The Super Volcano That Nearly Destroyed The Human Race | Catastrophe

Ғылым және технология

Today, we humans run the show. However, in the past many other species have dominated and died at the hands of our capricious planet. Whether it was an asteroid from the sky or lava from below it seems that on a timeline the chances of survival for all sophisticated life becomes zero. We look at key events over the last 100,000 years that could have changed everything.
In this truly spectacular documentary series, we go on a journey through the history of natural disasters. We'll be investigating from the planet's beginnings to the present, putting a new perspective on our existence and suggesting that we are the product of catastrophe. For each disaster led to another leap forward on the evolutionary trail form single celled bacteria to humankind itself.
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Пікірлер: 305

  • @anthonyehrenzweig7697
    @anthonyehrenzweig769728 күн бұрын

    The return of an ice age has nothing to do with the earth being further from the sun - its the result of the Milankovitch cycle - a combination of orbit eccentricity, axial tilt & axial precession.

  • @rinistephenson5550

    @rinistephenson5550

    16 күн бұрын

    Right.

  • @santososuwirto7446

    @santososuwirto7446

    16 күн бұрын

    Ice block bombing

  • @jasonhollister7497

    @jasonhollister7497

    16 күн бұрын

    ......................... "RING's" of "FIRE's" !!

  • @jeffo4817

    @jeffo4817

    15 күн бұрын

    What ice age? Lol

  • @bobbart4198

    @bobbart4198

    12 күн бұрын

    Milankovitch cycles have been occurring since the Earth got it's tilt. That tilt has been hypothesized to have resulted in a planet-sized body - Theia ~ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theia_(planet) - colliding with the Planet & (perhaps) excavating the rocky material that eventually formed the Moon ... That is supposed to have happened more than four BILLION years ago, and yet there is no evidence (that I know of) of any of Earth's many Ice Ages and glacial periods that are confirmed to have been DIRECTLY caused by the Milankovitch cycles that must surely have existed - with varied period duration's - SINCE the Planet's tilt occurred ...

  • @clints7834
    @clints7834Ай бұрын

    You think our civilization is 8,000 years old? Yeah forget Gobekli Tepe. I guess it sat here for 4,000 years before we arrived. Gobekli Tepe is 12,000 years old and contains megalithic architecture, which means it was not our first structure. Way before that, we were living in huts and caves.

  • @Marco90731

    @Marco90731

    26 күн бұрын

    Nazca was created around the same time.

  • @YouTube_user3333

    @YouTube_user3333

    8 күн бұрын

    I love how this type of documentary completely disregards the fact that Australian Aboriginal peoples survived the ice age. That culture still survives today.

  • @Marco90731

    @Marco90731

    8 күн бұрын

    I noticed that Neanderthal graves were dated back to 75,000 years , around the Time Toba erupted causing Nuclear Winter and food chain failures.

  • @spaceman081447
    @spaceman08144729 күн бұрын

    I never did particularly like the hypothesis that the disappearance of the megamammals was caused by humans hunting them to extinction. How could a few hundred nomadic hunter-gatherer bands do that, especially since they likely didn't hunt the larger animals all that often? The hypothesis that a large meteor impact event caused the extinction of the megamammals seems much more plausible.

  • @misterlyle.

    @misterlyle.

    26 күн бұрын

    Blaming humans is something of a default setting where archeology is concerned.

  • @grahvis

    @grahvis

    25 күн бұрын

    It can happen. If there is a large species which have had no predators for a very long time, they can be very slow at reproducing. A new predator with increasing numbers could reduce that population to the point they become unsustainable.

  • @OGSomeOne

    @OGSomeOne

    24 күн бұрын

    I don't think blame is the correct word. However, they have found pit trap remains that we're used by humans to trap mammoths. The pit trap was an evolution to cliff herd killing, i.e. stampeding herds of the edge of a cliff.

  • @sonic_attack

    @sonic_attack

    20 күн бұрын

    Maori managed to kill off the Moa population in New Zealand within a few hundred years of arrival. So not an unfounded revelation.

  • @spaceman081447

    @spaceman081447

    19 күн бұрын

    @@OGSomeOne That's true. But how often did any particular band of humans hunt large animals? It would have been a major endeavor and any particular group would not have done it all that often. In fact, it might have taken a combined group to dig a pit trap, camouflage it, herd the animals into it, and process the kills. Furthermore, how often would a particular herd of mammoths, bison, etc. have been subjected to a massive hunt? I doubt that it would have been enough to effect the genetic viability of a particular herd, much less the entire population of a species.

  • @spaceman081447
    @spaceman08144729 күн бұрын

    The narrator asserts that Earth's changing distance from the sun is what caused the ice ages. This is doubtful at best. Because Earth's orbit is an ellipse and not a circle, its distance from the sun normally varies from 91 million miles to 94 million miles over the course of each year. And we don't have an ice age every year.

  • @redskinjim

    @redskinjim

    28 күн бұрын

    its the axis...tilt

  • @spaceman081447

    @spaceman081447

    26 күн бұрын

    @@redskinjim Earth's rotational axis is tilted to 23.5° relative to its orbital plane. However, its axis wobbles like a spinning toy top that is slowing down. Over time, therefore, the north pole points to different areas of the sky, describing a circle. This is known as axial precession. It takes 26,000 years for a complete circle. It has nothing to do with ice ages.

