"Girl talk" Yeah, growing up with two sisters, I tell you, they just wouldn't shut up about underwater rift valleys, tectonic plates and continental rift.
In astronomy before computers ladies were employed to compute the numbers. Thanks to girl talk we know such things like the size and age of the universe, the distance of neutron stars, what stars are made of, the classification of stars. Yhea girl talk can get intense.
@@GiBBO5700 I almost said that Hank is awesome, too. But I didn't want to exclude Stephan or the lovely new addition, Rose. 🤣 But, yes. They're all awesome. I just particularly like Michael a lot.
@@virglibrsaglove fair point. Rose is better looking but Hank is always excited to tell you his story about science. Michael is fine, he gives me the impression I'd find him in a Jazz bar lol
Theres so much Fun and Education, some things are even both. So let me 'randomly' recommend: -Cinema Therapy. -Veritasium. -Krimson Rogue. -Raised by Zombies. -Cliffside.
I am curious if some genius heard the term "sounding" for dropping the rock to measure depth and was like "why dont we just invent something that uses SOUND?"
I did a double-take when I first heard him say that. Funnily enough...the same logic can be said about the....other form of sounding. Why is it called that??
@@alexbenavidez4500 you use a tool to measure the depth of a hole. Some holes are filled with water and called the ocean, other holes are part of the Human body but both are holes thus sounding.
"The earth is expanding like a balloon." Scientists: seems legit "The Tectonic plates move slightly over time" Scientists: preposterous! This is girl talk.
Yes girl talk is often composed of rift valleys, continental drift and tectonic plates. That’s why we always go to the bathroom together we’re just doing the girl talk thing!
I was just about to comment that I was wondering how long it took her to convince the good “ol boys she knew her stuff when this joker calls it “girl talk”. 🤨 I could not have survived back then. I could not guarantee their safety. 😳
Tharp had to do her work 5 times before her boss went to the good o'le boys geologic club to present the ridge. After all she was ONLY a calculator (female who could do math). I really understand sexism being the crossover generation. I was in my first profession paid $200/week LESS THAN a male yet I had a degree and all of the males on the team had no college degrees. That was in 1976. 20 yrs later in my second profession I was paid equally. There is no systemic sexism now.
I really appreciate you guys including and rightfully crediting female scientist contributions as well as male scientist contributions in your videos. You guys are what feels like some of the few people who actually act on rather than just pay lip service to the idea of "we should promote gender equality and get more girls interested in science!" It gives me hope that this field can be changed for the better and become more inclusive rather than exclusive to all and anyone interested in science. :)
We always have been. It is traumatic to work all your life on something than someone takes credit for your ideas. This happened alot in fields where women were not accepted to be intelligible. It's a trauma not many would risk.
I knew that Wegener was laughed out of science conferences etc when he proposed continental drift in the... 20s I think? Especially since he didn't have a mechanism for it, just the evidence that it happened. I never learned about marie tharp and her work with the mid atlantic ridge, though! every time I think that plate tectonics wasn't really Widely Accepted until the 50s/60s iirc, I'm still blown away that it's so recent-- I guess that's 60-70 years ago by now, but it still feels like something that """should""" be categorized with the things we learned in like, late 18th or 19th century, or even earlier, especially since a lot of the basic space info we have that ~feels~ like it's on the same level as continental drift as far as "the basis of a lot of more advanced knowledge" is as old as galielo. idk, oceanology is fascinatingly weird, thanks for making this compilation video so I can watch them all at once with ease!
@@ChristophersMum not really. we know how to contain nuclear waste, and the physical amount generated by currently operating reactors is quite tiny, especially if we were to invest in reactors that subsequently use the waste products. and the threat of nuclear material that could actually be used for a nuclear weapon or even just a dirty bomb, plus the actual technology to detonate it, is also equally unlikely. You should more be worried about bio-weaponry or the return of chemical warfare or chemical terrorism. The only two blockades to nuclear power is public fear and the enormous up-front costs of building the reactors. Both are valid concerns, but also shortsighted.
Theres so much Fun and Education, some things are even both. So let me 'randomly' recommend: -Cinema Therapy. -Veritasium. -Krimson Rogue. -Raised by Zombies. -Cliffside.
14:52 - "The researchers named it the Lost City of--" Me: "Atlantis?" "--Hydrothermal Field." Me: "Aww, I wanted some quackery in this factual science show."
