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Which Will Kill You First? 

MinuteEarth
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The body can get a whole lot colder - but not a whole lot hotter - before we die. Why is that?
LEARN MORE
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To learn more about this topic, start your googling with these keywords:
Hyperthermia: a medical condition where an individual's body temperature is elevated beyond normal
Hypothermia: a medical doncition that occurs when an individual's body loses heat faster than it can produce heat, causing a dangerously low body temperature
Thermoregulation is the ability of an organism to keep its body temperature within certain boundaries, even when the surrounding temperature is very different
Denaturation: the alteration of a protein shape through some form of external stress (for example, heat), so that it can no longer carry out its cellular function
If you liked this week’s video, you might also like:
A great article from Outside on hyperthermia: www.outsideonl...
Learn more about the woman who survived the lowest known body temp: www.atlasobscu...
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CREDITS
*********
Kate Yoshida | Script Writer, Narrator and Director
Sarah Berman | Illustration, Video Editing and Animation
Nathaniel Schroeder | Music
MinuteEarth is produced by Neptune Studios LLC
neptunestudios...
OUR STAFF
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Sarah Berman • Arcadi Garcia Rius
David Goldenberg • Julián Gustavo Gómez
Melissa Hayes • Alex Reich • Henry Reich
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REFERENCES
**************
Lepock JR (2004). Role of nuclear protein denaturation and aggregation
in thermal radiosensitization, International Journal of Hyperthermia, 20:2, 115-130, www.tandfonlin...
Leuenberger, P, Ganscha S, Kahraman A, Cappelletti V, PJ Boersema, Mering Cv, Claassen M, Picotti P (2017). Cell-wide analysis of protein thermal unfolding reveals determinants of thermostability
Science, 355: eaai7825. science.scienc...
Roti Roti J (2008) Cellular responses to hyperthermia (40-46 degrees C): cell killing and molecular events. International Journal of Hyperthermia 24(1): 3-15. www.tandfonlin...
Sawka MN, Leon LR, Montain SJ, Sonna LA (2011). Integrated physiological mechanisms of exercise performance, adaptation, and maladaptation to heat stress. Comprehensive Physiology 1: 1883-1928. onlinelibrary....
Slovis CM, Anderson GF, Casolaro A (1982). Survival in a heat stroke victim with a core temperature in excess of 46.5 C. Annals of Emergency Medicine 11(5):269-271. linkinghub.els...

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27 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 1,2 тыс.   
@MinuteEarth
@MinuteEarth 3 года назад
Thank you for your continued warm support of MinuteEarth, you all are so cool! Want to become our Patreon or member on RU-vid? Just visit www.patreon.com/MinuteEarth or click "JOIN". Thanks!
@greenjuice6095
@greenjuice6095 3 года назад
Hai!
@Blue.Diesel
@Blue.Diesel 3 года назад
But how can i sit in a sauna that is 70 or 80 celsius for hours as a teen? Would i not die? Or get cooked like an egg?
@prestons3400
@prestons3400 3 года назад
How is this 4 hours ago
@dxtrul2767
@dxtrul2767 3 года назад
Hi
@bigsloganza6861
@bigsloganza6861 3 года назад
Lol I expected an April fools video
@F_L_U_X
@F_L_U_X 3 года назад
I had a 107F fever as a kid. I just remember hallucinating and losing consciousness and having weird dreams and then not knowing if I was awake or asleep.
@ringringdoorbell
@ringringdoorbell 3 года назад
Same I once went to school with it and they sent me back with a note cause I went too often while I was in that state
@JordanPeterson.
@JordanPeterson. 3 года назад
damn dope experience
@mcbasil4752
@mcbasil4752 3 года назад
I Had A Horrible Fever Dream That i was buried alive and i had no idea what was happening because i was very sick-
@meetshah4432
@meetshah4432 3 года назад
same, I too once had a fever of 104F, and I felt the same
@jasonchiu272
@jasonchiu272 3 года назад
How to get high in another way.
@z-beeblebrox
@z-beeblebrox 3 года назад
Really appreciate the flex of posting on April 1st and actively ignoring the day
@Davanthall
@Davanthall 3 года назад
There’s actually quite a few videos in my inbox today that are doing that. Weird..
@nixx8186
@nixx8186 3 года назад
@@Davanthall Same here... What are they planning..?
@z-beeblebrox
@z-beeblebrox 3 года назад
@@Davanthall I just checked, Google's homepage doesn't even have a thing. The internet giving up on April Fools is a decision I can get behind.
@felixerin1165
@felixerin1165 3 года назад
for me april 2nd
@lurking_silhouette5802
@lurking_silhouette5802 3 года назад
Americans..
@DarkShadow84
@DarkShadow84 3 года назад
I think I understood what you tried to explain. When we slowly warm up from being very cold, we can roast marshmallows with a bear. Right?
@samyakjainjss
@samyakjainjss 3 года назад
Exactly
@TheFerretofEarth
@TheFerretofEarth 3 года назад
Yeah you got it
@blueblood-_-
@blueblood-_- 3 года назад
That's why, you are poor.
@sd.2528
@sd.2528 3 года назад
Nah, that was an April Fools joke. You don't have to slowly warm up before you roast marshmallows with a bear. There is no science to suggest that.
