Chicxulub Tsunami-2.mov

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @Bsquared1972
    @Bsquared1972 3 года назад +3162

    Could you run the simulation to show what would have happened if the asteroid landed in the middle of the Atlantic?

    • @gregrohsful
      @gregrohsful 3 года назад +50

      Why? It didnt.

    • @juliusnepos6013
      @juliusnepos6013 Год назад +854

      He said what if

    • @2011568
      @2011568 Год назад

      I think theres a great chance your mother would be mine

    • @Enzi_Meteori_902
      @Enzi_Meteori_902 Год назад +144

      I am curious too
      would be nice to see a giant ripple from the middle of the ocean before hitting land

    • @ScienceMan314
      @ScienceMan314 Год назад +174

      @@gregrohsful
      Keyterm: “What if”

  • @lemorab1
    @lemorab1 Год назад +893

    This is the first time I've seen a paleogeographic map of what the earth's land masses looked like 65 million years ago. Thank you!

    • @MelanieCravens
      @MelanieCravens Год назад +35

      Yes, thank you. I like seeing where things were and weren't.

    • @derekstaroba
      @derekstaroba 7 месяцев назад +14

      I found trilobites and other marine fossils in missouri middle usa when i was a kid. Could it be possible that they arrived on q tsunami 65 million years ago?

    • @gheart8278
      @gheart8278 7 месяцев назад +2

      Lies

    • @7inrain
      @7inrain 7 месяцев назад +25

      @@derekstaroba Trilobites went extinct at the end of the Permian about 250 million years ago, long before the Chicxulub asteroid struck. So your marine fossils most probably lived somewhere between 500 to 300 million years ago when Missouri was under water.

    • @jip5889
      @jip5889 6 месяцев назад +7

      @@derekstarobait’s more likely the layer you found it in used to be the bottom of the sea. America used to be split in two north to south by an ocean.

  • @typhoon-7
    @typhoon-7 Год назад +412

    The "England to be" is actually "Scotland to be". The Scottish Highlands are some of the oldest mountains in the world and that's them poking out of the north Atlantic 65 Mya.

    • @ChrisParkman-jn6qx
      @ChrisParkman-jn6qx Год назад +4

      U r correct

    • @Yasokiii
      @Yasokiii 7 месяцев назад +11

      Honestly the majority of the land there is actually Ireland to be, with around half of modern day Scotland there

    • @adrienaugustin6520
      @adrienaugustin6520 7 месяцев назад +6

      Little bit of Wales also there I think

    • @gailforce
      @gailforce 7 месяцев назад +7

      That was Scotland and Northern Ireland from the Caledonian oregeny. The rest of the UK and Ireland was from a different plate

    • @DeadEyeJedi
      @DeadEyeJedi 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@gailforce
      Didn't know that, but it makes sense, since Welsh slate, I'm pretty sure, is older than much of the surface of the Earth. That's what made it so popular, no fossils.

  • @thedefenestrator2994
    @thedefenestrator2994 Год назад +1391

    As someone who was there… yeah the tsunami was the least of our worries. I was thankfully 501km away so while I can’t hear anymore, I’m still alive. The ash winter was a bummer though.

    • @rafaelgames720
      @rafaelgames720 Год назад +20

      if were counting oc's then mine would be in hell (room 744, before hitler's room)

    • @MozTheBoz
      @MozTheBoz Год назад +41

      Good to know Keith Richards browse these parts of the internet...

    • @bootblacking
      @bootblacking Год назад +15

      How did you survive the 1200° rain of glass from the impact blowout?

    • @mattwebb5276
      @mattwebb5276 Год назад +11

      Yeah that ash cloud was shit but at least it was warm that day 😳😊

    • @leeroquemore8713
      @leeroquemore8713 Год назад +7

      Dinosaurs were a little tough. Especially the predators. Omnivores ate all the good vegetation. Mammals are a big improvement to cuisine. More for the Masters of this planet🕶

  • @crnivitez4995
    @crnivitez4995 2 года назад +938

    I'd love to see a Chicxulub event simulated for a deeper part of the Atlantic like you did with your first video. I absolutely adore these videos that demonstrate the utter magnificence of phenomena that occured in our planet's past, you earned a subscriber.

