If you saw the first version of this upload, no you didn’t...
@harshsharma71547 ай бұрын
Haha lol 😂
@ojmatthew7 ай бұрын
lol I was about to ask the problem with the previous version? It was unavailable when I finally decided to press play.
@chrism37847 ай бұрын
it showed up on my recommendations, clicked it, then it went away before had chance to play, this one is a second shorter. did you omit a bad word?
@chrism37847 ай бұрын
did Chuck say something bad? lol
@PeterKertesz20137 ай бұрын
Haha when the water level reached the left elbow the world ended and the video disappeared..
@jjsavior7 ай бұрын
I don't get people who get on Chuck. He is consistently funny. Very respectful, and doesn't constantly interject in an annoying manner like other comedians they have worked with. Some of those guys are nonstop, and the scientist can barely get a word in. Chuck usually interjects with well placed, well-timed humor. But the best thing about Chuck is, there are moments, where he really shows his intelligence outside of his quick whit, and either says things or sums things up very well.Just had to say that after seeing people disrespect him in other videos.
@PssszztYo7 ай бұрын
Chuck is the man
@KermitOfWar7 ай бұрын
@@PssszztYo Chuck is the man, man.
@blinda95487 ай бұрын
Chuck is awesome ❤
@THEsoulquarian7 ай бұрын
Agreed. Dude is dope and actually adds value to the show.
@vansdan.7 ай бұрын
love chuck ❤
@paragsj7 ай бұрын
Chuck is the best comedians to appear on Startalk. He appropriates the amount of jokes to keep things interesting related to the topic and not make it about him. You’re the best Chuck 👍👍👍
@gregorybower94987 ай бұрын
and an excellent and clever example of that was him equating Florida's elevation to his own height plus an inch. loved it!
@SankofaNYC3 ай бұрын
“And now we must wait until White man come… to discover us!” 😂
@SheezyShef7 ай бұрын
I love how Neil makes these topics fun and digestible... kudos Dr. Tyson and Lord Nice
@michaelbyrnee95847 ай бұрын
Yeah, the flooding of the Earth's coastlines is hilarious!
@firstnamelastname92157 ай бұрын
@@michaelbyrnee9584it’s inevitable so laugh or go crazy your pick
@Phoenix-in-flight7 ай бұрын
Nothing like fun and digestible human habitat destruction I always say. 😂
@mobrule90657 ай бұрын
These dudes are racist clowns! Both cry babies probably own beach front properties 🤣
@labbeaj7 ай бұрын
It makes it easier to digest the propaganda.
@valentinsantiago2777 ай бұрын
100% true. I have raised my kids in Florida and when they inherit my house I am going to instruct them to sell it and move north so they can give their kids a home. Thanks for informing others. Alot of people never believe me when I tell them these things.
@YaShaheed7 ай бұрын
Hats off to Chuck. Quick-witted and very funny. Great chemistry between the pair of you. From London 🇬🇧
@MzeeMoja17 ай бұрын
I’m not wearing a hat 😔
@YaShaheed7 ай бұрын
@@MzeeMoja1 mzee hana kofia?
@matttakahashi82837 ай бұрын
Put your hat back on, nobody wants to see that.
@lk88567 ай бұрын
Oh baloney. Climate change is intended to induce panic.
@emmanuelgutierrez86167 ай бұрын
He made me laugh a lot on this one.
@williamwilkins80377 ай бұрын
This is why I love you guys. Individually I knew all that but I've never really put it together in my head and really thought about it. Another great explainer!
@abstract52496 ай бұрын
I was thinking the exact same thing. Like yeah, the coastline today wasn't the same as it was a million years ago, but there's nothing special about today that says this is how our coastlines are "supposed" to look. I never considered that the continental shelf took the shape of the coastline because they USED to be the coastline. I had always thought of them as being solely part of plate tectonics.
@timstorey79157 ай бұрын
I too didn’t appreciate Chuck at first. But I didn’t realize he was a comedian and have come to enjoy his humor. Sometimes he also adds some clarity to the technical discussions. Chuck is a pretty smart guy and pretty entertaining as well. I think Chuck is a good counterbalance to Neil.
@vulcanfeline7 ай бұрын
i've been watching this channel for years and impressed with how much chuck has learned
@labbeaj7 ай бұрын
Realize they both actors...
@D.A.OhK.7 ай бұрын
@@labbeajSure. Everything's a performance. Are you trying to discredit an astrophysicist because he has a career in outreach?
@labbeaj7 ай бұрын
@@D.A.OhK. Discredit, no, however actors do act.
@HotSauce-mn1mp7 ай бұрын
@@labbeajyou clowns stay coming onto Neil’s vids with the fuckery. Go be a hater elsewhere
@invisibledimensions7 ай бұрын
My late uncle worked for NOAA, he went out on Navy ships (as a civilian) and mapped the ocean floors.
@joekenorer7 ай бұрын
That's pretty awesome, is that why we have ocean floor maps on everything now?
@TheHierophantCanon7 ай бұрын
This is my job now!! It's an amazing thing to see and do. You'd be surprised at what is in our oceans.
