What if Humans Are NOT Earth's First Civilization? | Silurian Hypothesis

2023 ж. 6 Жел.
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We’re almost certainly the first technological civilization on Earth. But what if we’re not? We are. Although how sure are we, really? The Silurian hypothesis, which asks whether pre-human industrial civilizations might have existed.
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  • Reminds me of the Star Trek: Voyager episode "Distant Origin" where the hero ship happens upon an ancient civilization on the other side of the galaxy that descended from hadrosaurs that left Earth 70 million years ago.

    @sethmaki1333@sethmaki13335 ай бұрын
    • Scrolled way to far to find a comment mentioning that episode

      @brennanr.697@brennanr.6975 ай бұрын
    • Ya, but if such a society existed, even if we never found evidence of it left on earth, might we find other evidence in our solar system though? Satellites would have lost or been flung from orbit over that long period, so probably nothing there. If it existed in mars it might have completely eroded by now, or been boiled over by lava when the planet was hotter and more volcanologically active. (it's a word now with it) Maybe something still exists there and is simply buried by millions of years of rust, but might be otherwise intact, or something taking wide paths around the solar system, like an early probe the kind we send out now. That probe would be the most likely to survive I think, but good luck finding a tiny piece of metal in the whole Oort cloud you don't' even know is there.

      @TheJadeFist@TheJadeFist4 ай бұрын
    • It's a shame that they didn't follow up that episode with more on the Vo'th species as recurring guest aliens

      @ianbrett3276@ianbrett32764 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ianbrett3276If Prodigy is allowed to go past the second season, maybe we'll see more of them.

      @UltimatePerfection@UltimatePerfection4 ай бұрын
    • Everyone in this thread is awesome. LLAP

      @bannisher@bannisher4 ай бұрын
  • This is why we need to build a pyramid on the moon... you know future civilizations will be like, pyramids or it didn't happen.

    @enotdetcelfer@enotdetcelfer5 ай бұрын
    • One last prank before we go. True human activity

      @ngud_gaming267@ngud_gaming2673 ай бұрын
    • One asteroid takes it out ..

      @WayneMcDougall@WayneMcDougallАй бұрын
    • @@WayneMcDougallsame with earth

      @steve29384@steve2938420 күн бұрын
    • @@steve29384 on earth we don't wait for asteroids - just tectonic activity and erosion. The Moon is where you place your monolith.

      @WayneMcDougall@WayneMcDougall20 күн бұрын
    • @@WayneMcDougallSo you’re saying…we need two pyramids on the moon.

      @stephanieworkman5110@stephanieworkman511015 күн бұрын
  • "The Brain Eaters," a 1958 horror film had a plot that revolved around an insect civilization from the Carboniferous creating a capsule to escape their refuge from deep underground. Also notable for featuring a pre-Trek Leonard Nimoy.

    @stevelyman6917@stevelyman69172 ай бұрын
    • Who’s making these movies? Someone knows something

      @Pictureperfectroof@PictureperfectroofАй бұрын
  • i really enjoy these episodes that dont contain overly complex math and phsyics that i cant remotely understand. this was interesting, and fun. thank you.

    @davidtal523@davidtal5233 ай бұрын
    • I feel much the same. I have loads of curiosity about the world around us and enjoying learn - but I also feel my limits in regards to the technicalities of the underlying science. I'm definitely pro-science and much appreciate it's ability as a system of thought to enriching our knowledge, but I don't think much of my personal capacity to understand the details!

      @DanielVerberne@DanielVerberne26 күн бұрын
  • There was an episode of Star Trek Voyager about this. A dinosaur civ escaped before the asteroid hit and drifted around the galaxy for millions of years until a ship from the same homeworld stumbled into them on the other side of the galaxy.

    @Gnomezonbacon@Gnomezonbacon4 ай бұрын
    • Distant Origin.

      @MJG206@MJG2063 ай бұрын
    • How did those creatures manage to escape before the asteroid hit?

      @MrClassicmetal@MrClassicmetal3 ай бұрын
    • Did they make it to another planet or just live in their cars for millions of years?

      @tmst2199@tmst21993 ай бұрын
    • Was a dinosaur driving the ship?

      @Obiter3@Obiter33 ай бұрын
    • @@Rich-hy2ey Anthopologists have modern humans emerging from Africa where their ancestors were presumably pretty well-suited.

      @tmst2199@tmst21992 ай бұрын
  • this reminds me of the Lovecraft's stories, basically Earth was invaded by different civilizations on the course of millions of years, all them sooner of later became extincts, or devolved, or literally just ghosts remains.

    @pugofwarbr@pugofwarbr5 ай бұрын
    • Lovecraft was writing at a time where he was engrossed by the booming new scientific understanding of "deep time," he thought it was fascinating, hence incorporated into his writing a radical, scientifically-inspired understanding of just how much older the Earth is than conventional wisdom (informed by written history and literalist biblical timelines) previously suggested.

      @RickJaeger@RickJaeger3 ай бұрын
    • "At the Mountains of Madness" is my favorite Lovecraft's story, even if atypical of his writing in general (speaking of which, it's kinda weird to read such hard sci-fi coming out of a horror guy who's otherwise all about mystery and monsters). Sure, it's absurd to imagine artifical structures withstanding erosion over 30 million years, but it does serve the drama. Lovecraft is an aquired taste and while I absolutely don't recommend going through all of his stuff like I did, since much of it is pretty mediocre, especially from the 1920s, and even this story has its fair share of detractors who can't make their way through the endless paragraphs of descriptions, but if you want to pick anything by him, I'd say pick this one.

      @yarpen26@yarpen262 ай бұрын
    • If this is true it will explain the war between gods in many mythologies like Anunaki ,ashura vs devas ect it can really help us cause in those mythologies they all were different species not humans

      @Mma12367@Mma12367Ай бұрын
    • ​@@Mma12367 They're all either humans or human-like mutants. The God of Christianity in neo-Platonian interpretation is more like an alien species than any of the other guys. There is not a shred of evidence to suggest that mythologized god wars were anything other than distorted recounts of conflicts between powerful chieftains from eons past.

      @yarpen26@yarpen26Ай бұрын
    • @@yarpen26 what do you mean by human mutants

      @Mma12367@Mma12367Ай бұрын
  • I think Silurian Hypothesis should be boiled down to: "Due to subduction, records of surface phenomena will be obscured over millennia" instead of the current: "an Industrial Civilization may have existed before humans existed". It is like modifying the belief that "A teapot might be orbiting Earth" to "It would be difficult to detect something as small as a teapot orbiting Earth".

    @SF-fb6lv@SF-fb6lvАй бұрын
    • I had forgotten all about the teapot orbiting the earth... Uh, I mean the other thing! But in all serious that's a nice boil down thank you

      @YouTube_username.@YouTube_username.3 күн бұрын
    • Is modify your wording from 'millenia' too an Epoch or Eon. Once you look up Epoch you'll see how perfectly it fits :) "An unknown epoch lost to the eons of time" Iirc...

      @glytchd@glytchd3 күн бұрын
  • „They‘re already here, aren’t they?“ - „THEY have been here long before us, Mr. Mulder.“

    @Sir_Typesalot@Sir_TypesalotАй бұрын
    • Always happy to find a fellow X-Files fan!

      @georgemichelakis1202@georgemichelakis12025 күн бұрын
  • This whole episode sounds like a bar conversation after a scientific conference. A lot of fun!

    @psantochi@psantochi5 ай бұрын
    • But without a hangover and burning bottom

      @pavelborisov515@pavelborisov5155 ай бұрын
    • Sounds like the sort of conversations I have with the World at large after the second bottle of Burgundy.

