The Insane Evolution of: Hibernation

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024
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Комментарии • 996

  • @realscience
    @realscience  Год назад +51

    Be sure to check out our new series Becoming Human on Nebula! nebula.tv/becominghuman
    If you've ever wondered why humans are basically the weirdest animals on earth, this series will take you step by step explaining why.

    • @ashtongrist
      @ashtongrist Год назад

      Your narration voice sucks!

    • @slcRN1971
      @slcRN1971 Год назад

      Very interesting!! One problem I have with this presentation, is that there’s a strange noise in the background. It is very difficult for me to hear her words (I have CC on too) due to that added noise (it is low, yet very distracting - - for people like me, that have hearing issues). I have my headphones on at the highest setting, didn’t resolve this problem.

    • @DonCarlos590
      @DonCarlos590 10 месяцев назад

      6:03 what's the music in the background ? Its very unique.
      Your commentary is very easy to understand

  • @dondraper3871
    @dondraper3871 Год назад +2220

    I am not lazy. I am an evolultionary step towards regaining hybernation capability

  • @trixrabbit8792
    @trixrabbit8792 Год назад +452

    Back in the 90’s there was a child that fell through the ice on a pond. Several hours passed before the rescue team found him. They were able to resuscitate him without any brain damage. The doctors said the reason was that he drowned in freezing water and it caused rapid drop in body temperature. His body didn’t have time to build up any of the dangerous chemicals. He was resuscitated while still hypothermic preventing any degradation before his body began to function again.
    I’m not saying I want to try it myself but that sounds like a good place to start studying how to make people hibernate.

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer Год назад +111

      the thing is it is tough to replicate that without risking killing the test subject.

    • @LudovicoTaddei
      @LudovicoTaddei Год назад +32

      We're still years away from human experimentation, regarding hibernation, but there are a handful of reported cases of possible human hibernation

    • @trixrabbit8792
      @trixrabbit8792 Год назад +58

      @@sirBrouwer either Russia or China will probably be the first to test anything. Political prisoners seem to be preferred test subjects.

    • @BondJFK
      @BondJFK Год назад

      @@trixrabbit8792 or USA with its nazi scientist working for government after 1947

    • @Kyharra
      @Kyharra Год назад +14

      @@LudovicoTaddei we really need more human test subjects tbf

  • @christinamann3640
    @christinamann3640 Год назад +139

    The closest I ever came to hibernation is when I caught a cold, called in sick, and slept as much as I felt like, only getting up to eat and go to the bathroom. I was asleep for 22 out of the first 24 hours, and the next day I felt so much better, feeling like it accelerated recovery by days. The difficulty is having to fight the compulsion to be awake and wanting to go about life.

    • @SphereOfStreaming
      @SphereOfStreaming Год назад +7

      @Quack ok?

    • @OgdenM
      @OgdenM Год назад +15

      Yeap, same here. I now have a rule that I just sleep when I get sick. I always recover so much faster then even if I just sat around watching TV. There is a REASON why we're so tired when we're sick.
      It's the body flat out going, "YO YO YO! GO TO SLEEP! Stop moving, stop burning energy by focusing on stuff, like TV etc, stop thinking even, let me repair myself!!!!"
      Honestly it's to the point now where I just naturally can't read a book or watch TV when I'm sick for the first day or two. My brain just shuts down and won't let me. ... and if I force it to stay awake, let me tell you; the cold just gets worse and I'm out of it for days longer then otherwise.

    • @kg-Whatthehelliseventhat
      @kg-Whatthehelliseventhat Год назад

      @@OgdenM thoughtytwo

    • @jacobvriesema6633
      @jacobvriesema6633 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@OgdenMthe hard part is the actual sleeping for me. I can be physically suck, but my brain keeps me awake. I’ll try to take a nap in the afternoons but after being in bed for 3 hours, I usually get maybe 15-30 mins of sleep. I’m somewhat jealous of those who are good at sleeping.

    • @Helena-ox7cr
      @Helena-ox7cr 9 месяцев назад +2

      Tried the same. 24h later healthy again so yeah. Enormous smounyel of sleep and great nutrition like all minerals and vitamins like in baby milk with antigens.

  • @thorn9382
    @thorn9382 Год назад +14

    Im so glad you have a calm voice because i like watching science videos before bed and im so tired of people borderline yelling in all their RUclips videos for no reason

  • @NoahSpurrier
    @NoahSpurrier Год назад +528

    I believe I once read that ectotherms (amphibians and reptiles) devote a large portion of their genome to multiple chemical pathways that allow them to function at different temperatures. One advantage of endothermy (birds and mammals) is that it simplifies the chemistry needed to run the body at the expense of needing more calories. One advantage of this is that it frees up space for the genome to evolve other useful traits (big brains). Not sure what this hypothesis is called or if it’s still considered plausible. It’s an interesting idea, though.

    • @darthtrump4428
      @darthtrump4428 Год назад +24

      interesting point, but isnt like +90% of our genome just trash from the past
      if someone has a further combined explanation for my, and Noah's points, please tag me

    • @hannahwinterhalder741
      @hannahwinterhalder741 Год назад +75

      @@darthtrump4428 I learned that only 1,5 percent if our Genom codes for genes, but that doesn't make the rest useless.
      Some of the rest is necessary for regulating our genes, so proteins only get made when they are needed.
      Other parts of our genom are leftovers from virus infections and called transposons (I'm not a native English speaker so the name transposon might be wrong), these transposons are mobile (also called jumping genes somtimes) and can..well jump.
      While jumping they make it possible that genes get recombined.
      Also at the ends of our chromosomes we have non coding ends called Telomers wich protect the ends and mark the end of the chromosomes.
      These are the few things I can come up with reasons why not 90 percent of our genome are junk, hope it helps.
      Have a nice day/evening/night.