  • @nymsmacgregor7232

    @nymsmacgregor7232

    23 күн бұрын

    If the ice age was caused by the Earth moving away from the sun by a tiny bit, why did the ice age go away....did we come back to the sun...? There is one major catastrophe not mentioned that is happening right now...US..!! The woke generation, the Gimme Generation, People do what they want and care nothing for anyone else, only wanting what THEY want. SOME people, THOSE sort, think they are so proud to die they'll take everyone with them. Perhaps we could use another ice age right now...we have had so many in the past. I DO wish we still had the Wooly Mammoth, though.....a fine animal, that..... Nyms.

  • @Unit8200-rl8ev

    @Unit8200-rl8ev

    21 күн бұрын

    The Ice Age Cycle is caused by a combination of changes in the Earth's Tilt, shape of orbit, and Precession, together known as the Milankovitch Cycles. The Ice Age Cycle is caused by a COMBINATION of these three orbital cycles.

  • @aaronsouthard8366

    @aaronsouthard8366

    8 күн бұрын

    Also the shape of the ellipse changes in a cyclic manner.

  • @lorenstribling6096
    @lorenstribling6096Ай бұрын

    Age and accuracy aside, it is the questions being asked that are important. If we never wonder about the past we have no perspective on the future.

  • @nathanboolin
    @nathanboolinАй бұрын

    When I visited California I went to the history museum and I talked with a gentleman that I can’t remember his name but we talked about this specifically and it was very interesting on the information he had to share.

  • @JackSmith-kp2vs

    @JackSmith-kp2vs

    Ай бұрын

    @nathanboolin Cool story

  • @prototropo

    @prototropo

    21 күн бұрын

    @@JackSmith-kp2vs You're a decent guy, Jack. Social media is so ripe with moments to willfully visit humiliation on others that just the glint of authenticity in reaffirming someone's sincerity becomes something of note, to remark upon what should be unremarkable. Fortunately, the effect of small but pure gestures like yours is logarithmic; emotional generosity has the power of a waveform, each example radiating out from its splash of origin in "ripple-it-forward" concentric victories over the long project to figure ourselves out. If life in our gauntlet of an era allowed, I imagine the spirit of such gestures continuing as long as forgiving, still waters allowed, all the while humanizing the horizons of experience. I hope I didn't patronize either you or Nathan, but I have observed or endured too many episodes of pointless disparagement in social media to let someone's intentional grace go unnoticed. I know the fragrance of humanity when it drifts by.

  • @primosolis2998

    @primosolis2998

    18 күн бұрын

    You stink

  • @eddiebingbong7977

    @eddiebingbong7977

    16 күн бұрын

    @@prototropocool very very cool.

  • @167curly
    @167curlyАй бұрын

    Between asteroid impacts, mega volcanoes, ice ages, and pandemics life on Mother Earth looks rather bleak, but mankind is very resourceful.

  • @darthwiizius

    @darthwiizius

    Ай бұрын

    We'll just resort to atomic energy on an increasing scale to power UV light, households and, hey, if it all goes pear shaped we won't need street lights anymore.

  • @emanuele616
    @emanuele616Ай бұрын

    The supervolcano of Europe: The Campi Flegrei (Phlaegrean Fields) very close to Naples, very dangerous and powerful.

  • @heatherstewart9300

    @heatherstewart9300

    28 күн бұрын

    Yeah, those Italy volcanoes are just "simmering" at the moment. Iceland is VERY concerning also, and Ruang volcano that JUST erupted (April 17th) is also another highly eruptive Indonesian volcano. Although there were tsunami alerts, thankfully there hasn't been anything significant thus far.

  • @Anti-furry-UK

    @Anti-furry-UK

    11 күн бұрын

    Campi Flegri is a supervolcnao but only just since it produces only half of what a yellowstone eruption.

  • @donjizzlemontana

    @donjizzlemontana

    6 күн бұрын

    The biggest most destructive super volcano is here on my ancestors land in America

  • @edgarilagan6388
    @edgarilagan6388Ай бұрын

    600 to 1.4 billion people! Wow, way to go, India! 😂🇮🇳

  • @veritas41photo

    @veritas41photo

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, sure.

  • @darthwiizius

    @darthwiizius

    Ай бұрын

    Every Human alive descended from 5000 survivors of Toba. It is thought that before Toba the Human population was about 2 million people.

  • @howsitgrowin

    @howsitgrowin

    19 күн бұрын

    ​@@darthwiizius Every human alive is here today because of God saving Noah and his family.

  • @darthwiizius

    @darthwiizius

    19 күн бұрын

    @@howsitgrowin 2 problems with your fairy story: 1. Noah never existed. 2. There has been no Global floods since man has existed on this planet, the Chinese and Bronze age Europeans would surely have noticed such an event. Now I could add in the fact that according to your little fantasy story Noah's "family" "repopulated" the whole planet inside their lifetimes which, of course, also never happened but hey if you want to believe in utter bollocks knock yourself out, you do you champ.

  • @joecurran2811

    @joecurran2811

    19 күн бұрын

    ​@@darthwiiziusWe are all Tobans!

  • @dustychamberlain9739
    @dustychamberlain973927 күн бұрын

    There are actually 2 chambers fueling Yelllowstone. The lower one dwarves the upper one, and the upper chamber still holds enough magma to fill the Grand Canyon...11 times over

  • @riverlady982

    @riverlady982

    21 күн бұрын

    I believe you have that backwards.