    • @callmeshaggy5166
      @callmeshaggy5166 2 года назад +19

      It would make waves as high as it's depth anywhere, with asteroids that big. If it hit the Mariana Trench, you'd get 39000+ ft waves at the source. Given how little energy was lost as it traveled the ocean here, it would drown the globe except for maybe the highest peaks on each continent.

    • @cs77smith67
      @cs77smith67 Год назад +6

      @@callmeshaggy5166 that scary but I wonder if the Wave 🌊 would be that high by the time it hit the Coast?

    • @brandonn6099
      @brandonn6099 Год назад +25

      @@callmeshaggy5166 There is a limit to how much water gets displaced. This isn't an earthquake with a large amount of displacement for a small wave height, which can travel across an ocean and lose very little height. This wave has massive height but relatively little width. Though far bigger than any earthquake, compared to its height, it will not travel far.
      I would love to see the simulation though. That overpressure displacement is quite the thing.

    • @reldwob22
      @reldwob22 Год назад

      0:24 0:24 0:26

    • @Edixim
      @Edixim 4 месяца назад

      ​@@brandonn6099you never know though lol

  • @brianmiller2877
    @brianmiller2877 Год назад +122

    Best treatment of this aspect of the impact that I’m aware of. Appreciate that you state equations, conditions, and assumptions. Special thanks for portraying the continents as they were “on the day of”!

  • @commanderwayan
    @commanderwayan 2 года назад +95

    Finally, I've found this wonderful channel again. I used to watch these videos in my aunt's phone back on early to mid 2010s when I was a kid because the simulations amazed me (coupled with my obsession for geography back then) even though the equations and explanations makes no sense to my younger self.
    Through time however, I slowly forgot the existence of this videos. Lately, I remembered them back again although I can't remember the channel's name.
    I am extremely glad for RUclips's algorithm to recommend one of the vids once again and be able to watch and finally understand the content in the videos after all these years.

    • @suelybaptista7087
      @suelybaptista7087 2 года назад +2

      Por favor coloquem o tradutor...assim fica mais fácil a comunicação...grata!!!

    • @irregular_gavin
      @irregular_gavin 5 месяцев назад

      this is wholesome

  • @iamabominati0n970
    @iamabominati0n970 3 года назад +205

    the notification is a surprise one, to be sure, but a welcome one

  • @jsdp
    @jsdp 3 года назад +383

    I have followed this channel in some form or another for my entire time on this platform. Strangely I have become some form of attached to the videos that you release. I am not one for parasocial relationships, and one with a nameless, faceless, and voiceless creator should be impossible! But I do hope you are doing well, wherever you are in life. You could die tomorrow, or just decide to stop uploading, and we would be none the wiser. I do not even know if you are in your mid twenties or your late seventies! Very cathartic to sit back and watch one of these. Hope you keep it up mate, and hope you are content with how life is playing itself out.

    • @cranksetwrench
      @cranksetwrench Год назад +25

      I looked up the guy behind this channel, he’s a geologist at I think a university in California or for the usgs, I think he’s in his 50’s too

    • @screamingmimi90
      @screamingmimi90 Год назад +10

      As a RUclips junkie I feel a little disappointment that this is the first time I’m discovering this channel. Grateful for the find. Warm wishes from Minnesota! ❤❤❤

    • @dukecity7688
      @dukecity7688 Год назад +1

      @@screamingmimi90 I feel same as you. This is wonderful.

  • @bridgecross
    @bridgecross Год назад +51

    From what I've heard recently, it was the "ballistic ejecta" that really put the nail in the coffin. Even life on the opposite side of the globe couldn't escape. When that much material came back down, the atmosphere heated to oven-like temperatures. Nothing above ground or out of the ocean was unaffected.

    • @chrisandme23
      @chrisandme23 Год назад +1

      Thanks

    • @AntilleanConfederation
      @AntilleanConfederation 11 месяцев назад

      If true. How come life survived.

