The Human Era Has an Official Start. It’s a Lake in Canada

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SciShow

SciShow

Күн бұрын

Recently, a group of scientists have declared that the start of the Anthropocene, the time of outsize human influence on Earth, to be Crawford Lake in Canada. But how can a time be a place? We'll explain, and maybe grab some maple syrup.
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Sources:
www.anthropocene-curriculum.o...
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www.sciencenews.org/article/c...
wapo.st/3OkdcPz
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1...
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Пікірлер: 965
@fancymarinus6681
@fancymarinus6681 5 ай бұрын
I'm currently an Earth Science masters student at Brock University in Southern Ontario. My supervisor is the lead researcher for the push for Crawford Lake to represent the Anthropocene and I'm actually a co-author on the July 2023 paper that they talk about in the video (some of the fly-ash data is mine). Anyway, the fact that there is now a Sci-Show episode about Crawford Lake is BEYOND surreal. :D
@osmia
@osmia 5 ай бұрын
+
@Final.Family
@Final.Family 5 ай бұрын
i would be incredibly excited and honoured to have a part in history like yours! Congratulations on your involvement & getting highlighted on Sci-Show to boot!
@fancymarinus6681
@fancymarinus6681 5 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! It's been super exciting.
@scaper8
@scaper8 5 ай бұрын
It must be such a bizarre dichotomy to simultaneously be part of the work to define a new geological epoch and to know that that epoch is totally unnatural and we're the cause. Still, fascinating work! Congratulations!
@karenneill9109
@karenneill9109 5 ай бұрын
That’s so cool! If you’d like another very small extremely deep lake in Ontario- more than 100 feet (we ran out of rope), let me know. It’s in granite, not limestone, though, and I don’t know what it’s chemistry is like. I do know that the clay on the bottom separates into layers with ease. It’s near Petroglyphs provincial park. Half of it is on Crown Land, the other side has a cottage built in 1978, but no other modern development at all. We no longer own the cottage, but I’m happy to point you in the right direction!
@zukaro
@zukaro 5 ай бұрын
They remembered Canada exists which means as a Canadian I'm obligated to watch.
@LegendaryCryBaby2338
@LegendaryCryBaby2338 5 ай бұрын
Wait... Canadians exists?
@Mitchellisawesome100
@Mitchellisawesome100 5 ай бұрын
@@LegendaryCryBaby2338shockingly yes
@stax6092
@stax6092 5 ай бұрын
Same.
@hancocki
@hancocki 5 ай бұрын
Eh-men! Especially as a resident of southern Ontario.
@ihavelonghere
@ihavelonghere 5 ай бұрын
I know the feeling, I’m from New Zealand and most movies leave us off the map and most the time we are just assumed to be part of Australia
@dagarath
@dagarath 5 ай бұрын
I've been for a dive in Crawford, the thermocline is insane, temp drops about 15 degrees almost instantly when you hit it.
@MurderBong
@MurderBong 5 ай бұрын
WEIRD. ALMOST LIKE THE SALT LINE IN A CENOTE.
@nobody.of.importance
@nobody.of.importance 5 ай бұрын
I'm assuming Celsius?
@karenneill9109
@karenneill9109 5 ай бұрын
We used to have a cottage on a small lake in Ontario. It was very deep, and didn’t mix at all. It could be bath-like at the top and FREEZING a few meters down. You could feel the layers as you dove. On hot days we’d dive down to cool off! I never realized how unique a sensation it was until I got older and went to other lakes, and though ‘huh, I wonder why it isn’t cold down here…’. 😂
@bobbiusshadow6985
@bobbiusshadow6985 5 ай бұрын
@@nobody.of.importanceobviously
@appa609
@appa609 5 ай бұрын
You mixed the layers! Never mix the layers!
@ParadoxalDream
@ParadoxalDream 5 ай бұрын
This is called a meromictic lake. There's another similar one in Gatineau Park (Quebec), near Ottawa, called Pink Lake. Its waters don't mix and in the Summer it turns emerald green. It's actually an abandoned mica mine from the 19th Century.
@earthknight60
@earthknight60 5 ай бұрын
Lake Tanganyika is also a meromictic lake.
@catserver8577
@catserver8577 5 ай бұрын
This lake you describe might be a good starting point as well, since it is definitely affected by humans.
@Munchkin.Of.Pern09
@Munchkin.Of.Pern09 5 ай бұрын
I’ve been to Pink Lake, it’s honestly gorgeous.
