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The Formation of the Mediterranean Sea

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2016
  • Continued from • BASEBALL, Part 2
    An excerpt from Episode 14 of our Endless Ocean: Blue World Let's Play. www.kisamayatsu...
    / zorak

Komentáře • 846

  • @alanfbrookes9771
    @alanfbrookes9771 Před 6 lety +362

    If the Gibralta Straits were to seal up again I guarantee that we would dig a channel to keep it open. There's too much investment in the Mediterranean for humans to let it dry up. As long as there are humans there will be a Mediterranean.

    • @Exoneos
      @Exoneos Před 5 lety +31

      I don't underestimate Human but really none human can fight the FORCE OF MOTHER FUCKING TECTONIC PLATE !

    • @HerrHertzsprung
      @HerrHertzsprung Před 4 lety +17

      Human engineering has only been possible so far by mastering rigidity. Our engineering can't deal yet with the tremendous forces that keep the planet flexible throrough geological time as to wreck human building.

    • @Karen1963Yorks
      @Karen1963Yorks Před 4 lety +6

      @@Exoneos I think we can outwit a tectonic plate. Well some of us can.

    • @razorback1sf1
      @razorback1sf1 Před 4 lety +1

      @@HerrHertzsprung we have nukes, tho it would posion the water, it definitely could reform the sea if we unclogged the straight

    • @MrCrunch808
      @MrCrunch808 Před 3 lety +2

      @Matheus Troan through a series of locks, which wouldn't work for refilling an entire sea basin.

  • @LordEmilous
    @LordEmilous Před 6 lety +447

    Imagine being at the Gibraltar at the very moment it broke? :D And witnessing all that massive amount of ocean water just pour in

    • @wd-type9643
      @wd-type9643 Před 6 lety +64

      Slow or not it would’ve been a beautiful sight

    • @jamessmith84240
      @jamessmith84240 Před 6 lety +43

      Yea I was thinking the same. The scale of it must have been crazy. I mean look up what happened at Lake Peigneur in 1980, and this was a drip in comparrison.

    • @shruggzdastr8-facedclown
      @shruggzdastr8-facedclown Před 6 lety +6

      mPky1: Back then, not only was it not known as "Istanbul", it was millennia from being named "Constantinople"

    • @shruggzdastr8-facedclown
      @shruggzdastr8-facedclown Před 6 lety +3

      mPky1: Um, that's what I was saying -- you just misread me.

    • @lusornemo8066
      @lusornemo8066 Před 6 lety +3

      Lord Emilous
      That waterfall would cause so much noise!

  • @EASYTIGER10
    @EASYTIGER10 Před 6 lety +21

    Fascinating fact: They reckon the very rapid drying of the Med left the Nile "hanging" with rapids or even a waterfall where it met the Med, and the much more rapid waters cut a deep canyon which moved south into Egypt in only a few millennia. When the Med filled again and the Nile slowed, that canyon quickly filled with the sediment that the Nile is famous for.
    If you look at the Nile Valley in northern Egypt today, you see that much of it is a flat, fertile floodplain with a rocky "lip" on each side before transitioning almost immediately into desert. Some reckon the relatively small cliffs that make that lip are in fact the top of a pair of canyon walls that would dwarf the Grand Canyon.....

    • @James-fg8rf
      @James-fg8rf Před 3 měsíci +1

      This is super cool. Thanks or sharing :)

  • @VoidHalo
    @VoidHalo Před 6 lety +44

    That was really well written. I admit the visuals weren't as descriptive as I'm used to, but the writing was phenomenal and I think the visuals only made me pay more attention to that. Definitely glad I stumbled across this.

  • @brianjohnson9938
    @brianjohnson9938 Před 6 lety +136

    One of the Cosmos episode explains how the Mediterranean Sea being refilled played a big part in the evolution of humans. The Mediterranean sea filling lowered the ocean level so that North and South America connected. This new connection shifted the ocean flow which make Africa much hotter and less of a forest. African primates in trees who'd become humans lost a lot of forest density to protect themselves from predators, and subsequently had to adapt to walk and run and use their hands for holding and using tools as weapons instead of hiding. Pretty fascinating.

    • @srinitaaigaura
      @srinitaaigaura Před 6 lety +6

      This planet is intelligent.

    • @njebei
      @njebei Před 6 lety +12

      I think this is a bit of an oversimplification. I don't remember Cosmos saying this specifically but if they did they are overselling (they did this a lot to ease story flow from one topic to the next). The Mediterranean closed about 5.9 million years ago and reopened about 5.3 million years ago. The closing of Americas took much longer, the South American plate beginning to subduct under North America about 24 million years ago and forming one contiguous land mass about 3 million years ago. The thing that disputes the 'Cosmos theory' is forests in East Africa began to be replaced by grassland about 10 million years ago and had switched completely around 3 million years ago. Another is that current scientific belief is the water transfer between the Pacific and Atlantic stopped between 7-11 million years ago, long before the Mediterranean closed and reopened.
      I do think it is accurate to say both events had various effects which in turn affected us. It seems likely to me that the linking of North/South America was the root cause for the formation of the African grasslands as it fits the timeline. It would be another 4 million years before the Mediterranean closed. I'm sure the closing of the Mediterranean 5.9 million years ago had its own effect as local heat patterns, blowing dust, and salinity and certainly would have changed climate all over the world. However, the forests in East Africa had already started disappearing long before this happened.
      Frankly, it is probably a good thing the grasslands took millions of years to appear. If it took less time humans would have been less able to adjust the new environment. At the very least, we would have evolved differently.

