@@MU-oi1sueven the gangs are moving out, much of Gary is just straight empty. Only parts that really have any danger to them, are the city center and near the South Shore station. A lot of the neighborhoods are just gone
How, did he buy a whole small town just to see nature take it over for an experiment or something? To be fair, that does sound like something someone named Gary Indiana would do
I love movies Maze Runner Scorch Trials, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, or games like Horizon Zero Dawn as nature just reclaims everything it makes for an interesting/appealing backdrop or overgrown mixed with the industrial remnants of our civilizations or starkly new technologies it would be amazing to see IRL but also daunting.
Highly recommend checking out Enslaved if you've not already, one of the earlier Green Apocalypse games that got overshadowed by the likes of The Last of Us.
For a little two-season show on the History Channel, it's apparently been VERY influential. Inspiring The Last of Us (game and show), Horizon Zero Dawn, and Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes.
I wanted to write a post apocalypse story set far on the future after the collapse, and a good amount of the research seemed to indicate that while the past had monuments of solid rock that lasted tens of thousands of years, today's modern structures wouldn't last nearly as well. Basically, it seems, in 5,000 years with no human upkeep, there's going to be little to no evidence of our modern civilization. Not on the surface. Maybe big things like mines and solid stone monuments, but we need to remember that a lot of what we have today has been dug up and restored.
It has been postulated that our roadways would survive after the cities are gone. Also, all that megalithic stuff they built 4000 years ago. Check out Andre Norton if you haven't already been influenced by her.
It's not like nature lasts either. Nature changes all the time. Our structures resist change, that's why it looks like they don't last in the annals of time. The Anthropocene will be very much visible in the rocks layer of the future. Also, if you're talking about past monuments made by humans, we haven't been around for *tens* of thousands of year. Civilization has been around for about one, not multiple, of ten thousands of years.
Part of the frustration with the climate impact that we have is the very fact that it's such a short period of time. The first "practical" power plant was only in 1882 (Edison); It was not until 1948 that 50%+ of U.S. homes had Air C. All these inventions are so young in our human history, yet we compromise so much of our world for them. We are still miserable on a large scale 😅
@@Professor_Utonium_ Says someone living comfortably in a cool, humid environment. Have you ever lived in a hot and dry place before? The air is hot, dry and stagnant. You open up your windows and there's no breeze coming in, your fan's blowing you hot air so you might as well just turn it off and the whole room feels like a big industrial oven. In such places, AC is a necessity and a blessing.
Well, “Horizon: Zero Dawn” had a good take on that 🙂 And even the lockdown has shown how nature takes the ground back when given the slightest opportunity.
I freakin' love your channel. Thank goodness that there's nobody quiet like you making this type of content. Cause my gosh, these last few videos of yours, truly _feel_ lonely af! 😂 That's not very easy to do. Love you woman. ❤❤❤
A world without humanity is a world that doesn't matter, by definition. There can be no value to a thing (ecosystem, product, etc) without a PERSON to discover value in it.
There are many abandoned towns and cities around the world - granted... mainly after major disasters. That we can analyse for what happens. Even Pripryat and it's dangerous hot spots of radiation been taken over by nature. Then there are dying neighbourhoods in many cities, which are just being left for nature because of economic reasons. You only need to leave an empty asphalt or concrete strip for few years until nature takes it over and few more until it starts to break down.
I really love this channel. I've always appreciated architecture, but so much as to invest into learning more about it (if that makes sense). The way Dami explains such interesting topics with such passion is perfect. The only downside is I have to constantly stop myself from thirsting in the comment section 😅
This was part of the appeal of The Last of Us video game among many other things like actor chemistry, realistic dialogue, adult story, and artistic aesthetic. The decay of human "stuff" everywhere was so cool to see imagined and beautiful in it's own right.
often the saying of its rare to see beyond your own nose comes to mind. the thought that the world will continue on without humans seems impossible. i just hope humans never come to a point where we stop caring and make it unlikely anything can survive without us happens.
