Anton, how the heck are you able to produce high quality, well researched, carefully crafted videos 7 days a week? It's a herculin accomplishment. Thank you for tour hard work and dedication. We appreciate it!
My guess he has a team for this, which would be common for channels the size of this. I think alot of big TH-camrs like Mr Beast tend to be part of an agency that helps promote their channels. Not saying Anton is part of this particular agency.
I never comment of videos. But I watch your videos everyday. I always appreciate hearing “hello wonderful people” I just want to say I very impressed with how smart you are and how hard working you are. Thank you and blessing from Texas.
@@diannepinkerton1689I believe they meant they don’t usually comment which might imply an emphasis on how much they appreciate Anton’s videos. Don’t know how you didn’t understand that to be honest
It is important to remember that Archaea we see today are not 2.2 Billion years old, but are the progeny of bacteria from 2.2 Billion years ago. So, if there are only two proteins common to both Archaea and Eukaryotes, then the rest of the immune proteins we see in Asgard Archaea today...could have evolved since the original time. It seems that the common proteins might have evolved first. And if these were crucail protiens and vital to the continued existence and survival, they would have been more likely to be retained. (If you lose something necessary for survival, you tend to have fewer or no offspring, or will be out competed by those with the vital protein).
In a funny way, a single-celled organism by reproduces by binary fission is both a new organism and simultaneously the same single-celled organism from 2.2 billion years ago.
The similarity isn't based on "same protein", but the protein and DNA sequence. Due to how some segments of DNA are highly conserved, it's very unlikely that they evolved convergently by pure chance.
Your commitment to your channel and science is mind blowing! I’m staggered by the amount of work, research and knowledge that you put into your content every single day and I’m humbled by you calling your audience wonderful people when in reality it’s you that is the wonderful one for doing what you do. This must take up all of your time and leave very little left for your family and other work. Thank you so much Anton for doing this, I for one send my love and appreciation to you, you wonderful person.
Love that they named these after Nordic mythology. Now they can call this entire branch of research Yggdrasill, after the world tree of Norse mythology.
@@helmeteye Excellent catch. Unfortunately, spell check doesn't come with definitions or a time direction switch nor who I'm actually replying to. I agree with your post. It is a new branch of research. Brings our myths into the world of science. This is something Loki would try to keep hidden from us The beginning of another edition of Norse Sagas.
@@1onearth I don't know if Loki would keep things hidden. The serpent in another religion talk them into consuming the apple and gaining knowledge. Imagine the mischief we could cause with this science. I wouldn't be surprised if Prometheus was tricked into giving us fire by Dionysus, the god of wine. You are more likely to get truth from someone who is sloshed.
I really appreciate his videos too. His "Hello wonderful person" intro is so friendly and wholesome, and I really enjoy people who get pleasure from sharing discoveries and knowledge. Angela Collier is another science communicator (and Star Trek buff) that's well worth checking out.
@@Itsallindica Well, he's human, just like you and me. And my other favourite TH-camrs, Vaush and the Kavernacle, also have takes I disagree with. I prefer to take what I can, thank them for their work, and don't expect people to be perfect, or to always agree with me.
Scientists are making small steps on every direction clearing up the origin of life. It's exiting to learn of these advances as they are made. Thanks for the updates Anton!
I commented this months ago but I will repeat myself= Science communication is a honorable pursuit....thank you for doing what you're doing in these times of far right lunacy, pseudoscience, anti intellectualism and religious fundamentalists attacking the objective FACTS.
Thank you for this amazing video and the practical explanations you always manage to provide us. This is a truly incredible discovery sitting atop a mountain of incredible discoveries that DNA/genome sequencing technology has been able to provide us. A lot of things in the world have gotten messy and frustrating since the beginning of the 21st century, but some things like the rapidly accelerating progress of science and technology make it worthwhile.
This raises so many questions in my mind. Did Archaea evolve because of bacterial expansion into a primordial soup of viruses? How were the early ones not wiped out? Were they isolated somehow, or maybe the early viruses were weak? Like sort of a weak primordial soup?