      @petergaskin1811@petergaskin18114 ай бұрын
    • "Back of the napkin" equations comes to mind. But this topic has always fascinated me. The chance of a civilization reaching out level of ability when it comes to leaving undeniable signs of its existence is incredibly small. However, a species that develops complex social structures and the basic ability to create shelter, and even a simple mastery of making fire, would be so difficult to detect after a few million years, let alone 100 million. It's incredibly egocentric to think we are the first "intelligent" species. After all octopuses have been around in some form or another far longer than vertebrates have. And they clearly show it doesn't take upright posture with hands and fingers to be able to solve complex problems that require complex problem solving skills. But we have yet to find anything that shows a technical advancement at our level at any time in the last half billion years, and not for a lack of trying either. So, intelligent species is highly likely. Complex social structure is probable. But no, nothing at our level has shown up in the record, _that we know of._

      @Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88@Benson_aka_devils_advocate_884 ай бұрын
    • After everyone having three or four drinks.

      @billkallas1762@billkallas17624 ай бұрын
    • Except these are only wild wdreams without scientic work of a geologist behind.

      @juliane__@juliane__3 ай бұрын
  • This is the proper way to debunk a conspiracy. Don’t strawman the argument or attack the proponents, steelman the argument and actually try to take it seriously, while looking for contradictions that imply falsehood

    @jeffk3746@jeffk37465 ай бұрын
    • Lol false

      @cp37373@cp373735 ай бұрын
    • @@cp37373 great argument bud

      @jeffk3746@jeffk37465 ай бұрын
    • How deeply, deeply I wish this is how humanity worked. The political environment in my country is so entirely incompatible with your notion that I think, if we ever achieved the level of rhetoric you imply, it will have completely vanished within our lifetime. The Information Age is giving way to “might makes right” and hypothesis driven science has lost relevance in the public discourse. The adage that “science doesn’t care what you believe” is no longer about truth - but rather a reason to ignore it.

      @michaelhobbs8082@michaelhobbs80825 ай бұрын
    • It's a useful analysis for other reasons, but it's not a great way to do debunking. The main issue is the imbalance of effort; it takes almost no effort to start a new conspiracy theory, but huge amounts of effort to treat it seriously and do the debunking. And then once you're done debunking, you get lumped in with "them" and are in on the conspiracy.

      @oasntet@oasntet5 ай бұрын
    • The problem is that a solid conspiracy involves the deliberate destruction or hiding of evidence. Any absence of evidence is merely evidence of a successful conspiracy. Only the believers can be trusted and they always find LOTS of stuff.

      @garethdean6382@garethdean63825 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely phenomenal. Watch all the way through. Thank you for a profound piece.

    @Beya045@Beya0454 ай бұрын
  • Appreciate all of you at PBS Spacetime, your efforts (shoutouts to the animators & editors.) I also appreciate the community here.

    @GSPV33@GSPV332 ай бұрын
  • This is why I love PBS Spacetime. They’ll cover cutting edge physics topics one day, and then give a fair look at far flung topics like the Silurian hypothesis the next. Fantastic work.

    @Realistic_Management@Realistic_Management4 ай бұрын
    • all while being clear about what degree of fact vs speculation is going on, too!

      @ajchapeliere@ajchapeliere4 ай бұрын
    • I think I prefer Anton Petrov personally, if you havent heard of him you should check his channel out. I will say I did enjoy this video, but tend to disagree with some of their stances in other videos

      @TylerHimothyOneJr@TylerHimothyOneJr4 ай бұрын
    • Yes but they are inherently biased being connected to the most nefarious misinformation paradigms the world has ever seen such as the U.S. Guv which is hiding tons of artifacts proving there WERE non human past civilizations.

      @hilohahoma4107@hilohahoma41074 ай бұрын
    • ​@@TylerHimothyOneJr2wa%@❤❤❤

      @blink182bfsftw@blink182bfsftw4 ай бұрын
    • LOL they're the most establishment-dogma show out there they hate the idea of aliens it calls anything non-material woo-woo they're the image of obnoxious close-minded modern scientists

      @hofmannwaves1525@hofmannwaves15254 ай бұрын
  • This fascinating concept brings to mind the famous sci-fi classic 'Nightfall' by Isaac Asimov and Robert Silverberg. In Nightfall, an alien race lives on a world that features not one but several suns. Each sun is up and visible at some part of the time each day and so the concept of 'darkness' is unknown and therefore terrifying to these aliens. In the story, astronomers make a prediction that a full eclipse will occur in the near future, exposing the alien civilisation to complete darkness. It is predicted that most of the aliens will go insane from the experience. Meanwhile in parallel to this storyline, the alien equivalent of geologists are exploring a dig site that uncover something shocking - a layer of carbon and ash buried under the current layer of habitation. The analysis suggest that the ash represents mass fires and destruction - of a previous 'cycle' of civilisation of that alien race. Further digs reveal something even more shocking - an undeniable pattern of wholesale civilisation destruction occurring with a definite period; over and over. It is eventually realised that the current civilisation of aliens on that planet is now 'almost due' for another collapse - and it looks like the forthcoming ultra-rare eclipse and descent into darkness may be the root of all of this. In short, Nightfall as a story contained a seed of the Silurian Hypothesis - what if our current 'advanced' civilisation isn't the first and indeed perhaps only represents the apogee of this particular 'instance' of human civilisation? Now I don't think there's any substance to that idea here on Earth, but nor do I know for sure either.

    @DanielVerberne@DanielVerberne5 ай бұрын
    • I think there is some evidence of it happening on earth. Why do most cultures on earth have stories dating back thousands of years about beings coming down from the sky with amazing abilities then calling them gods? How did humans spread across the globe then suddenly all develop agriculture and civilization separately at the same time? We're talking about cultures separated by thousands of miles and oceans who are thought to have had no contact. I have seen the standard answers given to these questions but they don't pass smell test for me. I think it's much more likely there was a more advanced human culture or another species a thousands of years ago that was moving humans around the planet for various purposes. Then one day were gone for whatever reason.

      @Bitchslapper316@Bitchslapper3165 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Bitchslapper316 I'd recommend a podcast called "It's Probably Not Aliens", they talk a lot about those sorts of ideas. But generally, that's selling humans short.

      @justforplaylists@justforplaylists5 ай бұрын
    • @@justforplaylists I've seen some of them. I'm not saying I believe the crap shown on ancient aliens. However there's never been an acceptable explanation of why humans decided to walk out of a cave tens of thousands of years ago and make up stories of "gods" coming down from the sky. We as modern humans try to apply our own cognitive bias to our ancestors. We see religion from our earliest memories, it's in our schools, on our TV, on the radio and all over the internet. We think believing in religion or a god is normal because in this day and age it is. We apply that same thinking to people thousands of years ago and say "oh it can't be someone actually coming from the sky, it had to be a religion!". I'm also not saying aliens built pyramids, I'm not selling humanity short. I'm saying that all of written history, legends and myths from across the planet from China to India to south America tell us about "gods" coming down from the sky.

      @Bitchslapper316@Bitchslapper3165 ай бұрын
    • You've all taken Dr Who too seriously.

      @MirlitronOne@MirlitronOne5 ай бұрын
    • Omg, that sounds amazing! I'm going to check it out!

      @Jezee213@Jezee2135 ай бұрын
  • An excellent discussion of an interesting hypothesis that many dismiss as too speculative despite, as Matt points out, is a valuable exercise for helping us understand so many questions about life on Earth and elsewhere. A marvellous channel.

    @docnelson2008@docnelson20083 ай бұрын
    • It is interesting. But there is a lot of junk science and things that are obviously wrong. We know very little about any planet outside our solar system. We have no idea what makes a planet habitable for an alien species. A lot of logic fails as you'd expect from the stoner hippies at PBS.

