Timeline of the Earth: From its Formation to Destruction

2021 ж. 3 Қар.
1 052 942 Рет қаралды

This is a complete timeline of Earth, the planet that we call home, from its formation to its end, and once again, the events may vary depending on the source.
Musics: Wayfarer - Scott Buckley ( • 'Wayfarer' [Inspiratio... )
Snowfall - Scott Buckley ( • 'Snowfall' [Uplifting ... )
What We Don't Say - Scott Buckley ( • 'What We Don't Say' [B... )
I Walk With Ghosts - Scott Buckley ( • 'I Walk With Ghosts' [... )

Пікірлер
  • I didn't include humans because the potential widely varies, we could live for an extremely long time (potentially billions/trillions of years) and colonize various parts of the universe or cause our own extinction with nuclear wars or AI in the next few hundred years also if earth's visual rotated continuously in one direction then it will look really glitchy with frame jumps so i decided to do this instead, also i decided to skip continental drift to prevent this vid from being a carbon copy of algol's and preserve the rotating model the orbital part towards the end of the history section had a little line below it that is barely visible and unintended, but hopefully it's not that disturbing

    @mrplasma7094@mrplasma70942 жыл бұрын
    • Nah, still a legend animation

      @bobinskiplays1779@bobinskiplays17792 жыл бұрын
    • @@bm-22projects it didn't

      @bobinskiplays1779@bobinskiplays17792 жыл бұрын
    • MrPlasma, please remove the line on the orbital part (and without ot her flaws).I will be very grateful to you.❤️ P.S. Please make the video perfect without flaws. This is the best video in the world and it is very valuable to me. Please do it.❤️Sorry to annoy you so much.

      @nickvazharov@nickvazharov2 жыл бұрын
    • Will you do it? Please do it, and please anwser me❤️

      @nickvazharov@nickvazharov2 жыл бұрын
    • @@nickvazharov ok the video is now bugless, the line is basically invisible so ig it's not disturbing

      @mrplasma7094@mrplasma70942 жыл бұрын
  • Makes me wonder how many lifeless planets we’ve looked at that actually used to be like earth

    @confusedlu8637@confusedlu8637 Жыл бұрын
    • Mars docet

      @alicesacco9329@alicesacco9329 Жыл бұрын
    • Makes me wonder how many Earth like planet are being born now that will support life by the end of our solar systems life!

      @kennethober6626@kennethober6626 Жыл бұрын
    • @@kennethober6626 lets only hope humans have learned to live with each ether and have got off earth before it died and got to mars and thin left the solar system all together

      @jimmyg3835@jimmyg3835 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jimmyg3835 We won't, we are to flawed in that we will destroy ourselves.

      @gowron277a@gowron277a Жыл бұрын
    • or will soon support life

      @jboydayz@jboydayz Жыл бұрын
  • It's sad to know that everything we've done for the planet will be forgotten, and will become another dead planet like others. But that doesn't change the fact that the video is amazing.

    @IkaroJesse@IkaroJesse2 жыл бұрын
    • Just like Venus

      @cheukchunng1411@cheukchunng14112 жыл бұрын
    • @@cheukchunng1411 yeah and mars

      @AlnadzriJunaidi@AlnadzriJunaidi2 жыл бұрын
    • I feel the same too. I feel very bad for Earth.

      @hanmoesatlwin7740@hanmoesatlwin77402 жыл бұрын
    • Is a pity there is nothing people can do to stop it.

      @DanielsArtStudioGamesAnimation@DanielsArtStudioGamesAnimation2 жыл бұрын
    • and URANUS LOL

      @Scythinite@Scythinite2 жыл бұрын
  • Everyone was so focused on how the red giant Sun affects Earth that only a few people noticed that Earth’s rotation now takes between 50 amd 60 hours to complete!

    @SpaceLover-he9fj@SpaceLover-he9fj2 жыл бұрын
    • I was the opposite lol 😂

      @artyjaycayairlines@artyjaycayairlines Жыл бұрын
    • Very well!

      @TheSpaceEnthusiast-vl6wx@TheSpaceEnthusiast-vl6wx Жыл бұрын
    • Opposite Earth🌎🌍🌏 lol

      @jnmjimenez1729@jnmjimenez17292 ай бұрын
  • Also the music in general fits so well with what happens on Earth, at 7:24, the tone the music hit echoes what is happening to the planet absolutely perfectly, like it's saying, "This is the end, it's over." It sounds like the kind of tone you'd hear in a scene on a movie where someone is hugging their dying loved one, or crying at their grave. And that's extremely fitting, because even though Earth will still be around after that, it is dead for all intents and purposes, because there is nothing left living on it. All but one of Earth's children have all died, and now the planet itself will also die, with only her brother, Mars, and her only remaining child, the Moon, to keep her company. But at one point, they too will all die. As Dreksler once said in one of his videos, "Everything, if you look at it long enough, will not have a happy ending."

    @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
    • Her twin, Venus and Venus’s long lost son - Mercury would be swallow by the Sun

      @lenguyenxuonghoa1295@lenguyenxuonghoa12952 жыл бұрын
    • oh yeah, you are a 哲学家

      @xiaoboswift4343@xiaoboswift43432 жыл бұрын
    • People commonly cite either the 21st century, 3rd millennium or 5 bil years into the future for apocalyptic events and while both eras are indeed dark, I wish more people looked into 600mil-1bil years from now as another major key turning point towards the apocalypse. It's a fascinating yet scary time period, where earth has oceans, but most of the land is desert. Another underrated and scary proposition is that plants could adopt carnivorous methods of sustenance, and they might be a broad range of species, instead of modern-day carnivore plants which are a small niche. I feel bad for all potential animals that are still around, carnivore plants digest prey via methods that are on average more painful and horrific than most forms of predatory tactics used by animals. And there's also the asphyxiation thing where large animals die a slow, drawn out death. I seriously wish there were speculative fiction covering this time period, that could be similar to The Future is Wild, just with less generic names and better CGI.

      @ExcaliburHeavyBattlecruiser@ExcaliburHeavyBattlecruiser2 жыл бұрын
    • @@ExcaliburHeavyBattlecruiser I know this is a REALLY, *REALLY* late reply, but perhaps you could have mobile plants walking around, like Audrey and the other flytraps from Little Shop of Horrors? Giant humanoid Venus Flytraps walking around and eating people... HORRIFYING. They would probably still have photosynthesis though, otherwise they would no longer be what most people would consider plants, would they? The only plants that don't are albino plants and parasitic plants.