    • @bridgecross
      @bridgecross 11 месяцев назад +18

      @@AntilleanConfederation 1) Much of life under water, oceans, lakes, swamps, rivers. That would save amphibians, fish, some reptiles, etc. 2) Anyone burrowed or buried a few centimeters underground. That would save a few reptiles, early mammals, some birds.

    • @michaelmartin9022
      @michaelmartin9022 8 месяцев назад +15

      First weeks of heat, then centuries of cold.
      Also pieces of rock blasted into orbit randomly falling back with nuke-like impacts and perhaps tsunami of their own.

    • @rwquote
      @rwquote 7 месяцев назад +9

      In fact it was winter that came right after. Plants couldn't really withstand years without sun. No plants - no herbivore and so on

  • @jakegrist8487
    @jakegrist8487 Год назад +8

    This was the perfect video format. Just interesting information. Thank you for not playing annoying music or blasting some text to speech voiceover. Great video.

  • @dylwhs
    @dylwhs Год назад +43

    Thanks for making this. I have never thought about what the world looked like back then, and how continental drift has pushed the eastern and western Atlantic coastlines apart... This video makes that evident and so the tsunami of the even all the more immense.

    • @carlosalbertolatorre2709
      @carlosalbertolatorre2709 7 месяцев назад +1

      Todo son supuestos nadie sabe la verdad absoluta, son simulaciones de lo pudo pasar, no se sabe porque nadie estuvo ahi...para saberlo con exactitud tendriamos que tener una maquina del tiempo e ir al lugar de los acontesimientos y verlo con nuestros propios ojos....lo demas son especulaciones.

  • @MyUsernameisDifferent
    @MyUsernameisDifferent 3 года назад +21

    This is such an underrated channel, I love this!

  • @LukeNukem82
    @LukeNukem82 Год назад +75

    Imagine doing all this math, only to be told by a flat earther that space doesn't exist.

    • @gheart8278
      @gheart8278 7 месяцев назад +1

      But it doesn't. Read my comment, you might learn something!😄

    • @damianbieniek3926
      @damianbieniek3926 7 месяцев назад +17

      ​@@gheart8278your brain doesnt exist

    • @gheart8278
      @gheart8278 7 месяцев назад

      @@damianbieniek3926 show me one side impact crater either on the Moon or Earth. Stop being a brainwashed repeat puppet without observing the facts! 🙄

    • @gheart8278
      @gheart8278 7 месяцев назад

      @@damianbieniek3926 show 1 side impact crater on the Earth or Moon. Good luck! 😉

    • @damianbieniek3926
      @damianbieniek3926 7 месяцев назад +22

      @@gheart8278 show earth being flat and prove it with your math, good luck.

  • @Corium1
    @Corium1 11 месяцев назад +237

    This is terrible for the economy

  • @notahotshot
    @notahotshot Год назад +37

    I would love to see a ground level pov of the waves at different locations.

    • @ryancappo
      @ryancappo Год назад +1

      The movie Interstellar has a good scene of a huge wave like this…
      But it would be good to know how high the modern tsunamis have been to compare the damage to what this one was.

  • @keterpatrol7527
    @keterpatrol7527 2 года назад +26

    Thank you for your continued existence. I havent seen videos like these anywhere else.

  • @hallcody3
    @hallcody3 3 года назад +64

    Heck yes! I fricken love these videos, great work and thanks for putting these simulations on RUclips. I find them fascinating and very informative.

    • @dallassegno
      @dallassegno Год назад +1

      informative in what way? you getting prepared ha ha ?

    • @hallcody3
      @hallcody3 Год назад +3

      @@dallassegno mostly the historical stuff he mentions but I got ya, you gave me a little laugh. Thanks 😊

  • @edithgruber2125
    @edithgruber2125 2 года назад +107

    I watched your older simulation video with modern geography and I hoped that you'd revisit this at some point. So I'm really excited that you managed to get elevation maps for the Atlantic and surrounding continents 65 Ma ago and run the simulation again. Great stuff! Also thanks for sharing the equations and the thought process that went into it. During the video, it went a bit too fast to follow but I remember something from studying physics as a part of my meteorology degree.