    • @rderran5377
      @rderran5377 Před 6 lety +4

      @Adam Vanderhoofven: All you've managed to do here is to prove -- 1) that you have no earthly clue how the processes of biological evolution work, and 2) that you have no clue what sort of fossil evidence for primate evolution actually exists. All in all, good job looking like a completely ignorant @55clown.

    • @rderran5377
      @rderran5377 Před 6 lety +4

      @lmb nasri: No one said that the primates in question "suddenly became incapable of climbing trees." The steady reduction in tree coverage reduced the protective advantage provided by the trees. Long-term survival in that context required adaptation. At least one, perhaps more, groups of these primates did adapt to a different preferred form of locomotion. Others probably did not (meaning they either died out or they adapted in some other way, leading to a different species line). See what happens when you actually do "switch on your brain" instead of just shooting your mouth off?

    • @VenueVideoUK
      @VenueVideoUK Před 6 lety +1

      So you've not heard of the last ice age and the sea levels that were so much lower for so long 😉

  • @MrPeterGoldman
    @MrPeterGoldman Před 6 lety +180

    What is this? Everyone knows it was Heracles who broke a path through the mountain of Gibraltar to let in the Atlantic Ocean!

    • @spidercollector9636
      @spidercollector9636 Před 6 lety +21

      _Woooosh_

    • @therealinferno161
      @therealinferno161 Před 6 lety +12

      +FortniteSnipes r/wooosh

    • @richardbigouette3651
      @richardbigouette3651 Před 6 lety +1

      MrPeterGoldman damn my ignorance.

    • @floridaman4073
      @floridaman4073 Před 6 lety

      Hercules was born in Lixus where the garden of Hesperides was located. The site does exist and been there near the present day Larache, Morocco. His exploits on the other hand are exaggerated to say the least.

    • @brahim119
      @brahim119 Před 6 lety +10

      *@MrPeterGoldman,* Sorry to see that many _smart_ guys missed the meaning of your subtle joke,

  • @SolaceEasy
    @SolaceEasy Před 7 lety +75

    "Very small, very few, large brine lakes." Which were the perfect breeding grounds for Jumbo Shrimp.

    • @EASYTIGER10
      @EASYTIGER10 Před 6 lety +8

      Which at close to boiling point, would be ready cooked :)

  • @welshpete12
    @welshpete12 Před 6 lety +9

    I used to sail the Med and often wondered how it came to be . Thank you for posting , very informative .

  • @kristine6996
    @kristine6996 Před 6 lety +26

    A lot of plastic is destroying its beauty. I witnessed this in Cyprus. So very very sad !

  • @SolaceEasy
    @SolaceEasy Před 3 lety +19

    "Very few, very small, large brine lakes." Did the small large lakes have jumbo shrimp?

  • @ahmetseckinov8790
    @ahmetseckinov8790 Před 6 lety +120

    I learn more at youtube than at school

    • @fluff5
      @fluff5 Před 4 lety +3

      @@viracocha definitely yes. School sucks

    • @slomotionaction
      @slomotionaction Před 3 lety

      @@fluff5 school uses youtube as their platform and i say no. Sorry edit but yes school is using CZcams instead of the outdated vhs tapes we used to use so no CZcams is teaching what school is teaching

    • @stekingtv
      @stekingtv Před 3 lety

      @@viracocha Definitely yes.

    • @konstantinoster9697
      @konstantinoster9697 Před 3 lety

      @@viracocha so nice of you to explain to him. I dont know he ll change his mind tho

  • @Utubearchy
    @Utubearchy Před 6 lety +3

    Strangely, the video omitted mentioning the feedback that the desiccation of the
    Mediterranean Sea would have created beyond stating the quick drop in sea level when what we today call 'Gibraltar' opened up to flood the Mediterranean basin. When the Mediterranean dried up not only did all that water get redistributed to the rest of the world but it captured huge volumes of salt, making the world's oceans less salty. This could've led to an increase of ice buildup in the oceans and create surfaces reflecting more incoming sun light which in turn could lower temperatures and create major climatic changes to include ice age conditions. The amount of salt deposits around the Mediterranean indicates that there may have been multiple drying and flooding of the
    the Mediterranean basin. This whole picture hints at how the development of human populations and civilizations managed to squeeze itself between geological changes in the dynamic history of the planet. And that our fragile existence can't be taken for granted,
    especially if we ignore our own impact.

  • @walidtali1804
    @walidtali1804 Před 5 lety +62

    The Mediterranean: the holy sea, the cradle of civilization 💪

    • @dddf27
      @dddf27 Před 4 lety +1

      Holy? Why

    • @Ispeakthetruthify
      @Ispeakthetruthify Před 3 lety +4

      A sea that was formed millions of years before humans even existed, and made up religion? I guess you can call that "holy"....