@winniethepooh9147
@winniethepooh9147 5 ай бұрын
Love the biking and hiking trails around pink lake! Gorgeous place to be
@johndc2998
@johndc2998 5 ай бұрын
Cool to see our city mentioned
@Bigsistermeg
@Bigsistermeg 5 ай бұрын
Somebody get John Green to revive The Anthropocene Reviewed just for this lake
@DarthAnimal
@DarthAnimal 5 ай бұрын
You know hes not allowed in Canada
@nhycohyesimon
@nhycohyesimon 5 ай бұрын
@@DarthAnimalwait whatt
@DarthAnimal
@DarthAnimal 5 ай бұрын
@@nhycohyesimon insufficient funds
@SpayAndNeuterChristians
@SpayAndNeuterChristians 5 ай бұрын
​@@nhycohyesimonlearn to read
@Kaitybardot
@Kaitybardot 5 ай бұрын
@@SpayAndNeuterChristians ​​⁠ As John Green says “we should be kind while there is still time”.
@hugoiwata
@hugoiwata 5 ай бұрын
The Anthropocene seems to be a cool concept. Someone should write a book reviewing it.
@yuanruichen2564
@yuanruichen2564 5 ай бұрын
will be either the shortest or longest epoch ever
@cht2162
@cht2162 5 ай бұрын
@@yuanruichen2564 1945-2045
@theorangeoof926
@theorangeoof926 5 ай бұрын
@@yuanruichen2564Depends if we want to end it tomorrow or keep it going for trillions of years
@Wingedshadowwolf
@Wingedshadowwolf 5 ай бұрын
I understood that reference!
@garretth8224
@garretth8224 5 ай бұрын
​@@theorangeoof926You mean billions. Our sun will die in a few billion years.
@TheFreeThinkingMan
@TheFreeThinkingMan 5 ай бұрын
Anybody who grew up in the area will tell you about the one or (in my case) more school trips to the lake to learn about the indigenous history of the area. The longhouses were the main event, the lake only being mentioned as a passing curiosity. Perhaps it will be of equal or even greater interest to schools now, particularly science classes. My favorite story was of the horse-drawn carriage that supposedly fell through the ice some century or two ago. The human(s) escaped if I remember but the horses did not. Because of the unique preservation at the bottom I always pictured the horses still down there looking as eerily fresh as they were when they fell in....
@theroamer2663
@theroamer2663 5 ай бұрын
Hah, I barely remembered the log cabins but remember that exact story very well. Always wondered what the horses really looked like down there.
@victorstancu8548
@victorstancu8548 5 ай бұрын
Yes I've heard that story too I've always thought the same about the horses at the bottom of the lake
@tomasjakovac7950
@tomasjakovac7950 5 ай бұрын
Came here to comment exactly this lol. Every Miltonian has been there on so many school trips as a kid.
@TripReviews
@TripReviews 5 ай бұрын
Being from Burlington I went on a school orientation trip there way back before the replica longhouses were built. Back then there was no fee to enter the park. I also visited a few times after the longhouse but I’m cheap and haven’t been back since a charge was implicated.
@northernwilli
@northernwilli 5 ай бұрын
Those school trips were so much fun! I seem to recall someone saying that at night you could see the horses eyes gleaming from the depths below. A few times during our teenage years we stumbled upon Crawford lake on our 'hikes'. Once in the middle of the night, that was definitely a spooky experience
@sherinevill9054
@sherinevill9054 5 ай бұрын
Crawford Lake is great. It's part of Halton Conservation. There are several trails, including a beautiful boardwalk around the lake, and a reconstructed First Nations village where they do a lot of education. I think almost every kid in the area goes on a field trip to Crawford Lake, usually in grade 6. There are also several gorgeous carved wooden statues and benches along parts of the trails.
@mateo-seekthevoid1321
@mateo-seekthevoid1321 5 ай бұрын
I can confirm. I went there multiple times in my elementary school days.
@cuetTimmonz
@cuetTimmonz 5 ай бұрын
its actually 6 nations. the long houses were made by mohawk tribes.. Algonquin, etc.
@JimmyTheMachine
@JimmyTheMachine 5 ай бұрын
Is it just me or did the video start out saying this was in Manitoba? When it's early in Ontario... Or am i misunderstanding her?
@omargoalzz
@omargoalzz 2 ай бұрын
@@JimmyTheMachine You misunderstood her
@samuelstrachan2726
@samuelstrachan2726 5 ай бұрын
I grew up going there a few times a week. I always heard about the whole "too deep for oxygen" thing and thought it was cool, but I didn't know it was so globally important too.
@michaeltyrrell3381
@michaeltyrrell3381 5 ай бұрын
I've heard about this Anthropocene lake a few times recently. I knew it was in Ontario, but didn't realize it was the Conservation Area 25 minutes from my house.
@ValeriePallaoro
@ValeriePallaoro 4 ай бұрын
You sooo have to go now.