    • @mettflix3054
      @mettflix3054 Год назад +95

      ​​@@darthtrump4428 I study biology at a german university and had a module of genetics this semester. I was provided with the following numbers:
      Genes account for 20-30% of our genome.
      Only 2-3% oft these are actually coding for rna and proteins, the rest of these 20-30% are regulatory sequences, introns and pseudogenes. 70-80% of the dna on our genome are not genes. These 70-80% are tandem repeats (10-15%(you use those for genetic fingerprints)), scattered repetive(25-40%(ofen transposomes)) or single copy/low copy sequences(the rest of the 70-80%).
      That leaves a lot of space on our genome. A possible reason for this empty space could be to prevent mutations from damaging our coding genes whilst profiting from mutations on non coding genes.
      Another theory is that repeating sequences might play a role in the folding process of chromosomes.
      Those are just theories, they are not proven yet.
      Sorry for possible translation errors, all the material i have is sadly in german. Hope i provided some interesting information.

    • @enternalinferno
      @enternalinferno Год назад +7

      Thank you for that interesting information!

    • @pro-nav
      @pro-nav Год назад +6

      Not a biology person, but is it possible that the remaining stuff in dna which looks empty is kind of like software? What I mean is that it may be used for storing "how to" like in case of sea turtles how do they know to follow light and sort of stuff. Idk just a thought

  • @jeremiasrobinson
    @jeremiasrobinson Год назад +241

    In my most recent semester of school, I had to do a project analyzing the quality of a science news source. I did my project on Real Science. I got 100% on that assignment. Thanks!

    • @RedRoseSeptember22
      @RedRoseSeptember22 Год назад +4

      Awesome :)

    • @firdaushbhadha2597
      @firdaushbhadha2597 Год назад

      How do you analyze the quality of a news source?

    • @jeremiasrobinson
      @jeremiasrobinson Год назад +18

      @@firdaushbhadha2597 I should probably say 'science reporting' source. The assignments were to look at sources that were not primary sources, such as research papers for peer-reviewed journals, and then research beyond the reporting sources to see how accurate they were. For example, if the source cites additional primary sources, such as research papers for peer-reviewed journals, if the source has advertising, and if so, how the advertising does or does not influence the information being conveyed, if there is any indication of secondary agendas, et cetera. In the assignment in which I wrote about Real Science, I wrote about why it is a reliable source of information. In another one of these assignments, I also wrote about why Infowars is not a reliable source of information.

    • @firdaushbhadha2597
      @firdaushbhadha2597 Год назад +3

      @@jeremiasrobinson amazing thank you! I always like learning how to improve my due diligence, especially in this age.

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer Год назад +2

      @@firdaushbhadha2597 Both real science and real engineering will always have a extended list of references below the video.
      if other science / news based videos have them. that will make the video credible as you can look at those resources and use ways to cross reference those sources to go even deeper.
      like with this video alone they have given 14 referral links they have used all from credible sources .
      there are quite a few that do.

  • @petercarioscia9189
    @petercarioscia9189 Год назад +81

    Ive heard the stories of people falling into frozen lakes being revived after 40+ minutes, but never have I heard of the hiker who survived 24 days of exposure. That's wildly interesting.

    • @dontbetreadin4777
      @dontbetreadin4777 10 месяцев назад

      77 degrees Fahrenheit ...... That's super crazy, my first instinct is to not believe it.

  • @vice.nor.virtue
    @vice.nor.virtue Год назад +59

    I believe that I owe at least 75% of my general knowledge of pub quiz animal answers to Real Science. Honestly this team (or individual) are so thorough I feel vaguely expert on any given animal after I finish one of these videos.

  • @Fantastic_Mr_Fox
    @Fantastic_Mr_Fox Год назад +146

    A real science *and* a real engineerig vid in the same day?
    unreal

    • @zegreatpumpkinani9161
      @zegreatpumpkinani9161 Год назад +11

      It's almost like they've been doing that on purpose for months 🤔

    • @edithsmith4131
      @edithsmith4131 Год назад

      I can hibernate

    • @purna3271
      @purna3271 Год назад +7

      I can hibernate peacefully now. Oh wait no, space gun go brrrrrrr. Damn it!

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 Год назад +1

      @@edithsmith4131 as a Bear i can as well

    • @edithsmith4131
      @edithsmith4131 Год назад +1

      @@purna3271I never said I didn’t have a gun. A Blankey and a pillow.

  • @Aquamayne100
    @Aquamayne100 Год назад +253

    Love this channel and this narrator!
    I've seen these techniques in open heart surgery and post heart attack/cardiac arrest. Cool stuff!

    • @suekim1147
      @suekim1147 Год назад +15

      The channel IS... the narrator... She does everything from the voice to the content and the editing on her own.

    • @Aquamayne100
      @Aquamayne100 Год назад +8

      @@suekim1147 whoa, she does a great job!

    • @suekim1147
      @suekim1147 Год назад +9

      @@Aquamayne100 yea I was shocked too when I found out!

    • @thisisastrobbery363
      @thisisastrobbery363 Год назад +2

      I saw it when I was 12 :)

    • @stevenmoreno9421
      @stevenmoreno9421 Год назад

      @@suekim1147what about the people linked? It says who they are and what they did…

  • @allenthutmacher1412
    @allenthutmacher1412 Год назад +449

    i’m literally just existing till Real Science comes and blesses my day

    • @frostjune6072
      @frostjune6072 Год назад +9

      always the best part of my day ever since her first video 🥰

    • @purna3271
      @purna3271 Год назад +6

      Real Engineering too

    • @TFBx
      @TFBx Год назад +1

      @@purna3271 they just put out a really interesting one

    • @heidirabenau511
      @heidirabenau511 Год назад +1

      @@purna3271 brrrrrrrrr

    • @robinhodgkinson
      @robinhodgkinson Год назад +9

      You need to get out more…

  • @waynejohn2567
    @waynejohn2567 Год назад +15

    I used to hibernate when I was broke asf it works

  • @1969kodiakbear
    @1969kodiakbear Год назад +36

    Dwarf lemurs fascinating. By the way, I have difficulty communicating because I had a stroke in Broca’s area, the part of the brain that controls speech. 2/8/2021 but I lived again. (My wife helped me compose this.)

    • @wetworms.
      @wetworms. Год назад +5

      God bless you and your wife ❤️

    • @klondikechris
      @klondikechris Год назад +8

      I had a stroke that gave me some aphasia, but I could generally speak well enough to be understood. Over time, I improved, and now people can hear no impairment to my speaking at all. Hang in there; even if slowly, things do get better! My typing went from about 5wpm up to 60 or so. Still not the 75-80 from before the stroke, but getting there.