@RusselPersimmons6 ай бұрын
@@TheHierophantCanonwhat do you guys see
@shilobutton54856 ай бұрын
Sounds like a tall tale
@STDavis-em1df7 ай бұрын
Chuck Plus an Inch is a standard unit of measurement, thank you.
@blkmtl967 ай бұрын
Shall we call it one ChuckBit
@Neotenyx7 ай бұрын
Americans using anything but meters😂
@mattpellico52557 ай бұрын
Fathom that!
@DustinDawind7 ай бұрын
Can someone please convert that to smoots?
@glimmmn6 ай бұрын
I'm Chuck minus 3 inches tall
@relaxchill58597 ай бұрын
We all know that Neil is brilliant. I believe Chuck was added to reach a larger audience so When the smart intelligent teacher and the funny student are conjured together you get Startak. Spreading informative information to the world...
@alainrouleau7 ай бұрын
Just to add... It's not just the melting of sea ice or glaciers that's causing the rise in sea levels. Something like 30% to 40% is caused by thermal expansion. As heat gets trapped, and the oceans warm up, the volume of water expands.
@Hiphop_Love7 ай бұрын
Nobody asked you Otis 🤣🤣🤣 just/k
@labbeaj7 ай бұрын
"Aircraft fly through existing clouds and inject the tiny particles, like silver iodide," What about the above? Why doesn't anybody address the elephant in the room?
@owentheoutlaw_7 ай бұрын
There is no Startalk without Chuck ❤
@hopefulskeptic427 ай бұрын
Oh, come on now. Neil is a pretty funny guy on his own. 😉
@davidlane2567 ай бұрын
The changing shoreline also impacts land “ownership”. If your land is reduced due to erosion or rising sea level, you still don’t own the land under the water.
@aedinquinn8687Ай бұрын
Your comment addressed my buyer beware warning for people who intend to buy Hurricane Helene & Milton property; Florida will be under water. Aedin
@samsonau82057 ай бұрын
I live close to the glaciers in the Canadian Rockies. We're supposed to have a few hundred years of ice pack to stock our water supplies at current melt levels (see Columbia Glacier...which I have seen retreating all my life during family visits since I was 3). The retreat of the glacier is pretty dramatic. But, there are still hundreds of meters of ice up high. When flying to the coast, you can still see lots of white (and clear cuts). I don't know how much water that would equate to if all melted into the ocean. To the south in Montana, the Grinnell Glacier was pretty famous when I was a kid and now it is completely gone. The past few years have seen rainfall dwindle and we're expecting a crazy dry year. Farmers are bracing for drought. Our skies have turned red a few times with all the forest fires. Crossing my fingers for mother nature to be nice to us.
@BuhNanaz7 ай бұрын
"Crossing my fingers for mother nature to be nice to us" Sadly, she doesn't owe us any favors. But I hope she is nonetheless.
@anothermouth70777 ай бұрын
Man that's sad and scary, praying for you
@josee.torres7647 ай бұрын
Saddly a "crude" reality we have to deal with. Here in the Caribbean I'm not that "optimistic" at all. Most of the island have little beach coast. So, we have to move to the central mountains to survive. All the cities at the coast well be gone and most likely half of the population at least. About 44 towns (about half of the population.... 1.5M persons) are at the coast line. Mother nature didn't have VIP's for nobody, so everybody should be taking steps toward our survival as in humans for the generations to come, regardless of the place on the earth you live. My two cents....
@samsonau82057 ай бұрын
I live on higher ground, so I rely on coastal people to tell me their experiences of water rise. I see ice shrinkage. The result is typically dryness/drought. It is interesting to hear deniers say that the coasts are not flooding when homeowners are saying otherwise.
@fauxque50577 ай бұрын
@@samsonau8205I live 8 miles from the beach and the only thing that has changed is the amount of 24 story condos they've built along the coast line. They aren't afraid to spend billions building along the Coast. We also noticed yesterday that we have 2 new Islands reappearing in the Indian River that we can see crossing the bridge. The Indian River and the Banana Rivers are both fed from the Atlantic Ocean and are considered brackish rivers because they also are fed from fresh water sources. What I have noticed is the normal twice annual flooding around Miami that is caused by the King Tide is now being used as evidence of riding seas due to Climate Change. Those annual events have been occuring long before Climate Change was cool. The Florida Keys are all still there and haven't shrunk in size. It's always the Coast of the Continental US that's going under water and never Hawaii
@BStreet6667 ай бұрын
StarTalk Radio. Came for Neil, stayed for Chuck.
@angeloavanti25387 ай бұрын
Florida. Newly wed or nearly dead. I watched jetties, and beaches disappear in a matter of a decade. I've seen the ocean meet the lagoon during numerous storms in Florida. I've been an avid climate watcher and weather observer for many decades. It has been heart breaking. Move the museum now.
@bigcity20857 ай бұрын
My buddy who used to live in W.Palm said the water down there has gotten disgusting....and diving and fishing is what he lived for. Now the fish are going goofy all over the Keys. Used to pick up garbage by fishing spots in the Keys. That was where we came out of the water from a dive and the amount of beer cans in the water was ...insane ( plus they look a lot bigger down there.) I've been all over the country and I've seen garbage in some of the most pristine places. It gets one furious. No worries; the planet will clean it all up ...in time...
