When Earth Nearly Lost Everything: Top 5 Mass Extinctions

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Пікірлер: 638

  • @Sideprojects
    @Sideprojects6 ай бұрын

    Check out Foreo at foreo.se/8ffs and get 35% off LUNA 4 for the first 100 people. Thank you FOREO for the sponsorship!

  • @magus104

    @magus104

    5 ай бұрын

    they must pay a lot for their ad spots considering it has you compromising your "integrity" so much. all the other ads seem like stuff you would actually use vs this nonsense. might as well start doing ads for that electroshock belt that will give me 6pack abs without having to workout

  • @rdgk1se3019

    @rdgk1se3019

    5 ай бұрын

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't the word "Foreo" in Swedish mean .....big ass forehead?

  • @Yafunnyco

    @Yafunnyco

    5 ай бұрын

    KZread - “the only extinction event is climate change. In 10-12 years, I mean 3-5 yrs.. +/-2,000 years “

  • @Phatxual

    @Phatxual

    5 ай бұрын

    No one's buying that unless we get video confirmation that's what Simon uses for his head🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @aatu050

    @aatu050

    5 ай бұрын

    @@rdgk1se3019 I'm sorry but you are wrong!

  • @DavidStruveDesigns
    @DavidStruveDesigns5 ай бұрын

    The extinction event that fascinates me the most is one you didn't mention - the Great Oxydization Event. The fact that the production of vast quantities of oxygen killed off over 80% of all life (which was almost entirely anaerobic at the time) is something many find surprising, since you wouldn't think to include "oxygen" on a toxin list but regardless it is. It's the idea that in order to survive this event some of the anaerobic bacteria formed a symbiosis with the new aerobic photosynthesising bacteria, living inside them for protection and they went on to become mitochondria, which led to the evolution of multi-cellular life.

  • @Timmycoo

    @Timmycoo

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah that one is my "favorite" because I find it the most interesting. Cyanobacteria proliferation :s

  • @theflyingdutchguy9870

    @theflyingdutchguy9870

    5 ай бұрын

    i was wondering why he didnt mention this

  • @1andonlynanoo22

    @1andonlynanoo22

    5 ай бұрын

    When will people realise it's because god did it

  • @LadyNewgrdia

    @LadyNewgrdia

    5 ай бұрын

    You could slow down bro

  • @theflyingdutchguy9870

    @theflyingdutchguy9870

    5 ай бұрын

    @@1andonlynanoo22 because for God to do anything, it first has to exist

  • @matteste
    @matteste5 ай бұрын

    A slight correction, the ammonites didn't die off with the late Devonian extinction. They soldiered on, even through the Great Dying. It took the K-T extinction to finally do them in.

  • @iami3rian394

    @iami3rian394

    3 ай бұрын

    Second correction. It is in fact Devonian as you said, and no "Denovian" as he kept repeating.

  • @Andrew-be7ts

    @Andrew-be7ts

    Ай бұрын

    @@iami3rian394 I heard Devonian every time he mentioned it; that’s what the subtitles had too. It’s been 4 months tho, I wonder if he went back and edited over the original.

  • @iami3rian394

    @iami3rian394

    Ай бұрын

    @@Andrew-be7ts 4:10 he's still saying denovian, inspite of the on screen graphic. The issue is that Simon not only doesn't do his own research, but he has absolutely no idea what he's talking about on most topics. He's simply reading a script... and either the script writers got it wrong while the graphics guys didn't, or he can't read.

  • @andreajohnson8652

    @andreajohnson8652

    Ай бұрын

    I thought that ammonites lasted longer than trilobites, so thanks for pointing this out.

  • @peterk7428
    @peterk74285 ай бұрын

    I’m a simple man; Simon posts a video, I watch it. Bonus that I can use this video in my classes.

  • @johnd5740

    @johnd5740

    5 ай бұрын

    You are right Peter!

  • @Mr.Death101

    @Mr.Death101

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@johnd5740pathetic!

  • @iami3rian394

    @iami3rian394

    3 ай бұрын

    He is literally saying "Denovian" and not "Devonian." He a brilliant dude, he just doesn't know what he's talking about. Good on him for making a Scrooge McDuck sized fortune on KZread, but Alex trebec he is not. He rarely has any idea wtf his interns researched and wrote for him.

