World Reveal: An 850 Million Year History - Worldbuilder’s Log 21

Ойын-сауық

Its finally here!! Here's the full 850 million year tectonic history of my fictional planet. Massive thanks to Worldbuildingpasta. Check him out. Links below.
-----
LINKS:
PATREON: / artifexian
🌍 GPLATES: www.gplates.org
⭐️ WORLDBUILDING PASTA : worldbuildingpasta.blogspot.com
⭐️ VANGA-VANGOG : www.deviantart.com/vanga-vang...
🧮 THE WORLDSMITH (Spreadsheet): docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
📕 REFERENCE DOCS: drive.google.com/drive/folder...
-----
MUSIC:
Udo Grunewald
-----
TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 Intro
00:25 Full Simulation Timelapse
01:54 Supercontinent I (850 mya)
03:04 1950
03:26 1860
03:50 1850
04:21 1800
05:00 1750
05:15 1740
05:43 1700
06:19 1680
06:37 1650
07:08 1640
07:21 Supercontinent II (450 mya)
08:47 1550
09:44 1510
10:25 1500
10:58 1470
11:07 1460
11:47 1450
11:54 1430
12:11 1400
12:49 1380
13:17 1350
13:42 1310
13:52 1300
14:16 1280
14:36 1250
15:16 1200
16:19 Modern World (0 mya)
17:32 Modern Hotspots
17:59 Americas Analogue Review
19:17 Australia Analogue Review
19:33 Mini Australia Analogue Review
19:59 Polar Continent Review
21:24 Ocean Evolution Timelapse
23:37 Plate Evolution Timelapse
25:01 Next on the Agenda
25:16 Thanks & Outro
-----
Thanks for watching everyone. It means a lot. 🥰

Пікірлер: 148

  • @Starling8563
    @Starling8563 Жыл бұрын

    Get ready for someone to speed this up 60x, play Gotye’s Someone I Used To Know, and title it Artifexian Lore

  • @o5-1-formerlycalvinlucien60

    @o5-1-formerlycalvinlucien60

    Жыл бұрын

    can't wait

  • @Skip6235

    @Skip6235

    Жыл бұрын

    Be the change you want to see in this world

  • @Orinslayer

    @Orinslayer

    Жыл бұрын

    bang bang

  • @TheSpearkan

    @TheSpearkan

    Жыл бұрын

    More like the Megalith remix of Somebody I used to know.

  • @Infrared01

    @Infrared01

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@TheSpearkan This is the way

  • @APerson863
    @APerson863 Жыл бұрын

    I know that a lot of people liked the detailed tutorial on how the tool worked. But I am so glad to be back to these types of episodes

  • @honema123456789

    @honema123456789

    Жыл бұрын

    I was so excited about a tectonic plate simulator, but it turned out to just be a keyframe animation program with a sphere to mercator view built-in A bad one at that...

  • @scolioscraps8612

    @scolioscraps8612

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah it gives you a scientific realism and unpredictability that I’d really like for my world but even watching these and trying to use GPlates it’s too much of a hurdle to get over.

  • @Dark0Storm

    @Dark0Storm

    Жыл бұрын

    In all honesty it felt a bit like "here's a really cool simulation tool... it's so much work to do a full world that I got somebody else to do it". Given how it seems you still have to pretty much manually choose and draw every movement you want, I'm not sure there what benefit there really is to using such a clunky tool over just drawing each stage on a globe in some 3D program, or just manually on paper for that matter. The animation just doesn't feel like enough pay-off. I'm honestly glad we are past this bit, because I genuinely love Artifexian's world building.

  • @ausgezeichnet2000

    @ausgezeichnet2000

    Жыл бұрын

    @@honema123456789 I know. I really want something that would just have you draw an initial super continent, map out some plate boundaries maybe, and then you could just hit play and let the sim work. Gplates is just too technical and clunky for me.

  • @moo8866

    @moo8866

    Жыл бұрын

    @@honema123456789 SO REAL.

  • @marcorubboli9415
    @marcorubboli9415 Жыл бұрын

    I think that it is absolutely incredible that you managed to create hype around something so weirdly specific. And you did it: I'm loving this series!

