How Ancient Microbes Rode Bug Bits Out to Sea
Ойын-сауық
Learn more about 80,000 Hours at: 80000hours.org/eons
Tiny exoskeleton fragments may have allowed some of the most important microbes in the planet’s history to set sail out into the open ocean and change the world forever.
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#Eons #microbiology #paleontology #exoskeleton
References: docs.google.com/document/d/1h...
Пікірлер: 279
That clip of anomalocaris swimming is fantastic, it really bring the animal to life. I can picture snorkelling and it swimming around your ankles!
@Spoonishpls
4 ай бұрын
All my homies miss anomalocaris
@cosby714
4 ай бұрын
I wonder how bad its bite would have been. Probably would have hurt
@leeleaman8057
4 ай бұрын
@@cosby714 I think there was a study back in 2010 that concluded it probably couldn’t bite very well and most likely just gummed it’s food! I could be wrong though (:
@Dragonlord13
4 ай бұрын
What do you mean? That's clearly an anorith from Pokemon
@AifDaimon
4 ай бұрын
@@leeleaman8057it looks adorable too
So basically athropods littered the seas so much that cyanobacteria hitchhikers rode the grabage and ruled the world
@HShango
4 ай бұрын
Ruled the oceans
@abody499
4 ай бұрын
is the "niche" of bottom of the food chain a ruling position?
@Blashswanski
4 ай бұрын
@@abody499 Blessed are the meek; for they shall inherit the Earth.
@gabrielalejandrodoldan4722
4 ай бұрын
@@Blashswanski Amen
@bruceclark7198
4 ай бұрын
Haha...this microbe odyssey is "hardcore." Or is it hard shelled?
So, evidently life on Earth really, really, REALLY likes riding on top of the water. Humans make boats, animals of all sorts use natural rafts, and microbial life uses dead sea bugs. Love it.
@justinpatterson5291
4 ай бұрын
We're all extreme sports lovers.
@SiqueScarface
4 ай бұрын
Riding on water is the most energy efficient way to move. You spend zero of your own energy and let the global water cycle do the work.
@greendragon4058
3 ай бұрын
@@SiqueScarfacelook at jellyfish they just roll with the tide
As a South Australian I'm proud to say it's named after the Ediacara Hills of the northern Flinders Ranges. The namesake of the newest named geological period and one of only two southern hemisphere type sections. Take that northern hemisphere! And thanks Reg Spigg!!
The 3D animations are FANTASITIC. There’s a decades long gap in my heart from when Walking With series stopped putting out CG animation. It really helps the public visualize the past, and gives them a reference point. Also thank you for putting out so many invertebrate centric videos. Invertebrates are so interesting, but are talked about so less often.
Ok I literally gasped when I saw the fit. Her style is always so on point!
@mailasun
4 ай бұрын
Two points. Two.
@thhseeking
4 ай бұрын
@@mailasun Glad I'm not the only one that noticed :P
@scaper8
4 ай бұрын
@@mailasun A surprise, to be sure, but a welcome one.
@enbyfairyyy
3 ай бұрын
Not appropriate. Stop being misogynistic jerks. AFAB people have bodies, get over it.
@navinkumarpk86
3 ай бұрын
You mean the nips ?
Now that there is a lot of plastic floating in the open ocean, I wonder if we'll see a similar thing evolve.
@Fourbix
4 ай бұрын
Can it be possible? I doubt it. The only thing certain is that we will not live long enough to see it.
@xkm1948
4 ай бұрын
Likely see bacteria that adapt to break down plastic
@chronoscat3371
4 ай бұрын
I believe there are some bacteria that have adapted to eat certain kinds of plastic, so maybe.
@karansjet3823
4 ай бұрын
@@Fourbix already happening, theres some bacteria already eating plastic
@MaryAnnNytowl
4 ай бұрын
There was already one microbe found that's learned to digest the plastic, if memory serves. Not surprising, really. It's a whole new resource that no one (I know, stop anthropomorphising) else is after, so why not?
You know that the Krill is gone when your relationship is purely planktonic.
@RadeticDaniel
4 ай бұрын
That is worthy of Kallie's pun style 😂 Congrats on this one hahaha
@AdDewaard-hu3xk
4 ай бұрын
Great pun.
@CAPSLOCKPUNDIT
4 ай бұрын
Can't take anymore of this. I'm baleen out!
I miss hearing "Steve" at the end
@beback_
3 ай бұрын
Do you remember when his last video was? They did a long eulogy to him.
@raphaelswaran510
3 ай бұрын
@@beback_ WHAT!! :(
@captsorghum
Ай бұрын
@@raphaelswaran510 Not really, they explained how he moved on to other projects.
Where are those animations of Cambrian critters from? They're some of the best I've seen.