  • @ibelieveyou2066
    @ibelieveyou2066 Год назад +12

    David Attenborough,did an excellent,as usual,very informative programme on Chicxulub. From the dinosaurs point of view, miles away,a few hours after the initial impact. Even include a fossil of a turtle that was impaled by wood when the tsunami pushed it on to land.

    • @49thNap
      @49thNap Год назад +7

      Poor turtle

  • @thewakeup5459
    @thewakeup5459 3 года назад +20

    I wonder how big the wave would be if it dropped in the center of the Atlantic or Pacific

    • @muhammadrifqi7308
      @muhammadrifqi7308 3 года назад +7

      Much bigger than when it hit the gulf of mexico certainly, but fascinatingly, dinosaurs would survive the impact if that was what happened

  • @brandenbizelli6332
    @brandenbizelli6332 Год назад +18

    0:11 my bad y’all I farted in the pool

  • @KentoKei
    @KentoKei 2 года назад +12

    this channel is one of those small but high quality channels and I love it

  • @joangalt6270
    @joangalt6270 7 месяцев назад +2

    2:00 - Correction (?) I believe that the full extent of the "shallow sea (from) the Mississippi Valley to Memphis" might be off by several hundred miles. The Permian Basin in Texas (where Midland is located today) was an oceanic basin as well. I base my correction on the location of the waterline at 2:09 (BUT, perhaps the Permian Basin formed as a result of Chicxulub??).
    Just wanted to throw that correction out there, respectfully.

  • @maxrockatansky3896
    @maxrockatansky3896 3 года назад +8

    Have you published a paper regarding the modeling, I think it's really interesting regarding the model and the paper could be built upon by future research to have a compressive understanding of this impact an potentially future impacts.

  • @501Mobius
    @501Mobius 3 года назад +11

    Can you simulate what would happen if across the mid Gulf of Aqaba was separated at the 700 meter depth level into two walls of water apart by 100 meters. All the way down to the sea floor. Then suddenly released to crash together? What would the recoil be like?

  • @chasemclain6235
    @chasemclain6235 3 года назад +10

    The legend is back!

  • @lheojan6320
    @lheojan6320 3 года назад +3

    I'm glad you come back....

  • @slimlol-j5b
    @slimlol-j5b 3 года назад +6

    I just wanted to say to keep doing what you're doing as it's very informative.

  • @zuthalsoraniz6764
    @zuthalsoraniz6764 3 года назад +26

    Very nice simulation - though one detail that is definitely not correct is the speed, or shape of the pressure wave. As a shock wave, it'd have a very sharp leading edge in terms of pressure, and relatively quickly and exponentially decay back to ambient pressure afterwards, not the triangle wave you modeled. And a very strong shockwave like this one moves faster than the speed of sound - in air, a shockwave with a 3.5 atm (~50 psi) overpressure will be travelling at twice the speed of sound, and there will be a wind blowing outwards at (just behind the shockwave) ~0.6 times the speed of sound behind it. I am guessing especially the shockwave travelling faster would weaken the coupling between shockwave and tsunami even further compared to your simulation, though the different shape of the pressure field might enhance it.

    • @wndiua7566
      @wndiua7566 2 года назад +10

      I like your funny words magic man

  • @zyxw2000
    @zyxw2000 7 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for spelling Chicxulub correctly.

  • @mgman6000
    @mgman6000 Год назад +8

    Great video would it be possible to simulate the younger dryas impact theory to determine how much ice sheet would be melted? Or multiple impacts

  • @earlinemcgahen3931
    @earlinemcgahen3931 Год назад +1

    Did you input the effects of the methane in the region on your simialation

  • @buggi_ecchy
    @buggi_ecchy 2 года назад +3

    i can’t be the only one who wants to know what software is used to generate these tsunami and landslides

  • @davsaltego
    @davsaltego 8 месяцев назад

    I’m not a mathematician by any stretch of even the most imaginative imagination, but thank you for including the equations. It adds to understanding the phenomenon itself, and how you created the models. Well done!

  • @Kohl293
    @Kohl293 Год назад +19

    For one beautiful moment, Mississippi was underwater.
    Great video!

