358 Million Years Ago

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2025

Комментарии • 120

  • @josephaldrich4023
    @josephaldrich4023 3 года назад +126

    I wish this was like 4 hours long.

    • @patricknowacki9675
      @patricknowacki9675 3 года назад +9

      Just download it and slow its speed enough so that its 4 hours long.

    • @josephaldrich4023
      @josephaldrich4023 3 года назад +8

      @@patricknowacki9675 You have saved me!

    • @sonofcronos7831
      @sonofcronos7831 3 года назад +14

      This documentary comes from Curiosity Stream Ancient Earth, so you can watch there

    • @ccdc7058
      @ccdc7058 2 года назад

      That's what she said

  • @CanadaIRL
    @CanadaIRL 4 года назад +86

    Hands down my favorite time period!

    • @cbr1thou
      @cbr1thou 4 года назад +9

      Yeah everything was dope then

    • @james-faulkner
      @james-faulkner 4 года назад +5

      That's when fossil fuels were made. Turns out nothing could digest all those dead trees yet. How is that tar sands region up in Canada doing? jus axin.

    • @agasifliyev4023
      @agasifliyev4023 4 года назад

      Yeah everything was dope then.

    • @james-faulkner
      @james-faulkner 4 года назад

      @@agasifliyev4023 Affirmative.

    • @patricknowacki9675
      @patricknowacki9675 3 года назад

      Yeah everything was dope then.

  • @Blankbedrock
    @Blankbedrock 2 года назад +33

    ah the good ol' days

  • @4Frmcfofficial
    @4Frmcfofficial 2 года назад +31

    If I saw a dragonfly that big I’m running for my life

    • @kingofnoob1432
      @kingofnoob1432 2 года назад +3

      Pretty sure you will get out runned.

    • @yt_bharat
      @yt_bharat 2 года назад

      You bet!

    • @adriananic8258
      @adriananic8258 2 года назад +2

      You run from free food?

    • @Aaa-u2h5z
      @Aaa-u2h5z 2 года назад +1

      @@adriananic8258 Maybe my finger is the food

    • @adriananic8258
      @adriananic8258 2 года назад

      @@Aaa-u2h5z certified itadori yuji moment...

  • @Historicaladdicted
    @Historicaladdicted 2 года назад +13

    There weren't cypress back then... forests were composed mostly of fern-like trees...

    • @GustafUNL
      @GustafUNL Месяц назад

      Yeah, the inaccuracy of the trees was my biggest problem with the video. I get it, it's easier to film a real swamp than to digitally construct an accurate carboniferous swamp on a computer, but still. And they at least could have not made the inaccurate statement about cypresses. The carboniferous trees were mostly giant relatives of club-mosses, often referred to as scale trees. There were some other tree like plants but I don't know of them as well.

  • @Harleywayne
    @Harleywayne 4 года назад +8

    Excellent content! Thanks 🙂

  • @synapticdecay5845
    @synapticdecay5845 4 года назад +7

    Some how this reminds me of a few EPs of Stargate SG1. Just picturing O’Neill’s and Jackson’s sarcasms. Then you have Teal’c’s indeed.

  • @istvansipos9940
    @istvansipos9940 2 года назад +4

    02:03 pwned!
    idk why, but I laughed so hard when that poor thing was offed.

  • @SpannerManna
    @SpannerManna 3 года назад +3

    needs 1 million views hell 100 even

  • @catman8670
    @catman8670 3 года назад +7

    Is this the time when lawyers and politicians crawled out of the swamps? 🤭

  • @littlebrayutd
    @littlebrayutd 4 года назад +5

    Weres full doc?

  • @robertmorrison2123
    @robertmorrison2123 3 года назад +14

    Very good presentation. But evidently, as the maps shown indicate the carboniferous era did not extend beyond the American borders. Living in Canada I am well aware that the carboniferous era extended into what is currently known as the Maritime region. I believe that there is even a National park named after it. Despite this, excellent presentation and caution for the future.

  • @JohnDoe-tx8lq
    @JohnDoe-tx8lq 4 года назад +13

    "It could eat it's own weight in food every 30 mins..." what?? That doesn't make sense! It might have done it 2 or 3 times a day, but every 30 mins? - it would have to constantly rip apart, digest and excrete a huge amount of material really fast, or get so heavy they couldn't even fly!

    • @nigelmaund9057
      @nigelmaund9057 4 года назад +2

      Yep something technically wrong there!

