What did the dinosaurs see before the Chicxulub impact ?
μμ€ μ½λ
- κ²μμΌ 2024. 04. 27.
- Using Outerra and Space Engine, here some visuals where you can see the Chicxulub asteroid before hitting Earth, 66 million years ago.
0:00 Video
12:28 : Link to the Part II
Part 2 : β’ Chicxulub strikes back...
Sountrack :
Darksiders II - The Makers Theme
Daniel Lopatin - The Viewing Suite
reconstructed dinosaurs vocalizations and other ambient sounds :
β’ Dinosaur Vocalization ...
β’ "Dino Forest" - Relaxi...
β’ π¦ QUEL EST LE VΓRITABL...
β’ Dinosaur Jungle At Nig...
β’ On The Shore | Sea Amb...
β’ Dinosaurs Jungle | Nat...
β’ Dinosaur Forest - 3 ho... - κ³ΌνκΈ°μ
It's uncanny how little the sounds of Boston have changed in 65 million years.
Man π
Shall we assume you're from New York? Probably a damn Yankees fan to boot? jk, lol!
As a Bostonian, I agree.
ππ
π€£π€£π€£π€£
I think the eeriest part for me, besides the actual hit, was when you could start actually seeing features of the asteroid from the ground. Because then you knew it was getting close!
They didnβt know what it was though
There's just something so haunting about that part, but I never stopped to think about what it would look like! It's almost like the giant heads from Rick and Morty.
dont be silly, they were vaporized before they could see anything too close
@@miguelelgueta5830 I was talking about in the video.
@@willowthesily672 The good thing about being a dinosaur is that your brain isn't quite big enough to notice or be bothered about things like this. You're too busy chomping on something or making a racket.
Crazy to think that the dinosaurs took this video before they died π₯
No
@@arbrilliant191 No
These "cameraman" comments are so damn stupid. Funny the first time but dumb as hell every time after
@@madeleinemusgrave5578 No
@@lucasks8124 No
The most anxiety inducing part for me was noticing that the asteroid moved across the sky much faster in other countries compared to Mexico. Because from the point of view of the Gulf of Mexico, it's not moving, it's just getting bigger
Oh god
@frostbite no kidding!!! I'm kinda having an existential freakout! π¨π±
Which means it's coming right at you...
@@seansimms8503 im coming after you π
Yeah bro literally same with tornado, if you see one gettin bigger it probably means it goes towards you
I can only tell you this: upon seeing Chicxulub coming at them at frightening speed, even the Thesaurus was at a loss for words...
Oh my gosh! I am in bed, with my wife asleep and I am dying because I am laughing, convulsing with tears from your comment, trying not to wake my wife!π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£
This needs to be pinnedπ
Cleverβ¦ π«΅π»π
Hah!
I laughed way more then I should have at this comment!!
Land dinosaurs: "NOOO!"
Weird hairy small creatures that secrete milk: "YEEESSS!"
Weird hairy small creatures: "OUR TIME IS NOW"
"Oh yeah. It's all coming together..."
A strange arboreal rat-like little mammal: *_This is your moment; now is your time_*
That big ass planet behind Mars full of gas and toxic clouds and shit: this is fine.
Also weird hairy small creatures that secrete milk: AMBATUKAAAAAAAAM
Imagine sitting there and having no idea that you're less than 60 seconds away from an Extinction Level Event. Every creature on the planet thought it was just going to be another day, but were clueless that a rock larger than Mt Everest was about to turn Earth into Hades and there was nowhere to hide.
Fr
Fr
but they lived 33 000 years after the impact.
proof ?
@@eighto1213
It says that you could only see it in the sky 48 hours before it hit so imagine we get that news, because you know if an asteroid was going to hit earth theyβd try to keep it a secret as long as possible. Why create mass chaos and panic.
5:38 A dairy cow screams in existential horror as it realizes how foolish it was to wish for the genie to send her back in time
2:39 A pterosaur screams, getting louder and louder, like a tornado siren, warning of the oncoming apocalypse.
Eerie.
@@osmarneto8368
Haunting and dark.
this sounds like hitchhikers guide to the galaxy π
@@osmarneto8368 It sounds like the pulse signal, typically used for radiation disasters.
If you see anything new in the sky that has a visible detailed surface on it and it's not the Moon you're quite a lot of trouble.
I'm quite a lot of trouble huh
We all are quite a lot of trouble
ππππ
βThatβs no moonβ
So would you your on this planet too...
