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Gwillerm Kaldisti
Gwillerm Kaldisti
Gwillerm Kaldisti
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Climate History of Arkhangelsk (Russia)
9:07
2 месяца назад
Climate History of Marrakech (Morocco)
9:07
3 месяца назад
Climate History of Buenos Aires (Argentina)
9:07
3 месяца назад
Climate History of Singapore
9:07
4 месяца назад
Climate History of Berlin (Germany)
9:07
4 месяца назад
Climate History of N'Djamena (Chad)
9:07
4 месяца назад
Climate History of Calgary (Canada)
9:07
4 месяца назад
Paleo Mapping Premiere Countdown
4:59
5 месяцев назад
South Pole - Aitken Impact (Moon) : Earthquake
20:48
5 месяцев назад
The South Pole Aitken Impact seen from Early Earth
2:00:00
5 месяцев назад
The impact that almost shattered the Moon
2:09:22
5 месяцев назад
The Last Ice Age Temperatures - Summer
11:16
8 месяцев назад
The Last Ice Age Temperatures - Winter
11:16
8 месяцев назад
The Last Ice Age Temperatures - Annual Mean
11:15
8 месяцев назад
Vredefort Impact : Earthquake
54:27
10 месяцев назад
Vredefort Impact : Thermal Radiation
1:25:55
10 месяцев назад
Vredefort Impact : Ejecta Grain size
1:40:49
10 месяцев назад
Vredefort Impact : Air blast overpressure
3:00:12
10 месяцев назад
Vredefort Impact : Ejecta Deposits Thickness
1:40:49
10 месяцев назад
Vredefort Impact : Temperature
3:00:05
10 месяцев назад
Комментарии
@Anoss91
@Anoss91 2 часа назад
Thank you for your work ! I think a lot about why we have lost track of our past? Why did life begin only 6000 years ago with the arrival of Adam, why did the arrival of the monotheistic religion and Jesus change everything, change the dates (year 0), change mentalities (fight to make one's religion known and imposed) and the arrival of money and capitalism which will also distance us from each other. Developed life existed throughout the Sahara 15,000 years ago, the Sahara was full of water, and everything disappeared at the same time. We find the same construction and stone which appear to be nested on top of each other as in Minecraft in all its areas where the ground has burned (Utah USA, Greece, etc.) It's fascinating, it looks like a nuclear type explosion has ravaged the ecosystem and started to melt the stone... 6000 years ago... It's nonsense, it's fascinating. Thank you for everything. (used google translate)
@DanielZamora-ct8eg
@DanielZamora-ct8eg День назад
The fact that Earth wasn't safe from these giant impacts suggests that asteroids hundreds of kilometers in diameter had struck the Earth every once in a while during the Late Heavy Bombardment 4 Billion years ago.
@ghosted9108
@ghosted9108 День назад
7:05 it’s way too early in the morning to be hearing this with headphones on😭😭
@walterdoggo
@walterdoggo День назад
14:02 when CaseOh jumps
@DanielZamora-ct8eg
@DanielZamora-ct8eg День назад
Make an In Real Time Simulation video for the Deniliquin Impact Crater in Australia. It's 520 KM wide, making it bigger than the Vredefort Impact Crater in size. Studies into it began in 2022 and the Deniliquin Impact Site was announced late last year in 2023.
@michaelwitt2919
@michaelwitt2919 День назад
They didn't see a thing, it was a cold and rainy night.
@thecamocampaindude5167
@thecamocampaindude5167 День назад
I saw a similar thing yesterday night happened just like that, im not kidding, it looked just like it and moved just the same way. Minus the explosion.
@hesklairvoyant
@hesklairvoyant 2 дня назад
ULTIMO TOPE! PATADAAAAAA
@paulj.l.9696
@paulj.l.9696 3 дня назад
It would be nice to have subtitles if you could ever have the time to get around to it 🙏
@wellifthemediasaysit
@wellifthemediasaysit 3 дня назад
Ridiculous fiction!
@Kaldisti
@Kaldisti 3 дня назад
ridiculous comment
@wellifthemediasaysit
@wellifthemediasaysit 3 дня назад
@@Kaldisti Please do explain? The word 'science' just isnt adequate either!
@Kaldisti
@Kaldisti 3 дня назад
@@wellifthemediasaysit Your Bible either.
@wellifthemediasaysit
@wellifthemediasaysit 3 дня назад
What are you talking about?
@Kaldisti
@Kaldisti 3 дня назад
@@wellifthemediasaysit do your research, this is what your kind tell everyday like parrots.
@MrLndrs
@MrLndrs 3 дня назад
Soundtrack at 25:30?
@Silverwind87
@Silverwind87 3 дня назад
Bird dinosaur: Hey guys, I'm back from migration! Huh? Where did everybody go?