      @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
    • @@ExcaliburHeavyBattlecruiser To add to this, about albino plants, they survive by stabbing other plants with their roots and sucking sugar and other nutrients out of them like a vampire. There are albino giant redwood trees, and they're fucking BEAUTIFUL. they look like they're made of snow and ice. And there are between TEN and 60 of them on the whole planet. The other trees share sugar with them because the albino trees have defective stomata that cause them to take in and store far more toxic heavy metals, such as uranium, than the other trees can, and thus protects them from being poisoned by said metals being in the soil. I saw an article about this environmentally reckless Canadian railroad company that wanted to *CUT ONE OF THEM DOWN* TO BUILD A FUCKING RAILROAD OVER IT. I was thinking, "Couldn't you just, oh, I dunno, CURVE THE RAILROAD A BIT AND GO *AROUND* THE TREE? and if you absolutely have *NO* choice *BUT* to cut it down, clone it or cut some branches/twigs off of it, sometimes they grow into new trees. If you clip/trim branches, you can make them grow into new trees if you know what you're doing. Or hell, if it's still a somewhat young and small tree, *MOVE* the fucking tree! Sorry for the rant, but people destroying or killing rare organisms pisses me the fuck off.

      @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
  • Videos like these give me such a profound appreciation for life and what the impossibly small chance it was for me to be breathing today. love all of you, glad to be experiencing the beauty of life along with everyone else.

    @TylerHP@TylerHP Жыл бұрын
    • I'll raise a drink to that. Cheers!

      @user-yv4mm6bx3c@user-yv4mm6bx3c3 ай бұрын
    • Same, my friend. Same.

      @kirara2516@kirara25163 ай бұрын
    • We must save our planet.

      @NatureLover-zr9iz@NatureLover-zr9izАй бұрын
    • Now it is time to SAVE PLANET EARTH!!!

      @NatureLover-zr9iz@NatureLover-zr9izАй бұрын
  • It's expected, but also pretty scary to think that extinction is inevitable

    @MoukhaSR@MoukhaSR2 жыл бұрын
    • Well… If we aren’t total morons we’ll end up colonising the entire galaxy by that point and spreading life from earth all over it. That buys us basically a trillion more years at least and gives enough time for other intelligent life to evolve after we’re gone. Probably the most important thing we can do especially if we’re the only life (however unlikely that may be).

      @yourearent@yourearent2 жыл бұрын
    • @@yourearent Yeah I agree, it is our duty to bring life to the Galaxy.

      @thesenate5956@thesenate59562 жыл бұрын
    • Nothing lasts forever, except the Big Guy maybe.

      @BrianAdams-dt1ks@BrianAdams-dt1ks Жыл бұрын
    • Will I be dead by then? I’m 15 and I’ve been worried

      @blakeoquinn8493@blakeoquinn8493 Жыл бұрын
    • @@blakeoquinn8493 The next mass extinction is just 1 million years later, dw.

      @Naiko-tekinaShinjukukumin@Naiko-tekinaShinjukukumin Жыл бұрын
  • The first half was so beautiful, the second have made me get teary eyed, knowing the fate of such a wonderful thing, Earth deserves better.

    @alexh8983@alexh8983 Жыл бұрын
    • The second half is scarier than a horror movie

      @nurhanolja1782@nurhanolja1782Ай бұрын
  • I think this video would be better if the continents also moved instead of one image fading over to the next, as-well as the spin changing direction for no reason. Other than that, this is a pretty good video!

    @kman314wastaken@kman314wastaken2 жыл бұрын
    • yea but i do prefer having a rotating model of earth without continental drifts and more space instead of having a vid that looked like a carbon copy of algol's, and without the spin changing earth's appearance would suddenly jump once in a while unfortunately

      @mrplasma7094@mrplasma70942 жыл бұрын
    • @@mrplasma7094 I don't think it would look identical to Algol's if you used a realistic depiction of Earth instead of a stylized... Mollweide-ish map projection? Plus, Algol's video didn't show the future, only the past.

      @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
    • Also, because it's a captured footage from Universe Sandbox 2.

      @anphu2024@anphu20242 жыл бұрын
    • @@WinVisten he did make a continental drift vid on earth for like 300billion years in his style, Plasma can do one that is better than algol, however i love algol more, idk why

      @EnzoLay_TheUmbraPonyGuardian@EnzoLay_TheUmbraPonyGuardian2 жыл бұрын
    • @@mrplasma7094 Your videos are definitely not Algon clones because the informations are displayed in a more emotional way

      @HeidenLam@HeidenLam2 жыл бұрын
  • This is absolutely amazing, and while there may be some people who notice bugs, or some unfixable bugs, overall this animation is absolutely legendary. I have no words.

    @eliorahg@eliorahg2 жыл бұрын
    • Planet isn't an animation it's Universe sandbox

      @tls559@tls559 Жыл бұрын
    • How the crap do I save planet Earth?

      @NatureLover-zr9iz@NatureLover-zr9izАй бұрын
  • Actually shocks me to think that Mars was in the habitable zone too.

    @starcatcherksp1517@starcatcherksp15172 жыл бұрын
    • Venus al prioncipio tambien. Venus es la proxima tierra en 1500 millones de años y marte dependiendo de si se logra una atmosfera con presion la proxima tierra, luego sera Europa o Titan

      @germangelv2@germangelv2 Жыл бұрын
    • @@germangelv2 And Pluto will be the last Earth.

      @waifuzawarudoj5424@waifuzawarudoj5424 Жыл бұрын
    • @@waifuzawarudoj5424 Plenty of other kupiter belt objects out there too.

      @Link2edition@Link2edition Жыл бұрын
    • Mars has been always in habitable zone, it's the core the reason why it dies. Mars' core has cooled down making the magnetic field go bye bye and the sun stripping its atmosphere.

      @GlodelaniaChannel@GlodelaniaChannel Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah it was, but it lacked the mass to become Earth 2. There's a theory that this was caused by Jupiter's "Grand Tackle", in which Jupiter forms and then starts going near to the Sun until resonances by the other planets drive it back. Jupiter, according to it, got as close as 1.5 AU and depleted much of the mass that could create a Mega-Mars. It might also have sent quite a few planets into the sun or out of the system and may be the reason the Solar System has no "Super-Earth".

      @sr.favopossodeixarvaziosim4595@sr.favopossodeixarvaziosim4595 Жыл бұрын
  • A sad ending, but with this art, I think you can be the second melodysheep, great video (rest in peace,our blue marble.).

    @XanuL74@XanuL742 жыл бұрын
    • it will be even more sadder if it showed that the earth get engulfed

      @elitedeadlockedhd2007@elitedeadlockedhd2007 Жыл бұрын
    • @@elitedeadlockedhd2007 Absolutely.