In the last sequence by the shore, at that few hundred mile distance the stupendous radiation flux would've instantly ignited all organic material and the sand would've fused to glass. At closer range, the ocean would've boiled on the surface for a few seconds before the blast swept everything clean.
And also the shock wave, generated by the asteroid's passage through the atmosphere, sweeping the clouds in its path, moments before impact.
@@osmarneto8368 not only sweeping away the clouds, but the rock too. The crater was being eroded the instant the asteroid reached the atmosphere and struck the surface (which was no more than about 2 seconds)
So it wouldβve been like a nuclear bomb but much much stronger
Also we wouldn't have seen such clear features. Even though it was a big rock, still too small to see the features on until the last few minutes before impact. 48 hours before impact it would look like a star in the sky with a tail. That's it
@@thomasfroat4668 Bruh, no. You can see the ISS with your naked eyes. This thing is much, much larger. I do agree it wouldnβt be as big as shown in the video.
You are Chicxulub's most insane and devoted fan. Although this stone must be given its due, without it, mammals would have a hard time
That "stone" was the shittiest day on Earth since The Great Dying. ππ
@@benderisgreat95able nah if that stone didnt strike i doubt that humans would evolve cuz dinosaurs would still be dominating the earth
@@ussarman8922 would be better
@@benderisgreat95able And we're just experiencing yet another mass extinction event. π€£
@@monsecko4792 Because we're the best & worse to have ever happened on Earth?
Its crazy how earth back then feels like a different planet.
Crazy to think that if the Earth never got impacted by objects like asteroids in the first place, people probably would've never came to be. In reality, things like this cause so much destruction but also eventually can bring creation. Heck the Earth could have been without a moon and been totally unliveable if it wasn't impacted early in its life by a rogue planet...
It's amazing how far graphics have come in so little time
it's like a reset button was hit.
It was
because it basically was. temperature geology life weather was all completely different 65 million years ago
2:40 When you're trying to sleep at night and your neighbor's pet dinosaur won't shut up.
πππ
You mean a parrot?
Wait a minute, I don't have any neighbor's.
oh sorry, those were my basement lizards. they always get hungry every Thursday, but lucky for them it's chicken pot pie every night too. even my chicken get noisy at night, but that's because they're nocturnal predators.
so I grab one fat individual, chop them up, and then serve them with earnest to the lizards in my basement. I didn't want to use human parts because they're just too expensive, too fatty and leathery y'know? now what my basement looks like, I don't know but I put the platter in some mini-elevator and lift it down to the deepest abyss of my basement.
gets real noisy down there for a while, but they're polite enough to ring a bell when they're done, so I lift whatever's left of the meal back up and clean up.
if you got more questions you can inquire me about it, I think I had fun taking care of these unique individuals. I heard Plum Island put these animals up for adoption so of course I bought a couple of them, just to be sure. have a good one!
@@tmaster3332 Then there's a dinosaur in your... Gtfo quick
The Krakatoa eruption was estimated to be over 300 decibels at the epicenter. At that point, the shockwave is powerful enough to shatter bones and rupture internal organs. Sailors on a vessel 40 miles away from the volcano had their eardrums ruptured. People in Germany on the other side of the world mistook the sound for a gunshot. It remains the loudest recorded sound in human history.
Now try to imagine how powerful the shockwave from this impact must have been. It must have flattened every tree in the western hemisphere and permanently deafened every animal on Earth.
I hadn't considered that, every animal on earth with a sense of hearing was instantly and permanently deafened. Jesus, that's a scale unparalleled before or since.
@@pinkushatejar I thought the speed of sound wasnβt that fast. Were they really instantly deafened?
@@LobsonGemerald579 yeah but I imagine most of the dinosaurs wouldβve been dead by then anyway
@@grongalicous8935instantly deafened when it reached them
β @@grongalicous8935the majority of dinosaurs on earth survived the immediate aftermath of the impact, the ash however blocked the sun and also suffocated the rest, except for a few dinosaurs that either went extinct from the lack of resources or evolved into modern day birds
11:51 What makes that part so terrifying isn't the music, but the fact that the asteroid is so large that it's visible in daytime even before it enters the atmosphere.
why does that music sound like something from Dune?
It is from Dune
Specifically the 2021 movie.
Its taken from the sequence where the lighters are taking off from Caladan
@@GhalidiusTrident is there a scene for it?
Either im blind or i no see no asteroid
ββ@sonytv4233 It hovers just above the horizon before entering the atmosphere. Start looking at the left side of the palm tree and you'll notice a whitish dot slowly moving westwards.