  • @spacepenguin4304
    @spacepenguin4304 3 года назад +3

    The dude is finally back ! you know it's gonna be a nice night when ingomar200 uploads

  • @filipp3702
    @filipp3702 2 года назад +4

    What kind of software do you use to make those amazing simulations?

  • @livetotell100
    @livetotell100 5 месяцев назад +1

    It reached Iowa because of the Mississippi River basin. Was that river even there that long ago?

  • @joaoialima
    @joaoialima 3 года назад +7

    Hi, could you run a simulation of the impact of the mega-tsunami from La Palma in Recife, a city in the northeast of Brazil with around 4 million people in its metro area, and made in very very low terrain, most taken from the rivers and sea. Recife was founded by the Dutch when they occupied the region in the XVII century “imitating” their own low lands. The curiosity is that Recife has the first synagogue in the Americas and the jews explelled together with the Dutch migrated to North America and helped to found New Amsterdam/New York.

  • @Chipt
    @Chipt 6 дней назад

    Excellent and enormous work have been done!
    Good one

  • @Rodeo_Rodeo
    @Rodeo_Rodeo 3 года назад +4

    YES!
    Damn, i thought you was going to be gone for a year again

  • @kalyannatarajan1695
    @kalyannatarajan1695 Год назад +1

    Very well done and amazing job with the evocative captions…….👏👏👏👏👏🙏🙏🙏

  • @maazwaseem8313
    @maazwaseem8313 Год назад +10

    Big fan of your content :)
    If its an interesting way to go, could you run a simulation on what would have happened if Chicxulub hit the Mariana Trench? I saw one other channel talk about this possibility and....I wanna see the devastation via simulation :p
    Also I wanna know....what software do you generally use to create these scenarios?

  • @sdarms111doug9
    @sdarms111doug9 Год назад

    Nice done, I enjoyed it. Thanks for posting!

  • @nomansland3840
    @nomansland3840 Год назад +2

    I got a question that no one can answer. But I'll ask anyway. Would it be felt or heard of you where in the salt lake area back than?.

  • @tlotpwist3417
    @tlotpwist3417 Месяц назад +4

    The Surfausaurus Rex was the only happy dino that day

  • @MasculinityMindset
    @MasculinityMindset Год назад

    Really interesting, watched all the way through, thanks.

  • @kwillow12
    @kwillow12 3 года назад +12

    MOST excellent! I wonder if one day you can do an estimate of the effects of the meteor calving (a'la Lucifer's Hammer) with bits striking the Atlantic ocean and maybe even land? This is so fascinating to view. I hope you enjoy making these videos! Thank You!

    • @MelanieCravens
      @MelanieCravens Год назад

      A fellow fan of 'Lucifer's Hammer'! I just replaced my second well-read paperback copy.
      Want a chuckle? I have a calendar that has an event a day (i.e. Black Cat Day. Pumpkin Day. Etc). This year (2023) 'Hot Fudge Sundae' Day actually fell on a Tuesday! Of course, I couldn't let the day pass without reading the whole 'Hot Fudge Sundae' description of the comet...while eating a hot fudge sundae.

  • @DeadEyeJedi
    @DeadEyeJedi 6 месяцев назад +1

    To be honest, I'm not really an applied Maths aficionado and didn't really understand that side of it, but I'm enough of a geek to understand the concepts behind it. It does help put the whole thing into perspective.

  • @michigannative2951
    @michigannative2951 Год назад +5

    That was really cool.
    Recently I’ve learned about the Carolina bays the story goes that a meteor hit near Ottawa and blasted a plume of ice chunks into the atmosphere at low earth orbit and they crashed down into the east coast and created these bays in the Carolina’s?
    But this was neat to see, do you think the ocean swell into the Mediterranean ocean could have caused a back flow event in Northern Africa or the Nile delta region?

  • @Jakeiscool456
    @Jakeiscool456 3 года назад +1

    Wow you’ve been making videos since a long time I’m so proud that you’re back

  • @alkh3myst
    @alkh3myst Год назад +4

    Thanks for showing the impact equations. Our teachers always wanted us to show our work.