      @XanuL74@XanuL74 Жыл бұрын
  • After Pangaea Proxima (or whatever next supercontinent's shape will look like) breaks apart, the future configuration of the continents will only become speculative. There are so many unpredictable shifts in the movement of the tectonic plates that we might not be able to accurately predict the position of the continents after 300 million AD. Also to note that one final supercontinent might form around 650 to 750 million years from now, if the supercontinent cycle pattern remains undisturbed. The Earth in 250 million AD might have temporary ice caps on the poles, and higher oxygen levels. But the climate of this age remains uncertain.

    @alexandrevachon541@alexandrevachon5412 жыл бұрын
    • yea I agree with this there could be another after 250 million A.D

      @kingjellyjar7446@kingjellyjar74462 жыл бұрын
    • depending on the supercontinent formed in A.D. 250,000,000 it is possible that the ice age will be restored honestly. the specific continent im referring to is Amasia, which has all the continents besides Antarctica move towards the North Pole, which would make them very frigid despite increasing luminosity, and as for Antarctica? It's location is unknown and so it is assumed to somehow have stayed around the same area, making both poles occupied by grand continental formations, but then again the albedo may be messed up by the massive equatorial superocean so who knows. If it isn't Amasia however, then it is very likely the ice age we live in today is the final ice age Earth will ever enjoy.

      @iceman7018@iceman70182 жыл бұрын
    • you never know

      @Cycles42@Cycles422 жыл бұрын
    • @@iceman7018 Australia, Zealandia, Antarctica or some combination may move back to/stay at the south pole, whether the other five continents converge around the equator or the north pole. If they do, we'll have an austral ice age, whether there's one in the north or not. New continents are also breaking off of East Asia and the East African Rift, so we'll soon have more continents with Tanganyika and Baikal as two more oceans; who knows where they'll end up. It could close the North Pacific Ocean and/or the Arabian Sea, or maybe they'll migrate south too (maybe even taking India with them by force, with a new Himalaya along its west coast?). If boreal continents are confined to above 30 degrees north latitude, they'll probably be cut off by a powerful and continuous warm ocean current from the equator, like the Antarctic Circumpolar Current does around the 60 south latitude. That'd exacerbate the ice age by keeping hot equatorial and subtropical air at bay but make any tropical islands and/or smaller continents even warmer and milder than they'd otherwise be.

      @juliecraze9310@juliecraze9310 Жыл бұрын
    • We control the climate. We say what it’s like, not nature, not anymore.

      @accelerationquanta5816@accelerationquanta5816 Жыл бұрын
  • Nice music choice man, after hearing it while seeing Earth gets almost killed by sun makes me think in life " What am I doing "

    @ariefDraws@ariefDraws2 жыл бұрын
    • 😂

      @raulrr4106@raulrr4106 Жыл бұрын
  • Degrees in history: ↑↑↑↓↓↑↓↑↓↓↑↓↑↓↓↓↓↑ Degrees in future: ↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑

    @meh5445@meh54452 жыл бұрын
    • this is my question too! doesn’t make sense

      @pcoles78@pcoles78 Жыл бұрын
    • @@pcoles78 We are now astronomically close to reaching an important point in the Sun's life - The Sun is about to become luminous enough to start pushing the Earth out of the habitable zone. Global temperatures in the long term will likely begin to steadily increase from around this point. There may be short periods of cooling interspersed with the general trend but the direction will generally be upwards.

      @cryoraptora303tm2@cryoraptora303tm23 ай бұрын
    • @@cryoraptora303tm2 perhaps one day Antarctica will be populated 🏝️

      @pcoles78@pcoles783 ай бұрын
    • @@cryoraptora303tm2by "about to" do you mean about 5 billion years?

      @Archman155@Archman1553 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Archman155more like the next 100 million years or so. Close on the geological scale but nothing to worry about. You can see it happening in the bottom left of the video where the habitable zonr gets pushed further out

      @dango6266@dango62663 ай бұрын
  • Don't get too scared guys. Galactic colonization would likely have already made good progress just 100,000 years into the future. Earth may be gone, but humanity could persist. (Assuming we don't die within the next 200 years lol)

    @_TheDoctor@_TheDoctor2 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly. We’ll have colonize the solar system way before that. Earth is a begging for us, not the end.

      @kennethober9070@kennethober90702 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly. By the time the Earth dies, we'll hopefully has ascended to a higher plane of existence and perhaps we'll be evolved enough to keep Earth and the Sun alive forever.....

      @girlgarde@girlgarde2 жыл бұрын
    • 200 years + 1 second

      @Cycles42@Cycles422 жыл бұрын
    • Before that, Enceladus, Europa, Titan, and maybe even Pluto and Charon will be places for human in future (if they know how to increase gravity).

      @DonkeykongSw2@DonkeykongSw22 жыл бұрын
    • @@DonkeykongSw2 Advances in medical technology might make gravity-related issues negligable too. Who knows.

      @_TheDoctor@_TheDoctor2 жыл бұрын
  • 11:32 Sun: *Im literally about to cry right now*

    @felixthespaghettifan7541@felixthespaghettifan75412 жыл бұрын
    • Time is 7,000 too

      @Octa2024_Memes@Octa2024_Memes Жыл бұрын
  • Our Sun is amazing. Its energy can sustain and grow life on Earth for billions of years, and then cook said life to a horrible death in the future. Wow.

    @marcusscience23@marcusscience232 жыл бұрын
    • That's how stars live. It gets brighter and unstable over time.

      @natosc44@natosc44 Жыл бұрын
  • It’s so sad that maybe in the future aliens are gonna find a barren uninhabitable desert planet and just go past it not knowing the history behind it. :(

    @coral19-@coral19-2 жыл бұрын
    • I’ll bet creatures from other planets are gonna say that about us when we discover interstellar travel

      @thaawesomealt@thaawesomealt2 жыл бұрын
    • No. Because it will be covered in city and filled with trillions of people

      @captainjackpugh6050@captainjackpugh60502 жыл бұрын
    • @@captainjackpugh6050 not by that point unless we were around for billions of years and managed to terraform Earth and use asteroids set in reverse gravity slingshot orbits to expand Earth's orbit fast enough for it to stay in the habitable zone.