  • @Anti-furry-UK

    @Anti-furry-UK

    11 күн бұрын

    However it physically can't erupt at the moment.

  • @sissy-_-

    @sissy-_-

    10 күн бұрын

    ​@@Anti-furry-UK Why?

  • @JohnCompton1
    @JohnCompton1Ай бұрын

    Love these earth science documentaries with a few years on them. It also never fails to amuse the people in the comments section always ready to shred 20 year old scientific theory...lol... Hope everyone has a great day or night!

  • @CyberspacedLoner
    @CyberspacedLonerАй бұрын

    Super Volcanoes like Yellowstone, Lake Toba, Siberian Traps, Laguna del Maule, Cerro Galan, Aira Caldera, The Phlegraean Fields/Campi Flegrei outside Naples, Italy, etc.

  • @sueerickson9988

    @sueerickson9988

    Ай бұрын

    You forgot The Long Caldera in California. The trees are dying from gas emissions in that caldera? Showing other symptoms too.

  • @jaysinlsavage50

    @jaysinlsavage50

    29 күн бұрын

    You forgot Mount Shasta. It uh, yeah. (Bong rip)

  • @sueerickson9988

    @sueerickson9988

    28 күн бұрын

    @@jaysinlsavage50 Mt. Shasta is not a super volcano, but the Long Valley Caldera (California) is. It is possible to create more death & destruction than Yellowstone.

  • @prodigalpriest

    @prodigalpriest

    20 күн бұрын

    The Siberian Traps was NOT a Supervolcano. It was an entire area called a Large Igneous Province. An entire continent of lava, basically.

  • @KillberZomL4D42494

    @KillberZomL4D42494

    20 күн бұрын

    You got everything right except Siberian Trap, it's not a supervolcano.

  • @steveclark5357
    @steveclark5357Ай бұрын

    very well done, I especially like the info on the younger dryas period

  • @jaimesalgadoakajaime_the_d7537
    @jaimesalgadoakajaime_the_d753724 күн бұрын

    Amazing work and content ❤

  • @paulpandi5199
    @paulpandi5199Ай бұрын

    You title super volcano toba but you never show that region where is toba and how it looks like now

  • @heatherstewart9300

    @heatherstewart9300

    28 күн бұрын

    You're joking, right?? The volcano is one of Indonesia's volcanoes (Sumatra), and the eruption occurred 74,000 YEARS AGO, so why would it matter how it looks now??? Did you fail grade school?? 😜 It's a good documentary, try watching it. lol

  • @braddblk

    @braddblk

    25 күн бұрын

    @@heatherstewart9300 The doc is about Toba yet as was said nothing was shown of it. Yet other calderas were shown and compared to Toba without showing Toba. The caldera is huge and still active with large deposits of ash very visible even after 74000 years. This doc isn't the only one mentioning Toba by far.

  • @KillberZomL4D42494

    @KillberZomL4D42494

    20 күн бұрын

    I know right, it supposed to be about Toba but somehow shifted to anything related to USA hahaha.

  • @cavemancaveman5190

    @cavemancaveman5190

    14 күн бұрын

    Between Java and Sumatra

  • @krill3333
    @krill3333Ай бұрын

    Tunguska objective was 30 feet across? That's a joke. The estimate was somewhere from 10-15 megatons equivalent energy released in an air burst form 2-5 miles above the forest. More like 300 feet across. Also, not metallic or rocky core found at Tunguska, so more likely a cometary fragment. The Chelyabinsk object was estimated around 75 feet across and yielded 1-2 megatons, they found pieces of the core

  • @misterlyle.

    @misterlyle.

    26 күн бұрын

    How does speed of impact figure in? Do comets move faster than typical asteroids?

  • @braddblk

    @braddblk

    25 күн бұрын

    @@misterlyle. From what I've read yes comets are faster. You can search for and play with impact calculators online that demonstrate how different factors affect the impact energy.

  • @steveclark5357
    @steveclark5357Ай бұрын

    this is brilliant

  • @user-ep6eo5gd7e
    @user-ep6eo5gd7e5 сағат бұрын

    my fav youtube channel...

  • @WayneMacCumber5875
    @WayneMacCumber5875Ай бұрын

    always good to get the closest correct info out there to the masses.

  • @jamesmoore3694
    @jamesmoore369429 күн бұрын

    i live in the foothills of mt hood. it still rumbles now and then

  • @robinstuyvesant7187
    @robinstuyvesant7187Ай бұрын

    We live in dangerous times

  • @philipmcdonagh1094

    @philipmcdonagh1094

    5 күн бұрын

    In theory its getting safer the more time passes.

  • @HellhoundX90
    @HellhoundX90Ай бұрын

    🔥

  • @kolapyellow7631
    @kolapyellow7631Ай бұрын

    Wooow. Volcano is a force not be mess with. !

  • @senojah
    @senojahАй бұрын

    I followed a series by Anthony Zamora that theorized that a crater made by an asteroid hit the ice on the coast of Greenland that helped cause the extinction of the megafauna in North America. Is anyone following that theory?

  • @justmenotyou3151

    @justmenotyou3151

    25 күн бұрын

    Yes. He's right, but the impact was not in Greenland. It was on the ice sheet near the Great Lakes area. There are probably two impacts at that location, also one in South America and one in Europe/ Middle East (I can't remember now). The North American impact pulverized life in North America.