@irchonite1953
@irchonite1953 3 года назад
After reading this and nearly having a stroke, I thought this video was gonna be an april fools joke, rhyme intended
@kurumi394
@kurumi394 3 года назад
Cold: starts off uncomfortable, then painful, then suddenly becomes relatively painless and loses consciousness Hot: uncomfortable and sticky and sweaty until dying of dehydration Yeah no thanks
@jonathanodude6660
@jonathanodude6660 3 года назад
this video isnt about dehydration, its about hyperthermia.
@batatanna
@batatanna 3 года назад
@@jonathanodude6660 or hyperthermia but yea while dehydration is a risk you'd probably actually die from organ failure
@jonathanodude6660
@jonathanodude6660 3 года назад
@@batatanna that is hyperthermia?
@batatanna
@batatanna 3 года назад
@@jonathanodude6660 yea. Hypo means less and hyper means more. So you get the gist
@jonathanodude6660
@jonathanodude6660 3 года назад
@@batatanna what? No one mentioned hypothermia here.
@AverytheCubanAmerican
@AverytheCubanAmerican 3 года назад
"We are already playing with fire" deep down inside, we are firebenders
@muhilan8540
@muhilan8540 3 года назад
I see you everywhere
@sirk603
@sirk603 3 года назад
Genocide time
@ketsuekikumori9145
@ketsuekikumori9145 3 года назад
As the Sun Warriors have stated fire is life.
@jtom2958
@jtom2958 3 года назад
Ok so do we just have the exact same taste in RU-vid videos or do you watch every video that comes out
@electronresonator8882
@electronresonator8882 3 года назад
it's heat
@self-proclaimednimwit2263
@self-proclaimednimwit2263 3 года назад
As someone who lives in a tropical country, I can't stand heat! I feel like my brain is melting. Guess I picked the wrong place to live.
@mr.boomguy
@mr.boomguy 3 года назад
I can't function over 25 celsius, little lone 30 c. 20 c or a little below are just right for me.
@impendio
@impendio 3 года назад
same, i’ve lived all my life in this humid tropical rainforest and can’t stand heat at all. it’s not just the temperature for me (30~34) but the humidity what kills me, it’s kill breathing water...
@shinobix4925
@shinobix4925 3 года назад
Then you should have been born in a colder country smh
@mazedude5911
@mazedude5911 3 года назад
Oh you should see Texas
@Tinil0
@Tinil0 3 года назад
@@impendio I do not envy you at all. Where I live is humid and mild in the winter and dry and hot during the summer. As much as I hate the few weeks when it gets up to 38 each year, it being dry during those times at least makes it livable. If it was also humid...man, I don't know how you guys deal haha.
@rodrigotolosa590
@rodrigotolosa590 3 года назад
Man, my mom used to talk about how afraid she got when I was a little kid and got sick, because 3 or 4 times I had 41°C fevers and I never really understood what that meant. This puts thing in perpective.
@siar073
@siar073 3 года назад
Same
@jonathanodude6660
@jonathanodude6660 3 года назад
the danger is that as you get hotter, your heat producing chemical reactions get faster. this means that it continuously gets more difficult for your body to cool down on its own. thats where the excessive sweating comes in and why you have to hydrate. if the fever gets out of hand at any point, you have to cool them down or else their body will be unable to do anything and their temperature will continue to rise until irreversible damage occurs and they die.
@EspeonAndMew
@EspeonAndMew 3 года назад
yea it really really puts why it's so worrying to adults- like I remember my temp being at like 105 a few years back and my mom being like "that's too close, if it doesn't go down we have to take u to the hospital" and I was just thinking "wow that's a stupid reason to have to go there pft 😳" but now I get it, that shit scary
@siar073
@siar073 3 года назад
@@EspeonAndMew I know someone who got so sick that she burned something in her brain. Now she forgets stuff the next day.
@jonathanodude6660
@jonathanodude6660 3 года назад
@@EspeonAndMew yeah it’s good to keep all that in mind and pay attention for it but also our bodies do it on purpose. The main issues are usually diseases that can trigger it on their own or immune systems that overreact. Otherwise, they’ll kill the pathogen and your body will go back to normal (hot flushes)
@dfpcmaia
@dfpcmaia 3 года назад
It took me a little while to realize 13C and 47C were internal body temps and not environment temps, for a second I was like whaaaat 13C isn’t too bad!
@The_Andromeda_Galaxy
@The_Andromeda_Galaxy 3 года назад
Yeah, I started thinking about that one guy who climbed mount everest(80% of it) in just his shorts. He regularly takes ice baths and walks around in below freezing temperatures in snowy/icey places with almost no clothes on. Several times to at least once a day.
@razveck
@razveck 3 года назад
@@The_Andromeda_Galaxy Wim Hof is the name. He teaches this stuff and there are many other people doing that nowadays. It's pretty crazy, I recommend everyone should try it
@realdragon
@realdragon 3 года назад
Especially when subzero temperatures are not a problem. But I would die if air temperature would be 37
@jonathanodude6660
@jonathanodude6660 3 года назад
@@realdragon when air temp is similar to or above body temp, you have basically no direct way to lose the heat generated by moving or pumping blood or thinking. evaporation becomes the only method of maintaining body temperature. if its humid, evaporation doesnt work and you cannot cool down. your body temperature would continue to rise until you moved to a cooler location or died.
@jonathanodude6660
@jonathanodude6660 3 года назад
@@The_Andromeda_Galaxy he must have a really high metabolism to cope with those temperatures like that.
@0neAutumnLeaf
@0neAutumnLeaf 3 года назад
Loving the Howls moving castle reference!
