Sometimes you're the windshield, sometimes you're the bug
@moranplanoАй бұрын
Everyone must ask this of themselves, at various times..."Am I the Windshield or the Bug..?" (oh, by the way, WHO originated this phrase? Quite, clever..)
@Knucklehead123Ай бұрын
Words from the famous Country and Western Song, "We are all just living here in a world of strife, and I am just a bug on the windshield of life."
@rickpontificates3406Ай бұрын
Consider this; the Milky Way and Andromeda are expected to collide, but due to large gaps between objects, no planets/stars are likely to collide, so "the bounce" may actually mean nothing
@leeannedowdell21102 ай бұрын
5 mass extinctions, that we know of currently, doesn’t mean that the galactic plane has anything to do with it. The great Oxidation event wasn’t caused through external forces. That was due to life on this earth. At the time of the KT event, the Declan traps eruptions were also taking place. It wasn’t just the asteroid that contributed to the mass extinction.
@FosterTravis1071Ай бұрын
It's simply OUR turn to go out of existence
@eoachan9304Ай бұрын
Exactly!
@fraserconnell21Ай бұрын
So When's next oh fuck epoch due to begin ?
@leeannedowdell2110Ай бұрын
@ Well for the USA it’s 20th January 😂😂
@crazyidiot5309Ай бұрын
The Deccans released so much sulfur dioxide, CO2, and methane that if it hadn't stopped it would have killed everything on this planet. Everything. And it would have likely caused a Venus like superheated atmosphere for a LOOOOOONG time, until everything cooled down.
@zarnell2 ай бұрын
When it comes, we can all "look up" and realize that yes.... we really had it all didn't we.
@wayneanderton49532 ай бұрын
I don't watch Netflix
@bosatsu762 ай бұрын
@@wayneanderton4953 And we all care about it... Not.
@1stepback12 ай бұрын
Just finished watching the movie. Logged into KZbin and this was the first thing I read. Your message
@ronadams3107Ай бұрын
Sometimes, you just have to accept that you've had a good run, and now it's time for new players to take the field.
@mbradley274Ай бұрын
Absolutely. Extinction and evolution don't stop just because a species is a bunch of really swell guys. People spent the last four years saying "follow the science", but most of them are in denial about the inescapable aspects of extinction and evolution.
@BrianWasson-o3iАй бұрын
Was the planet hotter because the dinosours were burning fossil feuls?
@RobotsandMonstersАй бұрын
We are pretty lucky to have come up with carbon tax, or we might have suffered the same fate.
@buckmurdock202529 күн бұрын
No, the Dino's actually did something about the greenhouse effect. By eating a lot of vegetation, growing fat and decomposing at the bottom of some swamp or river or sea or ocean thus capturing carbondioxide. That's why we still have it cool.
@Mr_Obvious14 күн бұрын
no, it was warmer from the methane which was caused by all those dinosaur farts. Sorta like cow farts are now. Dinosaurs were a lot biger though, so a sauropod whould expel enough in one fart to heat your home for a month!😆
@44hawk28Ай бұрын
The Earth crosses the galactic Meridian approximately every 12,500 years. The last time we crossed it we went from the South to the north side of the galactic Meridian in December of 2012. Just where in the world did you get the idea that it happens every 30 to 40 million years? The only calendar on the earth that marks this is the reset of the Mayan calendar and it's precisely accurate
@johnwalker8417Ай бұрын
Your math is way off.
@cuddlycholla3438Ай бұрын
Round and round we go, yet we want time to be a straight line forward, and around we go again 💜
@dinomite59224 күн бұрын
If you draw a line from the Earth through the Sun out into the Milky Way, that line will cross the Galactic Meridian at the center of the Milky Way every 12,500 years as the Earth orbits the Sun. The Mayan's observed that the Sun as viewed from Earth passes through the center of the darkest part of the Milky Way as seen in the sky every 12,500 years and they based their Long calendar on this scientific fact. A different concept is the Sun orbiting the Milky Way. As the Sun goes round and round the center of the Milky Way it also goes up and down and through the Galactic Plane. The Sun orbits the Galactic Plane and passes through it every 30 to 40 million years. The Galactic Plane is a very dangerous place for Earth to pass through.
