"Chemistry is, well technically, chemistry is the study of matter, but I prefer to see it as the study of change." - Walter Hartwell White Sr. Sorry for not posting in a while
For those that don't get the Arsenic picture: In Victorian England (and elsewhere and elsewhen), arsenic was a key ingredient in the green dye "Arsenic Green" which was popular for wallpaper. During cold and damp months, the wallpaper had a tendency to molder, breaking down the dye and releasing the volatile arsenic and making people breathing it sick. Doctors would frequently prescribe beach holidays in these cases to get away from the damp weather believed to be causing the sickness (which, in a way, it was), and for some reason, likely having to do with the patients not breathing arsenic vapors, the afflicted would get better. Sincerely, someone who paraphrased this from Theodore Gray's _The Elements_ and used "Arsenic Green" bamboo blocks in a Minecraft build the other day.
Context for references (about both the elements and countryballs) not everyone may be familiar with (if I skip some it's because I either consider them obvious or don't get them myself): - Lithium is mostly mined in Chile in use for batteries - Beryllium is what gives emeralds their colour - Maledives are sinking so yeah, they do need oxygen over there - Roman soldiers were paid in salt (also this is where the word salary comes from) - Magnesium is used for emergency flares (and also fireworks) - The Concord (and other supersonic planes) can go this fast thanks to aluminium alloys - The Chinese were the first to develop gunpowder (which of course needs sulfur) - Honduras and other Central American nations were what is known as "banana republics" - that's a long topic (and yeah, bananas contain potassium) - Manganese is present in ochre and other ancient pygments - The world's largest supplier of cobalt is the DRC - which brought a lot of horrible conflicts to it - Fun fact, US nickels are composed of only 25% nickel (the rest is copper). On the other hand, Canadian ones from before 1982 are 100%! - The word copper comes from the greek name for Cyprus, which was a major supplier - Arsenic was used in the green pygment used for wallpapers in the XIXth century, mostly in the UK - and yes, it killed people - Bromine-silver (as well as iodine-silver) compounds were used in early photography - Krypton is used in some lights, much like other noble gases (neon isn't the only one) - Rubidium is used in (expensive) purple fireworks - So is strontium - Yttrium (plus Erbium, Terbium and Ytterbium) were all discovered in a mineral found in the Scandinavian village of Ytterby - Rhodium is the most expensive normally purchasable element - The word Argentina comes from the same root as silver in Latin - Antimony was used by ancient Egyptians for eye makeup (not a good idea because it's toxic) - Caesium is used in atomic clocks thanks to the stable vibration of its atoms (they're the universal measurement for the duration of a second) - Barium is used in green fireworks - Cerium is used in lighters (and these modern metal flint and steel thingys) - Holmium is named after the old Latin name for Stockholm (Holmia) - Thulium is named after the historic name for Scandinavia (Thule) - Hafnium is named after the Latin name for Kopenhagen - Tantalum is used in surgeric prosthetics (also a reference to the Panamanian canal) - Rhenium is named after the river Rhine - Osmium is the most dense element (and Nauru is the most obese country) - Iridium comes to Earth mostly in the form of meteorites - Platinum was discovered by the Spanish during the conquests - and considered a worthless annoyance since it made purifying silver harder - The mercury thermometer was invented by Gabriel Fahrenheit - who came from Danzig/Gdańsk - Astatine is extremely radioactive (and the rarest of all natural elements, in any given moment, the entire Earth contains only ~30 grams of it!) - Radon was used in baths believed to help boost the mood (also not the best idea since it too is radioactive) - Francium has the shortest half-life of all naturat elements at only ~22 minutes - Radium was used in fluorescent paints (guess why that's a bad idea) - Thorium was used in streetlights and lamps (it could've been the reason for radiation discovered after the Diatłow's Pass incident) - Protactinium is common in nuclear waste (which was stored by the USSR in Central Asia, thus the countries shown) - So is neptunium - Transplutonium elements are all artifical and named after either scientists or places of their discovery, I won't go over them Fell free to correct any potential mistakes or ask for info!
Very nice. Also, Sweden is shown for beryllium, because of Minecraft emeralds. For oxygen, the Maldives were chosen specifically, as their president in 2009 famously held an underwater cabinet meeting to bring awareness to his country's plight. As for sodium, there is a famous myth about Rome salting the earth around Carthage after the 3rd Punic War.
