BEFORE YOU SCROLL! - I’ve made a newer version with an all-new script, improved narration, music and editing! Check it out here: th-cam.com/video/FmR14Yng9kI/w-d-xo.html :D Some shots in this older version were removed (blurred) due to ambiguity about the licensing rights of some footage. This is also amended in the new version.
It’s so counter intuitive. I would have thought that larger animals required more fuel to keep them going… not the opposite. But then look at the Hummingbird. They’re tiny, but are absolutely voracious for an animal of their size. Pound for pound they’re one of the largest consumers on the planet, energy wise.
@@mirkofloris9979 it's like you were ignoring the part where these creatures shallow counterparts are significantly smaller. So the colossal squid is actually the rule.
@@mirkofloris9979 but I never said there are giant monsters down there. I said you weren't paying attention on account of the fact that you said the rule was false. You still haven't paid attention actually. The rule says that larger creatures are more efficient in sustaining themselves as their mass to food consumption ratios are higher. That's why I mentioned that the creatures down there are larger than their shallow counterparts. Because that was the point. The point was that bigger was better for many creatures. Not that some reached colossal sizes. Just that they were bigger.
"While there may be no Lovecraftian things in our oceans..." *Shows multiple images and footage of tentacle monstrosities and other creatures that have too many legs and wiggly bits. "Are you sure about that?"
Most deep sea documentary’s make deep sea creatures seem really scary, but I really like this video because it shows how pretty and magnificent deep sea creatures are. No spooky music bullshit, just check out this epic big friend
I found a beached giant squid when I was a kid. Called a lifeguard over and he explained a bunch of stuff about it and called someone who he said could dissect it. I got to take pictures riding on it like a horse. Still one of my coolest childhood memories
I'm so surprised that 4 months after you made this comment, there's no replies. How old were you when you did that? Did you have any kind of meta-awareness, based on what the lifeguard told you, that you were touching something that gave you an experience totally unique from virtually every other human on the planet? That it's not unlikely that at that point in time, you may have been the only person on the planet who had ridden a giant squid, specifically, like a horse? Heck, you might still be. What a weird badge of individuality to have in your catalog of experiences. Talk about rare Achievements/Trophies..."0.000000000000000000000001% of other players have earned this achievement." Commission me to draw a digital drawing of that moment and mint it as an NFT -- now THAT's uniqueness, and someone might want to buy such a unique experience for a pretty penny...(I'm not joking by the way, let's make this happen, I'll be fair in my pricing!)
bro how tf do you not get scared of that shit as a kid? you had the nerve to ride it like a horse? do you just be like oh shit a giant squid its so cute i better ride it
@@RandomPerson-ui3xv I was really into wildlife as a kid, I fished with my dad a lot and watched tons of nature documentaries. So I was comfortable around dead sea life. It didn't even occur to me that it might be gross to sit on a dead giant squid.
I thought you said "sea spiders the size of airplanes" at one point and it freaked me the hell out. Glad I went back a few seconds to listen again lol!
Well this is going viral! To all of you about to comment on the music volume, audio quality or narration issues in this video, please note this was the first ever video I made in my Deep-sea Wonders series! This was before I’d bought a mic, properly figured out my style or delved deeper into the topic, so know that I’m aware this video is far from perfect haha! My newer ones, in my opinion at least, are much better.
Good to know! Just normalizing the two audio channels in Audacity (or any other software) to different levels would probably do the trick, but a good mic is a good investment in any case! You might want to pin the comment again, bc I found this comment manually after you told me about it, but this does not show as pinned... Probably a save button somewhere, happens to the best of us ^^
@Saruman Ork-Orphanage Cheers, that’s very useful!! Audio mixing is my weakness haha. And thanks for the heads up about the pin. Seems it unpins itself when I edit the comment.
@@NaturalWorldFacts Oh right, good to know! I'm not an expert myself, but essentially you should try setting the voice to -3dB and the music to -12dB/-18dB/-24dB of course you can coose any other nuber in between, but these are sort of the settings I'd typically go for. Watch out for one thing though, Normalizing your track will raise the volume of an overall quiet track, but if it's very quiet to beginn with or if you happen to have some noise, it also enhances noise. You can and probably should clean up the noise either way, especially on your own recordings. Denoising in Audacity works by selecting a quiet stretch of the recording, from which you get a pattern for the background noise, and then you select the whole recording and apply the denoising. You'll see it's pretty good considering it's a free open source program. Audacity doesn't doo video though, keep that in mind.
The deep ocean is the most fascinating ecosystem in the world to me. The mystery of the Giant Squids for one is a particularly elusive one, a real life kraken lurking in the depths and because of the dark we just can’t find enough of them to even build a clear image of what the largest among them really look like. A titan like that completely evading our gaze and the the tiny fraction of animals that ever get fossilized make me wonder what huge beasts once existed that we will never know about.
@@BenyaminLorit my anxiety when swimming is box jellyfish. Clear and too small to see, yet deadly. Also the fish with spines on its back, if you step on it you get injected with a toxin or venom that is one of the most painful in the world. I don't touch the floor if I can help it in the shallows.
That’s alright :) I’m glad you found them useful, I’ll definitely keep on placing subtitles on all future videos. Do let me know if you need further clarity on a topic or video, I’d be very happy to help!
"Giants will be the first to go." Kind of reminds me of when the meteor struck the earth causing the big dinosaurs to go extinct and only the smaller life forms survived. There is a hidden (rarely realized) evolutionary advantages of being smaller sometimes in a long enough time scale.
makes sense, smaller creatures reproduce at a much faster rate, so they are allowed to make more mutant iterations overall, and they under the constraint of natural selection in such extreme conditions. Natural selection keeps the better ones which continue the reproduction rate making them fitter at a faster rate. Its easier for a 150 pound an to get into peak physical shape than say a 600 man man given equal desire and motivation.
@@philipfry6428 More frequent mutation is not necessarily a good thing. Humanity has far surpassed evolution when it comes to tool making and they have one of the longest reproduction periods of the animal kingdom.
@@philipfry6428 The video you supposedly just watched literally says the prevailing theory on why deep sea gigantism occurs is because larger animals are more biologically efficient than smaller animals, which is pretty much the opposite of what you're saying. "Fittist" doesn't mean what you think it does. Animals in the wild aren't hitting the gym 5 days a week. Survival of the fittest is a misrepresentation of evolution anyway, but in this conext, "fittest" basically just means "best suited for survival for various reasons." It's not necessarily about who is the fastest or strongest, it's about the particular factors that may exist that give an organism the best chance for survival. These factors can be anything, such as a chameleon's ability to change the color of it's skin or a termite's ability to digest a food source that few other animals possess. Also, bacteria are extremely small and reproduce at incredible rates, but would you argue bacteria are the planet's "best" animals?
@@realwiggles if you're speaking literally then yes, bacteria are the superior life form. Maybe using big words and being condescending doesn't make you as smart as you think it does hm ?