  • @aryanahr7887

    @aryanahr7887

    22 күн бұрын

    Aye, we simple men... 😉 *Why he didn't mention MY favorite extinction event?* (Why don't YOU make your own video?) *He pronounced tomato wrong! It's supposed to be tomato!!* (Potato==Potato) Simple men, good! 👍😁

  • @iami3rian394

    @iami3rian394

    22 күн бұрын

    @@aryanahr7887 I mean, it's a literal dislexia event, and not at all related to pronunciation. I'm a fucking dishwasher and I know he's wrong, you'd think a dude who's literal job is doing this, and he's college educated would have _SOME_ idea about the second most famous extinction in all of Earth's history. Tomäto tomato this is not.

  • @patriciaaturner289
    @patriciaaturner2895 ай бұрын

    Interestingly, there was a sustained event in India similar to the one forming the Siberian traps that coincided with the the Chicxulub impact. This Indian volcanic area was located at the antipodes from the meteor strike, leading some scientists to suggest that both the basaltic flow and the impact caused the extinction event.

  • @bradlevantis913

    @bradlevantis913

    5 ай бұрын

    I saw that too. I believe you may be referring to the Decon Traps. Back in 2019 there was a meeting of palaeontologists and they have settled on the impact event as the main cause of the extinction. I believe because it was closer in time to the actual end of the dinosaurs in the fossil record while the sustained eruption of the Decon Traps was ongoing. It’s amazing how much of the past experts can piece together

  • @kvproductions2581

    @kvproductions2581

    5 ай бұрын

    that was the meteor's exit wound xD

  • @samanthagibson5791

    @samanthagibson5791

    4 ай бұрын

    I thought that had already started before the impact, meaning the impact couldn't have caused it

  • @mrdavman13

    @mrdavman13

    Ай бұрын

    @@samanthagibson5791the impact didn’t cause the eruptions. The eruptions caused an already stressed world that was making life hard for a lot of species already. The impact happened and then wiped out a lot of things while the ongoing eruptions made it hard for a lot of things to make it thru putting the cherry on top of a very deadly milkshake.

  • @iron_side5674
    @iron_side56745 ай бұрын

    I think you forgot to mention the Very first Extinction Event. Which is by far the most Eerie of them all. When Plankton began producing oxygen for the first time without bein immune to it´s toxicity and killing itself over and over all over the planet. If that Plankton hadn´t survived in at least small numbers, we wouldn´t be here today. This is how Banded Iron Formations formed. One could argue that Humanity is maybe on a course to doing the same to the ecosystem. Tho it´s a bit questionable if it would be as inconsequential, seeing how complex it is now as opposed to billions of years ago. That plankton had after all been among the very first lifeforms to not dwell on the occean floor.

  • @jacobpaterson4261

    @jacobpaterson4261

    5 ай бұрын

    Kind of wild to think (if you zoom out big time) that if man trashes the planet and another mass extinction happens, we won’t have been the first species to do it.

  • @anthonymurray2888

    @anthonymurray2888

    Ай бұрын

    I heard that if bees were to instinct we all be fucked..

  • @rikk319

    @rikk319

    Ай бұрын

    @@anthonymurray2888 Extinct, not "instinct". But yes. Bees are the primary pollinators of most of our food crops. If they went extinct, most humans would starve to death.

  • @sparkyfromel
    @sparkyfromel5 ай бұрын

    When the rate of extinction is quoted as 80% it can be presumed that the 20% who didn't die out must have sufered themselves an 80% individual extinction

  • @alanbeaumont4848

    @alanbeaumont4848

    5 ай бұрын

    Well not really. There are all those dead animals to eat for a start.

  • @sparkyfromel

    @sparkyfromel

    5 ай бұрын

    @carlsagan3806 It seems probable that even the species who made it across the bottleneck must have been severely affected too , some might have lost less but some might just have pulled through with massive losses

  • @beenez8194
    @beenez81945 ай бұрын

    lol I always love Simons unenthusiastic approach to his sponsors. 😂 3:15 It’s like “look everyone, look at her GO!!”

  • @cameraman502
    @cameraman5025 ай бұрын

    It's no longer called the K-T event because the Tertiary period was replaced with the Paleocene period. So now it is referred to as the K-P extinction event.

  • @bremnersghost948

    @bremnersghost948

    5 ай бұрын

    KP Nuts ;-)

  • @cameraman502

    @cameraman502

    5 ай бұрын

    @@SmashBrosInitiative you're right, it is the Paleogene. Swapped the period with the epoch that started it. Although technically.....