      @Arigator2@Arigator2Күн бұрын
  • This was awesome. This answered a lot of serious questions I had about this idea.

    @glock112983@glock1129834 ай бұрын
  • I love theories like this because they really explore the vastness of time and space.

    @senatorchinchilla5389@senatorchinchilla53894 ай бұрын
    • Hypothesis

      @RATKINGPLUG@RATKINGPLUG4 ай бұрын
    • @@RATKINGPLUG - Speculation.

      @MossyMozart@MossyMozart3 ай бұрын
    • Theories have evidence that support them, hypothesis do not.

      @howardhughes7596@howardhughes75963 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MossyMozart constipation

      @SPREAD-THEM@SPREAD-THEM2 ай бұрын
    • @@howardhughes7596 *hypotheses* do not.

      @cyberpleb2472@cyberpleb24722 ай бұрын
  • its really frustrating to think about how hard it is to build a truly functioning timecapsule that is both reachable(and not parked in geostationary orbit), understandable(no language will survive) and mechanically/chemically stable enough

    @S1nwar@S1nwar5 ай бұрын
    • There's an orbital time capsule that won't come down for a few thousand years, so I'd say that most of it is relatively easy to do and the challenge is language, and even then that's not an insurmountable hurdle.

      @Solnoric@Solnoric5 ай бұрын
    • That should be relatively easy, you could just write in quartz but if you wanted for this to last for millions of years you should produce millions of this quartz "picture books" and store them through the world

      @ericsaul9306@ericsaul93065 ай бұрын
    • Depends on the time scale your time capsule has to survive. Thousands, easy, sticks and stones will do ya. Millions, you can do it if there is enough of people in civ. Billions, things start to get muddy. Concept of time capsule falls apart. Yea, you can have stuff that can theoretically be stable for trillions of years, but in our universe(practice) you basically have just enough time until your star goes red giant. Until stuff gets recycled on cosmic (time)scale.

      @greenanubis@greenanubis5 ай бұрын
    • We’d have to go all in on the “The Inner Light” strategy and download the experiences of a middle aged man living in a dreary small town straight into the brain of a random alien passing by

      @uclakirk@uclakirk5 ай бұрын
    • Indeed. It's much more satisfying for me to imagine our existence in the constantly flowing, changing, boiling exchange of matter and energy as a transient game, and to accept that even as we reach out to know more and more while we are aware.

      @t.c.bramblett617@t.c.bramblett6175 ай бұрын
  • I think the one who should take a bow here is the one who wrote the script for this video. Very well done! I was somewhat convinced that there had been previous ancient civilizations. But you dealt with all the issues I could think of in a way that was compelling.

    @pastorpresent1@pastorpresent14 ай бұрын
  • Ive' been extremey dissociated all night struggling to watch anything -- but apart from playing a game or two, i managed to watch this whole thing, it was JUST calming enough and not super hyped up that I could pay attention - It was really cool, and i'm really grateful that when my brain wants to fold in on itself i got a home on youtube i can poke into for info content :)

    @duskfallmusic@duskfallmusic4 ай бұрын
    • What do you mean?

      @QoraxAudio@QoraxAudio2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@QoraxAudiohe was bored

      @marcelbruin9151@marcelbruin9151Ай бұрын
  • I find it funny how the Silurian hypothesis was named after the pre-human race called the Silurians in Doctor Who, which were named after the Silurian period, which ranged from 443.8 to 419.2 million years ago, a time when such a civilization may have hypothetically existed. It's all very recursive, like Pokemon Yellow being based on the Pokemon anime which was based on Pokemon Red and Green.

    @Devlinator61116@Devlinator611165 ай бұрын
    • And the Silurian is named after an extinct civilization

      @dinoflame9696@dinoflame96965 ай бұрын
    • If the Silurian's did exist, they existed before all the worlds major coal beds were laid down, 350-300 MYA.

      @Crushnaut@Crushnaut5 ай бұрын
    • While they are named that by a scientist in their first story (and the name sticks), in a later story (concerning their aquatic cousins the Sea Devils), the Doctor says that the time period is incorrect and they should be called "Eocenes"

      @thomasrinschler6783@thomasrinschler67835 ай бұрын
    • Funny enough I just got yellow.

      @kothar6159@kothar61595 ай бұрын
    • Red...and Blue.

      @frankn254@frankn2545 ай бұрын
  • this is the best explanation of the silurian hypothesis i've seen so far, not to mention the most comprehensive exploration of its implications, something sorely lacking from the other videos

    @mayoite160@mayoite1605 ай бұрын
    • @@iridium8341doesn’t elaborate 💀

      @theark1400@theark14004 ай бұрын
    • agree, but we are missing 100 million years in geological layer, and he assumes that an earlier civilization used the same technology as us, atomic energy, earth fertilizer, oil based industry et cetera, which is a big mistake.

      @Ezekiel903@Ezekiel9034 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Ezekiel903we have to look for that with which we are already familiar. He doesn't assume anything. He explains how our kinds of technology and energy would leave markers for future generations, because we are the only example of technology and energy use to go by. What exactly do you suggest we should be looking for? Please tell me how to look for an unknown technology we have never conceived.

      @paulonius42@paulonius424 ай бұрын
    • @@paulonius42 massiv build buildings, like the new one found in Siberia, over 8000 years old!

      @Ezekiel903@Ezekiel9034 ай бұрын
    • @Ezekiel903 There was no massive building found in Siberia. The 8000-year-old fortress there was a very modest construction. We have other much larger fortresses dating back 5000 years. An 8000-year-old fortress is evidence of our civilization's ancestors 8000 years ago, not even remotely something connected to a previous civilization millions of years ago. Also, the video explained why buildings will be far less likely to last as long as the kinds of evidence he cites in the video. Perhaps you should watch the entire video before commenting next time.

      @paulonius42@paulonius424 ай бұрын
  • The same thought processes and experiments could be used to help find evidence of very brief biogenesis on Mars or Venus. Figuring out the origins of trace amounts of unusual stuff is worthwhile.

    @s4098429@s40984294 ай бұрын
  • fun to think about, thanks for going to effort to analyze all this properly 👍

    @danm3570@danm35704 ай бұрын
  • Stephen Baxter's book 'Evolution' has a chapter exploring this hypothesis. It dispenses with the "advanced" civilization part, which, to me anyway, presents the much more intriguing notion of simply intelligent civilizations before us. If the pyramids aren't going to be here 200 million years from now, what hope would there be for a fire-sharpened stick from 200 million years past?

    @chaunceyfeatherstone6209@chaunceyfeatherstone62095 ай бұрын
    • Well the pyramids would last exceptionally longer then a fire sharpened stick so I'd say about 0. Really not the best example to use when comparing to the pyramids, I get what you're going for.. but that just ain't it chief

      @nahCmeR@nahCmeR5 ай бұрын
    • We have no reason to believe it without evidence in its favor which there is none.

      @razzleyaheard3204@razzleyaheard32045 ай бұрын
    • @@razzleyaheard3204 And that is the problem. How would we get evidence of such when 99.9% of all life is erased? The fossils we have are from EXCEPTIONAL cases. If we time travelled back to the cretaceous forexample, we'd see countless species not in the fossil record at all.

      @Tamamo-no-Bae@Tamamo-no-Bae5 ай бұрын
    • @@nahCmeRyou most definelty didnt get what he was saying if you think that wasnt a good comparison

      @Alex-ff1mk@Alex-ff1mk5 ай бұрын
    • @@Alex-ff1mk sarcasm must not be something you're familiar with is it? You don't have to answer you've already made that clear.