    • @MLGRDR
      @MLGRDR 3 года назад +5

      @@nigelmaund9057 Well, it's worth noting the word choice. Could doesn't necessarily mean that it did. I could eat an entire pizza in one sitting, doesn't mean that I will.

    • @indigneouschupacabra43
      @indigneouschupacabra43 3 года назад

      What are you talking about just look at the pray mantis lol

    • @JohnDoe-tx8lq
      @JohnDoe-tx8lq 3 года назад +3

      @@indigneouschupacabra43 A pray mantis only eats every few days, not every 30 mins! What YOU talking about?!? 😆

    • @brettbuck7362
      @brettbuck7362 2 года назад +3

      Even this short video is rife with mistakes. For instance, there is no mystery why the fires and the giant centipedes disappeared at the same time - the oxygen levels dropped, reducing the fire hazard and making the insects smaller because their rudimentary oxygen system could not support large insects. Another - when the humidity is high, the air density is *lower*, not higher, because a water molecule is lighter than and displaces either an oxygen or nitrogen molecule.

  • @jetboy9760
    @jetboy9760 2 года назад +3

    2:05 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @juandiegoprado
    @juandiegoprado 3 года назад +4

    2:37 weren’t coniferous trees not around or barely starting to appear around this time? It makes no sense that the environment would have Cypresses

    • @plainsabertooth7828
      @plainsabertooth7828 3 года назад

      Seed trees where around but there further inland but tree farns where more common.

  • @Deermanstudios524
    @Deermanstudios524 10 дней назад

    Where is this from?

  • @rustyshackleford234
    @rustyshackleford234 Год назад +1

    I would’ve loved if a few of the Carboniferous’s freshwater eurypterids were included.
    Like the human-sized horseshoe crab lookin hibbertoperus, that would occasionally crawl on land.
    And the megarachne, named like a spider because it was once thought to be one, before the discovery that it was actually a eurypterid.
    Also would’ve liked to have seen the Tully monster and a few of the Carboniferous’s giant amphibians!

  • @sunefrodi
    @sunefrodi 4 года назад +4

    more of this :D

  • @maahadrubel947
    @maahadrubel947 4 года назад

    Very first view, like and comment....

  • @romella_karmey
    @romella_karmey 4 года назад +4

    Where is the whole docu of this plsss 😭😭😭😭

  • @gardengeek3041
    @gardengeek3041 2 года назад +1

    A superb presentation ! But why, @00:34, would humans not have survived the higher oxygen atmosphere ?
    Wouldn't it just make us more energetic? Easier to climb Everest, etc.?
    After all, we supply medical & emergency oxygen to aid people.

    • @BleachMr873
      @BleachMr873 Год назад

      There would be dangers like the giant Arthropods, flammable oxygen, and natural disasters

    • @YaBoiDREX
      @YaBoiDREX Год назад

      More oxygen actually makes us feel drunk. Breathing %100 pure oxygen is equal to drinking a whole gallon of whiskey, with similar health effects.

    • @johnh539
      @johnh539 Год назад

      Fact is any gas out of proportion to what we are accustomed to is toxic

  • @klackon1
    @klackon1 4 месяца назад +1

    The narrator stated that: "Meganeura, unlike it's contemporary cousins could not fold it's wings". Well, modern dragonflies cannot fold their wings either. Damselflies, on the other hand, do fold their wings.

  • @indigneouschupacabra43
    @indigneouschupacabra43 3 года назад +3

    So what would happen to a human just spawned in the carboniferous period out of no were ?

    • @plainsabertooth7828
      @plainsabertooth7828 3 года назад +5

      People say you would pass out due to oxygen poisoning. But since it's not pure oxygen like in a tank I think you would have enough time to adapt to it. But that's my 2 cents.

    • @indigneouschupacabra43
      @indigneouschupacabra43 3 года назад

      @@plainsabertooth7828 nice nice

    • @Brey
      @Brey 3 года назад +1

      Let's say if humans existed during this time. We would be about 70% bigger than today. We would also be 70% smarter, stronger, and have more energy than we do today. We could easily break today's records if we lived in this time. Oxygen allows us to be alive, and have energy for our bodies to do whatever. Life over 300 million years ago was a world filled with giants.

    • @kingofnoob1432
      @kingofnoob1432 2 года назад +1

      @@Brey Humans would have to adapt and evolved to do that, Our bodies were evolved to live in this kinda of oxygen and environment of modern time.