  • @Nefville

    @Nefville

    5 ай бұрын

    The editor caught it 10:52

  • @pobsdad

    @pobsdad

    3 ай бұрын

    Well, that's just nuts!

  • @deltaomega2136
    @deltaomega21364 ай бұрын

    Given how common and accepted it is now it's crazy to me that the idea of an asteroid killing the Dinosaurs only first came up in 1980.

  • @barrydingall
    @barrydingall4 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I’ve always wanted a definitive list of the top 5 extinction events ranked from worst to best, and you delivered

  • @martinstallard2742
    @martinstallard27425 ай бұрын

    0:49 ordovician silurian 4:05 late Devonian 6:17 the great dying 8:45 Triassic Jurassic 10:32 k-t

  • @emilywright3454
    @emilywright34544 ай бұрын

    Well that's terrifying that one of the extinctions was from pumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere which is exactly what we're doing

  • @janejones8672

    @janejones8672

    Ай бұрын

    A massive volcanic eruption causes the Carbon Dioxide to sink from the atmosphere into the oceans, which can cause a 1-3 degree Celsius drop in temperature

  • @HylianCucco
    @HylianCucco5 ай бұрын

    It's the extinction of trilobytes that really gets me. It would be like rats and mice going extinct today.

  • @philhogan5623

    @philhogan5623

    5 ай бұрын

    Even more than that. It would be like flies becoming extinct.

  • @sideshowbob

    @sideshowbob

    5 ай бұрын

    Cockroaches

  • @RMAJGaming

    @RMAJGaming

    5 ай бұрын

    @@philhogan5623 if only

  • @RMAJGaming

    @RMAJGaming

    5 ай бұрын

    oof why you gotta do trilobytes dirty like that... yeah they were everywhere but like they are way cooler then rats and mice are.

  • @danielblinkhorn
    @danielblinkhorn5 ай бұрын

    Great channel Simon, thank you for all your awesome work across all your channels…👌

  • @user-xs2bf6vb9t
    @user-xs2bf6vb9t5 ай бұрын

    I feel like Simon would make a excellent Super Villain

  • @qwertyuiopgarth
    @qwertyuiopgarth5 ай бұрын

    There was a traps eruption in the Deccan province of India at the time of the KT extinction, severely stressing the planets ecologies, at the time of the meteor impact. A 'one-two punch'. Maybe neither was enough to take out the dinosaurs by themselves...but together - bye-bye!

  • @robertandrew880
    @robertandrew8805 ай бұрын

    It's almost like all of these lifeforms had to go extinct, for life as we know it, to exist today.

  • @alexandercaffrey865
    @alexandercaffrey8655 ай бұрын

    I’m fascinated to find out that the descendant of the crocodile was from the 3rd mass extinction. Just knowing that the origin of the croc has survived 3 extinctions and barely has needed to change/evolve over time.

  • @toniivanova9360

    @toniivanova9360

    5 ай бұрын

    Sharks survived 4 out of the 5 big mass extinctions, changed even less than crocks. Tardigrades - survived all 5.

  • @barbthegreat586

    @barbthegreat586

    5 ай бұрын

    That's why they're sacred animals! 😀

  • @derekstein6193

    @derekstein6193

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@toniivanova9360That is why sharks get their own week. Probably.

  • @theformertexan1642

    @theformertexan1642

    4 ай бұрын

    Turtles are up there too. Which is why they're the best. ..imo, of course.

  • @jacobwatts202
    @jacobwatts2025 ай бұрын

    The devonian mass extinction could have been caused by a meteor strike in Australia that made a super volcano go off nearby. A KZread by the name of ozgeographics goes in to detail about pretty interesting

  • @BLOXKAFELLARECORDS

    @BLOXKAFELLARECORDS

    5 ай бұрын

    It could have been my album dropping. 📀

  • @bremnersghost948

    @bremnersghost948

    5 ай бұрын

    Oz Geographics is quality content.

  • @spankflaps1365
    @spankflaps13655 ай бұрын

    When humans go the way of the dinosaurs, cats or raccoons will be the next top-link species. Cats have already captured half of the internet…

  • @megansfo

    @megansfo

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes, cats! Although I have both species at my house, and raccoons are definitely the most intelligent. They have hands, and they know what pointing means. None of my cats has ever figured that out. Once raccons develop opposable thumbs, lookout!

  • @RetroProg

    @RetroProg

    5 ай бұрын

    half? oh you naïve fool you. I, for one, welcome our new cat overlords. I fully believe that Zuckerberg is actually 12 cats operating a robot carapace.