Very good. But I have a correction. As soon as the meteor/asteroid enters the atmosphere, it will produce terrifying heat and light. It only gets much worse as it descends towards the Earth. It will outshine the sun many times and everything will catch fire within hundreds of kilometers way before impact! Just see what happened in Russia back in 2013. It was a very small one (15 meters at most) and see how bright it was 30 kilometers up. People said they felt the heat.....
But this one is about 10 kilometers big!!
If I'm correct the asteroid was hot enough to melt rock on the ground before it even impacted, so you're probably correct with this
@@LShaver947 You can compare it to the Tsar Bomba in 1961. It was 3000 times as powerful as the Hiroshima bomb. Now imagine setting 2.000.000 Tsar Bomba off at the same time......
The impact crater was 150 km across....
I was expecting the asteroid to leave a trail of fire behind it due to the friction.
@@knightofarkronia9968 You got a point!
It's quite unsettling to consider that there was a prevailing sense of peace in many locations prior to the asteroid impact, only for it to transform into utter chaos just a few days afterward.
As a tyrannosaurus rex i can confirm that this was one of the impacts of all time.
that was a bit racist not gonna lie
My condolences to those who didnt survive the event π
Skill issue
@@Stickyybenzz shut up bro we got nerfed hard an you know it
Walte Redwards lol πππ
5 most horrifying things in this video: The asteroid appearing to get closer basically every day, from Dominican Republic it was horrifying close, when the asteroid seemed to disappear from Mexico and last, the vaporizing white light of death-
it's going to recommend this again by saying you should simulate the impact that made the Verdefort crater the largest known impact crater on Earth and if it happened today.
That, along with Wilkes Land Crater, are the impact simulations I'd most like to see.
*Vredefort (I know, π€)
If it simulated as happened at that time, there would literally be no animal sounds lol. And the sky color would be different than even this Cretaceous let alone today
He just did that. Check it out.
The sequence from 10:30-11:40 is perfection. Like a final howl from the banshee before death arrives at the door.
Why is the Asteroid shown twice tho?
@@jddi1527
Different angles.
It was Spinosaur calls.
Props to the camera man for getting this once in a life time event
Definitely "Once in a Lifetime"
Camera man always lives. Smart idea to pick up a camera if you are ever facing global destruction.
Probably just wanted to party like it was 66 Million BC.
overused jokes.
@@LordNightCrawler don't be PB&Jealous that I got more likes than you π
As fantastic as this video is, I so desperately would like to see a remake of the real time extinction event but from the same perspective as this, at the furthest place away from the initial impact watching a massive wall of water just slowly obstruct more and more of the horizon on its way to us.
The tsunami wouldn't be that big actually. At that time, where the asteroid struck, the water was only like 100 meters deep, so the tsunami could have only been as big as the water it formed in.
I know your probably imagining a tsunami as big as the one in the 2012 movie, but it wasn't.
Plus, the tsunami was the least of your worries.
Returning debris that were sent into outer space by the impact, would ignited the whole atmosphere on their way back down, sending the air to boiling hot temperatures from the friction of all that debris colliding with the atmosphere.
That is what killed the dinosaurs, they basically burned alive even on the other side of the planet. And the one's that were left, died to to the nuclear winter that ensued, if there were any left.
A one hundred meter tsunami was nothing.
Not to mention the water directly impacted by the meteor more than likely vaporized, well, vaporized might be an understatement in this situation - I could imagine some mighta even been sent nearly into space instantly- which definitely would be much cooler than a mere tsunami
@@verigumetin4291feeling bad for poor fucks
Same.
I donβt know why but the thought of seeing an asteroid that huge in the sky and seeing it get closer and closer just terrifies me!
Yeah, wonder why.
It means you are soon to be dead.
It should, youβre quite literally staring at an inevitable death and the end of the world as we know it.
I think the scariest part is to see the asteroid moving toward your position
Donβt think dinosaurs were concerned with that to be honest.
the damn things were probably worried about taxes more than anything. not even the deccan traps could distract them from the painful reality of paying to live by sacrificing their kin to the lord of flies. on the flip side, the sacrificial lambs donated their skeletons to the british museum and be worshipped by naked apes to this very day...
and now the universe bides its time before we pay our taxes again. youch.
The length of time between atmospheric entry and surface impact really puts into perspective just how FAST that beast was moving. All that kinetic energy released in an instant. It must have truly been an event to behold
You wouldn't be around long to behold it.