Holy cow - this is the most informative video on this subject I've ever seen! It really made things *click* to the connection of our ocean with climate change!
Hell yes, seamounts are my fav obscure topic. "Summit depth" is such a beautifully bizarre concept, which serves to highlight that we truly can, on Earth, expand past the usual mainstream endeavors inside the academic staid comfort zone.
Nature takes many millions of years to slowly build delicate, amazing geological formations and incredible habitats for unique new life forms. Scientists discover these treasures and over a couple of decades make occasional visits to study them and marvel at the wonder. Corporations hear about this extremely rare natural beauty and announce: "let's get to mining that b*tch, our shareholders need to see growth!" Disgusting entities.
We're currently wrangling with various deep sea mining exploration & gas-drilling initiatives that keep trying to horn in here, in an area where our country largely consists of coastline and (unlike the landmass) almost none of it is legally protected as yet 😰 & for some reason the spots they keep pointing at are always on top of or right nextdoor to the most valuable ecological areas and richest areas of marine life! 🤦🏻♀️ It really frustrates me that we still know so relatively little about our marine environment & already corporations are willing to destructively destroy it...
As a marine geophysics major it’s always so cool to see deep sea stuff introduced to the public! Especially when it includes Marie Tharp, a great scientist. But please, pleaaaase, let’s not propagate the myth of the molten rock mantle, one of the few things we know for sure about the mantle is that it’s made of high-pressure, but solid, rocks! This is my pet peeve :(
Great science-tubers are always a great discovery! 😁 There seems to be a whole mix out there, from the deep dives (no pun intended!) right through to the recycled stereotypes & misunderstandings... Good recommendations always welcome! 🙏
We were sailing towards Japan. The captain told the navigator to be careful for an underwater mountain. Nearly hit it! I saw the sonar read out. Amazing!
I don't know your name, person who is not Hank and is in like every other video and between them, but your voice makes me really happy for I have no idea why but just purely childlike happiness beyond measure. You are a very good narrator with very good vibes
It always shocks me how ignorant humanity was about the basic way the earth works *geologically* until so recently. Like, when I was a kid gobbling up science books, nobody really knew why the dinosaurs died off, or that the continents are on plates that pull away or crash into into each other, which plays a huge role in explaining volcanism and earthquakes. It’s weird that (some) Bronze Age civilizations knew that the earth is round, that stars were really far away, even that the earth’s pole precesses over a span of 26,000 years! They could build sophisticated things with stone and align them with the 4 cardinal directions, and calculate the size of the earth from shadows cast by a standing stone! Not to mention they developed sophisticated mathematics, ingenious ways to move water uphill and irrigate fields in order to grow crops, and even figured out they should rotate those crops yearly to allow the soil minerals to recover. But the nature of the earth itself? 1970s: “It’s basically a big balloon.”
You're not taking into consideration that the iron is magnetic, so that quality of the building material used by the snails to build their exoskeleton is "HOW" the material actually accumulates by it's own means to "make the snail's iron shell". So cool!! Who could guess snails could be so smart. A snail without a shell is merely a slug.
"No other animal is known to incorporate iron into its skeleton..." Don't beavers incorportate iron into their teeth, making them very hard and giving them their characteristic orange color? 🤔
That's because teeth are not considered as bone, as they can't regenerate the way that bones can, and so are not part of the skeleton. So while iron is in their teeth, they don't have it incorporated into their bones. Hope that helped! 😊
You should really look it up on YT and see just how fascinating and beautiful they really are. BTW, they are called that because of their color and the fact that they have a “cape” lol.
Wow seeing Michael is crazy. This came on during a nap so I woke up thinking “wow, this guy is cute… wait I know him? The charlieissocoollike friend that had dyed hair?! His name named with something wtf was it… (veranda- like a porch). So good to see him doing nerd things that I will binge for the day.
I think on the marine snow segment, it might've been good to emphasize exactly why we don't want to go back to the Cretaceous. Because one of the denier arguments is that, even if we did go back to such a climate, life existed then so why should be so gloom and doom? On its face, it's not an unreasonable question, even if it's wrong. It's just that humans are not good at long-term pattern development and time frames. I don't have a good personal reference for what a million years is, because I'm 41. And love you, Hank. I hope you are remaining in good health and I am always wishing you the best.
the pressure is so high down there, your head would implode instantly if you teleported there. the snow is probably compacted in no time at all. you would sink no more than you do on the beach
The deep sea is like the internet!! It's fun as hell and seems to be just a wonderful place to explore!!!!!!!! But the deeper you go the more scary it gets....... In a fun way! Then very immediately not in a fun way!!!!!! And then you realize oh dear sweet mother of Moses I didn't even get to the most disturbing parts!!!!!!!!!! Thankfully I don't have the technology to get to the scariest stuff that it can provide..........