@rubrum58
@rubrum58 5 ай бұрын
Nice to see a place I’ve been to many times get some recognition, even if it becomes a bit more busy. Besides being a Meromictic Lake, it also has an extensive history to it. There's a popular local legend about the lake being haunted by the ghosts of horses that fell through the ice while carrying a sleigh and lumber a couple hundred years ago, during a warmer winter. I think their bodies are still at the bottom, alongside the lost lumber. It’s said that if you go there on a full moon (or sometimes alone after sunset) in the winter, their shining red eyes will stare back at you. Spooky. There used to be a historic logging house next to the lake, but it was burnt down 50 years ago, allegedly by some partying fools (just some randos, the house was donated to Conservation Halton by the Crawford family alongside the land a few years before). There is a recreation of a native settlement a few minutes walk from the lake, which is placed above an abandoned village from the 15th century. The longhouses are built approximately above where the originals were, and are around the same size. It also features one of the largest ancient grind stones in NA, which is pretty cool. I usually just go there for the great trails however. The maple syrup and fall colours are good too I guess.
@intellectually_lazy
@intellectually_lazy 5 ай бұрын
can't wait to get betty and barneyed by some intergalactic a ss-freaks
@burnyizland
@burnyizland 5 ай бұрын
@@intellectually_lazy Get what now?
@user-ey2xp2ge9y
@user-ey2xp2ge9y 4 ай бұрын
You seem like an awesome person
@sythrus
@sythrus 5 ай бұрын
As a Canadian, this is canadarific
@valeria-militiamessalina5672
@valeria-militiamessalina5672 2 ай бұрын
Good thing that it is not cadaveric. 💀
@darcyhammer
@darcyhammer 5 ай бұрын
Crawford Lake felt like a special place from the first time I was there as a teenager in the 1980's, and the memory brought me back numerous times. Fascinating to find out it's scientific significance is much larger than the interpretive plaques indicate.
@SpeakerWiggin49
@SpeakerWiggin49 5 ай бұрын
Funny thing about the nuclear product deposits marking the start of the nuclear age: within a range of ±5 years, we had invented computers and Alan Turing produced his theory with experimental evidence, thus nuclear power and computers coincide together to form what we now call the modern age.
@dadadadoog
@dadadadoog 2 ай бұрын
Just a correction... plutonium in the environment is produced by nuclear weapons, not nuclear power.
@TheSpectralArtisan
@TheSpectralArtisan 5 ай бұрын
Whaaa!?! I live less than an hour drive! Fairly sure we went on a field trip in elementary school to Crawford lake! Super cool
@stefxc
@stefxc 2 ай бұрын
I went on the same trip twice when I was younger.
@Themohr
@Themohr 5 ай бұрын
I remember going to a bunch of the Halton Region Conservation Areas as a kid. It was a super interesting story on how they discovered the indigenous history of the site, and it's awesome to see that the lake's unique attributes are still proving scientifically interesting!
@adamwiggins9865
@adamwiggins9865 5 ай бұрын
I went to Crawford lake on two separate occasions in school.. the native long houses were pretty cool
@joshuacookie6386
@joshuacookie6386 5 ай бұрын
This lake means a lot to me. Ever since I was a kid me and my family has a picnic there and we would take a walk around the lake. Earlier this year I learned of how it preserves layers of mud and how the water doesn’t mix. Very cool stuff.
@blakepedersen7178
@blakepedersen7178 5 ай бұрын
Thats crazy I’ve walked the trail there a bunch of times. Weird to think that little lake can be so significant.
@sciencecafe1543
@sciencecafe1543 5 ай бұрын
I know some of the people involved in this and have hear them issuing it for years. It's so cool that this made it to Sci Show!
@Chris-op7yt
@Chris-op7yt 5 ай бұрын
that's what i've been looking for, to make a new calendar system. thanks
@dersitzpinkler2027
@dersitzpinkler2027 5 ай бұрын
Savannah is a really talented host 🎉
@AscendingSlugcat
@AscendingSlugcat 5 ай бұрын
This is a half hour drive away from my home.💀As an Earth Science student this is really exciting to see!
@matthewsemenuk8953
@matthewsemenuk8953 5 ай бұрын
interesting name Slugcat
@ratguy101
@ratguy101 5 ай бұрын
I live 40kms away from this lake! I should totally pay a visit sometime when it gets warmer.
@matthewsemenuk8953
@matthewsemenuk8953 5 ай бұрын
Just grab a Tims and go for it. Im sure its great in every season. (416)
@slohmann1572
@slohmann1572 2 ай бұрын
Not only they have attractions in the Winter, but with a single pass you can visit any of the six or seven Halton Conservation parks nearby.
@glenncurley680
@glenncurley680 2 ай бұрын
Go in the Winter and skate on it. Now that's Canadian!
@KcMcStix
@KcMcStix 5 ай бұрын
Thanks for explaining it so well.
@MatthewTheWanderer
@MatthewTheWanderer 5 ай бұрын
It baffles me why anyone would be opposed to the idea of the Anthropocene being a thing! If the major changes caused by humans to the world aren't enough to delineate a new epoch, what the hell is!?
@strawberryseed1886
@strawberryseed1886 5 ай бұрын
Tbf it’s not scientists that have the problem.