  • @MangySquirrel
    @MangySquirrel7 күн бұрын

    Explains the Carolina Bays formations. The time is about right too. massive ice chunks sent flying and landed in a fanned out pattern around the US

  • @lindadowning6249
    @lindadowning6249Ай бұрын

    Animals would also be killed too. Not just people.

  • @makeracistsafraidagain

    @makeracistsafraidagain

    Ай бұрын

    Not my skunks!

  • @evensbass6204

    @evensbass6204

    Ай бұрын

    Who you telling?!!😅

  • @heatherstewart9300

    @heatherstewart9300

    29 күн бұрын

    That's the sad part. ;)

  • @Awake12345
    @Awake1234514 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much,so easy to understand ❤

  • @prototropo
    @prototropo21 күн бұрын

    A very well written, well-paced work. Thank you! Near the end, the narrator says that eventually, some global disaster will spell our extinction. I think that's probably too summary an assertion. The only guarantee of oblivion is the death of the sun, which is a few billion years away. But we certainly have the capacity to bring about our own demise. Why then have disarmament efforts been neglected? Before Putin and Xi Jinping got so belligerent, the nuclear powers on Earth (at least seven, maybe 17?) could have used that stretch of near stability to get a total nuclear ban drawn up, maybe even ratified. I propose that the good hearts and level heads of our time collaborate on two exquisite goals: 1) Reaffirm the notion that life is precious, and that every human life in particular is sacred, inviolate from first breath to last and endowed the right to live sustainably, meaningfully and equal in liberty. 2) Set in motion a global consensus that abolishes every effort toward genocide, and every weapon of mass destruction, including the notion that old stockpiles and research into new such weaponry is intolerable, the intentional pursuit of which is an anticipatory crime against humanity.

  • @conradboykoii1170
    @conradboykoii117013 күн бұрын

    The worry about people heading towards the equator shouldn't be an issue. If the glaciers suck up the water, then sea levels will fall, and expose more land.

  • @jim.franklin
    @jim.franklin29 күн бұрын

    The title of this video is misleading, Toba filled only a short part of the longer, albeit interesting, video. Toba is an active supervolcano, unlikely to erupt anytime soon, but still a potential threat. The United States has several supervolcanoes, many of which are active to one extent or another, Europe has one confirmed and one suspected - and as they noted, there are around 27 confirmed, I believe 8 are confirmed active with the status of others unsure. A longer video detailing all the known supervolcanoes, their eruption history and potential for threat would be very interesting to many, certainly worth consideration, but that would need to be at least 1.5hrs long to do the subject even passing justice...

  • @misterlyle.
    @misterlyle.26 күн бұрын

    Some have suggested that climate change will end the ice ages.

  • @user-ro6qw6iw6n
    @user-ro6qw6iw6n10 күн бұрын

    This video is quite old. The computer monitors are almost all CRT not LED. The clip of Professor Bill McGuire shows a much younger man than Bill's current age of 70.

  • @boxsterman77
    @boxsterman776 күн бұрын

    Glacier ice is metamorphosed ice. Much denser than your standard ice.

  • @star01248
    @star0124819 күн бұрын

    You left out a large Tunguska event atmospheric blast could do the same as the blast in the ice.

  • @Ulfhednir9
    @Ulfhednir93 күн бұрын

    So much focus on Yellowstone but Campi Flegrei and Taupo super volcanoes are more likely to erupt before yellowstone, the lake bed of taupo is rising and falling, is is also the most active super volcano with it being the most recent super volcano eruption and been active 25x in the last 12,000 years

  • @paul6925
    @paul6925Ай бұрын

    This hypothesis hasn’t stood the test of time very well. A lot of evidence against it has been accumulated over the years. For instance. human settlements at Pinnacle Point, South Africa did just fine after the eruption.

  • @krill3333

    @krill3333

    Ай бұрын

    There was still a bottleneck generically.

  • @paul6925

    @paul6925

    Ай бұрын

    @@krill3333 When though? Not around the Toba eruption. See John Hawks journal "The so-called Toba bottleneck simply didn't happen" for more information. It's one of those theories that was talked about a lot in the media but relied only only 2 studies: Rampino and Self (1992) and Ambrose (1998). Many studies since demonstrated there was no Toba bottleneck.

  • @krill3333

    @krill3333

    Ай бұрын

    @@paul6925 I've not yet found even one that disputes this. Not saying there isn't, just haven't found any yet.

  • @greggweber9967
    @greggweber996724 күн бұрын

    The previous eruptions along the Hawaiian, Yellowstone, or other chains, were they just as powerful with each other and had been eroded down over time, or did they secessively grow stronger and more dangerous with each interation? If equally dangerous, how did life survive? Was it ever totally life-threatening?

  • @wstavis3135
    @wstavis3135Ай бұрын

    The video starts off with a false statement, that being humanity hasn't experienced a global disaster. There is amble evidence that we did indeed experience a global disaster a mere 12,500 years ago.

  • @Firmth
    @Firmth16 күн бұрын

    "humans had now made it through a super eruption and an ice age, the risk of another disaster SEEMED remote..." Lol to whom?