Niobium, if memory serves me correctly, is used as an alloy in fighter jet engines as it increases the thermal tolerance or something. Pretty much means the parts its used in can handle higher temperatures. Hence why Israel is not happy with that jet.
i like how france is represented as an atom or francium while it says "francium will not last long" just like france if the government keeps on being crap
0:22 AirFrance flight 4590 Aircraft: concorde Concorde Air France (AF) 4590 was a Concorde aircraft from the Air France (AF) fleet that crashed while taking off from Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris, France, which at that time was heading for New York, United States. This incident occurred on July 25 2000 and killed 109 people on board the plane and 4 people on the ground.
For those who don't understand the Osmium-Nauru picture (at 1:45), it's a joke on how Osmium is the densest element (most mass in a given volume). Nauru is one of the most obese countries on earth, because they are an island nation unable to naturally grow food; thus, they have no choice but to import. However, unlike other island nations like Australia or New Zealand, Nauru isn't especially rich, so it has to opt for importing canned food. And regularly eating a lot of canned food will make you obese.
Also obesity is in their genetics : to survive on islands, you need a lot of enery from few food, which worked well in pre-industrial times but makes them really prone to obesity with a modern "diet"
This is THE definitive music video for the song, also covering which elements are important to certain countries (both historically and contemporarily) and where their names originated!
I remember seeing germanium, francium, and europium and thinking of the countries Germany and France, but I never knew there were so many more elements named after, or at least sound like, other places like Scandinavia and Tennessee of all places 😂
The elements doesn't even need autotune.This is more fire than potassium in water 🔥 Edit: For those wondering why alkali metals burn in water: This reaction occurs because the alkali metals become ionized so easily in water. They produce heat and hydrogen gas in the process which leads to a violent reaction. Why this happens with alkali metals? Well, they have only one valence electron, which they readily lose to form a positive ion (achieving the noble gases configuration). And why they lose the electron so easily?. That is because of their low ionization energy, energy needed to remove one electron from the atom of an element (in gas state). The ionization energy is lower in elements located more at the left of the periodic table because the nucleus of the atom has less force to attract electrons. In addition the more you descend in the group of alkali metals, the atomic size is bigger so the valence electron is more far away from the nucleus and there is more repulsion with inner electrons (shielding effect). That means that Francium lose more easily its valence electron than Potassium so its reaction with water will be more violent than in the case of Potassium.
0:23 omg this is such a good drawing of a Concorde! You did such a good job. I was on a school trip once and I brought a pen and paper so O can doodle to keep me entertained on the bus. When I ran out of space for the paper, I started drawing on my arms and tried to draw a Concorde. OMG IT LOOKED LIKE A DISTORTED CHICKEN- 💀
I love this so much! ❤️I know the whole periodic table and combining it with countryballs (one of my obsessions) was something I needed to see! I love all the references 🎉
Indium *i think* should’ve shown india but good vid! (1:06 - 1:07) Fun fact (Unless you like gum)! 49 shows Singapore bc it’s a crime to eat gum there. And yes, its gum
for anyone not understanding the arsenic picture, in Victorian england a color known as “Arsenic green” was widespread and it contained arsenic in it and arsenic led to arsenic poisoning and the british ball died because of arsenic poisoning
lol, i mean yeah, Radioactive elements won't last forever especially then one that has high atomic number But Moscow last long though, except the element
@ElectroPlasmaAnimatorElement 111 RG Is One Of The Most Mysterious Level Of Geometry Dash Because Of It's Difficulty And It Was An Impossible Level and Then The Creator (Darkx) Deleted The Level and people weren't able to pass through 41% Ship and people who were stuck trying to get don't know what the level looks like,and the level is restored by restoration union that's all i think
Basically, the Dutch are supposed to be very tall because they have a calcium rich diet (milk & cheese). As opposed to East Timorese who are among the shortest people in the world.
I have huge respect for you because you used the Polish flag correctly. Thank you for being the only countryball creator who sees reason (and for this banger of a song)!
@@Ariel1039 It's the first one I've seen in a long time who used the correct Polish flag. I understand the meme, it was funny at first, but now it's just old, overused and spreads misinformation.