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    Cheers :)

  • @Devimon4000
    @Devimon4000 Жыл бұрын

    Lord, I have spent three years trying to pull this off, and seeing a second example of the method is both inspiring and frustrating as it still feels like 200 to 300 million years into my attempts I screw up in a way that can only be fixed by starting over. Would have loved to have seen what they did at each step, especially with the ocean crust...

  • @jasonlewis4438

    @jasonlewis4438

    8 ай бұрын

    Ocean Crust has me screaming! I always seem to get to a point where it just becomes to giant slaps moving away from each other, but can't actually subduct anywhere without messing up the flowlines due to the geometry of a sphere!

  • @madelinejameswrites
    @madelinejameswrites8 ай бұрын

    This just completely blows my mind every time I watch it...

  • @rollindutchy7916
    @rollindutchy7916 Жыл бұрын

    Cant wait to see the ocean currents and climates to be filled in!

  • @recurvestickerdragon
    @recurvestickerdragon Жыл бұрын

    Watching how many "temporary" plates got gobbled up, it makes me wonder about Earth's lost tectonics

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    IIRC they found evidence of such a plate in Southern Europe not so long ago

  • @Schody_lol
    @Schody_lol Жыл бұрын

    Can’t wait for the alien biospheres section of this series!

  • @SyoaranBarker
    @SyoaranBarker Жыл бұрын

    I'm looking forward to the climate maps. I've more or less freehanded the continents in my world, but I've hit a spot where a bunch of my climate map is probably out of date, so I could use a refresher/updated guide.

  • @LexisLang
    @LexisLang Жыл бұрын

    Wow! You can certainly tell WBP that they've done a fab job! This is so inspiring - I'm so looking forwards to the rest of this series. :D

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    He's the GOAT

  • @funwithmadness
    @funwithmadness Жыл бұрын

    I still stand by my original assessment of the GPlates UI being crap-tastic. Seeing these results, though, is amazing! While I, or anyone, could simply invent a world, seeing how this evolves gives rise to situations that I would likely never think of on my own.

  • @johnvance882
    @johnvance882 Жыл бұрын

    I've been watching this series since you first started it and I can't wait to see what the ocean currents and global climate ends up like. I've always drawn fake maps and tried to label the ocean currents and how the climate is with different colored pencils so that's right up my alley.

  • @jordythecat7181
    @jordythecat7181 Жыл бұрын

    This is simply incredible. WP did an amazing job on this. For future videos, I'd recommend shifting the view of the world so that the western little "peninsulas" of the southern continent aren't cut off by the map. Edit: Just for funsies, I'm just going to project and theorize how societies could develop on this planet. The "Americas analogue" could develop in a similar way to Eurasian societies, not only because the northern part of the continent is horizontally-oriented, but is also situated in where the temperate regions of the planet would likely develop. The north-eastern part of the continent could even develop into a society analogous to the United States, because it's isolated by mountains. Of course, there are a *ton* of mountains, and as you said, that part of the continent could be very arid. If not the north-eastern continent, the northern region of the "Australia analogue" continent could lead to a highly developed society, not only because a good chunk of the land is laid horizontally across the temperate band, but of how it has far less orogenies, and could be far more fertile, instead of having a big, dried-up Rockies analogue taking up the west coast. I don't see the southern continent as becoming advanced as the northern continents could (with the exception of some regions) because a lot of it is in the polar zone, and it is vertically oriented, and would have drastic swings in climate as you migrated from one end to the other. The tiny continent in between the "Americas" and "Australia" would probably not be advanced, either, since it is in the tropics zone. Lands in tropical or polar zones would have climates that were either inhospitably arid, or infested with disease-carrying insects, or be unbearably cold, whereas temperate regions, being, well, *temperate*, would have lands far more suitable for yearly agriculture. This is all just by going off of "Guns, Germs and Steel", which of course, isn't the best history book, but is a decent resource for worldbuilding fictional cultures. Geography and climate *do* have an impact on history and societal development, although the sapient factor is not to be ignored.

  • @plaecholder

    @plaecholder

    Жыл бұрын

    How do you do that uin gplates?

  • @jordythecat7181

    @jordythecat7181

    Жыл бұрын

    @@plaecholder You go to "Set Projection" and shift the view.