  • @Deevon
    @Deevon 4 года назад

    good channel

  • @jakeweberzwier8655
    @jakeweberzwier8655 3 года назад +1

    I didn't know there were cypress back in the carboniferous

  • @eduardodasilva907
    @eduardodasilva907 Год назад

    Are you sure humans would not survive a 35% oxygen atmosphere?

    • @spatrk6634
      @spatrk6634 4 месяца назад

      yes.
      oxygen toxicity

  • @Kroggnagch
    @Kroggnagch Год назад +2

    Imagine how many critters we will never know about because they either didn’t fossilize, we haven’t found the fossils just yet, or they’re so old they’ve been thru the Earths geological cycle and been ground down below some continental shelf and therefore we’ll never know of them. Just think how many weird things there were that we can never know existed... God I’d give nearly anything to be able to go back in some sort of bubble with the proper O2 levels and it would protect me from the environment and the environment from me potentially contaminating it, and be able to actually see the strange ancient critters and creepy-crawlies of the time.

  • @josecinho23
    @josecinho23 4 года назад +1

    What documentary is this?? Can someone help!

    • @slightlyembittered
      @slightlyembittered 3 года назад

      I think it's from "A New Prehistory" 2017

    • @SeppukuPlatinum
      @SeppukuPlatinum 2 года назад

      Ancient Earth. it was on curiositystream a while back but it doesn't seem to be there anymore (not as a US viewer anyway) the series is pretty good tbh well worth the watch

    • @SeppukuPlatinum
      @SeppukuPlatinum 2 года назад

      correction: its still available actually

  • @OmnipotentSaiyan
    @OmnipotentSaiyan Год назад

    How big were roaches 358 million years ago?

  • @lightningboltt5437
    @lightningboltt5437 Год назад

    What doc is this

  • @Loe_2.0
    @Loe_2.0 Месяц назад

    Dragon flys, centipedes / millipedes and scorpions casually being unchanged for millions of years (ik scorpions changed a bit but ya know)

  • @KaizerSozaye
    @KaizerSozaye 3 года назад +1

    I was there too it was so hot and muggy back then

  • @00BillyTorontoBill
    @00BillyTorontoBill 4 года назад +2

    Extra oxygen.... and ahs from forest fires... perfect for plants..and bugs that live off them.

    • @korkee1111
      @korkee1111 3 года назад +2

      Then a forest fire big enough to blot out the sun for long enough to kill a critical amount of vegetation makes all the plants die at once in a time before there was bacteria that could digest cellulose... so all the carbon captured by the trees broke down and formed a layer of black tar that was eventually buried and formed the only coal and oil we have. 99 percent of the worlds coal and oil lay in the end years of the carboniferous period.
      Without the high oxygen from trees the super bugs died and animals that use lungs like lungfish were able to take the land and start evolution over again!

  • @cunjoz
    @cunjoz 2 года назад +1

    wouldn't it be more correct to say that the high oxygen content made the air more supportive of fire? oxygen is not flammable per se, but it makes fire possible.

  • @james-faulkner
    @james-faulkner 4 года назад +2

    Where is the complete documentary that was butchered to make this? Tell me, tell me now!

    • @sonofcronos7831
      @sonofcronos7831 3 года назад

      Ancient Earth, you can find in Curiosity Stream

    • @james-faulkner
      @james-faulkner 3 года назад

      @@sonofcronos7831 They have videos with the same name but They allowed me to watch one on the Permian Extinction, that had interviews with American scientists. Not sure if it that same then. Plus the series of videos, each episode was approximately fifteen minutes. Evidence that it was started by jilted people on youtube, they took with them their inability to make longer videos.

  • @drphil4ril161
    @drphil4ril161 2 года назад

    Wait! The continents are connected under the water. So how were they able to spread so far apart?

  • @sonofendergameplayandanima3388
    @sonofendergameplayandanima3388 10 месяцев назад

    Is it me or does the narrator sound like Scar from The Lion King? (the animated og one)

  • @jonathangair8031
    @jonathangair8031 3 года назад

    Evidently they didn't have the metric system back then.

  • @user-a6k9i6n9o6M
    @user-a6k9i6n9o6M 3 года назад

    My favorite Creatures Is Insects XD

  • @victorpuschkin5543
    @victorpuschkin5543 4 года назад

    Amazing

  • @p1ll
    @p1ll 4 года назад +1

    Too short you tease!

  • @namechange4919
    @namechange4919 2 года назад

    The first sentient being on Earth was an insect, and not a Mammal.