@BillGreenAZ7 ай бұрын
The ocean level is rising at less than 4 millimeters per year. In a decade that would be 4 centimeters. Beaches and jetties aren't disappearing because the ocean level is rising. It's more likely they are being eroded due to waves.
@bigcity20857 ай бұрын
@@BillGreenAZ The rise varies around the world, it varies due to geography,and a myriad of other factors....where you live it; you see it....but hey, when it's outa sight and outa mind - it's nothing. To coastal cities;it's something to be planned for. Just look at high tide. Is it the same everywhere ? nope. The geography can raise the water up a lot more in certain places, but yes; sand bars come and go, appear and disappear all the time. The beaches of Long Island get washed away all the time now, and they have to bring in new sand. How would millimeters do that.
@luckyduck69213 ай бұрын
@bigcity2085 you must be college educated
@kareno77927 ай бұрын
Great. Thirty some odd years ago I moved from north Jersey to Florida ....... Always nice to see Neil and Chuck, they're a great team.
@kryptoart877 ай бұрын
I live 4 blocks from the ocean in Daytona Beach and have been here for 6 years now. When I moved here there was a very long sandy beach to cross before getting to the water. Now on most days there is no beach. The water goes all the way to the buildings retaining walls. All I'm gonna say is I'm happy I'm renting not owning.
@funwithmagnus85707 ай бұрын
Beaches have to be maintained, even rebuilt after serious enough weather or they'll wash away.
@Cancelthis15417 ай бұрын
Ever heard of erosion
@bigcity20857 ай бұрын
The insurance companies that leave, do so for a reason. Then some place you would think safe ,like Colorado, gets kerbango'd with giant hail and everybody gets a new roof. Prolly way cheaper still, than a hurricane. Florida is going to be bizarre....there'll be islands and swamps everywhere.(well - even more than now.
@kryptoart877 ай бұрын
@@bigcity2085 yup just enjoying it while it's still here but ive made peace that it'll be very different in our lifetime.
@Mike-x9h5f7 ай бұрын
maybe it eroded away in the ocean level didn't really rise did you ever think of that
@brycehuff7 ай бұрын
6:10 I’m pretty sure the people in Mexico City would take issue with this statement that all major historical cities are on coastlines. edit: My mistake, he actually said “on major water lines.” So technically correct. Good word choice Mr. Tyson 👏👏
@BillGreenAZ7 ай бұрын
There are many others as well. Moscow enters the conversation.
@a.y.greyson92647 ай бұрын
But wasn’t Mexico City once located in the center of a massive lake before it was drained by the Spanish.
@brycehuff7 ай бұрын
@@a.y.greyson9264 As I understand it was a network of many lakes, and islands in those lakes, but still at high enough elevation as to avoid sinking under rising sea levels.
@hopefulskeptic427 ай бұрын
That list that Mexico City is on is a 'very' short one.
@smallstudiodesign3 ай бұрын
Madrid has entered the chat.
@easyb6227 ай бұрын
This was a very good episode. Also, whether you believe In climate change or not, the ocean water is rising. The scary thing about this event is it’s happening very quick now. There are some things going on that I thought wouldn’t happen for another 30 to 40 years but it’s happening now.
@Mike-x9h5f7 ай бұрын
very quickly you better run
@nedkent52397 ай бұрын
I wish Neil was my teacher.
@Adoubless3 ай бұрын
He is ❤
@TheChromeRonin7 ай бұрын
I live in Wellington, New Zealand, but my house is in the suburbs of the hills 138m above. Just a few meters of sea level rise would swamp our entire central city, and storm surge would take care of the rest. Im sure it's the same elsewhere. That's MILLIONS of people displaced in a couple of generations.
@bigcity20857 ай бұрын
....and they're already getting displaced by famine, low water tables and war. Pick a safe spot.
@pearlyung7 ай бұрын
In 1 generation. A couple of decades!!!
@loolfactorieАй бұрын
They've been saying this for 30 years and it still hasn't happened.
@TheChromeRoninАй бұрын
@@loolfactorie hasn’t happened to you. There are already pacific atolls now inundated by salt water.
@Kalyse.6 ай бұрын
I love Chuck. I’m always impressed because he keeps up with NDT without the pictures and diagrams. I’m dependent upon those. 😂😂
@MoreOnEVs7 ай бұрын
I live in the house I grew up in North of Boston on the coast. My backyard never flooded when I was a kid in the 80s and 90s unless there was a massive storm. Now it juuuust peeks up the storm drain on an astronomical high tide, and floods 10-15 times per year with pretty run of the mill storms. Not a good trend and it’s really going to be a big economic problem, in addition to the ecological problem
@gabkoost7 ай бұрын
No ecological issues at all. Sea levels have gone up and down before and ecosystems were fine. And gradual sea rise is a massive economical oportunity. And it might help create new more efficient cities over the oudated ones we have now.