In case you were wondering, yttrium was discovered by a Finnish scientist Johan Gadolin. However, the element gadolinium is named after Johan Gadolin, which is why I used the same image as a semi-callback. Bonus: yttrium, terbium, erbium and ytterbium were all discovered in one Swedish village called Ytterby, which is why they all have the same background in the video. Scandium, holmium, thulium and of course gadolinium can also all trace their origin to Yttebvy village.
"Chemistry is, well technically, chemistry is the study of matter, but I prefer to see it as the study of change." - Walter Hartwell White Sr.
Sorry for not posting in a while
"jesse we need to cook" - Walter hartwell white
0:52
1:21
This is cool,you might make good animation. Good job
why no romania?
For those that don't get the Arsenic picture: In Victorian England (and elsewhere and elsewhen), arsenic was a key ingredient in the green dye "Arsenic Green" which was popular for wallpaper. During cold and damp months, the wallpaper had a tendency to molder, breaking down the dye and releasing the volatile arsenic and making people breathing it sick. Doctors would frequently prescribe beach holidays in these cases to get away from the damp weather believed to be causing the sickness (which, in a way, it was), and for some reason, likely having to do with the patients not breathing arsenic vapors, the afflicted would get better.
Sincerely, someone who paraphrased this from Theodore Gray's _The Elements_ and used "Arsenic Green" bamboo blocks in a Minecraft build the other day.
spot on mate
man this video is amazing and just 30k views? i cant believe youtube shows these videos@@CarpetVermin
❤️
@@CarpetVerminThank you for the heart! :)
I thought it's because of them saying "arse" a lot
Context for references (about both the elements and countryballs) not everyone may be familiar with (if I skip some it's because I either consider them obvious or don't get them myself):
- Lithium is mostly mined in Chile in use for batteries
- Beryllium is what gives emeralds their colour
- Maledives are sinking so yeah, they do need oxygen over there
- Roman soldiers were paid in salt (also this is where the word salary comes from)
- Magnesium is used for emergency flares (and also fireworks)
- The Concord (and other supersonic planes) can go this fast thanks to aluminium alloys
- The Chinese were the first to develop gunpowder (which of course needs sulfur)
- Honduras and other Central American nations were what is known as "banana republics" - that's a long topic (and yeah, bananas contain potassium)
- Manganese is present in ochre and other ancient pygments
- The world's largest supplier of cobalt is the DRC - which brought a lot of horrible conflicts to it
- Fun fact, US nickels are composed of only 25% nickel (the rest is copper). On the other hand, Canadian ones from before 1982 are 100%!
- The word copper comes from the greek name for Cyprus, which was a major supplier
- Arsenic was used in the green pygment used for wallpapers in the XIXth century, mostly in the UK - and yes, it killed people
- Bromine-silver (as well as iodine-silver) compounds were used in early photography
- Krypton is used in some lights, much like other noble gases (neon isn't the only one)
- Rubidium is used in (expensive) purple fireworks
- So is strontium
- Yttrium (plus Erbium, Terbium and Ytterbium) were all discovered in a mineral found in the Scandinavian village of Ytterby
- Rhodium is the most expensive normally purchasable element
- The word Argentina comes from the same root as silver in Latin
- Antimony was used by ancient Egyptians for eye makeup (not a good idea because it's toxic)
- Caesium is used in atomic clocks thanks to the stable vibration of its atoms (they're the universal measurement for the duration of a second)
- Barium is used in green fireworks
- Cerium is used in lighters (and these modern metal flint and steel thingys)
- Holmium is named after the old Latin name for Stockholm (Holmia)
- Thulium is named after the historic name for Scandinavia (Thule)
- Hafnium is named after the Latin name for Kopenhagen
- Tantalum is used in surgeric prosthetics (also a reference to the Panamanian canal)
- Rhenium is named after the river Rhine
- Osmium is the most dense element (and Nauru is the most obese country)
- Iridium comes to Earth mostly in the form of meteorites
- Platinum was discovered by the Spanish during the conquests - and considered a worthless annoyance since it made purifying silver harder
- The mercury thermometer was invented by Gabriel Fahrenheit - who came from Danzig/Gdańsk
- Astatine is extremely radioactive (and the rarest of all natural elements, in any given moment, the entire Earth contains only ~30 grams of it!)