@samuelwatson6016
@samuelwatson6016 3 года назад
@Much2Troublesome where was that?
@3possumsinatrenchcoat
@3possumsinatrenchcoat 3 года назад
the titanic one though
@charliechristie9916
@charliechristie9916 3 года назад
@@samuelwatson6016 Sophie was carrying Calcifer as the pretty hot as normal illustration. 😊
@artsy8490
@artsy8490 3 года назад
I immediately came to the comments to see if someone noticed that
@ryansuploaddump952
@ryansuploaddump952 3 года назад
Wait where? Time stamp?
@Shatterverse
@Shatterverse 3 года назад
I thought you were going to do _external_ temperature, which of course is a different story, and relies heavily on temperature differential rather than absolute temperature.
@Nosirrbro
@Nosirrbro 3 года назад
Yeah if you can go as far as you want in either direction it would definitely be heat
@tonydai782
@tonydai782 3 года назад
@@Nosirrbro Well that also depends on the specific environment you're in. The more humid the air is, the less sweat can cool you down.
@Nosirrbro
@Nosirrbro 3 года назад
@@tonydai782 Well at a certain point enough heat would vaporize you far before sweat becomes very relevant, while in absolute zero you'd survive at least a few seconds
@legrandliseurtri7495
@legrandliseurtri7495 Месяц назад
@@Nosirrbro I'm not sure that's true(yes this is three years late). I'd say that anything past 60 degrees Celcius quickly becomes deadly regardless of how much water you can drink(so about 23 degrees above body temperature). Meanwhile, you can survive for a long time at -40 degrees Celcius if you wear enough clothing, which is 77 degrees under our body temperature.
@Nosirrbro
@Nosirrbro Месяц назад
@legrandliseurtri7495 You’re right I just meant like, core of the sun temperatures, which would instantly turn you into a plasma lol
@Lightning_Lance
@Lightning_Lance 3 года назад
"Ok-k-k-k-kay Rose, y-y-y-your time to hang on the d-d-d-door now. P-p-p-pull me up." "Oh Jack, you're so brave. Thank you for your sacrifice." "W-w-what? No Rose, p-p-pull me up, Rose...."
@sketchykitten3640
@sketchykitten3640 3 года назад
“What would kill you first, heat, or cold-ness” Me: *a math test*
@epauletshark3793
@epauletshark3793 3 года назад
I'll do you one better... THE ACT!
@epauletshark3793
@epauletshark3793 3 года назад
Or sat.
@bananya6020
@bananya6020 3 года назад
@@epauletshark3793 actually the SAT is just a huge reading test followed by a huge math test soo
@epauletshark3793
@epauletshark3793 3 года назад
@@bananya6020 so, its still hell.
@bananya6020
@bananya6020 3 года назад
@@epauletshark3793 i had to do it in march, it wasn't actually that bad.
@lukasmickevicius2173
@lukasmickevicius2173 3 года назад
I see you're a fan of Studio Ghibli! (Sophie & Calcifer from HMC)
@danielawesome36
@danielawesome36 3 года назад
0:30
@warb_of_fire
@warb_of_fire 3 года назад
Bruh I literally watched that movie last night and I missed that, oof.
@forgmanguy
@forgmanguy 4 месяца назад
@@warb_of_fireI watched that movie 3 years ago and didn’t miss it lol
@mousermind
@mousermind 3 года назад
1:53 _"Oh, two people in cold wa-_ _"OH, NO! YOU USED TITANIC FOR THIS. How could you? That's... awwwwh, man..."_
@smalltime0
@smalltime0 4 месяца назад
THERE WAS PLENTY OF ROOM ON THAT DOOR ROSE
@steffenvongrabau7260
@steffenvongrabau7260 3 года назад
Instructions unclear, went camping with a bear. I'm now missing my right arm
@thijmendewit5481
@thijmendewit5481 3 года назад
THERE WAS ENOUGH ROOM FOR JACK ON THAT DOOR!!!!
@impendio
@impendio 3 года назад
we know, we know...
@capivara6094
@capivara6094 3 года назад
even if there wasn't, he could go above her or her above him
@CT-cl9wi
@CT-cl9wi 3 года назад
We needed the drama
@MySerpentine
@MySerpentine 3 года назад
Not really, they would have dragged the door further down into the water.
@epauletshark3793
@epauletshark3793 3 года назад
@@MySerpentine Mythbusters. That is my response.
@Jessie_Helms
@Jessie_Helms Год назад
Recently I caught covid for a _fourth time_ and hit 102.8 before taking some more fever reducers and going to sleep. I had the most bizarre, unsettling, horrific dream of my life. Thousands of years passed, it was excruciating. And then I woke up and just had to _deal_ with being a normal mortal human being who was moderately sick.
@eglol
@eglol 5 месяцев назад
I've experienced the same thing but the other way around
@ilikecatsalot4688
@ilikecatsalot4688 3 месяца назад
I had. 110 fever and had Covid 3 times as a kid
@cbsboyer
@cbsboyer 3 года назад
My normal body temperature is about 2ºF cooler than the average, so it can be frustrating to explain to people why I feel awful when I'm "only" running a fever of 100-101ºF.
@bunniifangz
@bunniifangz 2 года назад
same, my body is normally around 96 or 97, so like 98.6 is already getting into mild fever territory for me, but people tell me i’m fine if I have that temp
@ragnkja
@ragnkja 8 месяцев назад
Armpit temperature is usually about 0.5°C or about 1°F lower than your core temperature, which you need to take into account. It’s normal, especially for petite people, to have a fever even when their armpit temperature is only 37°C, which is nominally the expected temperature.