  • @jaysinlsavage50
    @jaysinlsavage5029 күн бұрын

    Don’t you ever call an Asteroid a meteorite! It…..Well it makes me upset right there.

  • @heatherstewart9300

    @heatherstewart9300

    28 күн бұрын

    AGREED! A meteorite must connect with Earth, so unless it does, it's a meteor (penetrates Earth's atmosphere) and if it's out in space, it's a meteoroid.

  • @DaveLittleFL
    @DaveLittleFLАй бұрын

    There are a few things wrong with this documentary. One, Tunguska was an airburst, not an actual impact. The proof is that at the epicenter, the trees were left standing, as opposed to being incinerated. Two theories not even mentioned in the documentary on the onset of the Younger Dryas deserve consideration. The most plausible theory was a massive solar storm, also known as a micronova, occurred when the sun ejected its topmost layer into the solar system, possibly by pressure building as the topmost layer of the sun started to cool and contract. The effects would have been diverse and catastrophic... instantaneously on the side facing the sun there would have been incineration, as the atmosphere would have been insufficient to shield the earth from the micronova.and the iron clovis layer could be ejecta from the microburst from the sun. On the opposite side, there was an instantaneous drop in temperature drop, which is why you find mammoths with undigested food in their stomach and even flowers in their mouths... they hadn't even time to spit out their food before they were instantaneously flash frozen to several hundred degrees below zero. These are relatively recent discoveries, and explain a lot. So the crater of a massive impact does exist, but it doesn't explain the instantaneous melting of all the ice on earth which brought on a massive flood that is recounted in every culture's oral and traditional histories, including 'Noah's flood" which was recorded worldwide in ancient texts including of cour\se the Bible. Prior to this, the sea levels were up to 400 feet lower than they are today, and an instantanious liquefication of all the ice on earth would have wiped out most of civilization, in addition to creating massive tsunamis that would have wiped out most of civilization living on the then coast which is marked by the continental shelf surrounding the continents. A third possibility is a magnetic pole reversal, which would have reversed the rotation of the Earth and slowed the rotation of the inner nickel-iron core while the surface continued to rotate- air, water, and the associated debris washing across the surface as the 1,000 mph rotation slowed then reversed. A reversal does not mean the earth was flipped upside down, only the magnetic polarity was reversed. Only such a massive shift could cause native Peruvians in the Andes have legends of 'blue-green water' overtopping the Andes. For more information, the Hiawatha crater has its own video I watched half a year back (kzread.info/dash/bejne/qXin3LhriNnfkrg.html), the solar storm theory is embraced by the KZread channel The Why Files and by the Diebold Project, which predicts another microburst based on extensive calculations could happen as early as 2046. No matter which bears out to be the culprit, it is more likely it may be a combination of the three, either in succession or almost simultaneously.

  • @sueerickson9988

    @sueerickson9988

    Ай бұрын

    You sound an SO, Suspicious Observer, me too. I just saw an article about the Siberian Traps (volcanoes 250 million years ago). Wow!

  • @lewisgriffiths9928

    @lewisgriffiths9928

    Ай бұрын

    @@sueerickson9988I watched that yesterday as well!

  • @krill3333

    @krill3333

    Ай бұрын

    A macronova caused the younger dryas as the best theory? You might have missed the mass of evidence for the impact/airburst theory. Microsphereules, landacites and other impact nanodiamonds.

  • @misterlyle.

    @misterlyle.

    26 күн бұрын

    You've assembled several interesting things into one paragraph, Dave. Some, however, don't fit very well. For example, Earth's magnetic pole has shifted numerous times; we may have one developing in the near term. Magnetic field patterns locked into the Atlantic seabed reveal how often this has happened. Earth's rotation isn't affected, but the magnetosphere probably will be. The cataclysm you described, however, isn't magnetic pole shifting, but a different fringe notion where the geologic layers of the planet move catastrophically.

  • @sueerickson9988

    @sueerickson9988

    26 күн бұрын

    @@misterlyle. Recently I found out both Dave as well as myself are SOs (Suspicious Observers). I am in the process of reading Ben Davidson’s 4 books. The most recent book is Earth Disaster Cycle, The Cycle resets soon. I watch Suspicious Observers daily (sometimes twice) & read the articles suggested by Ben. Mini-excursions happen -6k years & -12k years there is a “geomagnetic excursion” which is a rapid flip of Earth’s magnetic field, which the North & South magnetic poles move. There is a major reduction in the magnetic field protection of Earth. Currently the geomagnetic excursion has been moving since 1859 Carrington Event. The North is moving toward Russia & the South toward Indonesia. There is a large Ozone hole near Antarctica. - 10 years was estimated the Earth’s magnetic field has been diminished by 25 to 30%. The new % s are probably higher now. SWARM is closed mouth about the changes. The poles will meet near between India & Indonesia. The opposite of the meeting place is near Peru. These excursions can produce major extinctions of species as well as reductions in populations of species that do not go extinct. More radiation is entering our atmosphere & surface, because a decrease in our ozone layer. Impact craters are part of the cycle. Increase & severity in volcanic event’s as well. The is evidence that stars been recurring nova because of a “magnetic kick” or material being dumped on the star. One example is Betelgeuse which dimmed then flicked. The magnetic current sheet from the Milky Way is producing changes in our solar system. The Sun & all of our planets are being affected. This galactic current sheet produces a magnetic kick as well as extra material being dumped on our Sun. Evidence of our Sun to micro nova which will unlock the crust from the mantle. The ice weight at the polar regions would drive the crust towards the equator (Greenland & Antarctica). This Earth tilt has been described in religious texts as well as stories & legends. Tree rings & geophysical evidence of devastating tsunamis convinced Einstein & others that it is a real phenomenon. It was happened before & it will happen again. “No Fear” Ben Davison