The problem is, it isn’t just native species that come back. Soooo many environments are overwhelmed by human-introduced invasives that would wreak havoc without continued human involvement. Just look at Kudzu in the American South, for instance. Withput the attempted management, it only gets worse. The earthworms in Northern forests, completely eroding the humus, wildly altering pH, amplifying the effects of drought and smothering saplings. The callery pear overtaking what should be grasslands. Old growth forests out East, West, and North that have either been clear-cut in the past, or are now being overrun by pine beetles going farther North every single year. That’s not even touching dams and freshwater invasives, the enormous swathes of grassland that have had all the nutrients depleted by monocrop agriculture where now nothing will grow without enormous quantities of fertilizer. I mean I can go on literally all week and not cover everything. There are sooooooo many environments that won’t magically go back to their natural state anymore without human involvement. It’s too late, there’s too many invasives, too much physical damage to the landscape. *_Some_* areas will be fine if humans all vanished, but MANY will not go back to their natural state. At least not for tens of thousands of years minimum.
That's what I think it's funny when people idealize the world without humans. We do so much to maintain the Earth how it is that humans disappearing would essentially create a mass extinction event.
Read Alan Weisman’s “The World Without Us.” It’s a thought-provoking read in which he describes what happens to the world when humans suddenly disappear.
There’s a show, maybe ten yrs old called “Life: After People”. And it explores exactly what you are talking about and has really cool imaginative CG based on science. Had many seasons if I remember right.
This is not the case all around...there are many abandoned cities around the Mediterranean..that have remained as still markers of past civilizations. Much of it depends on the geography of the place, especially the water cycle of that area.
There's always this one scene in a virus post apocalypse series, when we the viewers and most of the time even the main character(s) get a moment to just marvel at a ruined city. *The city is so ruined but also green and full of life.* "The Walking Dead" later seasons, both versions of the first part of "The Last of Us," and "I Am Legend." Ruined green cities are the perfect example of *"beautiful destruction."*
If you've never heard of it, consider reading 'the world without us', it's a non-fiction meditation of how our human constructions would decay if we hypothetically all dissapeared overnight. I believe it's been cited as inspiration for the last of us as well.
I was just thinking this morning (!) that the micelia on cities is probably arranged on a grid since trees follow sidewalks. And was wondering if that would lead other beings to deduct there was some form of organized civilization that lined trees up.
gorilla games did an amazing case study on how to age human made environments a thousand years into the future for their horizon games. however, they left some buildings in better shape for creative reasons - like landmarks. still, so far it‘s the most realistic depiction i‘ve come across in mainstream design. hint: after 1000 years without humans, there‘s not much left
I used to love that show, Life After People, (I think it was called,) but and it was really cool thinking about a lot of that stuff. I love the idea, however, of adjusting our architecture and city planning to accommodate for things like native plant life to flourish--Especially since as a Floridian, just over my lifetime, I've seen miles of native environment cleared for building the most absolute garbage architectural monstrosities (and as a anarcho-communist and a registered Green Party member understanding how my community was being destroyed by out-of-state developers could couldn't name a native plant species if their life depended upon it, and of course no one with the power to do anything is interested in listening to leftists like myself and the handful of others around here.) What eventually ruined this thought experiment for me was realizing that without people nuclear power plants would meltdown within the year and all of our prognosticating ends up looking less beautiful and more depressing. Imagine Chernobyl, Fukushima, & Three Mile Island just allowed to run their course but times a thousand. Not to mention all of the other fossil fuel projects--BP Oil "Spill" from 2010 just allowed to blast raw oil into the gulf until one day it just stops all on its own. The beauty of nature reclaiming the cheap, brutalist government offices is lost when compared to the parts of our existence that, when unregulated, prove we are less of a momentary sickness and more of a cancer--Our existence altering the natural world at its core in far too many ways.
Bntw it happening in wide area in Khartoum state capital of Sudan, the war make alot of people leaving space for more that 1.5 years and nature is taking homes and streets.
There a many recent and ancient historical sites to already witness this. Plant and tree overgrowth. There are like hundreds of the thousands of these sites with just a simple Google image search. I don't need to imagine it because I have been to abandoned sites. Montserrat's abandoned capital city is one
I often look at our great structures pondering exactly this. Empty and abandoned at first they would be kind of deserts. Small animals and birds would make homes. As leaks develop plants would grow. Starting with molds and funguses. On the other hand I love rudolf Steiners idea that nature needs mankind to behold it. Without men and women living and loving nature, nature disappears. Nature left alone ends with panicle species dominating and then dies out from lack of diversity in just a few hundred years. Whether that is true or not, a good gardener can do more to create harmony than a million politicians telling us to beware of carbon.
I don't know if anyone here is familiar with this anime named "Dr Stone", the first episode shows this very concept, changes after the whole human race ceased to exist for thousands of years.