@ericyang1401
@ericyang1401 3 года назад
"and things can go back to normal" * shows bear toasting marshmellows with human * if that was intentional, it was perfect comedic timing XD
@lenschwedt9646
@lenschwedt9646 3 года назад
Russia and aslaska in the spring
@ericyang1401
@ericyang1401 3 года назад
@@lenschwedt9646 haha yeah
@itsphoenixingtime
@itsphoenixingtime 3 года назад
i unfortunately don't get the pun but i applaud them if they hid it somewhere inside
@ericyang1401
@ericyang1401 3 года назад
@@itsphoenixingtime it means they're saying a bear eating marshmellows with a human is normal
@itsphoenixingtime
@itsphoenixingtime 3 года назад
@@ericyang1401 i see, haha.
@E1ns_2wei
@E1ns_2wei 3 года назад
I like how there were faces on the inner organs to hide the fact that freezing to death is a pretty horrible death.
@someguywhocanfly
@someguywhocanfly 3 года назад
Does it not weird anyone else out how happy and cutesy her voice is while describing ways your body shuts down? Feels completely off theme, she sounds like a manic pixie dream girl
@Hisu0
@Hisu0 3 года назад
I think she's done the Xenophile Advisor voice in Stellaris: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_s9vAFE2ESY.html
@ThePigeonBrain
@ThePigeonBrain 3 года назад
2:01 there's clearly enough room on that raft for two
@eikosiandmiloloverasmr4214
@eikosiandmiloloverasmr4214 2 года назад
Fr
@52flyingbicycles
@52flyingbicycles 3 года назад
I though this would be more of an analysis: at what speed could each temp kill you, and how close is it to your body temp? Like some sort of integral analysis of killing speed vs temperature. Obviously being superheated to 10,000,000 degrees will kill you instantly, as would superchilling you to 1K, but is there some sort of formula? Eh, I learned a lot either way 😁
@Helloknight
@Helloknight 3 года назад
“You will get cold in a cold room” ah yes, the ground here is made of ground
@cringeynamehere9145
@cringeynamehere9145 3 года назад
Ah yes, the floor is made out of floor
@hello-sz7hp
@hello-sz7hp 5 месяцев назад
@@cringeynamehere914534/34 on test
@AnimeShinigami13
@AnimeShinigami13 3 года назад
I love the Howl's Moving Castle reference!
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 3 года назад
We didn't start the fire Kate did
@capitalm417
@capitalm417 3 года назад
owa supleme reada kim jang un
@PremierCCGuyMMXVI
@PremierCCGuyMMXVI 3 года назад
The Americans did my leader
@kyesickhead7008
@kyesickhead7008 3 года назад
To answer the question on the title: The cold kills you faster, and with less pain; so if you have a death wish, but wants to die in a cool way, i suggest Skyrim.
@eduardop2111
@eduardop2111 3 года назад
If were talking speed of death/diference to the body temperature i think it might be heat my man, death by hypothermia takes quite a while, but if you are at 50 degrees celcius, everything is already melted and ur dead in minutes
@nothing-mm8ui
@nothing-mm8ui 3 года назад
e
@yourcrazybear
@yourcrazybear 3 года назад
@@sharky98 That's taking it to extremes in just one direction. You might as well compare it to being in near boiling water and compare times again.
@yourcrazybear
@yourcrazybear 3 года назад
@@sharky98 But that was not your comparison. You compared sitting in a car with being in freezing water. That's comparing apples to oranges.
@kyesickhead7008
@kyesickhead7008 3 года назад
@@eduardop2111 It's relative, "mah man"; throwing numbers arbitrarily is easy: obviously the heat kills faster. I specifically went from likelihood on survival scenarios, based on the research I've done on the subject. Got it?
@LangKuoch
@LangKuoch 3 года назад
The sleeping immune system cells are so stinkin cute!
@ended-randomcreations
@ended-randomcreations 3 года назад
Yes They look pretty chill
@sheltershowcase
@sheltershowcase Год назад
​@@ended-randomcreations💀
@jeffhappens1
@jeffhappens1 3 года назад
Why heat up slowly and not too quickly? I hear that advice a lot, but I don't get to hear the understanding of it.
@ThatOneGengar
@ThatOneGengar 3 года назад
Our bodies are very sensitive to change, and so anything that changes too rapidly when we're ill or injured can cause shock. Essentially if our bodies detect that we are in some life-threatening situation we experience vasoconstriction, meaning the blood vessels in our extremities narrow. In the case of hypothermia, if you warm someone too quickly and they go into shock, all that cold blood will shoot to the middle of their bodies and cause even more problems. This is also the reasoning for why if someone is experiencing hyperthermia (extreme heat) that you don't allow them to cool down too fast by putting them into an iced bath or anything. Simply remove as much clothing as you can and get them to (preferably) a shady and air-conditioned spot with some water to sip on.
@snuckytoes8427
@snuckytoes8427 3 года назад
@@ThatOneGengar There is also the issue of frostbite, if you warm up a frost bitten body part to quickly it damages the tissues and can cause some pretty severe problems (on top of the harm from the frostbite itself. )
@MichaelPaoli
@MichaelPaoli 3 года назад
"You're not dead, 'till you're warm 'n dead."
@sirjellyfish7501
@sirjellyfish7501 Год назад
I love when Minute Earth covers such nice and goofy topics such as "Would you freeze or burn to death quicker?"
