Really high-quality documentary that clearly lays out the current state of science with spectacular visuals and amusing editing effects, bravo! I've always been confused as to why water needed to come from elsewhere and why it wasn't just created by some process during/after the Hadean and hooray looks like I was heading in the right direction (the 'gassing out' theory, must remember that), it all finally starts to make sense to me! I was rapt for the whole video.
Perfect documentary, summarize most important moments of Earth's history including early life, and is very current in regard to a theories and hypothesis (especially with regard to HLB, orbital migration and water). Just perfect, even though I wish it's a bit longer and ambient music is bit lower.
This is by far the best nature documentary on the formation of Earth and early life that I have ever watched. Extremely well-organized, answering questions that would occur to the curious listener, and full of detail rather than drama. I learned quite a lot. Congratulations to the authors and to the narrator. The narration sounded very natural and I wasn't bothered by the music.
This documentary excels in its detailed, well-organized presentation of Earth's formation and early life. It’s educational, engaging, and the natural narration complements the content perfectly. Highly commendable work!
Wow, this documentary may not be as slickly produced as some of the big Nova and BBC specials, but it covers a huge amount of both familiar and cutting-edge development of esrth/biosphere right up to the threshold oof the Cambrian explosion. There's even little hints of some thing that I think is going to revolutionize the study of early life: the role of fungi, which have too long been overlooked. .I wish my planetarium director grandma and geologist grandpa had lived long enough to be amazed by some of these recent discoveries. It's been fun watching the impactor theory, late heavy bombardment, snowball earth, great oxidation event, early supercontinents and ediacaran fauna go from new discoveries and controveries to scientific consensus with a great deal of additional detail and understanding or, in a few cases, they've been superceded by newer discoveries.
The protoplanetary disk that surrounded the young Sun was not unique to our solar system. Many stars in the galaxy are currently surrounded by similar disks, which may form new solar systems!
This is a wonderful and highly educational documentary. Each hypothesis is discussed in both of its strengths and weaknesses. It shows that our current knowledge isn't fixed in the stone and new evidence could change what we learned in school.
There is no pleasing some ingrates. For me the music is inconsequential and hardly noticeable, especially when the fabulous subject matter is so compelling. Thank you for this.
Love it, for it shows the history of the ideas and evidence that points to our actual understanding. It does not shy away from dated theories but rather explains how Scientists moved on from that into current understanding. Science is a method, not a monolithic conclusion. This documentary shows that in the best way possible.
Well made documentary, felt like a professional production! Didn't find the music too loud, but can understand that it is too loud for those with a poor sound system.
@@ItsgonnabemayyYa funny, but at least with so many people 'liking' the comment it'll get the creaters thinking about it for next video. I loathe loud background music and bright flashes in the videos.
@@jeffslist6878 Yes, you have to sift the wheat from the chaff. YT is full of utter garbage - it's the nature of such a platform, but for example 'Astrum' is pretty good.
@@jeffslist6878 science adjusts as knowledge and observation improves. there is nothing wrong with that process. Religion hasn't changed in thousands of years and yet it claims to always be the absolute truth.
BG music is WAY to loid, Bro - and I'm a musician who loves psychedelic music. Go back in and cut it back. You'll get lots more 5 star reviews if you do, because actually other than that, it's a pretty good video that summarizes the science on these important subjects. And what is going on at 14:51 where we are shown a red screen informing us in 9 languages that the media is offline?
Great programme exploring the various latest theories about the formation of planet Earth and how water and life first came to be - Just when you think you know the story, new research comes along to make you think again - Human knowledge expands all the time - A must watch if you want to keep up with the latest scientific theories.
Just sent this educational material to my son. Entertaining learning, nice graphics presentation, looks like cable-channel quality. Look forward to more
Looked interesting. But the music is just too overbearing, with nightclub bass. I can't think & learn! I have missed a lot of science videos over this. Is it one production team, or a trend?