    • @gheart8278
      @gheart8278 5 месяцев назад

      To help support the lie you mean. 😉

    • @InfinityGGG1
      @InfinityGGG1 Месяц назад

      @@gheart8278 what lie?

    • @gheart8278
      @gheart8278 Месяц назад

      @@InfinityGGG1 meteors as taught. Zero angled impacts on the Moon or Earth, yet we see so called comets/meteors always at angles and slow. Besides getting by Earth which is taught to be much larger. Local clouds being lit by the Moon possessing questions as well. We learned many lies in our indoctrination classes from kinder care up. Alot to unlearn.😉

    • @gheart8278
      @gheart8278 Месяц назад

      @@InfinityGGG1 zero angled impacts. Care to splain?

    • @InfinityGGG1
      @InfinityGGG1 Месяц назад +1

      @@gheart8278 Maybe you think you're so grand relying on RUclips commenters for your answers and what you believe to be wrong. LOL, a lot of people get their 'Yeah this is ridiculous, must be fake' mindset when they're the ones getting their answers from non professionals!

  • @maddoxmonteza
    @maddoxmonteza Год назад

    This is a great video glad youtube recommended this

  • @complimentary_voucher
    @complimentary_voucher 3 года назад +3

    Thank you for satisfying both my morbid and nerdy tendencies 👍

  • @donaldculp3759
    @donaldculp3759 День назад

    This is a very impressive scientific explanation! Bravo for the formulas and discipline to science!

  • @andrewkmac3507
    @andrewkmac3507 2 года назад +3

    Can you please do a pole shift simulation.

  • @davidbartlow3465
    @davidbartlow3465 Год назад +2

    3:42 I just noticed that the northernmost extent of the wave is where the oil and coal areas of Ohio and WVA are…. Is there a connection?

  • @dustyk103
    @dustyk103 Год назад +15

    I think it would’ve been cool, or if you superimposed modern typography and state’s boundaries over the map the whole scenario. Also overlay the blast zone and burn zone. I’m sure there’s tons of ejecta damage, too. Excellent video! I wonder, could some of that ejecta end up in space and not come down? Like maybe end up on the Moon or other planets? “Look! I found fossilized life on Mars!”

    • @warbuzzard7167
      @warbuzzard7167 Год назад +4

      Very likely there was debris from this even driven into lunar orbit and even to the Martian surface. Good call here!

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Год назад +1

      @@warbuzzard7167 The Martian surface?
      I think you are reaching there.
      Reaching Mars would require being launched at a specific trajectory from earth at just the right time in Mars orbit of the sun (and Mars relative orbit to Earth) so that it did not simply pass Martian orbital path entirely before carrying on toward the outer solar system or being captured by Jupiter's gravity well.

    • @warbuzzard7167
      @warbuzzard7167 Год назад +6

      @@mnomadvfx We've found Martian rocks on the Earth from Martian impacts. NOT far-fetched to think some achieved escaped velocity to migrate to Mars' orbital plane and distance.

  • @geoffreylee5199
    @geoffreylee5199 День назад

    Did it collide in the day, the night, early morning, or the evening?

  • @NardoVogt
    @NardoVogt Год назад +4

    "For most life on earth, that was not a good day..." Could come out of a Douglas Adams novel

  • @phaiz55
    @phaiz55 Год назад +3

    Neat video but very frustrating for the animations to be constantly interrupted by walls of text.

  • @Hiismee
    @Hiismee Год назад +1

    hi, how did u make this?

  • @h.f6364
    @h.f6364 3 года назад +3

    the icon is back

  • @aapex1
    @aapex1 7 месяцев назад

    Very interesting and informative! Thanks for the effort.

  • @TheGeeMaster1337
    @TheGeeMaster1337 3 года назад +4

    We are a truly elite community of disaster enthusiasts.

    • @kwillow12
      @kwillow12 3 года назад +1

      What I find fascinating is the reducing such an enormous explosion to equations. Wish I'd had better math education, so I could be even more interested.

  • @WoodysAR
    @WoodysAR Год назад +1

    Great! First video I"ve been excited to click on in quite awhile! Did you make this?