@manasisnehal1572
@manasisnehal1572 3 года назад
0:29 did anyone else notice that scene is from Howl's moving castle?? Sophie holding Calcifer.
@robinchesterfield42
@robinchesterfield42 3 года назад
Wow. I had a fever of 104 (F, obviously) once and...my cells were doing THAT?! Man, I had no idea fevers were _that_ creepy...
@NetAndyCz
@NetAndyCz 3 года назад
I do not know Fahrenheit, but I had fever close to 40°C once and my, I had the weirdest dreams in my life, I was close to hallucinating, and time behaved really weird. I am pretty sure my brain cannot operate at such temperatures.
@nmm.v7
@nmm.v7 3 года назад
40°C =104°F
@jakerpunster
@jakerpunster 3 года назад
man's not hot
@secondengineer9814
@secondengineer9814 3 года назад
The book "Ministry for the Future" starts with an interesting tragedy related to this. A heatwave in India, with sustained wet bulb temperatures of (meaning even being wet can't cool you down more than) 106 degrees F, millions die. Just the first in a long line of tragedies related to climate change.
@naingchanmyae
@naingchanmyae 3 года назад
My stupid brain reads the title as "Which will you kill first?"
@JonathanKAKE
@JonathanKAKE 3 года назад
me too! I thought I was the only one! 🤣
@Hisname22
@Hisname22 11 месяцев назад
That last illustration of roasting marshmallows made me chuckle.
@KaranSingh-or7yy
@KaranSingh-or7yy 3 года назад
So, it's better to live in COLD places!!!! 🥶🥶
@Aereto
@Aereto 3 года назад
The Hitman game is right about death by too hot sauna.
@szy3993
@szy3993 3 года назад
I LOVE cold alot
@AmapaenseBakedBacon
@AmapaenseBakedBacon 4 месяца назад
nah, i'd become an ice cube at 8°C air temperature or smth
@trunghungpham9414
@trunghungpham9414 3 года назад
2:55 You are eating marshmallows with a bear... Are you some sort of... Russian? I can be your friend, if you’re so desperate that you have a bear as a friend.
@user-qj8su4os5j
@user-qj8su4os5j 9 месяцев назад
𝓘𝓽'𝓼 𝓪 𝓳𝓸𝓴𝓮
@k.c1126
@k.c1126 3 года назад
Wow ... I was just thinking about this question today! And I was thinking how people fear being cold more than they do being hot. Is that just because more people can remember surviving the cold????
@antivanti
@antivanti 3 года назад
Oh I thought this was going to be about the temperature of the surrounding environment. If we assume a default temperature of 20 C (68 F, regular room temparature, no sweating or shivering, no special clothes needed) Go up 30 degrees to 50 C (122 F) and it becomes very uncomfortable but survivable without special clothing. Go down 30 degreed to -10 C (14 F) and you won't last long in just your undies And saunas are usually between 65 C and 90 C (mostly around 80 C). Imagine sitting in the nude in -40 C (-40 F) for 10 minutes. Saunas are dry heat tho (even with the steam from pouring water on the hot rocks). Humidity makes a big difference. Especially for heat as it makes sweating less effective.
@olly5764
@olly5764 3 года назад
loved the bear toasting marshmallows! lol
@LearnInfo.
@LearnInfo. 3 месяца назад
While both extreme heat and cold can be deadly, the data suggests that cold is more deadly than heat. This is because cold can exacerbate pre-existing medical conditions, cause direct effects such as frostbite and hypothermia, and lead to a rapid loss of heat from the body.
@Aragorn450
@Aragorn450 3 года назад
That doesn't really answer the question though. At least not the one I was imagining when seeing the still and the title. I was assuming we were talking about which will make you die faster if you were exposed. As in, how long will it take to die in 120℉ weather vs 40℉ weather? Either way though, we still didn't talk about how fast each extreme kills you. It was really just answering how much of a difference from normal can our bodies handle? In other words, we can handle being colder than our normal than warmer than our normal by double (-40℉ vs +20℉). Which is interesting, but also not surprising since that's also the case with our weather. The maximum high temperatures here on Earth are only 20℉ to 30℉ above our body temperature but the lows are WAY below our body temperature (max of -126℉).
@the_smart_waterbear1234
@the_smart_waterbear1234 6 месяцев назад
2:25 That bear is _adorable_
@punybacon3175
@punybacon3175 3 года назад
love the fact that they also include the celsius temperature markings
@mr.sandman6823
@mr.sandman6823 3 года назад
I like that Sophie and Calcifer bit
@keenspeed7189
@keenspeed7189 3 года назад
Very nice, Howl's moving castle reference
@empty_rivers
@empty_rivers 3 года назад
That's pretty cool, if i do say so myself.
@tommeng6522
@tommeng6522 3 года назад
What a toasty joke
@tkhanh.
@tkhanh. 3 года назад
nice howl's moving castle reference
@limerence8365
@limerence8365 3 года назад
I heard stories about people falling into icy lakes and being the under the ice and unable to breathe. The frozen water cools their brain and they can survive with air for upwards of ten minutes.
@enlightenedone1386
@enlightenedone1386 5 месяцев назад
Bro didn't even answer the question 💀
@michaelliu6570
@michaelliu6570 4 месяца назад
Did you watch it? It’s heat.