@dinomite59224 күн бұрын
@@cuddlycholla3438 Travelling a straight line in space-time means you are travelling at the speed of light, but then according to Relativity there is no time for you. You can only experience time if you have mass and go slower than the speed of light, but then in space-time you can only travel in curves and must go round and around we go again.
@mikeharrington55932 ай бұрын
We cannot become an interplanetary species without global collaboration, & that is presently IMPOSSIBLE with the toxic mix of world leaders which comprise brutal tyrants & self-serving oligarchies, kleptocracies & inadequate political structures to seek mutual cooperation.
@biomechanique68742 ай бұрын
Your first six words.
@Tigdude2 ай бұрын
Not going anywhere...Jesus said the meek would inherit the earth. Matthew 5:5 The wicked will be done away with psalms 37:9-11 & verse29
@ricf95922 ай бұрын
Sorry, but we aren't in the realm of Star Trek. Impossible I'm afraid. No where to go.
@darko714Ай бұрын
If 'collaboration' means a single world govenment, no thanks - that would be totalitarian hell. I'd rather take my chances with the current oligarchies and kleptocracies.
@CaptainNeroАй бұрын
United countries of earth could work.
@nathanielhellerstein58712 ай бұрын
Why would passing through the galactic plane cause the Earth's core to heat up?
@Bill-im6nt2 ай бұрын
The idea appears to have taken place shortly after marijuana was legalized.
@bosatsu762 ай бұрын
@@Bill-im6nt lol.... That DOES explain a lot..
@javastream50152 ай бұрын
The author watched the movie "2012" too often. 😂
@leighchristopherson24552 ай бұрын
There is an emanation of energy that comes from the Galactic core, referred to as the Galactic field sheet. When we cross this emanation the dense metal core of the earth absorbs energy. A channel called Suspicious Observers, claims a much more frequent occurrence pattern, every twelve thousand years. The last would have been the Younger Dryas Event.
@edb38772 ай бұрын
@@leighchristopherson2455 Is it possible that the mass in the area where the Solar system passes, exerts gravimetric force on the Earth and other planets, effectively stretching and then compressing them? If so, then this would be an effect similar to that of some of the moons of Saturn and Jupiter that are warmed by the stretching and compression of these moons. The result could be a weakening of the crust of the Earth and rising volcanism, not to mention more impacts on the Earth and other planets of galactic debris.
@Kyanzes2 ай бұрын
Who knows how many civilizations have thrived and fallen. Even if we only consider the last 500 million years, this is such a vast and hard to grasp time scale that we cannot really hope to learn much about specific periods. Maybe, by luck, here and there some trace of information.
@TheRotnflesh2 ай бұрын
The evidence that someone was building structures as long as 470,000 years ago indicates that civilization did exist long long ago, and that our form of civilization is not necessarily new except in its appearance. We use coal, wood, and even uranium tk generate energy...by boiling water and spinning a turbine. Meanwhile, way back in the way, they used vibrational crystal technology. Their structures were the purest and densest granite, andesite, and basalt. Look into how those may manipulate electromagnetism and sono tech (boiling water using ultrasonic waves is 100x faster than fire, and granite can vibrate in this way). Ringing stones were their key resource, like our 'steel', and they manipulated quartz stone vibrationally. Then their world was destroyed, finally, as comet chunks blasted into the Laurentide Icesheet at Sachanaw Bay, sending massive glacier chunks as much as 800 miles away (These are now known by names such as the Carolina Bays). This event, 12,900 years ago, kind of ended the last civilization. Most of their ruins lie still across the world, and every modern civilization has been fighting over their secrets since Egypt/Khem which is where the repository of information from that era was kept. Why did every ancient civilization build or rebuilt Pyramids?
