Y’all should do a compilation of studies that have changed (like things we didn’t know and now do, etc..)since you’ve made a video on the changing subjects.
@@opium42069 I mean. He showed pictures of himself fairly fresh out of college on some form of social media. That would've been like 17 years ago roughly and it looks like it's no more than 3
Funny story about the Alvin sub. I was so scared of getting a new job that I decided to talk to a therapist to help me through the process (job security issues/constant rejction in the past). At my first appointment, he had a shirt on that had a small picture of it. Being a scuba diver, myself, I was curious and asked him about it. Turned out he was part of the crew of the Alvin sub. :)
What we learned recently: In order to study the deep sea species you have to go there and take samples in highly pressurised receptacles. A LOT of planning and work involved. We actually never really thought about this before. So we followed the scientists along on their quest to the depths of the ocean. That was very insightful and great fun indeed.
@whesley hynes what do you suppose they do in order to study them? By understanding the inner goings on of an organism we can understand it's function and place in the eco system and help to preserve it from harmful practices. As they said in the video is humans can help benefit from these animals through biomimicry by finding less harmful ways of producing things we have access to now. To call scientists psychopaths for dissections is an incredibly backwards way of thinking that limits discovery.
@@avematthew Thousands of autopsies of humans happen every day. Usually it's for knowledge (like figuring out what killed the person, often to even figure out WHO killed the person). Sounds pretty compelling to me...
I remember the video from Nautilus Live when they found that Deepstaria. It was such a great moment, listening to professional scientists geek out like college kids. And the animal itself was just plain gorgeous, mysterious, and fascinating.
The entire bacteria - tube worm symbiotic relationship is super cool and actually might be a good way of understanding how more evolved animals initially developed mitochondria millions of years ago.
'More evolved' animals didn't develop mitochondria. Singles celled organisms 'developed' mitochondria through a process called endosymbiosis where one cell lives inside another, and over millions of years, these became one organism.
"Who knew a giant mouthless buttless worm would redefine what we know about how life works on our planet". I agree my friend. And how weird is it that that worm makes blood plumes? Boom 🤯
in a few billion years or so those tube worms could go the same route as the ancestors of plants where the photo/chemosynthetic bacteria fuse with their respective hosts.
I love when you guys make videos like this ,the other more sciencey videos I find hard to follow since I'm not a science guy but I'm a animal lover to the core ,much Love from Compton california
I super recommend Kurzegesagt (in a nutshell) bc they make really nice educational entertainment videos but they also give a bit more background info on the chemistry and physics at play. Their videos are still super fun to watch but by the end of them you secretly have learned some science stuff.
@@Axodus i was just saying its an amazing game that i still have dreams about a year after i beat it. not saying its particularly accurate. just amazing.
@@alexscriabin You will love it! I've done 3-4 playthroughs over the years and love it every time. The second one is being worked on now so you'll have another one to look forward to
Not much in Subnautica really qualifies as "deep sea". The large majority of the game takes place in shallower depths or underground, with appropriate kinds of life. Even in the deepest areas you see pretty shallow-water-like vertebrates and cephalopods.
Like, ever? I mean, some things will probably die and not leave any fossils and we'll never know it existed...that's probably happened a lot. So, yeah! You right!
Interesting point, the truly gigantic Stygiomedusa Gigantea has a little friend of its own. On the rare occasion we spot one(only 110 or so have been in the century or so since we discovered them!) They always have an Itty bitty fish called Thalassobathia Pelagica. I recall it being mentioned said fishy isn't found anywhere else(could be wrong on that and sadly no time to research 😢) its usually seen right up underneath the bell. I find it intriguing how incredibly different from most jellies they are. Almost like they are more evolved. I suspect the relationship is the jellies offer a safe place to live and the fish rids them of parasites. Its a bit vexing that despite having observed these deep sea behemoths(deepstaria, Stygiomedusa and big red...Tiburon?) We've never really examined one it the lab. That must be epically aggravating to biologists. I recall the lady who invented the splat screen and jelly fish lure and pioneered research into bioluminescence. She also had a big hand in figuring out how to attract an arcateuthis dux. During a submersible dive with the Monterey Bay folks she had the incredible luck to run into(almost literally!) A Stygiomedusa Gigantea. It was so close they couldn't use thrusters and was only a few feet away from her. She very well may be the only biologist to ever come so close. They observed and photographed for a good bit of time. Yet how frustrating that there is simply no way to capture one(well trawlers occasionally get one but that really tells nothing as they are pretty much nothing but a mangled ball of snot afterwards and can be hard to tell if it was even a jelly or if a whale sneezed...hmm can whales sneeze!? I digress, as far as hands on examination such creatures might as well be on the dark side of the moon!
