REACTION UNIVERSE TIME-LAPSE 15 BILLION YEARS IN 10 MINUTES

  Рет қаралды 13,966

ViewMasters Reactions

ViewMasters Reactions

5 жыл бұрын

Hey guys, something me and my brother are very interested in is the universe and time. He sent me this video and I think it is gorgeous and a very fascinating process showing basically the entire evolution of...well everything lol Let me know if you guys dig this kinda stuff. LIKE and SUBSCRIBE if you are ENTERTAINED!!!
Original Video by melodysheep:
• TIMELAPSE OF THE ENTIR...

Пікірлер: 33
@user-cu3jk6qx5w
@user-cu3jk6qx5w 5 жыл бұрын
Yes i think you should really watch the follow up to this one. It's is simply breathtaking. I liked the video by the way, the only small criticism i have is that sometimes you talk over some amazing and important dialogue, which i find a little bit annoying sometimes, but i hope you at least read it. (I assume that's the reason why you turned on captions.) I'm eagerly waiting for the next one :)
@ViewMastersReactions
@ViewMastersReactions 5 жыл бұрын
Gonna react to it tm!!
@roverclover3178
@roverclover3178 5 жыл бұрын
@@ViewMastersReactions YES Cant wait!!!
@informing_
@informing_ 3 жыл бұрын
Video: "The interior of the black holes is forever hidden from us" reaction: "look at the colors" xD
@johansorensson7578
@johansorensson7578 5 жыл бұрын
"The ice age" was way after the dinosaurs. That one only lasted a couple of thousand years and only covered the northern parts of the globe. The ice age shown here is called "Snowball Earth" because it covered the entire surface. This was obviously before complex life began to exist. It lasted for millions of years.
@DaimonAnimations
@DaimonAnimations 2 жыл бұрын
Shout out to the Camera man for filming before the big bang!
@kookoolina2907
@kookoolina2907 5 жыл бұрын
Your reactions are so fun to watch! I recommend you react to "the history of the entire world I guess" it's really cool and comedic at the same time.
@NoMustang273
@NoMustang273 5 жыл бұрын
Unless it was sarcasm and i' dumb there was a lot of stuff before the dinosaurs. a lot. Also watch the follow up called timelapse of the future
@ViewMastersReactions
@ViewMastersReactions 5 жыл бұрын
I thought the same thing. I was like ohh here comes the dinosaurs....5 seconds later The End haha
@hyperion882
@hyperion882 2 жыл бұрын
You should combine Timelapse of the universe and the future that’s way you will getTwo videos in one
@widget3672
@widget3672 4 жыл бұрын
Loved it, I studied a variety of sciences (none too much but enough to appreciate them) and the appearance of life on earth is still a somewhat shrouded mystery - we know of processes and resources that would allow for abiogenesis (the natural formation of life from non-life) but we are not fully certain. Evolution is a considerably better understood science and we believe the first 'complex life' would have been Eukaryotic cells - everything before being a bacterium, archaum or virus ancestor (viruses are also a perplexing mystery we are yet to solve). Eukaryotic life is fundamentally different from bacterial and archaic life (which are kinda practically the same - though imagine trying to differentiate between a dog and two bacteria and the two bacteria are as different as the dog is to each of them). The biggest difference in eukaryotes is complexity of the cellular machines and mechanisms they use - we also believe that the mitochondria (the powerhouse of the cell) was actually a kind of bacterium that an early eukaryote engulfed and instead of digesting it - the eukaryote kept the bacterium and had it perform as a new part of the cellular machinery - still with it's own DNA. We, again, (as far as I know) have no idea why this happened but it changed everything for life on earth - and when a similar thing happened involving a simple bacterial photosynthesiser that resulted in the now abundant chloroplast - part of plant cells that allows photosynthesis in all plants today - before this distinguishing future animals and plants would have been nearly impossible. The first multicellular life was likely simple as well, we think things like (modern) jellyfish would not have been the first multicellular life - but the fossil record describes a time around 500-600 million years ago called "The Cambrian Explosion" - which saw every basic blueprint for life that would go on to become entire phylums later. Though all tetrapods - being animals with 4 limbs (yes, all of them) - had not yet come into form, but simple chordates (imagine a super simple fish - like a tunicate that could swim and give it the first semblance of a backbone) had come into existence during this time. At current we describe 2 main classifications of body plan - radial and bilateral (radial is like a jellyfish, anemone, starfish - bilateral is something you could only bisect (cut perfectly in two) in one way (imagine all animals that you could do that with - literally all the fish, the insects, the mammals, reptiles and amphibians). And in the fossil record from this time, we found some 22 different body plans, from which only these two still exist today. Extinctions have happened many times in the past - for example that ice age that threw you off a bit - that was one of the first mass extinction events that gave way to the Cambrian explosion - but there have been other ice ages. The last one ended just around 10,000 years ago and we are now in what's called an 'interglacial period' - and the dinosaurs dominated the world for over 100 million years before they were made extinct by a meteor that we believe crashed down in modern-day Yucatan peninsula - Mexico (the crater is still kind of there - but it's too big to see from the ground, heck I don't know if the ISS is high enough - but it's very old and faded). The most troubling thing about the dinosaur extinction is that I learned why the dinosaurs went extinct - they were the biggest animals around, thus they needed huge amounts of oxygen and food to sustain themselves. When the meteor hit, of course those stuck under it fared rather badly, but the real damage wasn't just a tsunami and fire - dinosaurs on the far side of the planet might get some earthquakes but it'll be weeks before much changes beyond that. No, the biggest impact we think was the ash and dust kicked up into the atmosphere that blocked out the sun for years and resulted in essentially a world-wide shortage of food and with less plant activity, you can bet there wasn't enough air for animals to get that big... But if you where a small mammal ancestor, at this point you would have burrowing insect eating little guys - who don't need that much food or air and can hide from outside adverse conditions in their burrow (not many caves big enough for a brontosaurus). Translate the cause and effect of that damage to today's situation. As individuals we are not huge, but as a population we are. We are so specialised in how we work that a collapse of global trade puts people out of work and that already does a lot of damage - but with climate change we see it coming and threatening to change a lot of things for us (all of us, everywhere) I worry that humanity wouldn't pass over like the dinosaurs... No I expect people will fight and do anything to survive - even if it puts other species into extinction - even if those species are species that all other organisms need to survive. The concept of 'ecosystem services' is an attempt to economically value the things the ecosystems around us do - and simply put, even if we didn't have to do decades of research to develop the technologies to replace nature in it's function, we'd still be wasting billions of dollars (per country) just to oxygenate the air and recycle water, carbon and nitrogen - all things that ecosystems do for free. It seems to me like economic suicide to break this deal (and a more literal form of suicide too, tbh). Anyway, don't know if this will ever be read by someone but if someone does get this far, hope this was enlightening in some regard and if you have any questions then please do ask and I will try to be more concise than this...
@coltonconroy5469
@coltonconroy5469 5 жыл бұрын
Those triceps are looking good
@RowanSteyn3D
@RowanSteyn3D 5 жыл бұрын
yea you should definitely do the one he just released too the one for the future :D
@ViewMastersReactions
@ViewMastersReactions 5 жыл бұрын
I definitely will. It was actual much more beautiful and epic with the music then I thought it would be in this one and my brother says the next is even better.
@redgeorgieredgeorgie
@redgeorgieredgeorgie 5 жыл бұрын
There have been quite a few ice ages on the planet.
@OriginalPuro
@OriginalPuro 4 ай бұрын
One thousand millions is one billion. You thought the Ice age was the killer of dinosaurs? Hint: asteroid.
@raymasters4929
@raymasters4929 5 жыл бұрын
You wanna see destruction on a mind boggling level? Watch the next one! I guess we'll see if people like it first though haha.
@ViewMastersReactions
@ViewMastersReactions 5 жыл бұрын
Getting decent view response so I think I'll do it just cuz Im curious now lol
@hyperion882
@hyperion882 2 жыл бұрын
The video that you’re watching is 11 minutes
@sicklymoonlight
@sicklymoonlight 5 жыл бұрын
Watch the next one!
@ViewMastersReactions
@ViewMastersReactions 5 жыл бұрын
Should be up in a couple hours hopefully!
@cauldron938
@cauldron938 3 жыл бұрын
Request:react to timeline of the universe by harry evett
@Adnanul543
@Adnanul543 2 жыл бұрын
Yes 15B years not 13B years yes
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