  • @lostintime4now983

    @lostintime4now983

    5 ай бұрын

    Some species of chimps or apes I can't remember are currently going through their own crazy enough.

  • @frankgesuele6298

    @frankgesuele6298

    5 ай бұрын

    😺😸😼 We will be the cat's meow.

  • @coarsegrind
    @coarsegrind5 ай бұрын

    First time I’ve heard Simon mispronounce a term. Devonian.

  • @CeleWolf

    @CeleWolf

    5 ай бұрын

    The first time??

  • @Nefville

    @Nefville

    5 ай бұрын

    You should check out his French accent on The Casual Criminalist. There he mispronounces an entire culture 😂

  • @user-jg6bd7se8u
    @user-jg6bd7se8u5 ай бұрын

    Extinction 6: Crab people dig us up with our cellphones and assume we worshiped them just like we do... 😮

  • @Nefville
    @Nefville5 ай бұрын

    Simon & Co., could you do one on precious metals? Definitely a sideprojects video idea, that one. I don't know that it would be of any interest to anyone but I would like to see it.

  • @eastdav
    @eastdav5 ай бұрын

    Humanity might be the extinction level event to finish it all off

  • @nitawynn9538

    @nitawynn9538

    2 ай бұрын

    The earth won’t miss us.

  • @robertandrew880
    @robertandrew8805 ай бұрын

    This video shows, as history can prove, that life on Earth will survive. Regardless of what happens to the planet. It's almost as if extinction is par for the course.

  • @tyrfree5733

    @tyrfree5733

    4 ай бұрын

    It IS. we live on a round planet.. that spins on ITS axis.. We also revolve AROUND the sun..with the other planets.. So what I'm saying is, "what goes around, comes around " is pretty much something you can depend on. A circle or cycle is inevitable in this reality. It might have something to do with the fact( thus far) that nothing van be totally destroyed in this reality. Eventually anything large breaks down to indivisible particles...to..become something else large again. Cycles and circles...life is infinite until this universe dies...and even then..its energy will spawn something ELSE.

  • @robertandrew880

    @robertandrew880

    4 ай бұрын

    @tyrfree5733 very interesting way to look at it.

  • @Butanozl
    @Butanozl12 күн бұрын

    thank you Simon for this amazing video. and for the references too, they were really helpful in imagining the scale of these events

  • @jp23x
    @jp23xАй бұрын

    Earth has been around for 4 billion years....the dinosaurs disappeared 65 million years ago. Imagine how many extinction events there have been. We can pretend to know, but we really have no idea.

  • @RMAJGaming
    @RMAJGaming5 ай бұрын

    as impressive as those extinction events are whats more impressive is that sharks have survived around 4 of those most recent ones. and the one that we as humans are actively and knowingly participating in might see the end of them. just let that sit with you for a second.... this CAN NOT HAPPEN.

  • @Armoure10
    @Armoure105 ай бұрын

    Hmm but what about the great oxidation event? It was the first mass extinction event, 2.460-2.426 billion years ago.

  • @wingerding

    @wingerding

    5 ай бұрын

    Sorry bub its top 5 only.

  • @JohnSmith-im8qt

    @JohnSmith-im8qt

    5 ай бұрын

    Did you miss the part about there being many but he picked 5?

  • @Armoure10

    @Armoure10

    5 ай бұрын

    @@wingerding a decrease in the biomass at 80%, kinda makes it one of the big ones. Just because it isnt used that much in the popculture extinction ranking, it still happened.

  • @adamwu4565

    @adamwu4565

    5 ай бұрын

    The Great Oxidation Event has never been included in any list of mass extinctions because mass extinctions are quantified by how much biodiversity is impacted: ie how many species, genera, etc are wiped out. But the Great Oxidation Event occurred back when all life on Earth was still microbial, and indeed mostly prokaryotic, and we do not really know yet how to classify species of prokaryotes in the fossil record, because the criteria that distinguish species in prokaryotes are mostly biochemical, and these do not easily fossilize. This issue is not exclusive to the Great Oxidation Event. There are essentially NO mass extinctions defined before multicellular lifeforms with easily classifiable fossilizable morphology appeared, even though it is absolutely certain that multiple events like the Snowball Earth episodes and the Great Oxidation Events MUST have killed off a lot of the extant microbial life on Earth at that time. We just do not yet have the ability to properly quantify and compare events that impacted microbes with events that affected multicellular lifeforms.