@thomasborg6341
@thomasborg6341 4 месяца назад
Bro didn't even watch the video 💀
@ngz1123
@ngz1123 4 месяца назад
They literally tell you 17 seconds into the video. Either you’re that dense or your adhd is off the fucking charts
@LoAagyaHero
@LoAagyaHero 3 месяца назад
Bro didn't even have mind in his💀
@johnclarke3598
@johnclarke3598 3 года назад
Nice Easter egg references 0:30 Howl's moving castle, Sophie and Calcifer 1:54 Titanic, Jack and Rose
@alexjelbert3219
@alexjelbert3219 3 года назад
Also 0:21 snow & heat miser
@jonathanodude6660
@jonathanodude6660 3 года назад
you didnt mention how the chemical reactions that require the heat also generate heat, and more heat means faster reactions, producing even more heat, etc.
@alicemarshall0823
@alicemarshall0823 5 месяцев назад
For some reason I have a temperature sensitivity. If I get even just a little to hot and I get sweaty I can't breathe and I get rashes in different parts of my body and I get heat stroke and pass out after being in the summer heat after less then 15 mins. And in the winter I have to bundle up and wear extra layers and I can't be out in the cold longer then 15 mins. My nose gets red and cold, my fingers go blue and numb, and my entire body feels frozen from the inside out. And if I stay out in the cold to long I can very easily get pneumonia, bronchitis, or strep throat. One summer day in my early teens I went to a park near my house to meet up with some friends and I stayed out for a couple hours and was ready as a lobster and could barely walk or breathe and while on my way back home I collapsed from heat stroke and my friends just left me unconscious in the middle of the road, I woke up about 20-30 mins after and staggered home and my mom helped cool me down by giving me a few glasses of water and got me in for a cool shower. And pretty much almost every winter I get sick from the cold air and it reacks havoc on my lungs. I don't know what's wrong with my body but it hates being in heat and in freezing teps
@unluckybat1390
@unluckybat1390 5 месяцев назад
Have you been to the doctors about it?
@alicemarshall0823
@alicemarshall0823 5 месяцев назад
@@unluckybat1390 I haven't been to see any kind of Dr in about a decade. Can't afford it
@tudororza
@tudororza 3 года назад
Are you feeling ok? At 37 it's almost fever... I am usually at 36.0 - 36.5
@UnusualPete
@UnusualPete 3 года назад
37 is normal for most people but for some it's the start of a fever. I'm like that. My temp is usually around 35 so 37 is already too much.
@dimanarinull9122
@dimanarinull9122 3 года назад
I'm normally 36-35.5... some people just have weird conditions... or maybe I'm actually a lizard...
@dimanarinull9122
@dimanarinull9122 3 года назад
@@UnusualPete you ARE a lizard m8...
@Hollow__Heart
@Hollow__Heart 3 года назад
Every 'normal' value actually varies a bit from person to person.
@ragnkja
@ragnkja 8 месяцев назад
How do you typically measure your temperature? If you measure in the armpit or mouth, it’s usually about half a degree lower than if you measure in the ear, rectum or vagina. And it’s also possible that your usual body temperature is slightly lower than average as well, so it’s definitely possible to have a fever when you’re measuring 37°C.
@mevadavraj4178
@mevadavraj4178 3 года назад
I live in India in Gujarat on summer average temperature is 45 C so is it dangerous 😱
@0deadx21
@0deadx21 3 года назад
So fucking what? Your body temperature is still normal, regardless what temperature the air is.
@adrees
@adrees 3 года назад
The other thing that they didn’t mention is that humans can exercise to warm up. Soldiers in Afghanistan used to walk back and forth when they had night patrol in winter to not freeze to death. Do not go gently into that goodnight.
@snuckytoes8427
@snuckytoes8427 3 года назад
Exercise is a double-edged sword though. You continue to sweat while exercising even when you’re extremely cold, which means unless you have a way to keep dry you’ll just freeze again. Source: many Alaskan winter camping trips. (And pro tip, ALWAYS bring extra socks when winter camping.)
@ragnkja
@ragnkja 3 года назад
@@snuckytoes8427 You don’t _automatically_ sweat when exercising, but it’s an _extremely_ delicate balance, and the only clue that you’re exercising a bit too hard is that you’ve already begun to sweat.
@boosterh1113
@boosterh1113 3 года назад
@@snuckytoes8427 Not sweating is just an exercise in exertion management. If you are shivering, do mild to moderate exercise: get up and walk around, swing your arms, maybe a couple pushups, etc. You don't go straight from too cold to too hot doing mild exercise. You only start sweating if: 1. you keep exercising after you feel warm, and build up too much heat, 2. you do something that requires extreme exertion (burpees, sprints, etc.) and build up internal heat before your skin warms up, 3. you don't have your clothing properly matched to your body's heat distribution, and you overheat one part of your body (usually your core) while another one still feels cold (usually an extremity).
@snuckytoes8427
@snuckytoes8427 3 года назад
@@boosterh1113 I can tell you for a fact that you are wrong. No matter how cold you feel if you are working hard you will sweat. I have gone on many a trip where I never felt warm yet still had to change clothes due to sweating. Just exercising enough to keep warm will not keep you dry. This mostly applies in extreme cold (I’m talking negatives Fahrenheit here) but it also applies to more moderate temperatures. I have lived in Alaska my whole life, I know how exercising in the cold works.