  • @LudovicoTaddei
    @LudovicoTaddei Год назад +24

    Great video, hibernation is such an intersting phenomenon and you narrated it pretty well.
    The only fallacy of your narration is to group togheter ectotherms' and endotherms' (torpor) hibernation. This is important because the hibernation process of ectotherms is passive, forced by environmental conditions (and which also requires massive adaptations like butt breathing), while torpor is an actively regulated phenomenon (although we still don't know the exact mechanisms). To put it in a simplier way, an animal can arouse from torpor even if the enviromental conditions stay advers, while an hibernating ectotherm can only be aroused if the envrionmental conditions improve (substantially if the wether gets hotter).
    Anyway, that's not something I wanna argue about, it's just that you did such a good job and viewers seem to be really intersted in the topic, so I wanted to add at least a bit of my knowledge.

  • @harrisun6459
    @harrisun6459 Год назад +14

    Insane biology of a scorpion would be so cool to learn more about how they glow

  • @samk2407
    @samk2407 Год назад +22

    This may be entirely wrong, but it seems like the simplest explanation for not losing muscle/bone mass is that for non hibernating species losing those things is an adaptation. As in, we evolved to LOSE those things to conserve energy and recoup resources when they're under utilized. So the way hibernating species don't is by not doing that 😭. Like the loss of muscle and bone mass is an active process that doesn't occur in animals for whom it would disadvantage.

  • @khuzaimanawabali2231
    @khuzaimanawabali2231 Год назад +20

    The originator of this channel exerted a tremendous amount of effort to gather data and presented it in a superb manner. The concepts that I grasped about Hibernation in this video are exceedingly captivating and enthralling, particularly the details about Mammals and Reptiles. Moreover, the creator's use of cinematography to showcase the Soft board Pin pictures in a group of hibernating animals and pointed to one specific image at the timestamp 2:46 is remarkable. I am fond of your channel, and to support you, I watched the full advertisements shown in your videos without skipping. Your content is admirable, please continue producing more.

  • @brandonlrushman2870
    @brandonlrushman2870 Год назад +13

    It’s absolutely fascinating how Mother Nature works! 💚

    • @Rerxxy
      @Rerxxy Год назад +1

      Nah father nature

  • @nickcunningham6344
    @nickcunningham6344 7 месяцев назад

    What I love about this channel is that it answers questions that I have always wondered about but never actually bothered to look up. "Where did hibernation even come from in their evolution history." Literally have wondered this myself, I love this channel.

  • @Metonymy1979
    @Metonymy1979 Год назад +25

    As someone that could be an Olympic gold medalist in sleeping, yes

    • @marcopohl4875
      @marcopohl4875 Год назад

      teach me!

    • @HumanBeingSpawn
      @HumanBeingSpawn Год назад

      And Olympic gold medalist at snoring as well.
      Snoring and deep sleepers go hand in hand

    • @Mulmgott
      @Mulmgott Год назад

      @@HumanBeingSpawn Snoring usually is a sign of disturbed deep sleep due to suboptimal oxygen supply. So your body starts gasping for air due to lower oxygen causing snoring. People who don't snore usually have deeper and more efficient sleep. Chronic loud snoring is a sign of sleep apnea which significantly decreases lifespan of those who suffer from it and don't even notice because they think they are just snoring. Always snoring is a very bad sign if you aspire to live a long and healthy life. Deep sleep and snoring are contrary to each other.

  • @clubx1000
    @clubx1000 Год назад +2

    The RUclips video was truly captivating! The content was insightful, and the presentation was engaging. I appreciate the effort put into creating such valuable and enjoyable content. Well done!

  • @dmacpher
    @dmacpher Год назад +20

    Wow this is phenomenal content. Thank you

  • @marie22213
    @marie22213 Год назад +2

    I love snuggling up at home during winter but I love it so much that I would never want to hibernate. Like I always say " you'll never feel air as fresh as you do when it's ice cold out" the most amazing feeling ever nothing but pure air.

    • @OgdenM
      @OgdenM Год назад

      I think we make a false assumption that bears (and other animals) are not aware of their surroundings while hibernating. Some might not be.. but bears I seem to remember that they 100% are. They will wake up if distributed enough. Otherwise their brains are just like, "NA, stay asleep, we're safe."

  • @xiphosura413
    @xiphosura413 Год назад +75

    The only creatures to walk on two legs? Surely you mean the only mammals to do so (interestingly enough, kangaroos don't really walk with two legs, they hop, when they do 'walk' they use all 4 limbs and even their tails, leading to a unique pentapedal locomotion), the ratites have us soundly beat in terms of species with bipedalism :P
    Great video, this is definitely one of my favourite channels right now!

    • @realscience
      @realscience  Год назад +43

      yeah you are right! I should have clarified

    • @zrath67
      @zrath67 Год назад +6

      Considering pangolins, I'd say, humans are the only mammal to regularly walk upright on two legs. I think that should be enough extra conditions to be true.

    • @redwolf4611
      @redwolf4611 Год назад +3

      Ratites don't have us beat in bipedalism. Humans have the highest endurance in the animal kingdom and it's due to how efficient our form bipedal locomotion is. Both our arms and our upper body act as counter pendulums when we walk or run. Essentially, we use far less energy compared to a digitigrade biped.

    • @xiphosura413
      @xiphosura413 Год назад +2

      @@redwolf4611 yea I meant in terms of there's only one species of us and many species of ratite

    • @ChrisNoonetheFirst
      @ChrisNoonetheFirst Год назад +3

      @@xiphosura413Fair, but there’s probably 1,000 individual humans for every individual ratite. That’s not to say we should go to war with them or anything. We all know what happened to Australia

  • @ksv314
    @ksv314 Год назад +19

    really excited about your new series, I absolutely LOVE Nebula (and CS)! Especially now with RUclips hiding dislikes, it's become almost impossible to tell if the content you're watching is any good until you've already wasted a bunch of time finishing it. With Nebula I know that everything on there is top quality stuff made by brilliant, passionate creators (like Real Science!) so I don't even need a like/dislike counter. RUclips, I'm sad to say, is now mostly filled with clickbaity, poorly plagiarised junk dressed up with a bit of fancy video editing.