“While there may be no lovecraftian horrors...” I'mma call cap on that one chief. If the Goblin Shark and Great Squid exist, I'm gonna wait patiently for when Cthulhu wakes up from his nap
Did it never occur to you that the Old One might be closer than you think..? Ț͍o͙̻̝ͅ ͖̳͘in̮͇̠̫̺v̳͚̖͇̲̮ͅo̳̟͢k͔͇͈͍̺̠ḙ̭̠̻̞̯ ̵͎͔̗̞t͍͉͉h̠̭̠̲͖e̘̼̯͡ ͎͓̗h͕̳͓i̙͍̰̗̯͘v̙̼̜̠͔̰͓͢e̗̦-͖m̯̹i̬̣̯̼͓n̶̘̫̩͓d͙̞̘̮̖̞ ̷̝̭̞̝̯r̮̰̥̦̥̺͔e̫ͅp̢͉͎̪̫̥͕̯r̬͇̜͕͍̬e҉̪͚̘̺͈͖s̸̙͉̳̣͕̼̗en̗͕͉ͅt̯̘̗i̭̳͇̻̕n̪͉̩͔g̢ ̜̖̘c̨h̫͍̥a̮͎̤̗̻o̞̦̲̗̼s҉̥̫̯̠̯.̷̹̱̩̭ ̣͍͇̘͚Ì̭n̞͓̬̖̘͎̙v͇̻̬̟̘͠o̴k̷̲̞̤̟̯͇i̦n̲̦̻̺̺̹̱g̦̯̥̤͕͚̺ ̧̰͔t̡̥̰̻̻h̖̝͙̀e̻̣̻ ̳̲f̖̦̲̝̖e̷̪̭̣͉e̬̱͈͉l̟̪̥̙͈i̤̜͠n̠͕̻g̨̩̻͍͎̜̳ ̺̩̣̪̰͕͡o̖̟̟̼͕̙͈͠f̵̟ c̳͠h͙a̢̮os̡̟̣̜.̘͚̼ ̪W̶̦̻̺i̖̜̮̪͙th̞͡ ͓̟̫̫o̴̥̮̮̗̠̱u̳̩t҉̥̲ ̤͓̺o̲͜r̹͔͘d͓̠͈̙͙̠͢e̱͇̜̟̻͖̪r͖̱̞̖͙̭̪.̷̣̳ ͖͈͚̝͠Ț̼̝h̷̟̣̙͚ͅe̗̟͞ ̵Ǹȩ̲͚͙̪͖z͡p҉̞̘e̬r͚̀d̰̠̪̤̠͠i̡̞̫à͓̜͍n͚̖ ̢̙̙h̰̙i̫̲̞̥̮ṿ̱̰e̞̪̤-̦̤m̶͖i̮̜n̤d̩ ̤̯o̞͕̼̻̣ͅf̥̞̜̹̦̝͓ ̮̣c͚͈̬̖̹ha͕͙o̷̰͎s͕̘̟̘̠̤͞.̱̮̟̬ ͎̹̳̻͞Z͈̹̞̻a̷l̡g̵̟͉͖͓͕̘̙o͍̪̳̗̰̰͞.̢̳ ̗̙͔̦H̨͎̖e ͈̯̗̘͈̗w̰̫̞͍̻̮͡h̗̫̯̗̙̺̫͜o̬̼̣̟͙ ҉̮̗̰͇W̲̺̹͝a̺̟̣͍͚̳̳͡i͏͍̦̫͔͍̖͈t̗̲͙͇̞̪̖͞s̤ ̼̮̘́B̶̘̖e͎̪̰͔͎̘h̡i͍̯̙͈̦̘̙n̤͎̦͔̣ͅḏ̀ ͍̜̳̪̰͖T͍͎̫ḩ̲̠͕̩e ̹W̰̮̦̭̩al̲̯̰̭̘̳̀l̝͚̪̪̺̦̙. ̳͕͈̰Ẓ͝ͅA̙̘͖̘͚͍͚̕L͝G̸͈̠̝͓̝̣O!͓͢
For cthulhu we just have to wait until they find some giant cuddlefish. I mean, have you seen them? Idk much about the ocean, they might have already found some lol.
This is reminiscent of a golden era Discovery or Nat Geo documentary, seriously. What to say... the music, footage and narration are all basically flawless and combine to capture the eerie otherworldly atmosphere perfectly. Fantastic work, mate.
“Deep sea gigantism, like sea spiders the size of dinner plates.” Goliath bird eating spider: “You know what? I’m sick and fed up of this. Are we nothing to you?”
Except that deep sea spider deals with atmospheric pressure that would turn the goliath bird water into paste in under a second, so yes it is a joke in comparrison.
This video is a masterpiece. Everything is so incredible, the explainations, the music, the footages, the editing and the voice as well, it really creates this sort of eerie atmosphere as if it were me swimming in the abyss myself and looking at these extraordinary creatures. Really awesome video!
I feel the same way, people comment about so much irrelevant stuff, while I am just frozen and exploding in the same time over what I just experienced.
When you think about it, a lot of the benefits of being larger in the deep sea overlap. A lower metabolism often means a longer lifespan, which means more chances to reproduce, and also reduces the need for the species to encounter a mate so regularly. Aside from conserving energy, a large size also suits to suits to help them ignore smaller predators, and allows them to store more food as they travel throughout the depths. Something to note: many smaller deep sea creatures have stretchy stomachs, but you don't see that in the larger animals. Deep sea animals play the long game, it would seem. tl;dr living that far down in the ocean is the epitome of the "Objective: Survive" meme, and being big helps with that.
@@dahleno2014 I only understand it when they use it as a joke like when they explain something in vivid detail then after that they'll type "tl;dr" then dumb it way down
one time i was swimming at the beach, fairly deep you could say, and all of a sudden, i saw a white-black figure in the water. i quickly ascended, and later concluded that it was, in fact, an astronaut in the ocean.
Aww thank you so much :) Your support means a lot! If you’re interested, I’ve done more deep sea videos of this style. Look on my channel for recent ones with the similar thumbnail style but on deep sea vents, brine pools or whale falls ☺️
@Mike Bison I couldn’t agree more! Everything feels so cheap and watered down these days, as if people making it think we’re all mindless drones. There are still some gems of shows and music out there, though! But it’s a shame they’ve become rare diamonds in the rough.
Man these creatures are amazing. I was very disappointed to find out that even at the depths of the Mariana Trench, scientists were able to find plastic. Btw, this channel just earned a sub:)
If I was rich bro I was advertise the fuck outta this video, this hit so perfect at 2am. It feels illegal that this doesn’t have as much views as it should
SEA SPIDERS. SIZE OF DINNER PLATES. One second, I need to burn down world and start over again. That is way bigger than any spider has any rights to be.
I actually learned so much. I was expecting a mumbling voice saying the same few sentences over and over before answering the question in the title in three seconds
For me it's not even the creatures at all, it's just starting into this endless void you'll never see the reaches of. I get very queasy playing Subnautica when starting at the empty drop-offs of deep caves or the dead zone, sometimes even having to take a break, but at the same time will square up with the ghost leviathans with nothing but a basic prawn suit, a repair tool, and a lot of batteries.
@@callmecharlie4250 damn same. I can feel vaguely ok facing off against a mob once I know it’s there, but like if the water changes color too fast I have to pause the game and take a quick breather. Idk personally for me there something just about the terror, the anticipation for something horrid, like danger or anything else, is worse than the actual creature. Cause I can reason away this is a video game when I’m seeing it, but the terror of anticipation kills me everytime, and it legit immobilizes me while playing. And frankly in real life too, tho in real life I’m scared of every single thing in the ocean doesn’t matter if I know it’s there.
This was fantastic to watch as someone who has always loved the deep sea. Well narrated, great footage, and a perfect musical accompaniment. Beautiful and fascinating. Hopefully we can save some of these amazing animals from the damage we have done as humans. Thank you for creating this.
@@KhoiruunisaRF By cleaning up pollution and preventing changes to the climate that will kill them. Did you think 'save the planet' meant 'collect for charity'?
@@kpeters909 everything is wrong with that. the fact that those creatures that we never even see dies because of us all the while never even seeing them yet says a lot about how our actions are affecting the natural ecosystem. having the ecosystem falling disrupt won't only affect these animals, but also us humans. everything is wrong with that. and being worried is the right attitude to have towards that. we are the smartest species in this planet and we have the consciousness to be responsible for everything that will affect this planet. especially that we are doing things that greatly takes part in that. the right actions need to be done. unless you want to wipe humanity away.
@@hitormisshuhYou are just brainwashed, probably at school like this YT guy. Life on Earth is a dynamic equilibrium that swings in one direction, then back in the other direction. Creatures are lost and gained in either direction. It has been this way since life on Earth began; before and after several mass extinction events. The biggest effect on climate change is the Sun, not humankind. The Earth and Sun combined, have many cycles between them of different lengths of time, and all effect life on Earth, for good or bad. 6,000 yrs ago, the Sahara desert was grassland, in another 8,000 yrs, that grass land will be back, as the Sun is part way through a particular 14,000 yr cycle that has affected rainfall in that longitude of the planet. It is only political rhetoric and big business that makes money out of us that try and convince us We are causing climate change and "killing the planet". Que Greta, and her "ruined" life 🙄
Man, imagine how many of those prehistoric creatures that may well be still lurking in the deep. something like 80% of the deep sea is still not mapped or researched.