      @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
    • @@WinVisten Bypass all that. Have an artificially maintained atmosphere, get all resources from sources beyond Earth. Earth will be covered in city. If we need to move Earth we can, or we can construct something in between the Earth and the Sun that regulates heat and sunlight

      @captainjackpugh6050@captainjackpugh60502 жыл бұрын
    • Humanity and Earth's legacy will still be out there, long after both are gone. Why? Because the Golden Record is in deep space right now, aboard the voyager probes. It is a record containing 90 minutes of music, and 115 images of all the fundamental pillars of human knowledge, culture, historic images of Earth and the diverse people & animals that live on our planet, and finally Earth's location in the universe and the origins of the spacecraft carrying the record. When possibly the only life ever to exist goes extinct, our collective memories; our collective ghost, will still be floating out there, perfectly preserved, deep in the abyssal vacuum of space. All of who we are and were, lovingly encoded into two gilded discs, representing not only life on Earth, but in a way all possible life, as it is a lonely cry into an uncaring universe, screaming defiantly to the silent void of it's single greatest creation, telling everyone or no-one at all that, whether by design or pure accident, "We were here. Life existed. We lived." I highly recommend checking out the things put on the Golden Records and hearing the hauntingly somber folk music encoded into it. kzhead.info/sun/gaWHYc-sa4V9bH0/bejne.html

      @ashb712@ashb7122 жыл бұрын
  • bro, how is this nostalgic???! i wasnt even alive during these times.

    @LocaICommenter@LocaICommenter3 ай бұрын
  • No talking, plenty of info, beautiful datas, masterful work.

    @JustAPersonWhoComments@JustAPersonWhoComments2 жыл бұрын
    • *data (singular is datum)

      @altheababysit887@altheababysit8872 жыл бұрын
    • @@altheababysit887 🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓

      @dirtegarbage@dirtegarbage Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@dirtegarbage shut tf up

      @tls559@tls559 Жыл бұрын
    • bot comment

      @petricor1420@petricor14202 ай бұрын
  • Dang, KZhead knows when you're gonna upload! I found your epic videos and then you release this right after lmao. Also, nice choice in music, Scott Buckley is damn good!

    @Novarchite@Novarchite2 жыл бұрын
  • This is absolutely lovely, thank you for a humbling experience.

    @AKennethNolan@AKennethNolan Жыл бұрын
  • these graphis blowed my mind up! i like all of your videos ever!

    @danjasmallivanenko453@danjasmallivanenko4532 жыл бұрын
  • I had hoped the guys who made the history/future of solar system would make one of just the Earth; thanks!

    @JohnSmith-zw8vp@JohnSmith-zw8vp2 жыл бұрын
  • Wow, what a masterpiece here!

    @dolfyrantsparodies608@dolfyrantsparodies6082 жыл бұрын
  • The Atmospheric Composition section looking like one of those KZheadr Subscriber count battles is killing me. Awesome video!

    @SUNSTOPPERTV@SUNSTOPPERTV2 ай бұрын
  • Its awsome to see things like this even though the time scales are speed up you still get to endulge in the events of the earth's past

    @spacenine2457@spacenine2457 Жыл бұрын
  • New video, nice! I have been waiting for this.

    @LesunkOfficial@LesunkOfficial2 жыл бұрын
  • truly amazing, i got to say its better then my timeline designs. Also great video!

    @thesmartkid245@thesmartkid2452 жыл бұрын
  • I like how the blurbs on the timeline imply that all it takes for a planet to become uninhabitable is for a single number whole or decimal to go up or down by one.

    @highpotencyiron4529@highpotencyiron4529 Жыл бұрын
  • What frightens me is just how close earth is already to the inner edge of the habitable zone in present day (according to the video) we don’t have much time left until the oceans start to dry up, relatively speaking. The entire history of life on earth is almost over when you really think about it… Not to be depressing, but it is also fascinating in a way as well.

    @VOMITQUEEN@VOMITQUEEN Жыл бұрын
    • All the more reason we need to get off this rock, and start spreading throughout the system, and eventually the galaxy. The universe itself is impermanent, but if we do not destroy ourselves, we have an opportunity to be very stubborn life.

      @Link2edition@Link2edition Жыл бұрын
    • Venus is in the habitable zone.

      @accelerationquanta5816@accelerationquanta5816 Жыл бұрын
    • Very true. Multicellular Life in the planet has, like, a bit over half a billion years. The end is already drawing near for our little blue marble. This also explains why some Astronomer searching for life are so interested in Red Dwarfs, they last far longer than stars like the sun, and if they aren't flare stars, may provide a far stabler enviroment for life than sun-like stars.

      @sr.favopossodeixarvaziosim4595@sr.favopossodeixarvaziosim4595 Жыл бұрын
    • @@accelerationquanta5816 Not for any advanced life. "Habitable zone" just means that life might theoretically exist there...even if it would be very primitive life forms - like the simple bacteria that survive in salty, volcanic hot springs on earth.

      @louise_rose@louise_rose8 ай бұрын
    • @@louise_rose ""Habitable zone" just means that life might theoretically exist there" No, it means liquid water could exist on the surface assuming an atmosphere similar to Earth's.

      @accelerationquanta5816@accelerationquanta58168 ай бұрын
  • Been waiting a long time for this! (Again Again)

    @bm-22projects@bm-22projects2 жыл бұрын
  • The video is amazing, next timeline: Mars-Phobos-Deimos :)

    @SantiGraficasYT@SantiGraficasYT2 жыл бұрын
    • Yes

      @jadenh2574@jadenh25742 жыл бұрын
    • yeah

      @raps3638@raps36382 жыл бұрын
    • YES

      @ArwinaThePlanet@ArwinaThePlanet2 жыл бұрын
    • Yes

      @mastergreen8396@mastergreen83962 жыл бұрын
    • Yay I need to watch

      @_I_Need_Therapy@_I_Need_Therapy2 жыл бұрын
  • This is generally depressing. There is always hope humanity will relocate to another world or push the earth back to keep it in the habitable zone or just move to another solar system entirely. Who knows, we might survive the end of the universe by going to another one.

    @ljames430_@ljames430_2 жыл бұрын
    • Well after the proton decay , humanity can rely on black holes to sustain the civilization for eons to come. After that , I have no other idea how humanity will continue to survive in an empty universe that contains nothing beside elementary particles flying around for eternity

      @lamvuong5343@lamvuong5343 Жыл бұрын
    • @@lamvuong5343 Keep in mind that Proton Decay is not this instant event. You can make new protons that will not decay, it is only the originals that decay at that time. Protons are constantly being generated. I do hope Proton decay isn't true though, because if it is, eventually there cant be matter at all.

      @Tamamo-no-Bae@Tamamo-no-Bae8 ай бұрын
    • @@Tamamo-no-BaeIf there is no proton decay, then all atoms will eventually become iron atoms, since it’s the most stable element, smaller atoms will quantum tunnel into iron eventually and bigger ones will fissile down. The time it would take for this to happen is unimaginably large though, especially the quantum tunneling part.

      @eggrollsoup@eggrollsoup8 ай бұрын
    • @@eggrollsoup Yeah I know, but it is definitely a better outcome than Proton decay.

