What a stunningly beautiful habitat. Judging by the lack of crude humour and tangents against the ills of modern society, I'd say joey was awestruck by the pure majesty of this place ☺️
I think like Tasmania and New Zealand are some of the few places you can go where there's so much preserved that you don't feel like people have destroyed everything.
As an Australian, I'm quite proud of this. What an amazing plant the Huon is. Surely these areas should be listed as world heritage. Many thanks to Miguel for the tour.
Makes me want to move to Tasmania. I live near some crazy temperate rainforests here in Victoria but nothing so wet as this. Here we still worry about everything going up in flames every summer with how hot and dry it gets. Would love to see CPBBD check out the Yarra Ranges National Park area one day.
The intact temperate rainforests don't burn. Only the tree plantations do. One of the best things we can do in BC to protect against wildfires is to protect the old growth forests.
Start sneaking Nothofagus trees into the forest as they were Australia wide before all the fires we created through drought, if we could get the deciduous plants back we can restore soil, forests and rain ☺️
@@composthis what? They may have very long fire frequencies (300+ years) but with a few exceptions most temperate rainforests do eventually burn. Douglas Fir could not be a component of these forests if there wasn’t some level of stand clearing disturbance. Don’t get me wrong, tree plantations are a scourge and have majorly disrupted the natural fire regime of this ecosystem, but they didn’t invent fire.
The place looks straight out of a fairytale, it's kinda' fascinating how authors who never got to see such places wrote quite vividly about stuff like this, and, to their fortune, wonders like this one exist. Yet another great video dude, thank you for sharing!
I live in on the edge the South West National Park (Where the video is shot) in Tasmania, This is pretty much my back yard.... I know many areas of pockets of Huon Pines, Sassafras, Celery top, King Billys and Pencil pines... Wonderful place.
Really enjoy following you on your botanical expeditions. You should come here to NZ too. We even have bigger Podocarps growing here (Totara, Kahikatea, Rimu, Matai) in addition to mighty Kauri trees. And if you come you should visit the West Coast of the South Island with its ancient forests. The alpine flora is also pretty intersting here.
Have you been to see the Antarctic Beeches on the mainland? There is an awesome spot to see groves of them in Qld. They grow in a similar way to the Huon Pines. In clumps of multiple trunks, often 3 - 4 from what I have seen although I am no expert. They also send out branches that just then shoot off for long distances at times. I found one Antarctic Beech (nothofagus moorei) that you can crawl under and sit next to it's massive tap root going into the ground. Incredible spot. One of my favourite spots to visit.
This forest almost looks extraterrestial. It`s really amazing we have the opportunity to see places like this where we will never go to. Great work, guys!
Crikey, mate. When I expected to hear Miguel De Salas it never dawned on me that he would sound like Crocodile Dundee's nephew. I was expecting Speedy Gonzales. Another fantastic show and Mr. Salas was a wealth of knowledge. Thanks Tony.
Reminds me so much of Oregon. To see this strange doppelganger of the forests I love so dearly is incredibly strange and beautiful. Thanks for the beautiful footage dude.
That's super interesting. Tasmania is very similar in a way, because California is very Mediterranean, and the more north you go the wetter it gets (upside down it goes south obviously) I guess its a form of convergent evolution.
Tasmania used to be connected to the north American plate. Way way back. Abc Australia does a short talk about a place on the north west coast called rocky cape. The rocks are the same and dated the same. They explain it pretty well. It's really interesting. I think they do state what part it was connected too. Would be bizarre if it the place you guys speak of...
loving the Tasmanian content. Would love you to do some mainland Australian stuff. Especially Victoria, from rainforest to alpine to sub desert habitats here.