  • @Phil.mingue
    @Phil.mingue3 күн бұрын

    I don't believe that the layer of ice that was used was representative in the impact experiment, it would represent many miles thick if it were scaled up and the red layer of dust which represents the Earth's crust would be many miles thinner than it actually is, wouldn't it? The crust layer should represent a thickness of 35 - 43 km, and the ice had a thickness of 3 - 4 km on average. That ice sheet that he used was way too thick...by several kilometres.

  • @brucehodge4556
    @brucehodge455623 күн бұрын

    A misleading title. There was a section dealing with past and future potential Vulcanic disaster, but this 'documentary' dealt with many other issues as well, asteroids, ice ages etc. I guess that's the cost of turning science into entertainment 😕. Thankyou naked science for the upload all the same. I think many of the comments before mine are interesting and worth reading as well!!

  • @nathaniellampman2052
    @nathaniellampman205226 күн бұрын

    However the supervolcano that is bigger than Yellowstone and toba is in Colorado called the La Garita Caldera.

  • @philipmcdonagh1094
    @philipmcdonagh10945 күн бұрын

    Internally the Earth is slowly cooling down and eventually there will be no more volcanoes or earthquakes hopefully were already past the point of mega eruptions.

  • @bobbart4198
    @bobbart419812 күн бұрын

    ... Well, if the Yellowstone Super Volcano is the " most famous of them all " this is ONE area where America is more than welcome to be NUMBER ONE ! ... 🇺🇸 🥰 🇺🇸🥵😶‍🌫

  • @TimBear-px9gj
    @TimBear-px9gj24 күн бұрын

    As usual, they're talking about Supervolcanoes but they're showing cone volcano images... The reason for that is that there is *_no footage of a supervolcano in existence_* as no human has *_ever_* seen one.

  • @GregDaniels-yo4od
    @GregDaniels-yo4od23 күн бұрын

    Regarding the 'Clovis Line', shouldn't human remains also be found at that level? An asteroid strike wouldn't just kill the megafauna.

  • @paultaylor7947
    @paultaylor7947Ай бұрын

    i dont know about ever living through a volcanic eruption that would engulf most of us with ashes. Perhaps all civilizations eventually suffer the same fate

  • @misterlyle.

    @misterlyle.

    26 күн бұрын

    Humans survived the last time Yellowstone erupted, around sixty thousand or more years ago. Other reports suggest it would not be global, but hemispherical. In our modern global economy, that would still be unimaginably catastrophic if we haven't prepared.

  • @denisvincelette9758
    @denisvincelette975818 күн бұрын

    Has the southern hemisphere ever experienced an ice age effect?

  • @shep9231
    @shep923111 күн бұрын

    I love how the narrator says that we've not experienced a single disaster. I beg to differ sir. Okay.. Then Please explain for me, if you can... How the fuck humanity survived the Events of the 530's AD?

  • @philipmcdonagh1094
    @philipmcdonagh10945 күн бұрын

    I think we will have done for the place well before any of this happens.

  • @JaseCJay
    @JaseCJayАй бұрын

    Wasn't this originally narrated by Sir Tony Robinson or William Shatner?

  • @hokeypokeypots
    @hokeypokeypots25 күн бұрын

    But if an asteroid hit an ice sheet and didn't make a crater that threw millions of tons of rock and debris into the atmosphere, how could it cause the mammoths to go extinct?

  • @justmenotyou3151

    @justmenotyou3151

    25 күн бұрын

    The debris came back down and pulverized everything.

  • @Karmic89
    @Karmic8927 күн бұрын

    @4:56 It shows movie poster of a movie which was released in 2001. Please get some new video footage from India :D

  • @misterlyle.

    @misterlyle.

    26 күн бұрын

    The documentary is about fifteen years old.

  • @walterlahaye2128
    @walterlahaye212823 күн бұрын

    The earth’s 6100 year history! Not billions of years history! Or, Two Trillion tenths of a second, world history!

  • @laurac8659
    @laurac865929 күн бұрын

    The people would have died in Ohio too!

  • @Snailmailtrucker
    @Snailmailtrucker21 күн бұрын

    Yellowstone will never erupt as a Super Volcano...it has way too many vents to reach that much pressure ! *FJB !*

  • @RobertSmith-jh2gh
    @RobertSmith-jh2gh19 күн бұрын

    The sun is getting bigger & hotter

  • @alexgunawan98
    @alexgunawan9823 күн бұрын

    Indonesia have a secret weapon.

  • @achelijanney7827
    @achelijanney78274 күн бұрын

    I find it funny how they blame the total Extinction event of the dinosaurs on a meteorite when evidence shows they would have went extinct without the meteor not to mention they were already starting to die off due to disease being carried by flies

  • @tammyroyce8013
    @tammyroyce80134 күн бұрын

    Okay the 3,000 to 4,000 earthquakes a year around volcanoes that tells you right there what is happening in Houston and in Dallas and the link between the two all the earthquakes here it's from volcanic activity

  • @Polosatiy_Varan
    @Polosatiy_VaranАй бұрын

    Planet of the Crocodiles. Rise of the Planet of Crocodiles. Escape from the Planet of Crocodiles.