@@canadasown02 But from what little we know, most of the life down there is small. Outside of squids and 6 gill sharks what else is really big down there?
Love the videos on the deep sea!! Such great video material and I find the narration very easy to follow! Very clear with good timing and somehow calming as well. Sometimes narrators put almost too much emphasis and dramatic pomp into their delivery... especially in documentaries: I myself find this rather distracting from the actual content and usually won't remember much of what was said😶
How ? Australia's giants have all been killed off I doubt anyone would classify Australia as an island. It is not a hard and fast rule, many species actually become smaller in isolation. Giantism is more to do with predators rather than the isolation.
Honestly the ending made me really sad. As terrified as the big ocean creatures might be to us, they benefit their deep down ecosystem as much as they get 'benefit' from it. The fact global warming will cause the death of these giants is very sad (as it for all creatures suffering at our expense...)
Sadly iirc we are the next massive extinction, the rate of which the species are disappearing is really high and getting higher, let’s see in what ways this comes to bite us in the ass 😩
Why?- is ultimately the most fascinating questions that most evolutionary theorists seem to ignore. This was extremely interesting, thank you. Contributing for the algorithm.
In college I wanted be either a marine biologist or a doctor. Currently in medical school now, but your videos are making me question everything. Well done, keep it up! 🧡
@@youmenow7942 Vibe means vibration. So as a noun something or someones vibration means their emotional atmosphere. The feelings they project subconsciously. But used as a verb, it means to be in harmony with oneself. Existing effortlessly.
@@apocalypse2819 it's not subnautica where the "dead zone" contains microorganisms and leviathan class lifeforms... Unless these leviathans eat planktons, like whales do, they wouldn't survive in a place without constant food. It's not like there can be a huge megalodon waiting for humans to have dinner on
Because 90% of the people going to youtube are casuals and only interested in bouncing ass short vids and youtube actually supports them thru monetization while informative vids like these tend to get demonitize i forgot what channel is it but its sad he had to stop creating content bec youtube stunted his growth.
So it doesn’t have anything to do with the pressure condensing the oxygen levels they would breathe? I know prehistoric insects were larger due to the oxygen levels, i just figured the deeper you go the more oxygen a deep sea animal would take in and you’d see the same kind of thing. Interesting video.
The oxygen levels are actually lower than at the surface. Organisms simply adapted to the lower levels. There are graphs online that show the oxygen levels for each "section" of the ocean as you get deeper. The patterns are really interesting; the lowest oxygen levels are actually in the middle region, followed by the deepest region.
"there may not be lovecraftian horrors" *literally shows the giant spider crab in the video* Edit: 6:08 you're just gonna sit there and tell me that's not a lovecraftian horror?
This channel has an intoxicating almost meditative effect, it literally drags you in and immerses you so deeply and clearly through this magnificent world of ours. The music is chosen so perfectly, I seriously fucking LOVE it. No channel captures the wonders of biology like this one.
Your voice combined with the music makes me feel like a deep sea post graduate student who is listening to the prerecorded lessions of life, present at the depth in visiting
@@squashua7727 unless you have a cardboard desk there’s no way to throw a controller through wood lmao. or you launched the controller with a. cannon or some shit
I studied marine biology and you have such passion for the subject, your videos are wonderfully made and very clear; they rekindle my passion right away! Amazing job dude! (your voice is also very suited to doing voice-overs for docs like these)
I couldn't be happier to have found this channel. The relaxing voice, smooth narration and interesting educational material make for an excellent ambiance while I work. ♡
I absolutely LOVE watching videos like this, they’re so fascinating. It’s always sad to realise the human population is largely contributing to the extinction of such cool creatures through climate change. I wish the fight against climate change didn’t feel so hopeless, humans as a whole should be working together to help our beautiful planet and the creatures on it live on. On another note - this video was so cool and i hope more people get it in their recommend :)
Thank you!!!! 😊😊 I do the narration myself but the beautiful raw footage is from various exploration institutes - see the description for creds, I reccomend checking them out
fun fact: nothing is STRANGE, only UNFAMILIAR. just because we are able to realize or discover something that we dont know much about or we didn't know before doesn't mean that it's weird or strange. Especially when it comes to science and nature. Just a reminder that these unfamiliar things were here before we, modern humans came to be. It is only our behavior and perceptions that make things "strange" because we're too ignorant about them.
nothing like acting woke by being a sophist shithead huh? whoop de fucking do, someone didn't use the perfect word for the situation, while strictly obeying the definition written in the dictionary. what propaganda. instead of actually important subjects, let's just argue X isn't the word to use in this context that everyone perfectly understands.
Well because in land there is no buoyancy at play, pressure and gravity does affect organisms which might mean they have to be smaller to survive underground
@@dragos8839 Well there's a few. One main one is a part of the hollow(ish) earth theory where the south pole (and maybe the north pole) has entry into the underground where humanoid things (people?) exist.
@@UncleMerlin Trust me it's REALLY convincing. I would 100% believe in it if it didn't break the law of gravity. These theorists are very talented, I must say. Also, this one is like 2-300 years old.
phenomenal video dude! you explain everything so clearly and bring in other great examples to support the point, the music adds to the intrigue and with the amazing editing it's perfect. this is the first of your videos i've seen, i'm definitely subscribing and i'm gonna binge all your others with my dad! he's only just gotten into the natural world during the pandemic and it's been so fun teaching and learning with him. thank you :)
"While there may be no Lovecraftian horrors lurking in the deep oceans--" Sir. You will excuse me if I do not take your word for it. *goes to live in a land locked territory far, far away from Deep Ones*
This somehow made me hate and appreciate the ocean so much more. The fact a concept of Gigantism can even exist and be applied ANYWHERE in our world is scary and amazing at the same time Thank you so much for making this video
The music, the images, the facts and your calm voice just make for an amazing video. TH-cam recommendations have brought me here and I'm glad it did so. You really need some sponsors, a patreon or some kind of donation sistem for people to support you. I can't belive you're under 50k subs, your videos look like they were straight from Nat Geo Wild or something. Good job
Thank you so much! I really appreciate your support! I have a paypal donation link, and offer a Channel Membership by clicking ‘join’ under a video (instead of Patreon), but honestly I’m still blown away that anybody watches these at all let alone would want to donate! The support I’ve had is incredible, and it’s all thanks to people like you :)
@@NaturalWorldFacts you deserve it man. Even though I can't donate myself it's a great thing other people can. But I feel like you do this videos with passion and it shows. Keep up with the good work!
Thanks so much mate :) Even just taking the time to watch and leave a comment helps out so much and is incredibly motivating! I feel very lucky to have such a lovely community growing around the channel, I really hope you enjoy what’s to come. Drop me a comment whenever you like :)
That’s huge, I feel so honoured to be used by teachers, say hey to them from me 😊 If they or you ever want any extra info on the deep sea, don’t hesitate to get in touch or drop me a comment. Interacting with fellow deep sea lovers is why I make these!!
BEFORE YOU SCROLL! - I’ve made a newer version with an all-new script, improved narration, music and editing! Check it out here: th-cam.com/video/FmR14Yng9kI/w-d-xo.html :D
Some shots in this older version were removed (blurred) due to ambiguity about the licensing rights of some footage. This is also amended in the new version.
Imagine living peacefully at the bottom of the ocean and out of nowhere some human comes and calls you ugly
Lol that’s what we do!
let me guess, you are subscribed to the "existential turtle" aka "exurb1a" ?
@TC Abby XO
Can't wait for aliens to do the same to us!