      @Tamamo-no-Bae@Tamamo-no-Bae8 ай бұрын
    • @@Tamamo-no-Bae I suppose, but the runaway expansion of the Universe is eventually going to make life impossible

      @eggrollsoup@eggrollsoup8 ай бұрын
  • I hit random rocky planet in US2 and got a planet with that super continent at 6:02. At 3:25 you would get that continent with the northern mountains if you flip the Pangaea planet upside down and go to the other side of the world. Awesome video and this shows that US2 is EPIC.

    @tornadotrick7991@tornadotrick79912 жыл бұрын
  • The second half of this video is just a tearjerker. Poor Earth.... Hopefully we as humans will be able to find a way to safeguard it from an expanding Sun in the centuries ahead.

    @thevisitor135@thevisitor1352 жыл бұрын
    • When everybody will realize that there is rock full of gold which can make everybody billionaire and that oil is just dead biomass then maybe we will find a way to do it. Today we are still more interested in what some celebrity had for dinner instead of science…

      @kundasemkundatam7461@kundasemkundatam74612 жыл бұрын
    • If sun become red giant, humas will go to enceladus,europa,titan

      @tuyenhuynh8409@tuyenhuynh84092 жыл бұрын
    • centuries? more like billions of years

      @pba4591@pba45912 жыл бұрын
    • By this time, humanity is either long extinct or busy colonizing deep space

      @paultheslayer2176@paultheslayer21762 ай бұрын
  • Here is another factoid I've spotted as a calendar enthusiast. At 7999.3 MYFN, Earth's year length of 2.56 years due to orbital expansion would mean that the years will contain 365 days per year once again as they are now. 10400 MYFN, the timing repeats again as the moon recedes from the earth.

    @eliorahg@eliorahg2 жыл бұрын
    • Insane that the timing repeats again. Its like the years want to contain 365 days

      @sr.favopossodeixarvaziosim4595@sr.favopossodeixarvaziosim4595 Жыл бұрын
  • Very impressive, good job.

    @Ayub--@Ayub--2 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for the tutorial, I’ve always wanted a earth.

    @CrispyMilkk@CrispyMilkk2 жыл бұрын
  • This is perfect, and I love it. Next time, (re)make a timeline of moon like Titan.

    @DonkeykongSw2@DonkeykongSw22 жыл бұрын
  • 100 million years from now: The Earth's temperature has risen 2 degrees. Polar ice caps are significantly diminished. The climactic zones have shifted considerably and much of the tropics are no longer fit for human habitation, with some areas even reaching temperatures that would be almost instantly lethal to a human being of today. 200 million years from now: Permanent ice is finally gone for good. At a 5 degree increase the bulk of human habitation and settlement now happens in what were once called the polar regions. The tropical reagons are now largely uninhabitable desert where going out at least during the day is impossible without protective suits and in the more extreme regions temperatures never drop below 50 degrees. 300 million years from now: By now for the first time in history a surface temperature of 100 degrees has been measured on planet Earth. Not even the sturdiest large animals have been able to adapt to temperatures above 70 degrees, so a large percentage of Earth is now a barren wasteland with not even the smallest traces of plant or animal life. Even on the poles snowfall is extremely rare, while the zone of human habitability steadily shrinks. The worlds desserts have finally won out over areas with plant life in terms of area. Difficult questions will need to be answered for the future of humanity. 400 million years from now: The Earth's average temperature has risen nearly 10 degrees from the dawn of humanity, a temperature which once would have been thought of as cataclysmic. There is no snowfall on planet Earth and only at the poles do you get seasonal cold weather. The zone of inhabitability steadily creeps upward as even societies used to never going out without a cooling suit can still not sustain themselves at temperatures above 100 degrees. 500 million years from now: The Earth is already a shell of its former self. Only near the poles does comfortable living still exist. Everywhere below the regions formerly known as polar is now nothing but uninhabitable desert. Temperatures near the equator routinely go over 100 degrees, leading to a slight increase of water vapor in the atmosphere. 600 million years from now: This is the last year that the Earth can in any way, shape or form be considered recognizable from the Earth in the dawn of humanity. Within just a few million years, there is a massive extinction of C3 plants due to insufficient CO2. C4 plants fill in the niche, but for the first time in ages, the oxygen level of the planet is irreperably damaged and starts to plummet. Contingency plans are made for the complete evacuation of Earth by humans. 700 million years from now: The Earth is no longer a fit planet for humans. Oxygen suits now have to be worn at all times. Even the poles have degenerated to a climate similar to the modern desert climate, with relief from heat occurring only in the winter. 800 million years from now: The oxygen levels have dropped to levels unfit for humans. Plant and animal biodiversity has been severely reduces and the extinction of all plants is soon to follow. A decision has been made to permanently evacuate Earth, save for occasional visits for research purposes. For the time being, Mars will serve as an adequate replacement and there will of course be orbiter colonies around Earth, but the original planet that brought forth human life will never again have a permanent human presence.

    @SerbAtheist@SerbAtheist2 жыл бұрын
    • Aww reading this make me fell like earth is.. having emotions

      @XlendneryGD@XlendneryGD2 жыл бұрын
    • @@XlendneryGD Lol Yes

      @biggamer145@biggamer1452 жыл бұрын
    • Press F to Pay Respects to Earth o7

      @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
    • It's depressing to read this

      @junior_meza235@junior_meza2352 жыл бұрын
    • The number of likes are number of ugly people on mother earth. 🌎

      @boips3017@boips30172 жыл бұрын
  • Awesome video! Everything must come to an end.

    @adams7707@adams7707 Жыл бұрын
  • The music at the end makes the end of the timeline more devastating Edit: it makes the vid more emotional and that's what makes this content amazingly awesome

    @elizabaker5370@elizabaker5370 Жыл бұрын
  • To be honest bro, this video is very motivative to me. idk if that is even a word LOL but it just is. rn i am working on TFOTSS V4, and this vid is very, VERY nice it really shows me I need to work hard. yea so thanks for making these great videos over these years bro :)

    @pba4591@pba45912 жыл бұрын
    • I think motivational is the word you’re looking for

      @crazy4gta1@crazy4gta16 күн бұрын
    • @@crazy4gta1 indeed, thank you

      @pba4591@pba45916 күн бұрын
  • Excellent video!

    @mountborneo5844@mountborneo58442 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you so much bro!!

    @infinity_zoom8765@infinity_zoom87652 жыл бұрын
  • I paused this video maybe 50 times to read everything and i was so happy by the time life came to earth and then it all went away and tears came down on me.. i know its pathetic because i wont be around for much longer but this is my home, and everyone's home for all the beings that have existed... and we threat out mother earth in such way when all she does is to provide for us.

