History of the Earth
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- Опубликовано: 3 янв 2020
- The history of the Earth from its formation to present day, covering major events throughout its 4-billion-year history. Estimates of average temperature, atmospheric composition, and day length are given. The reconstruction is based off of the companion video ( • ⁸ᴷ Interactive Contine... ) with changes to the coastline.
Forgot to add this event, but the little boom is in the video.:
(Impacts 2023Ma) Vredefort impact - This impact is the largest confirmed crater on Earth at 300 km wide. It is found in South Africa.
Music from filmmusic.io
“Division”, “Ever Mindful”, “Soaring”, “Revival”, “Ossuary 6”, "Impact Intermezzo" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
License: CC BY (creativecommons.org/licenses/b...)
Last 20 seconds:
"Oh yeah. It's all coming together."
Lmao
l i t e r a l l y
underrated
0:20
ikr
Earth: *Turning red, turning to lava, turning to ice, etc.*
The other planets: boi what you doin
@Alone Hacker that was a cool color though
Earth: Nothin, wtf y'all doin? I'm here tryna make life. You all are just gassy fucks
L i f e
earth talks to mars: boi, why did you let all the water go 😢
other planet's experience the samething if not worse
Until now I never realised that life literally had to exist for billions of years before even going multicellular. Wow.
You hot It!!!
Sorry, YOU GOT IT!!!!!
One of the best answers to the Fermi Paradox : making bacterial Life, it's easy (more or less...), making Plants and Animals it's not and requires entire eons.
It is such an incomprehensible amount of time, and with the conditions on earth, it basically had to happen.
That last part was like the continents going like "Oh shit teachers coming" and arranging themselves as fast as possible
Lol
Ocean: turns red
Music: turns into horror music
Earth: freezes
Music: *intensifies*
Viewers be like: :D... :o... D:
Ha I don't know why
04:30
Hotel: Trivago
@@Pentax33 😕
İ love how the dinosaurs and the humans are both in the last 20 seconds of an 11 min video.
Mother earth is very old.
Ye when you think about it the stego ruled the earth until the trex came along and even then they both had a very short time on earth even us weve only been on earth for a few thousand years
Yes prob 7billion years old
flamingrubys11 you mean a few million
Gnome
Nope we showed up few thousand years ago
@@sevenios3340 350,000 is quite a bit longer than "a few thousand". Look up the Moroccan fossils, H.sapiens became distinct a lot sooner than previously thought, and sites in Indonesia suggest it may well be closer to 400-450k years ago based on tools found.
0:10 starting a water vouper
3:19 first ice age
4:40 first snowball earth event
5:31 the end of first snowball event
6:20 beginning of the boring billion
6:37 beginning of the supercontinent Columbia
6:54 oceans turn purple.
7:56 oceans stop turning purple
9:21 second snowball earth event
9:34 the end of second snowball earth event
10:25 beginning of supercontinent pangea
11:20 last ice age
Thank you
God's blessing xD
we are in an ice age rn
Looks like you got pretty good snow day ahead of you planned. Always good to have an agenda . It tracks that most of snowball fight schedule is taken up in making the snowballs all ready to go and then once the event big is it’s usually already almost over. then boring billion begins before turn ocean purple after nap time. Pangea was that awkward to have Australia back again? Was it during the 140 million years that Pangaea has Africa and her sister America north and south all together so that you could walk from the White House to the Casablanca and Africa to just a casa that is Blanca in south America back to the White House together trading flora and fauna for millions of years before Africa says to America. Hey sis, I got a black thought. Why don’t we invent humans and then we can get off this planet so go see say hi to the moon again then shoot the moon for mars maybe Venus. If we have enough time.
@@SE7ENSCHOOL a lot of text
Credits to the cameraman who stood still for so long making notes in the space to record how the earth has changed.
Haha what a laugh 😒😐
Oh nooo, anyway.
Wey en esas epocas no habian camarógrafos
😂😂😂
Somebody already said that
when you realize homo sapiens were only in two frames
F
f
F
uck
f
E
*“Hey can we go on land?”*
*“N O.”*
*“Why?”*
*“THE SUN IS A DEADLY LAZER!”*
♪ Not anymore there's a blanket! ♪
@@1blackice1 "cool i can walk on land now but i have to go back in the ocean to _have babies_ "
1blackice1 *_ozone_*
When the earth completely freezes
@@noobo569 bue bye ocean
It’s trippy to thing that all of recorded human history is about 1/1000 of a second of this video.