Another great vid from CPBBD, we've got plenty of terrestrial leeches in our rainforests here, not sure if they're Gondwanan lineage as well, could be As said by others we've got remnants all the way up the east coast to New Guinea, crazy we lost so much to logging but mostly stopped now, we need to end intact native forest logging. Had fires in parts of the local sub-tropical rainforests here in 2019 though, probably first time in many thousands of years, part climate change and reduced size of the big scrub here in Nth NSW, remnants from Gondwanan rainforests too
Are you coming to QLD? Would love to show you around. I live in the Gondwana forests up here. Mega diversity and more rare plants per square metre than anywhere else in Australia.
Ooooh I think I know where you are...I tried to go there when I was in Tasmania but couldn't get it organised in time. Thank you so much for showing us these. Aaaaaaaaah yes, as the video goes on you are where I think you are :-)
Never would have thought I'd hear a Deny King reference on my favourite youtube channel, he was a fascinating character. I've spent a bunch of time in south west tassie, it's a magical place, a land that time forgot. Best explored with a boat, by god the walking tracks can be rough, knee deep mud for miles and miles!
Wow thank you for the gorgeous video! I want to go to Tasmania now. This forest reminds me of the Hoh Rainforest on the Olympic Peninsula except Hoh has twice the amount of moss. There is also a lot of biodiversity in terms of fungi and bryophytes. We also get lightening strike fires in the rainforest during some hot summers, hard to imagine with that much moss but it does get really dry.
"I can't imagine seeing something like this and wanting to cut it down" There was a book I read, I think it was historical fiction about druids. When they saw a really big, beautiful tree, they would tie ribbons around its branches. That really stuck with me and honestly I have a similar response when seeing trees like this. Like, look at you! Incredible! You are such a cool tree! Let me give you a ribbon and a gold star, you deserve it! (Not that I would do it literally, most ribbons now are polyester, and F*** microplastics.)
Great video man. That creek looks like one near me in New England, lots of moss and fallen trees, but I’ve never seen a tree with cloning capabilities like that. What a cool trip to Tasmania, hope you had a good new years!
Your probably pretty well organised but I recommend a road trip from Melbourne through the deserts to Alice Springs. If you go the good way it'll take a week. Nice work fella. 👏 👏👏
Thank you Joey and thanks to your guide and hosts. One wonders about resistance to rot and what exact compounds are responsible and if structure might also contribute.
Thanks mate, that was great. A wonderfully weird wander through a world that was once and always wet. Wish I had your insouciance towards the leeches. They freak me out.
Loved the video. "They named everything pine" 😄 Improvement for future videos, please smell the flowers and tell about the scent. I'd never pass flowers like those without sniffing them. 😀 Also during the video I had to think about the European Yew which is the coolest tree of Europe for much of the same reasons.
Ahhh, yeah! Stunning habitats, Joey! Love those Huon Pines.. especially with the drone footage flying around. Cheers, from the southern Oregon Coast. Gonna go hug some trees here.
Thank you. Live just across the moat north of the top end of the lost island at the bottom of the Earth, where the Huon are long gone, but the Mountain Ash still flourish above the Tree Fern, and we are currently attempting to push progress of Platypus back into outer suburbs of Melbourne,,, Difficult, but not impossible, so long as the yabbie, native mollusc and worms can also be coaxed back into cleaner water with more foot traffic and zero vehicles. A bequest worth leaving in our wake. Not long ago in the 1980s and 1990s Platypus were sighted in Blind Creek only 25km from the centre of Melbourne city. Seen in the Yarra today, but not often.
Tasmania the land of dinosaur 😍😍 From your drone shot, the tasmanian river seems to be quite dark from tannin leaching from the forest detritus, and i presume it has to be acidic softwater (low CaCO3 concentration). And I was thinking that how crazy that the world's biggest freshwater crayfish the majestic Tasmanian giant freshwater lobster can grow so large in this water environment
Love your work, I've been to Tassie and checked out the rainforest's, such special places. 🙂Another special place you could check out is 🌳Hinchinbrook Island National Park in North Queensland🌳, I help manage the walking track (Thorsborne trail) on the island (QPWS Ranger) and there are so many varied habitats, beach scrub, heathland, rainforest, dry tropical forest, wetlands, Mangoves, etc. that support some amazing species of plants. Blue Banksia, Ant plant, Button Orchid to name a few.