  • @itisALWAYSR.A.

    @itisALWAYSR.A.

    Жыл бұрын

    One thing I can't help but wonder: the big inland sea in West America. Since it's been cut off from the rest of the ocean bodies for so long, I reckon it would be full of aquatic life not seen elsewhere, having taken an isolated evolutionary route and being cut off from their main ocean body cousins. A Madagascar of the Deep, if you will.... 👀

  • @idle_speculation

    @idle_speculation

    9 ай бұрын

    @@itisALWAYSR.A.if it’s completely cut off from other waters then the only thing maintaining it would be rains. When the Mediterranean was cut off from the Atlantic Ocean 5 mya, it dried up into a massive salt desert with islands sticking out as small mountains.

  • @eostyrwinn5018
    @eostyrwinn5018 Жыл бұрын

    That was really cool. I feel like if I saw this before the rest of the series, I would have been that much more interested in all the gplates tutorials knowing what it was leading towards.

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    That's a fair point.

  • @Deipnosophist_the_Gastronomer
    @Deipnosophist_the_Gastronomer Жыл бұрын

    That's pretty cool. 👍 13:40 It's only a small, large igneous province ... but I be it's really venomous 😅 A lot of those trapped sea areas could have some really interesting salt based geology / geography.

  • @Titanic_Tuna
    @Titanic_Tuna Жыл бұрын

    This is such a valuable milestone in the development of this world. This video is just one of many great reminders as to why I subscribed all those years ago.

  • @sammyhiggins8601
    @sammyhiggins8601 Жыл бұрын

    Wow! This world looks so cool! Really exited for the future of Artifexia!

  • @jelkbaker9780
    @jelkbaker9780 Жыл бұрын

    WOOO! Do not regret bringing the rest of this series for the past few days, perfectly timed.

  • @sannekimenai639
    @sannekimenai639 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing stuff! Can't wait to see what's next!

  • @yannickschmied
    @yannickschmied Жыл бұрын

    Now map drawing? I cant wait to see erosion have an effect on the mountains

  • @yellowbutterfly6796
    @yellowbutterfly6796 Жыл бұрын

    nice! much thanks to world building pasta for helping with putting this together as well

  • @thirdcoastfirebird
    @thirdcoastfirebird Жыл бұрын

    Great video keep up the great work.

  • @krzysztofroskowski8971
    @krzysztofroskowski8971 Жыл бұрын

    I'm excited for the 'all that good stuff'! This was a nice journey, from the beginning of Your first gplates presentation to this one, complete geo world history.

  • @whatshappening708
    @whatshappening708 Жыл бұрын

    I'm only at my second rifting event on my world, but I've watched each of the videos a couple of times. I'm absolutely enraptured with this process. So cool. Thank you

  • @trajanindomitus108
    @trajanindomitus108 Жыл бұрын

    This is so freaking cool!!

  • @Kasaaz
    @Kasaaz Жыл бұрын

    I was just reading about the Paratethys Sea that is responsible for today's Black Sea and Caspian Sea and so this is very fitting.

  • @yoti2155
    @yoti2155 Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic! I'm really loving this series and it's great to see it all come together! So far in the series, have you been demonstrating plates? Unless I've totally forgotten, I don't remember you covering the actual landmasses, or are they what you've been looking at and the plates are just the combination of landmasses and ocean crusts?

  • @itisALWAYSR.A.

    @itisALWAYSR.A.

    Жыл бұрын

    A certain amount of the theory is in old videos on similar topics- but basically the land masses split and collide per the tectonics and crusts, and their interactions shape accordingly.

  • @JohnSmith-zf1lq
    @JohnSmith-zf1lq Жыл бұрын

    this is dope

  • @OnLowBattery
    @OnLowBattery Жыл бұрын

    15:48 yessss great book. I was wondering if you were going to bring that up.

  • @Hwelhos
    @Hwelhos Жыл бұрын

    tbh working with how continents moved and working with gplates is nothing for me, however this looks sick, really well done

  • @KianaWolf
    @KianaWolf Жыл бұрын

    I'm really looking forward to seeing what happens with that isolated bit of ocean around 15:00. Something about them always peaks my curiosity. Cave pools full of blind fish do that, too. Maybe something about it being a thematic inversion of isolated island species tickles my brain.