@simosimo-mm5qg
@simosimo-mm5qg 4 дня назад
but the maps is not correct it schould match that era, respecting continent drifting so that the simulation be correct
@Kaldisti
@Kaldisti 4 дня назад
yeah but no map of that period exist yet
@jameskitchens9379
@jameskitchens9379 4 дня назад
What movie was the New York City Destruction scene from?
@Kaldisti
@Kaldisti 4 дня назад
Knowing
@AveryChristy
@AveryChristy 4 дня назад
The only thing I'd say is that the theory posits there were several impacts. The primary one in Greenland, of course, but several smaller broken chunks which impacted on the Laurentide Ice Sheet, and one just off the coast of Norway. Sort of like a shotgun blast.
@araneasmith
@araneasmith 4 дня назад
Well, this scared me more than any horror/disaster movie I've seen in the last ten years. I definitely won't be replaying this in my head on an endless loop for the foreseeable future... Edit: 'Leaving Earth' was a nice touch that gave me chills.
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 4 дня назад
Goodness, that space station needs better speakers and wall padding to damp down echo. What a racket!
@theemeraldstar7713
@theemeraldstar7713 5 дней назад
7:10 so glad to see freddy fazbear drop in for this one
@theemeraldstar7713
@theemeraldstar7713 5 дней назад
Big shout out to the moon for taking this one for us
@Danielwhite9005
@Danielwhite9005 5 дней назад
God after the dinosaurs refuse to pay rent:
@roxanne_george
@roxanne_george 5 дней назад
Talk about watching paint dry 😄
@crewrangergaming9582
@crewrangergaming9582 5 дней назад
One day the God said: Enough with the dinosaurs.
@eduardomontesdeoca1970
@eduardomontesdeoca1970 5 дней назад
Nice to know that the sound in Santo Domingo hasn't change so much since them jejej
@joerosenman3480
@joerosenman3480 6 дней назад
I’ll drop a few notes just because. First, it was interesting & I appreciate the fact that it was a lot of work. That said, there are a few questions I’m left with and a few observations. What’s the source of your post-impact data? I’m inferring the impactor data is the current generally accepted values. My last information about projections of the post-impact world was from a recent (~2 years?) PBS science program, with University involvement & cites, having a dual focus: an exceptionally well preserved whole animal/dinosaur preserve in one of the Dakotas and an examination of the immediate post-impact effects in the gulf region outward. While most of the results were essentially in agreement with your model there were differences (mind you, this is from memory). The immediate Earthquake was described (as I recall) as exceeding a 10 on the richter, with excursions of 6’? 10’? Some mind-numbing value and not-survivable. The air-pressure wave (first? following? I forget) was enormous and it too was not survivable. I believe the tsunami made it a substantial way to the Dakotas but didn’t reach it-but won’t swear to that. The tsunami that followed was 20 or 30 feet, and it did reach past the Dakotas-and was the immediate cause of death of the buried animals. Before the boulder fall and firestorm… Again as I recall the tsunami was about 30 minutes later (the Earthquake they experienced, while dramatic and lengthy, was survivable-but I believe they had a five minute respite before the water hit). Now oddities I noted. The highest speed winds were immediately over the impact site. That makes sense. But shouldn’t the wind speed dissipate over time as that energy spreads out and up? Your model shows it (black) as steady. There was an early, peculiar affinity for highly populated areas for high temperature firestorms. At twenty minutes, for example, a line of fire found its way directly to NYC. But the angle of ejection from the impact was approximately NW whereas NYC was NNW or even a few degrees more Northward. What would pull the fire to NYC, Paris, Chicago, the Cali coast, all of SW Europe? NW doesn’t point to S. America isn’t that much of a reach-but singling out Australia’s East Coast (most populous), the Indian sub-continent while leaving SW China (relatively low population) untouched? Many more examples. And unfavorable post-impact climate models not-withstanding it seemed too targeted to be a coincidence. But not knowing your data sources, your algorithms or your models-and not being expert in the underlying science-I’m in no position to judge. Just ask the questions. Last, should you do a re-do, a suggestion (I watched on a iPhone 7s, just to establish context). The “connection” box can be reduced to a small box that reads “no signal” leaving more space for the other boxes or for an additional data box. As the model progresses it is confusing which data is being displayed at any given time (especially as it is shown, in tiny letters, in rotated format). Making the current data displayed clear would be very beneficial. Final bon mot. I watched most of it with my finger held down to run at 2X. Occasionally I backed up 20 second, at times I was tempted to go into parameters and speed it up more. In the end I made 2X work but the ability to jump to (20” before) the next significant change would be very welcome.
@ShadowDragon-cw7wb
@ShadowDragon-cw7wb 6 дней назад
Pretoria:"Gone. Reduced to atoms."
@marlindolo5311
@marlindolo5311 6 дней назад
0:00 21°C 0:05 WTF is kilometer°C
@Semparo
@Semparo 6 дней назад
"Plot Armor Activated" had me howling xD
@toxicmale2264
@toxicmale2264 6 дней назад
Just another hurricane season in Florida.
