Vredefort Impact in Real Time (biggest known crater on Earth)

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
  • The asteroid that hit Vredefort is estimated to have been one of the largest ever to strike Earth since the Hadean Eon some four billion years ago. The crater, which has since been eroded away, was around 200-300 km (100-200 mi) across when it was formed. The remaining structure, comprising the deformed underlying bedrock, is located in present-day Free State province of South Africa. It is named after the town of Vredefort, which is near its centre. The structure's central uplift is known as the Vredefort Dome. The impact structure was formed during the Paleoproterozoic Era, 2.023 billion (± 4 million) years ago. It is the second-oldest known impact structure on Earth, after Yarrabubba (Australia).
    This impact was 3 times more energetic than the Chicxulub impact. Unlike this one, the consequences of the Vredefort impact on Life were never been quantified, because of the lack of fossil records of that epoch, 30 times older than the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary.
    --- RAW VIDEOS ---
    Thermal Radiation : • Vredefort Impact : The...
    Earthquake : • Vredefort Impact : Ear...
    Air Blast : • Vredefort Impact : Air...
    Ejecta Thickness : • Vredefort Impact : Eje...
    Ejecta Grain Size : • Vredefort Impact : Eje...
    Temperature : • Vredefort Impact : Tem...
    --- TIMECODE ---
    0:00 The Earth, 2 billion years ago (Early Earth Project)
    4:00 Real time setup
    14:02 Real time impact simulation
    26:12 The heat wave starts to burn everything
    42:32 The earthquake reaches the antipodes
    1:05:52 End of the earthquake
    1:10:02 The heat wave no longer ignites forests
    1:39:56 Fading of the fireball
    1:55:02 The ejecta reach the antipodes. End of the heat wave
    2:25:34 The air blast stops to kill (but everyone is already dead)
    3:14:07 Timelapse simulation
    3:18:50 Impact winter simulation
    --- Soundtrack ---
    WoW Burning Crusade - Hellfire Peninsula General Walk 04
    WoW Burning Crusade - Hellfire Citadel Demon Walk 02
    WoW Burning Crusade - Ogre Theme
    WoW Burning Crusade - DeathForge Theme
    Cryo Chamber - Elegies for a Dying Sun
    Cryo Chamber - Songs From Underground Cities
    Cryo Chamber - Dark Space Music for Terraforming Alien Planets
    Beksinskian Nightmarescape 11 - Scary Dark Ambient Horror Soundtrack
    Trevor Jones - Graveyard, Quatermain To London
    Apocalypse WW1 Soundtrack - Verdun
    Apocalypse WW1 Soundtrack - La Marne
    WoW Legion - Anduin Theme
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Комментарии • 651

  • @Kaldisti
    @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +254

    NOTE : This simulation may be perceived as less destructive than the last one about the red comet impact. Since, I could get additional studies who constrained better the post impact heat wave generated by the ejecta atmospheric reentry. With these new settings, the heat wave intensity is now more accurate than it was in the Red Comet Impact.

    • @Demour77
      @Demour77 10 месяцев назад +10

      Excellent Work Kaldisti!
      Would also be really interesting to see a visual representation of the 'death counter', we see the number going up and have to guess where and where isn't liveable for the survivors :)

    • @martianbuilder5945
      @martianbuilder5945 10 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@Demour77It's not a matter of where they die, it's when. No place on Earth is safe from the amount of cooling that the post impact winter actually brings. Chicxulub was already really bad to begin with (3/4 of all life gone) and this one is multiple times worse than that.

    • @brotachi
      @brotachi 10 месяцев назад +5

      The soundtrack you picked for this fits pretty well. It'a eerie but soothing at the same time. Great choice!

    • @IanChapman-ld7ex
      @IanChapman-ld7ex 10 месяцев назад +2

      Hey, Gwillerm, do you think there would be any hope for man in this event? Especially if we knew it was coming?

    • @xymoriintus
      @xymoriintus 10 месяцев назад +2

      Ian Chapman, absolutely not unfortunately unless we leave Earth

  • @minecraftthelostorder5782
    @minecraftthelostorder5782 10 месяцев назад +268

    I'll now just wait here until Gwillerm makes a simulation of "Theia Collision"...

    • @indridcold8433
      @indridcold8433 9 месяцев назад +25

      We prefer to think of it as the merger of our two worlds. The Terran world where you came forth and our world where we helped engineer what you are now.

    • @user-ng4sb5nl2o
      @user-ng4sb5nl2o 9 месяцев назад +6

      And I was thinking about Ceres vs. Earth, the reference to "Armageddon"...

    • @irenafarm
      @irenafarm 6 месяцев назад

      Oh heck ya

    • @mrquackadoodlemoo
      @mrquackadoodlemoo 4 месяца назад +1

      YES

    • @Otakawaii1
      @Otakawaii1 4 месяца назад

      Yes!!!

  • @andyo5220
    @andyo5220 10 месяцев назад +131

    The audio leading up to the impact is remarkably effective and eerie. I particularly enjoyed the thermo reading of "WTF°C".

    • @aerisgainsborough2141
      @aerisgainsborough2141 10 месяцев назад +19

      did you catch the Salma Hayak reference for hotness???

    • @MarcMarshall94
      @MarcMarshall94 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@aerisgainsborough2141 Lmao I legit just caught it now and just scrolled to see if anyone else noticed.

    • @SuperHornetPilot
      @SuperHornetPilot 5 месяцев назад +1

      Haha, I caught that too!@@MarcMarshall94

    • @billbombshiggy9254
      @billbombshiggy9254 4 месяца назад

      Im glad somebody could understand it all.