  • @AaronGeo
    @AaronGeo Жыл бұрын

    Do Spec Evo!! I'm really excited to se Vanga-Vangog do those critters.

  • @KiarraThune
    @KiarraThune Жыл бұрын

    This is very evocative. By that I mean once we arrived at the "current time" I began picturing the civilisations that would inhabit the continents and island arcs. But then I remembered that it's "spec' bio" so the human-like civilisations I pictured wouldn't be there. I wonder what effect the giant Southern continent would have on the climate as there will be lots of ice there. Also, would the old inland sea in the north have ancient fish species? Certainly they'd be isolated. Could they be intelligent coelacanths?

  • @Parlepape

    @Parlepape

    Жыл бұрын

    I believe Artifexian mentioned humans would indeed exist on this world. Probably as colonizers instead of naturally evolving doe

  • @Nothingineternity

    @Nothingineternity

    Жыл бұрын

    In the world I’ve been working on a dragon like species evolved from an armored fish species in an isolated inland sea.

  • @gxdxmv
    @gxdxmv Жыл бұрын

    That's an impressive work

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    Shout out worldbuildingpasta!

  • @khilorn
    @khilorn Жыл бұрын

    HYPE 👏 🥳

  • @arthurmachabee3606
    @arthurmachabee360610 ай бұрын

    I love how during the animations the polar distortion just causes the southbound plate to just slowly "schloooooop" across the bottom border of the map :D

  • @noahclinch3241
    @noahclinch3241 Жыл бұрын

    How do you get the topology boundaries to interact so well with each other. Why do the subduction boundaries swallow the divergent boundaries instead of them overlapping, is it just the configuration of the features making up the topologies?

  • @kanski9
    @kanski9 Жыл бұрын

    ahh, pure gold this is.

  • @cassie5248
    @cassie5248 Жыл бұрын

    15:48 this made me go down a wikipedia rabbit hole trying to find what you meant by this, and now i have a book i'd like to read

  • @crusatyr1452
    @crusatyr1452 Жыл бұрын

    LET'S GOOOOO

  • @Dr.LemonMan
    @Dr.LemonMan Жыл бұрын

    upon seeing this video i immediately went "oh fuck yeah" so very dope to see! Was really interesting to see the age of the ocean crust too

  • @cupkelpie4656
    @cupkelpie4656 Жыл бұрын

    very cool

  • @spiritgaming1442
    @spiritgaming14422 ай бұрын

    Hey Artifexia, I've been watching your worldbuilding series and enjoying it. Recently I've started following your Gplates tutorial and noticed in the final world the Topological boundaries (the divergent, convergent, and transform boundaries) will sink under each other seamlessly. I can't figure out how. It looks like the boundaries are separated by a layer, but looking at the layers in this video it doesn't seem like that. Is there a point on the boundaries that ends between the boundaries? I NEED ANSWERS

  • @stefanodadamo6809
    @stefanodadamo6809 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating. We're but motes on the surface of (geological) history.

  • @stephenrider6107
    @stephenrider6107 Жыл бұрын

    "We will get to that, internet. Don't worry" promises, promises.

  • @SlushieeeeTheCatgirl
    @SlushieeeeTheCatgirl Жыл бұрын

    FINALLY! soon for the spec evo if thats still in the plan

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    It is but not soon. We'll need to sort out the topography and climate before we can talk biology

  • @user-mc7tu3zu9f
    @user-mc7tu3zu9f Жыл бұрын

    finally!

  • @kegusskardosan9324
    @kegusskardosan932425 күн бұрын

    does anyone know, what he is doing with the rifts and subduction zones in de full timelapse (with the forming Ocean platforms)? Im trying to figure it out, but i dont know what to do there - ive tried it myself

  • @ronantheotec8563
    @ronantheotec85636 ай бұрын

    There's a lot a detail we didn't get, like the fact that his rift move or, the boundaries.

  • @spiritgaming1442

    @spiritgaming1442

    Ай бұрын

    Watch the advanced video. He covers all the dynamically moving parts in that video.