I start to think life only really needs two things to happen: Lots of possible elements to work with (especially highly active elements and compounds) and a place that has a (mild) energy flow of some sort (e.g. heat).
I think I'm going to like this guy's channel. I'm going to learn a ton on this channel. And the sources are extremely interesting and ear catching. Good stuff.
Hank says symbiosis between tubeworms and bacteria could be thought of as "basically...an infection", but I'd like to think of it more like the bacteria have entered into a "pre/new construction agreement" before the rest of the (tubeworm) condos have been finished!
i clicked on this video expecting spooky fish and parallel-universe john green and im suddenly greeted with one of the most gorgeous human beings ive ever seen????? help????????????
I had an idea: what if the isopod lives inside the jellyfish to help attract prey for the jelly - predators of the isopod would smell(?) or sense the isopod and run into the jelly on accident. The jelly benefits by having something to attract prey and the isopod enjoys scraps of food inside the jellys digestive system. thoughts?
Micheal if you added an eye patch you'd look just like Snake Pliskin these days. Another great video from you and the team. Thank you for continuing to make these during these crazy, trying times.
Just a quick theory but could deepstaria and the isopod have a food based relationship? Perhaps the jelly is coated in a film the isopod finds appealing, whilst perhaps the isopods waste can be filtered by the host? Essentially recycling nutrition between the two in times when food is scarce? Anyways, great vid sci-show!
14:20 Hydrogen is also what mitochrondia use. Most energy is produced by combining hydrogen with oxygen to produce water. We also do burn carbon but the vast majority of our energy comes from hydrogen. This is why most now believe the place where life originated most likely was some kind of hydrothermal vent with a continuous flow of hydrogen.
1:11 it looks like its being lit by a 90s stage lighting setup/show that's been recently upscaled to HD I don't know what made me think of that but it was my immediate thought
Has anyone else noticed that Olivia ends every sentence on the same note? Like, there's no variance in her cadence. It's hard to un-notice it. Edit: I'm not trying to be mean or critical, though I recognize it may come off like that. She's a great presenter!
The creatures found at the bottom of the ocean and the fact that they can thrive under such enormous pressures and no sunlight are enough to make us question our own understanding of what "life" means. I'm sure this same rule applies to other planets, too. For all we know, there are creatures that breathe hydrogen and can survive under enormous amounts of pressure with hardly any sunlight.
Y’all should do a compilation of studies that have changed (like things we didn’t know and now do, etc..)since you’ve made a video on the changing subjects.
Hella good idea
@whesley hynes you can stop spamming the same thing everywhere schizo
Imagine being in a submarine far into the ocean, you land and the floor bleeds.
Sounds like something comming from a eldritch horror novel
yeah I would be excited as I love eldritch horror but also terrified
I thought that too!
The deep ocean honestly IS an eldritch horror novel X_X
Poor floor
I think Alvin was unmanned, so they were seeing all this through a camera. Idk if that's better or worse.
Micheal has a new hairstyle every video yet Hank hasn’t changed in 5 years. Both look great!
It's the familiar, yet unfamiliar, new but old, consistent yet inconsistent
Some say Hank has been like that for 27yrs
Bro half of the scishow cast are vampires... makes sense now ?
@@opium42069 I mean. He showed pictures of himself fairly fresh out of college on some form of social media. That would've been like 17 years ago roughly and it looks like it's no more than 3
the first thing i thought when i saw the video was "michael the witcher"
Isopods say "I know a place" and take you to a deepstaria jellyfish.
🤣
Underrated
Remora fish going "I know a place" then they lead you to the side of a Great White.
Petula Clark.
Deep sea fap sesh
Funny story about the Alvin sub. I was so scared of getting a new job that I decided to talk to a therapist to help me through the process (job security issues/constant rejction in the past). At my first appointment, he had a shirt on that had a small picture of it. Being a scuba diver, myself, I was curious and asked him about it. Turned out he was part of the crew of the Alvin sub. :)
What we learned recently: In order to study the deep sea species you have to go there and take samples in highly pressurised receptacles. A LOT of planning and work involved. We actually never really thought about this before. So we followed the scientists along on their quest to the depths of the ocean. That was very insightful and great fun indeed.