    • @coolbear6441
      @coolbear6441 3 месяца назад +2

      I can’t understand a word of it until AFTER impact. CC doesn’t work for this video. I wear hearing aids would love to hear the voices…

  • @damondriver6363
    @damondriver6363 10 месяцев назад +294

    Saw your chicxulub event sim from the "dinosaurs perspective" about a year ago, so glad you're still making thesw amazing impact simulations. Cant imagine to amount of work and research that goes into these. Let alone putting everything together and editing

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +53

      Thanks, I started to work on it one week after my last video :D

    • @brotachi
      @brotachi 10 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@Kaldistithats an insane amount of dedication. Kudos to you!!

    • @hotdog9262
      @hotdog9262 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Kaldisti vredefort magnitude impact in 5km deep ocean far from land. would have been interesting

    • @AlphaWasSpotted
      @AlphaWasSpotted 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Kaldistikeep up the fascinating work

    • @anthonyschocke2831
      @anthonyschocke2831 2 месяца назад

      @@KaldistiMake Theia Impact next, it’s definitely not gonna cause the fireball to take up the entire screen (or blast the entire atmosphere and about half of earth’s mass into space).

  • @G--qq2bo
    @G--qq2bo 10 месяцев назад +47

    Some chronological takeaways I got from this simulation.
    1. The death toll on the African continent is going to exceed 1 billion by the 30-minute mark. That’s 1/8th the world population dead.
    2. The major African continent biomes would be wiped out: the coastal environments, deserts and semideserts, mountain, savanna grasslands and the equatorial forests. Very little of anything beyond maybe burrowing creatures, insects and microbes would survive around the Sahel (belt of dry tropical savanna to the south of the Sahara Desert.” This also includes the totality of Madagascar and the surrounding islands.
    3. Most if not all major African megafauna would be wiped out; we’d have to rely on the reserves of African megafauna and other species spread across the globe in zoos and sanctuaries to even have a chance at saving them, and I’m not sure there’s enough genetic diversity to do that, unless someone can calculate that.
    4. It is conceivably possible for humans to survive within 300-400 miles of the impact IF they had deep underground shelters capable of withstanding nonstop seismic activity north of 10 Moment Magnitude and over a mile down with proper AC and viable supplies. Maaaaaaaybe as far south as the North 10* line of longitude (Ethiopia, Sudan, etc).
    5. Atmospheric Re-Entry coupled with heat wave hits the Middle East around Yemen at around the 27-minute mark.
    6. Atmospheric Re-Entry coupled with heat wave hits the Mediterranean at around the 34-minute mark past Cairo.
    7. South America and India are getting hit by the ejecta heat wave at about the 37-minute mark. The whole of the Middle East, North Africa and all Indian Ocean islands just got baked to a 520F crisp (lost all the Middle East, North African and Indian Ocean Island biomes, and just beginning into India, southern Mediterranean Europe, Central Asia and South America in Brazil.
    8. The Western portion of North America is being rocked by 3-4 Moment Magnitude quakes from the quake antipode point by the 44-minute point.
    9. The death toll is 2 billion at about the 45-minute mark. That’s 1/4th the world population dead.
    10. The 50-minute mark speaks for itself. The world is FUCKED.
    11. The world-wide forest ignition points hit as far north as Paris, France, far east as Singapore and past Perth, Australia, to the West Cuiaba, Brazil and Coyhaique, Chile. The heat wave still travels worldwide and causes indirect wildfires through other sources.
    12. By the 1 hour 15-minute point, eastern North America is cooked, and all the Russian territory, Central Asian, Europe and all of Southeast Asia and Australia have been cooked. The Central North Pacific near the antipode is now temporarily the safest place temperature-wise on Earth for the time being.
    13. At the end of the ejecta re-entry and heat wave phase, it turns out being within a dozen miles of the Hawaiian Islands was the safest place on Earth. The temperatures reach in the upper 30-40C, maybe in the 50-60C (122F-140F) for a little bit. Still THE safest place to have been on Earth. Minor impact on Hawaiian biomes. All others across the planet have been annihilated, are being destroyed by fires or damaged beyond repair. Most megafauna and human life on Earth is dead.
    14. 57-minute mark = 3 billion dead, 3/8th of the human population gone.
    15. 1 Hour 21-minute mark = 4 billion dead, ½ of all humanity is gone. Arguably more than 85% of all land species are extinct, and the following ocean extinctions will exceed 90%
    16. 2 hour and 19-minute mark, 5 billion dead, 5/8ths the world human population gone. Humanity is now considered an endangered species as most flora and fauna have been wiped out by this point. Nearly every city on Earth except for cities on the Hawaiian Islands are destroyed, on fire or baked into oblivion.
    17. At 3 hours over 5.5 billion people are dead. 2.5 billion remain. I didn’t mention anything about the airblast because…well everything and everyone on the African continent was most likely already dead. Maaaaaaaaaybe there are survivors around the Solel or 10* longitude line if they were underground and rode it out, assuming those underground shelters held out.
    18. Any survivors in east South America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia better find shelter from the air blast overpressure, if there is any left. It’s conceivably survivable but you really don’t want to lose your hearing as among the last human beings need to be on their A game if they’re going to survive. Beyond those areas, the worst that will happen is an overpressure blast that can shatter windows, much like the Chelyabinsk shock wave. Quite survivable but lots more injuries if you’re near any remaining glass structures.
    19. I find it fucking hilarious how Cape Town is projected to be 35C while Singapore is 46C by the 8-hour mark. I mean come on; mother nature has a sense of humor. Otherwise the temperatures around the globe are stabilizing while near the impact the temperatures are exponentially decreasing.
    20. PSYCHE! That was very temporary. Worldwide forest fires spike the temperatures up stupid again at about the 5-6 hr mark, then travels across the globe over the next ten days. Any survivors best be underground or in a submarine for the next 14 days at minimum. Impact Winter appears to begin around 10th-14th day. Yaaaaay cooler temperatures!
    21. Impact Winter will probably last for a very, very long time, killing millions and millions more over the duration. Likely down to less than one billion humans left on the planet.
    22. It’s possible we re-enter into a new Ice Age. The western coasts of North America, the southeast coast of North America will be survivable if you consider Ice okay. Pretty much all of Asia and Central Europe are Antarctica along with portions of continental interiors. Interestingly the Caribbean Islands might still hold out with tundra conditions, warmer than most other places across the globe around the 3-year mark.
    23. It’ll take more than 3 decades for the Earth’s climatic zones to recalibrate and recover back to their original state. By this point I think the human population would still hover about 500million to 1 billion based on the lack of resources and climatic intensity. We’d have to make massive underground cities to survive this 3-decade period and mobilize the entire planet’s available resources to save us and any other species we could to begin the slow process of recovery. It could be possible we also saved many large megafauna species over the 3-decade time; livestock primarily. I’d hope we would have also saved many other trademark species, and others survived out there. We’d probably have to make underwater habitat cities too and try salvaging marine ecosystems wherever possible.
    24. I think humanity can survive a Vredefort Impact, but we’ll get dangerously endangered in the process. This is easily a Permian level event, if not one that exceeds it by quite a few percentage points.
    25. I wonder what the new political reality of Post-Vredefort Impact would be like. I’m curious what ocean or Antarctic Impact simulations would predict. I suspect they would be magnitudes better than this one.