  • @adamwu4565

    @adamwu4565

    5 ай бұрын

    The reason the Great Oxidation Event had never been ranked among the Great Mass Extinctions is because we do not yet know how to rank it. It happened when all life on Earth was microbial, and mostly prokaryotic, and we do not yet know how to define species among prokaryotes in the fossil record. So we have no idea what percentage of species went extinct during the event, and as a result we cannot compare it with the other mass extinctions that happened to multicellular lifeforms.

  • @scenic871
    @scenic87114 күн бұрын

    It amazes me that so much of this is accepted as fact, even 99% of it is speculation. We are constantly learning that things we thought we knew are wrong

  • @mbathroom1
    @mbathroom15 ай бұрын

    last time I was this early there was a mass extinction oh wait

  • @jimschneider799
    @jimschneider7995 ай бұрын

    @6:15 - A much more compelling theory about the accumulation of biomass that became petroleum (at least to me) was the evolution of trees and other woody plants. A necessary precursor to the evolution of trees was that plants start making lignin, a biopolymer that provides structural rigidity to plant stems. Because this biopolymer was novel, and composed of some fairly noxious monomers, it took a few million years for bacteria and fungi to figure out how to digest it, and during this time, nearly every tree that died was eventually buried more or less intact.

  • @ricf9592

    @ricf9592

    5 ай бұрын

    It's why coal cannot form today.

  • @JohnSmith-im8qt

    @JohnSmith-im8qt

    5 ай бұрын

    I thought this was accepted science.

  • @2l84t

    @2l84t

    5 ай бұрын

    Oil has nothing to do with trees or dinosaurs. " Because this biopolymer was novel, and composed of some fairly noxious monomers, it took a few million years for bacteria and fungi to figure out how to digest it, and during this time, nearly every tree that died was eventually buried more or less intact." Correct and it turned to coal.

  • @danielriley7380

    @danielriley7380

    5 ай бұрын

    Oil and gas were the result of those early, mainly oceanic extinction events. Coal is the result of vegetation growing, dying, being grown over, dying, keeping repeating until it’s buried under it’s own weight.

  • @inmyimage1081

    @inmyimage1081

    5 ай бұрын

    Oil isn’t actually based on plants or animals, it’s based on marine organisms like plankton, algae and other marine microorganisms.

  • @clickbaitcabaret8208
    @clickbaitcabaret82085 ай бұрын

    Pretty sure I once got a a fish sandwich made out of a Dunkleosteus from Jack in The Box. So that goddamn fish might not be extinct.

  • @sideshowbob

    @sideshowbob

    5 ай бұрын

    "I Wish I Wish I Hadn't Of Killed That Fish" - Homer Simpson

  • @thedarkonestaint6105
    @thedarkonestaint61055 ай бұрын

    Who wrote this video? Excellent way to end it, very well put.

  • @Irish_Scout-56
    @Irish_Scout-565 ай бұрын

    I love your archeological and paleontological videos!

  • @r.awilliams9815
    @r.awilliams98155 ай бұрын

    In the long view, what we do means very little. Dust in the wind, like the song says. So to hell with what my doc says, I'm having bacon for breakfast every day!

  • @josephfuller6229
    @josephfuller62295 ай бұрын

    When oxygen first appeared in the oceans it was fatal to most life on earth around 2.2b years ago

  • @johnvaleanbaily246
    @johnvaleanbaily2465 ай бұрын

    It wasn't the DeNovian period, it was the DeVonian period.

  • @lasskinn474

    @lasskinn474

    5 ай бұрын

    the denuvo period kills games

  • @conundrum60690
    @conundrum6069020 күн бұрын

    These extinction events are one of the suggested solutions for the Fermi Paradox. Life forming may be fairly common but how often does it survive to our point? Much less far beyond us to the point where they’d be observable outside their immediate solar cluster? Earth is actually amazingly lucky; not only having the right atmosphere, elements and solar distance for life, but also having a massive big brother in Jupiter snatching most meteors out of the sky before they reach us. If a TENTH of the meteors that Jupiter has drawn in struck Earth it would be a barren rock.

  • @theonepristinemonk5528
    @theonepristinemonk55285 ай бұрын

    Strangely enough, that add was actually useful for me. Thanks for the odd partnership Simon!