@@jameshansen4388 I think there clearly was. If scientists knew how to make that, they could better understand the conditions necessary for evolution at each point. I think you'd have a basic chemistry for it, and then whatever stable proteins and early life forms that could survive there. If you put a more advanced bacteria into a low level soup then it would quickly kill every virus and stop evolving, but if the bacteria was too basic then it would just die and never create more advanced life
As a mushroom forager on Mt Hood, Oregon. I'm familiar with mycelium, the web that connects the mushrooms to each other and the trees they have a symbiotic relationship with. Then James Webb telescope showed us the web in the universe. Now this. All have the same patterns of an inter-connecting web and symbiotic relationship. Same as our nervous system!
Carl Woese identified them around 1976, however they were not officially recognized until around 1996, the idea of a whole new domain was a little contentious. :) Often they were referred to as Arche-Bacteria.
It would have been nice to learn that humans are really a unique creation, set apart from the rest of nature...etc. But we aren't; our origins are in the same primordial soup as all the other living things. Kind of humbling, I must say. Thanks for another lesson in humility, Anton.
This way cooler than being made, this means that out of all the combinations that happened we are among the other species on this planet the current survivors defying the odds and trying to become the greatest specie of all. This makes being here to experience that a lot cooler !
Thank you Anton, your videos are performance enhancing drugs for my brain. Your tone is just flat out relaxing and maybe you should be a character on a star trek type show? Keep up the great work.
proteins of similar sequence, referred to as viperins, are found in all kingdoms of life (plants, anmals, bacteria and of course archaea). this could well be an indication of co-evolution of an important enzyme for all life opposed to it being descended to all life from any one organism
Ok I often really like your videos. But this one knocked me out. Just the right amount of deep cut and big picture. A quick explanation of how Asgard name is both a great click bait but also not because of the payoff. 🤯. So may check boxes were checked. I know not all news can bring it together but not all TH-cam channels can put it togeather like Anton. 🎉
A free-thinking archaeon might add: an overly complex co-dependent lump of specialized cells that can't exist on their own, and will be wiped out by the next major meteorite.
Scientists from all areas of study are getting so much more imaginative in naming new structures. It really humanizes the scientists (they are nerds just like a lot of us, but with a way better education) and also makes the newly discovered structure easier to remember.
If you have an hour : "nick lane the electrical origins of life" Best lecture yet on this topic. Nick doesn't go on to say it, but, if he is right, the same thing would automatically happen on any wet and rocky world. Pretty quickly, too. As soon as things cool off enough to have an ocean.
The "If humans came from monkeys, why are there still monkeys?" crowd will lose their minds if we told them that the archea we evolved from is still around.
@@ZeroPhuqsGiven2000 i always wonder, if those people don't believe in science at all and reject everything that's been told to rhem, how did they graduate from grade school?
There is a very simple answer to the apparent riddle: Homologous evolution on a molecular level. A protein that is a tool to cut up virus DNA/RNA will always have to be structured in a certain way to function. Proteins that are built different may work the same function, but there may well be a good reason for viperins to be this similar in their function. It's a bit like ancient Egyptian hammers looking exactly like hammers used by the pueblo culture. That doesn't suggest that one culture learnt how to make hammers from the other, that is because things that look like hammers and are built like hammers are pretty good as hammers and are the easiest to make devices for that purpose and thus get made.
@@zweispurmopped this is a great point, and you are not wrong. That's why the approach used in this study - dual-homology (sequence and structure) - is so powerful. Using your analogy, is not as we found just 3 hammers that look alike (the structures), but we also have evidence that the manual to build this hammer (the genes) are written with the same steps, and the same words... The evidence here is that the way to build it was transferred from one to another, and the result of the process still preserves the function. 🤓
@@nenecoleao We still are on a molecular level here. There probably aren't many different ways in which proteins can be composed, especially when it comes to the leanest and shortest way to make certain proteins, to still be able to fulfil that function. That probably also is the reason why we share some percentage of genome with bacteria: These shared genes are just the tools to work the basic universal functions like executing the citric acid cycle or build the proteins that can do the mitosis and all that. Amylase and Transcriptase are the same across all species as this is the protein molecule that can do what needs to be done. Change it, and it ceases to work. So the tools that make the proteins in a deterministic system have to look the same, too.