Hey, thanks for an interesting presentation. I’m a Tasmanian University trained botanist (not that I’ve ever worked as one) but I had never before heard anyone say that these plants are not pines. This is both confusing and enlightening for me. I must follow it up more.
Absolutely beautiful!! Watched and learned tons of your content 👍 Have you done any throughout Florida, haven't come across any yet. Love your work from Indian River County FL
I'd love to drink from the creek, looks so clean! Beautiful ecosystem! I looked up Badger Creek, Tasmania, on Google Maps that your guide mentioned. He wasn't kidding that you either fly in via helicopter or spend days walking in. That is one seriously remote place! (Note to self: When the zombie apocalypse happens, Badger Creek looks like a great place to bail out of "society" to.)
I heard about the terrestrial leaches when I read The Wild Trees and wondered if you'd mention them. Just got back from the Sierra de la Laguna in Baja California Sur. Mostly bird watching with my brother (got the very seldom seen endemic Baird's junco) but the plants were incredible especially Pachycormus discolor or the elephant tree.
I wanted to buy a huon pine and grow it in a cool and humid room, I couldn't germinate the seeds too small, I found it more convenient to grow this tree from a branch piece, thanks.
I really need to know how you seem to have all this amazing information ready to go. How are you so well-versed? I’m sure practical experience is essential, but do you have any reading/resource tricks or recommendations? That or I’m assuming you have a photographic memory haha
This is amazing. Always wanted to visit this area. While you’re down under…thought about tracking down Wollemi “pine” in the wild? I believe it only grows naturally in some remote, undisclosed alluvial bottomlands in the Blue Mountains. PS you asked about Antarctica… full-continent scale glaciation came with the Eocene-Oligocene transition at around 34.5 Ma, although a paper that came out last year (Van Breedam et al. (2022). Modeling evidence for late Eocene Antarctic glaciations. EPSL, 586.) gives evidence for partial continental coverage of the continent by short-lived ice advances during late Eocene time, around 37 Ma and again at about 35.2 Ma. With these partial-continental ice-sheets, there would have still been refugia of polar temperate rainforests, especially around the Antarctic Peninsula and Western Antarctica. It wasn’t until the EOT that glaciation fully took over the continent and the last temperate rainforests would have vanished. Of course, during the mid-Miocene, with the climatic optimum (MMCO), there would have been ample opportunity for Gondwana temperate rainforests to reestablish themselves. During the mid-Pliocene warm period, too, the entire West Antarctic ice sheet may have been lost, so while almost certainly the rainforests were wiped out around the EOT, it’s entirely possible that Gondwanan temperate rainforests reestablished themselves in Antarctica, at various times up until the mid-Pliocene, or at least until South America, New Zealand/Campbell Plateau, and Tasmania drifted too far away for seeds to be transported and successfully rooted in Antarctica during these warmer periods of major ice sheet retreat.
and a big thanks to = Cousin Tony - so glad he came down under - to Gondwana Land ! tassie - go and have a look before you go to sleep with the fishes ! = love your commentating - GFY . thanks .
Speaking of moss diversity Tasmania has the only population of Ambuchanania leucobryoides, which is another lonely branch. Their closest relatives are the hugely successful genus Sphagnum. Not much to look at visually but evolutionarilly very cool.
What a stunningly beautiful habitat. Judging by the lack of crude humour and tangents against the ills of modern society, I'd say joey was awestruck by the pure majesty of this place ☺️
yes not a single joke or nasty word....Lol
Huon are awesome...
Ha, I was thinking the same thing!
Referred to as
"Bein f*ckin Gobsmacked."
I thought it was a smarteveryday video 😅
I wish I could give more every month, you show me things I'll never get to see in person. The drone shots are awesome Joey. Many thanks guys!
This reminds me I need to buy more merch
Thanks for your support, both of you!
I think like Tasmania and New Zealand are some of the few places you can go where there's so much preserved that you don't feel like people have destroyed everything.