Imagine a 4 hour day. You’d literally work for 2 days straight before doing stuff for a day then sleeping for 2 days then doing more stuff for a day then back to work.
I closed my eyes for one millisecond and missed half a million years
That's just how it is growing up
Time flies...
too sad man
yeah...
too sad man
Respect to the cameraman for capturing these!
Edit: boomers stay away if you can't even get these jokes
He lives on the moon
Trireme52 the moon cameraman was filming most of the video. The first one retired when the asteroid that formed the moon showed up
@@sumbuddy4088 The current one got to shake hands with Neil Armstrong and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin. The retired ones are on vacation on (in) Europa
@@ankaplanka American moon landing was fake.
@@ferwan r/whoooosh
I love how tense the music it gets when the ocean turned red
is it just me or does it feel very beautiful and serene? because it keeps changing from things like a jade green ocean to a red ocean and then a blue ocean then a purple ocean then back to blue is very nice to say the least. I also think the video music really hammers it home for me, and the mystery of not ever experiencing all the way back then.
Yes
-Can we go on land?
-No.
-Why?
-*The sun is a deadly lazer*
-_Not anymore there's a blanket_
lol u saw that video too
Great! Animals let's go on land!
*nope can't walk yet...*
*And there is no food so i don't care*
@@Nightmare-yx2nl literally everyone knows that video you are talking about xd
Same
In tHoteW-Ig the last fithed of this Video takes over 3/4 of the lenght and in this Vid the first fithed of tHoteW-Ig needs 4/5
That's what i call ironic
Earth: 4 billion years: nothing
Humans: every year: *World Wide Celebration*
Lol 😂
Every 10b+ years planets celebrate new years. While our sun *slowly but surely **_eats us because of its own lack of hydrogen._*
@@trallerman4151 Idea : Crashing Jupiter to the sun
@@bintanglubis7265 Solar System- Jupiter= Apocalypse but okay.
@@trallerman4151
Pros :
- Sun live longer (yay!) for some million years (yay?)
Cons :
- No more solar system
Shoutout to the cameraman for recording this sick timelapse!
Starting Timestamps:
0:01 Intro
0:07 Pretext
0:14 Evolution of the Earth
Legends:
Red: Eruption Events
Orange: Extinction Events
Yellow: Impact Events
Green: Biological Events
Dark Green: Tectonic Events
Violet: Miscellaneous Events
Timestamps:
Eon: Hadean
0:19 Formation of the Earth and the Moon
0:27 Latest appearance of Water
0:36 Earliest date of First life
0:50 Late Heavy Bombardment begins
0:54 Formation of Magnetic Field
Eon:Archean
Era: Eoarchean
1:07 Late Heavy Bombardment ends
✧MORE COMING SOON SO LIKE✧
"more coming soon so like" - 6 months ago
@@xav5376I ain't liking that sh
why are u copying me again dude i just get 358 likes for 6 months
soon…
soon 2:16
👇👇👇👇
Just a reminder that in a 10 minute video of Earth’s history, humanity is only there for half a second.
@@stoplookin9484 Do the math. Earth has existed for over 4 billion years and yet humanity is said to have originated only 50 thousand years ago, if that.
(EDIT: stop posting bullshit saying humans have existed longer than that... Me and everyone fucking already knew that. I was referring to recorded human civilization, as recorded by Earth's oldest civilization, the Australian Aboriginals, which dates back to 50-60k years ago.)
@@stxrrymidnight if that what?
@@stxrrymidnight in the context i used it, i said that humans have only existed for "50 thousand years, if that" meaning that we probably have been around for less than that time. are you a native english speaker? that's what the idiom means...
@@stxrrymidnight we say "if that" here in the US. Where are you from?
@@pallasa and in that 50 thousand years we clutched and took over the fucking planet
It's like watching a movie but knowing the ending
Underrated comment
Well, it still goes on...
The ending is the sun will swallow the earth up
InfernoPlus nani de fuk?