  • @Isawwhatyoudid
    @Isawwhatyoudid Год назад +24

    So the Southeast was a terrible place to be 65 million years ago, a terrible place to be 160 years ago, and a terrible place to be now.

    • @DougThompson-b1l
      @DougThompson-b1l 11 дней назад +2

      So terrible it's among the fastest growing parts of the country, but I'm glad you don't like it. Too many people here as it is.

  • @jerrypolverino6025
    @jerrypolverino6025 Год назад

    I really enjoyed this video and the difficult work in modeling. Big thank you.

  • @peterclarke3990
    @peterclarke3990 10 месяцев назад +4

    What evidence do you have of the geographical layout of the Earth 65 million years ago, or is it pure conjecture?

  • @themetalslayer2260
    @themetalslayer2260 Год назад +1

    i don't understand one small detail : why do you use metric system in all the measurement except with the pressure?
    whatever, the video is great and interesting

  • @robertwalker6023
    @robertwalker6023 11 месяцев назад +3

    Surf up dudes😎🤘😂

    • @RugMann
      @RugMann 10 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/mQ_91TaUy8Y/видео.htmlsi=wJ6d_2jfJcObjfa4

  • @eugeniabarsukova
    @eugeniabarsukova 7 месяцев назад +1

    Why is everything in metric, but the pressure is in pounds per square inch?

  • @pstrzel
    @pstrzel Год назад +3

    Can you do a simulation where the earth is flat and the asteroid goes right through and the oceans drain out?

  • @venturystar
    @venturystar 6 дней назад

    Very nice model. Thank you!!!

  • @DonnyBrisco
    @DonnyBrisco 10 месяцев назад +3

    Look, fairy tales. 65 million years ago is such B'S.

    • @LeastNationalistPole
      @LeastNationalistPole 10 месяцев назад +1

      It's just like the bible. A complete lie.

    • @NeocadeX
      @NeocadeX 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@LeastNationalistPoleShow us the proof that its a lie.

    • @LeastNationalistPole
      @LeastNationalistPole 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@NeocadeX There is none. Also, it's spelled "it's"

    • @InfinityGGG1
      @InfinityGGG1 Месяц назад

      The only fairy tale is your religion.

    • @DonnyBrisco
      @DonnyBrisco Месяц назад

      @@NeocadeX Space is fake. I was sucked in from birth being born in 65, I watched the Apollo landings with my family in the living room. Loved Star Trek and Shatner. Waited for the rockets to go to Mars in ten years when they said they would in 1975. 85 came and they said "Mars in 10 years" 95, Mars in ten years but look at the cool ISS that's"up there" now and I said to myself "it's up there? When did they do that launch,I never saw a launch" 2005, Mars in 10 years, 2015, Mars in ten years but LOOK at the new Rover on Mars. ...... I loved Battlestar Galactica, waited in line for the original star wars at the theater 27 times. Now I find out the Mars stuff is actually filmed in New Mexico, William Shatner drinks children's blood for the adrenochrome. The engine of the Google Chrome browser is called adreno. ISS footage is filmed in a huge swimming pool. The earth is actually confirmable to be flat. The word sci-enti-fic when put into Google translate from the witchcraft language of Latin to English means know that it is false. Jessica Alba is a man, so is Madonna. Do you know how much curve there is at ten miles on the freemason's globe? 66.6", the tilt of the earth 23.4° which is 66.6° opposite a right 90° angle, 666" of curve at 100 miles, 666,000 earths fit inside the fake freemasonic sun that's part of the heliocentric solar system..... Helios is the sun God in Greek pantheon. Yeah, space is fake, The Father created the earths firmament on Day 2 of creation. You can't get out, they will never go to Mars. Allen's are the fallen angels that rebelled and had sex with women. Life was much quieter when space was real, now it's not and the world is run by families that swear an oath to Lucifer and in exchange they get to be our slave masters, for now. Serve the True Living Father, this is not the real life, this is where you prove yourself worthy of it. Much love

  • @SyIe12
    @SyIe12 9 дней назад

    👍⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐EXCELLENT WORK I LOOK FORWARD TO NEW VIDEOS! THANK YOU

  • @TheJMBon
    @TheJMBon Год назад +2

    Keep in mind, a 200m tsunami is 656 feet high, over 1/8 of a mile high wall of water. 50m is 164 feet or the height of a 15 to 16 story building.