I wonder if there would be any use for all that carbon on the ocean deep. Also if Algae are the best at pulling carbon into the depths, why not mass produce them?
There REALLY needs to be something done about ocean acidification, it's unfortunate that it's stopped at research and no mainstream media will even acknowledge it, because of an ignorant few, the entire human race may end.
Compilation videos are a lot like anime recaps- the only people who need them weren't watching to begin with. Thanks for linking the actual videos below.
I find it more interesting how they optain oxygen than food deep underwater. Nowadays the arctic has a big role since cold saline water sinks and brings oxygen with it. But prior to the Arctics. How did O2 reach there? PS CO2 levels must be higher there, is it?
Good stuff. I first experienced this when in the waters of St. John, USVI. One area in particular has this type of underwater topography- not just mountains below the water but also blue holes and lot's of fish. It's really something to experience.
That sounds like the most amazing experience! I love the way RUclips & Instagram are allowing divers to share a taste of their remarkable experiences with those of us who'll never get to go there in person... always watch with fascination. The range of incredible life that lives below the ocean surface honestly blows my mind even more than what we have here above-water!
@@MOAB-UT 😆 Now I just need to find a millionaire with some spare cash to give away, and resolve the wee pandemic problem that's still keeping our borders closed to most international travel... 🙈
@@anna_in_aotearoa3166 not really 300 rt ticket. Stay at Cruz Bay boutique hotel. We visit often and we are not rich. Cheaper than many local east coast beaches. YOLO.
@whesley hynes That's not true. You can study the behavior of a live animal way more accurately than a dead one. Plus, when they first see a creature, they don't yet know if it's endangered so killing it would be ridiculous. Why would you think that? And why would you tell someone something like that if they're happy about a creature? Are you trying to make people hate science?
How sad that Marie Tharp got dismissed by Bruce Heezen because her findings about the Mid-Atlantic Ridges' rift valley were not as expected. Girl talk indeed!
"Girl talk"
Yeah, growing up with two sisters, I tell you, they just wouldn't shut up about underwater rift valleys, tectonic plates and continental rift.
*that they discovered
😂
Drift
yeah, i was waiting for him to say, "they thought a woman must be wrong"
Truuue
In astronomy before computers ladies were employed to compute the numbers. Thanks to girl talk we know such things like the size and age of the universe, the distance of neutron stars, what stars are made of, the classification of stars. Yhea girl talk can get intense.
I like the compilations like this. Especially about the sea. Plus, I like just about anything that Michael hosts.
Me too. Michael is awesome!
@@gabrielle8413 He is. I like the other hosts a lot, too. But Michael is my favorite.
No no no! Hank is the best
@@GiBBO5700 I almost said that Hank is awesome, too. But I didn't want to exclude Stephan or the lovely new addition, Rose. 🤣 But, yes. They're all awesome. I just particularly like Michael a lot.
@@virglibrsaglove fair point. Rose is better looking but Hank is always excited to tell you his story about science. Michael is fine, he gives me the impression I'd find him in a Jazz bar lol
At the bottom of the sea, it rains flesh! Just when I thought the ocean couldn't get any more metal, it find a way. That is so cool!
Hank struggling to contain his laughter at the scientist's sexism gives me life.
Theres so much Fun and Education,
some things are even both.
So let me 'randomly' recommend:
-Cinema Therapy.
-Veritasium.
-Krimson Rogue.
-Raised by Zombies.
-Cliffside.
@@nenmaster5218 I thank you for the recommendations!
Compilation videos show that you guys are really dedicated to the organisation and dissemination of the information you gather. *Massive* respect.👍
Wow, this video is... deep.
Deep indeed
Ba dum TSS
I almost can't fathom it
Dad stooooop.
I might be deep, but i crumble under pressure.
I am curious if some genius heard the term "sounding" for dropping the rock to measure depth and was like "why dont we just invent something that uses SOUND?"
Don't look it up with Safe Search off.
@@theofficialczex1708 I know what you’re talking about and I really wish I didn’t...
I did a double-take when I first heard him say that.