    • @Cringekeen
      @Cringekeen Před rokem +1

      Based

    • @Nellis202
      @Nellis202 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Ispeakthetruthifylighten up ⬆️

  • @xpsmango4146
    @xpsmango4146 Před měsícem

    535M years ago, a camera enthusiast was standing close to the Strait of gibraltar, when he saw a flood gate of water rush into the dry bed of mediterranean sea and he started filming. Indeed it was once in a lifetime opportunety.

  • @snakepliskin23
    @snakepliskin23 Před 5 lety +3

    The Mediterranean has always been the peak of my places to visit

  • @aaronmarks9366
    @aaronmarks9366 Před 6 lety +3

    Great video, and I really liked the music - symphonic and nature goes so well together

  • @Ikelae
    @Ikelae Před 7 lety +71

    Glad I found this ^^

  • @collegeman1988
    @collegeman1988 Před 6 lety +6

    Did the Mediterranean Sea dry up because of an ice age? This would explain why ocean levels were lower at that time. As the polar regions melted, ocean levels would rise and eventually, the area between what is now Spain and Gibraltar would flood.

  • @NotFlappy12
    @NotFlappy12 Před 6 lety +4

    imagine being alive at the time the mediterranean opened up, that would probably be one the fastest changes to the earths surface ever

    • @GrahamCStrouse
      @GrahamCStrouse Před 6 lety +2

      Mage craft There have been a few near equivalents. The formation of the Black Sea occurred somewhere around 7000-9000 years ago if I recall correctly.

    • @reddwarfer999
      @reddwarfer999 Před 6 měsíci

      @@GrahamCStrouse That would have been but a mere trickle compared to the Med filling up.

  • @finaoo1167
    @finaoo1167 Před 6 lety +2

    I've often wondered if Gibraltar breaking contributed to the legend of the Flood, but if it happened 5.5 million years ago there would have been no humans around to witness it.

    • @njebei
      @njebei Před 6 lety +4

      A more likely candidate is the Black Sea flooding that occurred when sea levels began to rise after the last ice age. It is estimated that sea levels dropped about 130 meters at the last glacial maximum which is a problem when you consider the shallowest part of the Bosporus (which links the Black Sea to the Mediterranean) is about 13 meters deep. The rivers feeding the Black Sea don't have enough flow to fill that body of water completely so during the ice age it would have shrunk to about half its current size. At some point, estimated to be about 10,000 years ago, the waters of the Mediterranean sea rose enough to again top the Bosporus and its waters flooded the Black Sea. Scientists argue how quickly it filled but there is no doubt that whole communities were flooded and cultures had to relocate. Considering that the area north of the Caspian and Black sea is also a probable source of Indo-European language it it isn't too much of a leap of faith to link this event to the many of the stories as its people moved beyond this area.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea_deluge_hypothesis
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_languages#Evolution

    • @finaoo1167
      @finaoo1167 Před 6 lety +2

      Agreed. The timing of the Black Sea flooding makes it much more likely, but the sheer scale of the Mediterranean has always fascinated me, so I guess it was some wishful thinking on my part.

  • @arkie87
    @arkie87 Před 6 lety +2

    why is the temperature at the dried out Mediterranean sea hotter?

  • @BAMofNC
    @BAMofNC Před 4 lety +7

    It would be great to do a video and description of the changing shoreline starting at the end of the last ice age and mapping out how the shoreline moved "inland" as the ocean levels rose from the ice melting. Now that would be interesting and would explain how so many ruins of towns and cities are now under water.

  • @mattpliska
    @mattpliska Před 2 lety +2

    Why is it that the Mediterranean is less salty than the ocean if it is ocean water that flooded into collosal salt flats and hypersaline seas?

  • @ChristianJiang
    @ChristianJiang Před 6 lety +51

    Why are there so many dumb comments??

    • @WinHippopotamus
      @WinHippopotamus Před 6 lety +10

      I don't know man I was wondering the same thing. A bunch of fucking retards here, even by normal CZcams standards.

    • @dddf27
      @dddf27 Před 4 lety

      Idk

    • @caseypilarczyk9312
      @caseypilarczyk9312 Před 4 lety +2

      @Thomas Headley
      Shipwreck in the underworld and dinosaur somebody here for ghost sea Hunter is nightmarish the living creatures on the earth was kind of extinct things that island about fossils and bones at the field museum

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube Před 6 lety +9

    There was a proposed geoengineering project a few decades back to build a gibralter damn to create a large energy supply plus tons of new land in the mediterranean. It was abandoned for several reasons. First, the massive terraforming would have changed the envoronment of a great deal of the world in ways that were not always predictable and often would have been disasterous, like the massively higher water levels flooding every coastal city on the world's oceans. And also because there wasn't enough concrete in the world to actually build it nor the technology to get it done. Plus, if it broke, everyone would die.
    So it was kind of a bad idea.

    • @petraf2069
      @petraf2069 Před 6 lety +1

      Not to mention the land under the sea is completely uninhabitable wasteland.

    • @giorgospapoutsakis5271
      @giorgospapoutsakis5271 Před 7 měsíci

      You mean the Atlantropa project from that one German engineer?

  • @JustinLHopkins
    @JustinLHopkins Před 6 lety +17

    Would have been incredible to see such an epic geological event.

  • @BFDT-4
    @BFDT-4 Před 7 lety +28

    Hello, what is the background music? I like it very much!

    • @alejandrayalanbowman367
      @alejandrayalanbowman367 Před 6 lety +1

      You must be the only one.