  • @patrickjones3593
    @patrickjones35935 ай бұрын

    Was this simulation done in Gplates or with pyGPlates? how did he dynamically make the subduction zones, well subduct? Its done so smoothly

  • @oddscomedy7128
    @oddscomedy71282 ай бұрын

    How do you remove the divergent boundaries when they're no longer equired?

  • @Luredreier
    @Luredreier Жыл бұрын

    No mention of how there's a bit of the southern polar continent sticking up into the equator and probably being inhabitable?

  • @sophustranquillitastv4468
    @sophustranquillitastv4468 Жыл бұрын

    This isn't look similar to your demo before so the past video is just a tutorial for howto work with Gplates to create history of the world. But this is absolutely gorgeous. I still have question on how exactly to make an initial supercontinent and how to make continent move in a way that have the place the story set in to be exist in desired place while continental movement never be a straightforward process (I designed the main continent to be somewhat Eurasian dialogue situated in southern hemisphere, and the main story start in one city sit around 25 degree south in earth like planet in western part of said continent, there's somewhat tall mountain range around 250km from the city on the north but the area not far from the city can grow rice, there's main river run through the city, and there's desert or at least dry steppes in the east 2-3 days from the city by horse, and there should have a peninsula on the other side of said mountain range that extended to the equator and there's more than 2000km of land west of the city until it reach the sea). I have follow your old video and got what I want (by imagine where all the plates supposed to move in recent history so I can put feature I want) although I can't know where the old mountain range exist as I don't have information on geologic history, like if I do it with this method, but it's hard to imagine continent trajectory with the setting of a city that I already set in stone in mind. I already ask question like this in your previous video but people here in comment section suggest that I should skip these steps because it's almost impossible to make geologic history backward from modern day map, but I still want to try these nonetheless, so I would like some suggestion on how to do that, or will it be clear by itself how to after we already tried to proceed some way into the project?

  • @Lilas.Duveteux
    @Lilas.Duveteux Жыл бұрын

    You can play with moisture by adding glacial lakes. Still have a high degree of continentality, just have some little moisture.

  • @SPARR0E
    @SPARR0E Жыл бұрын

    Are there any major fresh water formations? Or would that be done when considering glaciers and rivers?

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    The latter

  • @davidrogers8030
    @davidrogers8030 Жыл бұрын

    Great fun. I'm a bit slow so would have appreciated an early colour key intro.

  • @magnuswright5572
    @magnuswright5572 Жыл бұрын

    Should've played with the metadata to make the playbar 850 million years long smh

  • @Diesalot-sc9qz

    @Diesalot-sc9qz

    Жыл бұрын

    I think that can create a lot of messy data for GPlates, as all the numbers are aligned with the current ones, so changing it would be tedious and possibly destructive to the project. It’s much safer and easier to change the dates after GPlates (in the illustrator stage).

  • @magnuswright5572

    @magnuswright5572

    Жыл бұрын

    No, the video metadata. You can mess with a video file to make the playbar longer than the video actually is

  • @daniel_rossy_explica
    @daniel_rossy_explica8 ай бұрын

    I was looking more closely at the animation and noticed a ton of glitches and errros: For one thing, features appear and dissapear where they shouldn't do that, and at 5:56 your mouse is over a plate boundary shaped like a cross. That is a glaring mistake, if I learnt anything.

  • @lucas_e_jones
    @lucas_e_jones Жыл бұрын

    Hey, I had a question: what is the correct way to handle a LIP being involved in a collision? Would the area of the LIP that was overtaken by orogenies lose its distinctiveness? Or would it remain a notably basaltic mountain area?

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    "Would the area of the LIP that was overtaken by orogenies lose its distinctiveness" Not an expert at all, but this is how I would think about it.

  • @tripledeluxeguy
    @tripledeluxeguy Жыл бұрын

    That southern continent is screaming to house a cold India.

  • @Great_Olaf5
    @Great_Olaf5 Жыл бұрын

    I don't recall if you explained why older ocean crust is denser. Is it just denser from the start, like the magma coming out of the mantle in further back parts of the timeline is itself denser than modern mantle material, or does the ocean crust become denser with age, and if so, by what mechanism?