β@@BrianAdams-dt1ksπ
Now I am become Death, the true destroyer of worlds your best nuclear bombs never could be.
And that was a very shallow approach.
Imagine if it impacted Earth more directly. At a much steeper, sharper angle.
The energy released was truly unimaginable. In just seconds, it first created a crater 40 kilometres deep, which then rebounded to create what was temporarily the highest mountain in the world by far. Imagine if it had impacted at the deepest point of the ocean. Wouldβve taken it maybe a second to go through 10 km of water, creating waves the size of high mountains.
I live next to the state of Mexico where the dinosaur meteorite fell lol π
Hope for u that the quotes witch say lightning doesnβt strike twice at the same place apply for meteorites π
yeah XDDDDD
Mexico isn't a state
@@yutyrannusfanboy5873 Mira te lo voy a decir en espaΓ±ol, vivo en Mexico en el Estado de Quintana roo el estado vecino de Yucatan donde ahΓ se encuentra un pueblo de nombre maya llamado Chikchulub que fue el CΓ©lebre lugar donde cayΓ³ el Metiorito hace 66 millones de aΓ±os que provocΓ³ la extinciΓ³n de los dinosaurios
@@Adolfitotherevenant2003 english pls
I haven't felt chills in a while. This video gave me chills when the asteroid came closer and closer.
I wonder how close it had to get before animals started sensing something.
Itβs likely that a lot of the more intelligent theropods would have noticed a conspicuous light in the sky that wasnβt there before, days before the impact.
I feel like most of the dinosaurs in general wouldve noticed
They might have noticed but there's no way they could process or understand what was happening at all
β@@Black_Aces I know and that's the sad part π’π’
Curious how in the seconds before the impact, the tide on the beaches of Palenque recedes. I like it...
It could be that the heat of the approaching asteroid, was affecting the water.
@@nancybarnes7109gravity going towards the asteroid pulling water with it
@@bigsnugga not likely, the asteroid wouldn't be able to fight earth's gravity in that way, it wasn't massive enough
@@Blackhole-TON618 maybe the ocean just likes the astroid and they had some chemistry
@@bigsnugga well... The asteroid was a bit attractive... -in a strictly gravitational sense I mean π³
The craziest part was it was so large when the leading edge made contact the back end was still in the stratosphere.
This is one of the coolest videos Iβve ever experienced. Like holy crap man the audio effects are WILD to say the least. And some dang fine animation. Well done!
The sounds here at 10:35 is what gets me, almost knowing that within a minute all hell goes loose..
This is incredible! Not only is it informative, but the sound design is great !! I love how you captured the ambience of the Cretaceous and its very immersive! super great props to the sound design
Are those oil rigs visible near the lower left hand corner of the view from Pelenque (sic?)
β@@stephaniereynolds1108 They Are Islands With Trees.
This is so eerie, wow! I liked your previous video on this topic, but this seems even more accurate. Great work!
Watching its movement slowly get more and more noticeable as it approaches and the impending doom becomes more clear... I'm just in awe. And watching the asteroid "set" over the horizon across the Atlantic is super scary too, to think an observer back then wouldn't even know what would become of that weird new thing moving across the sky.
Maybe I missed something, but why were there two asteroids at 11:00 ? 0:
just the transition between 2 different angle of view =)
@@Kaldisti ohhh, smooth then, I didn't catch that! great work :)
10:58 don't panic guys, this is just a video transition
Thanks for the vid. Makes me wonder what apophis will be like.
@@aussiegod4269 barely worse than an H bomb
I wonder if a dinosaur looked up at this and thought, βI have a bad feeling about this. Itβs going to end in tears!β
Imagine you're just vibin with your dinosaur buddies and then 12:00
i hope this video gets the attention it deserves
Would be interesting to see a simulation of the Chicxulub asteroid impacting deeper waters like the Atlantic ocean or the Pacific. Imagine how high the tsunami waves are!
Please make this if you don't mindπ
I'd love to see the tsunami that Chicxulub created all the way up to the Dakotas!
Watch "Chicxulub Strikes Back", which that simulates the effects of an impact of this magnitude, and how huge and devastating a tsunami generated would be.βοΈπ
krplus.net/bidio/otydhJSMYp7SaZw
Seriously?π
@@tomerbauer The Great Plains were underwater and were an inland sea at the time.
"*Confused dinosaur noises*"
"*scared Dinosaur noises*"
"*ded dinosaur noises*"
10:34 Is when the creatures at the future place of the dominican republic notice the asteroid, as you can hear a few creatures sounding their calls. I presume these creatures aren't capable of realising the imminent danger but if they are, this would be the time that they notice the danger.