@MoreOnEVs7 ай бұрын
@@gabkoostI suppose sea level rise alone isn’t an ecological problem. Unfortunately, rapidly rising ocean temperatures and dropping pH levels are causing problems. Sea level rises and falls naturally, but it isn’t supposed to be this fast
@easyb6227 ай бұрын
The sea level is rising too fast right now to even say some of these cities. Some of these cities may have to be abandoned in the near future
@Kamamura27 ай бұрын
@@gabkoost Yeah, corporations will make a lot of money on coffins and funerals. Also - soylent green, once the climate change wrecks agriculture.
@shnilikmw7 ай бұрын
@@gabkoost that’s a simplistic view. Raising sea levels have destroyed climates and ecosystems because high sea levels doesn’t mean more water in the ocean saline levels will be affected disrupting currents and natural recycled energy in the ocean through water density, water temperature and more. We already seeing excessive algal growth when depriving ecosystems of water killing entire communities of marine life. Coral reefs are bleaching from increasing acidity and temperature in the oceans which provide shelter and food for a literal entire ecosystem. You can’t improve anything, if our environment is changing too fast for us to adapt. Not to mention, the loss of coastlines would render so many homeless and hungry, if not dead.
@greyholliday47843 ай бұрын
It’s too bad more people (especially politicians) didn’t understand this, and take it to heart
@dawnhansen78867 ай бұрын
I Love StarTalk ❤ I am grateful for Your existence. Educational Entertainment to the MAX ❕️
@travelvibes47787 ай бұрын
The Christopher Columbus reference was funny 🤣
@TheOldHippiebilly7 ай бұрын
To those of you trying to use the "ice cubes in a glass of water" analogy-- you obviously weren't paying attention. Re-watch the video and LISTEN this time. 🙄
@Ecclesia_7 ай бұрын
Indeed. That analogy is only logical if the ice is already floating on the water (as in a glass). But Greenland and Antarctica are land masses with ice on top. The ice has zero influence on the water as it is now. But that can (and most likely will) change big time...
@EnthusiasticTent-xt8fh7 ай бұрын
Hmm, They have no idea what they are talking about.
@paulgriese82437 ай бұрын
The great scientific genius of Rush Limbaugh used that "ice cube" dreck in his dreadful nonsense of global warming bashing. I wish I could have confronted him in his radio studio with a big plate of water, put a big block of ice, as big as Shaquille O'Neal's show box, leaving about 10% of ice above water, set so the water level is up at the top of the plate edge, and leave it that way overnight. Now see what happens when you arrive next day. A big ol' mess to wipe up off your desk, Rush!
@tom74717 ай бұрын
@@EnthusiasticTent-xt8fh No, that would be you who knows nothing.
@EnthusiasticTent-xt8fh7 ай бұрын
@tom7471 I don't know much; but, I'm smart enough to know that the land mass moves up and down and climate alarmists are not. They have no way to measure sea level accurately. At best they have a margin of error of 60 to 100 millimeters on an LEO satellite.
@StrawberryIce507 ай бұрын
Love this duo. Learn so much from StarTalk, it really gives me the thirst for the unknown
@vwdrvrfoundat4207 ай бұрын
In Tacoma,Wa. ,they just spent a lot of money ,moving the parking,bbq pits ,bathrooms, and concessions 30 ft. Up the hill due to water level rise. Point Defiance Park...Owen's beach.
@Mike-x9h5f7 ай бұрын
Penny's compared to what your leaders want to do
@mickylawless19417 ай бұрын
@@Mike-x9h5fwhat do they want to do?
@adarsh47647 ай бұрын
All the expensive sea facing hotel and luxury apartments will become obsolete by 2050 because all the roads and parking lots will practically be permanently flooded by that time.
@Deanjgallagher7 ай бұрын
@@adarsh4764 No they wont
@fauxque50577 ай бұрын
@@adarsh4764We were taught in school that by the year 2000 the entire US would be underwater except for the mountain tops, and the Statue of Liberty would be up to her chest. 24 years past that date and it still hasn't happened, and they're still making new predictions. Only this time the deadline is the year 2100 when most living people old enough to remember will all be dead
@coolet91323 ай бұрын
I feel like when schools have science lessons instead of having the teacher talk their boring lessons, just put up a video with Neil Tyson and it will be a much more enjoyable lesson where the students actually remembers something.
@lesliefranklin18707 ай бұрын
Note that it's not just melting of land ice. It's also expansion of ocean water when it gets hotter.
@Delt4_Cr4wfish7 ай бұрын
That's not factoring in atmospheric water or more iner land water. The planet gets warmer, and the atmosphere will be able to hold more water, and the land will accumulate more water in rivers, lakes, deserts, and life.
@Funslinger03257 ай бұрын
@@Delt4_Cr4wfish As sea level rises, those inner lakes and rivers holding more water will also be covering over more land.
@Delt4_Cr4wfish7 ай бұрын
@FunSlinger620 Not necessarily. Places like deserts would soak up much of the water. Through new plant life and water vapor. Places like desert and the polls hold little to no water in their atmosphere. Much of the water would become ground water as well. Not to mention, ice expands. Much of the ice has trapped gasses, dabree, etc, inflating the ice size.
@Thought_Processing_7 ай бұрын
There is also the fact that the sheer weight of ice on Antarctica actually pushes the rock down into the mantle so the continent of Antarctica will rise up in elevation which will displace even more water.