Nier Automata's ruined City map, or the desert map with ruined apartments capture this well. Remnants of extinct humans, and the androids fighting in the name of mankind, against alien robots, whose masters also went extinct thousands of years prior. Jin Rui no Ei Ko Wa Re.
Theres a great show that used to be on history channel called Life after Humans and went farther and farther into the future assuming humans were not on earth.
Modern buildings are designed to be maintained regularly, so I'm guessing our high rises would eventually collapse, outlasted by far more ancient buildings of stone
Are there any structures or architecture out there designed with this in mind? Like after the worlds collapses and everyone moves to the arc/habitats, are there any buildings designed for this specific epoch?
Hmmm... Picking mushrooms in the library. Leaving mushrooms in the sun lets them absorb vitamin D... I suppose we'll cook them on the roof, and harvest corn from time square. How do you spell spear in cuneiform?
I'm going to diss the concept of the Anthropocene, because the Holocene already matches nicely. The sudden methane bloom from the beginning of agriculture and pastoralism arrested what would have been a slide back into a stronger ice age 10,000 years ago. Anthropocene is a marketing term, nothing more.
I see Dami.
I click.
It's what I do.
Dami sexy
it’s what I think
Me too 🥰🥰🥰
She's so fine and nice to listen too it's crazy 😮
@@blottedcenter4348 srsly she's my future wife.
Fr She a baddie in all categories
Gary Indiana shows us what a town looks like when nature starts to take it back.
I was just making jokes about the fact that when you ask people from the south side of Chicago about humility, they point you to Gary…
😅😅😅 in some cases yes! In others it just shows how to get shot at.
So True unfortunately
@@MU-oi1sueven the gangs are moving out, much of Gary is just straight empty. Only parts that really have any danger to them, are the city center and near the South Shore station. A lot of the neighborhoods are just gone
How, did he buy a whole small town just to see nature take it over for an experiment or something?
To be fair, that does sound like something someone named Gary Indiana would do
I love movies Maze Runner Scorch Trials, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, or games like Horizon Zero Dawn as nature just reclaims everything it makes for an interesting/appealing backdrop or overgrown mixed with the industrial remnants of our civilizations or starkly new technologies it would be amazing to see IRL but also daunting.
For video games there's also I Am Future: Cozy Apocalypse Simulator, and Breath of the Wild.
@@darthapple87 Thank you for these suggestions, i'll try and track down/check these out for sure.
and Yeah i guess BOTW would count lol.
Highly recommend checking out Enslaved if you've not already, one of the earlier Green Apocalypse games that got overshadowed by the likes of The Last of Us.
There was actually a very good documentary series a few years back on exactly this subject: “Life after People.”
That was 2008, my guy
For a little two-season show on the History Channel, it's apparently been VERY influential. Inspiring The Last of Us (game and show), Horizon Zero Dawn, and Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes.
I loved that documentary
It was amazing and I never knew why they didn't make more episodes.
Every future setting references this documentary, at this point everyone knows
The World Without Us
Book by Alan Weisman
Solid book
Reminds me of Chernobyl and how the plants and animals came back.
@_momosumomo I was just thinking the same thing. 😅
Clover 🍀 picked up near Chernobyl cures all wounds. But you have to defeat it in hand to hand combat.
You meant town of Prypiat (or Pripyat, in russian), the nearest one to the nuclear power plant. On the contrary, Chernobyl town is inhabited in fact.
I wanted to write a post apocalypse story set far on the future after the collapse, and a good amount of the research seemed to indicate that while the past had monuments of solid rock that lasted tens of thousands of years, today's modern structures wouldn't last nearly as well.
Basically, it seems, in 5,000 years with no human upkeep, there's going to be little to no evidence of our modern civilization. Not on the surface. Maybe big things like mines and solid stone monuments, but we need to remember that a lot of what we have today has been dug up and restored.
Well, mine will be about a global pandemic involving an AI robot apocalypse with a devastating war including cybernetic vampires and zombies.
@@taotzu1339 I'll write my own apocalypse, with black jack and hookers! In fact, forget the apocalypse... ah, screw the whole thing.
It has been postulated that our roadways would survive after the cities are gone. Also, all that megalithic stuff they built 4000 years ago. Check out Andre Norton if you haven't already been influenced by her.
The nuclear waste will outlast us quite a while, also in the surface
It's not like nature lasts either. Nature changes all the time. Our structures resist change, that's why it looks like they don't last in the annals of time. The Anthropocene will be very much visible in the rocks layer of the future.