    • @TylerSmithMusic1
      @TylerSmithMusic1 11 месяцев назад +1

      Nailed it dude. With an AI voice over

  • @honeybunch5765
    @honeybunch5765 Год назад +4

    I've been hibernating every winter since childhood. Come summer and I'm extremely energetic!

    • @OgdenM
      @OgdenM Год назад +1

      How do you pay your rent or mortgage? That is the only thing keeping me from going into at least a torpor for 90% of the winter. I'd happily sleep 20 hours a day OR more if I didn't have bills. I actually think it's possible to.

  • @Quadr44t
    @Quadr44t Год назад +13

    I feel like a challenge was set for how many times one can put “butt breathing” in a script. ^^

  • @EternityUnknown
    @EternityUnknown Год назад +12

    15:14 "We're the only creatures to walk on two legs except kangaroos sort of."
    *Immediately shows a clip of an ape walking on two legs.*

    • @RedRoseSeptember22
      @RedRoseSeptember22 Год назад +4

      lol

    • @WalkyLyz
      @WalkyLyz Год назад +1

      " Creatures" as in "Primates" not "humans"

    • @duder7396
      @duder7396 Год назад +3

      Also forgot every bird that exists

    • @EternityUnknown
      @EternityUnknown Год назад

      @@duder7396 But birds don't have legs.

    • @duder7396
      @duder7396 Год назад +4

      @@EternityUnknown Is that so? Do ostriches just float then?

  • @morningstar9233
    @morningstar9233 Год назад +2

    Heard about farm workers in medieval France who did a form of hibernation to survive the harsh winters. Not the same as animals which have evolved to hibernate but it involved sleeping or slumbering for extended periods, eating very little and minimal activity. They had not the fuel or provisions to survive the winter any other way.

    • @OgdenM
      @OgdenM Год назад +2

      Makes sense. All humans actually used to sleep A LOT more then we do now. Electricity changed us drastically because of artificial light. Before that, it was common for people to basically go to bed within 2 hours after sundown. Wake up for an hour or two in the middle of the night and then sleep again till dawn.
      Which for say someone in the PNW could mean up to 12 hours of sleep during the winter! Potentially even more when you factor in the lack of light because of the clouds.
      The whole old timey thing of people using candles, gas and oil lamps etc to light up their dwellings at night was mostly for the rich. That stuff was expensive and most people didn't have money to provide light for their dwellings for more then a few hours a day.

    • @morningstar9233
      @morningstar9233 Год назад

      Good point. My neighbour had a power failure in the middle of a cold winter. Her whole place is electric. When I asked what did you do she replied I went to bed early and remained there till power was restored the following day. @@OgdenM

  • @aurtisanminer2827
    @aurtisanminer2827 Год назад +7

    This episode was absolutely mind blowing!

  • @swineherd608
    @swineherd608 Год назад +1

    What an amazing narrator! I love her voice and the way she speaks, which I can't say often about women

  • @andydrews4439
    @andydrews4439 Год назад +3

    Studying bioinformatics and genomics in college. This topic is very very intriguing to say the least.

  • @seeess925
    @seeess925 Год назад +1

    Why the hell they give celsius with no context. Nobody can tell what that is. So 10-35 is what? Room temp? 70-75 F?

  • @sapelesteve
    @sapelesteve Год назад +41

    Very interesting video! You were correct in mentioning that Bears are not true hibernators. You neglected to point out the all true hibernators undergo bouts of arousal and must have access to water. I am also surprised that you did not mention the tissue "brown fat" that all true hibernators possess which provides the energy needed for arousal. Finally, Bats happen to be the best hibernators on the planet. I always enjoy watching your videos! Thanks!

    • @hannahwinterhalder741
      @hannahwinterhalder741 Год назад +9

      But don't we humans also have brown fat, albeit very little?

    • @ultimape
      @ultimape Год назад

      @@hannahwinterhalder741 we do, and we can increase it thru a process called "adipose tissue browning", but most of the west doesn't eat in a way that can do this.
      > "In contrast to the pro-inflammatory and adipose tissue disrupting effects of the western diet, specific food items, including capsaicin and n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, and dietary interventions such as calorie restriction and intermittent fasting, favor white adipose tissue browning and metabolic efficiency."
      DOI: 10.1186/s12986-022-00694-0

    • @dreccidentisiast
      @dreccidentisiast Год назад +3

      @@hannahwinterhalder741 yes babies have lot of brown fat , but adults barely have brown fat !

    • @hannahwinterhalder741
      @hannahwinterhalder741 Год назад +1

      @@dreccidentisiast I know that's why I said we have little

    • @dreccidentisiast
      @dreccidentisiast Год назад +1

      @@hannahwinterhalder741 how is it useful then ?

  • @JCUDOS
    @JCUDOS Год назад +6

    0:29 I heard "And live on a diet of fruits, and sex, and small animals" Hahaha

  • @Amusicient
    @Amusicient Год назад +2

    I've never encountered myself, but I've heard a lot about yogis who meditate like hibernation at very low temperatures since ancient times in Himalayan mountain caves.

  • @HgBill
    @HgBill Год назад +7

    Excellent channel, excellent video.
    On the supercooling of squirrel blood - blood is full of a crazy amount of proteins, salts, cells, and other compounds. How could it be that the water in this blood is super cooled due to its purity?
    Thanks, and always look forward to your videos.

    • @xiphosura413
      @xiphosura413 Год назад +2

      That's what I was wondering, surely cells and proteins and such naturally act as nucleation sites? I know from personal experience one can supercool carbonated water, which also seems too unstable, but blood is another whole order of magnitude messier than even that.

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin Год назад +4

      If you lower water content and saturate the water with salts et cetera, then it won't be able to freeze (more or less), I'm thinking that is a closer explanation.