- Radon was used in baths believed to help boost the mood (also not the best idea since it too is radioactive)
- Francium has the shortest half-life of all naturat elements at only ~22 minutes
- Radium was used in fluorescent paints (guess why that's a bad idea)
- Thorium was used in streetlights and lamps (it could've been the reason for radiation discovered after the Diatłow's Pass incident)
- Protactinium is common in nuclear waste (which was stored by the USSR in Central Asia, thus the countries shown)
- So is neptunium
- Transplutonium elements are all artifical and named after either scientists or places of their discovery, I won't go over them
Fell free to correct any potential mistakes or ask for info!
Very nice. Also, Sweden is shown for beryllium, because of Minecraft emeralds. For oxygen, the Maldives were chosen specifically, as their president in 2009 famously held an underwater cabinet meeting to bring awareness to his country's plight. As for sodium, there is a famous myth about Rome salting the earth around Carthage after the 3rd Punic War.
As as a Thai person, I believe krypton references the time when the wild boars football team got stuck in a cave yes?
correct
Tennessee’s just staring menacingly
Niobium, if memory serves me correctly, is used as an alloy in fighter jet engines as it increases the thermal tolerance or something. Pretty much means the parts its used in can handle higher temperatures.
Hence why Israel is not happy with that jet.
2:20 You did Plutonium explosively dirty 💀
well plutonium did japan explosively dirty
[Pu]ns..
💀
Yani bişey yapamazsınız plütonyum atom bombası yapmak için idaal bir maddeydi.
@DayInShinnyArmor I [Li]ke your jokes
2:00 Damn didn't expect him to roast France.
i dont see it
@@EvanzEvanzaMaybe the author of that commentary thinks this sentence references to defeat of France in 1940?
Lolll
@@АндрейСоловьев-х9ю brother are you from reddit? And yeah we all know what I'm talking about 🤣🤣
@@АндрейСоловьев-х9юThat Astatine
my Science teacher played this song in class, I thought I wouldn't hear it again but here I am.
W teacher???
i like how france is represented as an atom or francium while it says "francium will not last long" just like france if the government keeps on being crap
😂😂😂
Germanium took that a bit too seriously.
lol@@IdunnoWhoIAm429
@@IdunnoWhoIAm429😂😂😂
Ruthenium took that a bit too
seriously.
WW2💀
ye that was because the government was crap@@PrussianGlory
This is honestly so cool, the attention to detail and history of the associated countries is outstanding !!
This is like an alternate timeline where Countryballs is an educational 90’s Saturday morning cartoon.
I would love to live in a world like that
@@OMSKBRUH me too me too
0:22 AirFrance flight 4590
Aircraft: concorde
Concorde Air France (AF) 4590 was a Concorde aircraft from the Air France (AF) fleet that crashed while taking off from Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris, France, which at that time was heading for New York, United States. This incident occurred on July 25 2000 and killed 109 people on board the plane and 4 people on the ground.
we aint reading all that 💀
For those who don't understand the Osmium-Nauru picture (at 1:45), it's a joke on how Osmium is the densest element (most mass in a given volume). Nauru is one of the most obese countries on earth, because they are an island nation unable to naturally grow food; thus, they have no choice but to import. However, unlike other island nations like Australia or New Zealand, Nauru isn't especially rich, so it has to opt for importing canned food. And regularly eating a lot of canned food will make you obese.
Also obesity is in their genetics : to survive on islands, you need a lot of enery from few food, which worked well in pre-industrial times but makes them really prone to obesity with a modern "diet"
This combine my 2 most favorite things, countryballs and elements, kudos!
same! that's why i made the video
Same!
@@CarpetVermin I’m so glad this blew up!!!
@@KyrkkkSame too
same
This just popped up in my recommended ı have a feeling this is gonna blow up
Wow this comment got 1200 likes...
Cool I guess?
we shall see...
same here!
Same
@@Mohammed7411h I would say 3.1k views is really good because of their subscriber count
yep
As a periodic table and countryball fan, this is so AWESOME!
Yeah
Same
No argument here!