      @nahCmeR@nahCmeR5 ай бұрын
  • For anyone interested in this sort of question the 2008 book *The Earth After Us: What Legacy Will Humans Leave in the Rocks?* by Jan Zalasiewicz is an excellent read. It looks at what the remains of our own civilization will look like over time up to around 100 million years in the future.

    @earthknight60@earthknight605 ай бұрын
    • Thanks. I was interested 😅

      @Dr.Kay_R@Dr.Kay_R11 күн бұрын
  • One thing I love about these videos is that they do not gloss over the hypothetical nature of the question and that they rationally frame that we are forming hypotheses to be tested or in the case of geology searched for and sampled.

    @davidcashin1894@davidcashin18949 күн бұрын
  • "LIZZID PEEPOL" -Hecklefish

    @schfiftyfive9680@schfiftyfive96804 ай бұрын
    • R u done? -hooman

      @cultiv8599@cultiv85993 ай бұрын
    • Exactly

      @clays1507@clays150715 күн бұрын
  • I have a Douglas Adams inspired variation on the Silurian Hypothesis. The Dolphins land dwelling ancestors once built a great civilisation, mastering the wheel, cities, post office towers, wars, etc. But the more they developed this magnificent civilisation, the more they realised that they could only de-stress from their high flying careers by mucking about in the water having a good time. Then came the most important moment in their social evolution - they realised that all of these achievements were a pointless distraction from what they actually enjoyed! So they genetically engineered themselves to become fully aquatic, dismantled & cleaned up all of their cities (to avoid giving any future advanced species bad ideas) and retired to the sea, where they have been mucking about and having a good time ever since. The only thing which depresses them is watching humans make the same mistakes, which is why they try to make friends with us & encourage us enjoy mucking about in the sea whenever possible. Whilst completely unsupported by evidence, this hypothesis is now ready for peer review :D 😍

    @brutussmithicus@brutussmithicus4 ай бұрын
    • They must not have invented WiFi. No way anyone is giving that up.

      @gaeroot@gaeroot4 ай бұрын
    • @@gaeroot Hmmmm, debatable. When I think about the amount of stress I suffer from low battery alerts & listening to ignorant morons spout pseudoscientific BS with supreme confidence, I often want to throw myself into the sea 😕

      @brutussmithicus@brutussmithicus4 ай бұрын
    • @@brutussmithicusBut, present company excepted, of course!🤔

      @kennethmartin1300@kennethmartin13004 ай бұрын
    • What’s that cartoon that makes the dolphins god like lol

      @jamesc8843@jamesc88434 ай бұрын
    • @@jamesc8843 Dunno, but worshiping dolphins sounds like a much better idea than worshiping any of the 10000 deranged gods that humanity has invented so far. There is good evidence that dolphins actually exist 😀🐬

      @brutussmithicus@brutussmithicus4 ай бұрын
  • I think it would be safe to say that if a second "advanced civilization" did emerge, they would immediately know about our existence as soon as they went to the moon... Of course this considers our future proposals of lunar construction and expectancy of human existence...

    @cherokeegabel2397@cherokeegabel23975 ай бұрын
    • Yes, but what are the odds of they finding something so small on a huge place like the moon? Maybe after we get to the poles, but if we kill ourselves before that, it would be another story.

      @RicardoSavino@RicardoSavino5 ай бұрын
    • They would probably think it was aliens.

      @Dennodq@Dennodq5 ай бұрын
    • Depends on how soon they emerged. Also, human remains on moon are (at least currently) limited and easy to miss.

      @jpuroila@jpuroila5 ай бұрын
    • The surface of the moon is pretty damn big. It’s not a certainty that a future civilization would explore the same small area as the one on which we landed.

      @obscurity3027@obscurity30275 ай бұрын
    • also a few meteor strikes in the right places would scatter our footprints and bury our landers and that'd be that

      @apokatastasian2831@apokatastasian28315 ай бұрын
  • Excellent and thought provoking. Nice work.

    @MSIContent@MSIContent4 ай бұрын
  • Great video! Keep up the good work

    @udishomer5852@udishomer58524 ай бұрын
  • if there was such civilisation, maybe our best bet would be to look for artifacts they may have left in pretty stationary environments, like in moons without much geological activity or Lagrange points... they may just be out there, waiting to be found. And indeed as we search for them we ourselves may leave a trail for the next arising curious civilization...

    @VRnamek@VRnamek5 ай бұрын
    • Lagrange points are not that stable, they are mostly "saddle" gravity wells or "orbits".. on the long run stuff will fly out (otherwise every body would have moons in the L points)

      @georgelionon9050@georgelionon90505 ай бұрын
    • @@georgelionon9050 L4 and L5 are stable, which is why there are groups of asteroids at Jupiter's L4 and L5 with the Sun, called trojans.

      @josephdocis1488@josephdocis14885 ай бұрын
    • ​@@josephdocis1488however, those orbits aren't that useful outside of their stability. One place to look would be geostationary orbit. It's far enough from earth that orbits can last hilariously long before decaying, and unlike some geosynchronous orbits, there isn't an annoying interaction with the moon that causes it to rapidly decay. However, these would still be small satellites 35,000km away that, if they're millions of years old, may very well have been destroyed by a interplanetary pebble.

      @Somerandom1922@Somerandom19225 ай бұрын
    • Well the senate passed a bill that literally talked about declassifying non-human intelligences artifacts and then Republicans just totally gutted it. It's big news in the ufo community and does have lots of specific examples of things to declassify...

      @mattmaas5790@mattmaas57905 ай бұрын
    • just find the Tacitus

      @monad_tcp@monad_tcp5 ай бұрын
  • Nothing like a bit of existential dread in the morning. This puts the 9 to 5 daily grind in perspective.

    @barkasz6066@barkasz60664 ай бұрын
  • thank you for the most succinct and informative explanation on this subject, i ever heard. i do see it different, learning about the effects of deterioration, and the eve changing nature of the earths crust. i think we should just get our own stuff together, and not worry too much about the past. :)

    @vycos-zen@vycos-zen3 ай бұрын
  • Stumbled onto this channel like 2 weeks ago. Very happy I did.

    @robbob3052@robbob305227 күн бұрын
  • Matt is a fantastic narrator. He's certainly qualified for physics related stuff, but he would make a great documentary narrator on any topic.

    @r1nger81@r1nger815 ай бұрын
    • Simon Whistler

      @GenericInternetter@GenericInternetter5 ай бұрын
    • @GenericInternetter Yeah. I dig fact boy too. Great presenter...no shortage of KZhead channels 😁

      @r1nger81@r1nger815 ай бұрын
    • @@GenericInternetter He has enough channels. Don't spread him even wider!

      @ArawnOfAnnwn@ArawnOfAnnwn5 ай бұрын
    • he IS a physicist

      @falconeagle3655@falconeagle36555 ай бұрын
    • he really is great.

      @Jezee213@Jezee2135 ай бұрын
  • Excellent. This was a really thought provoking video and I must commend the team behind spacetime for not considering this topic off limits, because I trust that with Matt behind the show even a speculative topic like the silurian hypothesis will get the spacetime treatment that it deserves.

    @HassanGaba1@HassanGaba15 ай бұрын
    • Hijacking the Top Comment to ask a simple question : Why is there so much Xenon 129 in Mars?

      @RobleViejo@RobleViejo4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@RobleViejothat's a very good question that nobody seems to have an answer for

      @mattp3518@mattp35184 ай бұрын
    • Not strictly a hypothesis, I think that this should be filed under "Brainfarts".