@@zweispurmopped There are countless ways proteins can be fold and still preserve function... not to count the interactions with other domains (what happens in the Argonaute part of the story) That's why I'm reinforcing that it's very nice now to be able to pair structural and sequence, finally having an evolutionary context of preserving information and function.
Interesting link in geo/nature engineering of our beutifull earth,giving rise to the symbiotic complexity of plant animal reliance in the ocean's and land ,Asgard must be important to setting the environmental conditions for future geo/nature engineering of the earth weather
So two different microrganisms accidentally hugged and vibed so hard they never let go, becoming something greater than themselves 😭 We're made from the original love♥️
As my eyes drifted over this thumbnail in my recommendations, I thought you were going to be telling us about the undisputable proof of how we evolved from asparagus!!! I'm kinda disappointed that you're not!
It's hard to make such a strong connection between a type of life that lives 2.2 km under the ocean and primates. But hey, it's very logical to believe that all life sprung from an original species.
Fighting viruses is the same for all. On a cellular level we are all very similar. We use the same chemical compounds, and our cells have the same potential entry points that can be exploited by viruses.
Nokia 3110 has a lot of primitive features seen now in the iPhone. The iPhone must have evolved from Nokia 3110 😅. No! The manufacturer made them both separately! Can't you guys just see it that way!
Excellent studies, thank you for presenting this. This is much better than fiction from cosmology and other fizzics (the study of fizz or mathematical physics) religions.
Interesting findings. How does a prokaryotic cells that originally lived in the individual unicellular structure to evolve into a collective, complex, and well-coordinated close multicellular system, even as part of an organelle substructure of an eukaryotic cell is something needed to explore to justify extrapolation of cross-cellular systems.
another theory of symbiotic merger - it wasn't long ago there was a symbiotic theory that 'something' ate 'something' for some reason - as to why cells have an outer wall of fatty lipids. Like a soap bubble to float about in.
My little BS in biology doesn’t help me much with these complicated wonders. I can appreciate though how absolutely fascinating science and evolution is. Wonder what will change in us in the next 10:7000 years
If tardigrades when they break down have the chemical basic machines to form life cells. It could explain the fermi paradox. That life needed a complex form to evolve and carry the machinery thought the Universe, and most the universe is just sterile and dead without it. Imagin a tardigrade-like creature that didn’t have the carrots in the soup, not being able to spread life over and over again until till one did. Then were all interstellar water bears.
Hey! That's my research paper! 🥳 Awesome video Anton! Thanks for the interest in our research. More to come soon! 💪
Congrats. Thank you for the awesome contribution to human knowledge 👏
Anton, how the heck are you able to produce high quality, well researched, carefully crafted videos 7 days a week? It's a herculin accomplishment. Thank you for tour hard work and dedication. We appreciate it!
Herculean . l agree its / he's astounding!
For entertainment / educational purposes only.
He is stronger faster better
My guess he has a team for this, which would be common for channels the size of this.
I think alot of big TH-camrs like Mr Beast tend to be part of an agency that helps promote their channels. Not saying Anton is part of this particular agency.
I don’t think you understand how big TH-cam channels work. It is more than just Anton.
He doesn’t waste his time watching shit on the internet.
I never comment of videos. But I watch your videos everyday. I always appreciate hearing “hello wonderful people” I just want to say I very impressed with how smart you are and how hard working you are. Thank you and blessing from Texas.
That's weird..
You're commenting now
Well not now ..but before
@@diannepinkerton1689I believe they meant they don’t usually comment which might imply an emphasis on how much they appreciate Anton’s videos. Don’t know how you didn’t understand that to be honest
It is important to remember that Archaea we see today are not 2.2 Billion years old, but are the progeny of bacteria from 2.2 Billion years ago. So, if there are only two proteins common to both Archaea and Eukaryotes, then the rest of the immune proteins we see in Asgard Archaea today...could have evolved since the original time. It seems that the common proteins might have evolved first. And if these were crucail protiens and vital to the continued existence and survival, they would have been more likely to be retained. (If you lose something necessary for survival, you tend to have fewer or no offspring, or will be out competed by those with the vital protein).
crabs...
In a funny way, a single-celled organism by reproduces by binary fission is both a new organism and simultaneously the same single-celled organism from 2.2 billion years ago.