@@JustAnInnocentLamb ?
Chemistry and history are my favourites! This is such a perfect video and I can learn so much stuff !
Oh my too, I also love geography very much, maybe we can be friends if we meet.?
This deserves more for the work put into this it just deserves more
This better blow up as much as the amount of times Chernobyl was referenced
I only saw it once
DEFINITIELY:
1:21
2:19
POSSIBLY:
1:57
2:18
2:20
i saw it twice 2:19 1:57
This is THE definitive music video for the song, also covering which elements are important to certain countries (both historically and contemporarily) and where their names originated!
Why is my country nitrogen??
@@theannihilator8800 Something something farming; I have no idea.
Uranium neptunium plutonium
2:19 YOU INCLUDED CHERNOBYL!!
5 times actually
Polska Indo and monaxo
1.Hydrogen 🌌
2.Helium 🎈
3.Lithium 🔋
4.Berylium 🔮
5.Boron 🎾
6.Carbon 💎
7.Nitrogen 💨
8.Oxygen 🌬
9.Fluorine 🪥
10.Neon 🚦
11.Sodium 🧂
12.Magnesium 💪
13.Aluminium 🛩
14.Silicon 📱
15.Phosphorus 🔥
16.Sulfur 🌋
17.Chlorine ☠
18.Argon 💡
19.Potassium 🍌
20.Calcium 🦴
21.Scandium 🇸🇪
22.Titanium 🪨
23.Vanadium ⚙
24.Chronium 🚿
25.Manganese 🪨
26.Iron ⚔
27.Cobalt 🔷️
28.Nickel 🪙
29.Copper 🎷
30.Zinc 🏥
31.Gallium 🔗
32.Germanium 🇩🇪
33.Arsenic ☠
34.Selenium 🧴
35.Bromine 🎞
36.Krypton 🔦
37.Rubidium 🎇
38.Strontium 🎆
39.Yttrium 🌫
40.Zirconium 🍊
41.Niobium 🛫
42.Molybdenum 🍛
43.Technetium 💻
44.Ruthenium 🇷🇺
45.Rhodium 🏎
46.Palladium ⌚
47.Silver 🍴
48.Cadmium 🍫
49.Indium 🖥
50.Tin 🥫
51.Antimony 🪞
52.Tellurium 💿
53.Iodine 🩸
54.Xenon 🎥
55.Caesium 📟
56.Barium 🎆
57.Lanthanum 🥽
58.Cerium 🚬
59.Praseodymium 🪚
60.Neodymium 🧲
61.Promethium 💠
62.Samarium 🎸
63.Europium 🇪🇺
64.Gadolinium 🧠
65.Terbium 🚨
66.Dysprosium ❌
67.Holmium ❌
68.Erbium 👓
69.Thulium 🇮🇸
70.Ytterbium 📡
71.Lutetium ❌
72.Hafnium 🧱
73.Tantalum 🦾
74.Tungsten 💡
75.Rhenium ❌
76.Osmium 🖋
77.Iridium 🧭
78.Platinum 💍
79.Gold 🏆
80.Mercury 🌡
81.Thallium ☠
82.Lead 🛢
83.Bismuth 💄
84.Polonium 🇵🇱
85.Astatine ☠
86.Radon ☠
87.Francium 🇫🇷
88.Radium 🕰
89.Actinium ☢
90.Thorium 🧱
91.Protactinium ☢
92.Uranium ☢
93.Neptunium ☢
94.Plutonium ☢
95.Americium 🇺🇸
96.Curium ☢
97.Berkelium ☢
98.Californium ☢
99.Einsteinium ☢
100.Fermium ☢
101.Mendelevium ☢
102.Nobelium ☢
103.Lawrencium ☢
104.Rutherfordium ☢
105.Dubnium ☢
106.Seaborgium ☢
107.Bohrium ☢
108.Hassium ☢
109.Meitnerium ☢
110.Darmstadtium ☢
111.Roentgenium ☢
112.Copernicium ☢
113.Nihonium 🇯🇵
114.Flerovium ☢
115.Moscovium 🇷🇺
116.Livermorium ☢
117.Tennessine ☢
118.Oganesson 🤑
Cool
Hassium should be german flag emoji
79.Gold is ????