I want to find the background music for this video
It’s so counter intuitive. I would have thought that larger animals required more fuel to keep them going… not the opposite. But then look at the Hummingbird. They’re tiny, but are absolutely voracious for an animal of their size. Pound for pound they’re one of the largest consumers on the planet, energy wise.
Exactly!! It’s a very strange but very important phenomenon
@@NaturalWorldFacts one of those things that makes sense but still seems strange
@@mirkofloris9979 it's like you were ignoring the part where these creatures shallow counterparts are significantly smaller.
So the colossal squid is actually the rule.
@@mirkofloris9979 but I never said there are giant monsters down there. I said you weren't paying attention on account of the fact that you said the rule was false. You still haven't paid attention actually.
The rule says that larger creatures are more efficient in sustaining themselves as their mass to food consumption ratios are higher.
That's why I mentioned that the creatures down there are larger than their shallow counterparts. Because that was the point. The point was that bigger was better for many creatures. Not that some reached colossal sizes. Just that they were bigger.
It's because they spend too much energy flapping those wings.
the deep sea used to scare my sister so much that she wouldn’t even swim in the ocean on grand theft auto
For good reason too. In story mode if you swim too far a shark will spawn and eat you out of nowhere
@@tfcbioshock Holy shit
Your sister and I are similar except for me it's not being able to swim in Minecraft lol. It's so embarrassing but I just can't
@@terenntracy9113 well there’s zombies down there
there's a ufo underwater in GTA 5 if you look hard enough. it would be terrifying to accidentally stumble on lol
For anyone who's was curious, the jellyfish at 6:08 is the Halitrephes maasi or firework jellyfish
It is beautiful
I looks straight out of a sci fi movie, incredible
It looks like it could be a Bioshock boss fight
i didnt see any jellyfish, only a huge eyeball
It's so beautiful
"Detecting multiple leviathan class lifeforms in the region. Are you certain whatever you're doing is worth it?"
I was just playing some Subnautica 😎
No i am not
@@NaturalWorldFacts pro tip: turn off the lights so no one can see your wet pants
I understood that reference!
😂
"While there may be no Lovecraftian horrors lurking in our oceans--"
SAYS YOU!
😈😈
Who has the audacity to deny the existence of our beloved Kos, or as some say Kosm?
"Reaper_leviathan:roar"
Edit:"leviathan" misspelled
I dunno, that’s pretty fishy.
"While there may be no Lovecraftian things in our oceans..."
*Shows multiple images and footage of tentacle monstrosities and other creatures that have too many legs and wiggly bits.
"Are you sure about that?"
Most deep sea documentary’s make deep sea creatures seem really scary, but I really like this video because it shows how pretty and magnificent deep sea creatures are. No spooky music bullshit, just check out this epic big friend
everyone gangsta until the cloverfield monster does a bellyflop out of the Mariana Trench
Kinda reminds me of subnautica
th-cam.com/video/uLdISMFytt4/w-d-xo.html
You can't even form a plural.
@@NoTaboos but I'm peaking like the Urals
I found a beached giant squid when I was a kid. Called a lifeguard over and he explained a bunch of stuff about it and called someone who he said could dissect it. I got to take pictures riding on it like a horse. Still one of my coolest childhood memories
I'm so surprised that 4 months after you made this comment, there's no replies. How old were you when you did that? Did you have any kind of meta-awareness, based on what the lifeguard told you, that you were touching something that gave you an experience totally unique from virtually every other human on the planet? That it's not unlikely that at that point in time, you may have been the only person on the planet who had ridden a giant squid, specifically, like a horse? Heck, you might still be.
What a weird badge of individuality to have in your catalog of experiences. Talk about rare Achievements/Trophies..."0.000000000000000000000001% of other players have earned this achievement." Commission me to draw a digital drawing of that moment and mint it as an NFT -- now THAT's uniqueness, and someone might want to buy such a unique experience for a pretty penny...(I'm not joking by the way, let's make this happen, I'll be fair in my pricing!)
YOOOOO I wish you could post the pic 😭😭😭😭
bro how tf do you not get scared of that shit as a kid? you had the nerve to ride it like a horse? do you just be like oh shit a giant squid its so cute i better ride it
@@RandomPerson-ui3xv I was really into wildlife as a kid, I fished with my dad a lot and watched tons of nature documentaries. So I was comfortable around dead sea life. It didn't even occur to me that it might be gross to sit on a dead giant squid.
Uhhhh squids bodies lie flat when out of water, so care to explain how this was possible? Did you mean to tell this story about an imaginary whale?
The TH-cam recommendations have brought me here, I hope everyone gets this masterpiece
I’m so glad you enjoyed 😊
same, I’m glad this video was recommended to me. it is so well explained
All hail TH-cam gods
Give us a 4k shroud.
Same reason I'm here!
him: "sea spiders-"
my arachnophobia, bashing me in the face with a crowbar: BET YOU THOUGHT THE SEA WAS SPIDERLESS HUH??
I won't cry if climate change kills that one.
I killed a idiot spider and felt life sleeping.
RIGHT I GOT SO FUCKING UNCOMFORTABLE THEY FIND ME WHEREVER I GO
If it helps, they aren’t true spiders.
Spiders are so cute tho
I thought you said "sea spiders the size of airplanes" at one point and it freaked me the hell out. Glad I went back a few seconds to listen again lol!
😂😂😂 now that would be terrifying!
Ahaha 😂😂😂😂😂
christ that's scary😂😂
let's not leave that possibility out just yet
There are no Airplane Sized Crabs but look up an image of the Spider Crab which I believe lives in the Pacific.
Well this is going viral! To all of you about to comment on the music volume, audio quality or narration issues in this video, please note this was the first ever video I made in my Deep-sea Wonders series! This was before I’d bought a mic, properly figured out my style or delved deeper into the topic, so know that I’m aware this video is far from perfect haha! My newer ones, in my opinion at least, are much better.
Good to know! Just normalizing the two audio channels in Audacity (or any other software) to different levels
would probably do the trick, but a good mic is a good investment in any case!
You might want to pin the comment again, bc I found this comment manually after you told me about it, but this does not show as pinned...
Probably a save button somewhere, happens to the best of us ^^
@Saruman Ork-Orphanage Cheers, that’s very useful!! Audio mixing is my weakness haha.
And thanks for the heads up about the pin. Seems it unpins itself when I edit the comment.
@@NaturalWorldFacts Oh right, good to know!
I'm not an expert myself, but essentially you should try setting the voice to -3dB and the music to -12dB/-18dB/-24dB of course you can coose any other nuber in between, but these are sort of the settings I'd typically go for.
Watch out for one thing though, Normalizing your track will raise the volume of an overall quiet track, but if it's very quiet to beginn with or if you happen to have some noise, it also enhances noise.
You can and probably should clean up the noise either way, especially on your own recordings. Denoising in Audacity works by selecting a quiet stretch of the recording, from which you get a pattern for the background noise, and then you select the whole recording and apply the denoising.
You'll see it's pretty good considering it's a free open source program. Audacity doesn't doo video though, keep that in mind.
Thanks a lot for your videos, love them
Didn't even notice!! 😊
I'm not fat, I'm just efficient
@@JoseSantos-el8nj lolololol 😂
lol
Beached whale comes to mind...
@Deneb frenemies
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
The deep ocean is the most fascinating ecosystem in the world to me. The mystery of the Giant Squids for one is a particularly elusive one, a real life kraken lurking in the depths and because of the dark we just can’t find enough of them to even build a clear image of what the largest among them really look like. A titan like that completely evading our gaze and the the tiny fraction of animals that ever get fossilized make me wonder what huge beasts once existed that we will never know about.
Or still exist. It's literally what causes my anxiety when swimming in areas where I can't see the bottom. Lol
Reminds me of the new Love Death + Robots short about the giant washing up on the shore
The Congo is also another fascinating ecosystem for me
Most large squids are long and thin. Not exactly girthy and capable.
@@BenyaminLorit my anxiety when swimming is box jellyfish.