    • @zicho1st
      @zicho1st 4 месяца назад +3

      Sorry i doubt humanity would survive. Human, yes, humanity, no. One billion might survive impact +24hours, but one year? With polar climate nearly everywhere? What would they eat and more, how would they heat thenselves, when forests would be burnt.
      And one thing i miss ... Level of oxygen. After initial burnout, oceans would release some, but how many. Would survivors be even able to breathe?

    • @Neognostic-pk5wu
      @Neognostic-pk5wu 2 месяца назад +1

      There was NO megafauna on earth to speak of 2 - 2.2 GYA.
      The landmasses were sterile, and only simple cyanobacteria in the oceans.
      The oxygen levels would have been so low, there would have been too little to ignite. The atmosphere may have still potentially been in the last phases of reducing rather then oxidising this early in Earth history with traces of molecular hydrogen still present possibly.

    • @theorangeoof926
      @theorangeoof926 Месяц назад +2

      @@Neognostic-pk5wuThis is obviously a comment saying what would happen if the Vredfort impact struck us in the modern day, not over 2 billion years ago

    • @ortherner
      @ortherner Месяц назад

      the human population if we survived would not be 500 million during the 30 year ice age. it would be 10 million at the highest.

    • @Ama-hi5kn
      @Ama-hi5kn 29 дней назад

      You put some thoughts into this I can see. But as of your comment 23. Frankly, I don't think I would want to emerge from such an impact. Even if there was a possibility. You'd face a wasteland completely devoid of life and you'd have to nearly start from scratch. I'd rather face the asteroid face on and get wiped out.

  • @roygoodhand1301
    @roygoodhand1301 10 месяцев назад +86

    Holy crap. We're going WAYYYYYYYYY back for this one: OVER TWO BILLION YEARS!

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +20

      This is indeed the second oldest known crater

    • @michaelhamar3305
      @michaelhamar3305 10 месяцев назад +9

      @@Kaldisti would you do Wilkes Land impact next?

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +15

      @@michaelhamar3305 Not proven to be an impact crater, but one day it could be interesting to make "what if" simulations x)

    • @michaelhamar3305
      @michaelhamar3305 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@Kaldisti also vrederford impact on modern map or 2.8bln years ago?

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +8

      @@michaelhamar3305 Indeed, continents shape is unknown for this period, so I used the modern map, as usual

  • @stevenreyngold1166
    @stevenreyngold1166 9 месяцев назад +59

    The amazing thing is that on a cosmic scale, this is a very insignificant event that is almost microscopic compared to some of the more energetic explosions in our galaxy such as supernova. Makes us feel so small in comparison, yet it is an event than is mind bending when trying to visualize.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 9 месяцев назад +1

      Well of course, a planet is but a speck compared to a star, especially a giant star exploding. If one of Jupiter's Galilean moons (roughly equal to our own Moon) were disturbed and crashed into Jupiter, it wouldn't make any long-term difference to Jupiter either, the moon would just get swallowed....

    • @indridcold8433
      @indridcold8433 9 месяцев назад

      It also happened very recently, as compared to the infinite cosmos.

    • @FleshWizard69420
      @FleshWizard69420 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@louise_roseit would be the same if Jupiter crashes into HD 100546b. The planet is bigger than a lot of stars

    • @Martinit0
      @Martinit0 5 месяцев назад

      A 30km diameter rock compared to 12000km diameter Earth is almost imperceptibly small. Also its speed at 20-30km/s is only about one rock diameter per second. Doesn't seem that fast, if seen that way, does it?

    • @RoySATX
      @RoySATX 3 месяца назад

      Perspective, it's all about one's perspective. The mosquito I smacked earlier also thought that event was a lot greater than I did. Perspective. 😎

  • @corgimations
    @corgimations 10 месяцев назад +64

    The Chicxulub simulation made me paranoid that an asteroid was going to hit the Earth for almost a week, let’s see what this one does to my mental health 😊

    • @PeterTheVald
      @PeterTheVald 10 месяцев назад +10

      Wishing you peaceful skies, but keep looking up!

    • @martianbuilder5945
      @martianbuilder5945 10 месяцев назад +4

      All the reason to lobby the world's governments to put more money in their space programs. It means we can move to another planet and avoid this mess.

    • @PeterTheVald
      @PeterTheVald 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@martianbuilder5945 Yes, leave.

    • @theorangeoof926
      @theorangeoof926 10 месяцев назад +7

      The sooner we become an interstellar species, the better

    • @Burnthealphabetpeople
      @Burnthealphabetpeople 10 месяцев назад

      @@theorangeoof926 for real maybe if aliens are ever discovered people will realize black and white Spanish etc are not a race we are the human race one race different races are humans and whatever aliens are out there

  • @patrykmaksymowicz1502
    @patrykmaksymowicz1502 10 месяцев назад +20

    "The resulted mass extinction probably outclassed the great dying itself"
    Ok, that was actually scary.