Hydrogen
Helium
Lithium
Beryllium
Boron
Carbon
Nitrogen
Oxygen
Fluorine
Neon
Sodium
Magnetism
Aluminum
Silicon
Phosphorus
Sulfur
Chloride
Argon
Potassium
Calcium
Scandium
Titanium
Vanadium
Chromium
Manganese
Iron
Cobalt
Nickel
Copper
Zinc
Gallium
Germanium
Arsenic
Selenium
Bromine
Krypton
Rubidium
Strontium
Yttrium
Zirconium
Niobium
Molybdenum
Technetium
Ruthenium
Rhodium
Palladium
Silver
Cadmium
Indium
Tin
Antimony
Tellurium
Iodine
Xenon
Caesium
gold is a link😅
The effort put into this is astounding, very impressive!
Awesome! Did not know where some of those element names came from, thank you!
This is great. An fun way to learn about the perodic table, the foundations of chemistry.
1:12 - 1:40 hit so hard 🥲, idk why it just sounded so beautiful
Honestly this was nicely done!
Originally the audio, for the video was made by ASAP science
@@DumAndSmart ye ik
I meant the art was well made and the animation
Thank you
I learned the science lol!
And it’s awesome!
I remember seeing germanium, francium, and europium and thinking of the countries Germany and France, but I never knew there were so many more elements named after, or at least sound like, other places like Scandinavia and Tennessee of all places 😂
One of those ones I kinda knew about was Moscovium... Which was because of XCOM. Elerium is canonically supposed to be element 115.
Poloniun is also named after Poland (country that Maria Skłodowska was from)
Argentina comes from Argentum and I mean gold having the Spanish flag is such a good Easter egg
There are four elements named after the Swedish village of Ytterby.
Maria Curie?@@Nostr00
I love the concept you went with, pretty unique!
This is wonderful, great work, haven't seen good countryball content in a while
0:23 AIR FRANCE CONCORDE
0:52 UKball: Wales (chocking) Cal-l t-t-the doctor-r (dies)
The elements doesn't even need autotune.This is more fire than potassium in water 🔥
Edit: For those wondering why alkali metals burn in water:
This reaction occurs because the alkali metals become ionized so easily in water. They produce heat and hydrogen gas in the process which leads to a violent reaction.
Why this happens with alkali metals? Well, they have only one valence electron, which they readily lose to form a positive ion (achieving the noble gases configuration).
And why they lose the electron so easily?. That is because of their low ionization energy, energy needed to remove one electron from the atom of an element (in gas state). The ionization energy is lower in elements located more at the left of the periodic table because the nucleus of the atom has less force to attract electrons.
In addition the more you descend in the group of alkali metals, the atomic size is bigger so the valence electron is more far away from the nucleus and there is more repulsion with inner electrons (shielding effect). That means that Francium lose more easily its valence electron than Potassium so its reaction with water will be more violent than in the case of Potassium.
Or lithium + water, and mercury + any other metal (i.e aluminum and gold)
@@pay-2winlithium + water has much less of a reaction than potassium + water
Francium + water
AnD ThEy pUt tHaT In bAnAnAs?!
@@guy-0ffic1al wait a moment 🧐 your pfp, my pfp, you know...
I hope one day Drew Durnil will react to this amazing video!
(Chemistry, History, Geography, Astronomy fan here)
He will reacts to it, alright. But the question is when?
Tbh I think it is pretty unlikely, since the Periodic Table Song is copyrighted by ASAP Science. So, he won't be able to monetise the video.
@@CarpetVermin So TH-cam will oof the video (with Drew's words)
@@ItsMeAttilaGameplay2018 my guess is probably
@@PixelKnowaLot He reacts hopefully not agressively like the halogens and alkali
As someone who is a permanent resident in Hong Kong I can confirm the night and morning of Hong Kong is just Neon ads
This is absolutely amazing
0:21 I literally just noticed for sodium it’s Rome and Carthage
0:35 is that a Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact reference?
Its probably a reference to how well capitalists and communists go well together, not specificaly Germany and the USSR
This is really creative, which is really rare for countryballs these days
Truly the most underrated yet most well done video and song made.
0:26 hey thats me but different
............
Reichtangle.....