    • @alastairdickins
      @alastairdickins Před 6 lety

      BFDT Maybe some Vaughan Williams? I'd also like to know what it is

    • @rt6692
      @rt6692 Před 6 lety

      I'm curious myself too!

    • @l3fth4nd
      @l3fth4nd Před 6 lety +8

      Yoko Kanno - Man in the Desert. The album is Song to Fly.

    • @rt6692
      @rt6692 Před 6 lety

      Thank you!

  • @whatthehellol1610
    @whatthehellol1610 Před 2 lety +1

    The Mediterranean sea regulates the sea level of the earth.

  • @fredhoupt4078
    @fredhoupt4078 Před 6 lety +2

    stunning. Very well presented. I didn't know most of that history. Wow.

  • @johnbecich9540
    @johnbecich9540 Před 6 lety +1

    Cataclysmic inundations are ALWAYS "game changers"! Thank you for this marvelous compendium that succinctly explains what has been ambiguously told, before. The story of this "Middle Earth" Sea warrants attention by those who are tethered to Jedeo-Christian explanations on the origins of Western Civilization, if not humanity itself. Ditto, the Black Sea's inundation, at Bosporus. That recent catastrophe was dramatized by two scientists who wrote "Noah's Flood"; Bob Ballard (of Titanic fame) subsequently searched that Sea's bottom, and found nothing resembling ancient human habitats, however.

  • @hotrodjones74
    @hotrodjones74 Před 6 lety +5

    Stuff like this was the most interesting part of my Geology 101 class at university. Rocks for jocks! Or in my case science for a liberal arts degree. I admit I did my Russian homework sometimes in the geology lecture, but the lab on Wednesday evenings was awesome! I think geological history and basic plate tectonics are more interesting for me than memorizing rock compositions.

  • @bluesdirt5889
    @bluesdirt5889 Před 6 lety +3

    The Midwest or Chicago land area was also an inland sea . Thornton quarry's are amazing

  • @tommyharrington3094
    @tommyharrington3094 Před 6 lety +2

    It would be fun and go back in time to see the Gibraltar straight break and watch the biggest flood ever happen. Would be fun with popcorn

  • @tomgates316
    @tomgates316 Před 6 lety +1

    Was a documentary within the last few years were they discussed drilling core samples from the bottom of the Mediterranean. They found repeating layers of decayed vegetation. Interesting area full of history.

  • @dominikhameder629
    @dominikhameder629 Před 6 lety +8

    Mare nostrum.

  • @robburgess4556
    @robburgess4556 Před 6 lety +2

    I know I'm late to the party, but 40C is 104F, not 72F!

  • @user-md9yv7jx2c
    @user-md9yv7jx2c Před 3 měsíci

    The Great Basin of Nevada is basically an inland sea that dried up, permanently. Our state fossil is the Ichthyosaur.

  • @dutchministryofdefence604

    thank the gods for Gibralter

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 Před 6 lety +320

    There's so much Roman treasure at the bottom of that sea. It would be pretty cool if it could dry again up for just a little while.

    • @Sock1122
      @Sock1122 Před 6 lety +40

      annual holiday, search for as much missing roman treasure in the dred up Med over 24hrs as you can

    • @alexhurlbut
      @alexhurlbut Před 6 lety +30

      The one way for that to happen, I.E. dropping sea level is by having a freezing period where more water gets lock up in ice again. Aka another Ice Age.

    • @karabenomar
      @karabenomar Před 6 lety +15

      But you better be back in time, we're not waiting for stragglers.

    • @eschel2155
      @eschel2155 Před 6 lety +3

      Alex Hurlbut or the mediteranian could dry up again

    • @alexhurlbut
      @alexhurlbut Před 6 lety +3

      Which require reducing water flow into the sea.

  • @BazColne
    @BazColne Před 6 lety +2

    I'm looking forward to seeing the Mediterranean seals featured here.

  • @barrybarlowe5640
    @barrybarlowe5640 Před 3 měsíci

    A lot of this is speculation. Ive heard it described differently in several places. It's possible the Mediterranean basin was habitable. Remember, the Sahara has undergone shifts in climate as well - frequently greening with abundant rivers that might also have fed the basin.

  • @df4250
    @df4250 Před 6 lety +3

    There should be more geological stories like this one. I trevealed to me something I was not aware of about the beautiful Mediteranean.

  • @Swecraft1
    @Swecraft1 Před 6 lety +2

    This was very interesting and I am surprised and a little sad to see this hasn't gotten more views.

  • @ErstDErst
    @ErstDErst Před 6 lety +1

    THIS IS WHY THEY SAY ... THE MORE YOU EXPLAIN THE BETTER YOUR EXPLANATION ..... GRAT LESSON FOR ALL

  • @TheNamelessOne888
    @TheNamelessOne888 Před 6 lety +5

    The continents are shifting a little today. To clarify, because we know this is happening constantly, we are witnessing the exact point of slight continental shift. Geological activity has increased in the pacific ocean recently. This has caused islands to raise and volcanoes to erupt. It's not over yet. Keep watching. Stay tuned and watch what happens next.