Funnily enough...the same logic can be said about the....other form of sounding. Why is it called that??
@@theofficialczex1708 DEAR GOD 😂 I had no idea, just googled it 😂
@@alexbenavidez4500 you use a tool to measure the depth of a hole.
Some holes are filled with water and called the ocean, other holes are part of the Human body but both are holes thus sounding.
The hair stile changes through the video was awesomely nostalgic.
They had to build a time machine just to record this video. This channel really goes above and beyond in providing quality content.
This guy needs to figure out his hair
"The Mountains Below Us" sounds like the name of a novel. Possibly written by this guy's brother.
Disregard the “Sci Show” channel above and all of it’s comments as it is a spam account
It sounds like something Lovecraft would freak out about.
I fear from happiness and I fear to make friends.
@@Archgeek0 I was gonna mention Lovecraft too
Hollow Earth!
(In Godzilla vs Kong, it has upsidedown mountains)
YES i LOVE the long vids.. and the ocean
It's a compilation
@@TheTuttle99 Yes...we gathered that...the description somewhat gave it away...🎇😁🎇
I love how Michael’s hair goes back and forth the entire video
"The earth is expanding like a balloon."
Scientists: seems legit
"The Tectonic plates move slightly over time"
Scientists: preposterous! This is girl talk.
Or it moves quickly every 12 or so thousand years. 🤷
@@legalize4all dress
@@YasminMaraj apple
@@user-bo1bp1jz5i umberella
@@ghoultooth bus
i love deep sea episodes
You're not alone m8
Same, dude. My favorite
It's the most fascinating part of our planet imo
I love deep episodes
Saaaaaaame they’re the best
I love compilations - even if I’ve seen all these before, I end up rewatching sci show anyways
gotta appreciate hanks chuckle when he cited the guy calling the hypothesis "girl talk" lmao
Yes girl talk is often composed of rift valleys, continental drift and tectonic plates. That’s why we always go to the bathroom together we’re just doing the girl talk thing!
real men talk about about the expanding earth theory
@@cvspvr what do non-binary people talk about?
@@atlaswilliams9639flat earth presumably
I was just about to comment that I was wondering how long it took her to convince the good “ol boys she knew her stuff when this joker calls it “girl talk”. 🤨 I could not have survived back then. I could not guarantee their safety. 😳
Tharp had to do her work 5 times before her boss went to the good o'le boys geologic club to present the ridge. After all she was ONLY a calculator (female who could do math).
I really understand sexism being the crossover generation. I was in my first profession paid $200/week LESS THAN a male yet I had a degree and all of the males on the team had no college degrees. That was in 1976. 20 yrs later in my second profession I was paid equally. There is no systemic sexism now.
@Sci Show go away
I LOVED this! You folks are genius educators...perfect baud rate, awesome graphics, almost implausibly engaging. BRAVO!
I really appreciate you guys including and rightfully crediting female scientist contributions as well as male scientist contributions in your videos. You guys are what feels like some of the few people who actually act on rather than just pay lip service to the idea of "we should promote gender equality and get more girls interested in science!" It gives me hope that this field can be changed for the better and become more inclusive rather than exclusive to all and anyone interested in science. :)
We always have been. It is traumatic to work all your life on something than someone takes credit for your ideas. This happened alot in fields where women were not accepted to be intelligible. It's a trauma not many would risk.
🙄
@@kingjellybean9795 if you've got something to say, say it. Nothing gets achieved if you eyeroll like a teenager
I knew that Wegener was laughed out of science conferences etc when he proposed continental drift in the... 20s I think? Especially since he didn't have a mechanism for it, just the evidence that it happened. I never learned about marie tharp and her work with the mid atlantic ridge, though! every time I think that plate tectonics wasn't really Widely Accepted until the 50s/60s iirc, I'm still blown away that it's so recent-- I guess that's 60-70 years ago by now, but it still feels like something that """should""" be categorized with the things we learned in like, late 18th or 19th century, or even earlier, especially since a lot of the basic space info we have that ~feels~ like it's on the same level as continental drift as far as "the basis of a lot of more advanced knowledge" is as old as galielo.
idk, oceanology is fascinatingly weird, thanks for making this compilation video so I can watch them all at once with ease!
I wander what people will be laughing at us for not knowing in the future
@@LilliD3 probably for taking so long to switch from fossil fuels to nuclear energy
@@Mare_Man ...Well...we do have a long term waste disposal problem...and those wanting to enrich the fuel for weapons!!