@nostrum64102 ай бұрын
seems unlikely to have ancient civilizations that left so little evidence behind
@TheRotnflesh2 ай бұрын
@nostrum6410 What do you expect to survive geomagnetic excursions, airburst comet strikes, supervolcano eruptions, 9.0+ earthquakes, and mega tsunamis? Aside from that: the ocean level is never constant. 13,000 years ago it was 400+ feet lower amd that water was bound in ice sheets and glaciers
@TheRotnflesh2 ай бұрын
@nostrum6410 keeping the abovesaid in mind: the evidence thus far indicates that a comet or many pieces of a comet struck the northern hemisphere around 13,000 years ago, launching glaciers the size of stadiums over 800 miles. These thpusands of ice glaciers liquified the ground everywhere they struck (see: Carolina Bays, Antonio Zamora). This event likely triggered the Younger Dryas, amd a collapse of the last advanced civilization.
@nostrum64102 ай бұрын
@@TheRotnflesh geomagnetic excursions we would be unlikely to even notice and certainly wouldn't destroy all evidence of a civilization. airburst comet strikes happen all the time and don't typically do much damage. super volcano would certainly effect the climate, but wouldn't really destroy much on a global scale. 9.0 earth quakes are not uncommon either so not sure how they could wipe out all evidence. Tsunami can certainly be devastating and could wipe out a lot of evidence, but not all, and not on a global scale. we have mountains of evidence for life forms from the Cambrian, but a civilization from a few million years ago somehow got missed? getting from a comet hit some glaciers to ancient civilizations is one hell of a leap
@nathanielhellerstein58712 ай бұрын
Asteroids do not leave smoke trails in space.
@svennoren90472 ай бұрын
Comets do, kinda sorta.
@xoxide10172 ай бұрын
The asteroid that hit earth was not the reason dino's and so many species died.. they were already dying for millions of years before.... Look at the study done on the center of the impact crater and the core samples that were done. IT WAS IMPORTANT AND HAPPENED YES but so much was already collapsing before hand.
@johng4093Ай бұрын
Because it''s bad for their health.
@rosestarratt7053Ай бұрын
No, but they do when travelling through atmosphere when they are burning.
@mikewolf-x6tАй бұрын
Ice trail
@ClandestineMerkabaАй бұрын
Suspicious0bserver has been on this for over a decade.
@WideCuriosity2 ай бұрын
You don't mention why moving through the galaxy plane would heat a planet's core. Also, as you make clear later, despite saying that we are close to moving through again, turns out that is many many years in the future. An indication of exactly how long would've been interesting.
@blest5132Ай бұрын
do you really believe anybody knows what happened 25,000,000 years ago or knows what's gonna happen tomorrow? they don't.
@CorvusNytheriaАй бұрын
There are no planets that man could live openly on other than this one.
@THEENERGYINHALER16 күн бұрын
there are billions and billions and billions of planets... so thats wrong
@walkergamble45042 ай бұрын
I agree that if we don’t find a way to colonize other places that our chances of eventually becoming extinct is a lot higher
@ricf95922 ай бұрын
Be realistic, please. We live here on this planet. It's the only place. There are no other places. It's here or nowhere.
@brentg8600Ай бұрын
@ricf9592 forever a pessimist. Who knows where we'll be in a million years.
@CorvusNytheriaАй бұрын
It's absolutely assured that we will go extinct. No matter how far we travel or what we discover. At some point in the far future everything in this universe will go cold and dark. Extinction is inevitable.
@SuperDPJRАй бұрын
@@brentg8600 Most likely dead...
@Jeremy9697Ай бұрын
@@ricf9592 yes.. maybe you should be realistic. Ppl like you also said we could never cross the seas... or we would never fly. YET. . .
@donaldsmith28329 күн бұрын
Thank you enjoyed it very much❤❤❤😊😊😊😊
@emmettedavidson7055Ай бұрын
I researched this 30 million year cycle some time ago, and my understanding is we passed through the plane just a few million years ago. Basically, from the last big extinction event of 65M years ago take off 30M (i.e. 35M years ago) and then another (5M years ago), so our next roll of the dice is scheduled for 25M years from now. If it were just a few "hundreds of thousands" of years off that'd be rather concerning, civilizationally speaking.