  • @philwaters9751
    @philwaters9751 Před 6 lety +4

    Great little lecture bud... And nice music too... xxx ;-)

  • @TheRealBrook1968
    @TheRealBrook1968 Před 6 měsíci

    At least two similar events have occurred in human history. The breaking of Niagara10,000 BC (coincidentally the beginning of the Neolithic Era) and the Bosporus around 6,000 BC. In fact, there have been archaeological dives in the Black Sea to underwater civilizations for many years.

  • @eliblake3112
    @eliblake3112 Před 6 lety +1

    And there is evidence that in HISTORICAL times (like flooded coastlines containing evidence of ancient civilization) that a similar event happened in which the Mediterranean itself broke through a land bridge in the Bosporous and flooded the basin of the Black Sea (which previously was probably a large freshwater lake.)

  • @andrewrecard5857
    @andrewrecard5857 Před 6 lety +1

    Good video. Geological history is always so interesting

  • @awildfilingcabinet6239
    @awildfilingcabinet6239 Před 6 lety +5

    now I want to see an animation of that.

  • @ONKTmetalband
    @ONKTmetalband Před 7 měsíci +1

    Couldn't handle the background music anymore after 2 min.

  • @ronjohnson1658
    @ronjohnson1658 Před 5 měsíci +1

    At 4:18 the temperature of 40 degrees Celsius is definitely NOT 72 degrees Fahrenheit !
    40 deg C = 104 deg F !

  • @simonk.4338
    @simonk.4338 Před 6 lety +4

    Thats insane! Imagine being there, seeing the flood with your own eyes.

    • @Trash_Boat007
      @Trash_Boat007 Před 3 lety

      there's an interesting theory that states that this flood is what caused the mythos of the biblical flood. early humans experienced this and it morphed and changed as stories of it were told through the generations

    • @lennysmileyface
      @lennysmileyface Před 11 měsíci

      @@Trash_Boat007 What humans were in Europe 5.3 million years ago though?

    • @reddwarfer999
      @reddwarfer999 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Trash_Boat007 Far more likely that would be the Black Sea flood.

  • @alperenbaser5595
    @alperenbaser5595 Před 5 lety +1

    What about Black sea during this event with sea of Marmara ?

  • @bajwa401
    @bajwa401 Před 6 lety +1

    You have just earned a subscriber. Great presentation.

  • @MrRinoHunter
    @MrRinoHunter Před 6 lety +49

    So the Mediterranean was once Mordor, who knew ! ... The hobbitssss did....

    • @testrun9679
      @testrun9679 Před 6 lety +2

      Mediteranean means the midle of earths actually

    • @littlerave86
      @littlerave86 Před 6 lety +2

      Well, in German it's simply Middle Ocean. We deny the existence of Mordor!

    • @Tripserpentine
      @Tripserpentine Před 6 lety +1

      that would have been Beleriand which has been sunk Mordor is still standing XD

  • @omarma7815
    @omarma7815 Před 6 lety +2

    fun fact gibraltar derived from the arabic word "jabal tarik" which literally translates to the mountain of tarik referring to the muslim umayyad general tarik ibin ziyad who conqured spain in 8th centuary and formed andalus

    • @martialkintu2035
      @martialkintu2035 Před 6 lety

      Omar Almalouhi It doesn't even sound close to that. It's like saying that the word macadamia nuts are derived from Macedonia.

  • @Julia-kz6ed
    @Julia-kz6ed Před 6 lety +4

    From Spain, very interesting.

  • @frmol1
    @frmol1 Před 6 lety +2

    Im from Slovakia.. dam! we had a sea couple millions years ago... "wish i could turn back time.."

    • @adreq3.05
      @adreq3.05 Před 3 lety

      I my country was the see too. I seen once the relicts of that world.

  • @Sandromvd
    @Sandromvd Před 3 lety

    the best video about Gibaltrar, thanks 👏🏼👏🏼🙌🏼

  • @steveweinstein3222
    @steveweinstein3222 Před 6 lety +3

    Interesting! I always thought that GIbraltar, rising so dramatically, wouldn't/couldn't stay that way.

  • @monk9816
    @monk9816 Před 6 lety +19

    Imagine what kinds of life forms lived in the basin before Gibraltar opened back up. We could be on the surface of a series of great scientific discoveries. There could be creatures similar to that of the Atacama Desert in Chile, which is the current driest place on Earth. There could be so much buried down there, albeit the amount of fossils would be slim, due to likely not having the best conditions for fossilization, they it is possible, we have fossils from the Gobi Desert, and pretty good ones at that.

    • @lizardirl9488
      @lizardirl9488 Před 6 lety +1

      Don't forget all the roman treasure still left to be uncovered down there!

    • @rharvey9808
      @rharvey9808 Před 6 lety +1

      Hunting fossils would be extremely difficult.
      Remember that the inrushing Atlantic filled the Med in (at most) a couple of years...so we are talking water flows of trillions of gallons per hour. This would have scoured the surface away and dumped debris into the deepest portions where it might have had a chance to settle to the bottom over time.
      Any fossils that did survive being pulverised, would now be in the deepest parts of the Med...and under thousands of feet of silt.
      Now as for the gold and other treasures...it would include Roman, Greek, Egyptian cultural trophies among many others.
      So...who's got a boat? :-)

    • @EASYTIGER10
      @EASYTIGER10 Před 6 lety

      I don't reckon they find much life in the deepest parts. The Atacama is a picnic compared to what the Med Desert would have been like.