    • @HgBill
      @HgBill Год назад +1

      @@kindlin , I agree. This seems more likely due to one of the so-called colligative properties:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colligative_properties
      "Depressed freezing point"

    • @BlessingsMate
      @BlessingsMate Год назад

      EVOLUTION designed this?? A basic summary of what that means...
      In the beginning was nothing but then it somehow became as big as the universe. Then there was dirt and water but then somehow it became alive. Then there was an organism but somehow it had the structure and information to reproduce. Then one decided to be a male and somehow another organism became female and somehow at the same time, with fully functioning structure and information, they reproduced. Then they grew branches, then arms, then fins, then legs, then wings, and breathed water and then air and now we see them all perfectly mutated to flourish in their ecosystems!
      Seriously, Have you considered how a butterfly came to be? What came first, the egg? caterpillar? chrysalis? butterfly? What mutation could cause a crawling creature to suddenly hang upside down, dissolve its organs and appendages and 2 weeks later emerge as a flying creature? And then find another butterfly to reproduce? Truly a fairy tale!
      How did the grub get these incredible organs? Mutations don't give new information, they corrupt existing information.
      It is glaringly obvious we are part of creation. The world around us is so incredibly complex that design is the obvious, logical and scientific conclusion. Jesus was a real historical figure who claimed to be God. He also confirmed that he created the world and was coming back a second time to reward and judge the world. He proved this by rising from the dead and fulfilling many prophecies. He also foretold what would happen before he would come again. These things have been coming to pass more and more. He loves his creation and has a purpose for everyone of us! But the evil we see in the world is not from God. We have a cruel enemy and you can see the devil's handiwork more and more. Please look into this urgently and with honesty. God is not a policeman in the sky, nor is he a genie that grants wishes, he is a loving Father who is caring and merciful and rewards those who seek him. Do not decide who God is by looking at religious people, you must decide who God is by reading what he says about himself in the bible. Then you would have judged fairly. Start with John or Luke. These are eyewitness accounts of what Jesus said and did. There are many resources to answer your many questions. Especially on creation and evolution see creationdotcom.
      Seek the LORD while he may be found, call upon him while he is near (Isaiah 55)
      For since the creation of the world, God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse. (Romans 1:20)
      To realise that your life is precious, you are loved, and you have a purpose, is real freedom and responsibility. There is an epic heavenly battle for your soul! You're never alone, reach out from wherever you are, Jesus is there, trust Him.

    • @xiphosura413
      @xiphosura413 Год назад

      @@BlessingsMate nice bait

  • @fartoocritical9409
    @fartoocritical9409 Год назад +1

    So fun fact for the day: its recently been suggested that Neanderthals may have engaged in hibernation, as researchers found lesions on Neanderthal bones that match up with lesions created on the bones of animals such as bears. I’m waiting to see follow up papers to it as it’s understandably controversial but it could give “hope” that under the right environmental pressures, our species could evolve the ability to hibernate

  • @JariDawnchild
    @JariDawnchild Год назад +6

    We tend to want to sleep more in the winter, have shorter tempers, and prefer fewer survival-based stressors (such as being short on food, late bills, etc), yes? That may be as close to a current form of hibernation we as humans have.
    Recent events in my personal life have prevented me from hiding away in my home with as few extra people as possible this past winter (including sleeping longer, slowing my life down in general, etc like I do every winter), and while shit's calmer now about halfway through spring, I've felt the difference to a startling degree. I have less energy, have gained more weight, less patience, less give-a-damn, my sleep patterns are all sorts of screwed up, I need to put more conscious effort into maintaining my mental and emotional health, I have more aches and pains, and I won't touch on the no-longer-like-clockwork monthly cycle.
    To be clear, these changes may feel huge to me, but no one else around me has noticed these issues and my doctors have no answers. I'm going to go out of my way to not have a busy, non-private winter when it rolls around again. ~6 more months to go...
    Sorry about the massive personal dump, but a kind of "intentional hibernation" is what best describes what I usually do during the winter, and having been forced to skip the last one, I'm starting to wonder if it's not just a me thing.
    I wonder if we human-animals haven't figured out how to purposefully hibernate, as our brains are so big we've forgotten how to do it instinctually?
    Please don't mind this 5:00AM sleep-deprived text wall. Speaking of hibernation, I'm going to go to bed lol.

    • @JariDawnchild
      @JariDawnchild Год назад +1

      @@by-the-by. And it can happen again at age 39. Previous doings of various kinds of growing up don't make the next one to roll around any easier lol.

  • @BorderickTemple
    @BorderickTemple 7 месяцев назад +1

    I cannot always control what goes on outside. But I can always control what goes on inside.

  • @dasstigma
    @dasstigma Год назад +5

    Yay, new video.
    Me happy.
    Thank you and everyone involved.

  • @mathansillion
    @mathansillion 4 месяца назад +1

    ohhhhhh so THAT'S why I get so pissed when I gotta be at work in the winter

  • @Hermdognation
    @Hermdognation Год назад +6

    Ive been in hibernation for years. its definitely possible.

  • @sarahs5340
    @sarahs5340 10 месяцев назад +1

    I used to joke with people and say I went into hibernation every winter. After I got my results from an ancestry company, I realized all my ancestry came from the far north. Now I realize that I probably wasn’t joking.

  • @serta5727
    @serta5727 Год назад +5

    humans doing Buttbreathing for long term space travel 😂 that would be sci-fi

  • @UberOcelot
    @UberOcelot 7 месяцев назад

    winter depression kind of feels like hibernation, and as I understand it many hibernating species still get up from time to time for basic routines like hydrating or relieving, so honestly I wonder if some people with SAD might just have remnants of the hibernating spirit within them

  • @amandamccallum6796
    @amandamccallum6796 Год назад +2

    I would totally hibernate through winter if I could.

  • @royalnovember66
    @royalnovember66 Год назад +2

    I don't always hibernate, but when I do it's usually while watching our local TV dramas.

  • @davegoud
    @davegoud Год назад +20

    Hands down the best channel on YT....butt breathing....of course...how did I not think of that. We have snapping turtle here and it always surprised me how they could survive with the river completely covered with ice for months at a time....with anaerobic respiration to boot. Damn I love nature...and this channel too!!!

  • @gosugosu1280
    @gosugosu1280 Год назад +1

    I like how you present the information! It's very interesting and next level. Maybe you could add some sci fi touch to the video/editing tho.