  • @Kharmitas

    @Kharmitas

    Жыл бұрын

    Temperature, apparently. Older oceanic crust has had more time to cool, which causes it to form into denser, less buoyant rocks over time, while newer oceanic crust still retains much of its initial heat and tends to be in the form of less dense minerals that can more easily sit on top.

  • @Great_Olaf5

    @Great_Olaf5

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kharmitas Ah, that makes sense, thank you.

  • @qwertydavid8070
    @qwertydavid8070 Жыл бұрын

    Babe wake up new planet just dropped

  • @daniel_rossy_explica
    @daniel_rossy_explica Жыл бұрын

    I only have one question: Those weird shapes on the landmasses at the beggining of the simulation are just large igneous provinces of the past or old mountains that got eroded before the start of the simulation?

  • @fridtjofkielgast1883

    @fridtjofkielgast1883

    Жыл бұрын

    I think those are the cratons

  • @daniel_rossy_explica

    @daniel_rossy_explica

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fridtjofkielgast1883 yes. I realized that after asking the question.

  • @shufflecat3334
    @shufflecat333411 ай бұрын

    Well, after watching how much this guy is putting into his world I am a little ashamed of my notepad document that's like "yeah there's like people, and they like do stuff"

  • @annethereseeltervag3566
    @annethereseeltervag3566 Жыл бұрын

    Give me the planet temperature formula! Now!

  • @gdminecraftsike3996
    @gdminecraftsike3996 Жыл бұрын

    can anyone help me with this, a there is something that is going wrong and I don't know why and his tutorial videos dont explain it so could som3eone try to help me?

  • @Scaveged
    @Scaveged Жыл бұрын

    Can someone compare this to the tutorial one pls

  • @jotasietesiete4397
    @jotasietesiete4397 Жыл бұрын

    I asume the inhabitants of this world will use a cartographic projection that distorts the south continent less than mercator does Also it looks like a dragon in orthographic

  • @King_Ben_IV
    @King_Ben_IV Жыл бұрын

    Would have been nice if so much didn't happen around the poles. The wrapping casued by the projection meant of alot iof the detail was hard to understand. additionallyu the fact the 2nd super continent collided along the edeg of the map made that hard to see Overall, this was a good video just the view used and choices made meant alot of detail was lost.

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    A lot of this will be mitigated when I put it into the reference doc

  • @JulienDavid2024
    @JulienDavid2024 Жыл бұрын

    Remember your Oa conlang? I need a dictionary for it. Please make it!

  • @ATOM-vv3xu
    @ATOM-vv3xu Жыл бұрын

    hyyyppee, today I started my simulation

  • @Not_Dane_Heart
    @Not_Dane_Heart Жыл бұрын

    NEW EPISODE

  • @crimsonhawk52
    @crimsonhawk52 Жыл бұрын

    16:30 continents going north would not meet the backend of the south polar continent

  • @otherperson

    @otherperson

    Жыл бұрын

    Why not? I don't disbelieve you, I just want to understand

  • @daniel_rossy_explica

    @daniel_rossy_explica

    Жыл бұрын

    Eventually, they would, if not interrupted by other landmass. They will pass the equator first by the edges of the map (by virtue of the proyection) but if they continue they might impact the "then" southern continent, assuming that it didn't move past that point. They way he phrased implies that the north and south edges of the map meet, which is incorrect. I think that's what you mean, right?

  • @ajgibson1307
    @ajgibson1307 Жыл бұрын

    God bless

  • @jacob_and_william
    @jacob_and_william Жыл бұрын

    Someone remind me why LIPs form? In the context of these simulations

  • @dericnorth8863

    @dericnorth8863

    Жыл бұрын

    Upwelling of mantle plumes from either earlier subducted crust helping to drive convection at the upper mantle, large superswells, or from deep at the core boundary. When these meet continental lithosphere they can punch through. LIPs are usually really quick, depositing in less than a million years. They often precede a future rift. There's a lot of competing theories/hypotheses about how much each type of reason is the driving force. There's even a belief that some hotspot + LIP combos (which happen to be antipodal) are LIPs caused by meteor impacts (although so far I believe that's not a very strongly-held opinion).