What do you mean by "since the original time"? What point are you even trying to make?
I will not stand by and let you besmirch my great ^100 grand daddy! Duel, I say duel!! 🤺
The similarity isn't based on "same protein", but the protein and DNA sequence. Due to how some segments of DNA are highly conserved, it's very unlikely that they evolved convergently by pure chance.
Your commitment to your channel and science is mind blowing! I’m staggered by the amount of work, research and knowledge that you put into your content every single day and I’m humbled by you calling your audience wonderful people when in reality it’s you that is the wonderful one for doing what you do. This must take up all of your time and leave very little left for your family and other work. Thank you so much Anton for doing this, I for one send my love and appreciation to you, you wonderful person.
Love that they named these after Nordic mythology. Now they can call this entire branch of research Yggdrasill, after the world tree of Norse mythology.
We may even see our ancestors naming things after our myth of evolution.
@@tom-hy1kn This isn't meant to be snarky but I doubt our ancestors will be naming anything considering it would be our prodigy that very well could.
@@1onearthLol. Hate to do this to you and I agree with your point, but I think the word you were looking for is progeny, not prodigy.
@@helmeteye
Excellent catch. Unfortunately, spell check doesn't come with definitions or a time direction switch nor who I'm actually replying to.
I agree with your post. It is a new branch of research. Brings our myths into the world of science. This is something Loki would try to keep hidden from us
The beginning of another edition of Norse Sagas.
@@1onearth I don't know if Loki would keep things hidden. The serpent in another religion talk them into consuming the apple and gaining knowledge. Imagine the mischief we could cause with this science. I wouldn't be surprised if Prometheus was tricked into giving us fire by Dionysus, the god of wine. You are more likely to get truth from someone who is sloshed.
Hey Anton, you wonderful person :)
❤
I feel like Anton doesn’t understand how much of a star he is and how he’s one of if not the best science channel on TH-cam
Probably remembers every month when he get that check from TH-cam.
Of course he does. It's modesty bourne of genius.
For entertainment / educational purposes only.
He's a real humble genius ❤
@@OldMan854That doesn't even include his Patreon. Based on his number of patrons, that number is likely around $100,000 per year.
@@randallpetersen9164 wish I could come up with something that that many people would be interested in but my brain is sooo tired.
Thanks Anton.
Interesting brief. Bit by bit the tree of life is getting clearer.
You remain one of the top 5 science TH-cam educators. Your research and time are sincerely appreciated!
he is a good teacher 🤔
I think he is a bit too enthralled by the Star Trek science fiction, and rich fools like Elon Musk.
I really appreciate his videos too. His "Hello wonderful person" intro is so friendly and wholesome, and I really enjoy people who get pleasure from sharing discoveries and knowledge.
Angela Collier is another science communicator (and Star Trek buff) that's well worth checking out.
What are the other 4 for you?
@@Itsallindica Well, he's human, just like you and me. And my other favourite TH-camrs, Vaush and the Kavernacle, also have takes I disagree with.
I prefer to take what I can, thank them for their work, and don't expect people to be perfect, or to always agree with me.
Yoooo new lore just dropped! Thanks anton!
Scientists are making small steps on every direction clearing up the origin of life. It's exiting to learn of these advances as they are made. Thanks for the updates Anton!
Small steps are essential, so you dont squish as many microbes when you walk. Cant study em, if they're squished.
If you're so excited, why are you exiting?
😊
Yep, they will soon figure out that the ingredients for life can be found behind every old fridge in the grove between wall and floor.
@@Guitarisforgrins…
This is why we know so little…
As soon as someone learns something, they are told they must exit.
🤷♂️
@@Guitarisforgrinshes not excited. Hes exitied.
Thank you very much for this amazing presentation
Anton your videos should be watched everyday by school children- what an amazing education you give us! thank you and God Bless You.
I watch him pretty much every night and have been since Covid. I feel like I really have learned a lot. Anton’s work truly is remarkable.
Hello here from Sjælland in Denmark in Scandinavia,this information gives me goose bumps !!!!
Another outstanding educational video. I do hope public school science programs share some of your videos are part of teaching.
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. 👍😊
I envy the next few generations. The things they'll discover and learn...... ❤
Why? Are you not gonna be around?