Probably Spinosaur Calls.
Btw You're Actually Correct.
Normal - Spinosaur Calls
Sped Up - Wolf Sounds
10:42 , this creature yelling... It's fantastic !
It becomes like an terrifying music , clearly announcing something terrible
2:39 I could hear they screamed, "No, a new star. This couldn't be. Our family, our future, our kid. This is impossible. Help, please, PLEASE...!!!"
12:04 The asteroid just penetrated the atmosphere, my spine is shiveringπ±
An asteroid so big that you can see it before it hits the atmosphere. We're doom.
Never comment on videos but the first version of this could possibly be my favorite KRplus video. Haven't really seen anything like it since and I also dig Mass Effect music too haha. I've been checking out impacts all day and was pleasantly surprised to watch this updated one. Great job and keep it up dude!
It's wild how you can see it calmly descend. Thank you Chiccy for taking out those nasty big old stinky alligators so we could run this place!
More like long tailed birds
More like ruin this place
Well technically the asteroid didnβt kill them all birds are dinosaurs.
We'll get our turn. Bet that.
I mean, it kinda doomed Earth tbh, we're probably cause the next mass global extinction before anything, really.
You've earned a sub! This was really cool to watch. It felt like I was in the world of dinosaurs.
i love the realistic dino sounds! top notch
The scariest thing is the sun didnβt shine after this event for 10s of thousands of years
9:30 If I saw that in the sky, Iβd cry
I'd be happy
@@redfield4759damn π
If anything, our world is amazing.
We're a rock floating around other rock's that are held in place by gravity. As miraculous as we are, imagine how tiny we all are.
Once you've seen space from, space you can't go back to seeing it the same.
I like your video βοΈπ₯°
04:53 my uncle roaming the streets in the night after the 10th beer
AAAAAAAAAπ€£Thats actually a haunting sound, but it also sounds like someone blowing into a big bottle
I absolutely love your updated version!
Wowβ¦ That was the most quietly terrifying thing I think Iβve ever witnessed.
"Now, ASMR time."
*scary monster noises*
This is one of the most terrifying videos ever!!
To think that tiny dot slowly moving across the night sky was a rock bigger than Mount Everest travelling 100x faster than a bullet, which in less than 24 hours would crash into the coast of Mexico releasing the energy equivalent to 5 billion Hiroshima bombs in the fraction of a second. It's difficult for the human mind to even grasp what something like that would look like.
Love this. Is that a 1:1 map of Cretaceous Earth you used? Is it downloadable?
I can send it you yes
we.tl/t-DQ8nBH9ndM
(link available for 7 days)
@@Kaldisti I just missed this...would love to look at the model and maybe even cite it for work. I'll dm if you prefer....
@@captainobvious62 Another new link ;)
ibb.co/VMrMXMB (permanent this time)
@@Kaldisti how to use
11:49
It's all fun and games untill the ominous music starts.
In loving memory of the cameramen and all dinosaurs in their last moment.
I love how you did the sound design and mixing! It gave it some real atmosphere! It actually somehow made it even more eerie than normal, because you feel almost like you're really there, but at the same time you know the imminent danger about to strike. It has an awesome effect! Great video! How did you use the program and mix the sound too? I'm really interested! This was super good!
I did not make any particular mix sound, I just picked ambient sounds on KRplus and added them in the video :p
@@lucaepure5749 Quetzalcoatlus
@@lucaepure5749 why not ?
Thank you so much for this. Great to get a glimpse into such a dramatic moment for our ancestors. My heart sank and my skin crawled when I couldn't see it at first in the last shot. Like the panic when you lose track of something stalking you.
Somebody ought to build a great memorial for those who didn't make it. We seem to be the first of their children to learn what happened to them. And we might be the last. We should honor them.
It was only dinosaurs during that time wasnβt it.
β@@angieangiel2666 There were some mammals back then, but they were mostly small. Our ancestors would have been some of the first primates, but they looked more like squirrels back then. We call them plesiadapiforms now. I think it's fun to imagine things back then through their eyes. It makes the dinosaurs seem even bigger!
Props to the time-traveling cameraman
Time travel hasn't been invented yet. And even if it had, it's clearly CGI used in the video. You must be really dumb to believe that π¬
2:44 "FRED FLINTSONE!! FOR THE LAST TIME GET YOUR DINO OFF MY LAWN!!!"