@@yesseniasantiago5298 basically the sun is consuming its hydrogen through nuclear fusion and turning it into helium eventually 4 bilion years from now it will have used all of its hydrogen. The sun's core will collapse due to lack of hydrogen as fuel and it will instead start to consume it's helium which produces even more energy and because of that the sun will expand into a red giant and swallow mercury and venus in the process it's not certain if it will swallow the earth because it will be as big as earth's orbit, but it's a possibility.
amazing, channels and videos like this would have made getting my geology degree easier back between 2005 to 2008! In gratitude!
The cameraman deserves an Oscar for floating in space for over 4,000 Million years
Here are some human history time list
First human in 11:23
First contry in 11:23
First man used fire in 11:23
World War 1 in 11:23
World War 2 in 11:23
Kanye born in 11:23
You NOW in 11:23
This video made in 11:23
Kanye birth is the most important of a event than most of human history
@@user-ek1fq3if7g This comment was made in 11:23
@@miguelsandoval3352 who tf is kanye lol
@@mr.commonsense6645 You don't know Kanye west?
cameraman really dedicated his life to this project
Skrkkt the cameraman died when cameras were invented so we could record it ourselves
When Cameras Died in the last 20 seconds...
LMAOOO
more like his single-celled ancestor lol
@@haroonrasheed11 You right.
That was damn formative. I hadn't seen anything prior to this that really contextualized my life... other than representations of the vastness of empty space. Well done to the Algol person/team.
10:00
Wow, just the most amazing rendering - greatest story ever told. Wish this had been available 35 years ago when I was a geology student, waited a very long time for this, thank you😊
1 m year
Better late than never!
In what way is this nonsense more sensical then Creationism and The Bible?
Remember when earth's day was like 4 hours man school went by fast
Golden Rock
yeah man, 30 minutes of sleep was a lot back in the day
90s kids unite
Straight God
Ah yes memories, my parents use to let me play outside for 7 minutes a day
Yeah i miss those days being at rock college with my rock friends for like what? 30 minutes
Golden Rock I miss the time when I used to play outside for minutes with my rock friends :(
This must have take long time to create
Respect this creator.
yeah he had to go through 4 billion years to report back
especially for cameraman
yeah
Yep exept for the fact that a day isn't 24h but 23h 56m + some seconds. This is why we add an extra day every 4th year, at least in Sweden.
TrexEmperor52 0 we add an extra day to each 4 years in every country
I love how he spend time on this video. It's awesome to watch this.
This video had around 7 million views when I first saw it in early to mid 2023, and it grew steadily to over 11 million to its end. Well deserved.
0:49 Green
4:32 Red
4:42 White
5:31 Red
6:12 Blue
6:13 Red
6:20 Blue
9:19 Red
9:22 White
9:31 Blue
9:33 White
9:35 Blue
Earth disco lol
0:20 fireball
9:34 Red
@@sonthebaguette That's gonna be the name of the next mass extinction DISCO EARTH.
Schedules of continental drift
9:16 Oh, what a relaxing musi-
*_looks around room for a boss to fight_*
Lmao
on the right u can see that *the earth had to do it to them*
Wtf
yeah and 4:26
0:18 : Earth/Terra’s formation
(A bunch of floating debris crash together forming what we know as Earth)
0:19 : The Moon/Luna’s formation
(A planet known as Theia entered the solar system around 4.6B years ago, but left orbit and crashed into earth. The leftover debris formed the moon.)
0:36 : Indirect evidence of first life
(Indirect evidence points to life starting on earth as soon as earth became habitable.)
0:48 - 1:08 : Late Heavy Bombardment
(A wave of asteroids that would crash into earth around the Hadean eon.)
2:11 : Vaalbara (The first supercontinent) forms
(Vaalbara was the largest landmass at the time, although today it would be consider a large island, somewhat like Long Island.)
3:01 : Ur forms
(Ur was a mash of Vaalbara and other islands. This supercontinent stayed intact until the breakup of Gondwana 165M years ago.)
3:17 : First ice age starts
(The Pongola Glaciation event was the first ice age, caused by a rapid increase of oxygen in the southern hemisphere.)
3:38 : First ice age ends
(The oxygen levels decrease slowly, until the icecaps melt.)
3:47 : Kenorland forms
(Kenorland is a mash up of a bunch of islands, with 2 separate halves. This was the 2nd shortest lasting supercontinent, beat by Gondwana.)