@@ChristophersMum not really. we know how to contain nuclear waste, and the physical amount generated by currently operating reactors is quite tiny, especially if we were to invest in reactors that subsequently use the waste products. and the threat of nuclear material that could actually be used for a nuclear weapon or even just a dirty bomb, plus the actual technology to detonate it, is also equally unlikely. You should more be worried about bio-weaponry or the return of chemical warfare or chemical terrorism. The only two blockades to nuclear power is public fear and the enormous up-front costs of building the reactors. Both are valid concerns, but also shortsighted.
Theres so much Fun and Education,
some things are even both.
So let me 'randomly' recommend:
-Cinema Therapy.
-Veritasium.
-Krimson Rogue.
-Raised by Zombies.
-Cliffside.
These compilations are really great. Love everything these guy's are doing.
Haha my five year old loves this show so much. And her nickname is “Olivine”. When she heard you say it, she almost had a stroke in excitement lol
It’s kinda awesome to literally see the hair growth. Digging the mane man 🤙
Yea cool ppl stop haircut because of bronchitis.
That transition @18:31 was brutal lol
Pandemic hit us all hard.
didn't get it first cause I thought it was a different dude
Yeah. I noticed this in his last video but I didn't know how to bring it up tactfully.
@@reina4969 I hope he's ok. Like, legitimately.
@@filonin2 Gosh, I didn't consider that. I hope it is just a case of the Covid-19lb.
14:52 - "The researchers named it the Lost City of--"
Me: "Atlantis?"
"--Hydrothermal Field."
Me: "Aww, I wanted some quackery in this factual science show."
Holy cow - this is the most informative video on this subject I've ever seen! It really made things *click* to the connection of our ocean with climate change!
Hell yes, seamounts are my fav obscure topic. "Summit depth" is such a beautifully bizarre concept, which serves to highlight that we truly can, on Earth, expand past the usual mainstream endeavors inside the academic staid comfort zone.
Anyone else here a serious Michael Aranda stan 🥺😍
I love these longer videos! They are so thorough and we get to see everyone. :D
It's just fluff content. They had no new ideas so they combined a bunch of old videos
Does anyone know the name of the creature @3:39 ?
It's so cute & weeeeirrrrd!
Humans mapping seafloor with sonar: DOOT---DOOT---DOOT
Whales hear: AAAAAAH! AAAAAAH! AAAAAAAH!
Whales: Dudes wtf?
"Water? Oh, no thank you! Fish make love in it!"
Also, it's not that they'd go to pee on land either...
Nature takes many millions of years to slowly build delicate, amazing geological formations and incredible habitats for unique new life forms.
Scientists discover these treasures and over a couple of decades make occasional visits to study them and marvel at the wonder.
Corporations hear about this extremely rare natural beauty and announce: "let's get to mining that b*tch, our shareholders need to see growth!" Disgusting entities.
We're currently wrangling with various deep sea mining exploration & gas-drilling initiatives that keep trying to horn in here, in an area where our country largely consists of coastline and (unlike the landmass) almost none of it is legally protected as yet 😰 & for some reason the spots they keep pointing at are always on top of or right nextdoor to the most valuable ecological areas and richest areas of marine life! 🤦🏻♀️ It really frustrates me that we still know so relatively little about our marine environment & already corporations are willing to destructively destroy it...
Capitalism... not even once.
Loved the video! Was also a compilation of Michael's hairstyles XD
ok but i have been blessed by three different michaels . thank you
As a marine geophysics major it’s always so cool to see deep sea stuff introduced to the public! Especially when it includes Marie Tharp, a great scientist. But please, pleaaaase, let’s not propagate the myth of the molten rock mantle, one of the few things we know for sure about the mantle is that it’s made of high-pressure, but solid, rocks! This is my pet peeve :(
Alysse? May i recommend you some
science-youtuber, cause ths is my (arguably silly) hobby??
@@nenmaster5218 you can recommend me some youtubers ^.^
Great science-tubers are always a great discovery! 😁 There seems to be a whole mix out there, from the deep dives (no pun intended!) right through to the recycled stereotypes & misunderstandings... Good recommendations always welcome! 🙏
@@anna_in_aotearoa3166 Anna?
@@anna_in_aotearoa3166 And?
awesome a long episode
I can't see Hank Green without thinking "water is lava therefore i am a lava monster"
We were sailing towards Japan. The captain told the navigator to be careful for an underwater mountain. Nearly hit it! I saw the sonar read out. Amazing!