Clear and too small to see, yet deadly. Also the fish with spines on its back, if you step on it you get injected with a toxin or venom that is one of the most painful in the world.
I don't touch the floor if I can help it in the shallows.
Thank you for including subtitles. I have difficulty hearing and they help me with understanding information.
That’s alright :) I’m glad you found them useful, I’ll definitely keep on placing subtitles on all future videos. Do let me know if you need further clarity on a topic or video, I’d be very happy to help!
Ehehehe dyslexic gaaang
@@itsyaboyskinnnypimp42069 that is so sweet ! Ican also help with captions if you need help, channel fried
@@ITI-xi5zx nah i just watch i for a second time lmao so i can understand it properly since i have adhd aswell and stutter the entire wombo combo
I dont know spanish
"Giants will be the first to go." Kind of reminds me of when the meteor struck the earth causing the big dinosaurs to go extinct and only the smaller life forms survived. There is a hidden (rarely realized) evolutionary advantages of being smaller sometimes in a long enough time scale.
makes sense, smaller creatures reproduce at a much faster rate, so they are allowed to make more mutant iterations overall, and they under the constraint of natural selection in such extreme conditions. Natural selection keeps the better ones which continue the reproduction rate making them fitter at a faster rate. Its easier for a 150 pound an to get into peak physical shape than say a 600 man man given equal desire and motivation.
@@philipfry6428 More frequent mutation is not necessarily a good thing. Humanity has far surpassed evolution when it comes to tool making and they have one of the longest reproduction periods of the animal kingdom.
@@philipfry6428 The video you supposedly just watched literally says the prevailing theory on why deep sea gigantism occurs is because larger animals are more biologically efficient than smaller animals, which is pretty much the opposite of what you're saying. "Fittist" doesn't mean what you think it does. Animals in the wild aren't hitting the gym 5 days a week. Survival of the fittest is a misrepresentation of evolution anyway, but in this conext, "fittest" basically just means "best suited for survival for various reasons." It's not necessarily about who is the fastest or strongest, it's about the particular factors that may exist that give an organism the best chance for survival. These factors can be anything, such as a chameleon's ability to change the color of it's skin or a termite's ability to digest a food source that few other animals possess.
Also, bacteria are extremely small and reproduce at incredible rates, but would you argue bacteria are the planet's "best" animals?
@@realwiggles if you're speaking literally then yes, bacteria are the superior life form. Maybe using big words and being condescending doesn't make you as smart as you think it does hm ?
It that were true, we wouldn't exist because Bacteria would be more optimal than evolving to the point where we are.
“ There may be no Lovecraftian horror “
Giant squid: *and i took that personally*
@Very Deep Think bout it What the hell is this
@@bunsenn5064 fresh meat
@Very Deep Think bout it huh
The giant squid is a giant friend
@Very Deep Think bout it lol wtf
“While there may be no lovecraftian horrors...” I'mma call cap on that one chief. If the Goblin Shark and Great Squid exist, I'm gonna wait patiently for when Cthulhu wakes up from his nap
Did it never occur to you that the Old One might be closer than you think..?
Ț͍o͙̻̝ͅ ͖̳͘in̮͇̠̫̺v̳͚̖͇̲̮ͅo̳̟͢k͔͇͈͍̺̠ḙ̭̠̻̞̯ ̵͎͔̗̞t͍͉͉h̠̭̠̲͖e̘̼̯͡ ͎͓̗h͕̳͓i̙͍̰̗̯͘v̙̼̜̠͔̰͓͢e̗̦-͖m̯̹i̬̣̯̼͓n̶̘̫̩͓d͙̞̘̮̖̞ ̷̝̭̞̝̯r̮̰̥̦̥̺͔e̫ͅp̢͉͎̪̫̥͕̯r̬͇̜͕͍̬e҉̪͚̘̺͈͖s̸̙͉̳̣͕̼̗en̗͕͉ͅt̯̘̗i̭̳͇̻̕n̪͉̩͔g̢ ̜̖̘c̨h̫͍̥a̮͎̤̗̻o̞̦̲̗̼s҉̥̫̯̠̯.̷̹̱̩̭
̣͍͇̘͚Ì̭n̞͓̬̖̘͎̙v͇̻̬̟̘͠o̴k̷̲̞̤̟̯͇i̦n̲̦̻̺̺̹̱g̦̯̥̤͕͚̺ ̧̰͔t̡̥̰̻̻h̖̝͙̀e̻̣̻ ̳̲f̖̦̲̝̖e̷̪̭̣͉e̬̱͈͉l̟̪̥̙͈i̤̜͠n̠͕̻g̨̩̻͍͎̜̳ ̺̩̣̪̰͕͡o̖̟̟̼͕̙͈͠f̵̟ c̳͠h͙a̢̮os̡̟̣̜.̘͚̼
̪W̶̦̻̺i̖̜̮̪͙th̞͡ ͓̟̫̫o̴̥̮̮̗̠̱u̳̩t҉̥̲ ̤͓̺o̲͜r̹͔͘d͓̠͈̙͙̠͢e̱͇̜̟̻͖̪r͖̱̞̖͙̭̪.̷̣̳
͖͈͚̝͠Ț̼̝h̷̟̣̙͚ͅe̗̟͞ ̵Ǹȩ̲͚͙̪͖z͡p҉̞̘e̬r͚̀d̰̠̪̤̠͠i̡̞̫à͓̜͍n͚̖ ̢̙̙h̰̙i̫̲̞̥̮ṿ̱̰e̞̪̤-̦̤m̶͖i̮̜n̤d̩ ̤̯o̞͕̼̻̣ͅf̥̞̜̹̦̝͓ ̮̣c͚͈̬̖̹ha͕͙o̷̰͎s͕̘̟̘̠̤͞.̱̮̟̬ ͎̹̳̻͞Z͈̹̞̻a̷l̡g̵̟͉͖͓͕̘̙o͍̪̳̗̰̰͞.̢̳
̗̙͔̦H̨͎̖e ͈̯̗̘͈̗w̰̫̞͍̻̮͡h̗̫̯̗̙̺̫͜o̬̼̣̟͙ ҉̮̗̰͇W̲̺̹͝a̺̟̣͍͚̳̳͡i͏͍̦̫͔͍̖͈t̗̲͙͇̞̪̖͞s̤ ̼̮̘́B̶̘̖e͎̪̰͔͎̘h̡i͍̯̙͈̦̘̙n̤͎̦͔̣ͅḏ̀ ͍̜̳̪̰͖T͍͎̫ḩ̲̠͕̩e ̹W̰̮̦̭̩al̲̯̰̭̘̳̀l̝͚̪̪̺̦̙.
̳͕͈̰Ẓ͝ͅA̙̘͖̘͚͍͚̕L͝G̸͈̠̝͓̝̣O!͓͢
@@NaturalWorldFacts I'm scared
@@NaturalWorldFacts i love this channel
im glad im not the only one who believes Cthulhu was/is real
For cthulhu we just have to wait until they find some giant cuddlefish. I mean, have you seen them?
Idk much about the ocean, they might have already found some lol.
This is reminiscent of a golden era Discovery or Nat Geo documentary, seriously. What to say... the music, footage and narration are all basically flawless and combine to capture the eerie otherworldly atmosphere perfectly.
Fantastic work, mate.
Cheers Andrew! This started out as a hobby so it blows me away to hear feedback like this, thank you :)
I totally agree!!.
@@NaturalWorldFacts They are amazing to watch.. Well done ✨🤍✨
@@NaturalWorldFacts this is just your hobby!? Omg that’s amazing. You get my subscribe👍🏽
@Ricky Tershak Thank you!!! I really appreciate it 😁
For Anyone Curious, the Shark at 7:34 is A Basking Shark, one of The three species that filter water for food
Thank you
The one after is a mega mouth
Every good intentioned friend: There are many more fish in the sea
The Sea:
😂😂😂
And they're HUGE!
this is hilarious
Their was a few that reminded me of my ex lmfao
Essentially, move to someplace cold and get a giant girlfriend
This was awesome to watch!