@glennschemitsch83417 ай бұрын
Water only expands when it freezes.sorry
@nealwestkott39727 ай бұрын
i have been feeling just like Chuck about this. our children deserved better. James Hasen says he wouldn't be surprised if we experience 5 meters by the end of this century. skycool technology!!
@johnsheehan51097 ай бұрын
One thing you missed about Florida is saltwater intrusion into the local aquifers which has already occurred and will get worse by orders of magnitude because it's just a limestone island,
@imtheeastgermanguy54317 ай бұрын
Can you just plant mangroves they protect the coast and even can turn seawater into fresh water water
@roberth7217 ай бұрын
@@imtheeastgermanguy5431the salt water intrudes because of drawing out too much fresh water for our use, similar problem in a lot of heavily populated coasts. Planting mangroves is helpful for erosion control so still useful.
@igorscot49717 ай бұрын
Rising sea levels are causing an influx of seawater into areas that were once only fresh water. This problem will get worse resulting in the loss of coastal freshwater aquifers.
@evelyntodd99467 ай бұрын
Living in Kansas it's hard for me to understand. I expect we will see more people moving in. The majority moving to my town are from the north east. Move now when land prices are average. If wait be prepared to pay through the nose.
@danlittle4477 ай бұрын
Just moved to Cali after living Manhattan Kansas lol
@jmodified7 ай бұрын
My house is four miles from the coast and 35 feet above sea level, with a drop to 25 above sea level at the end of the back yard. There should be a long period of time when it's beachfront property, but not until the year 2400 or so.
@jmodified7 ай бұрын
@@jennifermarlow. It will rise about a foot by 2050. Except in flat low-lying areas, that won't be a big problem. Hawaii is not very flat. It will only lose a tiny bit of coastline. The real acceleration in sea level rise will start after that, probably about a three foot rise by 2100. If you are in your twenties, I wouldn't buy a forever home six feet above sea level.
@mikemainer30097 ай бұрын
Neil says: with climate change you lose Florida... Chuck responds: well, that's one good thing about climate change. Well said Chuck, well said!
@stabilini7 ай бұрын
So... Atlantis may have been built in an early (lost) coast line
@TheBiggreenpig7 ай бұрын
If it were, it would already be found. It would stand out on satellite images.
@reinforcedpenisstem7 ай бұрын
Not when it was written about
@thejuanderful7 ай бұрын
It has been theorized that the legend of Atlantis came from stories of the end of the ice age.
@tannhauser53997 ай бұрын
@@thejuanderful - Not just Atlantis. Plenty of old myths and stories about the Flood, a lot from different cultures around the globe too. And later stories from ancient Akakdian myths such as story of Astra-Hasis, are just remnants of much older texts. Later on, they become part of story of Noe and his Ark (which is based on the Akkadian story and Utnapishtim). Myths and legends. Mostly... verbal. As a lot of writing, knowledge - was probably lost during that time. All was left was the "legends and myths" at the end. You also have underwater old structures all around the planet, for example close to Japan, but also plenty other places if you read about it. So, definitely something has happened during the last ice age, as the date of about 12K years ago is poping out quite often here and there in various myths, but also professional literature. And in a way, we actually know what has happened (or may have) - from the astronomy. Most likely some kind of meteor strikes, not just one, but multiple, small/large impacts on the ice polar caps too, lasting many years. At the end, quite large catastrophe, that most likely destroyed civilizations at that time, destroyed any possible coastal town/cities (whoever they were). And at some point the process was fast, especially after hitting the existing ice caps and melting of water (and more). I would suggest to start with something like the basic research: "Paleolitic Extinction and the Taurid Complex", by W.M. Napier, from Cardiff Centre for Astrobiology, Cardiff University, 2 North Road, Cardiff CF10 3DY, from Feb 2010 (Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Mon.Not.R.Astron.Soc.405,1901-1906(2010)). Quotes from the above reasearch: "Intersection with the debris of a large (50-100km) short-period comet during the Upper Paleolithic, provides a satisfactory explanation for the catastrophe of celestian origin which has been postulated to have occured around 12900 BP, and which presaged a return to ice age conditions of duration of about 1300 yr. The Taurid Complex appears to be the debris of this erswhile comet..." "The sudden onset of the Younger Dryas cooling 12900 yr ago was marked by intense wildfires over North America, major distruption of human culture, and the rapid extinction of 35 genera of Noth American mammals (Faith & Surovell 2009). A thin lcarbon-rich black layer of this age has been identified at many sites across North America (Haynes 2008), coincident in age with the Younger Dryas Boundary. Recently, several geochemical markers at this layer have been presented which seem to indicate that a major extraterrestial event was involved in these events (Firestone et al.2007; Firestone 2009)." And then it list the markers such as: nondiamonds, soot, microspherules and magnetic grains (giving description of the research and further academic references for each of those). But to be honest, plenty of other researches too, even from sources not related to astronomy. But the above would be a good starting point. Edit: Added more quotes from the research, from Cardiff University. Plus some grammar/spelling check.
@johnny5pizzaguy7 ай бұрын
My mom actually lets me watch you guys because you unlike my teachers can keep my attention. I wish my teachers were more like you guys.