You were very lucky to be on a ship where the Captain told you that and allowed you to see the sonar. I would have loved that.
trickle down seaconomics
Trckle down economics??? Oh blow it out your ass pal.
I don't know your name, person who is not Hank and is in like every other video and between them, but your voice makes me really happy for I have no idea why but just purely childlike happiness beyond measure. You are a very good narrator with very good vibes
Olivia you make me very happy too lol, you guys remind me of my siblings but nerdier I think is why
The speed of sound in seawater is a fantastic band. Shouts Damian.
It always shocks me how ignorant humanity was about the basic way the earth works *geologically* until so recently. Like, when I was a kid gobbling up science books, nobody really knew why the dinosaurs died off, or that the continents are on plates that pull away or crash into into each other, which plays a huge role in explaining volcanism and earthquakes. It’s weird that (some) Bronze Age civilizations knew that the earth is round, that stars were really far away, even that the earth’s pole precesses over a span of 26,000 years! They could build sophisticated things with stone and align them with the 4 cardinal directions, and calculate the size of the earth from shadows cast by a standing stone! Not to mention they developed sophisticated mathematics, ingenious ways to move water uphill and irrigate fields in order to grow crops, and even figured out they should rotate those crops yearly to allow the soil minerals to recover. But the nature of the earth itself? 1970s: “It’s basically a big balloon.”
you guys are great for teaching me where my classes left off.
:)
You're not taking into consideration that the iron is magnetic, so that quality of the building material used by the snails to build their exoskeleton is "HOW" the material actually accumulates by it's own means to "make the snail's iron shell". So cool!! Who could guess snails could be so smart. A snail without a shell is merely a slug.
"No other animal is known to incorporate iron into its skeleton..." Don't beavers incorportate iron into their teeth, making them very hard and giving them their characteristic orange color? 🤔
That's because teeth are not considered as bone, as they can't regenerate the way that bones can, and so are not part of the skeleton. So while iron is in their teeth, they don't have it incorporated into their bones. Hope that helped! 😊
@@youtubeismydayjob9147 that is very informative thank you
@@youtubeismydayjob9147 So are teeth considered part of the integumentary system? You got me wondering, lol.
@@lovecraftscat5044 teeth evolved from fish scales, so integument is an apt description
Mmmmmm fecal flakes & mucus snowballs 😆
2 fish 1 thermal vent
Loved this video...including the blasts from the past!!
So you're telling me that Marie Tharp gave direct inspiration for the 4th Ice Age movie?
I have to rewatch this video. I don’t think I’ve really heard anything after “vampire 🦑 squid!” 😱
You should really look it up on YT and see just how fascinating and beautiful they really are. BTW, they are called that because of their color and the fact that they have a “cape” lol.
one of my favorite topics no one talks about. There's an entire separate planet down there on the ocean floor. Wish we could fully explore it.
Michael is my favorite host!
I love this channel!
so to catch those snails all i have to do is bring a large magnet and lower it
@Sci Show I’m to stupid to understand what you are writing.
yesssss good to hear positive feedback been looking forward to this
Always interesting, thank you.
10:10 "in the past depth measurements where made with sounding" 😳😳☺️☺️
Love that you get to see different Micheal hair lengths xD
Great informative video! Can you do a Ozark mountain formation video sometime?
🎵You should have seen the snooooow. Carbon in the deeeeep.🎵
Started playing subnautica yesterday, great timing!
Wow seeing Michael is crazy. This came on during a nap so I woke up thinking “wow, this guy is cute… wait I know him? The charlieissocoollike friend that had dyed hair?! His name named with something wtf was it… (veranda- like a porch). So good to see him doing nerd things that I will binge for the day.
Incredibly interesting and informative video! But not the video to watch for breakfast. Thanks 'mucus nets'.
Very informative and interesting, Thanks
10:13 Why was that called sounding when no sound was involved? Wouldn't bottom-poking or weight-dropping have been more apt?
I think on the marine snow segment, it might've been good to emphasize exactly why we don't want to go back to the Cretaceous. Because one of the denier arguments is that, even if we did go back to such a climate, life existed then so why should be so gloom and doom? On its face, it's not an unreasonable question, even if it's wrong. It's just that humans are not good at long-term pattern development and time frames. I don't have a good personal reference for what a million years is, because I'm 41.