4:30 : Oxygen Catastrophe
(This event is a threat to all types of life at the time. This rapid rise of oxygen made the oceans rust and turn red, and later would cause the longest ice age in history.)
4:40 : Huronian Glaciation
(The longest ice age in history, the was the 2nd one since the formation of the earth, and was caused by the oxygen catastrophe as the remaining methane began to cool down and make the earth freeze.)
5:30 : Huronian Glaciation ends
(The longest ice age in history had ended. This was because of the oxygen levels decreasing due to the fact that the earth was producing more nitrogen.)
5:41 : Atlantica forms
(Atlantica formed from the leftover broken cratons of Kenorland, which at this time had been broken up for about 600M years already.)
6:20 : Oceans return to a more normal color
(Ocean stop rusting lol💀)
6:27 : Columbia forms
(Columbia was the first true supercontinent, and was about the size of Asia (maybe larger). It was formed from the collision of Atlantica and Nena.)
7:28 : First algae
(Algae blooms become abundant around this time.)
7:54 : Breakup of Columbia
(Idk what to say about this one really lol)
8:17 : Keweenawan Rift
(The largest known failed rift. If this rift was successful, it would have torn apart Laurentia and Rodinia would have never formed.)
8:34 : Formation of Rodinia
(The 2nd largest supercontinent known to date. This supercontinent consisted of 2 islands, Laurentia and Australia.)
8:59 : Land plants diverge
(Wow, that's a lot of water!)
9:17 : Breakup of Rodinia
(Australia fused with northern Laurentia and split north and south Laurentia. This drift would cause both snowball earth events.)
9:20 - 9:30 : Snowball Earth (Sturtian Glaciation)
(The first of the 2 worldwide glaciation events in the late proterozoic. This gave the earth at the time the name "Snowball Earth")
9:33 - 9:35 : Snowball Earth (Marinoan Glaciation)
(The last of the 2 worldwide glaciation events. The end of this event would have the most rapid oxygen rise in history (1% - 6% in 9.5MYA) and also would mark the end of the Cryogenian period.)
9:30 : First animals
(The first complex non-microscopic multicellular life appears around this time.)
9:40 : Formation of Pannotia
(Pannotia, meaning “South Land”, are the 2 halves of Rodinia moving southward, hence the name “South Land”)
9:51 : A New Eon
(The end of the Ediacaran period marks a new eon, the Phanerozoic.)
10:10 : First Tetrapods
(The Devonian period marks the point when animals were dwelling on land.)
10:20 - 10:38 : Karoo Glaciation
(This glaciation, although not as serious as others, would be the 2nd longest glaciation ever. As well as a rapid increase of oxygen, to the point of the highest oxygen in the atmosphere ever (32% in the Carboniferous period.))
10:26 : Formation of Pangea
(Pangea, is the largest known supercontinent. It would split into Gondwana and Laurasia, but not before staying together for another 145 million years.)
10:28 : Synapsids and Sauropsids diverge
(Synapsids (proto-mammals) and Sauropsids (early reptiles) would diverge.)
10:36 : First warm-blooded animals (in general)
(Warm-blooded animals are thought to evolve and come around during the end of the Permian Period.)
NOT FINISHED
The best and most educational video I have ever seen on YTB.
4:13
YOOOO THIS STONE DUDE LOST HIS LEG!!!
holy shit i see what you are talking about he looks like a chilling samurai. "There goes my leg, out to sea again, that's cool I guess....."
"GOD DAMN IT I KNEW SWIMMING IN THE BROWN CLOUD WAS BAD IDE- wait why is everything turning red?"
And then we never heard about Frank.
😎😎😎😎
100th like
HAHA I saw that too!
*that's not was i was expecting*
also it should've been 11 minutes but i paused like 50 times so it ended up being a 25 minute video xd
Same, It ended up being a 35 minutes video or something like that for me
Honestly who didn't pause every second or so...
@@whathead07 me, i'm insane i know.
yes a lot of pausing. and squinting to read the text whose colour didn't contrast enough. still great video.
But dont you think guys those sentences are to small?
I've heard of proposals to divide the Hadean eon into eras based on the few things we have found from the time.