@daisies9368
@daisies9368 5 ай бұрын
Geology major here to kind of explain! Geologic periods have a general set time for each epochs and periods. They usually have hundreds of thousands or millions of years between them. We’ve only just begun the Holocene epoch. Some geologists do not believe we should separate the geologic timescale to account for humans. However I think a lot of the geologic community is realizing that by saying the Anthropocene is a real epoch and time on the timescale it alerts people even more to our looming climate crisis. I’m going into environmental geology and science communication. Scishow, Hank Green, Neil deGrasse Tyson, and many others have been a huge influence on me and they’re one of the reasons I’m going into science. It saddens me that the general public refuses to trust scientists on climate change despite overwhelming evidence. That’s something I want to see change and hopefully can personally help.
@LFTRnow
@LFTRnow 5 ай бұрын
I agree (and support @daisies9368) and wish them the best. I also think though that another reason for the difficulty is the "line" isn't something that happened at once. It wasn't an asteriod crashing into the Earth and extinguishing most life, it was a slow but steady increase (which continues today) of usage of modern materials and even those keep changing (heard of bakelite? How much asbestos are we using? We also don't test many nuclear bombs either). This creates a fuzzy edge to where the Anthropocene starts (and we sure don't know it's end either!) I can see reasons to, and not to, define it as an "age" but it certainly is having quite the effect on the planet!
@strawberryseed1886
@strawberryseed1886 5 ай бұрын
@@daisies9368 glad you’re going into geology! We need more geologists! I was a geologist before I became disabled. We were talking about the likelihood of the Anthropocene in the 90’s. I’m always surprised it hasn’t been decided on yet. The Holocene marks the rise of humans. The Anthropocene would mark the destruction caused by humans. Considering everything, I wouldn’t be surprised if the two were just joined together under one name. On the Geologic timescale it would make more sense. But, if separating the two finally opens people’s eyes, I say go for it. It’s so disheartening how scientific literacy has gone backwards in my lifetime.
@MatthewTheWanderer
@MatthewTheWanderer 5 ай бұрын
@@daisies9368 Awesome, thanks for the information! I personally think that the arrival of humans should mark the beginning of a new era and not just epoch.
@DavidELD
@DavidELD 5 ай бұрын
Grew up in the area, just down the road from it. Done school projects on Crawford Lake twice, one for 10th grade History, and again for 2nd year Anthropology in Uni. Always nice to see my old neck of the woods get mentioned anywhere.
@NoName-ds5uq
@NoName-ds5uq 5 ай бұрын
Lake Saint Clair here in Tasmania may well have something to add to this research. It is Australia’s deepest lake in an extremely old environment far away from a lot of the more recent pollution we’ve added. I’d bet it shows something similar.
@intellectually_lazy
@intellectually_lazy 5 ай бұрын
i bet it ain't so far as you think. what isn't full of pfas and plastic?
@NoName-ds5uq
@NoName-ds5uq 5 ай бұрын
@@intellectually_lazy I know far away it is. It is where river I live near starts. It is also a UNESCO World Heritage area and national park. Are you really intellectually lazy?
@RainAngel111
@RainAngel111 5 ай бұрын
How do scientists sample the layers without distorting the record? I assume they do something like a core sample but in a medium of mud and water it would get very mixed if they did very many.
@gregweatherup9596
@gregweatherup9596 5 ай бұрын
Yeah, it seems to me like an epoch “reference point” should be both easier to access to study to “refer-to” and that doing so shouldn’t destroy or degrade the very reference point. Given the fairly small area of the smallish lake, how many sediment cores can we take from a drifting boat before our next core is too close to a previous core sample site? Unlike taking an ice core on land where you can walk a few steps further to make sure your next ice core is far enough away from previous sample sites.
@AcousticOne
@AcousticOne 5 ай бұрын
Been hiking here all my life….absolutely gorgeous!
@snaggy13
@snaggy13 5 ай бұрын
My family and I visited the park while scientists were drilling one winter (we were cross-country skiing.) So cool to see it in videos online!
@theendoftheworld9921
@theendoftheworld9921 5 ай бұрын
If theres a scientifically sacred pond out there, thats the one 😅
@mrSPEEDCASKET
@mrSPEEDCASKET 2 ай бұрын
Scientifically sacred?
@moroiiangel
@moroiiangel 5 ай бұрын
Let's not forget Dr. Francine McCarthy is the lead of the team on this, and she deserves recognition for her years of work and dedication to this discovery becoming public!
@MrGBOUCHER
@MrGBOUCHER 3 ай бұрын
It’s a beautiful place to hike, too.
@nathanbenoit6922
@nathanbenoit6922 5 ай бұрын
Fun fact: I got engaged to my now fiancé at Crawford lake! (Earlier this year)... cool to see people finally paying attention to it
@moroiiangel
@moroiiangel 5 ай бұрын
Did you happen to get a staffer's help with that? I was there that day, if so! Congrats again!