...and have to deal with...
@@kingcole55Bro is going to live a couple hundred years
2050
Or forget
Hello wonderful Anton 🙂 I appreciate you man ✌
This is a very interesting subject.
Thanks for sharing.
your a gem on this platform man i hope life is treating you well
Amazing, Anton, thanks.Cheers from the Pacific West Coast of Canada
This is mind blowingly incredible stuff which explains so much Anton. Bless you!
thank you for sharing this wonderful adam & eve moment !
Such a lovely smile. Thank you Anton. This news is important to the definitive Historical narrative of Humanoids of this Planet.
I commented this months ago but I will repeat myself= Science communication is a honorable pursuit....thank you for doing what you're doing in these times of far right lunacy, pseudoscience, anti intellectualism and religious fundamentalists attacking the objective FACTS.
Thank you for this amazing video and the practical explanations you always manage to provide us. This is a truly incredible discovery sitting atop a mountain of incredible discoveries that DNA/genome sequencing technology has been able to provide us. A lot of things in the world have gotten messy and frustrating since the beginning of the 21st century, but some things like the rapidly accelerating progress of science and technology make it worthwhile.
Thank you Anton, great topic
Ooooh and with dozens of unknown virus defense mechanisms, we might stand a chance as antimicrobial resistance takes hold!
thank you Anton. really love your work. much love and kindness always!
Exciting science,nice presentation,thanks Anton,👍❤
Thank you Anton.. very interesting as usual 🎉
Our cells are many different life forms converging into emergent properties such as our body and consciousness
I like your take on this. Mind blown 💥
So we all come from Thor’s home world?
You beat me to it sir! 😅
evolution has so many holes that, it’s on the same level as astrology.
@@josephtraylor1710they are no holes, they are white spots - which we just have not explored yet.
How exciting! 😃
So, we are Asgardians - and have finally proven that we have extra-terrestrial origin 😆
@@josephtraylor1710 gr8 b8 m8 I r8 8/8
This raises so many questions in my mind. Did Archaea evolve because of bacterial expansion into a primordial soup of viruses? How were the early ones not wiped out? Were they isolated somehow, or maybe the early viruses were weak? Like sort of a weak primordial soup?
Soup ? Is there a level of soup.
@@jameshansen4388 I think there clearly was. If scientists knew how to make that, they could better understand the conditions necessary for evolution at each point. I think you'd have a basic chemistry for it, and then whatever stable proteins and early life forms that could survive there. If you put a more advanced bacteria into a low level soup then it would quickly kill every virus and stop evolving, but if the bacteria was too basic then it would just die and never create more advanced life
Very interesting Anton. Thanks!
As a mushroom forager on Mt Hood, Oregon. I'm familiar with mycelium, the web that connects the mushrooms to each other and the trees they have a symbiotic relationship with. Then James Webb telescope showed us the web in the universe. Now this. All have the same patterns of an inter-connecting web and symbiotic relationship. Same as our nervous system!
It's not that recently that we separated Archaea from Bacteria. That was in text books as far back as 1995 or earlier. I can attest to this.
It was there in the 80s.
Carl Woese identified them around 1976, however they were not officially recognized until around 1996, the idea of a whole new domain was a little contentious. :) Often they were referred to as Arche-Bacteria.
But the Asgard archaea were only discovered since then.
Thx for this. Very Interesting.
For entertainment / educational purposes only.
It would have been nice to learn that humans are really a unique creation, set apart from the rest of nature...etc. But we aren't; our origins are in the same primordial soup as all the other living things. Kind of humbling, I must say. Thanks for another lesson in humility, Anton.
If you can trace back far enough… everything comes from one source.
Everyone, and everything… we are all connected.
This way cooler than being made, this means that out of all the combinations that happened we are among the other species on this planet the current survivors defying the odds and trying to become the greatest specie of all.
This makes being here to experience that a lot cooler !
Disapointed we were not custom made? 💩
Thank you Anton, your videos are performance enhancing drugs for my brain. Your tone is just flat out relaxing and maybe you should be a character on a star trek type show? Keep up the great work.
Truely fascinating!