@@19MAD95 The illustration book is awesome.
As an Australian, I'm quite proud of this. What an amazing plant the Huon is. Surely these areas should be listed as world heritage. Many thanks to Miguel for the tour.
I've never heard Joey sound so chill! Clearly being in a tassy forest is doing some magic.
Relictual, tender fuzzy drupacea,
bubbling creek, bubbly bark
another delightful journey
Thank you for sharing
and keeping it real.
Makes me want to move to Tasmania.
I live near some crazy temperate rainforests here in Victoria but nothing so wet as this. Here we still worry about everything going up in flames every summer with how hot and dry it gets.
Would love to see CPBBD check out the Yarra Ranges National Park area one day.
The intact temperate rainforests don't burn. Only the tree plantations do. One of the best things we can do in BC to protect against wildfires is to protect the old growth forests.
Start sneaking Nothofagus trees into the forest as they were Australia wide before all the fires we created through drought, if we could get the deciduous plants back we can restore soil, forests and rain ☺️
@@composthis what?
They may have very long fire frequencies (300+ years) but with a few exceptions most temperate rainforests do eventually burn. Douglas Fir could not be a component of these forests if there wasn’t some level of stand clearing disturbance.
Don’t get me wrong, tree plantations are a scourge and have majorly disrupted the natural fire regime of this ecosystem, but they didn’t invent fire.
The place looks straight out of a fairytale, it's kinda' fascinating how authors who never got to see such places wrote quite vividly about stuff like this, and, to their fortune, wonders like this one exist.
Yet another great video dude, thank you for sharing!
This has to be one of my favorite places you've been to. It's so peaceful and fun to imagine Antarctica looking like that.
I live in on the edge the South West National Park (Where the video is shot) in Tasmania, This is pretty much my back yard....
I know many areas of pockets of Huon Pines, Sassafras, Celery top, King Billys and Pencil pines...
Wonderful place.
God bless you Joey.....
❤ what you do !
Thank you 🌳
Such a cast in one show!
A joy to see.
I love all of the weird desert plants you show us, but it was a fun change of pace to see you in a rainforest!
First of your videos I've ever seen.
Absolutely fantastic, I can't wait to watch more.
oh my gosh what a beautiful holiday gift. Thank you!!!
Really enjoy following you on your botanical expeditions. You should come here to NZ too. We even have bigger Podocarps growing here (Totara, Kahikatea, Rimu, Matai) in addition to mighty Kauri trees. And if you come you should visit the West Coast of the South Island with its ancient forests. The alpine flora is also pretty intersting here.
And if he thinks that place is wet... :)
Have you been to see the Antarctic Beeches on the mainland? There is an awesome spot to see groves of them in Qld. They grow in a similar way to the Huon Pines. In clumps of multiple trunks, often 3 - 4 from what I have seen although I am no expert. They also send out branches that just then shoot off for long distances at times. I found one Antarctic Beech (nothofagus moorei) that you can crawl under and sit next to it's massive tap root going into the ground. Incredible spot. One of my favourite spots to visit.
What amazing trees! First video i saw o this channel -instantly subscribed. So much knowledge and really great bits with humor 😅👌👌
Tasmania, wow congratulations, such a great adventure for you I can imagine. Thanks for sharing a very exciting episode and local
This forest almost looks extraterrestial.
It`s really amazing we have the opportunity to see places like this where we will never go to.
Great work, guys!
Thank you.
I hope you have the opportunity to visit New Zealand. Lots of interesting stuff.
never thought I would find this channel as interesting as it is. Great videos
this was a goddamn beautiful video. such ancient giants. was lovely meeting you guys 💚
Crikey, mate. When I expected to hear Miguel De Salas it never dawned on me that he would sound like Crocodile Dundee's nephew. I was expecting Speedy Gonzales.
Another fantastic show and Mr. Salas was a wealth of knowledge.
Thanks Tony.
Visit New Zealand next! so much beauty !