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn22235 ай бұрын

    0:55 - Chapter 1 - Ordovician silurian 2:55 - Mid roll ads 4:10 - Chapter 2 - Late devonian 6:20 - Chapter 3 - The great dying 8:50 - Chapter 4 - Triassic jurassic 10:35 - Chapter 5 - KT

  • @cooscoe
    @cooscoe5 ай бұрын

    Absolutely love extinction studies. How's everyone enjoying the Anthropocene extinction? The only other lifeform besides us, that we know of, to cause its own extinction along with 90% of the rest of life was the cyanobacteria that oxidized the atmosphere. We are equivalent to ancient, simple bacteria.

  • @brandonscott9747

    @brandonscott9747

    5 ай бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣man these videos always bring out the crazy conspiracy people, hows your tinfoil hat today? 🤣🤣🤣

  • @cooscoe

    @cooscoe

    5 ай бұрын

    @@brandonscott9747 And what conspiracy would that be? The bacteria or the human caused extinction?

  • @Cannonsamtv
    @Cannonsamtv5 ай бұрын

    Bit at the end made me tear up

  • @keryeeastin4022
    @keryeeastin40225 ай бұрын

    Love everything you do man

  • @tpreston8453
    @tpreston84535 ай бұрын

    thank you for these presentations!

  • @frankgesuele6298
    @frankgesuele62985 ай бұрын

    The trick is to live your life way after the last one & way B4 the next one😃

  • @Nomad111.
    @Nomad111.5 ай бұрын

    That was an awesome comment at the end of this Video Simon. We have always known that our greed is destroying this planet. Its a sickness. A disease that will kill most of us.

  • @axeboy39
    @axeboy395 ай бұрын

    love the denovian XD

  • @meinkraft2284
    @meinkraft22845 ай бұрын

    Not De NO vian, but De Vo nian

  • @1492tomato
    @1492tomato5 ай бұрын

    It will happen to us. In our hubris as "the crown of creation" we have come to believe we can "save the planet." We are flies on an oak tree, seeing it as an everlasting event in their tiny lives. Nature rules. Period. If we last half as long as the dinosaurs...

  • @xanden1

    @xanden1

    6 күн бұрын

    There’s no way humans will last as long as dinosaurs… we are 2 minutes to midnight on the doomsday clock… we’re too smart for our own good!

  • @Bozbaby103
    @Bozbaby1035 ай бұрын

    Netflix has a great documentary series titled Life on Our Planet, narrated by Morgan Freeman, that is fascinating. It doesn’t go into all theories of each of the Five Great Events, but it does paint a unique picture I haven’t seen before, and I watch a LOT of documentaries. (Spielberg is exec producer.) Another great doc series is by PBS and was released this year (2023). The series is more geologic and climate/weather centric, but highlights how life dealt or didn’t deal with each Event, kind of the flip of Netflix’s doc series above. It was here on YT via their channel, but it seems all episodes were taken down. (sad face) Each series is produced well and thought-provoking. Together they paint a rather solid picture of our planet’s history.

  • @McNerdius
    @McNerdius5 ай бұрын

    For a uniquely fascinating in depth version of this, check out Gutsick Gibbon's "The Deadliest Pattern In Nature".

  • @georgefspicka5483
    @georgefspicka54832 ай бұрын

    Simon, fantastic as usual. Others too have mentioned the Great Qxygenation Event that occurred some 2.4 Billion years ago, with its estimated 90% extinction rate. Also, in the future, maybe you can talk about minor extinction events, of which there are many.

  • @vulcanfeline

    @vulcanfeline

    Ай бұрын

    there was one that i slightly recall in which there was only something like 1 or 2 thousand humans left on the entire planet

  • @Steve_1401
    @Steve_14015 ай бұрын

    Sad to see, no snow ball Earth.

  • @user-bm6xz6pq5z
    @user-bm6xz6pq5z5 ай бұрын

    Except for the KT event, those extinction events occured over the span of millions of years. So if you were a creature alive during nearly any point in Earth's history you'd have no idea an extinction event was occuring.

  • @Ytinasniiable
    @Ytinasniiable5 ай бұрын

    Just remember folks, if we ever got one of these things incoming; ground zero is the place to be, because the world after is even worse

  • @wayneigoe6722
    @wayneigoe67227 күн бұрын

    Well... Its like the bot said: "There were more than a DOZEN.. Extinction-level events before even the DINOSAURS got theirs..."