@simonruszczak5563Ай бұрын
Earth crossed the galactic equator in 2012. We're in the middle of it.
@emmettedavidson7055Ай бұрын
@@simonruszczak5563 Yeah well, the Mayan calendar's ending 2600 year cycle has to do with Earth's precession of the equinoxes, but nothing to do with the Sun's bobbing up and down vis a vis galactic structure. They knew nothing of magnetic fields emanating from its nucleus (central super massive black hole AKA Sagittarius A*), which explains the motion. As I said, we bobbed through to topside about 5M years ago (rather safely), and will reach maximum safety at the top of the sine curve in about 10M years before starting back down again.
@JohnGiorgi-d3x22 күн бұрын
Wait. First you said the solar system passes through the galactic plane every 30 to 34 million years, then later in the video you said it passes through every 35 to 40 million years. According to current astronomical estimates, the last time Earth passed through the galactic plane was approximately 3 million years ago so another possible error in this video. Experts predict that it will take another 30 million years for our solar system to cross the galactic plane again. And lastly, the earths core heating up when it passes through the galactic plane is not supported by current research.
@byronedwards8157Ай бұрын
Subscribed… as long as you link your studies in the description.
@jim.franklinАй бұрын
Oh dear. This is bordering on the flat earth theories. You really need to research these idea properly and report both sides of the story. The KT event impactor came from the main asteroid belt and chemical analysis indicates, based on drilled cored into the Chixalube crater, that it may have been a part of the original larger body that ended up giving us Vesta, the largest asteroid that likely started as a Dwarf planet - Ceres is still referred to as the largest, but it is a dwarf planet. Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) like the Deccan Traps, are known all over the world and closely associated with, mostly, known Mantle Plume activity, examples are, the Coast Range Batholith, Patagonia, Siberian Traps, Peru-Chile Batholith, Mackenzie Large Igneous Province and the afor mentioned Deccan Traps. The Siberian Traps are likely responsible for the greatest mass extinction event in Earth's history some 250 million years ago - The Permian-Triassic Extinction event - but the mantle plume that caused this LIP has yet to be identified - some have speculated that the possible mantle plume that now sits some 40km beneath the Eifel region in Germany, and responble for the regions volcanism, could be a potential candidate, but a recent discovery has identified an active mantle plume in the arctic that could also be the culprit. Getting back to your video and the theory - lets delve in shall we. The Theory's Origin: The idea gained some traction in the 1980s when researchers observed a possible cyclical pattern in the fossil record. The hypothesis was that the solar system might pass through the galactic plane of the Milky Way at regular intervals, potentially increasing the likelihood of extinction events during those times. Some of the proposed mechanisms include: Cosmic radiation: Passing through areas of the galactic plane with higher concentrations of stars or cosmic rays might increase radiation levels, which could have harmful effects on Earth’s atmosphere and life. Gravitational disturbances: The solar system’s motion through denser areas of the galactic plane could cause gravitational effects, possibly disturbing comets in the Oort Cloud and sending them toward Earth. The Problems with the Theory: Statistical Weakness: One major issue with the galactic plane hypothesis is that the pattern of extinctions it proposed is not consistent across the geologic record. Extinctions do not occur regularly every 26-34 million years, and there is no clear evidence that these events correspond to the solar system's passage through the galactic plane. The apparent pattern observed by some researchers could be due to sampling bias or coincidence in the timing of extinction events. Statistical analyses show that the pattern is not robust and does not consistently match the galactic cycle. Lack of Causal Mechanisms: Even if the solar system were to pass through the galactic plane at regular intervals, there is no clear, scientifically validated mechanism linking this to mass extinctions. For example, cosmic radiation is much more diffuse than the theory suggests, and it's unlikely that passing through the galactic plane would significantly impact Earth's environment in such a way that it would cause