Wow! excellent job recreating the ambient sounds of that time, hearing and seeing that "light" in the sky is terrifying
One dinosaur to another, "Bro, I'm telling you, there's a new star in the sky. Right there, see it?"
"I have no idea what you're taking about. What's a star?"
This video is so insane. Somehow it looks and sounds real while simultaneously having the graphics of CoD 4 on the Wii.
The dinosaurs who trained for the doomsday rock opera performed spectacularly on that day!
Especially that dinosaur who played that scary chord run at the very end...
Had to experience this another time what a wonderful piece of art
10:30
"man the moon looks strange tonight"
"jerry i don't think that's the moon"
After compared with my video file, I saw quality issues due to the compression during the publication on KRplus. If you wish a real HD quality, follow this link
drive.google.com/file/d/1yEwB5YOhH6PLvuhiO3idEeQDSryipDfI/view
Download would be great
@@Markersify we.tl/t-iAno3h8T7o
(Available 7 days)
Thanks! It has a panoramic view also fantastic
@@Kaldisti ty!
Was this deleted and reuploaded? I remember watching this months ago
Scary but the ambient noises helped me sleep! So realistic back millions of years ago
2:50 you expect me to keep my headphones in for that?? Almost had an aneurysm
That was really well done! Got me hooked to see whatβs next.
The noises Bostonians make today is surprisingly similar.
As per usual, the cameraman survives
Whatβs even more crazy is if this didnβt happen, we would not be hereβ¦.
Good, our species is like a parasite to this planet
The Planet will win@@comedial6829
Would be better.
β@@comedial6829 I swear, people like you are the most annoying, every living thing on this planet is a parasite to it, we're just the better ones
"Hey tony."
"Yeah Fred?"
"Is that star getting brighter?"
"Looks like it, doesn't it?"
-few days later-
"Yeah, that's not a star tony."
"Well fu-"
Destination: 12:00
if only dinosaurs has a space station they will study that rock to change its trajectory
10:35 imagine hearing this in 5:00 am
I just want to thank the camera man for risking his life to get us this footage
I wanna see the flash from France and other places too! Thatβd be awesome
The flash generated by the fireball would not have been visible in Europe, although it could be clearly seen in the sky over much of North America.
But it would be cool to see the flash of other places in the American continent.
Here, see in this simulation how far the light and heat generated by impact would have reached, and how long they would have lasted:
krplus.net/bidio/otydhJSMYp7SaZw
@@osmarneto8368 nice! Didnβt know that I feel so dumb bc of circumference of earth right? I live at Nove Scotia Canada we wouldβve seen that right?
Edit: I meant the curvature of earth?
@@EpicDestructionHD Correct, and no, Nova Scotia inhabitants would not see the flash, but they would soon know that the impact had just occurred when the global EMP affected all electronic equipment in the region (maybe there will be a meteor shower visible in the sky, just before the ejecta cloud reaching Canada).
@@osmarneto8368 nicce! I enjoyed reading it. nice Info, thanks Osmar take care!
Lots of atmosphere here. The sounds of the ancient large animals was a very nice touch.
Actually watched this video, finally, too, and my god - you have done it again, Gwillerm. That finale raised the hairs on the back of my neck. Thank You from the bottom of my ancient heart.
If you want the old version ;)
we.tl/t-RIFvGJwXxB
@@Kaldisti *faints*
That cut at 9:57 made this feel like a horror movie
Is anyone else SCREAMING at the screen ... "Watch out dinos! DUCK! Take cover!"
Slow, quiet, unavoidable death⦠how terrifying.
the asteroid went through the entire troposphere in less than a second. pretty neat
I always forget just how massive the asteroid was. 10 kilometres in diameter. Taller than Mount Everest.
I love your "real time" content, it gives a good sense of scale. could you do more space stuff like theia collision ?
"oh look a shooting star what have you wished for?"
I wish we would di-
Im just imagining the entire earth with ZERO light pollution! Imagine how much more connected our ancestors were with the stars.
Hello! The video was very well made! Especially the sound design!
Top 10 videos taken after tragedy.
Number 10: the chixulub impact
You should do a video on the Permian Extinction. Maybe every 5-10,000 years or something like that. I think it would be really interesting.
Very entertaining and fun to watch. Thanks for posting this.
Does anyone know what music played during the impact ( 11:50 )?
Would it have been possible to keep the previous obsolete version? I liked the music used in that one, although the background ambient is very well done in this one.
you can find it in the Paleo-mapping playlist ;)