  • @AtarahDerek
    @AtarahDerek Жыл бұрын

    Let's say you started out with a row of cratons that more closely resembled an arc of New Zealand sized islands--basically what geologists think the first dry land on earth looked like. And then you ran the simulation through two supercontinent cycles. But the simulation lasts only 24 hours. What kinds of effects would that insanely rapid worldbuilding have on the planet? We're not including any life forms at all in this equation. Earth is a barren, sterile rock mostly covered in water in this scenario.

  • @Jpteryx

    @Jpteryx

    Жыл бұрын

    Then the continents would have to have moved 40 000 km in 24 hours, or 1739 km/hr. All that friction will certainly melt some rock and evaporate some water, possibly even leading to a runaway greenhouse effect.

  • @AtarahDerek

    @AtarahDerek

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Jpteryx Okay, so then we drop an entire biomass made up of plants and microorganisms on the planet. Just plop it right in there, because the universe is our sandbox. What happens then? Does it stop the greenhouse effect or accelerate it?

  • @Jpteryx

    @Jpteryx

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AtarahDerek The presence of autotrophs will reduce the greenhouse effect eventually, if they have enough time to start burying carbon, but not necessarily fast enough to prevent the runaway greenhouse from evaporating the oceans.

  • @AtarahDerek

    @AtarahDerek

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Jpteryx Interesting. So you'd basically have to put a lid on the world in order to prevent all that evaporated water from escaping and force it to eventually fall back onto the surface.

  • @scptime1188
    @scptime1188 Жыл бұрын

    I wanna do this for my world so bad but i don't have the patience 😢😢😢😢

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    You totally don't have to do any of this. One can get a perfectly good world map without a deep geological history. Though I would recommend trying to think about where your landmasses came from so you can make a good stab at believable topography.

  • @zacharymoss2994
    @zacharymoss2994 Жыл бұрын

    Who would inherent this strange world

  • @Duiker36

    @Duiker36

    Жыл бұрын

    There's really nothing strange about this world.

  • @TAP7a
    @TAP7a Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for caveating the GGS mention. Geography is spectacularly important but to cherry pick data just to remove the impact of choice, preference and agency really misses the point

  • @rickvrieling
    @rickvrieling Жыл бұрын

    Goodday

  • @yipperson2974
    @yipperson2974 Жыл бұрын

    Are you gonna invent creatures to put on your planet?

  • @davidcoquelle3081
    @davidcoquelle3081 Жыл бұрын

    DO RETROGRADE CLIMATES🥺🥺

  • @daniel_rossy_explica

    @daniel_rossy_explica

    Жыл бұрын

    He already did that in an older video.

  • @davidcoquelle3081

    @davidcoquelle3081

    Жыл бұрын

    I know, but I meant do it in his world

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    We'll see when we come to climate. If I think I can get nicer climate zones if retrograde then I'll switch else not

  • @finnkay2832
    @finnkay2832 Жыл бұрын

    Day 1 of asking for you to show us how to make a Paper currency for our worlds🙏😁

  • @junespoesy
    @junespoesy Жыл бұрын

    Do you think gaming studios need conlangers for their fantasy games?

  • @stephenrider6107
    @stephenrider6107 Жыл бұрын

    w00t!

  • @LeanSt
    @LeanSt Жыл бұрын

    Can we get into culture animals races and stuff now 😂

  • @vocabpope
    @vocabpope Жыл бұрын

    Who's Ed Grout?? You kinda growled his name all sexy there for some reason.

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    That's how we roll here

  • @zkingsalsa
    @zkingsalsa Жыл бұрын

    artifexia face reveal?

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    Already been done :)

  • @zkingsalsa

    @zkingsalsa

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Artifexian i meant the world artifexia, because you showed the map, unless that is what you’re talking about

  • @sambal5108
    @sambal5108 Жыл бұрын

    that was a very long 5 months

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed myself

  • @sambal5108

    @sambal5108

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Artifexian i'm glad, i just wish you could have uploaded them at the same time

  • @hungryduckling1345
    @hungryduckling1345 Жыл бұрын

    42 seconds

  • @icevlad148
    @icevlad148 Жыл бұрын

    are we finally out of GplatesSleeper saga?

  • @Artifexian

    @Artifexian

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes! Gplates will still feature a lot in the series but I can minimise the amount of on screen GPlates time, cause the fundamentals of the app have been covered.

Келесі