@fernandogarajalde40667 ай бұрын
@Chuck: take comfort in the fact that most of Central and Southern NJ will become a huge lake while Northern NJ becomes a peninsula where most of us live. 😎
@GavinHamilton-i1l7 ай бұрын
Through a different lens, in the same time, but a different location… this video would be viewed as inappropriate. Much love to you both. Keep it going.
@radianman7 ай бұрын
The problem is not only the additional volume of water melting into the ocean, the heating of the oceans will cause the water to expand, further raising the surface level. The melting of the Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets will also eliminate their reflection of sunlight and expose dark waters that will instead absorb sunlight and convert it to heat, further warming the oceans and again raising sea levels. Increased sea levels also means increased tides and storm surges, which dramatically increases erosion. Hotter ocean mean more frequent and powerful storms, again with higher storm surges. I was raised in Bermuda, which lies in the North Atlantic Ocean about 600 miles of the Coast of North Carolina. Growing up there we learned about the five glacial and interglacial periods that have successively inundated and revealed the archipelago, allowing coral colonies to form and then destroying them and eroding them to sand, then forming limestone. Currently Bermuda is comprised of 9 majors islands and more than 100 islets that together have a total landmass of about 22 square miles. However, during the peak of a glacial period the entire summit of the Bermuda Rose is exposed revealing a single island of 200 square miles (plus Argus and Challenger Banks. Over the past 150 million years since Bermuda formed this has happened five times if I recall correctly, and the islands are of course presently shrinking. Bermuda is comprised of a relatively soft limestone cap sitting on top of an extinct submarine volcano. Limestone can be broken by hand, so you can imagine the damage wreaked by a powerful hurricane or winter gale. The first Bermuda, a volcanic island, stood at 1,000 feet above sea level. Currently, the highest hill stands at just over 200 feet. The climate there has grown noticeably warmer in my life time; winter temperatures as low as 44°F (6°C) were not uncommon when I was growing up, but over the past 14 years I do not think the temperature has dropped below 56°F (13°C), and I recall meteorologists reporting that the harsh winter of 2010-2011 was the first normal winter for 20 years. For those of us raised on Oceanic Islands, we know the Ocean and we observe the weather like an unpredictable and potentially dangerous alcoholic neighbour. I am betting long term, I moved to the continent.
@shinylunchbox619 күн бұрын
I want to do a podcast with Chuck. He’s a national treasure!
@that_heretic7 ай бұрын
So the "Clovis first, land bridge" hypothesis is probably not the full story, there's evidence of settlement in the Americas that pre-dates the land bridge being de-glaciered. They also almost certainly used large canoes during migration. It's neat, look into it!
@d.b.cooper12 ай бұрын
lmao omg the start was amazing!
@riparianlife977017 ай бұрын
No one says an eclipse won't happen when one is predicted. It's the one time everyone believes scientists.
@stellarwind19467 ай бұрын
One of those things happens every couple years
@bill_tube7 ай бұрын
I predict the sun will come up tomorrow. Therefore, I can also predict that when we find Planet Claire, all the trees will be red and no one will have a head.
@riparianlife977017 ай бұрын
@@bill_tube Face it. Predicting when and where an eclipse will be many years out is impressive AF. Infinitely harder than saying "There will be eclipses".
@riparianlife977017 ай бұрын
@@stellarwind1946 Where, and what day and time?
@TheLadymiss227 ай бұрын
I don’t think eclipses are predicted. It’s not like a 45% chance for one showing up.
@josephdavis24276 ай бұрын
Somebody tell the politicians and billionaires that are buying up coastal properties...it's almost like they aren't concerned with the sea level rising. They certainly don't mind burning up more fuel in one trip than anybody else, that would take a decade of driving and fueling up their car.
@maxlevy98575 ай бұрын
We need to start a revolution
@Trp5105 ай бұрын
none of this is gonna happen in our lifetime. That’s why they keep buying up property, because it doesn’t matter at this point..
@thecedex3 ай бұрын
and they will be the ones, due to their wealth, be able to come out of this perfectly fine.
@SecretsOfASage3 ай бұрын
Or, maybe don't tell them? 😅
@Jesse-Summers7 ай бұрын
We exist on a wet planet, yet we refuse to evolve with it, why ?
@seauryakumar7 ай бұрын
There are too many people on this planet, do you have any idea how long it would take to open the minds of 8 billion people.
@mr.dudley56377 ай бұрын
Waterworld 😂
@sosheeanand35377 ай бұрын
Humans are evolving in different direction. In fact at micro level we resist to evolve, think this way, what we do if it is very hot day, we switch on AC, we put warming cloths on colder days. We take medicine and drugs to overcome diseases and infections without giving a chance to body to fight itself by immune system. Although we swim we just use boats and flights to travel over sea. With all these where is the challenge to evolve with water?
@disadupzmusicentertainment27707 ай бұрын
because we're busy trying to "evolve" Artificial Intelligence instead.