  • @lazy_nyt
    @lazy_nyt Год назад +2

    imagine calling your friend and being told to leave the message due to hibernation.
    or your spouse mad at you and went hibernation for two months 😁

  • @davidhunter1538
    @davidhunter1538 Год назад

    There are so many learning streamers (Nebula, Brilliant, etc, etc) I wish there was one service with one annual subscription that I could sign up to and get all of these ancillary channels in one go.

  • @elthomas_
    @elthomas_ Год назад +4

    AINT NO WAY IM GOING TO HIBERNATE THROUGH CHRISTMAS

  • @klondikechris
    @klondikechris Год назад +2

    A few things I would argue: I have seen Artic Hares running on their hind feet, i.e., bipedal motion, like humans. I have seen primates throw things (usually clumps of sod) while angry, and elephants will throw dung with their trunks when irritated. I know that as I was the target once, but she missed! Otherwise interesting. I live in the far north which has winter days, and nights, and if I am not hibernating in winter, I at least slow down, as do many others up here. It is the opposite in summer. Not quite a hibernation cycle, but heading that way.

    • @mnxs
      @mnxs Год назад +1

      I think, for the reason you specified, bipedalism is understood to be when it's the _primary_ means of locomotion.
      My brother can also attest to the throwing ability of elephants, as one once threw a stick at him - and didn't miss. He's had a profound dislike of elephants ever since 😂
      However, what's referred to here with regards to throwing capability is that humans have evolved to have especially well-articulated shoulder joints that allows us to do the characteristic throw of something like a spear, and very effectively at that. No other animal can do that. (See Real Science's video on human biology.)

    • @ChemEDan
      @ChemEDan Год назад

      @@mnxs My dad had a story about elephants throwing rocks large enough to potentially be lethal at people. They were just laughing about it until the elephant ran out of rocks and switched to poops. I guess people are more scared of getting messy than getting killed LOL.

  • @pandanganmatiyn1487
    @pandanganmatiyn1487 Год назад +4

    Me commenting in year 2125: This video aged well.

  • @SleepyKyju
    @SleepyKyju Год назад +1

    If we can get a move on with the research so I can hibernate until the housing market is decent again, that'd be cool.

  • @markedis5902
    @markedis5902 Год назад +14

    My wife thinks that I do hibernate. I’m disabled and in the winter sleep as much as I can, up to 18 hours a day

    • @realscience
      @realscience  Год назад +8

      I just read a report that humans might need much more sleep in the winter!

    • @NickanM
      @NickanM Год назад +2

      Yep. My sleep record is 70 hours, went up to pee twice. Had incredible dreams, I still remember them.
      (I live way up in Northern Sweden. And yes, I have my family as witnesses.)

    • @dumborgs0
      @dumborgs0 Год назад +1

      Yes I can sleep all day every day. I lived a tough life, I enjoy the sunset years 🥰

  • @gta4everrr
    @gta4everrr Год назад +2

    That'd be nice if humans could hibernate. It would help save on food and energy costs for the winter. Only catch is you'd have to save up three months of rent so you don't get evicted.

    • @W.Binderei
      @W.Binderei Год назад

      would rather be nice to have affordable energy and food

  • @darkprofile
    @darkprofile Год назад +4

    Well sleeping at nights is a kind of hibernation too. We spend our passive time at dark nights by slowing down our heartbeat and breath in sleep. People who sleep less dies earlier. So sleeping is kind of leaving activity to day time and hibernate at nights. Also 8 hours in conscious takes much time than sleeping 8 hours. Sleeping is like time travel to future.

    • @HumanBeingSpawn
      @HumanBeingSpawn Год назад +1

      No. Wrong.
      Sleeping is time travel to breakfast

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin Год назад

      The point is that the physiological changes that take place between sleeping and hibernation, while outwardly similar, are actually quite different and have substantial affects. As pointed out in the vid (and this was new to me) some animals can have _sleep deprivation_ while hibernating, as their brains cannot properly do what they need to do, as they aren't sleeping, they're hibernating.

  • @Netbase2000
    @Netbase2000 Год назад +2

    Not only for space travel this is interesting. Also for Medical use. Imagine we could put very weak, injured patients in hibwenation to recover and support their organism. This would be BIG

    • @shanthishourya8082
      @shanthishourya8082 Год назад

      They tried something similar for Rabies patients , they were put in induced Coma to let the body fight the virus.

  • @tateranus4365
    @tateranus4365 Год назад +1

    I don't think we should be putting much effort into hibernation for humans in space, in a trip to mars you have 9 months of time to do science, a typical stay on the ISS is 6 months, people have spent over a year straight in space, we have figured out how to minimize the negative effects of microgravity, maybe for a trip to Saturn or something but not to mars.

  • @tucker8594
    @tucker8594 Год назад +3

    Butt Breathing! What an amazing adaptation.

  • @lepayen
    @lepayen Год назад +1

    Some ancient texts would hint that not only can humans hibernate, but they can also choose whether or not to die. An ancient Irish text involving a decision on how the kingdom of Tara (Ireland) was to be divided. After everyone else of importance had been brought to the hill of Tara, Fintan, the oldest among them was summoned. He was the great, great, great, great grandson of Noah, and the son of Bith. He spoke of being alive before the flood, living in Egypt. He said he was saved from the deluge by the Son of God, and he slept in a cave on a mountain for many years, saying "there has not been, there never will be a better sleep". He spoke of the exodus from egypt, saying that Moses and his followers stole ten of the pharaohs ships. When moving forward on water in a boat, it appears like the water is parting for you. The Israelites most certainly did cross the Red Sea with dry feet, just not the way everyone assumes. Fintan was the first person in Ireland, and he was there when every group arrived. The time he was telling this was after the time of Jesus, and he does mention Jesus and his mother Mary. He told of a time long before when a very large man came from the direction of the land of the setting sun (the Americas). This visitor asked if all of the people of the island could be gathered. Fintan said they could, but they would probably have a hard time sustaining their guest. The man said that the branch he carried held all the sustenence he required. He wanted to know the history. Fintan knew all history from the time of Adam on, and related all things to the man. That man set out the rules for the division of Ireland. So Fintan told the people, "That man was either an angel sent from God, or he was God himself" and so the division stayed as it always was, and still remains today. At that time, Fintan would have been over 2500 years old. He attributes his long life as a gift from God for his faith. Keep in mind, this is an ancient Irish text, older than many accepted books of the bible, from about 400 years before St. Patrick ever set foot on the island. At the finale of the text, Fintan chose to die, feeling that his life had been complete.