@lephtovermeet
@lephtovermeet 5 ай бұрын
This is genius. I love this. I mean I'm disgusted with how thoughtless and self destructive we are, but conceptually this is such a beautiful application of a nature discovery.
@2bitTank
@2bitTank 5 ай бұрын
nature is not your friend. it wants you dead
@billpetersen298
@billpetersen298 5 ай бұрын
Google how much China is increasing coal burning.
@MrDaraghkinch
@MrDaraghkinch 5 ай бұрын
*ingenious
@Brainlesss96
@Brainlesss96 5 ай бұрын
I do like this as a useful diagnostic tool for figuring out where and when the Anthropocene began. But I feel there is strong evidence for another location, the site of the Trinity Test in New Mexico. That is a single date at a known time that fundamentally changed Earth's geology in a measurable way. Personally, I believe we are actually seeing one of the briefest Periods in human history, from around 100,000-20,000 years ago till 1945 when the Cenozoic Era ends and the Anthropocene Era, not Period, begins. I do recognize that this is a somewhat contentious hypothesis, but I do feel it is supported by the data. For the past 100 thousand years or so humans have started measurably altering Earth's climate in a way that is recordable in the geologic era, marking the short Pre-Anthropocene Period at the end of the Quaternary Period, before things change in a way not dissimilar to the end of the Mesozoic and beginning of the Cenozoic Eras, with big nukes subbing in for the asteroid which ended that Era. This is a pedantic hill I will die on, but I am eager for criticism or comment.
@dwm1156
@dwm1156 5 ай бұрын
I agree. Coupled with an extinction event most definitely with an anthropic influence - if not cause - it seems necessary to mark a new boundary.
@Bodhidrop
@Bodhidrop 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video. You put out good stuff. Strange, I grew up a fairly short bike ride away from Crawford Conservation Area. Spent a lot of fun times around there. Bit mind boggling that it's now serving as the marker for the beginning of the Anthropocene.
@lenhindle1108
@lenhindle1108 2 ай бұрын
Great video....thanks for explaining this phenomenon
@borisbravelylovesu
@borisbravelylovesu 5 ай бұрын
How would people dig into it without mixing up the layers? Are there limits to how many samples scientists are allowed to take of the lake?
@applegal3058
@applegal3058 5 ай бұрын
Good question! I guess taking very careful core samples?
@andreaquadrati
@andreaquadrati 5 ай бұрын
Packed mud can be resilient enough, with limestone and all, it's probably like sandstone.
@svenmorgenstern9506
@svenmorgenstern9506 5 ай бұрын
Core samples aren't usually all that big in diameter, and they usually collect them with a weighted metal tube dropped from the surface. Good question though. 👍
@fancymarinus6681
@fancymarinus6681 5 ай бұрын
Hey! I'm a masters student who was lucky enough to be at the lake when the cores were taken. We use a metal spike filled with a slurry of dry ice and ethanol. That gets lowered into the lake and then dropped so it wedges in a couple of metres deep. Then you wait for half an hour for the sediment to freeze onto the metal and you scrape off the excess after you pull it up. The layers are super detailed. It's mesmerizing. Also, getting permission to sample the lake is a pretty long process since the area is in a conservation area and the lake has cultural significance to some indigenous groups. We were actually pretty lucky to get to take the cores that we took this past April. We didn't even know if we were going to be allowed until the morning we came.
@osmia
@osmia 5 ай бұрын
+
@mdhindley
@mdhindley 5 ай бұрын
I used to hang out there as a kid. Was talking about it with my parents just last week. Very unassuming place, love that it's got some new found significance.
@mtlicq
@mtlicq 2 ай бұрын
and then it will be like area 51, no one is allowed to go there anymore without a formal application process and an appointment and security guards watching your every move
@TheDivergentDrummer
@TheDivergentDrummer 5 ай бұрын
Wicked cool! Great Video. I suppose the only way to 'read' the bed would be to core sample it? Or, have a sonar that penetrates deep enough with a high enough resolution to differentiate between the no doubt subtle density differences between the layers. One would think that the thickness of the layers is likely rather minuscule, so non invasive probing with something like sonar would need require extremely accurate hardware.
@michaelpjeffries1521
@michaelpjeffries1521 5 ай бұрын
I lived in area for couple decades. Eden Mills Ontario had rail connection to Toronto. Was useful during underground railway era and re-engineered for prohibition commerce by Al Capone.
@zlm001
@zlm001 5 ай бұрын
Naming an epoch after ourselves is pretty ambitious and optimistic. Given what has happened to nearly every other species on the planet, we’d be lucky not to be a blip that momentarily exists between the pre Anthropocene Event Epoch and post Anthropocene Event Epoch.