  • @bay0r
    @bay0r 10 месяцев назад +24

    Not the Salma Hayek radiation temperature of 20'000C° lmao

  • @skylarthegreat100
    @skylarthegreat100 10 месяцев назад +43

    Was reading about the Vredefort impact crater just a few minutes ago and was pleased to find this video. Everything an inquisitive and wandering mind could want. I can't imagine the amount of research and work this takes for little to no credit. Thank you for taking the time, we greatly appreciate it!

  • @miyawwko12
    @miyawwko12 10 месяцев назад +48

    My area has the Tropical Savannah climate but in this scenario it would be suffered with over a decade of freezing which is insane, thanks for all of the dedication you’ve put in this video

  • @lexdeobesean
    @lexdeobesean 5 месяцев назад +9

    If I remember correctly from my professor during my geology studies, this impact was so brutal it vaporized 16km of crust in less than a second. That's 2x Everest in the blink of an eye, gone. To this day you can still find peridotite (exposed mantle rock) lying at the centre of the old crater.

  • @malsypright
    @malsypright 7 месяцев назад +9

    These simulations blow my mind. It's one thing to see a 30 second CGI clip in a documentary that talks about the extreme heat and massive earthquakes and so on, but this really helps put everything into perspective. The sheer astounding amount of energy released, something currently beyond human capacity...yet with a universe so big who knows how many far bigger collisions are happening right now, the universe wouldn't even notice.

  • @cricket-lt8nc
    @cricket-lt8nc 10 месяцев назад +6

    "WTF ⁰C" A pretty strong representation of the temperature lol.

  • @svetchannel2998
    @svetchannel2998 10 месяцев назад +19

    Great work, 100% synchronization with ongoing events. The level of staging and editing is growing exponentially. I was lucky to find this channel and subscribe!

  • @Murican_redneck
    @Murican_redneck 10 месяцев назад +68

    A long time ago I saw an animation of a 500 km haedan earth impactor class object (I'm sure you probably have seen it as well) it was simulated as if it happened today, it was spectacular it generated so much heat that it covered the entire earth in rock vapor I hope someday this channel will make an animation of such an early earth impact.

    • @theorangeoof926
      @theorangeoof926 10 месяцев назад

      Do you mean Theia?

    • @GofaqYusef
      @GofaqYusef 10 месяцев назад

      @@theorangeoof926 No, I think he means this. ruclips.net/video/PENT_hnyO-o/видео.html&ab_channel=AnselmoLaManna

    • @djchips
      @djchips 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@theorangeoof926 Theia would have been far larger than 500km and would have far more devastating effects. There are theories that say the Earth would have been so hot most of the planet would have vaporized or liquefied and re-condensed.

    • @kman314wastaken
      @kman314wastaken 10 месяцев назад +3

      Was this what you were referring to? ruclips.net/video/PENT_hnyO-o/видео.html

    • @messier8379
      @messier8379 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@theorangeoof926Theia is mars sized planet probably diamtee over 7,000km with 1/3 of Earth's density

  • @joergmaass
    @joergmaass 10 месяцев назад +10

    You badly underestimated the temperature and thermal radiation of Salma Hayek, specifically in her molecular state of the vampire queen in "From Dusk Till Dawn".

    • @antred11
      @antred11 8 месяцев назад +4

      Let's not jump to any conclusions here! We would need a highly detailed 2 hour simulation video of Salma Hayek's hotness, and then maybe we could derive a meaningful analysis from that. 🤔

    • @joergmaass
      @joergmaass 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@antred11 That would be quite helpful indeed, but existing evidence is quite convincing already. A two hour simulation, however, could show the instant incineration of a majority of the male forests of the world in much more detail, while also fostering the understanding of which parts of Salma Hayek's smoking hot body would create the most impact...

  • @scratchthecatqwerty9420
    @scratchthecatqwerty9420 10 месяцев назад +6

    Man, was waiting for this from the very start, and I can say it was worth the wait. Keep up with the good work!

  • @TheSlendermang
    @TheSlendermang 10 месяцев назад +18

    Even with this info, it's hard to fathom just what this might have looked like had you been there. The scale and magnitude isn't something I could even imagine. Well done, I hope you make more.

  • @biess_
    @biess_ 10 месяцев назад +8

    Magnificent work from you as always, you reignited my long lost passion for these sorts of events once again :)

  • @LiSa.N.J
    @LiSa.N.J 10 месяцев назад +13

    Anyone else catch the WTFc temp? Lol Great simulation. Well done.

    • @march8482
      @march8482 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah and apparently Salma Hayek is pretty hot...

  • @MarylandballProductions
    @MarylandballProductions 5 месяцев назад +4

    16:42 you know it’s hot when the temperature is “what the fuck°”

  • @chibullz0232
    @chibullz0232 10 месяцев назад +12

    What a great video, I especially like how things change the more data you are able to use in your videos. The death toll is astronomical, truly a world ending event.

  • @Lestat21500
    @Lestat21500 8 месяцев назад +3

    Your opening coupled with the music sets an ominous tone throughout the video. Great work!

  • @nuvostef
    @nuvostef 10 месяцев назад +13

    This was an excellent simulation, in some ways better than the Chicxulub sim. Thank you!

  • @rivencleftofstars4592
    @rivencleftofstars4592 10 месяцев назад +7

    These simulations are awesome. The music really makes it. Don't ever change the music.