    • @adriananic8258
      @adriananic8258 2 года назад +1

      Define sentient.

    • @namechange4919
      @namechange4919 2 года назад

      @@adriananic8258 Has mirror neurons and is aware of its own consciousness. Is able to process information and interact with its environment by predicting the behavior of the physical world and the behavior of plants and animals imo.

    • @namechange4919
      @namechange4919 2 года назад

      @user-mm7dl3pi9u Bacteria do not have nervous systems or the capacity for consciousness. WTF are you thinking?

    • @namechange4919
      @namechange4919 2 года назад

      @user-mm7dl3pi9u There are no sentient bacteria because bacteria do not have a nervous system or a brain, just like you.

    • @namechange4919
      @namechange4919 2 года назад

      @user-mm7dl3pi9u Insects evolved over hundreds of millions of years and did not just "pop" into existence. You are the one saying that, not me. You haven't demonstrated that you have understood anything that I have written. Until you do that, I will not respect you.

  • @archstanton_live
    @archstanton_live 2 года назад

    But why, with so much more hyper-flammable oxygen, did that period manage to geologically sequester so much carbon??? Could it be that... much more of the planet's surface at that time was covered with seas and shallow swamps that did not favor fires let alone large fires?

    • @Raptorman0909
      @Raptorman0909 2 года назад +3

      There were no bacteria capable of breaking down wood so when trees died or were covered with sediment they didn't decompose. Almost all the coal we use came from this period. High oxygen level promote more aggressive fires, but high humidity reduces that tendency. The planet was covered with trees and the instant a tree died it was replaced.

    • @archstanton_live
      @archstanton_live 2 года назад

      @@Raptorman0909 the oxygen content of the atmosphere was around 30% at that time. Most all the temperate forests today would be toast under those conditions. We are talking Pangea, so the planet was hardly covered with trees. I do agree that humidity/rain slows fire. I guess my point was that the large carbon deposits today likely all came from swampy tropical areas. Temperate/drier forest likely hardly existed. 😉

  • @anthonychiara2960
    @anthonychiara2960 4 месяца назад

    How do you know humans would not survive. What if that was the nephilim

  • @BruceWayne-mb4hk
    @BruceWayne-mb4hk 3 года назад

    Randyll Tarly narrates

  • @SolachiVoz
    @SolachiVoz 2 года назад

    “giant insects thrived”
    *giant insect dies*😅

  • @BrenaCedraz
    @BrenaCedraz 3 года назад

    WOW!

  • @AbxiolyticEpi
    @AbxiolyticEpi 2 года назад

    Yee nah mate I think ill pass on that.

  • @clobbyhops
    @clobbyhops 3 года назад +2

    Their not extinct, still here, much smaller numbers, but still here, our mother earth is bringing them back

  • @luztiurt
    @luztiurt 3 года назад +1

    Wth

  • @DavidMG99
    @DavidMG99 4 года назад

    👍

  • @BleachMr873
    @BleachMr873 Год назад

    Fairy roleplayers be like

  • @plainsabertooth7828
    @plainsabertooth7828 3 года назад +2

    I think humans would have adapted to the high oxygen levels. Maybe we would've become giants.

    • @goldendemise3165
      @goldendemise3165 3 года назад +3

      No we wouldn't have become giants, but we would have become faster stronger and recover stamina faster

    • @plainsabertooth7828
      @plainsabertooth7828 3 года назад

      @@goldendemise3165 it was just thought, I get that we wouldn't be giants but maybe faster and and stronger.

    • @Brey
      @Brey 3 года назад +1

      The oxygen we get is what makes us the height we are. So yes, 35% oxygen will make us bigger. This period was a world filled with giants. We would be around 11 feet tall. (And yes, we could be faster, stronger, and recover faster) Trees towered above clouds too.

    • @BleachMr873
      @BleachMr873 Год назад

      We would probably adapt to the swamps and evolve into different species

  • @Vannguyen_69
    @Vannguyen_69 3 года назад

    358 million...bull shit

    • @korkee1111
      @korkee1111 3 года назад +7

      Oh right it's like 5000 years and it was all made by magic sky daddy in a week so he had something to torture?

    • @patricknowacki9675
      @patricknowacki9675 3 года назад +2

      Ya I feel like a giant white sky dad making everything makes a lot more sense.

  • @WokeandProud
    @WokeandProud Год назад

    Humans would have done juat fine in 35% oxygen.