  • @davidbyster9249
    @davidbyster92495 ай бұрын

    Interestingly enough, the largest impact zone, on earth, is in central Australia, dated between 600 and 300 million years old. The twin asteroids, were over 10km wide, and the zone is about 400km wide, and is at 3km deep.

  • @zufalllx
    @zufalllx5 ай бұрын

    lolz @ the 6th

  • @will88TFs4Life
    @will88TFs4LifeКүн бұрын

    Weird to show a dead Triceratops when discussing the late Triassic extinction since that animal wouldnt be around for at least a 100 million years

  • @deddy2339
    @deddy23394 ай бұрын

    That first extinction clearly wasn't a major burst of gamma radiation. There are no Incredible Hulk Trilobites in the fossil record. XP

  • @sam3kperv
    @sam3kpervАй бұрын

    Overy few million years the earth 🌎 goes through a refresh, so we mankind is just delaying the inevitable..

  • @Frogger
    @Frogger3 ай бұрын

    Why did the sponsor ad make me think of Simon rubbing his bald head with that sponge thing...

  • @nicholasmazzei6126
    @nicholasmazzei61265 ай бұрын

    I love this video Simon but how TF is this a side project 😂😂😂😂

  • @fenndoggett2977

    @fenndoggett2977

    5 ай бұрын

    The current mass extinction is humanity’s side project

  • @jrunyan24
    @jrunyan244 ай бұрын

    Interesting list, but you missed one. My brother broke wind once, it was so bad that it felt like that scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark after the ark is opened. We fled the house to a movie. Two hours later, the smell was still in the house. That's a near extinction level event my friend.

  • @punditgi
    @punditgi5 ай бұрын

    Well done, sir! 😊

  • @Timeforchange8685
    @Timeforchange86855 ай бұрын

    love the last segment well done for sticking your head above the parapet

  • @wlhgmk
    @wlhgmk5 ай бұрын

    A couple of examples often quoted of the 6th mass extinction are the demise of the passeger pigeon and the near demise of the NA buffalo (bison). However, the huge extent of these animals when the Europeans first reached the Americas could well have been the result of a previous set of extinctions. In a climax ecology, no organism exists in overwhelming numbers. If a species rises in overwhelming numbers, some other species finds that this species is a great resource and begins to whittle it down. Back some 12,000 years ago, the Americas had a rich and varied ecology greater than that of Africa. Man arrived and wiped out huge numbers of species. We unbalanced the ecology allowing a temporary rise in the numbers of some species. In the fullness of time, without the interference of man, something would have increased in numbers by using these exploding populations and eventually, an ecological equilibrium would have been established.

  • @jimp8400
    @jimp84005 ай бұрын

    Thank you Simon.

  • @101Phase
    @101Phase5 ай бұрын

    Having watched Oliver Lugg's video on mass extinction debates, I can now see how the asteroid vs volcano argument spread to way more than the k-t mass extinction event. There's a reason why those 2 theories seem to pop up for everything 😂

  • @theflyingdutchguy9870

    @theflyingdutchguy9870

    5 ай бұрын

    vulcano eruptions where probably a part of it. there is a lot more but its all a byproduct of the asteroid impact. it likely created a giant chain reaction. pretty much a vew weeks to months old apocalyptic event

  • @paperboy...8667

    @paperboy...8667

    5 ай бұрын

    Both 💯😊.. incorrect..

  • @vulcanfeline

    @vulcanfeline

    Ай бұрын

    i think the biggest problem is always assuming this OR that when this AND that would be more correct

  • @cpuuk
    @cpuuk5 ай бұрын

    Don't worry about the 6th, I'm sure the cockroaches will dig us up one day and make YT video about our extinction.

  • @gerlachsieders4578
    @gerlachsieders45784 ай бұрын

    Si, you forgot the extinction by the Wolf-Biederman comet in the movie Deep Impact 😂

  • @JasonKing247
    @JasonKing2475 ай бұрын

    Content 100%. Accent and cadence… incomparable at 2X speed. Ain’t nobody got time fur dat!

  • @omar53333
    @omar533335 ай бұрын

    He really ended the video with "The latest extinction event, is You"

  • @garwynrosser8907
    @garwynrosser89073 ай бұрын

    Seems like life is trying to evolve to survive mass extinctions.

  • @pauldourlet
    @pauldourlet5 ай бұрын

    The Siberian Traps Eruptions --in many areas erupted thru a bed of coal stting it on fire .This would have belched CO2 and Carbon Monoxide at gigantic levels

  • @aaronmcconkey1062
    @aaronmcconkey10625 ай бұрын

    Actually the background extinction rate is 15000x natural.