Most Interesting & Informative ! The earth has undergone several changes during its evolution till finally it has become a wonderful home of mankind ❤ ! What a true friend ! The moon is formed out of solidification of the earth's lava & is fixed at a distance to it due to the strong gravitational force of the earth ! ❤
As I wanted to read the comments before watching, I saw lot of people commenting on the music. Unfortunately couldn’t focus on the video just because of that. Perhaps re-uploading with lower music? 🙏🏻
9:20 they disproved the Co-Formation theory because both earth and moon must be identical in chemical composition but they are NOT. But they agreed on the Giant Impact theory, a mars-sized planet Theia hit Earth to form the moon. Then earth moon must have the same chemical composition, right?
Had they formed together, the Moon would have likely had a somewhat more substantial iron core, which it doesn't. The basalts on it's surface are however, very similar to those found on the Earth. The Earth's iron core is also proportionately much larger than those of the other terrestrial planets, because it likely consists of both it's original core, and that of the impactor. The low density of the moon is another clue. Lighter crustal debris from the collision remained in orbit around the Earth, forming the Moon, while the heavier core debris from both bodies stayed behind. The Moon's low gravity, lack of a substantial magnetic field, and other factors, explain why if wasn't able to retain a substantial quantity of volatile elements and compounds. Because this all happened so long ago, and so much has changed on the surfaces of both bodies and the solar system in general, this whole idea will always remain a hypothesis, but it seems to be the best fit at the moment. Cheers.
They have found huge chucks of the moon inside earth. Might have something to do with the strong magnetic anomalies under south America I think. Its been awhile.
So wonderful-- commendable, really-- that classroom level terminology and ideas are not feared or avoided in the best of life-science presentations on You Tube. In fact, sophisticated concepts are now served publicly in free, well-produced packages like this, with compelling narration and credible imagery, all bound by sequential logic and delivered with the refreshing assumption that viewers are not allergic to dictionaries. Only the background music is a problem--in both volume and esthetic choices. (Some accompanying soundtrack is warranted, sure, but Gregorian or Byzantine chant, maybe, or Post-Modern Minimalist keyboard works are more amenable to discursive science than a lush symphonic hothouse sound or the demanding rhythms of vernacular pop.) But all in all, this is a real gift of innovative cultural enrichment for the literate citizens of liberal democratic societies. Thank you from a steady consumer! When I first studied the history of evolution, Latin, rhetoric, geology and geography were included in a balanced curriculum. We began such sessions with various admonitions I hope will return someday, like ~ Sapere aude: Transire suum pectus mundoque potiri!
To the producer: I WANT to watch your video. I really do. But I see the first comment about loud unnecessary music, and I instantly move on to another video. At least ofter a 'quiet' alternative. Thank you
Likenian link was not the same 4.5b years ago! everything was much closer therefore, bringing more chances of collision of any planetesize earth/moon! its the same for water!
So many new and interesting theoretical developments in this well made presentation. There are some better graphics, but there are usually budget constraints related to lacking those. We'll done.
Even if Earth's water boiled off in it's early years, earth had a strong enough gravity, to retain it, as a steamy atmosphere. If earth has enough gravity now, to retain water and a thick atmosphere, it had enough gravity back then too. I don't get, why nobody thinks about that possibility....
What's even more interesting, IMO, is we might not even be all that rare considering how many planets there are and how huge the universe is thought to be.
That's simple. 20 foot deep microscopic glass shards instead of dust covers the entire Lunar surface. The main reason man cannot use the moon as a jumping off point.
Jupiter and Saturn reversed their direction AWAY from the sun orbiting more outwardly into the solar system 😉 I know I thought the same thing and had to rewind that part several times.
1:50 the gentle clumping concept makes so much more sense than the BS colliding as theorized. At least for the begining until it got really huge. Otherwise as stated, it would've scattered it all out.
This is really an interesting and fascinating to see how long we came and its frustrating to see the recent developments on the earth due to no brainer leaders
Why do these science documentaries always insist water arrivedit on our planet via external means, like comets? It also forms with basic chemistry - acid + base = water & a salt. This makes more sense than small amounts surviving a catastrophic crash then staying put in its crater until just enough crashes here, to form oceans? My bet is on chemistry.