Awesome piece of information!
interesting find anton!!
this makes it sound like our eukaryotic ancestors vs archaea was like Planet of the Apes, or Terminator series
proteins of similar sequence, referred to as viperins, are found in all kingdoms of life (plants, anmals, bacteria and of course archaea). this could well be an indication of co-evolution of an important enzyme for all life opposed to it being descended to all life from any one organism
Thank You
Anton is such a priceless source reporting evolution of life, that biologists should be doing.
If you know your stargate, it's always the asgard...
This is actually mindblowing. I can't wait to see what other archaean traits we inherited next ^^
Greetings from the BIG SKY of Montana.
That smile at the end !
Ok I often really like your videos. But this one knocked me out. Just the right amount of deep cut and big picture. A quick explanation of how Asgard name is both a great click bait but also not because of the payoff. 🤯. So may check boxes were checked. I know not all news can bring it together but not all TH-cam channels can put it togeather like Anton. 🎉
Never forget that you're just a highly sophisticated multipurpose cellular-viral symbiotic ecosystem.
A free-thinking archaeon might add: an overly complex co-dependent lump of specialized cells that can't exist on their own, and will be wiped out by the next major meteorite.
@@eljanrimsa5843 the way things are looking currently, that 'meteorite' will be lump'o'specialize'cells-made.
Scientists from all areas of study are getting so much more imaginative in naming new structures. It really humanizes the scientists (they are nerds just like a lot of us, but with a way better education) and also makes the newly discovered structure easier to remember.
❤ to you and wife
That was awesome. Thanks
Wonderful person.
great topic!
Anton, your pronunciation of merger sounds like murder. Listening to this in bathroom getting ready for work. Hearing murder over and over😂
If you think about it… it’s kinda always been one or the other 😂😂😂
Dude i was thinking the same 😂😂
Good video 😁
Hello Wonderful Anton!!
our body is amazing! everyone with a healthy body should take care of it!
If you have an hour : "nick lane the electrical origins of life"
Best lecture yet on this topic. Nick doesn't go on to say it, but, if he is right, the same thing would automatically happen on any wet and rocky world. Pretty quickly, too. As soon as things cool off enough to have an ocean.
6:18 1st merger 2,2 billion years ago. Is there a connection with GOE (Great Oxidation Event)?
yes of course
This makes so much sense!
The "If humans came from monkeys, why are there still monkeys?" crowd will lose their minds if we told them that the archea we evolved from is still around.
"I've never seen a squirrel change into a bird" Minds are already lost.
I always answer them this way:” Same reason that your parents are still around after you were born.”
@@ZeroPhuqsGiven2000 i always wonder, if those people don't believe in science at all and reject everything that's been told to rhem, how did they graduate from grade school?
@@ZeroPhuqsGiven2000no, because dinosaurs became birds 😜
@seriousmaran9414 No, you see, dinosaurs aren't real, they're made up to hide the existence of Dragons
They found them right where you would expect life to evolve, imagine that...
There is a very simple answer to the apparent riddle: Homologous evolution on a molecular level. A protein that is a tool to cut up virus DNA/RNA will always have to be structured in a certain way to function. Proteins that are built different may work the same function, but there may well be a good reason for viperins to be this similar in their function.
It's a bit like ancient Egyptian hammers looking exactly like hammers used by the pueblo culture. That doesn't suggest that one culture learnt how to make hammers from the other, that is because things that look like hammers and are built like hammers are pretty good as hammers and are the easiest to make devices for that purpose and thus get made.
@@zweispurmopped this is a great point, and you are not wrong. That's why the approach used in this study - dual-homology (sequence and structure) - is so powerful.
Using your analogy, is not as we found just 3 hammers that look alike (the structures), but we also have evidence that the manual to build this hammer (the genes) are written with the same steps, and the same words... The evidence here is that the way to build it was transferred from one to another, and the result of the process still preserves the function. 🤓
@@nenecoleao We still are on a molecular level here. There probably aren't many different ways in which proteins can be composed, especially when it comes to the leanest and shortest way to make certain proteins, to still be able to fulfil that function. That probably also is the reason why we share some percentage of genome with bacteria: These shared genes are just the tools to work the basic universal functions like executing the citric acid cycle or build the proteins that can do the mitosis and all that. Amylase and Transcriptase are the same across all species as this is the protein molecule that can do what needs to be done. Change it, and it ceases to work. So the tools that make the proteins in a deterministic system have to look the same, too.