    • @OgdenM
      @OgdenM Год назад

      Laugh, of course we humans can choose to die. I don't know if we can choose to live for long long long periods of time or not but we 100% can choose to die. Eastern religions also talk about this stuff btw.
      It's apparently still a common practice in some Hindu and Buddhist and other religions. They take the ability to die at will as a sign that someone has reached the goal.. whatever said goal is in the religion.
      And yes, basically; it's when the person feels their life is complete.. they just go, "Bye!" and are gone.
      Buddha apparently did it.
      There's more recent stories of both Hindu yogis and Buddhist monks doing it.
      Even one about an old Tibetan Buddhist monk who was a teacher that invited all of his friends and closest students over for tea. Was unusually picky about the tea being perfect, told all of them how much he appreciated them and then was just gone while still sitting upright in full lotus. Didn't fall over.. was just dead. Like his body went right into rigamortis or something.
      There are plenty of other stories of this stuff. And some that are more unbelievable like bodies shrinking over time after death to the size of a baby OR even just nails and hair. Or even outright turning to bright light and the light vanishing.. so who know how true this stuff is.
      And apparently western religions ALSO have these stories btw. Even up to people becoming light.

  • @SupraSav
    @SupraSav Год назад +6

    TIL ; butt breathing.

  • @TheLordFrog
    @TheLordFrog Год назад +1

    I'm no zoologist but I reckon the combination of anaerobic metabolism + "butt breathing" is not particularly conducive to a delightfully smelling breath.

  • @stefanc4520
    @stefanc4520 Год назад +4

    Butt Breathing. 👍👌😎

  • @tejas5261
    @tejas5261 Год назад +1

    There are actually Yogis deep in remote regions of Himalayas who go months without food and water. They have Yogic capabilities to see them through their intense period of penances. Yoga is very evidently a tool through which one can reduce their BPMs. Who knows probably this ancient science will help us travel deep in space or survive climate change.

    • @OgdenM
      @OgdenM Год назад +1

      I'm glad someone else knows about that. It's not only yogis doing this stuff. Buddhist monks do it also.. they just have different reasons for it. The monks typically just use breathing to get into that state though, no yoga involved. (Hindu monks also do the same as Buddhist monks in this regard)
      The Dali Lama claims there are monks that go into these states for YEARS.
      Some yogic traditions also make these claims.
      It's more then just decreasing your heart rate though, its about decreasing ALL metabolic processes AND your mental activity since our brains take up SO much of our caloric needs. (Apparently 20-25% of our caloric intake goes to our brains!)
      My understanding is that really, how Buddhist (And Hindu) monks do it is they outright go the lowered brain activity which lowers everything else..via mental training. Yogis probably are more a combo of physical and mental training.
      The idea is that if the body (and brain) are not expending energy, muscle loss etc doesn't happen quickly.. but CAN over years if someone stays in these states for that long. Ergo, yogis and monks can drop into them for weeks, a month or longer with out any problems besides stiff muscles. But when it comes to years? Nope... the body still has to keep itself alive and the longer it does that without food intake it's gonna start canalizing itself....just much much more slowly then someone who isn't in those states.
      So sadly, for space travel... it's not that useful IF you have to show up and be fully able to move about etc. It could take months to recover from even a year! I'd imagine much much longer if it was possible to keep oneself in these states for years.

    • @tejas5261
      @tejas5261 Год назад

      @@OgdenM Good that you're interested in Yogic practices. But firstly, Yogis and Buddhist monks are not two different things. A yogi can be anyone following the principles of Yoga. Also, Yoga was present in the land of Bhārat much before the advent of 'Buddhism'.

  • @byghikko
    @byghikko Год назад +4

    Yeah, it's called a coma

    • @slowiedovie
      @slowiedovie 7 месяцев назад

      No, in coma you have no significant reduction of bpm of heart or reduced breathing

  • @bossyspaghetti
    @bossyspaghetti Год назад +1

    Can't say... we muted that fight to watch Spence/Crawford . No regrets.

  • @KasunChathuranga
    @KasunChathuranga Год назад

    During IVF, embryos go freeze -196 degrees C (-320 degrees F). Under these conditions, embryos are typically kept up to multiple years. Some people walk among us actually gone through much much cold conditions.

  • @chevyboyforlife4234
    @chevyboyforlife4234 Год назад

    I have lived in Florida literally all my life I have never seen snow and I cannot wait to move somewhere that actually has seasons

  • @headmondronary2127
    @headmondronary2127 8 месяцев назад

    There's a story of a couple and their baby caught in a snowstorm that lasted for days. They abandoned their car and retreated to a cave. I think the husband either passed away or went for help and the mother was hypothermic beyond and passed away but the baby was discovered to be frozen but had a extremely low heart beat and was successfully brought back with no effects from the experience.

  • @farazahmad728
    @farazahmad728 Год назад +2

    I had been waiting for this science for long. Great thanks to @RealScience for such amazing content.👍👍👍

  • @hamstersmash
    @hamstersmash Год назад +1

    Can you pls pls do a video on the progression Humans are making to Communicate with Apes and maybe Whales

  • @YVO007
    @YVO007 11 месяцев назад +1

    So much of our general social consciousness is already in hibernation. We find ways to both interact as well as own bloated egos based on cheap cash pride and winning that which we covet. And that is the good news... As far as living /surviving free of the filth we pick up or manufacture anyway, sleep /hibernation, would clean it all up. Or would it? Until we come to grip how everybody runs best running life skills to suit their /our piticu;ar physical make up. We'll be only in the dark....