The hubris of some people...Humans have no freaking clue as to what was going on over a billion years ago...we don't even know for sure what things were like a few thousand years ago!!
The late heavy bombardment was likely a reaction to the explosion from the proto planetary disc and sun formation, debris was sent to the heliosphere and rebounded and returned as bolides some hit planets many were vaporised by the sun✌️❤️🇬🇧
Please, documentary.off Earth I agree and accept the way it explain how water problem with water getting here by the comets. And then for how life begins on this Earth.❤🎉🎉🎉
No matter what, man does not know where life came from or How the Universe came to be in the first place, nor can they answer how all of the known elements or first single cells came to be. All these things were somehow created, which will never really be known because it goes Way Beyond our comprehension
The narration is fine but that backing track has no business and so high up in the mix. Ask me what's going to teach me something it's not going to be the soundtrack.
This presentation has deftly avoided the Origen of life enigma. Where did the information come from or data that became encoded on the primitive RNA chains come from. Data and an interpretive mechanism was needed simultaneously for replications to occur. This appeared by 3.8 BYA. Far too fast to attribute to natural processes. That is the enigma that is stumping science. All they can say is they are working on it. Science of the gaps. What is the recipe for primordial soup ?
Really high-quality documentary that clearly lays out the current state of science with spectacular visuals and amusing editing effects, bravo! I've always been confused as to why water needed to come from elsewhere and why it wasn't just created by some process during/after the Hadean and hooray looks like I was heading in the right direction (the 'gassing out' theory, must remember that), it all finally starts to make sense to me! I was rapt for the whole video.
The Ediacaran Biota is my favorite! So mysterious! I liked when you called them creatures of "uncertain origins."
Perfect documentary, summarize most important moments of Earth's history including early life, and is very current in regard to a theories and hypothesis (especially with regard to HLB, orbital migration and water). Just perfect, even though I wish it's a bit longer and ambient music is bit lower.
This is by far the best nature documentary on the formation of Earth and early life that I have ever watched. Extremely well-organized, answering questions that would occur to the curious listener, and full of detail rather than drama. I learned quite a lot. Congratulations to the authors and to the narrator. The narration sounded very natural and I wasn't bothered by the music.
Agree 👍
Its a college textbook piped into TTS
This documentary excels in its detailed, well-organized presentation of Earth's formation and early life. It’s educational, engaging, and the natural narration complements the content perfectly. Highly commendable work!
Wow, this documentary may not be as slickly produced as some of the big Nova and BBC specials, but it covers a huge amount of both familiar and cutting-edge development of esrth/biosphere right up to the threshold oof the Cambrian explosion.
There's even little hints of some thing that I think is going to revolutionize the study of early life: the role of fungi, which have too long been overlooked.
.I wish my planetarium director grandma and geologist grandpa had lived long enough to be amazed by some of these recent discoveries. It's been fun watching the impactor theory, late heavy bombardment, snowball earth, great oxidation event, early supercontinents and ediacaran fauna go from new discoveries and controveries to scientific consensus with a great deal of additional detail and understanding or, in a few cases, they've been superceded by newer discoveries.
Its a textbook narrated with TTS
Loved it, want the next part!
The protoplanetary disk that surrounded the young Sun was not unique to our solar system. Many stars in the galaxy are currently surrounded by similar disks, which may form new solar systems!
Thanks!
Great doc!!!
This is a wonderful and highly educational documentary. Each hypothesis is discussed in both of its strengths and weaknesses. It shows that our current knowledge isn't fixed in the stone and new evidence could change what we learned in school.
Great modern documentary, very detailed.
Best one yet
There is no pleasing some ingrates. For me the music is inconsequential and hardly noticeable, especially when the fabulous subject matter is so compelling. Thank you for this.
Fantastic! Love the narrator's voice too.
Love it, for it shows the history of the ideas and evidence that points to our actual understanding. It does not shy away from dated theories but rather explains how Scientists moved on from that into current understanding.
Science is a method, not a monolithic conclusion. This documentary shows that in the best way possible.
Beautiful narration. Could listen to his voice all day.