The first era would be the Paleohadean, which is defined not by physical evidence from the period which does not survive but by things that we know must have taken place. The era lasted from about 4.6 bya to about 4.4 bya, encompassing two periods. The Chaotian period lasted 30 to 70 million years, from the formation of the original "Earthmoon" body until the Theia Impact, while the Titanomachean period lasted from the Theia Impact to the solidification of the Earth's crust about 80 million years later.
After this would be the Neohadean Era, beginning at 4.404 bya and containing three periods. The Narryeric, Jackhillsian, or maybe the Australian period, named after the Narryer Gneiss from the Jack Hills of Australia, which preserves the oldest known zircons from the early Earth dating to 4.402 bya. After that is the Iwokranan or Guianan period, after the Iwokrana Formation in Guiana, in which Hadean xenocrysts with surviving zircon have been discovered dating to 4.22 bya, and the last is the Acastan or Canadian period, named after the Acasta Gneiss of northern Canada, which contain tonalites dating to 4.03 bya.
I really appreciate keeping the timestep constant throughout, that's the main insight that most timelapses like this lack... Just how long or short some of these periods were
Who would win?
> The oceans, the average global temperature, and almost all life as we knew it
> Some cyanobacteria bois making oxygen
Who would win?
Earth
vs
An Ice Age Squirrel
@@ra_alf9467 oh man its good film .d
*Or the Ice Age baby*
@@19EggsBenedict83 *great*
Astronomy shows our insignificance in Space. Geology shows our insignificance in Time.
Underrated comment.
yeah
True words
And Cosmology
Joerionis003 cosmology is part of astronomy
This is one of my favorite videos on RUclips! I only wish it could somehow be side by side with great extinctions & abrupt changes in dominant species as that might help clarifying some misconception about climate changes.
The true OG people remember when the days were 23 hours and 59 minutes and 59 seconds
I followed this tiny first island ... It seems to be in Indonesia now.
Кьялке Ментикопей-полигнират what island it’s hard to tell where Indonesia is
India came from antarctica and The Philippines rose out from under the ocean, that's why both of these countries have some of the most diverse flora and fauna in the world
So indonesia is the oldest country in the world
@@eidokun indonesia not india
What's island? Java or borneo?
0:17 Earth: _"I'm beginning to cool down"_
0:19 Theia: _"Give me two seconds"_
Video:
0:17 Earth: _"I'm beginning to cool down"_
0:19 Theia: _"Give me two seconds"_
Reality:
0:00 Earth: _"I'm beginning to cool down"_
20000000:00:00:00:00:00 Theia: _"Give me twenty million years"_
@@Gena_Tsidrusni looool that's fair
Me: THATS ALOT OF DAMAGE
Hey theia is back
Keurusselka province
Exactly what i was looking for .Thanks.
Kinda crazy how we can all remember the second before we were born- the absolute darkness and then suddenly our first memories came to us. Little did we know all of this happened in the blink of an eye.
Imagine one day you walk outside and the ocean is red
ight end of the world
Imagine imagining
Soviet Union wants to know your location
or when it was purple
And then the earth becomes a snowball
8:01 we did it boys
_Evolution of Sex_
E elogión of 69
Ye its true lol
thx for showing us!
0:15 the earth is a ball of fire 0:19 theia collides with the earth 0:25 first water 0:41 first tectonic plates I like it for part 2
When it's 490°C on earth, you won't find water.
Ah yes I loved the good old days when the air was made of *rock vapor*
ah yes
For more information about global history : ruclips.net/video/HK5OsDWYJmQ/видео.html
And the average temperature was above 2000 degrees. No risk of feeling cold then!
And the seas ran red with rust! Oh the fun I used to have with Cthulhu in those days!
Earth never told me that!
There was a comment like, “ why was earth full of lava?” The answer is that when earth formed it was super rocky and since it formed so fast and hard it made it hot so lava formed
That literally looked like the sun
Yes, people dont understand that lava is rock, but so hot in fact that it turns to liquid
Hell was sent to hell.
@Daniel Kolbin you are lying.
It’s after the impact that formed the moon
best video!!! thank you Algol!!!
The best thing that was on RUclips.
video: "relaxing music"
me: "skip 5 seconds"
video: OCEAN GETS RED AND STARTS A TENSION MUSIC
He’s there
Wake up wake up wake up wake up, wake up
@@togotogo1413 wake up
Wake up
Is just a Tumblin down tumblin down tumblin down
Oxygen: yeah let’s make the oceans red
GriBly GrinDer Actually it was the iron in the oceans that made them red not the oxygen
@@Official_Chivo.06 Iron and water don't form rust on their own. You need oxygen as well.