    @SupremeLordEnki@SupremeLordEnki Жыл бұрын
  • The music fits this so well. The animation is sooooooo good and I love it

    @Redjan_Mapping@Redjan_Mapping2 жыл бұрын
  • RIP algol uploads, new content creators are continuing Algol's legacy

    @TheGamingG810@TheGamingG8107 ай бұрын
  • It's very beautiful work!!!

    @user-lw5sr6wi4p@user-lw5sr6wi4p2 жыл бұрын
  • Loving the synth tracks ❤

    @mattshaw6259@mattshaw6259 Жыл бұрын
  • Very amazing!

    @frane9832@frane98322 жыл бұрын
  • This makes me think that Venus-like planets may be pretty common, even among "Goldilocks" planets.

    @SharDarksoul@SharDarksoul2 жыл бұрын
    • Life-rich planets, or those just missing being rich in life (like Mars) will become Venus-like planets at some stage. Mars will become Venus-like when the carbon dioxide and crystallized water within its rocks will be released.

      @paulbrower4265@paulbrower4265 Жыл бұрын
    • Mars is likely to be different from Venus. Mars is not as powerful as Earth and Venus. Therefore, there is no power to hold the atmosphere, and if the gases in the Martian rocks were hot enough to escape into the atmosphere, the sun would have already become a red giant, and the gases that escaped from the Martian soil would be swept away by the strong solar wind and blown into outer space.

      @ukmdf@ukmdf23 күн бұрын
  • Amazing and I love your channel ❤ ♥

    @zoelovesdinosaurs1597@zoelovesdinosaurs15972 жыл бұрын
  • 9:25 the music kind of lines up with new atmosphere earth gets

    @ortherner@ortherner2 жыл бұрын
    • Venus: THAT IS MY ATMOSPHERE!!!!

      @AlexWaterElement@AlexWaterElement7 ай бұрын
    • @@AlexWaterElement shut up child

      @ortherner@ortherner7 ай бұрын
  • It scares me to think that we are closer to the *end* of life on Earth. Good vid though, definitely reminds me of one of Algol’s videos.

    @itsluke.3482@itsluke.3482 Жыл бұрын
  • Loved it. Waiting for timeline of mars

    @eurybiaball847@eurybiaball8472 жыл бұрын
  • Even though this video is 2 years old,I am literally almost crying It's very sad that our home planet and everything we done and will do to save it will be forgotten,but just be glad we will be gone by then,and once we are in any afterlife,we will never forget how long we been fighting to save our beloved planet

    @Sw33tT4rt@Sw33tT4rt5 ай бұрын
  • Another question: Why doesn't the CO2 level go back up a bit sometime before 200MYF, since the amount of forest/grassland increased a lot? I'd think the oxygen levels would go up a bit too. But once the sun got 2% brighter, the forest level started to decline.

    @WinVisten@WinVisten Жыл бұрын
    • Human deforestation?

      @limyboy887@limyboy887 Жыл бұрын
    • @@limyboy887 annoying

      @ISAFSoldier@ISAFSoldier6 ай бұрын
    • From what i know future is completely wrong. Since 1 bullion years into the future it is guarenteed that earth has about 650 C temp and 100+bar air pressure on surface with the 98% co2 atmosphere. So litteraly venus 2.0 but worse. i have no idea wtf this guy was smokin when he made this bullshimulation.

      @mertc8050@mertc80506 ай бұрын
    • 2% is very little

      @deleted-db9xx@deleted-db9xx6 ай бұрын
    • @@deleted-db9xx 2% of 100 is 2 2% of 1 trillion is 20 million I dont think 20 million is a "small" number

      @ISAFSoldier@ISAFSoldier6 ай бұрын
  • These videos deserve 500M likes. Not crapoy tiktokers karens.

    @Nn.65juk@Nn.65juk8 ай бұрын
  • I see you used the same song you used on the Dwarf Planets one! That song was a great choice yet again! Was I the one who inspired you to do that? haha

    @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
  • It's amazing how the earth ends and at the same time very sad good video 👌🏻

    @GIOVANI.67@GIOVANI.679 ай бұрын
  • Nice to know we have something to look forward to.

    @SuperEdge67@SuperEdge675 ай бұрын
  • The Earth today: I have life, I am the best planeta of the solar system. The 1.5 bilion years in the future: Ehn, I still have a bit of Water

    @eduardogoncalves765@eduardogoncalves7652 жыл бұрын
    • Planet*

      @Robbie-pc1dl@Robbie-pc1dl2 жыл бұрын
    • 2 Billion years in the future: Darn it…

      @Robbie-pc1dl@Robbie-pc1dl2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Robbie-pc1dl I'm not English :)

      @eduardogoncalves765@eduardogoncalves7652 жыл бұрын
    • @@eduardogoncalves765 okay

      @Robbie-pc1dl@Robbie-pc1dl2 жыл бұрын
  • 12:45, humanity has long gone for itself, its last centuries wheezed by, and the ecological disaster they armed was inevitable. Contrary to my initial bets, it hasn't developed developed any significant advances in spacetravel, and so I'm stuck in the only planet where I can actually die. After becoming deeply depressed and hopeless, for spending wayy too much time alone, way more time than I could initially fathom, I have started to search every corner of this godforsaken world. Looking I'm every crevace for them, talking to myself, talking to voices in my head, the countless faceless and nameless voices I came to create to cope with the solitude. The helped me find them. And so finally after aeons searching for them, I can once for all, die, in a horrible way but it will end this meaningless suffering. I stand and face the swollen sun, like I did for a trillion or so days before. But this time there is only relief, everything mutes, the air, the hissing rocks in the lead-melting heat, the sun.... all I can hear is the my own heartbeat and breathing, as that snail crawls up my foot...

    @AstronautaVerdadeiro_77@AstronautaVerdadeiro_772 жыл бұрын
    • "And so this is christmas..."

      @d9zirable@d9zirable8 ай бұрын
  • Awesome video!

    @georgesalles1166@georgesalles116611 ай бұрын
  • Nice,ive watched this several times!

    @The_Brazilian_Empire_Da_Epik@The_Brazilian_Empire_Da_Epik4 ай бұрын
  • 10:44 2022,2 °c

    @josianesantos315@josianesantos315 Жыл бұрын
    • Truly a 2022 moment

      @AlexWaterElement@AlexWaterElement7 ай бұрын
  • Now that Planetscaping is a thing, you could remake this with accurate continents, and you'd only have to change them for each early/middle/late part of the periods or each significant step between Pangaea Ultima's formation (15 myf, 25 myf, 50 myf, 100 myf, 200 myf, 250 myf, and then its breakup from 300 myf to any periods you think would be significant to show, assuming there are hypotheses about how the continent will break up and the way the plates will move. The periods I'd think would be important, are: 375 myf, 450 myf, 560 myf, 650 myf, 760 myf, 850 myf. I'm pretty sure by 400 myf, it's known it will break up like you said.