@whesley hynes what do you suppose they do in order to study them? By understanding the inner goings on of an organism we can understand it's function and place in the eco system and help to preserve it from harmful practices. As they said in the video is humans can help benefit from these animals through biomimicry by finding less harmful ways of producing things we have access to now. To call scientists psychopaths for dissections is an incredibly backwards way of thinking that limits discovery.
What we learned today? Not too sure, couldn't really listen. I had too concentrate on the SCIENCE GUY WITH A MULLET
@@almostded2818 really depends on the organism. Tube worms, maybe fine? Vertebrates, better have a very compelling reason besides "for knowledge".
@whesley hynes "sacrifices must be made for the greater good" - Unit 731
@@avematthew Thousands of autopsies of humans happen every day. Usually it's for knowledge (like figuring out what killed the person, often to even figure out WHO killed the person). Sounds pretty compelling to me...
I remember the video from Nautilus Live when they found that Deepstaria. It was such a great moment, listening to professional scientists geek out like college kids. And the animal itself was just plain gorgeous, mysterious, and fascinating.
The swept back is a good look on you Michael, rock on.
I hoped i would find a comment like that! :D
That’s a mullet I thought
GOd he looks really nice
Thanks
@@mizzshortie907 no, a mullet is when you trim and spike the front while leaving the back long.
Aranda is slowly transforming into the green power ranger, when he had that late 80s early 90s mullet going on.
8o8p
SciShow: For over a century, their habit of fatally overeating was the main way scientists collected specimens
Me: noice
The entire bacteria - tube worm symbiotic relationship is super cool and actually might be a good way of understanding how more evolved animals initially developed mitochondria millions of years ago.
'More evolved' animals didn't develop mitochondria. Singles celled organisms 'developed' mitochondria through a process called endosymbiosis where one cell lives inside another, and over millions of years, these became one organism.
@@leahdragon you pretty much said "you're wrong, but actually right"
@@MazeMaker4Life Because they're kinda right, but not really because mitochondria predate animals by a good stretch of time 🙃
The big mystery: why is he wearing a jacket?
No, its what's up with his hair?!
He ate 70 hot dogs
Their office might be cold?
somebody has gained a tad bit of weight
Heater is broken perhaps. Lol , great question. You're very observant 💯🧐🔍
Who the hell ate 70 hot dogs without vomiting???
boogey2988
A lot of training
Your body is programmed to throw up if you eat too much, competitive eaters have to program their body to not do that
Any stoner after a heavy session
They dump them in water and stuff themselves . True story
Some dude at the Nathans contest ate 75. google say his name is Joey Chesnut, 75 in 10minutes. I'd rather stop at 3
"Who knew a giant mouthless buttless worm would redefine what we know about how life works on our planet". I agree my friend. And how weird is it that that worm makes blood plumes? Boom 🤯
It'd be pretty much the same as fish gills.
Hank, I'm a really big admirer of ur childish enthusiasm when u r explaining stuff. Keeps me hooked.
Awww. That drawing of the dragon fish was adorable
in a few billion years or so those tube worms could go the same route as the ancestors of plants where the photo/chemosynthetic bacteria fuse with their respective hosts.
Hair looks awesome, Michael! I’m beginning to get jealous. Lol
I love when you guys make videos like this ,the other more sciencey videos I find hard to follow since I'm not a science guy but I'm a animal lover to the core ,much Love from Compton california
I super recommend Kurzegesagt (in a nutshell) bc they make really nice educational entertainment videos but they also give a bit more background info on the chemistry and physics at play. Their videos are still super fun to watch but by the end of them you secretly have learned some science stuff.
@@kf10147 thanks I'll check it out!
Biology is a science...
This channel is the only sleep medicine that works for me
3:22 Aw man. I had a really good joke prepared about what the worms were full of if they can’t poop
"... four times as long as the swallower" lord hammercy!
"Why is it like this?!?!" pretty much sums up studies of deep sea creatures imho
I didn’t know baby Steven Seagal got hired to do sci-show now.
No way Michael is related to Steven Seagal. He's got too much range.
Thought it was john travolta
I was just thinking...mullet? wtf
Awesome!
It’s all in good fun! We love you Michael!
I love everyone being nice about Michael's hair! So nice of you guys to show restraint :)
subnautica is a masterpiece, if anyone would like a deepsea simulator.
Not exactly, there are colossal squid, but those are nothing like leviathans that actively seek you out by SCREAMING AT YOU.
@@Axodus i was just saying its an amazing game that i still have dreams about a year after i beat it.
not saying its particularly accurate. just amazing.
Outer Wilds was my game of the decade, and Subnautica got rec'd to me as "kinda like Outer Wilds but underwater", so I'm gonna check it out!