@CottageQueso7 ай бұрын
Aquatic life is evolving quite well on a wet planet. But make no mistake that like 99% of the species to ever exist we'll all go extinct at some point. And new ones will rise and evolve in their stead
@mackeymintle667 ай бұрын
“There’s nothing inherent about the existence of Florida” This applies to everyone… Love yourselves. Forgive your mistakes, forgive the people who hurt you. Move forward with passion.❤
@ManishSaini-sd1qo7 ай бұрын
Neil is a good combination of scientist and comedian😅😅
@merickful7 ай бұрын
Comedientist
@rgp80387 ай бұрын
And bullshitter.
@syedarmaghanhassan46527 ай бұрын
Very cool choice of topic guys! Gimme some mo Geography stuff! ❤👍🏼
@troys6965Ай бұрын
The top of the southernmost point marker in Key West is 18 feet above sea level. How much taller should it be to mark this ancient point for a hypothetical ice-less future?
@TowserTx7 ай бұрын
Love the show!
@christopherbrooksoregonboy7 ай бұрын
6:35 wish Neil had gotten into how and why Antarctica’s Sea Ice is growing…while the Arctic melts! But you can’t get everything you want
@AqueleRod7 ай бұрын
This gentleman is a genius!! Doctor Tyson is also really smart...
@luislucas35217 ай бұрын
Question - by loosing Florida the golf becomes fully part of the Atlantic. What happens to the earth weather and ocean currents? And so on.....?😮
@LowTide9417 ай бұрын
I like this question!
@STDavis-em1df7 ай бұрын
Chuck at 4:04 had me fully rolling 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@ericdavison61867 ай бұрын
it was instant wasn't it? funny as owt(anything)
@AuGAlaN7 ай бұрын
i wouldn't have started watching this channel if not for Chuck
@aburdett857 ай бұрын
@@ericdavison6186 It was edited to seem instant.
@MadeInArt137 ай бұрын
Love Chuck's enthusiasm every time I see him on a programme.
@jackwhiteside50947 ай бұрын
During my 56 years of construction, I have tied elevation loops into Township Monuments. As sea level rises, all those of those Monuments will have to be corrected. Buildings will have to be salvaged, along with bridge structures. Youngsters may want to train in heavy rigging and crane operation. The salvage business will be a big thing. 😢
@moreiratc927 ай бұрын
As an evolutionary biologist, welcome, my fellas, to the awesome and beautiful path of cycles that have surely brought awesome migration and diversity. Humans are just an awesome example of it :D Awes work, awesome work.
@adamw27857 ай бұрын
There was recent news about a home in Nantucket, purchased for $2.3M, market price should have been $3.2M, but it sold for $600k because 70ft of its beach had been washed away by the oceans in under 6 weeks.
@kerryomalley39434 ай бұрын
I can imagine the sellers: "ocean, what ocean, I don't see any ocean".
@mariojortiz237 ай бұрын
I’m from New Jersey And I agree gentleman I’ve been telling people for years I’m going to North Dakota the geographical center of North America, because all of this will come to be…
@Deonteosayande7 ай бұрын
Neil degasse Tyson for president in 2028
@vcvortex63567 ай бұрын
Why? Who would want that job? I wouldn't wish that on Neil.
@alainmilette64607 ай бұрын
MASA make America scientifically accurate
@normandy25017 ай бұрын
I wouldn't say that. He'd be of better use as a member of a board turns to for scientific matters. A president who specializes in political relations and possibly philosophy would be preferable.
@leavingtheisland7 ай бұрын
Chuck for 2024
@brianrobertson20677 ай бұрын
I'm no an American but a agree as he will defo make America great again
@XideEagles7 ай бұрын
Chuck always be half awake on these podcasts lol. You can tell when he was up all night cuz his eyes are watering and he is clearly just happened to wake up recently
@rajathr72177 ай бұрын
Hello guys ! Watching it for the second time coz you re uploaded
@StarTalk7 ай бұрын
Thanks for your support!
@ojmatthew7 ай бұрын
What was different the first time?
@StarTalk7 ай бұрын
Nothing but an export error!
@userrnoise27777 ай бұрын
Conspiracy starts in 3..2..1.@@StarTalk
@faustoutloud7 ай бұрын
I Absolutely Love Star Talk. Neil Is The Smartest Man Alive. 😊
@joekenorer7 ай бұрын
People are impatient, if it's not happening inside hours they won't believe it's really a thing.
@cronobactersakazakii5133Ай бұрын
True, geological time is not usually in our scale but now (I mean since the 70’s) we’re speaking in decades and that mean a human life. The first self propelled flight is only 120 years old !
@Wisco_Jim4 ай бұрын
Imagine for a moment playing D&D with these two gentleman..
@awolffromamongus8757 ай бұрын
Take 2!
@StarTalk7 ай бұрын
🎬
@oldcrow6990Ай бұрын
Thanks for bringing a different spin on all things, and for all the fun!
@joependleton62937 ай бұрын
That was deep, the humorous quip 'The Ocean is on board' got me♤ good show*
@parisbarton43043 ай бұрын
As a Floridian the beginning where South Floridia vanished was beyond crazy 😢
@martijn31517 ай бұрын
Way before we reach that maximum, we’ll deal with dangerous water rising because of intensified storms and overflowing rivers because of increased precipitation. So for anyone thinking, we’ll be fine for a few more decades at least, we’re not. Cheers from the Netherlands.