Well made documentary, felt like a professional production! Didn't find the music too loud, but can understand that it is too loud for those with a poor sound system.
29:44 Ofc for the laymen out there, BYA stands for "Billion Years Ago". Just needed to make sure the entire class was following through.
Continue ...
What’s a great documentary. Loved it all. Informative and entertaining
Yo, turn down the music some I want to hear the information you researched....
This video had me hooked the whole time!
Background music so loud all I hear is the speaker mumbling... can't make out what he is saying at times.
If you want to get rid of the music and then re-release this, let me know. I'm not wasting my time with this god-awful soundtrack
I’m sure they are working on that as we speak….
@@ItsgonnabemayyYa funny, but at least with so many people 'liking' the comment it'll get the creaters thinking about it for next video. I loathe loud background music and bright flashes in the videos.
Lol😅 I like it
It’s ridiculously loud
I am kinda curious about the "Sound Track" companies which manages to sell this ludicrous idea to the producers.
Simply splendid! We need more interesting informative documentaries like these. Kudos to the Creators 🎉!
Fantastic documentary! Well done! Simple, educational & enriching! Thank you!
Best explanation, tanks
👏👏👏👏 im so used to these space docs on youtube sucking that i was wrongly prepared to be disappointed. I was wrong. Good job. This one is a winner.
It's amazing how much we were taught in school just 30 years ago is now considered to be wrong.
science keep improving the better
Yeah. That's why I'm suspicious of a lot they say on these videos too
@@jeffslist6878 Yes, you have to sift the wheat from the chaff. YT is full of utter garbage - it's the nature of such a platform, but for example 'Astrum' is pretty good.
@@jeffslist6878 science adjusts as knowledge and observation improves. there is nothing wrong with that process. Religion hasn't changed in thousands of years and yet it claims to always be the absolute truth.
@@h2ophilter what's religion got to do with these videos?
اللّٰه اکبر ❤سبحان اللّٰه ❤ ماشاء اللّٰه❤ الحمدُ اللّٰه ❤ بیشک یہ ساری دنیا ساری مخلوقات میرے اللّٰه❤ نے بنائی ہے ماشاء اللّٰه❤ سبحان اللّٰه❤ الحمدُ اللّٰه❤
BG music is WAY to loid, Bro - and I'm a musician who loves psychedelic music. Go back in and cut it back. You'll get lots more 5 star reviews if you do, because actually other than that, it's a pretty good video that summarizes the science on these important subjects.
And what is going on at 14:51 where we are shown a red screen informing us in 9 languages that the media is offline?
This is just spectacular.
I love this video. The music is the best part.
Hey I noticed that you made a mistake and left a error message on the video on 14:50 minutes. It was annoying
Great programme exploring the various latest theories about the formation of planet Earth and how water and life first came to be - Just when you think you know the story, new research comes along to make you think again - Human knowledge expands all the time - A must watch if you want to keep up with the latest scientific theories.
Thanks forthe free documentary. No one is perfect. We will be patient as you improve your soundtrack.
Spectacular, an all encompassing
video…
I'm almost positive that we have discovered, in other solar systems, two planets inhabiting the same orbit.
Just sent this educational material to my son. Entertaining learning, nice graphics presentation, looks like cable-channel quality. Look forward to more
Well presented, hits the salient points. The music is indeed too loud.
Looked interesting. But the music is just too overbearing, with nightclub bass. I can't think & learn! I have missed a lot of science videos over this. Is it one production team, or a trend?
The music is way too loud haha
your hearing is way to bad...haha.
@@Joshua-dj5lb 😂
Most Interesting & Informative ! The earth has undergone several changes during its evolution till finally it has become a wonderful home of mankind ❤ ! What a true friend ! The moon is formed out of solidification of the earth's lava & is fixed at a distance to it due to the strong gravitational force of the earth ! ❤
As I wanted to read the comments before watching, I saw lot of people commenting on the music. Unfortunately couldn’t focus on the video just because of that. Perhaps re-uploading with lower music? 🙏🏻
I agree with you, I would hardly call it music though a cacophony of noise perhaps? !