  • @brandonthegrey
    @brandonthegrey Год назад +1

    I guess those lemurs aren't trying to move it move it

  • @redwolf4611
    @redwolf4611 Год назад +1

    The explanation for why humans became so weird is actually pretty simple. We lost our hair due to our tropical origins and the way our cooling system works. Sweat evaporates and carries more heat away from bare skin. Our brains grew bigger as we started eating more meat and we became smarter because unlike our neanderthal cousins who were also smart, we have lighter more agile frames so we couldn't take the punishment they could. So, we specialized in tool making. Everything else more or less came as a side effect of that process. As to why we stand and walk completely vertical there are two theories. One was that it allowed us to see over the tall grass of our environment at the time. (Lions like to hunt in tall grass). Theory two is more contested and that's the Aquatic ape theory Which suggests that we partially adapted to wading in bodies of water due to availability of food. There's some credit here because spears are commonly used in both situations. The theory also comes from an observation of the fact we're attracted to bodies of water which is where we tend to settle if given the chance.

  • @brody3166
    @brody3166 Год назад

    Winter is my favorite season though, so I wouldn't want to hibernate through it. I'm quite excited about the medical potential of the technology though, and potential spaceflight applications

  • @ashketchum5622
    @ashketchum5622 Год назад +2

    What a beautiful and informative video. Thank you so much

  • @notcherbane3218
    @notcherbane3218 Год назад

    Being able to have a form of hibernation or as in science fiction It's referred to as suspended animation would allow for space travel and have a practical function of placing an injured or diseased body in stasis until they could be repaired or cured 1:04 😮

  • @christianmuntzer632
    @christianmuntzer632 Год назад +1

    Birds!!!!! we aren't the only animal to walk on two legs. Birds are bipeds, walking on two legs is one of few things we have in common with birds/dinosuars. Also, I loved the video very, educational, interesting and cool. I enjoyed it a lot.

  • @kellydalstok8900
    @kellydalstok8900 Год назад +2

    Did the hiker’s toes and fingers survive the freezing cold as well?

  • @incrediblebharat9129
    @incrediblebharat9129 10 месяцев назад

    Hibernation techniques can be explored using meditation, specially called YOG, there are yogis and sidhas in Himalayas who are living for hundreds and thousands of years using this technique, during YOG the breathing rate falls and sometimes to such low levels that you can't even feel your breath..

  • @NWforager
    @NWforager Год назад +2

    it might be interesting to hibernate to wait for investments to grow , or a specific medical break-through

  • @SaintAugustineTheRighteous
    @SaintAugustineTheRighteous Год назад

    During the winter months I walk outside without shoes when shoveling snow. I love the cold weather

  • @popeofthechurchoftea7256
    @popeofthechurchoftea7256 Год назад +1

    @12:05 Hey! Alan! Makes an appearance 😂

  • @isaacmarch2184
    @isaacmarch2184 Год назад +1

    I'm so psyched that in my lifetime I'm either going to see the collapse of humanity via AI or colonization of mar

  • @rishiniranjan1746
    @rishiniranjan1746 8 месяцев назад

    According to ancient Indian YOGIC philosophy, every individual is born with a predetermined number of breaths. When we are in a state of relaxation, our breathing rate naturally slows down. Conversely, people who frequently experience stress tend to have a higher breathing rate. Therefore, if you wish to prolong your lifespan, it is recommended to manage and reduce stress levels, which in turn slows down the breathing rate, potentially leading to a longer, healthier life.

  • @comradestalin1109
    @comradestalin1109 4 месяца назад

    I'm a EMT and my teacher is on yt for saving a man found in the snow with barely anything on after about 10 hours I believe and his heart stopped but the cold helped him

  • @gabor6259
    @gabor6259 Год назад +1

    0:14 Maurice and Julien!

  • @demitv001
    @demitv001 Год назад +1

    My theory is that the modern Human is a combination of an Invasive Humanoid species from Mars and the Humanoids of planet Earth. With very little natural predators/competition we were able to become the dominant species.

  • @louithrottler
    @louithrottler Год назад +1

    I'm beginning to wonder if Stephanie Sammann should include a content creator course on Nebula: 'Stephanie Sammann: Successfully Slipping Segues, Smoothly, Surreptitiously, Scientifically'. lol

  • @OfficialGOD
    @OfficialGOD Год назад +1

    yogis have been hibernating since thousands of years

  • @rutufn0596
    @rutufn0596 Год назад

    Not only water-turtles but also terrestrials one's, and also some insects, and even hummingbirds (just torpor)!

  • @miriammcfarlane6972
    @miriammcfarlane6972 Год назад

    You do such a good job of these videos. Well done!

  • @firdaushbhadha2597
    @firdaushbhadha2597 Год назад +1

    10:42 "they spend about seven months of the year in nests buried below the tundra": Same can be said for the Canadian, Alaskan, and Siberian peoples too XD
    12:48 "researchers found that rats placed in a medically induced torpor experienced less harm from radiation": This helped me understand that radiation is a metabolic process but is this why radiation poisioning is "curable" to a certain extent?

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin Год назад +1

      Radiation damage is part of the replication process. So, if you don't replicate, you'll have less damage. Hibernation directly slows down all cell activity, reducing radiation damage proportionally. Sleep actually increases a lot of cell activity, like a garbage collection cycle throughout the body.

    • @firdaushbhadha2597
      @firdaushbhadha2597 Год назад

      @@kindlin amazing! That is very cool! Thank you 😊

    • @LudovicoTaddei
      @LudovicoTaddei Год назад

      @@kindlin It has actually been shown that hibernation can be protective (up to a certain extent and according to specific evaluation methods) even if the animal hibernates after the irradiation. At least innatural hibernators, for rat in synthetic torpor the work is still in process

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin Год назад

      @@LudovicoTaddei So, become irradiated, and then hibernate, and it's still better? I guess that's because once damaged by the radiation, slowing cell growth is still a good thing. Does hibernation actively improve the outcome? As the damage would already be done at that point. There's a lot of possibilities here, and I'm not sure which affect might actually do the most.

  • @albashir7140
    @albashir7140 Год назад +2

    That was brilliant thank you 🙂🙏

  • @jebtickle4065
    @jebtickle4065 Год назад

    4:10 dude was just feeling the music

  • @diypictures
    @diypictures Год назад +2

    I'm just glad to know that butt breathing is not only a term but an actual thing.