Loving the facts, digging the fit
love this video! i also really love the animations of some of those cambrian organisms, i know somebody put a lot of work into figuring out how those animals would move and then animating it and it really helped bring those animals to life. hope to see more in the future!!
This hypothsis dovetails nicely with the ideas that logs ejected into the oceans by rivers, also have similar functions, providing floating islands that can provide a platform for attaching larval barnacles & algae, creating life laden islands in the desert of the pelagic.
The Anomalocaris swimming is amazing!!! Very exciting to see! There's not enough anomalocaris art out there, so quality additions like this are really great. Thanks!
Since I can't relive the thrill of hitting the subscribe button on this channel I'll just make sure to tell other people to do it and live vicariously through them.
"My formative years" = The Cambrian Period 😂
This video was absolutely Amazing, loved it 💯 please more content into Cambrian, Ediacaran and Proterozoic periods!
Michelle's expressions and speaking style makes understanding ideas and concepts so much easier. She's an amazing presenter.
Applause! Excellent eye-opening episode!
I love that I recognized the Journey To the Microcosmos footage.
Trying to remember your episode on the Ediacaran period. I believe it's named after the Ediacara rock formation in Australia where some of the first fossils from this period where found/accepted/acknowledged?
@AifDaimon
4 ай бұрын
Spot on!!! Ediacara Hills
Still waiting for the return of my homie Steve !
I so love your Videos! They blow my mind with All those Details that are So Hard to get as a lay.
Not to detract from how cool the science is, but I love this host's sense of style. She's always got amazing outfits.
Fascinating! Life is so wondrous and mysterious.
I'm 33 and still haven't gotten my exoskeleton, should I be worried?
@MossyMozart
4 ай бұрын
@GOAT-rl2uq - Have you tried turning yourself inside out?
Thanks for this excellent video ! It is informative and very well presented with great graphics.
Love you folks. Great content.
love the ancient microbiology!! ❤
Everything in this video is gorgeous, it was hard to focus on the words
I love your channel. You always have great information. I enjoyed learning about this.
Man i cant wait for more research on this to come out, this is so damn cool
Cool to see footage from Journey to the Microcosmos on Eons.
The title of this video is a real mindbender
Thanks for sharing these wonderful videos eons! I always enjoy them (:
Great video! I loved the animations of those Cambrian arthropods!
this honestly makes total sense, there hasnt been "pure chitin" before, so some adapted to eat it/live on it!
Basal Cyanobacteria: making mats in shallow seas Picocyanobacteria aboard chitin foodrafts: *_AUE AUEEEEE_*
Love the new animations! ❤
Excellent delivery and production of very cool information.
Nia’wen Thank you for honoring and acknowledging Native Peoples. As an avid, years long patron of your videos, and a Native descendant, this newer addition has meant the world to me…
Brilliant! Scientific inquiry is such an amazing innovation unlocking the secrets of nature and the evolution of life. Given the opportunity, life exploits and adapts given time and the right conditions. It's why I'm certain there is much more life out there in the cosmos.
Your channel is unbelievably fascinating thank you❄️
So we use boats, rodents rafted and microbes used bug bits!
@Zaxares
4 ай бұрын
Part of me wonders if, in the far distant future, we will wind up doing something similar on a planetary scale. Using materials and resources gathered from across the entire solar system, we build something like a Dyson sphere to encase the sun itself, building our civilization on the inside of the sphere, and then launching the sphere across the galaxy in search of new systems to colonize, and possibly even to other galaxies entirely.
@leeleaman8057
4 ай бұрын
@@Zaxares wow I love that idea :D aha I like the way your mind thinks!
Okay I love the information and your dress. Thank you for sharing both!
I just love that we're still learning about things❤ kind of reminds me of Water World the floating on bits of stuff
That Title. Rocks! 😂
Ah, i see, coordinated uploads with microcosmos 🤝
The Beach Boys were right: everybody's surfin'
Thank you.
Michelle's got to be one of the most fabulously dressed palaeontologists out there! (That i know of 😅) [Edits are me fighting autocorrect/complete]
@emojigran
4 ай бұрын
Fr, she’s dripped out in every episode feels like
@merrickmoriel8878
4 ай бұрын
The dress choice here was 👌🤌
@frostebyte
4 ай бұрын
I'm flabbergasted I had to scroll this far to find any mention of this lol what a style
@GoWithTheChlo
4 ай бұрын
their outfits are always so stylish, I ended up getting a hat specifically because of how much I loved their look in one of the shorts 🥺
@misterhat5823
4 ай бұрын
You're just saying that because her nypples are showing.
Thats a nice fit!
This is very cool!
I love how this video is part of her day, but not her whole day.
Jake Heart and John Davidson Ng. Are OGs
Thank you
Hats off to this lady for doing this video on her wedding day.