    @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
    • ik, i’m using this feature to some extent for my mars vid which i’m now done and revising for errors

      @mrplasma7094@mrplasma70942 жыл бұрын
    • @@mrplasma7094 Nice! You're doing one like this for Mars too? I think seeing the evolution and death of its oceans etc would be interesting. Especially if you didn't fade it out when it started drying up and actually drained it.

      @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
    • Wanted to come back to say yu didn't disappoint, you had the oceans ACTUALLY drain.

      @WinVisten@WinVisten2 жыл бұрын
  • Mr. Plasma, I know you’ve been inactive for a while, but I love you videos, and I have an idea. I know you haven’t finished the Jupiter system yet, and if you could pull that off as a part two, it would be amazing! Thank you, and I hope you come back to this channel soon! You make amazing videos and you have gifted talents doing these! Thanks so much again!

    @etern55l80@etern55l804 ай бұрын
  • It has been an honor to share this lil’ planet with you boys.

    @nathd6784@nathd67847 ай бұрын
  • Honestly depending on what happens with humans the earth may not die if humans (or maybe even ai) become successful and colonized the galaxy. Erth could be a super protected planet (being the cradle for all life and civilization) honestly I don’t think anything that is intelligent would ever abandon where they came from. As time goes on earth is more like an old person dying, unable to help themselves, I would hate to see this planet die and disappear

    @thatcollegekid1334@thatcollegekid13342 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah. Unless Earth gets swallowed by the Sun (which there's not a consensus on whether it'll happen), it could be possible in theory to use solar shades to block out the sun, although they'd need to block out over 99.9% of the sunlight at the red giant peaks. But even if all that survives is Earth itself (not even its geology would survive the runaway greenhouse and red giant without human intervention, as it'd melt), it'd still be there to see and visit.

      @juliecraze9310@juliecraze9310 Жыл бұрын
    • If humans can for example adjust the orbit of Earth, which will definitely be doable in a few million years if technological progress continues, Earth could survive for as long as the sun could provide it with energy. After that, a new solution would be needed. Maybe some sort of spaceship or similar construct would replace Earth. This construct would be used to collect energy from other stars and other celestial bodies such as black holes in the future.

      @JohnCena-le1jj@JohnCena-le1jj Жыл бұрын
    • @@JohnCena-le1jj Using asteroids set up in reverse gravitational slingshot orbits, we could indeed expand the Earth's orbit and make it sweep outwards, but we'd have to be very careful not to screw up and destroy the very life we're trying to save.

      @WinVisten@WinVisten Жыл бұрын
    • We should destroy the Earth and harvest the rich minerals deep within it; use them to build megastructures in outer space.

      @accelerationquanta5816@accelerationquanta5816 Жыл бұрын
    • @@accelerationquanta5816 That'll depend on the preference of future people. Myself, I'd rather preserve it. Keep as a crown jewel in some immense future megastructure, like say a birch world or something.

      @ASNS117Zero@ASNS117Zero Жыл бұрын
  • It's really sad, knowing a blue greeny earth we called as home dies, slowly and surely, becoming an unhabitable cold planet or vanished, for somehow me, a man can cry at seeing the planet we call home, our place where we stay at, our lovely home dies.

    @lmaoidontmakecontentsanymo4816@lmaoidontmakecontentsanymo48162 жыл бұрын
  • I know this is an extremely well researched video, scientific in nature, but it's so touching to me... Our home.

    @Thedanielpiccolin@Thedanielpiccolin3 ай бұрын
  • Congrats on 7,000 subscribers!

    @celestialcody@celestialcody Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for the information for the proton decay, because we still don't know IF it happens

    @bobinskiplays1779@bobinskiplays17792 жыл бұрын
    • Lol, how fast did you gave me that hearth :o

      @bobinskiplays1779@bobinskiplays17792 жыл бұрын
  • This is the future we predict, but we can’t stop it from happening

    @user-ms1pm7lq8h@user-ms1pm7lq8h2 жыл бұрын
  • My favorite video it has great music and I can trust you

    @tarotamy5563@tarotamy5563 Жыл бұрын
    • Also in the formation it looked very Venus like

      @tarotamy5563@tarotamy5563 Жыл бұрын
  • Our earth always lived for us, she will always remember us♥️

    @AlexLexusOfficial@AlexLexusOfficial2 жыл бұрын
  • Very fascinating! Some interesting things about what is going to happen to Earth millions of years from now.

    @legendaryrobb5903@legendaryrobb59032 жыл бұрын
  • 6:43 last plant

    @ArwinaThePlanet@ArwinaThePlanet2 жыл бұрын
    • 7:21 no plant left

      @ArwinaThePlanet@ArwinaThePlanet Жыл бұрын
  • Nice, i can't wait to see it happening.

    @giorno4859@giorno48592 ай бұрын
  • Well done.

    @billkallas1762@billkallas1762 Жыл бұрын
  • i like how at 0.2MYA it said humans are making their own mass extinction

    @DoppelTaken@DoppelTaken2 жыл бұрын
  • Beste vidéo timeline 😁

    @tialin4903@tialin4903 Жыл бұрын
  • What a sad video. Very nicely done.

    @ivofritsch@ivofritsch Жыл бұрын
  • It woulda been cool to see the plate tectonics in action, but overall really cool video!

    @sonicdoesfrontflips@sonicdoesfrontflips2 жыл бұрын
  • Songs: 0:00- 1:00 Wayfarer 1:00- 5:04 Snowfall 5:04-11:32 What we don’t say 11:32-13:51 I walk with ghosts

    @paolaaceballos7301@paolaaceballos73015 ай бұрын
  • 11:31 scared the shit out of me. Otherwise, very good video. Would Earth really look like that at 11:47 at only 180 degrees Celsius? Wouldn't it look like Mercury does now, with the lava coming later?