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 Před rokem

    Greetings from the BIG SKY. The Straits of Heracles to the rescue.

  • @salchaw
    @salchaw Před 6 lety +2

    amazing ! thank u for posting .

  • @andrewgalvin844
    @andrewgalvin844 Před rokem

    Thank you for your factual videos...they stand out.

  • @thaddeuskobylarz8519
    @thaddeuskobylarz8519 Před 7 lety +115

    12K people watched, around 75 people liked...
    You people are mean...

    • @dlwatib
      @dlwatib Před 6 lety +12

      No we're not. 75 people were overly generous.

    • @raggedclawstarcraft6562
      @raggedclawstarcraft6562 Před 6 lety +14

      I would leave a like if youtube wouldn't create a pointless playlist of my liked videos which I do not want, or if at least there would be an option to delete it.

    • @gredualmcmelon1914
      @gredualmcmelon1914 Před 6 lety

      @Ruslan Zarifov Exactly

    • @casimiriii5941
      @casimiriii5941 Před 6 lety +3

      The odd part is it was a well done educational as well as entertaining video.

    • @TheAilate
      @TheAilate Před 6 lety

      I use my like playlist for listening music B) I liked your comment tho

  • @CraigMcDonald1234
    @CraigMcDonald1234 Před 6 měsíci

    As noted, when the ocean poured in to fill the Med., ocean levels dropped 33 feet. Doe this mean that with 2 years, almost all coral reefs in the world, died?

  • @fionnmoules7620
    @fionnmoules7620 Před 7 lety +3

    If this never happend we wouldn't be here today

    • @pagedown4195
      @pagedown4195 Před 6 lety +1

      I´ll think we would..

    • @riebenzahl-524
      @riebenzahl-524 Před 6 lety +1

      Maybe we would, but our culture would look different, or even not at all. The Mediterranean sea is the cradle of our western civilization. Not only that most civs lived alongside the shore but euphrat and tigris are also (partly) fed by evaporated water from the sea
      With that gone no civs would have formed alongside the Mediterranean, maybe only egyptian, but that would be isolated as no other civ would have formed around it in a desert bigger than the Gobi.
      Migration routs would have shifted, maybe we would never have left africa....and formed no civilization at all as all plants and animals used (most) came from eurasia and not africa
      The impact of that would have changed our evolution completely because it would have had effects on the climate in africa as well

  • @dudeskidaddy
    @dudeskidaddy Před 6 lety +3

    The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain

  • @adambrickley1119
    @adambrickley1119 Před rokem

    "very small, very few, large brine lakes"

  • @jdsol1938
    @jdsol1938 Před 6 lety +1

    reading the comments everyone seems to like your work, me too

  • @Silverado138
    @Silverado138 Před 6 lety +1

    Need to talk about Atlantropa / Panropa like Herman Sörgel planned. He wanted a hydroelectric dam to be built across the Strait of Gibraltar...

  • @jaumemiravitlles3001
    @jaumemiravitlles3001 Před 3 lety

    GREAT Documentary!

  • @alinaanto
    @alinaanto Před 5 měsíci

    If we were to build a hydroelectric dam at the Gibraltar and another at the Suez Canal and then allow the Mediterranean Sea to evaporate only a little, like 5-10 cm or even less : we would have so much electric energy !

  • @kille7543
    @kille7543 Před 3 lety

    Many years ago I read Julian May, The Saga of the Exiles, this brings me back. 🤗

  • @tripsalloveramerica689

    thanks for the so accurate information ,we still find a fossils at 600 meters about the sea level all around Mediterranean sea

  • @TheAutobotPower
    @TheAutobotPower Před 6 lety +2

    The great Mediterrean salt desert

  • @paulrandig
    @paulrandig Před rokem

    The Mediterranian was populated by species from the relatively cooler Atlantic. Since there is the Suez Canal, other species from warmer seas have the opportunity to enter the Mediterranean Sea. Because they are better adapted to the warm water, they are more successful, especially since the Mediterranean is getting warmer, too, because of climate change.
    This would not be such a big problem was it not for the irrigation water taken from the Nile. Back when the Nile had enough water, it laid a sweetwater curtain around its delta which also covered the northern end of the Suez Canal keeping back the invasive species. But meanwhile so much water from the Nile is taken for irrigation that not enough sweet water reaches the Mediterranean to keep up the curtain effect to shield the Mediterranean from invasive species immigrating through the Canal.

  • @Timrath
    @Timrath Před 6 lety +2

    I love how you coordinated yourself with the music. Coincidence or careful planning?

  • @alanfbrookes9771
    @alanfbrookes9771 Před 6 lety +1

    There's such an enormous current lowing through the Straits of Gibraltar that it would make a wonderful electricity generation project, and you could have a railway bridge across, linking Europe with Africa.

  • @cloudkitthemailman7282
    @cloudkitthemailman7282 Před 6 lety +2

    *creationist anger intensifies*

  • @rjb6327
    @rjb6327 Před 6 lety

    If we didn't know what saline means, we wouldn't be watching this.

  • @eddog6666
    @eddog6666 Před 6 lety

    Did you know that if Mediterranean Sea disappears anything south of Paris would become a desert as hot to instantly cause a third degree burn? that means no one could live there.