  • @larryengland989
    @larryengland989Ай бұрын

    An so the question is . Did an Astroid kill the dinosaurs ??? Or Was it a mega volcano ???

  • @binkwillans5138

    @binkwillans5138

    Ай бұрын

    You don't get so much iridium in a volcanic eruption.

  • @misterlyle.

    @misterlyle.

    26 күн бұрын

    @@binkwillans5138 But there have been discussions indicating that it was a "double whammy," where both events happened close together in the timeline.

  • @binkwillans5138

    @binkwillans5138

    26 күн бұрын

    @@misterlyle. Discussions are not evidence.

  • @misterlyle.

    @misterlyle.

    25 күн бұрын

    @@binkwillans5138 But they can include analysis of the evidence that does exist. One study includes discussion on this topic, published in the _Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences_ by T. Green, P. Renne and others in 2022. If your default setting is to be skeptical about such things, that is a good thing.

  • @binkwillans5138

    @binkwillans5138

    25 күн бұрын

    @@misterlyle. Thank you. I agree with the peer-reviewed and as-yet-to-be-tested and hypothesis that continental flood basalts could have contributed in part to this extinction. Nevertheless, first principles indicate the likely first cause of such a mass basalt eruption would be the impact of a large asteroid.

  • @toddrochel9282
    @toddrochel928219 күн бұрын

    Pigs aren't that big! We're are all the mega animals bones??

  • @charlesrobb6912
    @charlesrobb691225 күн бұрын

    Surely we could increase greenhouse gases including gases with thousands time the effect of CO2.

  • @brunojm7282
    @brunojm7282Ай бұрын

    Minimum 14000 years civilization…Gotepli tepe 12000BC

  • @stuartlee6622
    @stuartlee662223 күн бұрын

    But there are no schmoogies in Yellowstone.

  • @jamescasey1756
    @jamescasey1756Ай бұрын

    Reminds me of a Fart that I once made. It was Bad and then to think of the Damage that it could have done if it was worse, I could have blown up the Sun .

  • @darthwiizius

    @darthwiizius

    Ай бұрын

    The "silent but deadly" AKA the "carpet creeper" are the most dangerous, I once dropped one at the DVD section of my local supermarket, shook out it of my trousers, moved to a safe distance, then enjoyed my work watching people enter ground zero. You know a fart's bad when you can smell it outdoors on a (hehe) windy day.

  • @spaceman081447
    @spaceman081447Ай бұрын

    It's my understanding that the human race went through a population bottleneck about 70-80 thousand years ago, that reduced the entire human population worldwide to about 2-10 thousand people. Could this have been caused by the Toba eruption?

  • @justmenotyou3151

    @justmenotyou3151

    25 күн бұрын

    Yes

  • @arisgod2749
    @arisgod2749Ай бұрын

    So I am confused. Are we do for global warming or global ice age?

  • @lethal2453

    @lethal2453

    Ай бұрын

    Nil. We are in the plateau of climate. The sun will decide.

  • @misterlyle.

    @misterlyle.

    26 күн бұрын

    Both, really, in sequence. Most scientists will say that we are in an "interglacial" between the last glacial maximum and the next one. So a warm spell, an unusually mild interval that allowed humans to develop modern societies, will be followed by cooling and advancing glaciers thousands of years in the future, more or less. There are, however, some scientists suggesting that human caused warming has already shut down the ice age cycle.

  • @ianthompson3360
    @ianthompson336020 күн бұрын

    humans will them self million times overbefore

  • @forceof1
    @forceof12 күн бұрын

    You couldn't convince me an asteroid hit the earth and that weak test in the lab doesn't prove it happened. I been disagreeing since I first heard this absurd theory. 😊😊

  • @bradfregger2561
    @bradfregger25612 күн бұрын

    We don’t remember a number of catastrophes… and our extinction is guaranteed if we refuse to become a spacefaring race.

  • @rheinhardtgrafvonthiesenha8185
    @rheinhardtgrafvonthiesenha8185Ай бұрын

    Who else is high?

  • @buffalobill9793

    @buffalobill9793

    Ай бұрын

    I am I am!

  • @shinesstraker3586

    @shinesstraker3586

    Ай бұрын

    Spaced out

  • @risaalshaan

    @risaalshaan

    Ай бұрын

    Lmao shit

  • @simplyhuman3982

    @simplyhuman3982

    Ай бұрын

    Does drunk and wanting to sleep count?

  • @buffalobill9793

    @buffalobill9793

    Ай бұрын

    @@simplyhuman3982 I would say no since high usually means the opposite of feeling sleepy.

  • @denisvincelette9758
    @denisvincelette975818 күн бұрын

    I think our ice age was actually Noah’s Flood.

  • @stevehartz4615
    @stevehartz461529 күн бұрын

    I can care less about humans,,but its a shame the animals had to die.

  • @veritas41photo
    @veritas41photoАй бұрын

    Did this video explain how Toba affected India? Southeast winds? And why only India? Total speculation asking us to suspend disbelief. Worthless. Thumbs down.