    @DSocha-cu4qw@DSocha-cu4qw2 жыл бұрын
    • there would be lava from earth's resurfacing events (which will occur after plate tectonics stop) and extreme volcanic activity, creating that look before earth heats above the draper point

      @mrplasma7094@mrplasma70942 жыл бұрын
    • @@mrplasma7094 that happened to Venus precisely as the events of lava resurgence and high volcanic activity on its surface as it is believed astronomers and scientists have made computer simulations about the past of Venus because it is said that 715 million years ago something changed Venus to what it is today and you will know it as in the video it says an infernal version of Venus the Earth will become due to the runaway greenhouse effect because until the terrestrial core is not solidified that there will still be lava resurgence events and just like Venus it will also happen not only the Earth until the core cools down and solidifies and the Magnetic field with it will stop exerting its fusion as happened to Mars at the time, only the Earth will not lose its atmosphere until the Sun begins to reach its last billion of years when the Red giant phase arrives will be the nightmare for the inner rocky planets Mercury, Venus and possibly the Earth I do believe that Venus had tectonic plates at the time like the Earth when it had water on its surface before reaching what we see today an infernal planet with its runaway greenhouse effect

      @hansrussell2918@hansrussell29182 жыл бұрын
    • And also because when earth's atmosphere is beginning to be stripped away, the water molecules in the upper stratosphere will decompose into oxygen gas and hydrogen gas when bombarded by UV radiation where the hydrogen gas will be light enough to escape into space whilst the oxygen returns to the surface. This will caused the surface to oxidise and turn red anyway i believe.

      @marsbars1105@marsbars11052 жыл бұрын
  • The history of our planet is fascinating

    @zebraz3839@zebraz3839 Жыл бұрын
  • The music is chilling

    @hi-fy2wb@hi-fy2wb Жыл бұрын
  • 7:22 That hurts our civilisation 9:26 That hurts my eyes and our planet the most

    @bobinskiplays1779@bobinskiplays17792 жыл бұрын
    • D

      @altheababysit887@altheababysit8872 жыл бұрын
    • Jeez

      @altheababysit887@altheababysit8872 жыл бұрын
  • I think that 800 million years in the future we will have enough energy and might to drag Earth out to the habitable zone and in billions years even dragging it out to another star shouldn't be a problem.

    @SerbAtheist@SerbAtheist2 жыл бұрын
    • we could either do that or become extinct in the next few hundred years with nuclear wars and superintelligent AI, so i didn’t take into account

      @mrplasma7094@mrplasma70942 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@mrplasma7094 Literally the only serious scenario I'd consider plausible for total human extinction would be being flinged into the Sun by a rogue planet. All other scenarios come from this 'humans are evil and are destroying the planet' notion (in my opinion a fallacious one), but are far from realistic. Take the nuclear war scenario. Who in their right mind is gonna release even a single warhead, let alone an arsenal enough to wipe out large parts of the globe? Literally no one. Even during the peak cold war most people came to the conclusion that no sane leader would ever order a nuclear launch for any reason. Nowadays? Pffft. Who wants to risk relative economic prosperity on a global level for nuclear annihilation over some trivial dispute? Same with the AI. Who in their right mind would also program an AI with the self-awareness AND self-preservation instinct AND enough real-life control over real-life resources to destroy humanity? Take just one of these things out and the AI is harmless as a kitten. AI will become incredibly powerful in the future, but it will remain just as compartmentalized as it is today, i.e. being programmed to only perform extremely specific tasks. Stockfish can easily defeat the best human chessplayers in the world, but it isn't planning on taking over the world any time soon. Even when we program robots to do things still out of our reach in the present, like have complex conversations with us, it will be simply treated as another task, just like playing chess. There won't be an 'agenda' behind it.

      @SerbAtheist@SerbAtheist2 жыл бұрын
    • @@SerbAtheist if we don’t become extinct quickly we don’t have any plausible predictions either, since humans can go down so many paths in the future since we might just leave earth behind and completely move somewhere else, and even if we do decide to focus on earth there’s no way we can accurately predict what we’re gonna do to it so i left humans out of the picture

      @mrplasma7094@mrplasma70942 жыл бұрын
    • @@SerbAtheist It would be a stupid thing to make Artificial Intelligence more powerful and intelligent, it is as if I liberate a very poisonous snake just to have more power with other people

      @junior_meza235@junior_meza2352 жыл бұрын
    • @@mrplasma7094 it is much more probably that climate change will cause our extinction Edit: of course not this very far future, Sun version, but the recent, human caused climate change :(

      @sectorgovernor@sectorgovernor Жыл бұрын
  • the peace period of where 2021 plus years is something very beautiful and calm. We should do something with this time instead of destroying each other.

    @notfuckingdrewmaria@notfuckingdrewmaria7 ай бұрын
  • almost at 1 million!

    @Ice_Pikmin2@Ice_Pikmin22 ай бұрын
  • We exist so the universe can observe itself, and we're here on the most beautiful planet of them all.

    @K0msur@K0msur2 жыл бұрын
    • Proof?

      @johnroscoe2406@johnroscoe2406 Жыл бұрын
    • @@johnroscoe2406 All living beings are made of stardust, and the building blocks of the universe; we are the universe, we see, therefore the universe sees.

      @K0msur@K0msur Жыл бұрын
    • @@K0msur Prove "the universe" has a subjective point of view and "sees" anything please.

      @johnroscoe2406@johnroscoe2406 Жыл бұрын
    • @@johnroscoe2406 I am part of the universe, I see stuff, I have a subjective point of view. Point proven.

      @K0msur@K0msur Жыл бұрын
    • @@K0msur You didn't prove a single damn thing nitwit.

      @johnroscoe2406@johnroscoe2406 Жыл бұрын
  • Hey MrPlasma, I have no clue if you still look at these comments, but if you do, why would super pressurized underground water be inhospitable to life 2.8 billion years from now? Life may have originated in the sweltering late Hadean 4,280 million years ago, with temperatures well over boiling point, only staying liquid due to extreme atmospheric pressures. And 2.8 billion years is surely enough time for even grander extremophiles to adapt. The only situation in which I see life going extinct is if absolutely not even the slightest nanometer of liquid water, hyper pressurized or not remains on this planet.

    @frostlitroniusmaximus6140@frostlitroniusmaximus61402 жыл бұрын
    • back then, the temperature was very unevenly distributed, with some spots below boiling point even with the planet average 300-400C, but 2.8 billion years from now, every spot on the surface will be above 100C and underground water would have immense pressure and extreme acidity that will make it uninhabitable

      @mrplasma7094@mrplasma70942 жыл бұрын
    • From what i know future is completely wrong. Since 1 billion years into the future it is guarenteed that earth has about 650 C temp and 100+bar air pressure on surface with the 98% co2 atmosphere. So litteraly venus 2.0 but worse. i have no idea wtf he was smokin when he made this bullshimulation.

      @mertc8050@mertc80506 ай бұрын
  • Very legend MrPlasma like Universe Sandbox 2 very helpfuly

    @iwayanyudhapratama@iwayanyudhapratama Жыл бұрын
  • Very nice video!

    @JasieTheFox@JasieTheFox2 жыл бұрын
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