@Viking_6_3
@Viking_6_3 7 дней назад
Thank god for the FF Button
@admincpt5947
@admincpt5947 7 дней назад
What did the dinosaurs see before the Chicxulub impact ? Not much, they too busy eating.
@kat_astrophe4279
@kat_astrophe4279 7 дней назад
“Everyone in McKinney is dead”
@JakuVlogs
@JakuVlogs 7 дней назад
The Indomitable human spirit
@unknowboy7189
@unknowboy7189 8 дней назад
Do you guys ever think if wasnt this asteroid we humans dont have any chance to live? Sometimes i think God erased dinossaurs to humans get a chance to live and now someday God will erased humans from earth to give a chance to another species to live is like the Law of Nature extiction and evolution🤔.
@CigaRhett73
@CigaRhett73 8 дней назад
God damn. I don’t like this. I have had insanely vivid and real feeling dreams, that until watching this just gave me chills, now I am sweating and feel like I’m having an anxiety attack. I had this nightmare a few times where everyone around me was looking at a bright light in the sky, and the feeling of dread and doom was so overwhelming. I’m not gonna sleep anytime soon.
@Helloyamnik
@Helloyamnik 8 дней назад
I found the Original Sound if the man in the suit at 10:32
@rolandchestnut9076
@rolandchestnut9076 8 дней назад
THEY SEEN THE SAME THING WE ARE GONNA SEE WHEN THE NEXT ASTEROID HITS US ( OBLIVION )
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 9 дней назад
"Human activities have been the main driver of climate change"--even ten thousand years ago? Wow!
@olisomething
@olisomething 9 дней назад
46:29 i am cooked by a 300 degree heat wave
@Remnisce_ph
@Remnisce_ph 9 дней назад
This is a proof that camera man is envitable.
@elylove267
@elylove267 9 дней назад
how are north pole and antartica not affected by the impact
@se7enthsoul
@se7enthsoul 9 дней назад
How much worse would this have been if it directly hit land instead of sea?
@Rodneytheproducer1986
@Rodneytheproducer1986 9 дней назад
The dinosaurs look up and they see it coming but in unison they all say they can do nothing because they don't have hands or thumbs thus not being able to come up with an effective plan shame
@venator5
@venator5 9 дней назад
Horseshoe crabs: "Dis again!?"
@jlha1
@jlha1 10 дней назад
there are quite a few mistakes 1 the black sea was much smaller because the water level was very low, it was only when the sea had risen so much that it could run through the Bosphorus 7,500 years ago and it is not that deep, 2 The Baltic Sea ran out to the south of Denmark and up through the Great Belt and Kattegat, not over Sweden, 3 the English channel did not exist then, the 120 m high white cliffs at Dover are part of a gigantic coral reef that stretched across the channel to France, up through Germany and Denmark, tectonically parts have risen and others have sunk, all the rivers from Belgium and north then ran north and north of Scotland into the Atlantic, that channel was only created when the ice built up again over i.a. scanvia saw a glacier slide from norway over the north sea, over scotland and dug out loch nes, it created a huge fresh water lake where the north sea is today, it rose until it could run over where the english channel is now and dug down through the limestone to the canal we see now, there are still waterfalls from that time at the bottom of the canal, the water did not enter through the canal from the south, but ran that way out during the melting of the ice it took the sea 7000 years to rise 120 m from the end of the Younger Dryas which ended 10,800 years ago
@Kaldisti
@Kaldisti 10 дней назад
1) the rapid sea-level rise of the Black Sea at 7,500 BC is a theory debunked for a while. The Bosphorus Strait was 160m deep before Holocene sediments partially filled it and Marmara strait, 96m. It means Mediterranean water started to flow toward Black Sea circa 14,500 years ago and filled progressively the basin. See the references in my Black Sea video 2) You refer here to an ice-dammed lake (Ancylus lake) which is not displayed here. 3) The situation you describe is anachronical, the Dover strait land bridge broke up 400k years ago. Since, North European rivers flow through the Channel when the ice bridge between British Isles and Scandinavia was formed.
@loukotaification
@loukotaification 10 дней назад
This is great, can I borrow few seconds for my educational Moon video?
@Kaldisti
@Kaldisti 10 дней назад
of course
@Nightshift10000
@Nightshift10000 11 дней назад
2:16 - why does Australia look like a Brachiosaurus trying to hump a giant boulder?
@ghosted9108
@ghosted9108 11 дней назад
6:26 forgot what I was watching for a second😂
@pusheenthecat9264
@pusheenthecat9264 11 дней назад
To give you a reference as to how fast 20 km/s is, that is precisely 112,359.55 bananas per second.
@Ama-hi5kn
@Ama-hi5kn 9 дней назад
I like deep fried bananas. They are delicious.
@StormsandSaugeye
@StormsandSaugeye 11 дней назад
I want that THX "NOPE" as its own thing.
@redswingline262
@redswingline262 12 дней назад
Thanks for the reminder shockwaves in the earth travel faster than in the air.