Killkor Yes when iron is exposed to oxygen or moisture the iron will rust over time
Killkor Yes it does rust forms when Oxygen eats my booty
@@Official_Chivo.06 exactly.
So much effort put into this.
Ah yes, those good ol days when i used to hang out with my dinosaurs
4:14 - oh no, he lost his leg ;(
im so happy people like you exist
Ono Fuuuu my leg
*oops*
MAH LEG
and its bleeding
Some people think that geology is boring. Some pepole don't know that 2 bilion years ago there was a *literal nuclear reactor in the middle of a lake in Gabon* that stayed active for *thousands of years*!
This video is some of the top tier stuff on youtube.
Edit: fixed a typo
they brush the surface and don't even dig in because it's "boring" or "stupid"
Pepole
*PEPOLE*
Yeah, still boring.
Edit: I meant that geology in general is boring for me, this video is kinda fascinating.
*pepole*
Thank you for this...understanding this progression should be just as important as reading and writing
I was falling asleep at the calming music, but when it changed at the red ocean I jumped 😂
4:39 when you turn the water tap a little bit when it is too warm
lmao
It feels just as aggressive
yeah but when I turned the water on it warm
0:14 On the other side
Imagine if an alien came when all the oceans were red and just said “nope” and left
...
...
I think one was left in Area 51 we just did not see it
@@onion7830 area 51 is a millitary base
@@maikatideibaskapanaumrqlatupa New in internet?
This was great, algol!😃
Favorite video, right here. The movement of everything and changes to the world, as well as the music, it's mesmerizing! Great work, Algol!
National Geographic: *he’s too powerful to be kept alive*
*_National Geographic wants to know your location_*
dangerous*
Carter Adams okay boomer
@@angiechen6192 okay boomer
i totally did not copy you
National Geographic : *Stay right where you are*
Sad to see how short the ICE AGE was.
short as in Ma tho
Which ice age? There are 3 snowball effects and 4 ice ages including our current one.
Speaking more about that recent one
@@justnoah2073 it is not over, in ~50 mio years Antarctica will move north again, then our ice age will end.
Yeah we are in a interglacial period.
the animation was so good Algol :)
I can't believe the satelite recorded earth for 5 billion years.
bruh moment
No, it’s 4.540.000.000 years ago
100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
petabytes on your hard drive. This proves that we had old technologies. XD
Ikr
Milion* No bilion
This video is 11 minutes long. All of human history occurs in less than a blink of an eye. Crazy.
All the history we learn are the last 30 secs
30 sec??? Man the homo sapiens arrives literally at the last second, that means that since the prehistoric age till today is like 0,3 sec in this video. So we maybe "learn" 0,05 sec😂
@@Alessandro-jm7mm I didn't know you studied only homo sapiens😂i studied also dinosaurs
@@Maxistanca wait you said 'history' lol.
@@Alessandro-jm7mm noooo💔😂
This was amazing!
Where do you get the impact sound from? Just wondering so I can add some extra detail to something I'm working on.
At 1300 Ma, I picked a piece of land and thought "hmm where will this end up in". I was able to track it down to the Solomon islands.
Nice
Noice
Noiuce
Did the same, my piece ended up in Sudan!
Mine ended up in Saudi Arabia
We gotta thank the camera man who floated in space 4500 million years recording for us
ur joking, right?
@@vishalk7131 its not real its an animation
@@vishalk7131 who the frick is vishnu
@@c_yatf it’s a joke 😂
@@JalenGee yeah i know
4:39 holy crap the music was timed perfectly with earth becoming a snowball
Camera man never dies
Can we all just take a moment to appreciate the amount of research and time put on this video
YES!
no, most of the credit should go to the cameraman. imagine how much work he did only for it to go to waste.
It's a fake fantasy. No way all this data is true or accurate
Synthesis Chara as well as being something that has been estimated by decades of research and expeditions.
@@vtron9832 *Centuries.
Imagine how fresh the air was back then
LMFAO
@@user-zq4ec5xp7t what's so funny
@@maikatideibaskapanaumrqlatupa When the air was "fresh", as in new, since the earth hadn't been around as long
Mmm nitrogen!