  • @justmenotyou3151

    @justmenotyou3151

    25 күн бұрын

    Volcanic ash screwed up the vegetation animals used, killing them off and messing with human food sources. It's in the video.

  • @donjizzlemontana
    @donjizzlemontana6 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂 how can you say billions of this and say 8k for the species the creators created 1st over anything after creating an enclosed flat plain within a vortex of separated waters with a protective dome 🤣🤣🤣

  • @jacques_phroste
    @jacques_phrosteАй бұрын

    Title is misleading as this is more about calamity from space and hubris of humanity. The first 12-15 minutes are about the title subject. ☹

  • @Carl-ht7cg
    @Carl-ht7cg22 күн бұрын

    Is Ashley Biden's Diary a secret document?

  • @JustReed
    @JustReed8 күн бұрын

    Then get it right next time.

  • @bobbart4198
    @bobbart419812 күн бұрын

    ... To paraphrase George Carlin ... The PLANET will be just fine ... WE are going away ...

  • @coxfordGamer
    @coxfordGamer24 күн бұрын

    The LORD said I have made the earth and created man upon it. Isaiah 45:12. Jer 27:5 I have made the earth the man and the beast that are upon the ground, by my great power and by my outstretched arm.

  • @emaliciously

    @emaliciously

    19 күн бұрын

    Written by dudes 2000 years ago who didn't know about the importance of hand washing or what a super nova is. Perfect, let's base our modern day science on that book. /Eyeroll

  • @donjizzlemontana
    @donjizzlemontana6 күн бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣🤣 the 🧢 about the historical events that took place is hilarious

  • @markgatz6127
    @markgatz612717 күн бұрын

    Maybe a flood?

  • @BlastMaster-db4qp

    @BlastMaster-db4qp

    7 күн бұрын

    Never been a world wide flood. The Bible is wrong

  • @BIGPINKMAN
    @BIGPINKMAN10 күн бұрын

    Lol no not everyone are from Africa I've done hours of the rabbit hole thing for hours doing research and my people come from Europe and not Africa but unfortunately each they own

  • @Horticarter41

    @Horticarter41

    6 күн бұрын

    Dude...no

  • @JadeaRS4
    @JadeaRS4Ай бұрын

    Sun is expanding closer to us faster than we ( earth) is moving away. Sorry

  • @georgepollastri601
    @georgepollastri60126 күн бұрын

    Go underground.....

  • @Badgersj
    @Badgersj27 күн бұрын

    Fascinating subject but don't like the portentous narration and irrelevant video. More interviews with experts would have been much, much better.

  • @rogerclyde2720
    @rogerclyde2720Ай бұрын

    And man became a living soul,

  • @mooksixalpha5694
    @mooksixalpha569426 күн бұрын

    Lots of imagination in this one… billions of years ago 😂

  • @paultaylor7947
    @paultaylor7947Ай бұрын

    it may not be yellow men that will occupy this part of US then it will be yellow ball

  • @oneshothunter9877

    @oneshothunter9877

    28 күн бұрын

    What? 😀😀

  • @matthewmonzillo3141
    @matthewmonzillo314129 күн бұрын

    They're clueless

  • @cruzsanchez3647
    @cruzsanchez364724 күн бұрын

    India had nuclear wars

  • @koosvanpetten5567
    @koosvanpetten556720 күн бұрын

    Lulverhaal.

  • @paultaylor7947
    @paultaylor7947Ай бұрын

    i am becoming psychotic

  • @johnstojanowski8126
    @johnstojanowski812625 күн бұрын

    The end-Pleistocene extinction of the ice age megafauna was not the result of an extraterrestrial impact. Their extinction was a gradual one and many of them were decreasing in size before their extinction. It has been well established that megafauna, including mammoths, were undergoing severe dwarfing near the end of the Pleistocene when the Clovis hunters were here. Here is a quote from the book ‘Quaternary Extinctions’: “Virtually all mammoths associated with Clovis points in the New World are diminutive and have reduced tusks.” Here is another quote from the same book: ‘The knowledge that extinction and dwarfing are concurrent processes may provide new insight into extinction phenomena. If we can identify mechanisms causing a decrease in body size, we can, so to speak, approach extinction “through the back door”, assuming that both dwarfing and extinction are linked to a common causal factor(s).’ My theory ‘The Gravity Theory Of Mass Extinction’ can account for the reduction in size of megafauna not only at the end of the Pleistocene but the end of the Cretaceous period as well.

  • @gwentomlinson4205
    @gwentomlinson420520 күн бұрын

    Ancient history starts in the book of Genesis . Our future is written in the Bible written by the prophets and in the book of Revelation. For those who turn to God through Jesus Christ, repenting from their sins will live in Paradise forever and ever. All glory , honor and praise to our God and His Son, Christ Jesus.

  • @emaliciously

    @emaliciously

    19 күн бұрын

    No.

  • @SueFerreira75
    @SueFerreira7529 күн бұрын

    Why can't Americans pronounce laboratory correctly? It is Labor - tory, not Labra - tory. A place of work - Labor - tory. Got it?

  • @emaliciously

    @emaliciously

    19 күн бұрын

    Cashe. It is "cash", Brits. "Cash". Not "ca-shay".

  • @SueFerreira75

    @SueFerreira75

    2 күн бұрын

    @@emaliciously Cache - cash is the English pronunciation. Caché is the French equivalent and is pronounced Cashay.

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