +1

      @nick sweeney you realize that's a new hypothesis right not full blown scientific theory but a hypothesis that's being investigated right now?
      And the investigation has been ongoing and there is a BIT of evidence for it not enough to say beyond a reasonable doubt but I mean stuff like this is there www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=www.sciencemag.org/news/2018/11/massive-crater-under-greenland-s-ice-points-climate-altering-impact-time-humans&ved=2ahUKEwjF1OCK_pPsAhUSd6wKHVvdD9AQFjAhegQIAxAB&usg=AOvVaw1d9XHH4Seyl_D5rojP74K_

    • @jeffersonwagnerdessordi8958
      @jeffersonwagnerdessordi8958 Před 3 lety

      @nick sweeney Random collisions is a better explanation than random mantle plumes. Impacts can explain the origin of mantle plumes. Impact craters are visible on Moon, remnants of craters are visible on Earth. You may believe in what you want, but I do research and I'm not afraid of new plausible theories.

    • @jeffersonwagnerdessordi8958
      @jeffersonwagnerdessordi8958 Před 3 lety

      @nick sweeney Don't you know the basics? Learn about, do your own research before defying others to explain it to you. Surely, I have nothing to learn from you, have a nice tantrum.

    • @jeffersonwagnerdessordi8958
      @jeffersonwagnerdessordi8958 Před 3 lety

      @nick sweeney No, I didn't feel a tantrum in your previous reply. I anticipated the tantrum in this reply, and I am not disappointed. And positively, I'm not embarrassed. Your arrogant manners do not deserve my time. If you didn't get it yet: I have no obligation to answer your questions; I have better things to do than talk to you. This conversation is over, your little display attempt is over. Bye bye!

  • @crookeddesk
    @crookeddesk Před 2 lety +1

    Looking at that timeline of mass extinction events is freaky because it seems to follow a pretty regular pattern, and one that implies the next event will be happening soon...

    • @eviljoel
      @eviljoel Před 2 lety

      Nah that's new age pseudoscience bullshit. It's extremely easy to see patterns anywhere.

  • @ywoisug8845
    @ywoisug8845 Před 2 lety

    Props for scientifically accurate dinosaur on the thumbnail

  • @ameyas7726
    @ameyas7726 Před 3 lety +10

    Brachiosaurus: Hey guys, we need to prepare...you know a meteor could hit Earth and wipe us all out!!
    T-Rex: FAKE NEWS!...meteors hit Earth all the time and never cause no global whaming..

  • @aprameyakrishna9686
    @aprameyakrishna9686 Před 3 lety +4

    Last time I was this early, the dinosaurs were still around.

    • @BlackSakura33
      @BlackSakura33 Před 3 lety +1

      They are still around. 🐥

    • @Newbmann
      @Newbmann Před 3 lety +1

      Oh last time I was this early I was struggling to survive the younger dryas

    • @venth6
      @venth6 Před 3 lety

      bad joke cause they are still around

  • @dirtydan9410
    @dirtydan9410 Před 3 lety +1

    It’s so crazy how such an arbitrary event like a huge rock just so happening to be in the direct line of impact of this planet in the entire universe changed the course of life as we know it. Hell, had that huge rock been a huger rock, life may have died out completely. Crazy.

  • @paytonlott5183
    @paytonlott5183 Před 3 lety +1

    That 2 fern species fact is so interesting