A video full of knowledge
9:20 they disproved the Co-Formation theory because both earth and moon must be identical in chemical composition but they are NOT.
But they agreed on the Giant Impact theory, a mars-sized planet Theia hit Earth to form the moon. Then earth moon must have the same chemical composition, right?
Had they formed together, the Moon would have likely had a somewhat more substantial iron core, which it doesn't. The basalts on it's surface are however, very similar to those found on the Earth. The Earth's iron core is also proportionately much larger than those of the other terrestrial planets, because it likely consists of both it's original core, and that of the impactor. The low density of the moon is another clue. Lighter crustal debris from the collision remained in orbit around the Earth, forming the Moon, while the heavier core debris from both bodies stayed behind. The Moon's low gravity, lack of a substantial magnetic field, and other factors, explain why if wasn't able to retain a substantial quantity of volatile elements and compounds. Because this all happened so long ago, and so much has changed on the surfaces of both bodies and the solar system in general, this whole idea will always remain a hypothesis, but it seems to be the best fit at the moment. Cheers.
@@stargazer5784 that makes sense. thank you for the explanations.
They have found huge chucks of the moon inside earth. Might have something to do with the strong magnetic anomalies under south America I think. Its been awhile.
Background music and noise makes this documentary unwatchable.
So wonderful-- commendable, really-- that classroom level terminology and ideas are not feared or avoided in the best of life-science presentations on You Tube. In fact, sophisticated concepts are now served publicly in free, well-produced packages like this, with compelling narration and credible imagery, all bound by sequential logic and delivered with the refreshing assumption that viewers are not allergic to dictionaries.
Only the background music is a problem--in both volume and esthetic choices. (Some accompanying soundtrack is warranted, sure, but Gregorian or Byzantine chant, maybe, or Post-Modern Minimalist keyboard works are more amenable to discursive science than a lush symphonic hothouse sound or the demanding rhythms of vernacular pop.)
But all in all, this is a real gift of innovative cultural enrichment for the literate citizens of liberal democratic societies. Thank you from a steady consumer!
When I first studied the history of evolution, Latin, rhetoric, geology and geography were included in a balanced curriculum. We began such sessions with various admonitions I hope will return someday, like ~
Sapere aude:
Transire suum pectus mundoque potiri!
MUSIC IS TOO DAMN LOUD YO HAD TO FIND ANOTHER DOCUMENTARY CHANNEL… damn didn’t mean to yell
🤣
Great watch.
Yet another documentary with loud, unnecessary music.
I’m sure it sounds nice in a Dolby home theatre set up 😁
Same.. I want listen to this st bed time but the volume is all over the place and loud bangs happen after I fall asleep...
@@indecent0079sounds incredible with the AirPods 2 pros or whatever they’re called. Incredible audio tbh
They either block their content in your region, or upload badly mixed trash people can barely watch. Spark sucks.
I agree, the worst offenders are documentaries with ridiculous guitar melodies, poor music choices ruin even a good documentary ✌️❤️🇬🇧
To the producer: I WANT to watch your video. I really do. But I see the first comment about loud unnecessary music, and I instantly move on to another video. At least ofter a 'quiet' alternative. Thank you
maybe you should just not listen to what other people say. wait too much i know
Has Earth always been perfectly round as depicted here?
8:35 have you guys understanded the position within the spacetime itself before saying any speculation about Darwin?
Likenian link was not the same 4.5b years ago! everything was much closer therefore, bringing more chances of collision of any planetesize earth/moon! its the same for water!
So many new and interesting theoretical developments in this well made presentation. There are some better graphics, but there are usually budget constraints related to lacking those. We'll done.
*LOUD NOISES*
Even if Earth's water boiled off in it's early years, earth had a strong enough gravity, to retain it, as a steamy atmosphere. If earth has enough gravity now, to retain water and a thick atmosphere, it had enough gravity back then too. I don't get, why nobody thinks about that possibility....