extinctions. Newer Research: More recent studies have emphasized that the timing of extinction events is more likely linked to factors within the solar system, such as the dynamics of the Oort Cloud (a distant region of icy bodies) or large-scale volcanic activity, rather than galactic phenomena. Other causes, such as climate change, asteroid impacts, and tectonic activity, are better supported by evidence for periodic extinctions. Debunking the Hypothesis: Research into the timing and causes of mass extinctions has found that no consistent pattern exists that matches the solar system's passage through the galactic plane. Instead, extinctions appear to be more sporadic and influenced by other, more immediate factors like asteroid impacts (e.g., the event that caused the dinosaurs' extinction) or massive volcanic eruptions (such as the Siberian Traps). Conclusion: The idea that Earth experiences periodic extinctions tied to the solar system passing through the galactic plane is now considered a fringe theory that lacks strong scientific support. While it was an interesting hypothesis, more recent research and a closer look at extinction patterns have debunked this connection. Extinction events are more likely to be caused by a combination of factors, including planetary dynamics, asteroid impacts, and environmental changes, rather than galactic cycles. Further, it5 should be noted that other massive impacts occurred just before and just after the KT impactor, the difference was scale, estimated at twice the mass of other impactors, but primarilly the rock it impacted as this determined the chemical composition of the debris thrown into and then suspended in the atmosphere with the impact this had on the environment and the climate of the whole planet
@themaddgamer21122 ай бұрын
If we don't nuke ourselves into the stone age in ww3,imagine the technology afterwards.
@pennyjaquet84332 ай бұрын
Bring it on, says I, it is about time the earth was cleared, cleaned and had another go.
@darko714Ай бұрын
Seriously? I like our comfy, damp, filthy, moldy home. Every other planet in the solar system is weird and hostile, and the what we know about planets outside the solar system suggests Earth is a wonderful anomaly
@thelegion_within21 күн бұрын
even if the bounce effect brings about the literal apocalypse, it wont happen in the lifetime of anyone who reads this sentence - the time scales are too vast.
@THEENERGYINHALER16 күн бұрын
no shit sherlock
@Rick79LUFCАй бұрын
It must of been beautiful 😍 one lush forrest north to south east to west warm and life every were 😊
@RichardWheeler-kw7mkАй бұрын
I have an astronomy degree, but I wouldn't bet on this idea. It's more likely that there are a few undiscovered planets way out there that occasionally disrupt the orbits of smaller icy bodies.
@kevinbarry4325Ай бұрын
A world ending rock could come in behind the SUN in 13 minutes..it could be 13 million yrs. We are here to laugh,love and enjoy our very very brief time on this Big Blue Marble❤
@darrincohick223522 күн бұрын
Millions of years? Always means thousands of years.
@derekbryan28Ай бұрын
You sort of ruin your theory with "dinosaurs ruled the world for more than 150 million years" if you are suggesting every 30 to 34 million years there is a calamity. I like the theory but you are leaving out some important data points if you want a time line of every 30ish million years :)
@randyrogers8568Ай бұрын
I hope this doesn't happen this weekend. I have a bike ride scheduled.
@doc2helpАй бұрын
Hah, the comet really just ignited all those saurid farts!
@alexbowman7582Ай бұрын
Pterosaurs may only have been able to fly because the land all being in one place generated huge coastal winds.
@herbie_the_hillbillie_goatАй бұрын
What mechanism would cause the core to heat up when passing the galactic plain?
@brucebinion4189Ай бұрын
Stay on track with the core discussion. My work indicates magnetic coupling changes have been underrated & not investigated enough.
@mccormykeАй бұрын
Thing is, it likely took tens if thousands of years for all the dinisaus to become extinct. It may well have taken millions if years and there is no reason some could not survive far beyond the age of dinosaurs
@Grinder22-z3gАй бұрын
Hopefully we won’t be an interplanetary species we’ve made some mess of this planet
@tonycdriveАй бұрын
I can’t wait to see it
@jamesblossom-y1uАй бұрын
There was a s.f. story back in the earl 1950s called 'brainwave" in that story every 200 million years the earth was brought to a region of the galaxy where electricity ran 10% faster than elsewhere. The result was a sudden increase in intelligence. Good yarn.