My favorite show
01:40. I don't think I've ever seen an animation of Anomalocaris swimming before. I wonder if any of the microbes could colonise the shells of living animals of the time.
@sapphirII
4 ай бұрын
I replied the same, but I'm sure they could.
I have to thing there were upwellings of nutrients from the deep ocean before this that would have supported life before this, but the chitin certainly would have helped expand the amount of ocean they could colonize.
I keep forgetting about the switch to trivia from puns lol. "What is the Ediacaran named for?" "lol eating a carrot or smn"
Epic❤❤
The smallest living organisms have the biggest power to influence direction of life
Oooo, special effects
Wow
The hypothesis in this is cool, but that fit is straight fire!! Who says science and a killer fashion instinct don't mix?
That's a great trivia question because I know I learned the answer from another PBS Eons wideo
If you wondered "..So what are the Ediacara Hills named after?" I also thought that and looked it up. The origin is disputed, but probably an Anglicization of an indigenous term, possibly for "stony ground." Maybe.
Cool
My only problem with this hypothesis is: chitin doesn't float. Dead arthropods may float for a bit after death, but they are generally picked off by scavengers. An individual plate of chitin would not be prone to float, unless archeologists could show that some of these species' plates had air pockets for ballast or something.
Without skeletons, we’re all just life blobs.
@OrgusDin
4 ай бұрын
Life wouldn't be as spooky.
@chronic_payne5669
4 ай бұрын
@@OrgusDinif we were all just skin sacks (life wouldn’t be as spooky)? Have you see blob fish? 😂
@pollytiks3885
4 ай бұрын
What a relief to finally understand why I am what I am! Did you mean no skeleton or no spine? 🤔
@bricksloth6920
4 ай бұрын
Blob fish don't look like sad clowns when they're under proper pressure in their natural habitat. It's being depressurized that makes them look like that. You also wouldn't look very pleasant if you depressurized 🤔
@jenkcomedy
4 ай бұрын
Juicy meat bags covered in holes.
cool!!
“What is the Ediacaran period named after?” My genuine first thought was a mountain range, but I couldn’t place it on my mental map, which made me realize two things. First, I am poorly learned of Australia’s geography, and secondly, I have no idea how I knew that. Time to do some knowledge diving, it seems.
Drifting on dead bodies is something I never realized.
That outfit is freaking adorable.
Surfs up!
This is a curious revelation given the “floating islands” on Titan
Chitin is excellent against those sharp ice crystals of snowball Earth.
I guys! Great video! Would you ever do one on the evolution of adaptive immunity? Thanks!
So chitin pollution was the original plastic problem. History does repeat itself.
I have never heard of picocyanobactria.
More Radiodonts!!!!!
Just like how SpongeBob rode that Boulder!
What if there is just a ton of small arthropods currently mixed into the water column and these picoplankton have evolved to access the nutrients therein AFTER spreading into the deep oceans? Do the authors cover the case where bacteria spread first and then started to utilize arthropod detritus as a way to gleam extra carbon from their desolate environment?
Can you make a video about maiasaura ?
two picocyanobacteria videos in the same day
It's so weird to think that there was a time when you would walk across barren rocky land, come to a seashore of thriving life, turn around and walk back... and there'd be this barrier in the ground of inert minerals, and microbes slowly working their way through. I mean, in reality, they probably spread quickly via rain and whatnot, but I do wonder what the last patch of earth to be truly lifeless was. I mean, that COULD have life in it.
My only question is do crab legs and tarantula legs taste the same😅
some hills in Australia
Off topic, but love your dress, and sense of style! Old Hollywoodish.
Earth was spinning the wrong way in that one shot
We humans are rafting on the planet earth, learning how to live in the universe. Until one day we will leave the cradle behind set for the stars.
1:24 saw hallucigenia and thought I will see the Founding Titan.
@Keti_Mporta
4 ай бұрын
It IS...
I found it very interesting, though I found the backwards light on Earth, threw me off just for a moment. lol
Next up, microbes adapting to live off the microplastics in the ocean? And will this lead to an "Oxygen Extinction" type event by pumping out toxic byproducts into the ocean or atmosphere?
@vinny184
4 ай бұрын
This is already happening some animals and probably microbes too are already adapting to and filling up niches in the ‘plastic soup’.
That's like humans becoming a space faring species, considering the size. I wonder what plastic is doing in this regard? 🤔😶
How do we know they were 'surfers on arthropods body parts' and not 'parasites of arthropods'?
when you have an Eons video to shoot at 7, and getting married at 8
An Eons that fits hand in glove with another of my favorite science channels, Journey to the Microcosmos? Yes, please. 😁 (Edited a stupid mistake)
is microplastics the new chitin?🤔