  • @brutalistkiosk
    @brutalistkiosk 9 месяцев назад +7

    For celestial phenomenon/apocalyptic events, between spectacular depictions and realistic depictions, I always prefer realistic, even if they sometimes have seemingly mundane moments. Having an accurate understanding of those events makes them much more haunting

  • @intricatezebra8930
    @intricatezebra8930 10 месяцев назад +49

    As long as you're underground during the heatwave, this seems... actually quite survivable for the western coast of North America and definitely Hawaii. The temperature would quickly build and peak at around 100c for about 5 minutes and then decline as soon as it came. You'd only need to be a few meters underground to survive that and, with how many cave systems that area has, there's plenty of natural shelter even if you don't have a private one. Hawaii might get very uncomfortably warm for a few minutes if you stay above ground. The earthquake would flatten Hawaii as its infrastructure isn't built to survive it, much less a very strong one. Unlike Hawaii, the vast majority of infrastructure would survive on the west coast of North America since the earthquake would be weak (3 or 4), and most highly critical infrastructure is up to earthquake code of that magnitude. That brings out two potentially EXTREMELY important details for potential survival in these regions.
    1. Local infrastructure is likely to survive. That includes ports, roadways, buildings, and the greatest boon of all: intact shortwave AM radio infrastructure. This region would still be able to communicate within itself at a reasonably modern 1950s level. The seats of Canadian, American, and Mexican governments would likely relocate to these regions if the world is given even a two-week notice of the impact.
    2. The American Pacific Fleet. Its main docks are in Pearl Harbor and San Diego, regions where the fleet's assets would likely survive. Its tonnage displacement is massive and it can carry a massive weight load. The pride of this fleet and the greatest asset of it are its nuclear-powered aircraft carriers which won't be bothered in the slightest by fuel shortages. The fleet would give the remnants of the three countries a massive advantage over any other group of surviving people. It would, and time to get grim, allow the likely uniform military government that would come from the combination of the nations to overpower, subjugate, and colonize the areas where survival is most likely in the impact winter.
    There would probably only be a couple hundred million human survivors from this catastrophe after a few decades and I'd be willing to bet a FAT chunk of them would come from that region and would be at a massive technological advantage during the recolonization of the world.

    • @poluCrovca1979
      @poluCrovca1979 10 месяцев назад +6

      Русские тоже выживут. У нас очень много горных систем таких как Кавказ, Урал, Алтайские горы и т.д. Ходят слухи, что там уже понастроили кучу подземных убежищ, со всей инфраструктурой. Или вы думаете, что вы самые умные на этой планете? За полярным кругом в вечной мерзлоте можно понастроить кучу подземных баз. И кстати, Россия находится примерно на таком же расстоянии от эпицентра взрыва, как США, Канада и Мексика. И плевать нам на гордость вашего флота. Посмотрим ещё, кто кого коллонизирует и поработит.🤟🤨

    • @arturocevallossoto5203
      @arturocevallossoto5203 10 месяцев назад +2

      Since it's only for a few minutes I imagine you could even just stay in the bathroom with the door and the windows closed. The inside temperature will not change that much. Except maybe if the any part of the house is made of wood (that could catch on fire).

    • @kingssuck06
      @kingssuck06 10 месяцев назад +16

      @@poluCrovca1979Russia has 1 aircraft carrier that doesn’t work. The United States has 11. Good luck

    • @metatechnologist
      @metatechnologist 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@arturocevallossoto5203my guess is that if you can survive boiling water for 5 😊minutes you're ok. Too bad it will be in the form of a 200 foot tidal wave.

    • @metatechnologist
      @metatechnologist 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@poluCrovca1979My guess after something like this there's not a lot of building going on even in Russia. And even if people survive it's going to be hard to find food in essentially what is a long lasting nuke winter.

  • @alenparker3056
    @alenparker3056 10 месяцев назад +5

    Love the video, thanks for your time in creating this. I love the spaceship ambiance and atmosphere fellow commander o7

  • @fontcaicoya5686
    @fontcaicoya5686 10 месяцев назад +5

    Thank goodness, someone finally added the Squirrel metric for length. Squirrels must know the dangers of asteroid impacts.

    • @screamingmimi90
      @screamingmimi90 2 месяца назад

      I was looking for someone else who saw that! 😂

  • @Staralium
    @Staralium 10 месяцев назад +11

    Wonder what kind of life was wiped out during that great filter event

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +11

      you'll get the answer tonight x)

  • @spiguy420
    @spiguy420 10 месяцев назад +2

    Outdone yourself in this one man, good work. As I was watching at the beginning, when it was close to impact I was like "wait this shoud hit the atmosphere and light up..." just to be happily "blinded" in the next second.
    Good stuff

  • @ThrustersX
    @ThrustersX 10 месяцев назад +1

    Instant subscribed! I loved the chicxulub event simulation

  • @soouG.
    @soouG. 9 месяцев назад +3

    "4761 squirrels" i know i'm american but i've never seen anyone use "squirrel" as a unit

  • @villie86
    @villie86 10 месяцев назад +10

    One question ocurred to me while watching. The kinetic energy of the impactor would have been huge. And the Earth's crust was thinner than it is now. It could have penetrated the crust. Even if it didn't have, The amount of kinetic energy would have not just travelled on the surface but I'm sure it would have travelled through the molten core too. Did take that into account while making the simulation? I wonder if the surface wave would have travelled as fast as the one in the core too.
    I also wonder how high the ejecta would have reached into space. How long it would have been visible from outer space (the ejecta, not the lava lake). From Venus or Mars the planet might have looked more bright for a long time.
    It would have been interesting to see how much seismic and volcanic action the impact caused. I'm sure some (if not the most) fault lines would have ruptured to to this extreme force, causeing eons of new major earthquakes and volcanoes popping up all around the world.
    >WTF°C
    >4761 squirrels
    >20 000°C Salma Hayek
    I'm dying from laughter. Never been this early to a mass extinction. Also the intro was high-quality and great! Thank you and keep up the good work!