@@alexscriabin You will love it! I've done 3-4 playthroughs over the years and love it every time. The second one is being worked on now so you'll have another one to look forward to
Not much in Subnautica really qualifies as "deep sea". The large majority of the game takes place in shallower depths or underground, with appropriate kinds of life. Even in the deepest areas you see pretty shallow-water-like vertebrates and cephalopods.
Giant _Anuropus_ Isopod: (encounters _Deepstaria_ Jellyfish)
Also Giant _Anuropus_ Isopod: *_IT'S FREE REAL ESTATE_*
Michael has joined Los Lobos. It's official!
Dude, your hair looks awesome tied back! I'm currently growing mine out to do a similar style, as well
A mullet
1:54 I wonder how the researchers first reacted to that, honestly.
I am less terrified by the sea creatures than I am by the mullet.
the deep ocean is fascinating, i doubt we'll uncover all its mysteries
With time, albeit a lot, we might.
Don't tell God I told you this but most of it is piss
@@Nameorsmth dang that’s a bummer
Like, ever? I mean, some things will probably die and not leave any fossils and we'll never know it existed...that's probably happened a lot. So, yeah! You right!
If its not turned into acid first.
He never mentioned how big the giant tube worms got.. so i googled it.. they grow up to 8 feet.. over 2 meters.. now thats a GIANT tube worm!!🤯
why am i so proud of your ponytail xD
I miss Olivia 💜
I'm not sure why, but hanks delivery with his jokes kill me everytime! I'm not happy they make me laugh. But they make me laugh. XD
"a giant mouthless, buttless worm" = description of the century LMAO
Imagine how many fossils of unknown prehistoric species are buried at the bottom of the ocean that we’ll never be able to get to.
Interesting point, the truly gigantic Stygiomedusa Gigantea has a little friend of its own. On the rare occasion we spot one(only 110 or so have been in the century or so since we discovered them!) They always have an Itty bitty fish called Thalassobathia Pelagica. I recall it being mentioned said fishy isn't found anywhere else(could be wrong on that and sadly no time to research 😢) its usually seen right up underneath the bell. I find it intriguing how incredibly different from most jellies they are. Almost like they are more evolved. I suspect the relationship is the jellies offer a safe place to live and the fish rids them of parasites. Its a bit vexing that despite having observed these deep sea behemoths(deepstaria, Stygiomedusa and big red...Tiburon?) We've never really examined one it the lab. That must be epically aggravating to biologists. I recall the lady who invented the splat screen and jelly fish lure and pioneered research into bioluminescence. She also had a big hand in figuring out how to attract an arcateuthis dux. During a submersible dive with the Monterey Bay folks she had the incredible luck to run into(almost literally!) A Stygiomedusa Gigantea. It was so close they couldn't use thrusters and was only a few feet away from her. She very well may be the only biologist to ever come so close. They observed and photographed for a good bit of time. Yet how frustrating that there is simply no way to capture one(well trawlers occasionally get one but that really tells nothing as they are pretty much nothing but a mangled ball of snot afterwards and can be hard to tell if it was even a jelly or if a whale sneezed...hmm can whales sneeze!? I digress, as far as hands on examination such creatures might as well be on the dark side of the moon!
I start to think life only really needs two things to happen: Lots of possible elements to work with (especially highly active elements and compounds) and a place that has a (mild) energy flow of some sort (e.g. heat).
I think I'm going to like this guy's channel. I'm going to learn a ton on this channel. And the sources are extremely interesting and ear catching. Good stuff.
Maybe the isopod stays inside of a jellyfish to break down the waste of food after it eats, kind of like a garbage disposal
Hank says symbiosis between tubeworms and bacteria could be thought of as "basically...an infection", but I'd like to think of it more like the bacteria have entered into a "pre/new construction agreement" before the rest of the (tubeworm) condos have been finished!
I was making dinner, I came in on the black swallower segment.
This was an interesting one.
Michael looks like a Jedi master with that hairstyle, and I love it!
The Black Swallower has nothing on Tarrare.
Since the straw has no holes, as it is a tube, does that mean that worms are technically without holes as well?
biologists: we believe some things are impossible for a living creatures
bacteria: change your beliefs
i clicked on this video expecting spooky fish and parallel-universe john green and im suddenly greeted with one of the most gorgeous human beings ive ever seen????? help????????????
Funny enough, "Giant, mouthless, buttless worm" just so happened to be my nickname in highschool...