@stefB_7 ай бұрын
Whatever software was used to generate the images of the Bering Land Bridge is pretty sweet! The topography looks a bit exaggerated but it's a really great render.
@vansdan.7 ай бұрын
i was thinking it could be ai
@Apollorion7 ай бұрын
How warm was that Bering Land Bridge?
@bartolomeothesatyr7 ай бұрын
@@Apollorion Per the 2014 Scientific American article *_How Climate Change Spurred a 10,000-Year Ice Age Journey,_* "While most of the region endured dry, freezing weather, pockets of 'refugia,' or vegetated areas not affected by climate change, remained scattered along the Bering land bridge throughout the [Last Glacial Maximum] period. These unaffected areas provided the Native American founder population with moist, mild temperatures as well as adequate amounts of shrubs, trees and animals."
@einsiol4 ай бұрын
In the animation at the beginning, Iceland is shown as having a longer coastline during the iceage. But Iceland was completely under the ice, did it really have a larger coastline during that period?
@yumitokushige84867 ай бұрын
My hairlines are receding just like the coastlines in a totally different way. 😢
@Mytemporaryhome7 ай бұрын
😂 your humorous
@khaledeid2607 ай бұрын
Over 50% of men in the world experience receding hair in their 30s that's called being alive ❤
@willgame263 ай бұрын
Chuck has an honorary degree at this point
@davidmccarthy60617 ай бұрын
I hope I live long enough to see Florida underwater!
@wallace_films7 ай бұрын
No you don’t , that’ll mean it’s really bad for the rest of us.
@wanfuse7 ай бұрын
what a terrific narration!
@michaelccopelandsr71207 ай бұрын
Neil and Chuck for 2024!
@jmufkinr7 ай бұрын
Their onscreen chemistry is fantastic
@SageDominic7 ай бұрын
Chuck had me like the video in the first 10 seconds 😂😂😂
@brossalot6 ай бұрын
Okay as someone from north Jersey I have to say you would cry if you knew all the great pizza places that would be lost to such a catastrophic sea level rise…
@MBMCincy637 ай бұрын
9:37 I want to watch "Waterworld" , movie again. I think Costner had it mostly right.
@44bonkers7 ай бұрын
Shout Out to Neil and Chuck, much love and respect to these brothers. Great program, learning so much.
@cacophonic77 ай бұрын
It does my heart good to know that Florida will be some of the first fundamentalist strongholds to be lost to the uncaring potency of the very God they worship, and wield against so many of us. Makes you think... unless you are a Floridian, of course.
@alanmendieta992Ай бұрын
“Your elevation is chuck plus an inch… you’re in trouble man”😹😹😹 that seems like a cool one liner from a movie
@shawnclare-nb1up7 ай бұрын
Al gore was warning us about this 35 years ago
@connornorwick-aka_loudwheeler7 ай бұрын
Yup I remember my grandfather talking about it when I was super young
@Alan-lv9rw3 ай бұрын
My parents live in Connecticut, just a few miles from the ocean but at 710 feet above sea level. They’re going to have a spectacular view when the glaciers melt.
@theperfectbotsteve49167 ай бұрын
i imagine in the future people gonna be looking for the lost city of Orlando edit ok ill see the 30% of yall 2100
@oceanwavesES7 ай бұрын
it is crazy how much information I have learned from this video
@Batman-vr6jp7 ай бұрын
Second time upload
@StarTalk7 ай бұрын
🤫
@impeachy15187 ай бұрын
Alternate universe alert! We've been co-factored!
@jacquelinevanfossan70077 ай бұрын
I read that Indonesia is building a new capital city away from the coast because Jakarta will disappear.
@cryptogollum82137 ай бұрын
Good Info Time frame would have been nice though
@BillGreenAZ7 ай бұрын
That would destroy the narrative. The sea level Neil was talking about won't happen for a long time.
@feeberizer3 ай бұрын
I live in New Mexico where the Western Inland Seaway was located during the Late Cretaceous period. I look forward to having seafront property for awhile until all the ice melts and a floating residence is required. ⛵
@josechan42957 ай бұрын
❤that's the effects of industrial modernization .😅industrial capitalism economic rapid growth .like cancer cells to self destruct.
@lsunav7 ай бұрын
This happens no matter people do but we speed up the clock.There is no coincidence that the last 10,000 have been the best for human civilization. Less land should mean less people so the planet will heal.
@Warcrime2477 ай бұрын
I used to go to the beach in Wildwood New Jersey as a kid with my family as a kid. It was always like a quarter mile walk across hot sand from the boardwalk. Even from the tips of the amusement park piers. I have to say I went back sometime in my 30's the oacean has massively crept in. Ive waded out like 50 yards into the water and could still touch bottom because that was the old sand dunes.
@Cristianotorres19987 ай бұрын
I live in Portugal ! Soo if this will happen in decades, should i move now ? 😂😂😂
@cashmoneychanel1209Ай бұрын
My husband’s family has been in south Florida for a few generations 4-5 at least. Our daughter will be 79 in 2100… it’s insane to think that her grandkids may not get to see her family home 😭