I did not get the full geologic history or context from this video. It skipped along and touched down only a few times on a long, complicated story. Explanations, when given, were poor and short. It focused on the evolution and the animals, but not so much on the geologic history of Europe and how it came to be, at least in any in-depth and focused way. You would have just a scant idea of how it came about from this video.
@5:35 The Lewis Gneiss with its age of 2.9 billion years is certainly very old. But it isn't nearly as old as life on Earth itself. LUCA, the Last Universal Common Ancestor is supposed to have lived about 3.6 billion years ago. But LUCA was already DNA based life and as such it wasn't the first lifeform at all and probably was preceded by other lifeforms based on RNA and its ancestors that even weren't based on RNA. This might have happened 3.8 - 4.0 billion years ago. So we are possibly looking at the first life being close to one billion years older than the Lewis Gneiss. If as an example we go one billion years into the past from now we are landing in a time when the first multicellular life had just arisen and consisted of algae and primitive forms of marine fungi, when there was no life on dry land and the first vertebrates would only appear 450 million years later. We are talking about time frames that are hard to grasp for us humans.
The greek definition didn't use to have europe east to the ural mountains but russia changed it. can we return to origins and put russia out of being called part of europe? it's anyway only 1/5 eastern europe and 4/5 asia...
First paragraph on continents from Wikipedia: A continent is any of several large landmasses. Generally identified by convention rather than any strict criteria, up to seven geographical regions are commonly regarded as continents. Ordered from largest in area to smallest, these seven regions are: Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Antarctica, Europe, and Australia.
Europe is a continent I see you deleted a comment saying touchofgrey obviously doesn't know about geography, actually they appear to and it's you who doesn't know the difference between a continent and a tectonic plate.
Thank you for this wonderful and interesting documentary!
This is a phaaabulous phlick! Nicely done. Thanks!!!
Fantastic video. Very informative. Thank you
Our pleasure!
Excellent video 😊
Very powerful Documentary!!
Europe is without doubt, the most important continent that have shaped our life more than any other.
based on what?
I would say Africa.
Who is our?
I did not get the full geologic history or context from this video. It skipped along and touched down only a few times on a long, complicated story. Explanations, when given, were poor and short. It focused on the evolution and the animals, but not so much on the geologic history of Europe and how it came to be, at least in any in-depth and focused way. You would have just a scant idea of how it came about from this video.
I was not expecting zoology etc etc.,so my interest waned.
@5:35 The Lewis Gneiss with its age of 2.9 billion years is certainly very old. But it isn't nearly as old as life on Earth itself. LUCA, the Last Universal Common Ancestor is supposed to have lived about 3.6 billion years ago. But LUCA was already DNA based life and as such it wasn't the first lifeform at all and probably was preceded by other lifeforms based on RNA and its ancestors that even weren't based on RNA. This might have happened 3.8 - 4.0 billion years ago.
So we are possibly looking at the first life being close to one billion years older than the Lewis Gneiss. If as an example we go one billion years into the past from now we are landing in a time when the first multicellular life had just arisen and consisted of algae and primitive forms of marine fungi, when there was no life on dry land and the first vertebrates would only appear 450 million years later. We are talking about time frames that are hard to grasp for us humans.
👍👍👍👍
The greek definition didn't use to have europe east to the ural mountains but russia changed it. can we return to origins and put russia out of being called part of europe? it's anyway only 1/5 eastern europe and 4/5 asia...
Russia is the most important European country like it or not.
@@xhorxheetxeberria-td1hu based on what?
@@therealfrantux Slavs are Europeans. You can't exclude a whole race because you don't agree with them politically. That's called racism.
Europe is not a continent, merely the western peninsula of Asia
First paragraph on continents from Wikipedia:
A continent is any of several large landmasses. Generally identified by convention rather than any strict criteria, up to seven geographical regions are commonly regarded as continents. Ordered from largest in area to smallest, these seven regions are: Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Antarctica, Europe, and Australia.
Maybe in your mind!
@@touchofgrey5372 You are obviously ignorant of geography.
Europe is a continent I see you deleted a comment saying touchofgrey obviously doesn't know about geography, actually they appear to and it's you who doesn't know the difference between a continent and a tectonic plate.
And also by your logic Italy is an African country
The Europeans built the modern world.
Why is Europe a continent.
Documentary about nothing.
Europe is not a continent!
Yup that is how it split apart. Only it occurred approximately 4700 years ago.....and rapidly.....Rapid Continental Drift. During the Biblical Flood.
Give me a break.😡
Funny
Do you even science?
Fantastic introducing of informative Scientific Documentary coverage Video allot thanks ( (G. factual ) channel
It is just a theory!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Too many ilegal ads, the poster must be so proud of it's self to be part of a criminal crime gang.