@@Recognizetheunknown 😈
EVACUATE THE EARTH NOW!!!!
That was Amazing it just came up in my recommended
PHENOMENAL, KEEP IT UP MATE 🎉
This is a awesome video! A beautiful piece of art
1:54 AMERICA. DONT DRINK THE PINK SAUCE
WHAT????
It’s pepto bismol you dummies
Thats pepto bismol ( yes, pepto bismol contains bismuth even though its radioactive)
Bruh
@@Iamwhoiamandilikeyoutube "Radiactive" is an overstatement. It has a half-life longer than the age of the universe.
This has taught me basic chemistry better than any school would do, Thanks!
Very nicely done!
Cuando mezclas la química con la geografía e historia, mis ciencias favoritas
Obtienes una obra maestra!🤩
Nuevo sub
No eres el único X2
Bro this is English
1:57 Belarus
1:59 Canada province , British Columbia
2:01 OHIO
correct
0:11 China does a make a helium
@@astatoscookie0:10
Polonium for poland
@@astatoscookieI think it's because of the Chinese spy balloons
Nice how you portrayed Thailand countryball in a cave, like the incident where 13 kids were trapped in a cave due to flooding.
0:23 omg this is such a good drawing of a Concorde! You did such a good job. I was on a school trip once and I brought a pen and paper so O can doodle to keep me entertained on the bus. When I ran out of space for the paper, I started drawing on my arms and tried to draw a Concorde. OMG IT LOOKED LIKE A DISTORTED CHICKEN- 💀
France 💀
SUPER SLAY
CONGATS ON THAT AWESOME VID!!!
This just popped up in my recommendations, and Im happy to have found your channel, very underrated. Would love to see more videos :D
Welcome aboard!
I like how indium is represented as chewing gum in Singapore
(indium is the safest metal to chew on like gum)
i'm a singaporean...
2:36 you should of put Russia launching Poland at the sun because its oganes'son'
also youtube keeps randomizing my @_______
Wat
It will be more logic if he put armenia ball as Oganesson
It's named after an Armenian-Russian scientist Oganessyan.
biology says youre %55 bacteria
chemistry says youre %78 water
physics says youre %99.9999 void
but i say youre made a masterpiece!
I love this so much! ❤️I know the whole periodic table and combining it with countryballs (one of my obsessions) was something I needed to see! I love all the references 🎉
0:22 YAY THEY ADDED THE CONCORD
Yeah, that aircraft was a piece of art
@@Model_cars_Edits i agree
LETS GOOOO
@V3xil1ty huh?
the correct moment is 0:23☝️🤓
Indium *i think* should’ve shown india but good vid!
(1:06 - 1:07)
Fun fact (Unless you like gum)! 49 shows Singapore bc it’s a crime to eat gum there.
And yes, its gum
Indium ≠ India
Indium = Indigo
@@goobylooby4Yk indigo is a color
@@goobylooby4 Color ≠ Element on the Periodic Table
0:26 Germany not again
Forever...
Long live the Kaiser!!
Hail to the German Empire!!!
👑🇩🇪🙃🇾🇪
Mustard? How about mustard gas?
@@poyopoyo6227 No mustard no mustard gas
That was truly beautiful bravo!
Why schools show crappy songs unlike this gold
Lmao the Carthago delenda est at 0:20
I really love chemistry and history this song is a master piece
1:39 what polity is that?
it is supposed to be paris
@@CarpetVermin oh ok
0:52 A R S E N I C
Wow. Your artwork is amazing!
for anyone not understanding the arsenic picture, in Victorian england a color known as “Arsenic green” was widespread and it contained arsenic in it and arsenic led to arsenic poisoning and the british ball died because of arsenic poisoning
Woah. Now i know
0:51
0:54 my country
Is it the cave???
Yes
caveland
I am also happy that it’s magenta because it looks like red because they are my favorite color. The colors that looks like red are my favorite colors.
Me
1:12 Oh my God that change in course was beautiful. 🥲
No one should say "Oh my God"
@@AquaTomMoviesjesus christ, man
@@0_Matthiasss_0 no one should say "Jesus Christ" like that either
@@AquaTomMovies fucking hell
@@AquaTomMovies oh my fucking god
Te quedó muy bien :D
Dude this is amazing ❤
Such an underrated certain arrangement of carbon that creates a shiny crystal object.