  • @thecreativemastermindnetwo4685
    @thecreativemastermindnetwo4685 10 месяцев назад +6

    Amazingly entertaining and earth shattering. I really can't wait for the chicxulub impact in real time again but this time with the map of the world 65 million years ago instead of the present world in the future. As always, keep up the good work out there 👍✨

  • @omnipixilgaming5340
    @omnipixilgaming5340 9 месяцев назад +3

    Amazing how we can still manage to research and discover so much about something that happened so long ago. It was such an alien and exotic planet back then it might as well have been a different planet entirely. Not enough people cover things this far in the past and its so cool seeing what our Earth looked like in such archaic times, so this was amazing and informative.

  • @pusheenthecat9264
    @pusheenthecat9264 16 дней назад +2

    To give you a reference as to how fast 20 km/s is, that is precisely 112,359.55 bananas per second.

    • @Ama-hi5kn
      @Ama-hi5kn 13 дней назад

      I like deep fried bananas. They are delicious.

  • @FenyaLeonidov
    @FenyaLeonidov 10 месяцев назад +15

    It will be interesting to see the animation of the Vredefort impact Have you heard about the Popigai crater? Will there be an animation about it? Idea for the video: The climate of Antarctica over the past 20 thousand years

    • @xymoriintus
      @xymoriintus 10 месяцев назад +3

      That one the impact crater was only a bit under 1/3rd the size of this one though and half the size of the dinosaur killer (chicxulub)

  • @flaviusnita6008
    @flaviusnita6008 10 месяцев назад

    Nice and explicit work! Thank You!!!

  • @LadyCatFelineTheSeventh
    @LadyCatFelineTheSeventh 10 месяцев назад +3

    Just think of how many lotteries our ancestors had to win in order for us to exist today. It's mind blowing.

  • @yegorshevtsov3148
    @yegorshevtsov3148 10 месяцев назад +7

    Thank you very much for this unique existential experience.

  • @dovydaslevanavicius9050
    @dovydaslevanavicius9050 9 месяцев назад +1

    Finally! more real time impacts! I love these kind of videos

  • @linuswerwer6513
    @linuswerwer6513 10 месяцев назад +3

    Imagine life today if evolution wasn't slowed down for 1.4 billion years

  • @tizwah
    @tizwah 10 месяцев назад +4

    Ok this is nitpicking: Talking about "atmospheric re-entry" is technically wrong, as the asteroid wasn't launched from earth and hence doesn't do a "re"-entry."Atmospheric entry" would be more accurate.

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +4

      Good point, but I saw the use of both terms about asteroids impact. As non-native english speaker I was not able to say which one was the right term. Thanks

  • @redswingline262
    @redswingline262 16 дней назад +1

    Thanks for the reminder shockwaves in the earth travel faster than in the air.

  • @RobertCraft-re5sf
    @RobertCraft-re5sf 6 месяцев назад +2

    It's really amazing these early crazy impacts. They likely boiled the oceans away. It's insane to even think about. Theres a really good documentary on here called Miracle Planet: The Violent Past.

  • @Cyanesque111
    @Cyanesque111 10 месяцев назад +1

    I like how this channel makes these simulations interesting, scary and a little humorous at the same time. It's got the scarily accurate readings of what it would be like of asteroids impacted our planet in the present day, but it's also got some nice little quirky messages in it, such as Pretoria having a temperature of WTF degrees Celsius to prove a point that the place was hotter than hot, the site of the Chicxulub impact being labeled as 'Not This Time' to show that Chicxulub was not the star of the show for this video, and even showing when the air blast stops to kill (although everyone on Earth is already dead from the hell that has ensued). I can't wait to see what will happen next.

  • @gunguir9264
    @gunguir9264 10 месяцев назад +16

    Hey Kaldisti, really wonderful simulation you made there. If you don't mind, I have a couple of questions I was curious about, especially in respect to the "Time after Impact" map:
    1. Given the -28 degrees drop(and the fact that all of the continents are all covered in ice), would it be safe to assume that the ocean should also freeze over and give us a slushball/snowball earth?
    2. How did places like Cuba and Haiti survive being completely iced over compared to the other islands in Philippines(with roughly the same latitude as Cuba) or the area around Malaysia/Indonesia?

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +9

      Hi:
      1: sea-surface temperature also drop, but less (around 15°C), so indeed, large parts of the ocean may freeze, seasonally or permanently.
      2. tropical islands are mostly spared by the impact winter (excepted mountains of course), so the best place to survive is along their shore

    • @gunguir9264
      @gunguir9264 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@Kaldisti "1: sea-surface temperature also drop, but less (around 15°C), so indeed, large parts of the ocean may freeze, seasonally or permanently."
      Not sure if you could answer this, but to picture how far this sea ice would go with a 15°C degree drop, up to which latitude should this newly created sea ice extend to?
      Would this newly created sea ice(permanent or seasonal) extend up to around the 30th latitude? Or is this temperature drop still enough to freeze vast majority of the ocean?

    • @Theriodontia4945
      @Theriodontia4945 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@gunguir9264 The biggest issue with an extreme impact winter occurring during modern times (interglacial) is that once the sea ice reaches within ~30° of the equator, the ice reflects so much sunlight that the Earth cools further, eventually leading to a positive feedback loop which inevitably causes all of the sea ice to freeze, triggering a "Snowball Earth" episode.

    • @dinorexrx6980
      @dinorexrx6980 4 месяца назад

      ​@@Theriodontia4945 a reboot of life on earth?

    • @Theriodontia4945
      @Theriodontia4945 3 месяца назад

      @@dinorexrx6980 Unicellular life would obviously survive. I am not so sure about multicellular life during a post-impact Snowball Earth. It depends on if any exposed rock exists, which would enable lichen to survive. Out in the ocean, any ice free areas would be productive with plankton (after the dust settles and the sun "returns"), supplying populations of krill and fish.

  • @CarlosAM1
    @CarlosAM1 10 месяцев назад

    that was pretty cool. Good video!