@chrisbiro12 ай бұрын
One should ask exactly why was Pangia located clumped on one side of the planet? It is fairly obvious why this land mass broke up and began to redistribute more evenly across the planet. But why was it all on one side in the first place? Could it be that the earth had previously collided with a large planet sized mass creating the astroid belt lop siding the globe?
@wuodanstrasse56312 ай бұрын
Asking for the “opinions” of non-astrophysicists is many orders of magnitude less likely to elicit a rational response than asking a random person on a street for advice on optimal techniques for brain surgery to remove a deep glioblastoma. Utter nonsense. I am a retired physicist (electro-optics/plasma physics & quantum electrodynamics) who knows enough to know that I am not remotely qualified to render any opinion.
@elixaro16 күн бұрын
If Earth was 4.5 billion years old, how salty would our oceans be?
@gerhardsteenkamp8759Ай бұрын
The speed of sound is 1375KMH
@soldierandsunshineshow55838 күн бұрын
The mystery’s of earth would be amazing but we will never know for sure what really happens man cannot conceive the lengths of time this involves
@byronedwards8157Ай бұрын
Or what if the shift in direction from the apex of vertical oscillation… in other words not when we cross the plane of our galaxy but when we change gravitational direction… was what changed the near orbit of comets or asteroids like Encke that would normally miss us?
@mfdomenico8637Ай бұрын
The asteroid theory has competition
@kunalroy9735Ай бұрын
A theory called Manuvantara in Hinduism cosmic historical records, It's a time cycle of universe, a universal time counting unit method, 1 manvantara =30.6 million years cycle according to earth, We r in 7th manvantara, 6 are left . Almost 2 billion years ago this Kalpa (kalpa = 14 ×1 Manvantara) started . Kalpa =half daylight time of 1 day of lord Brahma, Vikalpa night time of the Brahma day. Lord Brahma's 1 day = kalpa +vikalpa = 4.32 ×2=8.6 billion years cycle for 1 day of Brahma.
@Iywu17.512 сағат бұрын
Are you saying we only have 6,000,000 years to the next extinction event? And me with no comet insurance 🐹
@dadsalwaysrightАй бұрын
From my math, its seems to be closer to every 50m years. And every 250m years something even worse. It also seems like we are coming up to that point. Beetleguese just got hit by something humongous. Are we next?
@robertlivingston1634Ай бұрын
When exactly did Beetlejuice get hit by something? 642 light years ago.
@Amadeu.Macedo2 ай бұрын
The possibilities of the proposed scenarios are not only astonishing but nearly alarming. The chaotic universe's nature will continuously surprise and obliterate living creatures populating celestial bodies anywhere (within and beyond) the known cosmos. Fascinating!
@TayWoode2 ай бұрын
I’m surprised you didn’t manage to slot in the “it’s crazy how...” or “its mind blowing that...” phrases like everyone else does on videos like this
@iluvitall27432 ай бұрын
The chaotic universe's nature will also continuously surprise and create living creatures populating celestial bodies anywhere (within and beyond) the known cosmos. Even more Fascinating!
@kennethprice5628Ай бұрын
So...if smoking weed causes memory loss, then what does smoking weed do to your memory?
@CaptainNeroАй бұрын
United countries of earth could work. If we could cooperate for 5 seconds
@luizmoura455Ай бұрын
There is something off about that Pangea animation... 🤔
@mikebull77752 ай бұрын
Glad we have plenty of time
@dallassegnoАй бұрын
Every 30 to forty millions years they say a fart is caught by a bag.
@am74343Ай бұрын
6:00 Albany, NY!
@sidviscous5959Ай бұрын
I thought the increase in asteroid/comet strikes was the result of our solar system passing through the spiral arms of the Milky Way every 67 million years or so . . .
@Mr.EyedguyАй бұрын
I think we deserve the same fate as the dinosaurs and no other planet deserves us destroying it too!
@Jeremy9697Ай бұрын
? What planet did we destroy?
@vincentkillewald93152 ай бұрын
We have already destroyed one planet. What makes you think that we deserve another chance?