Man I love habitats like this so much. Thanks for posting this man amazing rainforest!
I hope you are enjoying your time in our beautiful country brother, bless you.
Reminds me so much of Oregon. To see this strange doppelganger of the forests I love so dearly is incredibly strange and beautiful. Thanks for the beautiful footage dude.
There are some spots on the upper Mckenzie and North Fork Willamette that are dead ringers.
Oregon? Coastal forest or North Fork Willamette ?
That's super interesting. Tasmania is very similar in a way, because California is very Mediterranean, and the more north you go the wetter it gets (upside down it goes south obviously) I guess its a form of convergent evolution.
Tasmania used to be connected to the north American plate. Way way back. Abc Australia does a short talk about a place on the north west coast called rocky cape. The rocks are the same and dated the same. They explain it pretty well. It's really interesting. I think they do state what part it was connected too. Would be bizarre if it the place you guys speak of...
Thanks, Miguel! ❤️
loving the Tasmanian content. Would love you to do some mainland Australian stuff. Especially Victoria, from rainforest to alpine to sub desert habitats here.
He's got a series up on WA hinterland habitat, which is quite good.
Another great vid from CPBBD, we've got plenty of terrestrial leeches in our rainforests here, not sure if they're Gondwanan lineage as well, could be
As said by others we've got remnants all the way up the east coast to New Guinea, crazy we lost so much to logging but mostly stopped now, we need to end intact native forest logging. Had fires in parts of the local sub-tropical rainforests here in 2019 though, probably first time in many thousands of years, part climate change and reduced size of the big scrub here in Nth NSW, remnants from Gondwanan rainforests too
man.. i feel like NOW i know what your "A game" looks like. this is amazing stuff!
I learned so much from this episode!
Thank you!
Are you coming to QLD? Would love to show you around.
I live in the Gondwana forests up here. Mega diversity and more rare plants per square metre than anywhere else in Australia.
Ooooh I think I know where you are...I tried to go there when I was in Tasmania but couldn't get it organised in time. Thank you so much for showing us these. Aaaaaaaaah yes, as the video goes on you are where I think you are :-)
Incredibly beautiful! Thanks for sharing this incredible habitat ❤
love seeing people share the beauty of my home state, hope you come back soon
You are so awesome. The things you show us are things we might never see on our own. Props to you.
Stunning. Thank you 🙏
Another amazing video - thank you for working to share this with the world!
Never would have thought I'd hear a Deny King reference on my favourite youtube channel, he was a fascinating character. I've spent a bunch of time in south west tassie, it's a magical place, a land that time forgot. Best explored with a boat, by god the walking tracks can be rough, knee deep mud for miles and miles!
Moving contents always give me the giggles. Thanks for the amazing videos and knowledge!
Wow thank you for the gorgeous video! I want to go to Tasmania now. This forest reminds me of the Hoh Rainforest on the Olympic Peninsula except Hoh has twice the amount of moss. There is also a lot of biodiversity in terms of fungi and bryophytes. We also get lightening strike fires in the rainforest during some hot summers, hard to imagine with that much moss but it does get really dry.
Sure hope that you're doing an Australia-wide tour. Would love to see you do other parts of the country also.
He was in Australia 3 years ago. Below I link the playlist.
th-cam.com/play/PLK8bda0Bqux1dfVwx9vyvuY5KeVckLW2N.html
"I can't imagine seeing something like this and wanting to cut it down"
There was a book I read, I think it was historical fiction about druids. When they saw a really big, beautiful tree, they would tie ribbons around its branches. That really stuck with me and honestly I have a similar response when seeing trees like this. Like, look at you! Incredible! You are such a cool tree! Let me give you a ribbon and a gold star, you deserve it!
(Not that I would do it literally, most ribbons now are polyester, and F*** microplastics.)
You've shown us some pretty interesting plants over the years but this Huon Pine is my new favorite, this was fantastic.
Love it! If you want to explore the Otways then let me know, you're about a stones throw away from us in Victoria.
