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The Ages of Planetary Glaciations: THE INCREDIBLE Moment when the Earth was a snowball! Documentary 

Wondody | The World of Odysseys
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🌍 Did you know that, in the past, the Earth experienced periods so cold that it became so icy that it resembled a "snowball"?
While mankind has always had an image of a blue, hospitable Earth, it turns out that this wasn't always the case. Before plants and animals began to populate it, our planet experienced periods cold enough to see its surface completely covered in ice.
How did the Earth, which lies in its star's habitable zone and on which water remains in a liquid state, turn into a ball of ice? And, above all, how did it manage to get out and become suitable again for the development of life?
🔥 As a reminder, videos are published on SUNDAYS at 6pm.
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💥The Ages of Planetary Glaciations:
- Since the formation of the Earth, the atmosphere has played the role of a heating blanket. In its early years, the Sun released 30% less energy than it does today. Since then, every billion years, its power has increased by 7%. Despite this, the Earth was much warmer than it is today. This phenomenon is due to its radiation balance. This is the difference between the energy received from the Sun and that reflected by the continents, oceans and atmosphere.
From the very beginning, carbon dioxide and methane have acted as a heating shield. These two powerful greenhouse gases are responsible for regulating surface temperatures. Oxygen, methane and carbon dioxide are the main forces driving variations in the Earth's climate.
In its early days, the Earth's atmosphere was mainly composed of carbon dioxide. Its concentration is gradually reduced by the erosion associated with the appearance of the first continents. Initially, this decrease was offset by the methane produced by methanogenic bacteria. Gradually, however, oxygen-producing bacteria appear. As the methanogenic bacteria die out, the concentration of methane in the earth's atmosphere falls sharply.
Climate is the result of a balance between the emission of greenhouse gases and their extraction from the atmosphere. For the Earth today, the most important natural source of carbon dioxide is volcanism. Water runoff then reacts with continental rocks to remove CO2 from the atmosphere and fix it in the form of carbonate, which accumulates as sediment on the seabed.
Nevertheless, over 3 billion years ago, although volcanism was already very active, continental surfaces, and consequently erosion, were derisory, resulting in high levels of CO2 in the atmosphere.
How did the very first ice age on Earth occur 2.4 billion years ago? And what are the causes and consequences for the Earth of each glaciation? Before answering these questions, let's take a look at how an ice age is defined.
An ice age is defined as an episode of glaciation that took place during a past geological period. Falling average temperatures cause ice caps to expand across the planet. This phenomenon can last for millions of years. Throughout its history, the Earth has experienced at least 5 major ice ages.
It is now scientifically proven that the Earth goes through cycles of climate change. The causes of these changes are diverse: modification of the Earth's orbit, changes in solar output, geological factors... As a result, temperatures drop significantly over long periods. This is known as an ice age. During an ice age, seabed temperatures drop considerably, allowing large glaciers, comparable in size to continents, to develop over a large part of the planet's surface.
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🎬 Today's program:
- 00:00 - Introduction
- 04:37 - Ice ages
- 07:24 - Evidence of ice ages
- 11:52 - Causes of climate change
- 13:25 - Huronian Ice Age
- 31:24 - Cryogenian or Varanger ice age
- 40:38 - Andes-Saharan glaciation
- 56:22 - Karoo Ice Age
- 01:02:10 - The Pliocene-Quaternary Ice Age
This channel is an official affiliate of the ORBINEA STUDIO network.

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4 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 49   
@slavaukraine5117
@slavaukraine5117 4 месяца назад
Goodnight everyone
@seisies-mama
@seisies-mama 4 месяца назад
This channel helps me to go to sleep too his voice is so relaxing that it helps me fall asleep ❤
@brianswelding
@brianswelding 4 месяца назад
😴😴😴
@stefanschleps8758
@stefanschleps8758 4 месяца назад
Good morning!
@michouharoliyk2050
@michouharoliyk2050 4 месяца назад
@@seisies-mama you know it's a computer talking, right?
@stefanschleps8758
@stefanschleps8758 4 месяца назад
Well done. Another worthwhile endeavor.
@user-yx1lc2mz4c
@user-yx1lc2mz4c 4 месяца назад
Fascinating video
@Titus-as-the-Roman
@Titus-as-the-Roman 4 месяца назад
Here in Kentucky we were at one time Ate Up with Mastodons and less so Mammoths. Big Bone Lick State Park is a Salt Lick that attracted these Beast from miles around and left their bones for us to study.