The black swallower inflating and floating up made me laugh
So basically ALVIN squished a whole bunch of worms and that’s how they discovered them 🪱
Omg! I'm loving the hair!
I had an idea: what if the isopod lives inside the jellyfish to help attract prey for the jelly - predators of the isopod would smell(?) or sense the isopod and run into the jelly on accident. The jelly benefits by having something to attract prey and the isopod enjoys scraps of food inside the jellys digestive system. thoughts?
Thanks i knew about Michael Hill! He was my professor in Oxford and told us about FBC13 algorithm!
They’re all terrifying
The Deepstaria could benefit from the isopod in that other animals could try to eat it, only to be caught by the jellyfish
Here’s my idea for why they have this relationship. The isopod helps break down the food for the jellyfish and in turn, isopod gets shelter and food
His hair is getting so long and it looks so good
Nice talk
Manbun comin'? Love it!
I really want to snuggle with Michael wearing that vest... he looks cozy.
Micheal if you added an eye patch you'd look just like Snake Pliskin these days. Another great video from you and the team. Thank you for continuing to make these during these crazy, trying times.
How'd they get Kit Harrington on SciShow?
love this look michael !
I am LOVING Michaels long hair
Me: now how do they know those worm things are animals and not plants?
Hank: ….plumes of red blood…
Me: ah. That way.
Come on SciShow the snake was a Ball Python . Wrong pattern and Boas don't have heat pits.
Some boas do indeed have heat pits, for example, the Emerald Tree Boa. However, that is indeed a ball python lol
@@mikerich32 Quite true a sloppy statement on my part. I assumed they got lazy. I was referring to the Boa imperator and red tail Boa.
Hank's videos are the best.
'Life will find a way', how true.
13:13 New band name, or Dethklok song lol
I love these compilations
I've caught heaps of fish with isopods in their mouths so I'm not surprised about the one in the jelly fish
Very cool information. Nice delivery and great content. Thank you. 💜😊
I love that isopod already and its the first time iv seen it
Loving the hair!!!
If isopodes are more advanced life forms then aren't the jelly fish the pets
These are amazing
my questions is why the jellyfish aren't spotted with more than one isopod inside.
Just a quick theory but could deepstaria and the isopod have a food based relationship? Perhaps the jelly is coated in a film the isopod finds appealing, whilst perhaps the isopods waste can be filtered by the host? Essentially recycling nutrition between the two in times when food is scarce? Anyways, great vid sci-show!
6:45 sure someone pointed this out by now... but that's a ball python. Not a boa.
I keep coming back to see Michael's hair progress!
14:20
Hydrogen is also what mitochrondia use. Most energy is produced by combining hydrogen with oxygen to produce water. We also do burn carbon but the vast majority of our energy comes from hydrogen. This is why most now believe the place where life originated most likely was some kind of hydrothermal vent with a continuous flow of hydrogen.
The bacteria making food for the tube worms kinda reminds me of how the first mitochondria viruses got trapped in cells and started making ATP.
Is no one going to mention that Michael is rocking a mullet?! Business at the front, party at the back, hell yeah!
Is he though? I thought it was a lie ponytail pushed up/around through the coat (which nobody seems to be taking about??)
Oh I LOVE the hair
Could we develop a bacteria strain that consumes polymers to eat up all the micro plastics in our bodies?
I've never related to another animal so much in my life
the hair \m/ lovin it
If we were to find alien life in the solar system, it would be proof of panspermia.
Wow that latest subnautica update looks more realistic than ever!!
1:11 it looks like its being lit by a 90s stage lighting setup/show that's been recently upscaled to HD
I don't know what made me think of that but it was my immediate thought
"Shut your mouth, butthole!"
Tubeworm: I'm so confused...
Fantastic
Can't wait to watch this
Oh man is it lucky day because you can right now 😂
@@brandonking2223 lol
Has anyone else noticed that Olivia ends every sentence on the same note? Like, there's no variance in her cadence. It's hard to un-notice it.
Edit: I'm not trying to be mean or critical, though I recognize it may come off like that. She's a great presenter!
In comparison to ACTUAL living creatures on Earth, Bigfoot seems EXTREMELY dull (if it actually existed).
Really? 5 ads? TH-cam making their $$$
The creatures found at the bottom of the ocean and the fact that they can thrive under such enormous pressures and no sunlight are enough to make us question our own understanding of what "life" means. I'm sure this same rule applies to other planets, too. For all we know, there are creatures that breathe hydrogen and can survive under enormous amounts of pressure with hardly any sunlight.
"Endosymbiotic"......think I may have found a new favorite word...