Great video man. That creek looks like one near me in New England, lots of moss and fallen trees, but I’ve never seen a tree with cloning capabilities like that. What a cool trip to Tasmania, hope you had a good new years!
So happy to see you showing off the beauty of my home state. The Huon Valley is gorgeous all year round!
Fantastic video Joey. Thanks mate.
Excellent Drone Work! Another great video. GFY!
Good to see come old friends.
Been scrub bashing through miles of bauera. My favourite has to be atherosperma moschatum
Thanks for sharing your knowledge!! Love these videos.
Leatherwood honey is the best honey!
Excellent video, informative and entertaining.
incredible. Thank you for all that you do.
Your probably pretty well organised but I recommend a road trip from Melbourne through the deserts to Alice Springs. If you go the good way it'll take a week. Nice work fella. 👏 👏👏
Thank you for the very cool stories and teaching us how nature actually works.
Great music. Loved the video with the music. Thx
Love to watch these, big ups Joey!
Thank you Joey and thanks to your guide and hosts. One wonders about resistance to rot and what exact compounds are responsible and if structure might also contribute.
I think the slow growth is part of it, really fine grain with lots of oils in the timber.
Love your videos! Would love to see you do a tour of New Zealand some time.
Thanks mate, that was great. A wonderfully weird wander through a world that was once and always wet. Wish I had your insouciance towards the leeches. They freak me out.
love your passion and knowledge
Excellent field trip Professor GFY. I love Tasmania, this was a pleasure. Have a great New Years Eve!
Loved the video. "They named everything pine" 😄 Improvement for future videos, please smell the flowers and tell about the scent. I'd never pass flowers like those without sniffing them. 😀 Also during the video I had to think about the European Yew which is the coolest tree of Europe for much of the same reasons.
I'm so glad you finally took the Tazzie tour! Fantastic stuff.
Thank you, beautiful trees!
Ahhh, yeah! Stunning habitats, Joey! Love those Huon Pines.. especially with the drone footage flying around. Cheers, from the southern Oregon Coast. Gonna go hug some trees here.
Thank you. Live just across the moat north of the top end of the lost island at the bottom of the Earth, where the Huon are long gone, but the Mountain Ash still flourish above the Tree Fern, and we are currently attempting to push progress of Platypus back into outer suburbs of Melbourne,,, Difficult, but not impossible, so long as the yabbie, native mollusc and worms can also be coaxed back into cleaner water with more foot traffic and zero vehicles. A bequest worth leaving in our wake. Not long ago in the 1980s and 1990s Platypus were sighted in Blind Creek only 25km from the centre of Melbourne city. Seen in the Yarra today, but not often.
Wow, glad to see you in my home state!
loving the 90s acid jazz and drone shots to kick off. stay for the thousand-year-old tree.
This episide is amazing. They should let you make van Imax movie soon
Tasmania the land of dinosaur 😍😍 From your drone shot, the tasmanian river seems to be quite dark from tannin leaching from the forest detritus, and i presume it has to be acidic softwater (low CaCO3 concentration). And I was thinking that how crazy that the world's biggest freshwater crayfish the majestic Tasmanian giant freshwater lobster can grow so large in this water environment
I recognized your video from the adjacent room hearing the music. Love the intro.
Love your work, I've been to Tassie and checked out the rainforest's, such special places. 🙂Another special place you could check out is 🌳Hinchinbrook Island National Park in North Queensland🌳, I help manage the walking track (Thorsborne trail) on the island (QPWS Ranger) and there are so many varied habitats, beach scrub, heathland, rainforest, dry tropical forest, wetlands, Mangoves, etc. that support some amazing species of plants. Blue Banksia, Ant plant, Button Orchid to name a few.
Hey, thanks for an interesting presentation. I’m a Tasmanian University trained botanist (not that I’ve ever worked as one) but I had never before heard anyone say that these plants are not pines. This is both confusing and enlightening for me. I must follow it up more.