@jgt2598
@jgt2598 5 ай бұрын
It makes sense as a reference because it's easily measurable but I'd personally prefer to see the anthropocene start when our ancestors reached North America and finished wiping out the last of the megafauna. By the time we discovered fission we had long since become the dominant species in nearly every ecosystem and had significantly altered Earth's biosphere.
@KnowledgeCat
@KnowledgeCat 5 ай бұрын
Love this lake, it's truly special. Hope we keep it protected!
@rwilsonweir5697
@rwilsonweir5697 5 ай бұрын
I am not a science person so I'm not sure why this popped into my KZbin feed but I'm so very glad that I watched it. Thanks that was informative.
@tedonyszczak3029
@tedonyszczak3029 5 ай бұрын
There goes our fav hiking trail. If you go, go during maple sugar season. They have a recreation aboriginal village and they make maple syrop the old old fashioned way. It’s an amazing park. And the sign on the lakes been explaining this for years. The internet just finally caught up.
@tiacho2893
@tiacho2893 5 ай бұрын
Hey! I live in middle of that circle!!!
@lazy_bluejaysfan2476
@lazy_bluejaysfan2476 5 ай бұрын
I've came here many times with my family on Thanksgiving and I never knew this
@dannick100
@dannick100 5 ай бұрын
I’ve been hiking this lake since I was a kid. I knew it was cool, but I didn’t know it was THIS cool
@mansonandsatanrock
@mansonandsatanrock 5 ай бұрын
As someone who was raised in the GTA, I've been there multiple times. It's a good place to visit.
@lemonicowo
@lemonicowo 5 ай бұрын
crazy, just looking for something wholesome to watch as my opa’s euthanasia is tomorrow and randomly looked up scishow. i don’t tend to watch u guys all that much, only if it comes up in my recommended. and you guys posted 8 minutes ago!!!!!!!!! thank u ❤
@mikeokeefe2014
@mikeokeefe2014 5 ай бұрын
Thanks.. very great pronunciation and reading and explanation with a super happy demeanor...that was so informative 😊
@obliolepoint8371
@obliolepoint8371 5 ай бұрын
I used to go to crawford lake for summer camp when i was a kid in the early nineties.. ways of the woods camp lol
@Rubrickety
@Rubrickety 5 ай бұрын
Did anyone else think Savannah was about to say "white chocolate" at 3:37?
@RickImus
@RickImus 5 ай бұрын
Now that you mention it... "White chalky ,,,"
@VINCENTDICRESCE
@VINCENTDICRESCE 5 ай бұрын
Awesome! Love the Narrator, excellent job, thanks
@zipobob1
@zipobob1 5 ай бұрын
Interesting, I've been to Crawford lake bunch of times this past couple of years and it's beautiful.
@christianlee8589
@christianlee8589 5 ай бұрын
In highschool they brought us there for a field trip. It was neat to learn about
@tiffanymarie9750
@tiffanymarie9750 5 ай бұрын
Really thought SciShow was about to get in on Kurzgesagt's Human Era calendar... Would be a great way to start 12,024 HE.
@LFTRnow
@LFTRnow 5 ай бұрын
I really like Kurz's HE idea. Interestingly, we have already started the "Holocene" which according to some googling, was 11,700 years ago. That would put it around 300 HE. For the sake of convenience (just add 10k years) I prefer Kurz's measurements. The Anthropocene is something else - it is roughly when we really started to change the planet (which is not really a fixed point in time, it just accelerated and keeps doing so).
@EnnuinerDog
@EnnuinerDog 5 ай бұрын
As a Canadian who lives near that lake... sorry.
@quinnwasson2399
@quinnwasson2399 5 ай бұрын
Daaaaang the chemistry bit had me floored. Utterly fascinating 🤘🏽
@Hummmminify
@Hummmminify 5 ай бұрын
Good to know….something to add to casual conversation. Thanks for the info.
@zyctc000
@zyctc000 5 ай бұрын
OK Ontarions, let’s march to Milton!
@SugarandSarcasm
@SugarandSarcasm 5 ай бұрын
Too many people. I’ll stay in the Northwestern part of Ontario, thanks
@360.Tapestry
@360.Tapestry 5 ай бұрын
my uncle introduced me to the anthropocene when i was 6. now i'm 14 and i prefer classic anthropocene compared to the modern anthropocene that's more popular with people my age
@furby1357
@furby1357 5 ай бұрын
ive been to Crawford lake so many times as a kid!! this is so cool!!
@lisastenzel5713
@lisastenzel5713 5 ай бұрын
This is amazing! I can't think of how they found that lake and it's special existence. I guess some student of biology found something at some point. And yes, I think we need that new epoche.