💎💎💎
Two of my favorite things combined
same
@@CarpetVerminlet’s goooooooooooooooooooo
1:59 I love the reference to British Columbia
i'm from bc, is bc actually special for the amount of radon in the ground?
This surely will blow up
Here, take my subscription. You’ve earned it
They named it "Francium" because it lasts for a very little time, although "Denmarkium" might've been a better name
No. 🏳=🇫🇷.
lol, i mean yeah, Radioactive elements won't last forever especially then one that has high atomic number
But Moscow last long though, except the element
@@steveget1186 denmark last 6 hour against germany, while france last 1 month
Idts
@@steveget1186napoleon, and literally every other great french leader:
0:57 i got Zirconium pants
TALLY HALL REFERENCE???
Philippines
how is this has so little views, the sheer amount effort this guy put in baffles me
1.000.000 now
wait no 1,000,000
For anyone wondering what the 2 planes that showed up were: 0:22 Concorde 0:58 F-35 Lightning II
This is some of the most well made countryball video
0:14 India 🇮🇳 ( Nitrogen)
2:28 ELEMENT 111 RG GEOMETRY DASH REFERENCE
interesting, i never knew the chemical elements were based off of geometry dash
@ElectroPlasmaAnimatorElement 111 RG Is One Of The Most Mysterious Level Of Geometry Dash Because Of It's Difficulty And It Was An Impossible Level and Then The Creator (Darkx) Deleted The Level and people weren't able to pass through 41% Ship and people who were stuck trying to get don't know what the level looks like,and the level is restored by restoration union that's all i think
More like Element 64 Gd
@ElectroPlasmaAnimator congratulations 2nd bfdi comment on this video!
Don't understand 0:29 being Netherlands Trading With east timor If the Portuguese that Discovery and colonized east timor...
Basically, the Dutch are supposed to be very tall because they have a calcium rich diet (milk & cheese). As opposed to East Timorese who are among the shortest people in the world.
I love how with calcium the Netherlands is like to East Timor “eat it now”
I have huge respect for you because you used the Polish flag correctly. Thank you for being the only countryball creator who sees reason (and for this banger of a song)!
1:50 Heres the flag of Gdańsk/Danzig
is this the first time you watched a countryball animator?
@@Ariel1039 It's the first one I've seen in a long time who used the correct Polish flag.
I understand the meme, it was funny at first, but now it's just old, overused and spreads misinformation.
this... this is... PERFECT!!!
i was actually gonna do this myself but you beat me to it! and i LOVE your art style!
what program do you use?
procreate for ios
@@CarpetVermin oh thanks!
1:48 what is that flag?
Mali Empire
Mali/Songhai Empire
Mali Empire is rich (Mansa Musa)
keep the good work, you gained an sub 👍👍
This is a masterpiece!!
It looks like a classic 2017 Polandball video
Isso e magnífico
Parabéns 👏
0:51 UK got Arsenic'd
@Tigran-Abazyan France duh
The lyrics are just amazing Very enjoyful-informative
Thank you for this video!!!i know some elements now!!!btw the song looks good😊
Love how you memorized the whole table!
Edit: 0:22 aint no way they showed concorde 💀
July 25th, 2000.... 💀
@@Zidan07166ask the dc-10
At 1:33 they used the same image
In case you were wondering, yttrium was discovered by a Finnish scientist Johan Gadolin. However, the element gadolinium is named after Johan Gadolin, which is why I used the same image as a semi-callback.
Bonus: yttrium, terbium, erbium and ytterbium were all discovered in one Swedish village called Ytterby, which is why they all have the same background in the video. Scandium, holmium, thulium and of course gadolinium can also all trace their origin to Yttebvy village.
I love when it sounds like a country (or a union for EU) they but the ball in some elections. 😂
This. Is. AMAZING!
Thank you this saved my exams you are the best thank you once again
0:16 oxygen
I am Maldivian 🇲🇻
@@waterducklover6588me too❤❤
@@waterducklover6588how’s your island’s
same 🇲🇻@@waterducklover6588
OMGOMGOMGISTHATFRIESFROMBEFEDIE!!!?!!??😮😮😮