  • @StanleyKewbeb1
    @StanleyKewbeb1 Před 6 lety +1

    3:50 It formed very small large lakes

  • @guadalupegandara8961
    @guadalupegandara8961 Před rokem

    Rapid descent of Oceans due to Gibraltar straight breakout explains Tamaranset basin drain

  • @R6-D2
    @R6-D2 Před 2 lety

    Maybe a past civilization drained the Mediterranean Sea on purpose and built a hydrological dam. Imagine the power that it could have produced. Possibly the dam failed.

  • @stephenmascari950
    @stephenmascari950 Před 6 lety +2

    ...background music greatly detracts from the documentary...

    • @josehernandez2219
      @josehernandez2219 Před 6 lety

      It really doesn't, it's noticably quieter than the voiceover.

  • @nearearthobjects3089
    @nearearthobjects3089 Před 3 lety

    May 2021 Gibraltar shakes to be on topic

  • @eddog6666
    @eddog6666 Před 6 lety

    Something like that happened to the inland sea of USA. That sea poured into the Snake River. in I have been there. It was road trip to Wyoming where and it has a rest stop there.

  • @richardruby8866
    @richardruby8866 Před 7 lety +5

    I did calculations. For ocean water bringing the Mediterranean Sea level back to normal... for that to had caused the global sea level to lower by 10 meters, the Mediterranean Sea level would only had risen by 1,924 ft. 3,000 ft shallower than the average depth of the Mediterranean Sea. So for that to had happened, the average depth of the shallower Mediterranean Sea before the spill, was 3,000 ft. Then the remaining 1,924 ft increase in the Mediterranean Sea level by the spill would had lowered the global sea level by 10 meters. By the way, if all the Mediterranean were evaporated, not including the Black Sea and Sea of Marmara, the global sea level would be 1,000 ft higher. Or 1,002.7 ft to be exact, based on my calculations from other measurements I found @ Google.

    • @gjh42
      @gjh42 Před 6 lety

      I don't believe your calculations are reliable. Just think - what is the ratio of Mediterranean Sea area to all of the oceans? I find just under 1 million square miles vs. 138 million square miles, so a change in Mediterranean level would be 138 times the greater ocean level change. 10m = 34' +-, 34 X 138 = 4692'. Pretty much what was claimed.

  • @syncmaster915n
    @syncmaster915n Před 6 lety +2

    Let's talk about Snowball Earth. If the entire world was covered in ice and snow, where did all the water which formed the ice and snow come from, and where had it gone? I mean If the ice sheet was thick enough to cover the tallest mountains, granted Mt. Everest hasn't been formed yet, there must be a hell of a lot more water on earth than there is now!!

    • @francogiobbimontesanti3826
      @francogiobbimontesanti3826 Před 6 lety

      That is not it it was just that ice expands way more than water and the seas weren't as deep and the mountains weren't as tall

    • @supplican
      @supplican Před 6 měsíci

      That ice and snow was ocean, and became ocean again afterwards. Sea level was MUCH lower during the snowball earth period.

  • @magos_0083
    @magos_0083 Před 2 lety

    Amazing video

  • @orangejuiceman
    @orangejuiceman Před 6 lety

    I’m far more fascinated by the background music.

  • @jofermk
    @jofermk Před 6 lety +1

    great video !!!

  • @LARdTLARdT
    @LARdTLARdT Před 6 lety

    Yo, que en la piel tengo el sabor
    Amargo del llanto eterno
    Que han vertido en ti cien pueblos
    De Algeciras a Estambul
    Para que pintes de azul
    Sus largas noches de invierno
    A fuerza de desventuras
    Tu alma es profunda y oscura
    A tus atardeceres rojos
    Se acostumbraron mis ojos
    Como el recodo al camino
    Soy cantor, soy embustero
    Me gusta el juego y el vino
    Tengo alma de marinero
    Qué le voy a hacer, si yo
    Nací en el Mediterráneo
    Nací en el Mediterráneo.
    “Mediterraneo”
    Joan Manuel Serrat

  • @mrlordclaude
    @mrlordclaude Před 6 lety

    I can't see how the salinity of the rest of the world oceans would decrease with the re-formation of the Med (6:07). I would have thought, if anything, salinity would go up, due to the re-dissolving of the salts that remained in the dry Med basin from previous sea water. When the "old" Med dried up, the salinity of the rest of the world's oceans, it seems to me, would go down as the Med's water evaporated, because the water that came out of the Med would fall as rainwater in the oceans... Thefore diluting it. The overall water volume on the planet would roughly be the same, but the level of dissolved salt changes, depending on the existence, or not of the Med. I am no expert (in anything), can someone please explain. Thanks.

  • @TheDavidlloydjones
    @TheDavidlloydjones Před 6 lety +1

    Why would some of the oceans' water moving into the Med "decrease the oceans' salinity" at 6:20? I don't get it. The water in the Med would be saltier than the water outside, but this is because of the salt accumulated over the previous 5-odd million years. This has no effect on the remaining water outside, so I don't understand what the guy is saing.
    Anybody?

    • @briandiehl9257
      @briandiehl9257 Před 6 lety +1

      Because the water in the Med would start evaporating and falling into the ocean as salt free water.