Aw thank you!
Damn Ferg i love your vids i didn't catch you for someone who would like the ocean
Didn't expect you here
Cool
and cringey to listen to
“Deep sea gigantism, like sea spiders the size of dinner plates.”
Goliath bird eating spider:
“You know what? I’m sick and fed up of this. Are we nothing to you?”
POV Australia
@@ogthanos6964 Goliath Birdeaters are from South America IIRC
@@Daniel-ld3hm POV brazjl
Huntsman Spider would like a chat 🤣
Except that deep sea spider deals with atmospheric pressure that would turn the goliath bird water into paste in under a second, so yes it is a joke in comparrison.
This video is a masterpiece. Everything is so incredible, the explainations, the music, the footages, the editing and the voice as well, it really creates this sort of eerie atmosphere as if it were me swimming in the abyss myself and looking at these extraordinary creatures. Really awesome video!
Eh, he’s talking about heat loss for animals that don’t produce body heat
I feel the same way, people comment about so much irrelevant stuff, while I am just frozen and exploding in the same time over what I just experienced.
When you think about it, a lot of the benefits of being larger in the deep sea overlap. A lower metabolism often means a longer lifespan, which means more chances to reproduce, and also reduces the need for the species to encounter a mate so regularly. Aside from conserving energy, a large size also suits to suits to help them ignore smaller predators, and allows them to store more food as they travel throughout the depths. Something to note: many smaller deep sea creatures have stretchy stomachs, but you don't see that in the larger animals. Deep sea animals play the long game, it would seem.
tl;dr living that far down in the ocean is the epitome of the "Objective: Survive" meme, and being big helps with that.
underrated comment
Same thoughts
I will never understand people who use tl;dr
@@dahleno2014 I only understand it when they use it as a joke like when they explain something in vivid detail then after that they'll type "tl;dr" then dumb it way down
Everything about this video gives me just the happiest feeling. I absolutely can't wait to hear about future discoveries about deep sea creatures
Aw that’s so great to hear!!!
Yes, it would be cool if humans don't make them extinct first
Even the poor dinosaurs dying?!
@@QnaPP1 p p
So the deep sea is basically just a game of Agar io
lmao
Indeed
No, because larger cells in agar.io are actually less efficient and lose % size faster than smaller cells.
@@eliasmolina7307 Indeed
@@aldmeripatriot7703 keyword: basically
one time i was swimming at the beach, fairly deep you could say, and all of a sudden, i saw a white-black figure in the water. i quickly ascended, and later concluded that it was, in fact, an astronaut in the ocean.
Bro
I’m done
God... damnit.
Were you rolling in the deep?
This was such an amazing video and it is a federal crime that it doesn’t have more views
Aww thank you so much :) Your support means a lot!
If you’re interested, I’ve done more deep sea videos of this style. Look on my channel for recent ones with the similar thumbnail style but on deep sea vents, brine pools or whale falls ☺️
@@NaturalWorldFacts we are living in a world where more importance is put on reality shows and idiotic music.
@Mike Bison I couldn’t agree more! Everything feels so cheap and watered down these days, as if people making it think we’re all mindless drones. There are still some gems of shows and music out there, though! But it’s a shame they’ve become rare diamonds in the rough.
@@NaturalWorldFacts also, keep up the great work. It was hard finding your channel but very worth it.
@Mike Bison Thanks Mike!! TH-cam’s algorithm is a tricky thing to tame, so I’m glad you did end up finding me :)
i like to think nature survives, life finds a way and all that, this has been a very fascinating look into some terrifyingly inspiring life forms
Glad you enjoyed 😊
It’s more interesting to learn about the why and how of “life finding a way” to begin with
The crazy thing is that you share a common ancestor with these creatures.
This video needs WAY more views, its super well made.
Thanks so much thats really sweet :)
@@NaturalWorldFacts this looks so weird since the replys is gone lol
Damn what happened to them?
@@NaturalWorldFacts Don’t know what happened bro, but good job
Man these creatures are amazing. I was very disappointed to find out that even at the depths of the Mariana Trench, scientists were able to find plastic.
Btw, this channel just earned a sub:)
Funny how they can find plastic in the depths of 1 of the most inhospitable conditions known to life.....
If I was rich bro I was advertise the fuck outta this video, this hit so perfect at 2am. It feels illegal that this doesn’t have as much views as it should
Thanks so much!!! I hope you enjoyed 😁
watching this at 2 am lmao
literally watching this at 2 am as well haha
so it seems like this just shows up in people’s recommended at 2 am, cuz it’s like 2:30 rn and i just finished watching it
Me watching this at 2am👁👄👁
“While there may be no Lovecraftian horrors lurking in our oceans”
please don’t jinx it, I’m already terrified of that place
SEA SPIDERS. SIZE OF DINNER PLATES. One second, I need to burn down world and start over again. That is way bigger than any spider has any rights to be.
*Bigfin squid has entered the chat*
@@monarchminnie5827 meanwhile during the filming they were thinking: "f*ck the apes became bigger and came down here too.."
He said may LOL
“What you know about Rollin down in the deep?”
When your brain goes numb, you can call that mental freeze.
This was an unfortunate occurrence
@@rosinssb5506 i agree
What an awful day to be literate.
Based
I actually learned so much. I was expecting a mumbling voice saying the same few sentences over and over before answering the question in the title in three seconds
People be like “why do you have thalassophobia that’s stupid how do you be scared of the ocean” bitch this is why
Every time I see this videos I wish i could go down there
For me it's not even the creatures at all, it's just starting into this endless void you'll never see the reaches of.
I get very queasy playing Subnautica when starting at the empty drop-offs of deep caves or the dead zone, sometimes even having to take a break, but at the same time will square up with the ghost leviathans with nothing but a basic prawn suit, a repair tool, and a lot of batteries.
@@callmecharlie4250 damn same. I can feel vaguely ok facing off against a mob once I know it’s there, but like if the water changes color too fast I have to pause the game and take a quick breather. Idk personally for me there something just about the terror, the anticipation for something horrid, like danger or anything else, is worse than the actual creature. Cause I can reason away this is a video game when I’m seeing it, but the terror of anticipation kills me everytime, and it legit immobilizes me while playing. And frankly in real life too, tho in real life I’m scared of every single thing in the ocean doesn’t matter if I know it’s there.
just make them play subnautica lmao
@@miguelcabreracastro6968 same im soo curious behind this dark blue ocean
The whole time watching this made me want to play subnautica lol
I want to play subnautica but i have other things that keep me busy
I couldn’t even swim from the pod to the crashed ship
I highly recommend subnautica below zero!
@@natelow8517 subnautica is better than below zero
Watching this made me really NOT want to play Subnautica
Damn, this man knows a lot about rolling down in the deep.
I hope you know how perfect this comment is
@@saraha451 I'm sure their comment was very intentional xD
@@AbdulazizAladwani-ke7in call that mental freeze 🥶
@@Charlie-rh8od yea put that shit on slow motion
@@AintChillGuy For some odd reason I feel like a astronaut in the ocean 🤔
This is literally one of the best channels I've discovered! Such good content!
This makes me even more curious about what life in Europa's oceans might look like.
Under the ice, it may very well look like it does in our polar deep sea: th-cam.com/video/Rw4WX2Dd8HA/w-d-xo.html
I wouldn't hold out hope that there is any, honestly
That's a big nope from me dude.
Teeth would be more wack.
@@that_one_guy1002 🤣🤣🤣
6:07 everybody gangsta until the multidimensional vortex eye swims towards you
You're wrong. That's actually a multi-dimensional arsehole.
This was fantastic to watch as someone who has always loved the deep sea. Well narrated, great footage, and a perfect musical accompaniment. Beautiful and fascinating. Hopefully we can save some of these amazing animals from the damage we have done as humans. Thank you for creating this.
Thank you for the lovely feedback!
@@NaturalWorldFacts what was the song during the island rule section?