  • @DeathsGarden-oz9gg
    @DeathsGarden-oz9gg5 ай бұрын

    Can we get a top 5 green projects that worked and after in same video a top 5 of green projects that failed.

  • @xxxpensive1415
    @xxxpensive14154 ай бұрын

    Imagine if the Chinese or Romans discovered dinosaurs

  • @330DC5
    @330DC54 ай бұрын

    Well done

  • @angelitabecerra
    @angelitabecerra5 ай бұрын

    The Great Dying is so fascinating

  • @Cuckoorex
    @Cuckoorex5 ай бұрын

    Always enjoy the videos, but... the AI imafe of the skeletal Triceratops with Stegosaurus back plates as a graphic for the Triassic-Jurassic extinction event was a spectacular fail on multiple levels. Allegedly. In my opinion.

  • @williamkeene9032
    @williamkeene90328 күн бұрын

    According to scientists, the sun is burning at a rate of 1% per century, or about 3 inches a year. At the same rate of growth, how big would it be 5 billion years ago?

  • @MrTroxism
    @MrTroxism4 ай бұрын

    Just learned that manicouagan was a crater and i live 2hours away from it! I have to go take a look now😅

  • @Titus-as-the-Roman
    @Titus-as-the-Roman5 ай бұрын

    You missed the first one, the great oxygenation event. It killed almost all the Archean life which had been dominate for millions of years.

  • @seanj3667
    @seanj36675 ай бұрын

    Funny how "Side Projects" is no longer about "projects" but is basically "Top Tenz" but a few items short.

  • @inmyimage1081

    @inmyimage1081

    5 ай бұрын

    I think the only real distinction now is for accounting based on who pays to write the script and edit the video. Fortunately I don’t think anybody cares 👍

  • @allanfrd
    @allanfrd4 ай бұрын

    Nice ending!

  • @ahiadstain8666
    @ahiadstain86665 ай бұрын

    you forgot the first extinction event aka the ocsigen disaster .

  • @pokemontrainergeoff6107
    @pokemontrainergeoff61075 ай бұрын

    Wonder what the next type of life to rise up will be, once humans go extrinct?

  • @kaldo_kaldo

    @kaldo_kaldo

    5 ай бұрын

    Crabs or the octopus

  • @saulsat8373

    @saulsat8373

    5 ай бұрын

    It might be stupid but I think we’re creating the next “life” currently which would be ai or robots cause if you think about it they could survive most things and easily colonize other planets once advanced

  • @saulsat8373

    @saulsat8373

    5 ай бұрын

    plus the lack of emotions and anger would make it less likely for them to destroy themselves and instead work together as a species unlike us

  • @dwjoseph59
    @dwjoseph593 ай бұрын

    We sometimes forget how things may have happened in the past, how they MAY happen again & the fact that planet earth is many billions of years old & we are in just the human year of 2024 🤔🤔😑😑👍👍!!

  • @Sinncere06
    @Sinncere063 ай бұрын

    “Life, uh, finds a way.”

  • @Aeryon_616
    @Aeryon_6165 ай бұрын

    As someone famously said: “Life finds a way.”.

  • @Reallifeintheblue
    @ReallifeintheblueАй бұрын

    Let's give it up for water bears. Ya.

  • @Marconius-SPQR
    @Marconius-SPQR5 ай бұрын

    No mention of "Snowball Earth" 250 million years ago ??

  • @PupOrionSirius26
    @PupOrionSirius2625 күн бұрын

    Ya missed the mark on how far a GRB needs to be to be potentially lethal. Depending on the size of the star and it's explosion, 150-300 LY to completely kill all life. So no more than about 500 LY for the kill off for the first one you listed. Anything in the 1K + LY range is utterly non-lethal.

  • @joribremer5260
    @joribremer52604 ай бұрын

    12:54 , I,ll see that different, must be the Lystrosaurus

  • @robertevans8126
    @robertevans81265 ай бұрын

    Yes, and we have a Brown Dwarf with 7 planets that orbit around our Sun, once every 26 million-years, causing a Mass Extinction each time here on our planet

  • @tristanburgos1
    @tristanburgos1Ай бұрын

    It’s crazy to try to fathom an asteroid impact that had 10 billion times the force of nuclear bomb 😅

  • @MrDan708
    @MrDan7085 ай бұрын

    4:10 Did I hear him say "DeNovian"?