      @petergaskin1811@petergaskin18114 ай бұрын
    • @@RobleViejo Saw this comment and felt the urge to contribute. This video was interesting and a partial explanation of this is addressed at 15:14 when nearby supernovae are mentioned as a possible source of fissile material. Interestingly the half-life of some of these materials and the distances involved would make it impossible to travel such distances and be deposited on planets in our solar system. A controversial alternative hypothesis is solar micronova events. Such events could have also restarted biological development on our own planet. So was it an advanced civilization that wiped itself out from nuclear war, or was it a solar micronova event that sterilized life in our solar system? Or even more far out, was a solar micronova event triggered by an advanced technology as a doomsday weapon or technical failure? The possibilities are only limited by our imagination. Happy hunting all!

      @goobyboxxton8526@goobyboxxton85264 ай бұрын
  • Brilliant and thought provoking as always. Thank you Matt 🙏🌟

    @MitzyB1@MitzyB14 ай бұрын
  • Imagine how interesting it would be to find the remnants of a billion year old lunar lander.

    @JoePatterson@JoePatterson4 ай бұрын
    • Yes, space artefacts are something he didnt touch on.

      @casinodelonge@casinodelonge4 ай бұрын
    • The Moon is hit by around a hundred detectable asteroids every day. Within a billion years the Moon is hit by tens of trillions of asteroids, traveling tens of thousands of km/h. A single nearby impact would annihilate the rover, sending it into space in tiny specks.

      @tukkajumala@tukkajumala4 ай бұрын
    • Yes, but maybe, just maybe there some ancient underground bases/mines, artefacts, ruins on Mars & the Moon. We might find our evidence for other life from elsewhere or elsewhen out there rather than here on Earth.

      @KevinWarburton-tv2iy@KevinWarburton-tv2iy3 ай бұрын
  • It never ceases to amaze me that the Drake Equation, an equation made up entirely of variables, gets any play. It’s just making up the probability of other life in the universe with extra steps, while giving it an air of respectability so people are fooled into thinking you’re not just making it all up.

    @Welverin@Welverin5 ай бұрын
    • I thought Drake was just a singer. Huh. The more you know. 😂

      @chrisdonovan8795@chrisdonovan87955 ай бұрын
    • It's organized ignorance,and it's very useful when you make up 'reasonable' numbers to argue your case. It gets play because it's a useful tool, if only for the person arguing.

      @garethdean6382@garethdean63825 ай бұрын
    • Make a better guess.

      @fbsfgr@fbsfgr3 ай бұрын
    • The point is that the variables are markers, placeholders ...a framework superstructure in which we strive to fill the gaps with facts within each Variable Box. It gives us an Endo-Skeleton on which to adhere "the Flesh of Knowledge" as we learn more.

      @KevinWarburton-tv2iy@KevinWarburton-tv2iy3 ай бұрын
    • @@KevinWarburton-tv2iy Nice try, but that's nothing but a bunch of flowery language trying to obfuscate reality: no one actually treats it that way much less makes it clear that's all it is.

      @Welverin@Welverin3 ай бұрын
  • Any civilization that follows us will find our footprint on the moon if nothing else.

    @noanyobiseniss7462@noanyobiseniss74623 ай бұрын
    • Nah they’re will still be some McDonald’s burgers in perfect condition 2,000 years from now

      @norneva775@norneva77513 күн бұрын
    • Smartest american:

      @noblenormie1179@noblenormie117910 күн бұрын
  • Superb video, as always!

    @zacharywong483@zacharywong4834 ай бұрын
  • Have you heard of Crawford Lake? Currently the best location that records our impact. Also called the Anthropocene lake.

    @icedbear@icedbear5 ай бұрын
    • Don't make me go up there with an immersion blender and mix the layers!

      @russellzauner@russellzauner5 ай бұрын
    • I think I just saw a Video from Eons a week or so back...

      @TJ52359@TJ523595 ай бұрын
    • Did they not recently do a video on this exact lake?

      @dewaard3301@dewaard33015 ай бұрын
  • Another amazing video that really makes me think about, well, everything 😆 i'm a 13 y old girl and literally one of my most favourite things is coming home from school and curling up in bed with my cat and watching this channel for literally hours on end till my parents get home from work lol. I've been watching you for a few months now and I'm not lying when I say I've learnt more from this channel than I have in my physics class 😂

    @user-ro5tn3zt1d@user-ro5tn3zt1d5 ай бұрын
    • Have you thought about uploading a video of your cat? 🐱

      @Ggdivhjkjl@Ggdivhjkjl4 ай бұрын
    • @@Ggdivhjkjl I have but my dad said I'm too young to be uploading stuff. Maybe when I'm older I will. For now I'm using the internet to learn as much as I can BC I think I want to study astrophysics when I'm in college 😀

      @user-ro5tn3zt1d@user-ro5tn3zt1d4 ай бұрын
    • @@user-ro5tn3zt1dyour dad's totally right. Too many creeps out there. Good luck with astrophysics!

      @Justmint939@Justmint9394 ай бұрын
    • @@user-ro5tn3zt1d You should listen to your dad. Tons of weirdos especially on youtube. I hope you do well in college, I'm in college now myself

      @Dover939@Dover9393 ай бұрын
    • Hi, I am glad you have an interest in these topics and wish you all the best and a lot of luck in your future goals!!! :) But, please be careful of weirdos on the internet! You already posted way to much info, such as your age /gender, as well as the fact that you're alone at home after school (telling you have a cat, can also give someone an impression about your personality, but also narrow you down from a group of people). I am sorry to say this, but sadly, all these info are just gold for creeps lurking around, (online, but also offline...meaning in the real world!). Don't want to scare you either, but I would really advise you to delete this comment :/ You can write another one, if you like, but please keep the info you give about yourself (anywhere on the internet...but also sometimes in real life) to a minimum! Again, wish you the best in the future, and above all...stay safe :) p.s. DON'T EVER send or upload anything online, without your parents consent (and also, only if you feel okay with that!), no matter WHO asks you, okay! Please!!! Even if the requests may sound like they're harmless, like the one from one of the dudes here asking you for cat videos, or whatever! Sorry again if I am scarring you, but better a bit scarred now than very sorry later! Bye 🖐

      @ditalotl@ditalotl28 күн бұрын
  • Ozymandias BY PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY I met a traveller from an antique land, Who said--"Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in the desert....Near them, on the sand, Half sunk a shattered visage lies, whose frown, And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command, Tell that its sculptor well those passions read Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things, The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed; And on the pedestal, these words appear: My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings; Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair! Nothing beside remains. Round the decay Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare The lone and level sands stretch far away."

    @zbighugh9193@zbighugh91934 ай бұрын
    • Thank you that - very appropriate.

      @keithtinkler4073@keithtinkler40732 ай бұрын
  • It's not quite as insane as I once would have thought. video is bang on correct.

    @astyanax905@astyanax905Ай бұрын
  • "Distant Origin" is the 65th episode of Star Trek: Voyager, the 23rd episode of the third season. Voyager encounters an alien race, but runs afoul of their principles. The Voth are humanoid lizards, and the plot revolves around one particular scientist who has taken an interest in studying Voth origins. They were from Earth and it was hearasey for them to acknowledge the Intelligent monkeys from the same place. Also touched on in Dr Who.