@@zweispurmopped There are countless ways proteins can be fold and still preserve function... not to count the interactions with other domains (what happens in the Argonaute part of the story) That's why I'm reinforcing that it's very nice now to be able to pair structural and sequence, finally having an evolutionary context of preserving information and function.
This is wild.
Earth, what a huge test tube.
Great video
Imagine is humans lived more in symbiosis and then that’s how we reach eusocial status
How did we get from Norway to Ethiopia which is: "The fount of humankind?"
For entertainment / educational purposes only.
Wow, truly awesome
the bottle neck with snowball earth and the extremophiles produced "yeah me "
So, we're all Asgardians? Cool!
*Thank you, Thor and Odin!!*
I always knew I felt different, but now I know my ancestors were the Asgards from Stargate, Lolz
Over the hundreds of millions of years of evolution, cells over time mutate and change do to the changing of the environment!
fascinating as always
Interesting link in geo/nature engineering of our beutifull earth,giving rise to the symbiotic complexity of plant animal reliance in the ocean's and land ,Asgard must be important to setting the environmental conditions for future geo/nature engineering of the earth weather
Whenever I watch the best TH-cam science channels like this one, I think for a moment about how incredibly weak science programming is on PBS.
Fascinating!,✨
Anton i can imagine you as a happy little Asgard floating around and imbibing sewer.
Initially I didn’t hear the J, and I thought whoa that’s brutal.
So two different microrganisms accidentally hugged and vibed so hard they never let go, becoming something greater than themselves 😭 We're made from the original love♥️
As my eyes drifted over this thumbnail in my recommendations, I thought you were going to be telling us about the undisputable proof of how we evolved from asparagus!!!
I'm kinda disappointed that you're not!
It's hard to make such a strong connection between a type of life that lives 2.2 km under the ocean and primates. But hey, it's very logical to believe that all life sprung from an original species.
Fighting viruses is the same for all. On a cellular level we are all very similar. We use the same chemical compounds, and our cells have the same potential entry points that can be exploited by viruses.
Asgard bacteria, why can't we have that stargate episode?!
I’m watching on my Cellphone ❤❤❤❤❤❤
Prokaryote or Eukaryote cell phone?
@@barryon8706 iPhone 🤣🤣🤣
It's how we jump from 'probably' to 'certainly' that amazes me
Nokia 3110 has a lot of primitive features seen now in the iPhone. The iPhone must have evolved from Nokia 3110 😅.
No! The manufacturer made them both separately! Can't you guys just see it that way!
Felt like just yesterday we were learning about archea
Excellent studies, thank you for presenting this. This is much better than fiction from cosmology and other fizzics (the study of fizz or mathematical physics) religions.
Interesting findings. How does a prokaryotic cells that originally lived in the individual unicellular structure to evolve into a collective, complex, and well-coordinated close multicellular system, even as part of an organelle substructure of an eukaryotic cell is something needed to explore to justify extrapolation of cross-cellular systems.
What do you mean with "extrapolation of cross-cellular systems"?
Hello wonderful Thorian
another theory of symbiotic merger - it wasn't long ago there was a symbiotic theory that 'something' ate 'something' for some reason - as to why cells have an outer wall of fatty lipids. Like a soap bubble to float about in.
My little BS in biology doesn’t help me much with these complicated wonders. I can appreciate though how absolutely fascinating science and evolution is. Wonder what will change in us in the next 10:7000 years
Started college in 1974 with biology major as my goal. I've learned more from Anton!
If tardigrades when they break down have the chemical basic machines to form life cells. It could explain the fermi paradox. That life needed a complex form to evolve and carry the machinery thought the Universe, and most the universe is just sterile and dead without it. Imagin a tardigrade-like creature that didn’t have the carrots in the soup, not being able to spread life over and over again until till one did. Then were all interstellar water bears.
I think that all living things took a path that was easy for them to survive in. and then multiply from there!,✨
Would there even be sugars available to digest for the earliest "life processes" (whether those processes were cellular or not) ?