Also, if you're talking about past monuments made by humans, we haven't been around for *tens* of thousands of year. Civilization has been around for about one, not multiple, of ten thousands of years.
An interesting thonk
Part of the frustration with the climate impact that we have is the very fact that it's such a short period of time.
The first "practical" power plant was only in 1882 (Edison); It was not until 1948 that 50%+ of U.S. homes had Air C. All these inventions are so young in our human history, yet we compromise so much of our world for them. We are still miserable on a large scale 😅
AC is one of the best inventions to exist. There's a lot worth sacrificing in order to keep it.
We do t have a climate crisis . We have consomption inequality. And you guys. Consume the most. Too all of our detriment.
@@ArbidarbOpen a window, turn on a fan. AC is nowhere even close to a necessity.
Yeah im in texas , fuck that. A window and fan isnt enough @Professor_Utonium_
@@Professor_Utonium_ Says someone living comfortably in a cool, humid environment. Have you ever lived in a hot and dry place before? The air is hot, dry and stagnant. You open up your windows and there's no breeze coming in, your fan's blowing you hot air so you might as well just turn it off and the whole room feels like a big industrial oven. In such places, AC is a necessity and a blessing.
Well, “Horizon: Zero Dawn” had a good take on that 🙂 And even the lockdown has shown how nature takes the ground back when given the slightest opportunity.
Listening to you talk about architect is soothing
This short explains why i love the atmosphere of adventure time and the new planet of the apes movies. Definitely gonna watch the whole video
"You maniacs...you blew it all up!"
"Oh wait, that was me!" 😈
I've got the Postal reference if that's what that was 😂
@@dermeisterdesspiegels3518 Charleston Heston quote from Planet of the Apes.
@@gku8744 thanks, I'll remember that one! 👍🏻
Depends on the event that causes the disappearance.
The manga Dr.Stone has some great answer for this question, I think the author got a really good interpretation
I love a woman who thinks about everything and anything. This eliminates selfishness and center-ism
Dami, Thanks for posting such interesting and intelligent videos. Very enjoyable and thought provoking.
It's funny how in that "fraction" of time of the entire lifespan we have completely ruined Earth
I freakin' love your channel. Thank goodness that there's nobody quiet like you making this type of content. Cause my gosh, these last few videos of yours, truly _feel_ lonely af! 😂 That's not very easy to do. Love you woman. ❤❤❤
A world without humanity is a world that doesn't matter, by definition. There can be no value to a thing (ecosystem, product, etc) without a PERSON to discover value in it.
There are many abandoned towns and cities around the world - granted... mainly after major disasters. That we can analyse for what happens. Even Pripryat and it's dangerous hot spots of radiation been taken over by nature. Then there are dying neighbourhoods in many cities, which are just being left for nature because of economic reasons.
You only need to leave an empty asphalt or concrete strip for few years until nature takes it over and few more until it starts to break down.
Why are you so well spoken and beautiful?!!! I just subscribed because that food for thought was devine😊
I really love this channel. I've always appreciated architecture, but so much as to invest into learning more about it (if that makes sense). The way Dami explains such interesting topics with such passion is perfect.
The only downside is I have to constantly stop myself from thirsting in the comment section 😅
Always such fascinating topics!!!
History Channel had a Series called "Life After People" that examined what would happen if humans disappeared.
Oh hey that’s Singapore ❤️
Demi you have some amazing videos thanks for sharing .
Love the art in Wild Strawberry - kind of an extreme version of this, but pretty cool!
This was part of the appeal of The Last of Us video game among many other things like actor chemistry, realistic dialogue, adult story, and artistic aesthetic. The decay of human "stuff" everywhere was so cool to see imagined and beautiful in it's own right.
often the saying of its rare to see beyond your own nose comes to mind. the thought that the world will continue on without humans seems impossible. i just hope humans never come to a point where we stop caring and make it unlikely anything can survive without us happens.
The problem is, it isn’t just native species that come back. Soooo many environments are overwhelmed by human-introduced invasives that would wreak havoc without continued human involvement. Just look at Kudzu in the American South, for instance. Withput the attempted management, it only gets worse.