@richardjohnson8114Ай бұрын
@vincentkillewald9315 What, exactly, about the planet is 'destroyed'??
@Jeremy9697Ай бұрын
What is destroyed little bud?
@geedubb-q1uАй бұрын
And what happens if the asteroid hits in the middle of the Pacific? Likely many dinosaurs would have survived and then what? Would be interesting to see videos on What If. There’s a bazillion on what happened when the asteroid hit a shallow gulf region.
@pekkajarvinen69Ай бұрын
The result is exactly the same. Thin layer of water means nothing for a rock bigger than water depth traveling 36000 km/h
@CharlesCurran-m9p2 ай бұрын
Darn dinosaurs, didn’t they hear of the climate crisis? They should have been ashamed to be driving those dinosaur sized SUVs.😂
@travisgravelle7687Ай бұрын
At this point, without further research. It sounds very much like just another cosmic disaster maybe.
@gerald4384Ай бұрын
I can't believe that asteroid did that much damage.
@francisfischer7620Ай бұрын
Why?
@gerald4384Ай бұрын
@@francisfischer7620 The destruction was too vast to kill off so many species. It may have been more than one meteorite and/or volcanoes. Seeing an old impact crater is not proof. There craters all over the planet. Some impacts that are unknown if they hit the ocean. Maybe the ice age killed the dinosaurs.
@Patel-rp6yj2 ай бұрын
Why would passing through the Milky Way plain cause the core to heat up?
@AlexanderJoneshttpsАй бұрын
It doesn't we're still moving through space but it doesn't effect our core
@shawncarter5619Ай бұрын
there is no hard evidence to suggest that during the crossing of the galactic midline that there are disasters on the earth...try not to panic
@wbiroАй бұрын
Good things to know...
@blastulaeАй бұрын
There were lots of Cretaceous species over a meter that weren’t dinosaurs.
@jimmiller6704Ай бұрын
We likely have the technology to deflect some 5 or so asteroids from an impact but if there were m,ore than that we would be in trouble.
@bobbyduke777Ай бұрын
The bullcrap effect is in full force on this channel. I love how they speak like they were there.
@rontom-l4hАй бұрын
I thought we started to go thru the plain in 2012?!
@6Charles52 ай бұрын
Damn. That's a long time😂
@mikimikemike120 күн бұрын
they have underground bases here and the moon is a blocker for asteroids
@jimpassi34929 күн бұрын
the earth had to restart 7 times //nuke wars 2 // flood 1 // astroid 3 times this is the last time i think the end time is near maybe less than 4 years /// my guess space war // thats my best guess
@BooDamnHooАй бұрын
I'm not hearing an explanation as to how passing through the galactic plane can cause the Earth's to heat up.
@kdeuler2 ай бұрын
Why would Earth’s interior get hotter when passing thru galactic plane?
@johnwalker8417Ай бұрын
This planet will meed a smart species that doesn't destroy itself through ignprance and stupidity. Our species is clever, at best.
@RomoRoosterАй бұрын
Nobody has ever explained how our sun can change direction Bobbing back and forth across the galactic plane. Maybe unless it's part of a binary system orbiting a dark object I don't see how it can happen otherwise
@upsguppy5202 ай бұрын
the sun crosses the galactic plain twice a year it takes 26k light years to do one orbit of the galactic center
@johnwalker8417Ай бұрын
The ignorance is profound in this one.
@upsguppy520Ай бұрын
@@johnwalker8417 why not type in what said to google to see who the idiot is
@upsguppy520Ай бұрын
@@johnwalker8417 your right i was thinking about the earth and sun srry as far as ignorance goes you prolly believe in big bang black holes and thermonuclear stars good luck with that
@TerryBell-l4p23 күн бұрын
What do I think? I think it doesn't matter. At least to me, And my kids, certainly not my grandkids.
@markhellman-pn3hnАй бұрын
great story !! ... humans are next on the shopping list
@psychesonic1Ай бұрын
Excellent presentation, but the word "apocalypse" has a different meaning to what you were saying.