@antonioskontonasakis
@antonioskontonasakis 5 ай бұрын
I love the part where you clearly and definitely say where the anthropocene era starts based off crawford lake
@fancymarinus6681
@fancymarinus6681 5 ай бұрын
I almost didn't notice that they didn't even say the date lol. The proposed base of the anthropocene is the layer of mud (varve) deposited in 1950. After which there's a sharp increase in plutonium, fly-ash, and lots of other proxies (LOTS of other proxies)
@julian4992
@julian4992 5 ай бұрын
Kionywarihwaen (Crawford Lake): in the indigenous Wyandot language, caretakers of the lake and land for time immemorial.
@osmia
@osmia 5 ай бұрын
+
@chadherbert18
@chadherbert18 2 ай бұрын
I got to visit Crawford Lake in the 90’s for a school project. I think I still have the write-up with pictures somewhere… 😊
@billclarke1131
@billclarke1131 5 ай бұрын
This is an awesome explanation of the early stages of diagenesis of Crawford Lake's sediments - succinct with illustrations! Thanks.
@SchlumiBenLuschi
@SchlumiBenLuschi 5 ай бұрын
The Anthropocene will be shorter than a standard deviation in the geological record. Why bother?
@somethingedgy2185
@somethingedgy2185 5 ай бұрын
Dope
@STONEDay
@STONEDay 5 ай бұрын
eh
@somethingedgy2185
@somethingedgy2185 5 ай бұрын
@@STONEDay Why are you even here if you don't think things like this are interesting?
@DjWellDressedMan
@DjWellDressedMan 5 ай бұрын
OMG, I planted Corn / Maize at Crawford Lake a few years ago and now I might be part of the Anthropocene Epoch Cool
@bettatech2000
@bettatech2000 5 ай бұрын
I grew up 40 km away from crawford lake. So cool!!
@kariannecrysler640
@kariannecrysler640 5 ай бұрын
The Human Age. Excellent concept. The name is lacking some of the destructive nature of the namesake though. Still this could help the acceptance of being ecologically responsible in the future.
@SlyPearTree
@SlyPearTree 5 ай бұрын
What are the arguments against the Anthropocene?
@snave4o4
@snave4o4 5 ай бұрын
Love hiking here. Very cool that this place could become even more protected in the future. One of the most stunningly beautiful lakes in Ontario.
@MrJayrock620
@MrJayrock620 5 ай бұрын
I’ve been to Crawford Lake many times. There’s also a corkscrew shaped tree along the boardwalk too which I believe is still standing.
@1Grr8Guy
@1Grr8Guy 5 ай бұрын
After watching this video, I’m still unsure when the Anthropocene begin, so I asked Bing chat: When does the Anthropocene epoch begin? Bing chat reply: "The exact start date of the Anthropocene epoch is still a matter of debate among scientists. According to the Anthropocene Working Group, the Anthropocene epoch began around 1950 when the Great Acceleration, a dramatic increase in human activity affecting the planet, took off. However, some scientists argue that the Anthropocene began at the start of the Industrial Revolution of the 1800s, when human activity had a great impact on carbon and methane in Earth’s atmosphere. Others think that the beginning of the Anthropocene should be 1945, when humans tested the first atomic bomb, and then dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. Please note that the Anthropocene epoch is not yet an official unit of geologic time, and the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) has not yet formally adopted the term."
@ZT1ST
@ZT1ST 5 ай бұрын
That seems to actually make it less clear what it is than more clear.
@1Grr8Guy
@1Grr8Guy 5 ай бұрын
@@ZT1ST The uncertainty principle comes to mind. However, I'm still trying to think of an equivalent statement. Additional edit: Say, the scientists agreed where the human era start but they're uncertain when it begin. If they're ever determined when the Anthropocene begin, then they cannot tell where does it start.
@HughSheehy
@HughSheehy 5 ай бұрын
How useful can the lake be? According to the animation there's only enough room in there for 4 or 5 years of deposits.
@E-Bizzy
@E-Bizzy 5 ай бұрын
It's an animation. Probably not to scale.
@fancymarinus6681
@fancymarinus6681 5 ай бұрын
Lol I thought the same thing when I saw it. The layers are between 0.5mm and 2mm in reality. I was lucky enough to be part of the group that cored the lake this past April.
@osmia
@osmia 5 ай бұрын
+
@crapizio
@crapizio 5 ай бұрын
I have very little sympathy for unlabeled sarcasm in text.
@Tsukaiyo
@Tsukaiyo 2 ай бұрын
Just watch out for the dead horses at the bottom. On a school fieldtrip there, the guide told us about how, some decades ago, a guy drove a carriage pulled by two horses out over the lake. He had overestimated the thickness of the ice, and they fell in. Wonderful story for 12 year olds
@gilmulth
@gilmulth 5 ай бұрын
Wow😂
@MichMez-xw5sn
@MichMez-xw5sn 5 ай бұрын
Understanding personal finances and investing will most likely lead to greater financial independence. By being knowledgeable about money and investing, individuals can make informed decisions about how to save, spend, and invest their money. A trader made over $350k in this recession influenced market
@Ibrahim-mt8te
@Ibrahim-mt8te 5 ай бұрын
Please who is the consultant that assist you with your investment and if you don't mind, how do I get in touch with this person
@Ibrahim-mt8te
@Ibrahim-mt8te 5 ай бұрын
I just looked him up on the web and I would say he really has an impressive background in investing. I will write him an e-mail shortly.