The earthworms in Northern forests, completely eroding the humus, wildly altering pH, amplifying the effects of drought and smothering saplings. The callery pear overtaking what should be grasslands. Old growth forests out East, West, and North that have either been clear-cut in the past, or are now being overrun by pine beetles going farther North every single year. That’s not even touching dams and freshwater invasives, the enormous swathes of grassland that have had all the nutrients depleted by monocrop agriculture where now nothing will grow without enormous quantities of fertilizer. I mean I can go on literally all week and not cover everything.
There are sooooooo many environments that won’t magically go back to their natural state anymore without human involvement. It’s too late, there’s too many invasives, too much physical damage to the landscape. *_Some_* areas will be fine if humans all vanished, but MANY will not go back to their natural state. At least not for tens of thousands of years minimum.
That's what I think it's funny when people idealize the world without humans. We do so much to maintain the Earth how it is that humans disappearing would essentially create a mass extinction event.
there was a series called Life After People. showed this process with visuals.
There was a cool book done in 2007 called "The World without Us" by Alan Weisman. It was a really cool read.
I'm just glad that I don't have to think about a youtube without you, Dami. That would be a cold, dark place indeed.
Intellectually and Physically Beautiful 😍
Read Alan Weisman’s “The World Without Us.” It’s a thought-provoking read in which he describes what happens to the world when humans suddenly disappear.
The planet would flourish! Period!!
Thank you for doing all that thinking that we can’t do ourselves 🎉
It's already happened in Brazil where large cities have been found covered by Amazon's jungle. One of others still to be found.
i could listen to her all day
It was a series on cable, "Life After People." They did all the imagining already.
There’s a show, maybe ten yrs old called “Life: After People”. And it explores exactly what you are talking about and has really cool imaginative CG based on science. Had many seasons if I remember right.
Thanks for the book inspo
This is not the case all around...there are many abandoned cities around the Mediterranean..that have remained as still markers of past civilizations. Much of it depends on the geography of the place, especially the water cycle of that area.
There's always this one scene in a virus post apocalypse series, when we the viewers and most of the time even the main character(s) get a moment to just marvel at a ruined city. *The city is so ruined but also green and full of life.* "The Walking Dead" later seasons, both versions of the first part of "The Last of Us," and "I Am Legend." Ruined green cities are the perfect example of *"beautiful destruction."*
I've been in Robarts library, met a guy whose girlfriend made him a cape, it was pretty cool, he said it was surprisingly warm.
If you've never heard of it, consider reading 'the world without us', it's a non-fiction meditation of how our human constructions would decay if we hypothetically all dissapeared overnight.
I believe it's been cited as inspiration for the last of us as well.
I was just thinking this morning (!) that the micelia on cities is probably arranged on a grid since trees follow sidewalks. And was wondering if that would lead other beings to deduct there was some form of organized civilization that lined trees up.
gorilla games did an amazing case study on how to age human made environments a thousand years into the future for their horizon games. however, they left some buildings in better shape for creative reasons - like landmarks. still, so far it‘s the most realistic depiction i‘ve come across in mainstream design. hint: after 1000 years without humans, there‘s not much left
That's my favorite thing from Dystopian movie and show, which is overgrown city and land.
I used to love that show, Life After People, (I think it was called,) but and it was really cool thinking about a lot of that stuff. I love the idea, however, of adjusting our architecture and city planning to accommodate for things like native plant life to flourish--Especially since as a Floridian, just over my lifetime, I've seen miles of native environment cleared for building the most absolute garbage architectural monstrosities (and as a anarcho-communist and a registered Green Party member understanding how my community was being destroyed by out-of-state developers could couldn't name a native plant species if their life depended upon it, and of course no one with the power to do anything is interested in listening to leftists like myself and the handful of others around here.) What eventually ruined this thought experiment for me was realizing that without people nuclear power plants would meltdown within the year and all of our prognosticating ends up looking less beautiful and more depressing. Imagine Chernobyl, Fukushima, & Three Mile Island just allowed to run their course but times a thousand. Not to mention all of the other fossil fuel projects--BP Oil "Spill" from 2010 just allowed to blast raw oil into the gulf until one day it just stops all on its own. The beauty of nature reclaiming the cheap, brutalist government offices is lost when compared to the parts of our existence that, when unregulated, prove we are less of a momentary sickness and more of a cancer--Our existence altering the natural world at its core in far too many ways.
I think about this often, I used to love that History channel show Life After People.
Bntw it happening in wide area in Khartoum state capital of Sudan, the war make alot of people leaving space for more that 1.5 years and nature is taking homes and streets.