    • @pavel9652
      @pavel9652 Год назад +1

      Did the calculation on the fly for 50 meters, insane stuff.

    • @WilliamMurphy-b6v
      @WilliamMurphy-b6v 7 дней назад

      There were no 16-story condos back then.

  • @tomsalzano8120
    @tomsalzano8120 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for such a detailed simulation ( backed by the equations ). I've run through this a few times now, and it gives such a good picture of the chain of events from so many different aspects and vantage points. Truly excellent ( and fascinating ) modeling of the event.

  • @MrCrunch808
    @MrCrunch808 Год назад +2

    Would the extinction have been less severe if the asteroid hit the deep ocean instead of the continental shelf?

    • @pavel9652
      @pavel9652 Год назад +2

      I saw a video where authors claimed the material making the sea bed in the region was particularly bad because of the way it interacted during the impact, created ashes, etc.

  • @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid
    @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid Год назад +10

    Hey, really cool video, man!
    I especially enjoyed how you displayed the math for kinetic energy, as well as the run-up heights across the globe.
    The tsunami aspect of Chicxulub never really occurred to me. I've always focused on the atmospheric impact, but the fact that ~10m run-ups were reaching the then-hidden corners of Africa is certainly not a joke!

  • @clsanchez77
    @clsanchez77 6 месяцев назад

    Really incredible detailed modeling here. What software did you use for the wave modeling?

  • @G6JPG
    @G6JPG 6 месяцев назад +1

    Made a wonderful change to not have any added audio!

  • @arctic_wind
    @arctic_wind 2 года назад +1

    Please say you're working on a Tonga sim

  • @Koozomec
    @Koozomec Год назад

    It's very good. The imperial unit threw me off a bit. Is there a metric only version ?

  • @bssn9469
    @bssn9469 3 года назад +2

    Outstanding! Fantastic content, thank you.

  • @fuzzpope
    @fuzzpope 4 дня назад

    Excellent presentation, thank you.

  • @davidholman48
    @davidholman48 Год назад +1

    What size would the crater be if it had hit inland, maybe somewhere in Iowa, Illinois or Missouri?

  • @76rjackson
    @76rjackson Год назад +1

    Can you do a simulation of an impact on the ice of an ice age glacier? What happens when 2 kilometers of ice are the impact site? Thinking specifically of the younger dryas impact hypothesis. There are no good models that take into account the properties of ice. Thanks

  • @ksoman953
    @ksoman953 Год назад

    This is brilliant work!

    • @WilliamMurphy-b6v
      @WilliamMurphy-b6v 7 дней назад

      Why? Because you see math and animated suggested consequences?

  • @lucaspakele3038
    @lucaspakele3038 10 месяцев назад

    Can you run the simulation slowly, at a constant speed, zoomed in?

  • @barrypickles6546
    @barrypickles6546 6 месяцев назад

    Worth a watch, what would happen if you put all of the hypothesised extra impactors into your simulation?

  • @theobserver9131
    @theobserver9131 День назад

    Cool!!! Thanks for this.

  • @mickwend1
    @mickwend1 Год назад

    Super-Video. Und als Sahnehäubchen : keine Musik, kein Gelaber. Ein fettes Double-Love-Like.

  • @ThomasEWalker
    @ThomasEWalker Год назад

    Amazing sim! Very cool! Thanks!

  • @alexmeanin8049
    @alexmeanin8049 7 месяцев назад

    Very nice simulation, awesome work, accept my respect.

  • @ericberman4193
    @ericberman4193 2 дня назад

    Nice work!

  • @AncientMysteriesAndInnovations
    @AncientMysteriesAndInnovations 2 месяца назад

    Brilliant breakdown

  • @nsa867
    @nsa867 10 месяцев назад

    What program is he using?

  • @antipattern0
    @antipattern0 Год назад +1

    Good job Adric