How could you help them, if they are almost has no contact with us in daily life, not even found yet or don't even know if they are exist or not?
@@KhoiruunisaRF By cleaning up pollution and preventing changes to the climate that will kill them. Did you think 'save the planet' meant 'collect for charity'?
My favorite TH-cam channel for nature and ocean life. Learned more here than anywhere else.
The ending is a bit sad, we might kill all the giants in the deep sea before we even see them
Nothing wrong with that 😵💫
Cool
@@kpeters909 everything is wrong with that. the fact that those creatures that we never even see dies because of us all the while never even seeing them yet says a lot about how our actions are affecting the natural ecosystem. having the ecosystem falling disrupt won't only affect these animals, but also us humans.
everything is wrong with that. and being worried is the right attitude to have towards that. we are the smartest species in this planet and we have the consciousness to be responsible for everything that will affect this planet. especially that we are doing things that greatly takes part in that.
the right actions need to be done. unless you want to wipe humanity away.
@@hitormisshuh cry about it
@@hitormisshuhYou are just brainwashed, probably at school like this YT guy. Life on Earth is a dynamic equilibrium that swings in one direction, then back in the other direction. Creatures are lost and gained in either direction. It has been this way since life on Earth began; before and after several mass extinction events. The biggest effect on climate change is the Sun, not humankind. The Earth and Sun combined, have many cycles between them of different lengths of time, and all effect life on Earth, for good or bad. 6,000 yrs ago, the Sahara desert was grassland, in another 8,000 yrs, that grass land will be back, as the Sun is part way through a particular 14,000 yr cycle that has affected rainfall in that longitude of the planet. It is only political rhetoric and big business that makes money out of us that try and convince us We are causing climate change and "killing the planet". Que Greta, and her "ruined" life 🙄
This was both beautiful, terrifying, with a bit of sadness at the end when you mentioned the giants will be the first ones to go. What a ride
Man, imagine how many of those prehistoric creatures that may well be still lurking in the deep. something like 80% of the deep sea is still not mapped or researched.
I think we’ve only discovered 6-7% of the worlds oceans 😳
@@canadasown02 But from what little we know, most of the life down there is small. Outside of squids and 6 gill sharks what else is really big down there?
@@zenzen8210 Huh? Didn't this video literally just explain why creatures in the deep sea are larger?
@@capturedflame Technically, since when you compare them to the typical crab they're ginormous.
the ocean is terryfying
Love the videos on the deep sea!! Such great video material and I find the narration very easy to follow! Very clear with good timing and somehow calming as well. Sometimes narrators put almost too much emphasis and dramatic pomp into their delivery... especially in documentaries: I myself find this rather distracting from the actual content and usually won't remember much of what was said😶
Thanks for the kind words, both this and your other comment have really made my day ☺️
"Down here, bigger is better" *cue obligatory that's what she said joke*
In the end bigger is always better
@Speedy Trash ayyy office reference
6:40 youre swimming in your deep sea diving suit and your trying to attract isopods but then out of no where A COLOSSAL SQUID
I swear thats the scariest thing ive seen in a long ass time
The tone of this voice over would be at home in Dark Souls…
❤️
I was gonna say that he sounds exactly like VaatiVidya
Yees, indeed.
@@Badgabr1 not at all really lol.
He does sound kind of like Hawkshaw though
@Matt F nah use gaping dragon instead. Ds3 lore is cringe and Aldrich specifically is a huge retcon to lore
6:07 Man's lookin like one of those biblically accurate angels...
that island rule explains australia as a whole.
Exactly!
How ? Australia's giants have all been killed off I doubt anyone would classify Australia as an island. It is not a hard and fast rule, many species actually become smaller in isolation. Giantism is more to do with predators rather than the isolation.
We don’t really have anything that big, most of our species are small but deadly hahaha
@@Meggyx yeh , like salties.
@@jollyroger7624 aside from crocs hahaha
Honestly the ending made me really sad. As terrified as the big ocean creatures might be to us, they benefit their deep down ecosystem as much as they get 'benefit' from it. The fact global warming will cause the death of these giants is very sad (as it for all creatures suffering at our expense...)
Everything eventually comes to an End
humans are creatures too you dumb alien
@@anarchyseeds4406 i never said we weren't????? That was not the point of the comment
Sadly iirc we are the next massive extinction, the rate of which the species are disappearing is really high and getting higher, let’s see in what ways this comes to bite us in the ass 😩
bruh its really not you are aware that everything dies yes?
Why?- is ultimately the most fascinating questions that most evolutionary theorists seem to ignore. This was extremely interesting, thank you. Contributing for the algorithm.
Thank you so much! The ‘why’ is my favourite part
That was my first question. Why are deep sea animals so strange/weird?
@@anna.318 because its an extremely high pressure environment, and also not much food
@@generalgrievous2202 Hello there!
Why what?
In college I wanted be either a marine biologist or a doctor. Currently in medical school now, but your videos are making me question everything. Well done, keep it up! 🧡
Hell yeah, keep it up
Tldr; everybody at the bottom of the ocean just vibes
They just chillin
Why do people say “vibe.” What does vibe or vibing mean?
@@youmenow7942 good feelings
Yeah, humans can't kill them there
@@youmenow7942 Vibe means vibration. So as a noun something or someones vibration means their emotional atmosphere. The feelings they project subconsciously. But used as a verb, it means to be in harmony with oneself. Existing effortlessly.
There's definitely some type of horror creature down there we haven't seen yet
glad we send robots and not subs down there
Yeah it's watching and waiting
Every time they say the blue whale is the largest animal of all time, I just think to myself "that we know of".
@@apocalypse2819 exactly! Back in ancient times there were much much larger creatures down in the water
@@apocalypse2819 it's not subnautica where the "dead zone" contains microorganisms and leviathan class lifeforms... Unless these leviathans eat planktons, like whales do, they wouldn't survive in a place without constant food. It's not like there can be a huge megalodon waiting for humans to have dinner on
Why doesn’t quality correlate more with views on this platform. So strange
Because I’m not a fortnite streamer or a reaction channel :/
Because 90% of the people going to youtube are casuals and only interested in bouncing ass short vids and youtube actually supports them thru monetization while informative vids like these tend to get demonitize i forgot what channel is it but its sad he had to stop creating content bec youtube stunted his growth.
When has quality ever correlated with popularity?
@@NaturalWorldFacts So true! 😂
Your channel is great by the way.
@@Pikkabuu literally forever until recently.
“There’s no love craftian horrors in our own ocean”
Proceeds to show lovecraftian horrors then say. “We’ve only scratched the surface!”
So it doesn’t have anything to do with the pressure condensing the oxygen levels they would breathe? I know prehistoric insects were larger due to the oxygen levels, i just figured the deeper you go the more oxygen a deep sea animal would take in and you’d see the same kind of thing. Interesting video.
You’re definitely onto something, I reckon that must be a factor in explaining gigantism!
The oxygen levels are actually lower than at the surface. Organisms simply adapted to the lower levels. There are graphs online that show the oxygen levels for each "section" of the ocean as you get deeper. The patterns are really interesting; the lowest oxygen levels are actually in the middle region, followed by the deepest region.
@@TennyConductor Yes, it's believed that that is the reason everything down there moves so slowly. To conserve oxygen as it's more scarce
@@thatyellowfellow Also they're big dumb.
After a threshold, the bigger you get, the bigger your dumbness.
Hence, turbo dumb.
@@piterpraker3399 Aren't giant squids extremely intelligent?
Amazing vid
Thanks :)
@@NaturalWorldFacts I especially love the narrator's voice!
@Queen_Of_Flatulence Thanks :) It’s just me making these, so that’s my voice up there 💛
@@NaturalWorldFacts that's awesome!
Why this guy sound like he’s about to read me a series of unfortunate events?
unfortunate indeed
hell of a vid. amazingly explained and edited appreciated the knowledge my man
This is incredible dude, I feels like it came straight from a T.V. You’re awesome dude and deserve way more views
Thanks so much, that means a lot!!