  • @lizardkilr
    @lizardkilr 10 месяцев назад +4

    Why did the overblast shockwave end so quickly? Your first Chicxulub impact video showed the shockwave reaching Canada. I'm confused.

  • @AngrySangheili
    @AngrySangheili 2 месяца назад +2

    Nice simulation. Btw, I just like how Yucatan peninsula's Chicxulub impact site designated as "Not this time" 😄

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  2 месяца назад +1

      Finally one who noticed it :D

  • @xymoriintus
    @xymoriintus 10 месяцев назад +8

    This is absolutely amazing/fascinating/horrifying

  • @IncoGnito-ji5du
    @IncoGnito-ji5du 4 месяца назад

    Never heard of this. Phenomenal work, thank you.

  • @SuperScottCrawford
    @SuperScottCrawford 10 месяцев назад +2

    Those garbled voices at the beginning certainly add to the drama in some weird way.

  • @lotus7589
    @lotus7589 10 месяцев назад +4

    WTF°c made me laugh so hard. Thanks for the effort on these vids 🤣

    • @wetube6513
      @wetube6513 10 месяцев назад

      This heatwave feels like what the fuck degrees Celsius.

  • @horntail-wyvern2803
    @horntail-wyvern2803 9 месяцев назад +4

    Absolutely splendid simulation that i think feels much better than the last one! It gives a sense of scale to an event i just cant fathom in my mind. I have two suggestions for future videos if you don't mind:
    1. Simulating the comet from the film Don't Look Up. Its 10km across and strikes just off the coast of chile. The film was excellent in my opinion apart from the impact, which i feel could be massively improved with your simulation 😂.
    2. Comparing the effects of different types of impactors of various sizes, using a set place as a target, e.g a city, land, the ocean. I think that would really help to give a sense of scale to the level this impacts can cause, and also be a great realistic educational video.
    3. Perhaps adding realistic visuals of the explosion alongside the standard ones, e.g the ejecta cloud raining down, the fireball, the blast, etc. It would make the impact easier to visualise and give a better sense of scale.
    I hope you keep making more fantastic videos. ❤

    • @ybbybbynogg1813
      @ybbybbynogg1813 9 месяцев назад +3

      Gwillerm stated somewhere in this comment section that he'd like to cover the impact from Don't Look Up for his next simulation. :)

    • @horntail-wyvern2803
      @horntail-wyvern2803 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@ybbybbynogg1813 Amazing! That would be great!

  • @glenchapman3899
    @glenchapman3899 10 месяцев назад +2

    The scariest part of this whole simulation. The author said they used 'average" values

  • @piergaay
    @piergaay 9 месяцев назад

    Again a very impressive vision, great work Gwillerm Kaldisti, that is breathtaking.
    Putting all we know in perspective . . .
    How about the life we live?
    Staggering

  • @El_Presidente_5337
    @El_Presidente_5337 2 месяца назад +2

    13:55
    "Plot armor activated" 😂

  • @sandrinojohnsun9949
    @sandrinojohnsun9949 10 месяцев назад +2

    Amazing video! Nice inclusions of temperature. Always wanted to jnow how hot it can get near these things

  • @user-ng4sb5nl2o
    @user-ng4sb5nl2o 10 месяцев назад +8

    Hello, some questions about the temperature:
    1. Is the fireball the reason the impact place stayed at over 50,000°C for two hours?
    2. How, even after that, it stayed well above the boiling points of anything for so long?
    3. After 10 hours, it cooled to ~35°C, and then began heating up to a stable 1,150°C?
    4. Possibly just a glitch (you warned), but in 1-10 days timelapse, there is literally another heat wave, but slower and doesn't seem to cool down.
    Except for 1, it feels unrealistic to me and I want to know what it's based on.

    • @Martinit0
      @Martinit0 5 месяцев назад +1

      I think first you open a lava lake at impact point, so that alone is several thousand °C then consider the impact energy heats up that rock and rock retains a lot of heat for long.
      As for the second heat wave, my understanding is it's from forest fires.

  • @lukedeane99
    @lukedeane99 10 месяцев назад +2

    Amazing. I had never heard of this before.

  • @Theriodontia4945
    @Theriodontia4945 9 месяцев назад +2

    How did you simulate the Impact Winter? It must be complicated trying to calculate all of the changing climates as the world cools!

  • @Semparo
    @Semparo 11 дней назад

    "Plot Armor Activated" had me howling xD

  • @tomcooper6108
    @tomcooper6108 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent video and statistics!

  • @theowotriangle8934
    @theowotriangle8934 10 месяцев назад

    The legend has blessed us with another video.

  • @brotachi
    @brotachi 10 месяцев назад +1

    Imagine this is pretty much what would have happened if Son Goku would have just beamed his Kamehameha in a 90° angle towards Cell in the Cell games.

  • @G--qq2bo
    @G--qq2bo 10 месяцев назад +2

    26. I just realized, over the three hours and 21 minutes of this simulation, in real time more than 5.5 billion would be dead by the end of the video. An interestingly macabre observation XD

  • @piterparker88
    @piterparker88 10 месяцев назад +2

    You should apply for impact simulation software from Imperial College London, they simulated Chicxulub impact which you used in your other video.

  • @williamgalbraith3621
    @williamgalbraith3621 5 месяцев назад

    WOW! Good work!

  • @johanjacobs9240
    @johanjacobs9240 10 месяцев назад +2

    I live almost in the middle of this crater. Parys, Free State, South Africa.

  • @UncleFester84
    @UncleFester84 10 месяцев назад +2

    "Plot armor activated!" That made me laugh

  • @brotachi
    @brotachi 10 месяцев назад +2

    The radio chatter at the beginning was extremely annoying. I loved what you did with the Chicxulub video, it was way more ominous and atmospheric. Please consider it for your next video. ❤

    • @coolbear6441
      @coolbear6441 Месяц назад

      It wasn’t that it was annoying, it was the fact that it wasn’t understood 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️

  • @CapeMike
    @CapeMike 10 месяцев назад +2

    The background chatter on the pre-impact space station is muffled...can't quite make out what they're saying(except for the countdown warnings)...sounds ominous, though!