@boosterh1113
@boosterh1113 3 года назад
@@snuckytoes8427 Don't know what to tell you. I am in the CAF, I've done the sentry shift at 0200 at -25C. I've done the Winter Warfare course. If you are shivering, get up and walk around. You won't sweat unless you over exert yourself. I mean, sure, if you get up and try to do crossfit routine, you're going to sweat no matter what (see my point #2), but some low intensity activity is just fine.
@Jennijennijenni
@Jennijennijenni 3 года назад
Interesting video idea related to the hot ans proteins braking : Finnish people use the sauna almost every week, there are even more saunas than cars in finland. But we often like to TOAST there in about 50-80 Celsius and avarage time used in there is about an hour So my question is : is it harmful to use the sauna in over 40celsius 1-7times a week and 1 hour everytime?
@diamondjub2318
@diamondjub2318 3 года назад
The Sun is my enemy and if it isn't what kills me, it will enter a rage state and light the entire Earth on fire
@bread7101
@bread7101 3 года назад
aight
@neonbunnies9596
@neonbunnies9596 3 года назад
You: Kills sun Cold: *That Tom and Jerry meme of Tom sneaking though the door*
@Anonymous-ib2qh
@Anonymous-ib2qh 3 года назад
Me: *feeling cold and ask the teacher if I can turn the ace off* *I turn it off* My friend: *it's sooo hot* Me: 😀 "remove your jacket then". 🌱 Common sense of life 🌱
@JFlora23
@JFlora23 3 года назад
Common sense of life says you can only take off so many clothes, but you can always put on more layers to warm up.
@MysteryUser-Who-Is-Mysterious
@MysteryUser-Who-Is-Mysterious 5 месяцев назад
I would add, that warming up is way easier than trying to cool down. If you end up in a cold environment without adequate supplies, you can keep yourself warm for a little while by being active, jumping around, etc. Won't help for long if you end up naked in the arctic at -50C, but you'd still be alive longer, then if you were in a desert at +50C. I know my brain feels like it's melting when it's hot, but in cold wheather I just flex my mustles and feel a lot warmer in a couple of minutes.
@two67gh
@two67gh 3 года назад
I LOVE the howls moving castle reference at 0:31
@comicsandanimation5531
@comicsandanimation5531 3 года назад
my depression will kill me first
@PremierCCGuyMMXVI
@PremierCCGuyMMXVI 3 года назад
Honestly both can kill you and it’s important we protect each other from it. Make sure you know the signs of hypothermia and hyperthermia and the like. But definitely like seeing the science behind what is more deadly.
@kyaraonly
@kyaraonly 2 года назад
Yeah I’m the heat you can get a heat stroke or in the cold you can get a really strong flu
@shitbox10yearsago65
@shitbox10yearsago65 3 года назад
2:49 well that's not normal🤧
@user-xr6xi5ym6e
@user-xr6xi5ym6e 14 часов назад
Then what is the coldest temperature for our body could get before fatal?
@landonadams8122
@landonadams8122 3 года назад
Oh sure, cold isn't bad for you--it just freezes your fingers and toes till they break off...
@the_retag
@the_retag 3 года назад
Thats realy cold, not normal cold
@HaydenTheEeeeeeeeevilEukaryote
@HaydenTheEeeeeeeeevilEukaryote 3 года назад
My initial thought when seeing this was “heat, because it can instantly evaporate you while heat escaping your body in absolute zero will kill you a bit slower.”
@ThePariahDark
@ThePariahDark 3 месяца назад
And now I have even more reasons why winter / fall / spring are my favorite seasons and summer is the only one I truly abhor.
@thedarkmeme2591
@thedarkmeme2591 3 года назад
I doubt anyone will answer this, but if you can get so cold and survive, why do we get hypothermia as low as 95F? I heard even that is life threatening.
@Vamilator7165
@Vamilator7165 3 года назад
So the sun is our enemy after all. It hardly comes as a surprise
@hunszaszist
@hunszaszist 3 года назад
Lol, no, a VPN is not "really important" for a normal user.
@ragnkja
@ragnkja 3 года назад
How am I supposed know that Surfshark isn’t one of those companies collecting data on their users?
@NigraXXL
@NigraXXL 3 года назад
2:18 that liver is so shocked
@raffaelepiccini3405
@raffaelepiccini3405 3 года назад
Also, consider that the temperature on earth goes much colder than it does hot.. a temperature over 40C is rare anywhere in the world, while temperatures like -20C are quite common on our planet So the planet also can get much colder than it gets hot
@bunniifangz
@bunniifangz 2 года назад
temperatures above 40 happen multiple days per year nearly every year here ;u;
@Campbell_P
@Campbell_P 3 года назад
"Which will kill you first, hot or cold?" Me: Uhhh, probably heart disease!
@wamsang7818
@wamsang7818 3 года назад
A video posted on April Fool's That isn't some sort of rickroll? You did not let us down
@woodfur00
@woodfur00 3 года назад
They didn't give us up either
@anna.owo.
@anna.owo. 3 года назад
But in nature, on earth where can we survive longer? In a very cold pace or in a very hot place? I don't include volcano or burning forest, i am taking about a desert. If i am not mistaken it is better to be at a desert that a vey cold mountain as 5 minutes of the cold nature has to give us is enough to die but the desert gets mote time.
@CosmicAggressor
@CosmicAggressor 20 дней назад
I had a weird sort of flip flop between these states recently and basicly lost a whole day to it. First i went out and mowed the lawn in 90 degrees F tempetures, then I cam inside and had a shower that was on the particularly cold side because any warmer was uncomfortably warm, then I just sort of slept the next like 8 hours in my bed with my big snuggly bath robe on to warm back up to normal. Oh yea and then when I woke up I basked in the sun a bit.