@angelsmith9421
@angelsmith9421 3 месяца назад
Cool 😎
@climate1965
@climate1965 3 месяца назад
A lot of work went into this video documentary. Unfortunately, it suffers greatly from a large error. CO2 increases in the atmosphere follow water and air temperature increases/warming and do not precede or cause it. This is known from chemistry and is virtually unknown or ignored by those who don't have chemistry course training. This is a law of solubility of gases, including CO2, in water. The colder water dissolves much more CO2 than warm water. As water warms, CO2 escapes into the air basically because the increased kinetic energy of the dissolved gas molecules allows them to break weak attractive bonds with water molecules and return to the air. No amount of wordsmithing can change this. The long delay of hundreds of years in CO2 rise after the temperature rises is because of the way the oceans currents work. The current official narrative (see above) ignores and obfuscates this. The Pacific and Atlantic meridional multidecadal oscillations take hundreds of years to move the water through full cycle. Water temperature changes much more slowly than air temperature because of its large latent heat capacity. Cold water at high latitudes, with high dissolved CO2 levels, sinks to the bottom of the oceans and the less dense warm water rises to replace it at lower latitudes. For example, the northern flow of the very warm gulf stream surface water goes to the arctic warming Europe greatly and losing heat and then sinking to the bottom around Greenland and Iceland.. This colder bottom water then flows back south in a bottom counter current where it warms and upwells. The Pacific has its own cycle. Look it up. CO2 levels are critical for photosynthesis as explained in the video, Higher CO2 level increases photosynthesis and plant growth which is good for all life, including animals which all, directly or indirectly, depend on plants. CO2 was critically low, maybe 280 parts per million or ppm (0.028%), coming out of the last earth ice age glaciation about 12,000 years ago. Incidentally, CO2 also varies noticeably locally/regionally with earth's seasons and with daytime and night time (diurnal variation) because of plant photosynthesis variability with sunlight. It's like watching earth breathe. This is almost never mentioned. With the warming in the last 12,000 years, CO2 is now about 400 ppm (0.040%) as explained above. This is good for life. Dry air (no water vapor) is about 78.08% Nitrogen (N2), Oxygen is about 20.95%, argon is about 0.93%, and trace gases are the rest including CO2 (0.04%) and extremely low %'s of methane, ozone, hydrogen, krypton, xenon. Wet air with water vapor included varies up to about 4% or 40,000 ppm. Water vapor and water are the great buffers in earth's weather and climate helping to keep it from getting too cold or hot. They store and transfer heat. Weather is a heat transfer mechanism. A second comment to follow will concentrate on the last part of the video which above concentrates on the orbital forcing and ice age glaciations of the last 2 1/2 million years.
@secularsunshine9036
@secularsunshine9036 4 месяца назад
*Let the Sunshine In ...*
@michaelselz3389
@michaelselz3389 3 месяца назад
❤️❤️❤️
@zack_120
@zack_120 4 месяца назад
Another fascinating documentary! I like this channel's signature heavy stress of the ending syllable of each sentence, which makes the ending words unmistakable 👍
@michouharoliyk2050
@michouharoliyk2050 4 месяца назад
Could you reprogram the computer so that plurals sound more natural? That Z sound at the end of every plural really grates. OR get a human to narrate... if there are any left
@theozarktrekker
@theozarktrekker 4 месяца назад
These AI narrationz can be so annoying and some are unbearable but for some reason I find the glitch in this one somewhat endearing. lol
@johnchapman1978
@johnchapman1978 4 месяца назад
I gotta agree... the contrextis great: thanx! Really, but the voice sounds like someone is msticking a hot poker up his arse every sentence
@hadz001
@hadz001 4 месяца назад
This ai talks like forrest gump 😂
@morgunstyles7253
@morgunstyles7253 4 месяца назад
Sounds like an old chevy chase skit
@FlyinRyan231
@FlyinRyan231 4 месяца назад
Yup,great subject, be much better if u read it urself tho
@paulmicks7097
@paulmicks7097 4 месяца назад
It's premise starts off with wrong info, water molecules and dust are the two most important factors, not carbon and methane
@judgementhallcollections8168
@judgementhallcollections8168 3 месяца назад
I would caution to not say methanogenic bacteria die off. They are still here.
@katieobbink4612
@katieobbink4612 4 месяца назад
Who is the narrator?
@katieobbink4612
@katieobbink4612 4 месяца назад
He sounds like someone I know who is on the spectrum and has a uniquely understandable way of speaking.