@LegendszguildАй бұрын
So where did the moon crash
@Unit8200-rl8evАй бұрын
Let's learn how to live in harmony on Earth before we as spread our evil spawn to other worlds.
@petercooper79272 ай бұрын
Mass extinctions don’t match this 30 million years but the. They wouldn’t as any dislodged asteroids or comets take a long time to reach Earth. If there is any over density along the galactic plane, enough to cause this effect, then it would have to be fairly extreme as the solar system only “wobbles” by about 10% of the thickness of the galactic disc and surely such a concentrated and well defined over density would be detectable due to its influence on other stars.
@gregmccomas375027 күн бұрын
The sooner the better.
@svennoren90472 ай бұрын
The earth orbits the Milky Way once in about 225 million years. During that time it will pass through the galactic plane twice. That's every 110-115 Myears, not 30.
@justincase5272Ай бұрын
Your graphical depictions of Earth passing through the plane of the Milky Way's ecliptic are wildly inaccurate. Earth only passes through the plane twice per orbit of the galaxy.
@mikedougherty101117 күн бұрын
Solar system rotates around galactic core in 230 million years in a planar orbit. So would be above galactic plane for 115 million years and below it for the other 115 million years. Only way to cross every 30 million years is if there is some other force also involved causing a helical motion around the planar orbit. This seems more like a magnetic effect on a charged particle like electrons spiraling around earth's magnetic field lines. Is this evidence our sun and Sirius are perhaps a binary star system.
@Ryukioses2 ай бұрын
4:27 Alien species: hey I found a nice planet to visit snd study... it will take us about 25yrs to get there..... *arrive at planet Earth as the asteroid reverts it back to molten form* Are you sure this is the right location?!?!😮😮😮
@Tigdude2 ай бұрын
And you know this how....
@josephwarra5043Ай бұрын
Aliens
@markp85812 ай бұрын
Then there should always be something happening because is always 30 mill years from something happening.
@timl8302Ай бұрын
Nothing about Dead Cats, huh?🤔😁Last question = Missiles or explosives.
@keithjeffery1974Ай бұрын
That demonstration of the breakup of Pangea is wrong. You had India already attached to asia and this is not what happened.
@dkindigАй бұрын
Yep, the Himalayas had to come from somewhere!
@TerryMccullough-t9vАй бұрын
i don't think think there is anything we can do about it; so why worry?
@Joe-bx4wn16 күн бұрын
All you did was just ignore the fossil record and previous global mass extinction events by quoting ONE max Planck astrophysicist
@6Charles52 ай бұрын
Maybe next time, whatever it is in charge will get it right and not create humans!
@sharadvishwas16712 ай бұрын
It's ok your explanation of 33/40 billion years cycle period anylisis. Any thing can happen in future. God knows?
@mevenstienАй бұрын
Somes wonder if the dinosour time was the real temp enviroment of earth ,possibly only snow on moutaian tops , Until the asteroid impacts that in combo w/volcanic activity Was what caused the ice ages, That the earth is naturally a hotter place, where cold blooded reptiles can grow big, and that the earths snow melting ,sea levels rising , temperature rising are all just the earth regaining equilibrium and balance of its normal natural state of HOT. Seacoast erosion does show that sea levels where higher before and inbetween ice ages. People will be too big for in that enviroment as mamals had to be tiny to survive the heat that reptiles were thriving in ,if it get to hot we may need an asteriod impact coupled with volcano eruptions again to cool the earth back to how it is in this transition period coolness. Just some thoughts About why maybe global warming is a natural,enevitable process cycling back until the next comet.
@demetriocampos86312 ай бұрын
The video reference that the solar system passes through the galactic plane but does not reference the Mayan Prophecy December 2012 when the solar system passed through the galactic plane does that mean soon something will dramatically change here on earth?
@josephmansfield2437Ай бұрын
taking into consideration that they know the asteroid that may have killed off all the dinosaurs came from the asteroid belt and which family of asteroids it came from i'm calling b.s
@sciuriware2 ай бұрын
OK, I got it: the end is near (again); Why not, we need some entertainment.