And love you, Hank. I hope you are remaining in good health and I am always wishing you the best.
It's not just heat convection that drives plate tectonics. Slab pull has gained substantial acceptance.
How deep is the marine snow, like if you were to walk on the sea floor, would you just sink into it life fictional quicksand?
the pressure is so high down there, your head would implode instantly if you teleported there. the snow is probably compacted in no time at all. you would sink no more than you do on the beach
The deep sea is like the internet!! It's fun as hell and seems to be just a wonderful place to explore!!!!!!!! But the deeper you go the more scary it gets....... In a fun way! Then very immediately not in a fun way!!!!!! And then you realize oh dear sweet mother of Moses I didn't even get to the most disturbing parts!!!!!!!!!! Thankfully I don't have the technology to get to the scariest stuff that it can provide..........
Tor and I2P are free
If you want to look up sounding make sure safe search is ON
What a great way to go deep, yet still just barely scratch the surface.
Great video very interesting
20:30 Scorpions incorporate iron into their exoskeleton if I remember correctly.
Fairly certain of it as well.
Rodents also use iron in their bodies to strengthen their teeth enamel. Not just the magneto snails.
Great work
Thank - you .
I wonder if there would be any use for all that carbon on the ocean deep.
Also if Algae are the best at pulling carbon into the depths, why not mass produce them?
I think a carbon sink using algae has been/is being researched.
@Sci Show what's this now sci show?
Tharp's Rift sounds like an area in some scifi show
20:28 maybe not other marine animals, but I know scorpions incorporate iron into their stinger to fortify it
The fecal rain, far west of Spain, falls mainly on the abyssal plain. That's not the way I heard it, but... tavi.
Compilations are lit
i love Michael :)
No one gonna talk about his fresh cut at 13:57 ?
There REALLY needs to be something done about ocean acidification, it's unfortunate that it's stopped at research and no mainstream media will even acknowledge it, because of an ignorant few, the entire human race may end.
Until there’s a U.N. That is actually unified we are all screwed
Compilation videos are a lot like anime recaps- the only people who need them weren't watching to begin with. Thanks for linking the actual videos below.
I wonder how well plants would do in the soil brought up from the bottom of the ocean
❤ scishow
Very helpful for me .
I find it more interesting how they optain oxygen than food deep underwater. Nowadays the arctic has a big role since cold saline water sinks and brings oxygen with it. But prior to the Arctics. How did O2 reach there? PS CO2 levels must be higher there, is it?
Am I high or is that guy a new person everytime ?😂
You hand wringers are hysterical.
YESSSS!!!!!
Olivia and Steven Seagal!!!
Love this episode
You can also make your own snow by rubbing your hand fast to your scalp.
Continental Drift should have been named Continental Tharp.
12:25 - Thank goodness for "Girl Talk" !
Good stuff. I first experienced this when in the waters of St. John, USVI. One area in particular has this type of underwater topography- not just mountains below the water but also blue holes and lot's of fish. It's really something to experience.
That sounds like the most amazing experience! I love the way RUclips & Instagram are allowing divers to share a taste of their remarkable experiences with those of us who'll never get to go there in person... always watch with fascination. The range of incredible life that lives below the ocean surface honestly blows my mind even more than what we have here above-water!
@@anna_in_aotearoa3166 It's never too late to go. St John is a nonstop flight from the East Coast.
@@MOAB-UT 😆 Now I just need to find a millionaire with some spare cash to give away, and resolve the wee pandemic problem that's still keeping our borders closed to most international travel... 🙈
@@anna_in_aotearoa3166 not really 300 rt ticket. Stay at Cruz Bay boutique hotel. We visit often and we are not rich. Cheaper than many local east coast beaches. YOLO.
Early!!! Plus the deep oceans animals are mostly terrifying.
Does anyone know the name of the creature @3:39 ?
It's so cute & weeeeirrrrd!
@whesley hynes That's not true. You can study the behavior of a live animal way more accurately than a dead one. Plus, when they first see a creature, they don't yet know if it's endangered so killing it would be ridiculous. Why would you think that? And why would you tell someone something like that if they're happy about a creature? Are you trying to make people hate science?
Man. I didn't even know we were harvesting our hydrothermal vents. That's messed up.
When the teacher tells you to do a group presentation
How sad that Marie Tharp got dismissed by Bruce Heezen because her findings about the Mid-Atlantic Ridges' rift valley were not as expected. Girl talk indeed!