  • @alexenderase1718
    @alexenderase1718 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you! That was realy great simulation

  • @wxtfishy
    @wxtfishy 10 месяцев назад +1

    Who else found the audios kinda disturbing? Nice vid tho

  • @scottcantrell2595
    @scottcantrell2595 9 месяцев назад

    Great work

  • @bensmall6548
    @bensmall6548 8 месяцев назад +3

    If you to land anywhere on earth 30 years after impact, what would the surface look like? Would it just be a barren wasteland?

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  7 месяцев назад +4

      dead trees but ferns everywhere

    • @bensmall6548
      @bensmall6548 7 месяцев назад

      @@Kaldisti I think all of the trees would have decomposed by then. Also is there a possibility that ferns would have gone extinct with this one? You said the extinction event would have been bigger than the Permian.

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  7 месяцев назад +4

      @@bensmall6548 Spores are highly resistant to extreme environmental conditions. Ferns survived to the last 3 mass extinction (Devonian, Permian and Cretaceous)

    • @bensmall6548
      @bensmall6548 7 месяцев назад

      @@Kaldisti Makes sense.

  • @RideAcrossTheRiver
    @RideAcrossTheRiver 9 дней назад

    Goodness, that space station needs better speakers and wall padding to damp down echo. What a racket!

  • @Bdd_fan
    @Bdd_fan 10 месяцев назад

    that was VERY well done

  • @frankolioman
    @frankolioman 10 месяцев назад +2

    The Earth got so cold you had to come up with a new Koppen Climate color, that's crazy.

  • @colonelsanderkfc6392
    @colonelsanderkfc6392 10 месяцев назад +2

    I feel like the death toll is a little inaccurate because by the time the heat wave reaches the middle of North America, it's still hot enough to boil water, and you're in the heat wave for like 10-15 mins straight. I'd straight up just peace out. aint no way I'm livin through 15 mins of 200 degrees. The death toll an hour an a half in should be like 7 billion or somethin like that

    • @randomguyhere6061
      @randomguyhere6061 2 месяца назад

      But wouldn’t by then people have a general idea of what’s happening and how to survive it, surely someone would’ve said something to help them survive?

  • @michaelhamar3305
    @michaelhamar3305 10 месяцев назад +3

    So what will be your next impact simulation?

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +13

      I'd like to make the Don't Look Up impact

  • @W0LFB3AT5
    @W0LFB3AT5 9 месяцев назад +1

    It’d be interesting to have a “Breaking News” update

  • @worldcomicsreview354
    @worldcomicsreview354 10 месяцев назад +1

    Creepy how slow and serene it seems "aboard" the asterod. Until suddenly it isn't!

  • @justinpettenuzzo8210
    @justinpettenuzzo8210 9 месяцев назад +1

    This would be terrifying if this actually happened. Just imagine, a near moon size object getting ever closer every day while knowing that there's nothing you can do to stop it.
    Then after the event; there's a very high chance that humanity can't recover from this mass extinction and is very well on the way to extinction. Hell it'll take Earth a long time to fully recover from it with us having no knowledge of what creatures will thrive in this new world.

  • @Markersify
    @Markersify 10 месяцев назад

    thanks these are always fun

  • @coolbear6441
    @coolbear6441 Месяц назад

    Saw some comments concerning a Red Comet impact? When and where was it?

  • @qdpqbp
    @qdpqbp 3 месяца назад

    why you keep clock like this moving around because the decimal disappears every whole second

  • @johnsmith5255
    @johnsmith5255 10 месяцев назад +1

    I got a laugh at the 'WTF°C' reading on the temperature chart.

  • @user-ng4sb5nl2o
    @user-ng4sb5nl2o 10 месяцев назад +1

    Somebody call Bruce. If he saved us from a Texas sized rock, this would be a breeze for him.

  • @cow_tools_
    @cow_tools_ 5 месяцев назад +1

    It's difficult to imagine/visualise the fact that the ejecta travels faster than the air blast.

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  5 месяцев назад +4

      bullets or bombshell travel faster than soundspeed x) it's the same for ejecta x)

    • @cow_tools_
      @cow_tools_ 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@KaldistiTrue! I'm trying to imagine it. The sound would be insane, like a global roar.

  • @rEdf196
    @rEdf196 4 месяца назад

    Make a short video on the impact of the Barringer aka Meteor Crater in Arizona and the destruction it could do to a US state or nearby cities and towns.

  • @churrascodupao6410
    @churrascodupao6410 10 месяцев назад +2

    If a bigger impact had ever occurred in the sea, we wouldn't know, because the bottom of the sea is very unexpired and there is more erosion there. Most of the Earth is covered with water, and every big impact known took place on the ground.

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  10 месяцев назад +4

      Oceanic crust never last more than 250 million years, because of subduction process. You're right, there were probably ocean impacts, but the information is forever lost

  • @AiryIsHere
    @AiryIsHere 2 месяца назад

    Why havent you listed the last music?
    I defenetly want to know.

    • @Kaldisti
      @Kaldisti  2 месяца назад +1

      I listed it, this is Anduin Theme from Wow legion

    • @AiryIsHere
      @AiryIsHere 2 месяца назад

      Forgot about that, im too blind lol

  • @petterlarsson7257
    @petterlarsson7257 6 месяцев назад +1

    its called atmospheric entry not atmospheric reentry when an asteroid enters the atmosphere

  • @a4yster
    @a4yster 9 месяцев назад

    Awesome dramatization! But the voices are so distorted that I cant figure out the words.

  • @almckimmey8898
    @almckimmey8898 10 месяцев назад +1

    ok- I loved the WTF C and the Selma Hayek 20,000 C humor...thank you ...