@heidih1361
@heidih1361 4 месяца назад
I’m pretty sure it’s AI
@GeneM-on1mp
@GeneM-on1mp 4 месяца назад
Doesn't seem to be the case, since as I noticed, this guy keeps mispronouncing 'Iapetus (/aɪˈæpɪtəs/) Ocean' as 'Lapetus Ocean'. Cool narrating otherwise
@michaelselz3389
@michaelselz3389 3 месяца назад
He sounds gay
@GeneM-on1mp
@GeneM-on1mp 4 месяца назад
As always, entertaining and informative to watch, however.. You forgot to mention the current trend in CO2 emission. The rate of change for it in the atmosphere is estimated to be much higher than that during the time that lead up to the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum 55 million years ago when the average temperature rose 5-9 degrees Celsius. Although, as you did mention, climatic situation today is very different from what was back then with barely any ice on the poles, yet imagining a comeback of the Ice Age in 50k years should happen in the presence of this huge warm elephant in the room. So don't be shy and say it : Global Warming!
@charliemihai5471
@charliemihai5471 4 месяца назад
As for the current increase in CO2 on this graph, keep in mind discrepancies like this: the main measuring station for global CO2 is located on Hawaii's Mauna Loa volcano, which releases CO2 at an increasing rate, according to the USGS. this is so much fun
@Oldguitar57
@Oldguitar57 Месяц назад
The narrative of this video has so many errors I cant watch it🙄
@paulhowson8744
@paulhowson8744 4 месяца назад
NEVER HAPPENED.
@JerryThomas-xc7ur
@JerryThomas-xc7ur 3 месяца назад
Got too boring, so I stopped watching this.
@lmeasley1262
@lmeasley1262 4 месяца назад
I just don’t believe this. I am no ape, no monkey. Mankind is their own species. Just my opinion. But you had me interested til then! So this is just another theory. Besides how anyone say billion, million , thousands. There is no logical way to date that many years ago. This is just a theory!!
@harrietharlow9929
@harrietharlow9929 4 месяца назад
Please learn the difference between a theory and a hypothesis. A hypothesis is an idea or concept that has little to no evidence. A theory is an idea/concept which has gathered considerable evidence to support it. The THEORY of evolution is a scientific fact whether you wish to acknowledge that or not. And yes, you are a primate, a member of the family of great apes. Our closest genetic relatives are chimpanzees. Again, there is a whole body of evidence to support this fact. Our anatomy is similar to that of other apes, we have similar blood groups and we are 98.8 identical to chimps and bonobos genetically.--in fact we are 10x more closely related to chimps than mice are to rats. So yes, you, like all other humans, are an ape.
@rogerwilco1777
@rogerwilco1777 4 месяца назад
DNA, you know, the same stuff that can link you to a crime, can also link you to your ancestors.. and yep, all humans closest living relatives are the lesser and great apes, ie bonobos, chimps, gorillas etc from Africa, orangutans and gibbons etc from Asia.. ..We had closer to human 'looking' relatives like the Neanderthals, "Lucy" and others at one point, but we wiped them out long ago due to 'conflicting issues'.. Thats the reason you don't see chimps giving birth to humans, they aren't the closest thing to 'us', they are only the closest 'living' thing to us.. the animals that were closer to 'us' were wiped out by 'us' long ago.. ..And the reason we can say thousands/millions/billions of years is through the decay of atoms.. theres a dozen or so methods, but the main one is measuring carbon-14. The way carbon-14 gets into the tissues of plants and animals begins with cosmic rays. Cosmic rays blast apart atoms in the atmosphere, splitting neutrons. The neutrons combine with nitrogen-14 atoms to create radioactive carbon-14. The radioactive carbon combines with oxygen in the atmosphere to form radioactive carbon dioxide, which plants absorb to make energy to grow. When animals like humans or cows eat the plants, and humans or whatever eat the cows, they absorb the radioactive carbon. When plants and animals die, they cease to take in new carbon-14, so start the clock as the carbon-14 decays into nitrogen-14, which then becomes oxygen-15, which then decays to nitrogen-15 and then for some reason that doesnt become carbon-16 but instead blows apart to become carbon-12 and a helium.. and you add up all the decay rates of all these different quantities of elements.. and thats how you get a ball park on the age of something.
@russellcrosby8175
@russellcrosby8175 4 месяца назад
If we didn't evolve, god's not very creative; bi lateral symmetry, arms, legs. Kind of similar. We got a tail bone, cocyx?.. Check out featus development.. at one point you had gills! Then there's the Male hernias: fish have testicles next to there heart, keep em warm. That's were ours start as a featus, then drop rite through the body, leaving a weakness, in mammals testicles need to be cooler! Mind my spelling, sorry - and a couple other points!
@stevemorris6855
@stevemorris6855 3 месяца назад
How can people know this stuff." Its called education, try reading more than one book. DNA says we're 99% chimpanzee.
@YECBIB
@YECBIB Месяц назад
Lies​@@russellcrosby8175
@Oldguitar57
@Oldguitar57 Месяц назад
The narrative of this video has so many errors I cant watch it🙄
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