    @ctuna2011@ctuna20115 ай бұрын
  • I've done some thinking about this, when looking back at some historical mass extinction events. The Permian-Triassic extinction event roughly 250 MYA was one that really stood out to me, even though it everything I'll mention can be solidly explained by the aforementioned catastrophic volcanic-fuel interactions. The P-T was one of the few known mass extinctions of insects, which we are also doing. It has some evidence of ozone layer depletion, which we narrowly avoided with CFC's. It has evidence of a large dying of marine life including coral, which is an issue that our actions with ocean-acidification is amplifying. Not sure how volcanism could cause the insect extinctions, but there are some hypothesis that the burning of coal and high-temperature interactions could have created some highly-reactive ozone-consuming chemicals. Volcanism could have also generally increased the CO2 in the atmosphere, leading to increased acidity of the oceans, and then wrecking coral life. Also, a little strange how during this time the Lystrosaurus made up such a large portion of living creatures and left behind so many fossils. Haven't really gone further, but its a very interesting thought experiment! Something for a team up of interdisciplinary researchers to look at... Edit: Forgot to mention the C12 and C13 ratio! Those changed radically due to the mass-burning of organics, which could have been caused by the Siberian Traps volcanism, or by some species of coal-burning creatures.

    @coolsa@coolsa5 ай бұрын
    • Are you suggesting Lystrosaurus could've been domesticated? Why would it be strange for it to be just a very successful grazer?

      @whifflingtove@whifflingtove5 ай бұрын
    • The mass extinction of insects in the P-T event isn't sudden though (unlike today). Given that the P-T is also the largest mass extinction event on record, it would be expected that insects be affected more strongly just like other life. On the other hand, we are arguably causing insects to go extinct before any other group of animals due to our land and pesticide use.

      @bpz8175@bpz81755 ай бұрын
    • @@whifflingtove They could have been the most successful grazer of all time, and somehow avoided predation (until their extinction), or just happened to live in a way that favoured fossilization (like living by flood plains). Some food for thought though, humanity and our domesticated animals make up around 95% of current land-mammals lifeforms, while Lystrosaurus makes up 90% of the fossils found from the PT boundary. Thinking about it like a science-fiction enthusiast, perhaps they were a domestic species of a specific obligate carnivorous species. Perhaps they were themselves the tool-users, and progressed much much slower than we did in technology, getting "stuck" in some places, and not innovating themselves out of some Great Filters. Who knows what other sapient species would do or how they would behave, that's for scifi authors to speculate, with emphasis on the fiction.

      @coolsa@coolsa5 ай бұрын
    • @@bpz8175 I mean, there is a 15 million year gap in insect fossil record between the late Permian and early Triassic, with a major shift in dominant species occurring somewhere in this time, so its hard to pin down how long the insect extinction took. Though, the source for that is a paper is dated to 1993, and I really hope that further research and discoveries have happened in the time since, since my main source is Wikipedia citations. A quick google search shows a 2022 paper published in Frontiers claimed that 1/3 of insects went extinct at the PT boundary, which pretty similar to the 10%-40% of insects currently endangered in our Anthropocene era. This paper also specifies these extinctions occurred after a long decline from the middle-Permian onward, so its super unlikely that this was actually caused by any sapient species, but its still fun to speculate!

      @coolsa@coolsa5 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@coolsamore food for the thought! Humans and our pets and livestock will be fossilized by the billions so we will appear quite ubiquitous on the fossil record, the reason for this it's that one of the requisites for fossilization that makes it such a rare occurrence is that the body needs to be buried soon after death, preferably before decaying and before predation in an environment conducive to fossilization and protected from crushing or again predation, this is basically what we have done for thousands of years through burials, it could be the case that Lystrosaurus is so ubiquitous because it was ritually buried too.... Then again probably not.

      @ericsaul9306@ericsaul93065 ай бұрын
  • Glad you mentioned the PETM. That era is frighteningly similar to what we see right now. I doubt we'll ever have the evidence to say for sure, but it's entirely possible an advanced civilization lived during the PETM. Possible? Yes. Likely? No.

    @jozjonlin3170@jozjonlin31704 ай бұрын
  • Amazing thing about the material of everything when you consider that vibrations are exactly the same thing

    @danielash1704@danielash1704Ай бұрын
  • I love the Doctor Who origin of "the Silurian hypothesis" name, because it's an example of Doctor Who actually being scientifically valid. The "Silurians" aren't called "Silurians" by the humans because that's the age they're actually from. Instead, humans call them "Silurians" because that's the geological layer where they found their underground hibernation base. It makes sense that this is a lot deeper than the geological era they're actually from, because they were creating an underground hibernation base from the start.

    @IsaacKuo@IsaacKuo4 ай бұрын
  • I would never watch a video with this title, except when produced by PBS Space Time. Great work again Matt and all.

    @billg.7909@billg.79095 ай бұрын
  • tectonic plate movement devours everything on the surface over time.

    @dcptiv@dcptiv3 ай бұрын
  • Yes, this is becoming a fairly common thought. Many even think that prior earth residents are actually living underground, or under the ocean somewhere.

    @rwschumm@rwschummАй бұрын
  • That ..."Spacetime" finishing sequence at the end of video has always enthralled me❤

    @_MAXrevs_@_MAXrevs_5 ай бұрын
    • Try ending all your conversations like that for fun. 😀

      @jimmyzhao2673@jimmyzhao26735 ай бұрын
    • @@jimmyzhao2673 won't have many conversations after doing that too many times 😅

      @NexuJin@NexuJin4 ай бұрын
  • I just realized, the sadest solution for the Drake Equation would be, if it turns out the limiting factor why we don't see life everywhere is the duration a civilization survives, and not how hard it is to get there in the first place.

    @Ganjor420@Ganjor4205 ай бұрын
    • The Great Filter is no joke.

      @oasntet@oasntet5 ай бұрын
    • Sagan pointed this out in the original Cosmos. He ran the (at the time) best guesstimates for the variables in the Drake equation. It all came down to the life expectancy of a technological civilization. If that number was 100 years (from invention of radio to extinction) then the number of radio communicating civilizations in the Milky Way is 1. Just us.

      @8584zender@8584zender5 ай бұрын
    • The dark forest theory could be the answer

      @icekingsbattlefield9805@icekingsbattlefield980522 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for this video!

    @quentinbricard@quentinbricard3 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting, love that they referred to the Silurians in the name, great DW reference 😊

    @rivkavermeij@rivkavermeij3 күн бұрын
  • This is so cool! I love that PBS Spacetime is exploring incredibly unlikely hypothesis like this, and what their implications could be, without sensationalizing them at all, and being real about the actual likelihood of them happening. Because when something like this is analyzed from such a good scientific perspective, there really are interesting things to be learned from it! :D Thanks for these great videos!

    @user-rm2qj2jh4l@user-rm2qj2jh4l4 ай бұрын
    • why unlikely?

      @metal87power@metal87power4 ай бұрын
    • @@metal87powerprobably the fact that there's literally zero evidence to suggest, much less support, the hypothesis.

      @theskorpian@theskorpian4 ай бұрын
    • Unlikely is what the government would say if they found technology better than ours in an archaeological dig, they don’t want us to know the truth

      @user-hh9kz8ng4d@user-hh9kz8ng4d4 ай бұрын
    • @@theskorpian Absence of evidence is not evidence of abscence.

      @fuckingblackgod@fuckingblackgod4 ай бұрын
    • @@fuckingblackgod Which makes it extremely unlikely as the person you quoted said.

      @Dover939@Dover9393 ай бұрын
  • Many years ago I remember hearing about a dinosaur species (sorry I can’t remember which) that had developed a bigger brain in the later Cretaceous, and the commentator said that had it continued to evolve, it might have been almost as intelligent as humans, and my immediate thought was that it had millions of years head start on the mammals so it would have been MORE intelligent than us. This is a nice overview of what markers might be left, an exciting albeit unproven hypothesis.