    • @dlwatib
      @dlwatib Před 6 lety +1

      But that makes no sense. Water that evaporates and then precipitates out, typically does so over land, where it picks up salinity (and other trace elements) before flowing to the ocean. Some rain falls directly into the ocean, of course, but most of it falls in the mountains because the mountains drive the clouds to higher elevations. The higher elevations are cooler, which makes it harder for the clouds to hold as much moisture.

    • @jamesmay1164
      @jamesmay1164 Před 6 lety

      David Lloyd-Jones my best guess would be because the world's ocean isn't uniformly saline. So after the spill into the Mediterranean of lower solute concentrated water, this left the higher solute concentrated ocean outside to redistribute within a depleted volume of water. This is pure conjecture without evidence or research though 😆.
      I'm just comparing to what happens anatomically when you're hyponatraemic or hypernatraemic in respect of fluid compartments and fluid restrictions.

  • @ryan2flyin
    @ryan2flyin Před 3 lety

    This video was done very well

  • @itaieiron7275
    @itaieiron7275 Před 6 lety

    I wonder what sort of animals would have evolved if the Mediterranean would not have been re flooded.

  • @tenlosol
    @tenlosol Před 8 lety +7

    this is going to be a dumb question, but lets say the earth closes the strait again and it starts to dry the Mediterranean. do you think humanity will realize the consequences and try to open it, and if so how much effort would that actually take without really screwing up nature?

    • @Sennmut
      @Sennmut Před 8 lety +3

      Would probably takes some low-yield nukes to blast open Gibralter enough to return to normal.

    • @Deebz270
      @Deebz270 Před 7 lety +10

      It is somewhat of a 'dumb question' (..well you said it...lol). This video upload is an excellent explanation of how the Med was formed. And to give 'ZorakGoesOn' his dues, he did say that no-one really knows how the tectonics will 'pan-out'. But here is the current theory (via computer modelling of the ongoing global tectonic shift): As Zorak mentioned, the African plate continues to subduct (push beneath) the Anatolian and Eurasian plates. The Alps are therefor still being thrust up (a process known as 'orogeny' - or crust deformation - mountain building). Eventually the Mediterranean will be effectively narrowed until it becomes a narrow sea-way and eventually close altogether. the Atlas mountains (Northern Africa) will eventually 'meld' with the Alps.
      But that is not all... The Indian plate and the Indian sub-continent is also continuing to thrust northwards, in so doing, continuing the Himalayan orogeny. Deformation of the crust along these fault lines will cause a massive chain of mountains ranging from The Iberian peninsular (Spain) to roughly Sichuan in Western China. The Australasian and Antarctic plates are also continuing to march roughly north-eastward and will close up the Island chain of Indonesia/Sumatra/Borneo/ Philippines, in so doing closing the eastern Indian Ocean, which will become a vast inland sea. Bigger than the current Med.
      Now in the Atlantic, which is currently regarded as a 'constructive plate margin' is widening; that is to say, it is creating land along the mid-Atlantic ridge. However, the Pacific plate, the largest and most powerful plate on the earth's crust, is subducting beneath the North/South American plates. This action is what has formed the Coastal, Rockies and Andes mountain ranges. With the ongoing tectonic action creating the volcanic chain evident in those ranges. The San Andreas fault being a small part of that subduction zone along with the Peruvian/Chilean trench just off the South American Pacific coast. It is believed, that the power of the Pacific plates (there is the main Northern plate, but a complex of smaller plates to the south - Nazcan plate etc...) will actually start to push the North and South American plates against the forces of the Atlantic's constructive plate margin, effectively closing the Atlantic.
      The upshot of this in some 250 million years time, will be the formation of a new super-continent. This is not unusual. These tectonic plates have been doing this dance for the entire life of this planet and in fact several 'super-continents' have been formed in the past, the last and most noteworthy being Pangaea, which was home to the dinosaurs... Which broke up to form Laurasia and Gondwana (forming the Tethys Ocean/Sea and the Iapetus Sea, then 'Proto-Atalantic...), which in turn broke up to form the main continental masses of today... We thus arrive back at where the video started. BTW, all this info and excellent animated footage can be found right here on CZcams or elsewhere on the www. :-D
      So, we are talking millions of years in the future. Given the exponential increase in human populace of this planet, our unlikely chance to survive the next 100 years (note, we are in the Sixth Mass Extinction Event, brought on by our own industrial hubris...), let alone the next million, then I would say, yes, very dumb question indeed. Remember, the forces at play inherent in the earth's crust are THE most powerful forces on this planet. They are extremely slow acting (approx the same as the growth of a fingernail in a year...), but NOTHING stops the movement of a tectonic plate.
      Our chances? Not good, unless the Anunnaki put in a late appearance by returning to save us... But you have my sympathies....

    • @danarj5713
      @danarj5713 Před 7 lety +3

      Human already built a canal to connect red sea with the Med (Suez Canal) in Eygpt.

    • @frenchimp
      @frenchimp Před 7 lety +1

      Depends on what you call screwing up nature. I'd say causing a see as big as the mediterranean to disappear or to appear would be an instance of screwing up nature 'bigly'...

    • @etmax1
      @etmax1 Před 6 lety

      Quite doable, but they are actually thinking of closing the strait to control Mediterranean sea rise due to global warming. Similar things are being discussed for the US around San Francisco as otherwise the food belt will go go under water.