Our planet is so special, rare , and it took an unimaginable amount of time to be created for us .. let’s make sure we enjoy and treat it better 😊
What's even more interesting, IMO, is we might not even be all that rare considering how many planets there are and how huge the universe is thought to be.
That's simple. 20 foot deep microscopic glass shards instead of dust covers the entire Lunar surface. The main reason man cannot use the moon as a jumping off point.
This was a great show, bur 32:33 is a bit worrying with a planet orbiting in the reverse direction!
Jupiter and Saturn reversed their direction AWAY from the sun orbiting more outwardly into the solar system 😉 I know I thought the same thing and had to rewind that part several times.
My theory was the if Earth formed farther from the Sun it would have accumulated more gasses and become a gas giant.
Lower the Music Volume...! Be professional...!
1:50 the gentle clumping concept makes so much more sense than the BS colliding as theorized. At least for the begining until it got really huge. Otherwise as stated, it would've scattered it all out.
i agree with other cmments. The music is horribly loud and makes this unwatchable. What a shame.
The kuiper belt does not collaps into it self so do rings.
I love all the assumptions made in this video 🤯
I hate AI narration
music seems fine to me - listening on desktop speakers. maybe headphones is bad for people.
Muchos Interestos
"Acritarch" does NOT mean "unknown origin". It means "confused origin".
How many moons in the solar austen rotate at a rate that keeps one side always facing the planet?
This is really an interesting and fascinating to see how long we came and its frustrating to see the recent developments on the earth due to no brainer leaders
Why do these science documentaries always insist water arrivedit on our planet via external means, like comets? It also forms with basic chemistry - acid + base = water & a salt. This makes more sense than small amounts surviving a catastrophic crash then staying put in its crater until just enough crashes here, to form oceans? My bet is on chemistry.
Did you not watch all of it lol
Music too loud. Narration sloppy, too fast and lacking in clarity and precision.
The hubris of some people...Humans have no freaking clue as to what was going on over a billion years ago...we don't even know for sure what things were like a few thousand years ago!!
True story🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
For now... not consensus just more and more genius-level insights moving the goldposts. (delib typo)
Explain to me why you depict the orbit of Venus as retrograde (which it is not).
The late heavy bombardment was likely a reaction to the explosion from the proto planetary disc and sun formation, debris was sent to the heliosphere and rebounded and returned as bolides some hit planets many were vaporised by the sun✌️❤️🇬🇧
😅so interesting 🧐
You were once a "Grypania spiralis"
Thea integration into proto earth was a fusion event, not an impact. Need to tighten up the English.
Please, documentary.off Earth I agree and accept the way it explain how water problem with water getting here by the comets. And then for how life begins on this Earth.❤🎉🎉🎉
25/10/1994 0.25
14:52 Premiere being Premiere
putting my comment here so I can look back an relearn stuff later on.
Mercury is all thats left of Thea flung out after impact and captured by the suns gravity
Did life came from energy?
I for one support the nightclub bass on this video
Would have been good, but t😊hat godawful music....
At last a documentary with something new to say about the earth’s formation ✌️❤️🇬🇧
No matter what, man does not know where life came from or How the Universe came to be in the first place, nor can they answer how all of the known elements or first single cells came to be. All these things were somehow created, which will never really be known because it goes Way Beyond our comprehension
The narration is fine but that backing track has no business and so high up in the mix. Ask me what's going to teach me something it's not going to be the soundtrack.
The music is annoying.
All of this wondering where water comes from. Its clouds!
At the end of the day its all conjecture ,no one knows for sure what events took place and how
What music? 😳
This is the time of life ttat on the opposite teans try line
I love astrology
what happend to the gas
and why does this moon escses
This presentation has deftly avoided the Origen of life enigma. Where did the information come from or data that became encoded on the primitive RNA chains come from. Data and an interpretive mechanism was needed simultaneously for replications to occur. This appeared by 3.8 BYA. Far too fast to attribute to natural processes. That is the enigma that is stumping science. All they can say is they are working on it. Science of the gaps. What is the recipe for primordial soup ?
This sounds great so far…
Hmmm I’m getting the sounds though they aren’t great but aren’t loud either..