As a former UofT student, Robarts was basically where I lived for quite some time.
That planet would flourish and look very beautiful
There a many recent and ancient historical sites to already witness this. Plant and tree overgrowth. There are like hundreds of the thousands of these sites with just a simple Google image search. I don't need to imagine it because I have been to abandoned sites. Montserrat's abandoned capital city is one
I often look at our great structures pondering exactly this. Empty and abandoned at first they would be kind of deserts. Small animals and birds would make homes. As leaks develop plants would grow. Starting with molds and funguses. On the other hand I love rudolf Steiners idea that nature needs mankind to behold it. Without men and women living and loving nature, nature disappears. Nature left alone ends with panicle species dominating and then dies out from lack of diversity in just a few hundred years. Whether that is true or not, a good gardener can do more to create harmony than a million politicians telling us to beware of carbon.
Would you ever be interested in making a video about Price Tower? It’s a neat frank lloyd wright designed skyscraper in Oklahoma
Earth doesn't care if we are here or not.
Okay, right, the earth is a planet. but the people and animals that populate the earth and our affected by our choices care.
@princegobi5992 The earth would heal if we left. If it had feelings it'd probably be pleased.
@@boogiel3853Yes
@@boogiel3853the earth'd be positively orgasmic if we disappeared 😂
Sound like heaven to me.
Im leaning towards we'll be left with option 2
this is the reason I loved Nier Automata so much, the concept is just too interesting
I think the HORIZON game series has depicted the situation nearly accurately.
The full video is definitely a full video in that link.
I don't know if anyone here is familiar with this anime named "Dr Stone", the first episode shows this very concept, changes after the whole human race ceased to exist for thousands of years.
Nier Automata's ruined City map, or the desert map with ruined apartments capture this well. Remnants of extinct humans, and the androids fighting in the name of mankind, against alien robots, whose masters also went extinct thousands of years prior. Jin Rui no Ei Ko Wa Re.
You can ask the archaeologists. I was one back in my mother country. We know what and how it is happening. We can describe it.
There was a cool TV series called "Life After People" that dealt with this idea.
I'm honestly unable to figure out if I'm being proposed to or not.
Theres a great show that used to be on history channel called Life after Humans and went farther and farther into the future assuming humans were not on earth.
Modern buildings are designed to be maintained regularly, so I'm guessing our high rises would eventually collapse, outlasted by far more ancient buildings of stone
Are there any structures or architecture out there designed with this in mind? Like after the worlds collapses and everyone moves to the arc/habitats, are there any buildings designed for this specific epoch?
Nature would reclaim it all 😀🙏🫡
Hmmm...
Picking mushrooms in the library.
Leaving mushrooms in the sun lets them absorb vitamin D... I suppose we'll cook them on the roof, and harvest corn from time square.
How do you spell spear in cuneiform?
Amazing shorts✌
one of my fav thoughts 😇
Idk what will happen thousands of years after humanity is gone . But if current events are anything to go by, nature always wins.
Someone once mentioned that disneyworld will eventually be one of the strangest and scariest places on earth when its abandoned
The earth needs humanity to grow more and humanity need earth, so its vice versa, we are with nature we are connected
I'm going to diss the concept of the Anthropocene, because the Holocene already matches nicely. The sudden methane bloom from the beginning of agriculture and pastoralism arrested what would have been a slide back into a stronger ice age 10,000 years ago. Anthropocene is a marketing term, nothing more.
If you ever see my overgrown back garden, it’s already happening, it’s like a rainforest.
I believe it happened a couple of times already. We destroy each other the planet cleans itself up. we start all over
Dami ❤
I will take everything in my power to keep you safe.
Simple, consider creation stopped on 5th day...but then again,...
Oh hey you choose Singapore. Hi. Thought that skyline was familar
There’s a whole series that examines this hypothetical: Life After People
Ah yea the smarter dami twin is back
Your obsessed with the Robarts library
What’s the name of the piano piece?
It would be wild to see all the cheap concrete basically dissolve
Mold and fungi growing out of book pages? Pretty crummy library.
Why did the idea of a planet suddenly without humans give me a little high?
I _BLAM_ humans...
Look at the Amazonia or lost maya cities!
Where the full video?
"The World Without Us Book by Alan Weisman" will be a good book about human extinction
I ❤ YOU DAMI
I don’t like to think of it as a World Without Us. It’s more like a World Beyond Us.
What about nuclear reactor meltdown without people to maintain them?