@FUCK YOU Cyanobacteria caused a mass extinction by doing too much photosynthesis, we're going to do the opposite.
The length of day gives you a better sense of a countdown than the years does.
As a bacteria I can say this brings back memories😊
i'm scared to blink and miss 100 years
Six million years in a second, does your blinking take 1/60000 of a second?
@@meowcat7124 Yes.. yes it does
@@meowcat7124 it takes 1/8 of a second, therefore, if you blink you miss 750,000 years
@@i.pezzotti853 you must be really funny
@@cellulairerare you must be really boring
The music is perfect. Adds a dimension.
Yes , nostalgia that i never had
Indeedly also of What if next Earth Virus Will Might be The Great Depression Dying Extinctions after This Corona The Middle East Asia Corona Virus Countries Kinds need to Altered this Planet DNA like from of Reptile blood might block this Mammal BC Virus for this Alteration Earth for The Glorious Experience Real Life Global Glory Existence Beyondly!
Kelsea Haughton
I agree it makes me feel like I was there...
@@julianivoreloehzaz758 ??
All human history passes in 1 frame of this video.
實際上在2s左右,當然,這是從第一隻古猿走下樹木開始
4:32 shake your screen
People at the computer: ☠️
Sun: "Son, why are you covered in snow?"
Earth: "It's not a phase, mom!"
No its her not his
...
@@sabito9389 oh
@@sabito9389 no its the cyanos
Sun son
humans: wow 100 years to life is very long.
earth: am i a joke to you?
Hi!
yes
@Alexander Oskar Omon 4 pretty much the same thing. Both made of matter, both having gravitational pulls on other objects. Both are going to eventually decay around the death of the universe. Similar in size compared to the size of just the obserbvable universe. What's the difference really?
Ah ah ah
@@lepperkin one is round the other is not
True thanks for the cameraman for waiting
Life is beautiful. The world is beautiful. So much development, maturity and growth for us to be here. We had every miracle given to us, every right path taken for us to exist. And though we may only be one drop, one insignificant section of the world timeline where we humans exist, we are able to look back into what made our world, and what made us. And we should using that for the future. Our Earth is the only habitable planet with the right amount of steps for actual conditions, things like tides and seasons and atmosphere are so conditional that all the exoplanets we looked at can't compare. Our existence first took billions to build the fundamentals, then millions in iterations and experiments until we got where we are. And all of our lives, so conditional and contrived in the greater scale in the universe, all of us being so special and unique. Whether you believe in science, monotheism, polytheism or otherwise, you must appreciate what a miracle life is and how if it were gods or forces of nature or the laws of the universe, life is fundamentally sacred and we are all so blessed to be here on Earth at this time.
4:39 I love how the beat changes when the temperature changes
And ocean color.
I don't know why that scared the shit out of me
same
yah
There were no oceans, they were all covered with ice
11:07 India was like:
*Lemme park over here*
Lol
Okay FBI
Hi FBI
Hello FBI nothing is permanent...lol
It's makes it every funnier the fact used the the word "lemme" Instead of "let me"
I love every vid u make may God bless you
Beautiful! ❤❤❤
Colors of Earth.
Red = depressed
Purple = Happy
White = Anxious
Lava = Angry
Green = Stressed
Cyan = Relieved
Blue = Chill
@@bm-22projects Sometimes you have emotions that you hide from others
O2+Fe=sadness
Michael Curry Green should be Stress
Pangea + Vaalbara (or Ur) = 7 Continents
Pangea + 7 Continents = Pangea-Next (Pangea is about 630.000.000 years older than Pangea-Next)
Remember this guy? 0:15
This is him now 11:23
*feel old yet?*
Yes so old i look like grape :(
😂😂😂😂😂😂
the sun now becomes earth
0:15
Formation of Earth and Modern Earth
Ive always wanted to see the Earth since its creation. Nice video
thank you so much
Earth: "it made me itch for a few hundredths of a second"
Moon: "that was humanity"
Earth: "i've experienced much worse"
Moon: "like what?"
Earth: "my painful formation from the meteors, Theia being launched into me and birthing you, the Oxygen Catastrophe, to name a few..."
@@vistagreat9994 Moon: Don’t you ever disrespect mother Theia like that again!