@PeterMOD-fq9oz
@PeterMOD-fq9oz 5 ай бұрын
Access to good in formation is what we investors needs to progress financially and generally in life. this is a good one
@kingdmind
@kingdmind 5 ай бұрын
i love botts
@MichMez-xw5sn
@MichMez-xw5sn 5 ай бұрын
@@kingdmind you wish
@kbjerke
@kbjerke 5 ай бұрын
I've been there! Several times. Very picturesque location.
@unitedlime6896
@unitedlime6896 5 ай бұрын
It’s kinda crazy this got recommended to me, I have lived in Stoney creek, Hamilton for my entire 22 year old life and have not heard of this lake or this Chanel and see this video and find out I’m about 30 mins away from it
@bplup6419
@bplup6419 5 ай бұрын
*talking about our terrible effect on the environment* *stock footage of a nuclear plant* *the cleanest source of energy we have by a wide margin* Woof
@brianpedonomou5481
@brianpedonomou5481 5 ай бұрын
Love this lake. I remember many trips with my family there in fall and summer. If I remember correctly, there is a very interesting story about a horse(s?) that drowned in the lake due to the very same properties described here. Pretty cool stuff I definitely recommend y'all to either read up more on this cool little spot or, even better, visit it if you ever find yourself in Toronto.
@mingming919
@mingming919 2 ай бұрын
One cannot describe the enjoyment i experienced upon realizing that not only is Crawford lake only miles from my hometime, i went on at least 2 field trips threre as a kid! Once for my school in elementary, another time as a teenager in a leadership camp. Great times. Heard "small lake, deep af archeological dig, native longhouses" and went OMG!! I went there!
@PhilipCockram
@PhilipCockram 2 ай бұрын
I grew up near there , passed by it each day giong to school . Its a creepy place man .
@RBarnett421
@RBarnett421 2 ай бұрын
This is practically in my backyard lol grew up fishing around Crawford lake, its an amazing place
@jbstepchild
@jbstepchild 2 ай бұрын
I love that you don't sound like the rest of them ppl just a regular person great video
@benguillemette8176
@benguillemette8176 5 ай бұрын
Very informative, thanks
@TheShaleco
@TheShaleco 5 ай бұрын
This is crazy!! I've been to crawford lake so many times as a kid and an adult. I grew up super close to here. I didn't really know it's significance
@MichaelForde521
@MichaelForde521 5 ай бұрын
Oh nice! I used to walk my dog along the Bruce trail and we’d circle around Crawford lake.
@LEDewey_MD
@LEDewey_MD 5 ай бұрын
Great topic!
@Kahadi
@Kahadi 5 ай бұрын
I actually live near Crawford Lake, close enough that in elementary and middle school, we took a couple of field trips there, got to taste the maple syrup and hear a lot about the lake and the plant life around it and the history and everything. I remember one of the things they taught us about was actually about those layers and how still the water is. I remember them saying something about a story where, a hundred or so years ago, a horse drawn carriage was crossing the lake in the winter, crossing over the ice when it cracked. The horses, carriage, and all of the riders ended up sinking to the bottom of the lake and drowning, and because of the stillness of the lake and the lack of life in it, divers can still see the remains, almost like it's frozen in time. Of course, they didn't want to show pictures of such a scene to children, so I don't know if the story is true or exaggerated or what, but it was always fun to hear. I have so many memories going there as a kid, I loved those trips. Even if we did go multiple times through the years.
@sandramarieroberts1172
@sandramarieroberts1172 5 ай бұрын
Been there several times since 1984 when we took day campers there for the Iroquois village. Everyone remembers the horse story.
@65mcman
@65mcman 2 ай бұрын
1:01 One note, it wouldn’t be north west of Toronto, it’s South West. North west would be in the Orangeville direction.
@philpaine3068
@philpaine3068 5 ай бұрын
As a nod to our history, I'll add that the Wyandot (Huron) name for Crawford Lake is Kionywarihwaen. It's a pretty little lake, nice hiking in the area, yet easily reached by exurban transit from Toronto or a quick drive. There's a reconstucted 15th Century Iroquoian village near the lake, with three longhouses, a palisade, and an excellent museum. It would be nice spot for a climate science museum!! I didn't know of any until I checked, but there such museums in NYC, and Hong Kong, as well as a mobile/digital one in the U.K. and we are overdue to have one in this country. The Canada Science and Technology Museum in Ottawa is strong on presenting climate science, and so is the ROM in Toronto, so perhaps they could be recruited to such a project.
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