    @PhilW222@PhilW2225 ай бұрын
    • Mammals actually slightly predate Dinosaurs. Also imagen in the future a new race finds like Babboons or something and r like" if they only had a few million more years they could have been people to." Compleatly unaware we existed. With a hand full of remains artifacts that there academics dismiss as hoxes like we do with stuff like the Critacius hammer

      @Shard18@Shard184 ай бұрын
    • Sounds like a fictional story to get views rather than anything factual.

      @jamisojo@jamisojo4 ай бұрын
    • Hadrosaur.

      @MJG206@MJG2063 ай бұрын
    • Think how smart some modern bird brains are. I would guess one of the bipedal dinos is a good start.

      @Krezmick@Krezmick3 ай бұрын
    • Troodons?

      @KevinWarburton-tv2iy@KevinWarburton-tv2iy3 ай бұрын
  • Wow, such an interesting video. Thanks!

    @LuisVillanuevaCubero@LuisVillanuevaCuberoАй бұрын
  • Question to the maker of this video: I really enjoyed it, if an advanced civilisation launched a satellite, would it have survived to present times in the atmosphere of space?

    @librapondo_@librapondo_3 ай бұрын
    • Potentially. Most satellites are going to re-enter earth's atmosphere and be destroyed on re-entry. The few that might be thrown out of it's orbit would just be one grain of sand on a beach. There'd be no way of finding it other than by pure dumb luck.

      @robertabblebaum7813@robertabblebaum78139 күн бұрын
  • Easily the last topic Iever expected to find on this channel

    @dx5soundlabs939@dx5soundlabs9395 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I almost hit the do not recommend channel option on the video listing until I saw it was PBS.

      @googlesucks6029@googlesucks60295 ай бұрын
  • I’m certainly intrigued by the concept of an ancient industrial civilization, I think it’s much more likely (and thus more intriguing) to think of an ancient civilization that wasn’t advanced technologically. Did creatures exist that drew on caves walls that have long ago crept below earth’s surface? Can we ever know?

    @timurphy8888@timurphy88885 ай бұрын
    • The genes and proteins allowing highly intelligent species to emerge just evolved rescently. Even chimps must acquire a few extra mutations to be able to get the level of humans. Anything living before and during the mesozoic could hardly beat a chicken in intelligence.

      @TheGyuuula@TheGyuuula3 ай бұрын
    • @timurphy8888 - Sounds like that so-called "hollow earth" fantasy.

      @MossyMozart@MossyMozart3 ай бұрын
    • I'm pretty sure I had a commented on this, but it's not visible for some reason.

      @TheGyuuula@TheGyuuula3 ай бұрын
    • @@MossyMozart i think they meant the caves crept below the earth's surface as in subduction

      @AiNaKa@AiNaKaАй бұрын
    • Not only drew on caves.. If there was an Inca or Mayan kind of civilization (non industrial, but with fire, tools, writing, mining) 5 million years ago.. And they lived in a now flooded land.. Could we ever find out?

      @FabsHF@FabsHF6 күн бұрын
  • One thing I have always thought about, and asked a geology professor about (to which they had no answer) is that if there were a huge calamity (like super volcano or large meteor impact) that caused a large extinction level event and happened even within 50 thousands years of our our current time period... the following impact on the sedimentary layer would be significant enough that it would completely mask the last 300 years of impact we have had on that sedimentary rock. Hundreds of millions of years from now, researchers would likely just see it as the same event.

    @cameronward9443@cameronward94432 күн бұрын
  • Thanks for taking this seriously

    @robaustin_@robaustin_4 ай бұрын
  • Thank u for this channel as well as Matt.i appreciate how he/you explain it to us or myself.i look forward for all of ur subjects u talk about.again thank u

    @dockholiday0731@dockholiday07315 ай бұрын
  • This is why it is important that we scatter as much long lived synthetic radionuclides across the world. Got to leave our mark! /s

    @jajssblue@jajssblue5 ай бұрын
    • If we wanted to tell future civ to go ### themselves, how would we do that? And they need to understand it too.

      @georgelionon9050@georgelionon90505 ай бұрын
    • New golden record but the human figures are flipping the bird

      @xaviertorrence2559@xaviertorrence25595 ай бұрын
  • "We're on track to get at least one [example of an extinct civilisation]" was exactly the humour I needed this morning. :)

    @davydatwood3158@davydatwood31584 ай бұрын
  • so basically, we have no idea

    @robbybee70@robbybee704 ай бұрын
  • I think this type of question and this type of thinking is very important, regardless if we find ancient civilizations or not. This search answers important questions about how we're affecting the environment we live in today.

    @shadowmil@shadowmil5 ай бұрын
    • @irdium8341 I hear there are a few nukes lying around that would make a big splash

      @tiffanymarie9750@tiffanymarie97505 ай бұрын
    • We are not affecting it in any way given enough time. 2 billion years from now tectonic plate movements will erase any evidence of our existence.

      @wally7856@wally78565 ай бұрын
    • @@tiffanymarie9750 Nukes: the "forbidden technology of the Ancients" of the future!

      @imveryangryitsnotbutter@imveryangryitsnotbutter5 ай бұрын
  • As someone who grew up watching a lot of fascinating documentaries on Discovery channel only to see it go down to become the conspiracy theory sh*thole it is now, I started watching this video thinking ‘No PBS SpaceTime, please don’t’, and ended it thinking ‘Thanks mate, thanks for a detailed explanation’. Thanks for taking on a risky topic and explaining it without bias.

    @capt.picard445@capt.picard4455 ай бұрын
    • Can you discuss what the vid was about

      @mkhanman12345@mkhanman123455 ай бұрын
    • Just a little reminder: The whole human experience is biased, because we can only perceive the universe from our perspective. We might be "3D Creaters" living in an 11-Dimensional Universe. The key is to question everything and stay true to the scientific principles which lead to a profound understanding of some laws of the universe so far.

      @MrNuki42@MrNuki425 ай бұрын
    • They still have to work that algorithm. Even the thumbnails aren't really representative of the quality of content that is contained within the videos, but that is what people click on so that's what they have to do. The titles are the same way - wording it like they do engages a much wider audience that otherwise might not end up seeing this channel. The people who already come just for the channel are going to see it anyways, a clickbait-y title and thumbnail aren't going to affect that but will draw in thousands or millions of other viewers.

      @sidereus8654@sidereus86545 ай бұрын
    • PBS space time have long ago surpassed any documentaries on either discovery or NG. Neither of them can equate with pbsst in quality of the physics related material.

      @oskarskalski2982@oskarskalski29825 ай бұрын
    • @@MrNuki42 Theories are fine. Theories without evidence disguised as fact are not.

      @ProYada@ProYada4 ай бұрын
  • The most fascinating thing i took from this is most of our technology and industry today has a similar impact on the earth as natural catastrophic events. That says a lot about how we are choosing to go about things.

    @kwesisalim@kwesisalim3 күн бұрын
  • Nice it reminds me of the tv program Space above and beyond .

    @nikkiparksy@nikkiparksy3 ай бұрын
  • I like how this possibility was explored in both Doctor Who and Star Trek Voyager

    @anthonymudge9768@anthonymudge97685 ай бұрын
    • "Distant Origin" - yeah - beautifully started episode, somewhat simply ended. And Voth, being so powerful - strange they haven't move to earth to e.g. erase proof of distant origin. But beaming Voyager with shields raised inside was really something else even on ST scale.

      @piotrd.4850@piotrd.48505 ай бұрын
  • Sort of related, I occasionally wonder whether or not we would actually pick up any of our signals, TV, radio, etc., if we had our SETI setup and other tools in a nearby star system.