People: "The Kraken doesn't exist, don't be ridiculous!"
Kraken: "Hold my beer."
UNUS ANNUS UNUS ANNUS!!!
giant squid: they used to call me kraken.... :,(
"..Ello Beasty!"
Hold my tentacle
memento mori
"there may not be lovecraftian horrors"
*literally shows the giant spider crab in the video*
Edit: 6:08 you're just gonna sit there and tell me that's not a lovecraftian horror?
No that shit is beautiful
I was thinking more the sea equivilent of a half meter cockroach, but that works too
@@capturedflame you're right hahaha
Nah that ones not a monstrosity it’s pretty
maybe time for you to revisit Lovecraft
This channel has an intoxicating almost meditative effect, it literally drags you in and immerses you so deeply and clearly through this magnificent world of ours. The music is chosen so perfectly, I seriously fucking LOVE it. No channel captures the wonders of biology like this one.
This is amazing!!!! Thank you so much for taking the time to create such an incredible video!
Thank you so much Elyse!! I’m really glad you enjoyed, they’re so much fun to make ☺️
"Animals on islands tend to be larger"
*King Kong has entered the chat*
Quality content, sad its underrated :(
Thanks man, I can only hope the YT algorithm notices me. But at the moment it seems to neglect small channels :(
@@NaturalWorldFacts it just kicked in hard for me :)
Your voice combined with the music makes me feel like a deep sea post graduate student who is listening to the prerecorded lessions of life, present at the depth in visiting
_"... the stragner the animals become."_
Transitions to an underwater dog in sunglasses with a tentacle hair style.
“While there may be no love craftian horrors lurking in our waters”
Reaper Leviathan: *gangman style*
Reaper: And i took that personally
My first reaper encounter I got scared so bad that I launched my controller and now there's a rather large hole in my desk
@@squashua7727 unless you have a cardboard desk there’s no way to throw a controller through wood lmao. or you launched the controller with a. cannon or some shit
Gangnam* style
To be fair, those aren't OUR waters.
I studied marine biology and you have such passion for the subject, your videos are wonderfully made and very clear; they rekindle my passion right away! Amazing job dude! (your voice is also very suited to doing voice-overs for docs like these)
I couldn't be happier to have found this channel. The relaxing voice, smooth narration and interesting educational material make for an excellent ambiance while I work. ♡
Me with thallasophobia: “Ah yes, perfect video to watch..”
Hello fellow masochist!
Hello fellow masochist!
@@NaturalWorldFacts x2
samee
I feel your pain
I absolutely LOVE watching videos like this, they’re so fascinating. It’s always sad to realise the human population is largely contributing to the extinction of such cool creatures through climate change. I wish the fight against climate change didn’t feel so hopeless, humans as a whole should be working together to help our beautiful planet and the creatures on it live on. On another note - this video was so cool and i hope more people get it in their recommend :)
u stole words from my mouth.. well, fingers
I kept having to rewind since I got lost in how beautiful those creatures are.😄 And my goodness the narration was so relaxing.
Thank you!!!! 😊😊 I do the narration myself but the beautiful raw footage is from various exploration institutes - see the description for creds, I reccomend checking them out
fun fact: nothing is STRANGE, only UNFAMILIAR.
just because we are able to realize or discover something that we dont know much about or we didn't know before doesn't mean that it's weird or strange. Especially when it comes to science and nature. Just a reminder that these unfamiliar things were here before we, modern humans came to be. It is only our behavior and perceptions that make things "strange" because we're too ignorant about them.
I agree with your sentiment, but just know that I use words like ‘strange’ as a compliment! I adore the creatures of the deep immensely
...... “John Goodman’s voice”....NEERRRDDS!!!!!
nothing like acting woke by being a sophist shithead huh? whoop de fucking do, someone didn't use the perfect word for the situation, while strictly obeying the definition written in the dictionary. what propaganda.
instead of actually important subjects, let's just argue X isn't the word to use in this context that everyone perfectly understands.
People are strange
yes, but isn't that why we have the word "strange?"
Im sure the deepsea animals think we look weird af too when they ever see us HAHAHA
They often dont have good eyes though. No use for eyes in the dark. So sadly they wont be able to look back :(
As someone who is terrified of the ocean, I regret watching this at night
I enjoyed this, Leo. Thanks! I thought the audio, and your narration, were just fine!
So...then this explains the “ Giants living underground “ theory
What's that theory ? Never heard it before
Well because in land there is no buoyancy at play, pressure and gravity does affect organisms which might mean they have to be smaller to survive underground
@@dragos8839 Well there's a few. One main one is a part of the hollow(ish) earth theory where the south pole (and maybe the north pole) has entry into the underground where humanoid things (people?) exist.
@@archockencanto1645 that is just SCP logic
@@UncleMerlin Trust me it's REALLY convincing. I would 100% believe in it if it didn't break the law of gravity. These theorists are very talented, I must say.
Also, this one is like 2-300 years old.
phenomenal video dude! you explain everything so clearly and bring in other great examples to support the point, the music adds to the intrigue and with the amazing editing it's perfect. this is the first of your videos i've seen, i'm definitely subscribing and i'm gonna binge all your others with my dad! he's only just gotten into the natural world during the pandemic and it's been so fun teaching and learning with him. thank you :)
I love the narration of this- so weirdly relaxing
Thank you :)
Yaaaaas
TH-cam recommended brought me here and I’m glad it did. Such a well done video that I subscribed.
"While there may be no Lovecraftian horrors lurking in the deep oceans--"
Sir. You will excuse me if I do not take your word for it. *goes to live in a land locked territory far, far away from Deep Ones*
Only about 20% of the ocean has been discovered, so for all we know, there might be.
This somehow made me hate and appreciate the ocean so much more. The fact a concept of Gigantism can even exist and be applied ANYWHERE in our world is scary and amazing at the same time
Thank you so much for making this video
A wise man once said,
"whatchu know about rolling down in the deep"
Great video man!👍
The music, the images, the facts and your calm voice just make for an amazing video. TH-cam recommendations have brought me here and I'm glad it did so. You really need some sponsors, a patreon or some kind of donation sistem for people to support you. I can't belive you're under 50k subs, your videos look like they were straight from Nat Geo Wild or something. Good job
Thank you so much! I really appreciate your support! I have a paypal donation link, and offer a Channel Membership by clicking ‘join’ under a video (instead of Patreon), but honestly I’m still blown away that anybody watches these at all let alone would want to donate! The support I’ve had is incredible, and it’s all thanks to people like you :)
@@NaturalWorldFacts you deserve it man. Even though I can't donate myself it's a great thing other people can. But I feel like you do this videos with passion and it shows. Keep up with the good work!
Thanks so much mate :) Even just taking the time to watch and leave a comment helps out so much and is incredibly motivating! I feel very lucky to have such a lovely community growing around the channel, I really hope you enjoy what’s to come. Drop me a comment whenever you like :)
@@NaturalWorldFacts sure thing! I hope your channel and community will grow beatifully
This is definitely my new favorite nature channel
Aww thanks mate :) that means a lot
wow, now I got here through the recommendation of my teacher. we're making a video about the deep sea. your work is brilliant!!!
That’s huge, I feel so honoured to be used by teachers, say hey to them from me 😊 If they or you ever want any extra info on the deep sea, don’t hesitate to get in touch or drop me a comment. Interacting with fellow deep sea lovers is why I make these!!
4:22 can we take a moment to appreciate this shot
Wow! Great Video! Can't believe this doesn't have millions of views yet!!
Thanks so much! A million views would be nice, doubt I’ll get that though. That means a lot :D
This channel WILL blow up
Cheers :) that means a lot
Detecting multiple leviathan class lifeforms in the region. Are you certain whatever you're doing is worth it?
Warning: Entering ecological dead zone. Adding report to databank.
@@NaturalWorldFacts sees pale blue outline in the distance. Fuck
Wait what is the creature shown at 0:47 ? It's so cute I want to know more about it. Also great video btw!
We want to know this answer too!!!!