Correct, not pines. There are no pines native to the Southern Hemisphere except for one species that gets into the mountains of Indonesia
So much easier with a drone than in the old days climbing round with ropes. Glad to see you down under!
gorgeous. magical. thank you!
Great episode, nice departure, sublime forest
Absolutely beautiful!! Watched and learned tons of your content 👍 Have you done any throughout Florida, haven't come across any yet. Love your work from Indian River County FL
I'd love to drink from the creek, looks so clean! Beautiful ecosystem! I looked up Badger Creek, Tasmania, on Google Maps that your guide mentioned. He wasn't kidding that you either fly in via helicopter or spend days walking in. That is one seriously remote place! (Note to self: When the zombie apocalypse happens, Badger Creek looks like a great place to bail out of "society" to.)
So glad you've come to Tassie :)
I heard about the terrestrial leaches when I read The Wild Trees and wondered if you'd mention them.
Just got back from the Sierra de la Laguna in Baja California Sur. Mostly bird watching with my brother (got the very seldom seen endemic Baird's junco) but the plants were incredible especially Pachycormus discolor or the elephant tree.
Great video.
Well done
Awesome vid thanks man
Documentario eccezionale grazie. Anche la musica è ottima’
I wanted to buy a huon pine and grow it in a cool and humid room, I couldn't germinate the seeds too small, I found it more convenient to grow this tree from a branch piece, thanks.
I really need to know how you seem to have all this amazing information ready to go. How are you so well-versed? I’m sure practical experience is essential, but do you have any reading/resource tricks or recommendations? That or I’m assuming you have a photographic memory haha
This is amazing. Always wanted to visit this area. While you’re down under…thought about tracking down Wollemi “pine” in the wild? I believe it only grows naturally in some remote, undisclosed alluvial bottomlands in the Blue Mountains.
PS you asked about Antarctica… full-continent scale glaciation came with the Eocene-Oligocene transition at around 34.5 Ma, although a paper that came out last year (Van Breedam et al. (2022). Modeling evidence for late Eocene Antarctic glaciations. EPSL, 586.) gives evidence for partial continental coverage of the continent by short-lived ice advances during late Eocene time, around 37 Ma and again at about 35.2 Ma. With these partial-continental ice-sheets, there would have still been refugia of polar temperate rainforests, especially around the Antarctic Peninsula and Western Antarctica. It wasn’t until the EOT that glaciation fully took over the continent and the last temperate rainforests would have vanished. Of course, during the mid-Miocene, with the climatic optimum (MMCO), there would have been ample opportunity for Gondwana temperate rainforests to reestablish themselves. During the mid-Pliocene warm period, too, the entire West Antarctic ice sheet may have been lost, so while almost certainly the rainforests were wiped out around the EOT, it’s entirely possible that Gondwanan temperate rainforests reestablished themselves in Antarctica, at various times up until the mid-Pliocene, or at least until South America, New Zealand/Campbell Plateau, and Tasmania drifted too far away for seeds to be transported and successfully rooted in Antarctica during these warmer periods of major ice sheet retreat.
Great video, thank you man
“ beautiful massive, ancient bastards” keep the TH-cam gold coming. Thanks for the vids.
Wow that place is amazing looking.
Magical, thank you
good guesr. thanks Tony
and a big thanks to = Cousin Tony - so glad he came down under - to Gondwana Land ! tassie - go and have a look before you go to sleep with the fishes ! = love your commentating - GFY . thanks .
Speaking of moss diversity Tasmania has the only population of Ambuchanania leucobryoides, which is another lonely branch. Their closest relatives are the hugely successful genus Sphagnum. Not much to look at visually but evolutionarilly very cool.
If you happen to be in Australia, and visiting Queensland soon, I would KILL for an in-person episode
What a beautiful place. I would never want to leave there.
Saludos desde tuxtepec Oaxaca Sr Joey...
come back to perth(sw)!! wait a minute till summers over but ! gonna need to buy some new merch too haha.. great soundtrack on this one btw...