    @mikebmcl@mikebmcl5 ай бұрын
    • Wonder no more, you can Google this answer. Just search for "SETI link budget". A "link budget" is the term used by communications engineers to figure out the power their transmitters need to be received by a receiver of a certain sensitivity (with potential noise sources thrown in on the link path). You find a few sites with calculators that explain this in more detail and allow you to find various distances based on signal source and strength. I warn you though, when you understand the link budget it starts to get depressing, and you'll wonder why we're even bothering with a SETI project.

      @kirkhamandy@kirkhamandy5 ай бұрын
    • Excellent question.

      @HobieH3@HobieH35 ай бұрын
    • @@HobieH3 Yes, and even the possibility that any alien replies might be replies to 'Silurian' messages that they intercepted.

      @imagseer@imagseer5 ай бұрын
    • Nope they become fuzzy right away basically

      @mattmaas5790@mattmaas57905 ай бұрын
    • SETI automatically discounts any human signals from being evidence of intelligent life 😁

      @magma2050@magma20505 ай бұрын
  • Incredible writing and great presentation. I love this channel.

    @salmonesque@salmonesque11 күн бұрын
  • This is fascinating. I would like to meet this presenter to learn more.

    @computer-training-for-seniors@computer-training-for-seniors4 ай бұрын
  • I've been talking this theory for so long now, I'm happy someone is covering it in fine detail. There is such a possible chance humans are not the first Earthlings!

    @ArmstrongandTumbler@ArmstrongandTumblerАй бұрын
  • THIS is exactly how you address extraordinary claims like the Silurian Hypothesis. Such claims require incredible standards of evidence. Scientists can take them seriously, there's nothing wrong with that so long as we recognize that the standard of proof is extreme.

    @billfrehe6620@billfrehe66205 ай бұрын
    • All that is needed is sufficient evidence it need not be extraordinary

      @kh9242@kh92425 ай бұрын
    • It's very complicated to prove, but also to disprove

      @Titere05@Titere055 ай бұрын
    • @@kh9242 Wrong. This is why idiot pseudo-scientists get mocked, they make outrageous claims and put up underwhelming evidence to match the claim. The evidence must match the claim. In the present case, there's zero evidence.

      @billfrehe6620@billfrehe66205 ай бұрын
    • @@kh9242 Wrong. This is why idiot pseudo-scientists get mocked, they make outrageous claims and put up underwhelming evidence to match the claim. The evidence must match the claim. In the present case, there's zero evidence.

      @billfrehe6620@billfrehe66205 ай бұрын
    • it's essentially a thought experiment which can serve as a starting point for asking actual (interesting and relevant) questions. a thought experiment doesn't have to be plausible in and of itself, in terms of realism of its assumptions.

      @vibovitold@vibovitold4 ай бұрын
  • This, combined with the Martian Canals, is my favorite retro scifi concept.

    @xitheris1758@xitheris17585 ай бұрын
  • this warm blip will be like every other warm blip seen in the geologic record.

    @skelafeti@skelafeti4 ай бұрын
  • Your green screen work is top tier

    @HamSammichApex@HamSammichApex4 ай бұрын
  • I think the line of radioisotopes will be pretty unmistakable for a long time into the future. We can't even properly make new steel (easily at least) that doesn't have some miniscule amount of radiation background now. I've read that steel from before the atomic era has become its own market for applications that need very low background radiation levels.

    @JMurph2015@JMurph20155 ай бұрын
    • Do you know how long it takes for those steel contaminating isotopes to decay? Will it be issue after few milions of years?

      @DalHrusk@DalHrusk5 ай бұрын
    • maybe i'm being difficult... but isn't the Radiation level of Pre-1945 Steel only considered "Low Level" Because Post 1945 is "HighER" and we know what we did in 1945.... If Earth shakes her etch-a-sketch... and the Dog-People rise up in a Billion Years as the 3rd Civilization ; our post WWII numbers will be the only Baseline they know ... and those levels will Either Hinder their ability to do what ever it is that we think we need 'low levels' for; or they will find their own work arounds to it (that we don't consider/solve, because we can still find it however scarce

      @TJ52359@TJ523595 ай бұрын
    • that* its*

      @JorgetePanete@JorgetePanete5 ай бұрын
    • The problem is that is a test for nuclear technology (specificcally its misuse), not a general test of technological civilization.

      @kennethferland5579@kennethferland55795 ай бұрын
  • There was a great episode of Star Trek Voyager (Distant Origin) that had this premise... "We are not immigrants!" Very cool.

    @justin-tyme@justin-tyme5 ай бұрын
    • One of my favorites! And the first thing I thought of when I saw this video title + thumbnail.

      @exscape@exscape5 ай бұрын
    • I love this episode 💟🌌☮️

      @eSKAone-@eSKAone-5 ай бұрын
  • this was my first thought when learning about plate tectonics in elementary school, funny how our imaginations can lead us to similar ideas.

    @X-jaybyrd@X-jaybyrd4 ай бұрын
  • I want a civilised discussion about all those structures that no-one really knows how they were built.

    @user-fs1hv7dk7o@user-fs1hv7dk7o2 күн бұрын
  • Bravo for tackling a topic that is usually considered too "fringe" and "silly" for mainstream science to consider. Keep up the great videos.

    @smartguy-lx9im@smartguy-lx9im5 ай бұрын
  • Well. That was one terrific video. (Partly, I suppose, because I could understand most of it). There was even some swipes of humor in there. Swordbound, below, wrote "I love serious answers to silly questions." But, it turns out it wasn't quite as silly a question as I thought at the beginning of the video. Thanks!

    @roo1314@roo13145 ай бұрын
    • I was thinking that as well, this might be their first vid I’ve ever got all the way through and understood all of it 😅

      @watts18269@watts182695 ай бұрын
  • What a fabulous episode!

    @charoleawood@charoleawood2 ай бұрын
  • For as much as you mentioned the thing, I'm surprised that KZhead didn't slap a context warning on this video.

    @J0krswy1d@J0krswy1dАй бұрын
  • What if Snowball Earth was simply a nice ski resort for aliens but went out of fashion?

    @nigh7swimming@nigh7swimming5 ай бұрын
    • It’s more like a zoo for aliens. So when they come they are just doing a typical trip to the zoo.

      @Lomogrammaton@Lomogrammaton5 ай бұрын
  • Just when I thought I couldn't love this channel any more

    @AngeloXification@AngeloXification5 ай бұрын
    • Right

      @dxtrum@dxtrum5 ай бұрын
  • Imagine the stuff that is just under water... off the land bridges that are very recently under water. Imagine what civilizations have been lost to time itself

    @Paul.atherton@Paul.atherton12 күн бұрын
  • I don't really comment on KZhead videos but this is a really fun thought experiment.

    @Vorticron@Vorticron6 сағат бұрын
  • How long (on average) would artifacts survive on the moon? Would the chance of finding something there be larger or smaller than on earth?

    @jakobthomsen1595@jakobthomsen15955 ай бұрын
    • Radiation from the sun would first bleach then break down many surface artifacts, I believe. Theres also cold-hot cycles and impacts that complicate things.

      @ILLUMINATED-1@ILLUMINATED-15 ай бұрын
    • I've seen estimates that it would take 10s of millions of years for the Apollo landers to be destroyed by micro meteors

      @DaveCompton5150@DaveCompton51505 ай бұрын
  • I enjoyed this episode (and I didn't need to Google Silurian 😉). I watch every one but must admit I struggle to follow some of the deeper mysteries of Space-Time. This was about my level.

    @jamesm1494@jamesm14945 ай бұрын
  • Watching this GREAT video totally screwed my algorithm though

    @chucklr@chucklr4 ай бұрын
  • thanks for the video

    @riccarrasquilla379@riccarrasquilla3793 ай бұрын
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