@the7crystals668
@the7crystals668 3 года назад
Who TF disliking this?
@neonbunnies9596
@neonbunnies9596 3 года назад
0:54 Just got to love those :l face for the immune cells
@blaze9670
@blaze9670 4 месяца назад
Thanks
@lhei_tayuun
@lhei_tayuun 4 месяца назад
Excess energy in a system causes a breakdown in operation as the sub-elements of each component Begin to operate independently rather than function in concert. That's how i got there, anyway. Also, bless you for not making me wait to the end for the answer to the title. I despise being held hostage for watch time metrics ♡
@christopherantonio3612
@christopherantonio3612 3 года назад
There was enough room on that door for Jack and Rose to both survive smh
@rphb5870
@rphb5870 Месяц назад
we all know this, people die of heart every year, but it is very rare to hear of anyone freezing to death. Because it is so simply to protect against cold, but heart are much harder to escape from
@ElNerdoLoco
@ElNerdoLoco Месяц назад
"They're not dead until they're warm and dead." A mantra every EMT learns for dealing with hypothermia.
@JavierSanchez-zq9pc
@JavierSanchez-zq9pc Год назад
I once had 41°C fever and didn't notice until my teacher sent me to get a thermometer
@kennarajora6532
@kennarajora6532 3 года назад
1:52 *GODAMMIT ROSE* THERE'S ROOM RIGHT THERE.
@Swiftzerman
@Swiftzerman 5 месяцев назад
Hey is 30 degrees Celsius just right as your usual body temp okay? I'm kinda worried about that one.
@lightyagami9083
@lightyagami9083 3 года назад
Your voice is very relieving and calm plus the animation is cherry on top!
@BusterGamez
@BusterGamez 3 месяца назад
thanks for making me understand why i can sit outside in the snow with shorts on
@SeptemberMeadows
@SeptemberMeadows 5 месяцев назад
My average body temperature is 97.2F so a little cooler than the supposed average. I prefer the cold to heat, always have. I keep my living space between 55F to 60F and dislike it when outdoor temperatures rise above 40F. I'm almost 60 years old and cooler temperatures just feel right. I don't understand how and why it seems most senior citizens want to live in places like Florida or Arizona.
@kennethfinch4009
@kennethfinch4009 3 года назад
Jack never gets a break.
@loz9600
@loz9600 3 года назад
In the end did we find out which is better?
@tolvajtamas8567
@tolvajtamas8567 3 года назад
Me, who has problems as soon as I step into a 37C room: Alright, Imma head out.
@the_retag
@the_retag 3 года назад
Thats because you start having trouble getting rid of your waste heat
@tolvajtamas8567
@tolvajtamas8567 3 года назад
@@the_retag true. But even if I wouldnt have trouble, I could still not be able to take the heat, Im more adapted to cold enviroment.
@ahadmoeen4102
@ahadmoeen4102 3 года назад
My attention was instantly diverted at 1:55
@JOEYDEEZ369
@JOEYDEEZ369 День назад
I’d say the heat because of the smoke inhalation which will unalive you quicker than the actual flames of the fire… The cold gets to you at a slower pace but that only depends on the scenario you’re describing… I mean if I was to be outside… in the thick of winter wearing not much or unsuitable clothing for the elements then I’d suspect I could perish quite sooner rather than later but not much quicker than if I was stuck in a burning building unable to escape it for love nor money !! There you go Minute Earth… that’s my answer… You’re welcome btw.., Cheers & Ciao ;)’
@annakollins6729
@annakollins6729 3 года назад
Which will kill you first , hot or cold?" Me: Uhhh, probably heart disease!
@idiotsandwich5059
@idiotsandwich5059 3 года назад
BOT
@F_L_U_X
@F_L_U_X 3 года назад
That wasn't an option... -_- 0/100
@PremierCCGuyMMXVI
@PremierCCGuyMMXVI 3 года назад
Or coronavirus....
@IgnisPeaks
@IgnisPeaks 3 года назад
@@F_L_U_X Well no it wasn't, but it's technically true so 100/100
@harshshitole6293
@harshshitole6293 3 года назад
0:31 Howl's Moving Castle!
@dawnsclim4382
@dawnsclim4382 3 года назад
1:05 the illness that cause such high threatening temperatures are hyperpyrexia ,such extreme fever happens in a damaged heat regulating system (by genetic ,time or permanent damage from illness) that when a infection comes ,the system overdrives the heat of fever over intense temperatures ,or when a already existing normal fever is exposed to high amounts of anesthesia that causes reaction to heat the fever even worse for malignant hyperpyrexia. the nomal occasional fever between 37.5'c and 41.1'c is just being vulnerable to hyperpyrexia. 1:55 the next cause hypothermia below 35'c happens in cold weather without correct clothing or again ,body regulation damage. Correct As you said it can be helpful in a moderated time period , some adapted folks can live comfortably here ,unless it gets below 32'c where deep frostbite can happen. Shivering stops because your muscles can't have enough energy to do that anymore. Because your brain can't have enough energy ,confusion and lack of conceration happens .also the risk of caridac diseases increase as your vessels contract and there is less space for blood to flow. You might go to the emergency room after a while. Below 28'c can leave you unconscious and at risk of dying ,24 to 13 'c might not enough time for help to arrive and below that is just death for sure Im a gifted IQ 9 year old
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