What-If Situations That Turn Everything Upside Down

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Transcript
00:00:00Ever wondered how people all around the world spend their precious 24 hours each day?
00:00:05Well, you're about to find out!
00:00:08Time is like a common thread that connects us all.
00:00:11No matter where we're from, we all have the same 24 hours to work with.
00:00:16But people from different countries and cultures spend it very differently.
00:00:20But imagine if the entire world were one person, what would their day look like?
00:00:25That's the question that Canadian researchers aim to answer.
00:00:29They wanted to know what the average human's day looks like all around the world.
00:00:34They collected surveys from over 130 countries, looking at surveys conducted from 2000 to
00:00:402019.
00:00:41Anyway, researchers combed through surveys about people's daily routines and even gathered
00:00:46information about jobs and economic activities.
00:00:50So what are your theories?
00:00:52Do you think it's going to be a boring work-sleep-repeat cycle?
00:00:56Surprisingly, not at all.
00:00:57In reality, it turns out that we spend more than a third of our time on things that make
00:01:02us feel good and keep us healthy.
00:01:05Researchers simplified time into 4 categories to make it super easy to understand.
00:01:10First up, we have sleep and bed rest.
00:01:12There's nothing particularly surprising here.
00:01:15An average adult sleeps about 9 hours a day.
00:01:19We know that this is a norm for healthy sleep.
00:01:22But if you think about it, it turns out that sleep takes up a huge chunk of our day.
00:01:27It's a bit sad that we need it so much.
00:01:29Just imagine how many things we could've gotten done if we didn't.
00:01:32Next, we have direct human outcomes.
00:01:35This category covers things that directly affect us as individuals.
00:01:39It includes activities like eating, hanging out with friends, taking care of ourselves,
00:01:44and having fun.
00:01:45You know, all the stuff that makes us feel good.
00:01:48And not only that, these activities include everything from working, education, and personal
00:01:53growth to socializing and watching TV.
00:01:56The researchers discovered that we dedicate just over 9 hours each day to these things.
00:02:02In this magical 9.4 hours of our day, we do so many cool things.
00:02:07We take care of ourselves and others through hygiene and grooming.
00:02:11We also spend time on healthcare, including looking after our own well-being and taking
00:02:16care of our loved ones.
00:02:17Work, schooling, academic and private sector research, exercising, socializing, meals,
00:02:23hobbies, and even engaging with the media are all part of this awesome mix.
00:02:28Now, let's break it down even further.
00:02:31About half of this time, which is about 4.6 hours, is spent on passive, interactive, and
00:02:37social activities.
00:02:39Think of catching up with friends or reading a fantastic book.
00:02:42Wahoo for fun times!
00:02:44Eating delicious meals takes up around 1.6 hours.
00:02:48It's essential to fuel our bodies and enjoy the wonders of food.
00:02:52School and research add another 1.1 hours to the mix because learning never stops.
00:02:58And here's an interesting twist.
00:03:01Certain activities seem to be universal, regardless of a country's wealth.
00:03:06Hygiene and grooming, as well as meal times, remain consistent across low-income and high-income
00:03:11countries.
00:03:12Well, it makes sense if you think about it.
00:03:14Our basic necessities bring us all together, no matter where we're from.
00:03:19But it's still pretty cool.
00:03:20Of course, keep in mind that there are variations between individuals and cultures.
00:03:25Everyone has their unique way of spending time.
00:03:28But when we zoom out and look at the big picture globally, these activities stay pretty consistent.
00:03:35Next on the list, we have organizational outcomes.
00:03:38This is all about being productive and getting things done.
00:03:41It includes tasks like working, studying, organizing, and managing our lives.
00:03:46Basically, it's all the stuff we do to keep our lives running smoothly.
00:03:50Let's break it down.
00:03:53Organizational outcomes include everyday activities like grocery shopping, getting from one place
00:03:58to another, paying bills, accessing government services, and handling all kinds of administrative
00:04:04stuff, as well as travel and administration.
00:04:08It's the nitty-gritty of managing our lives and taking care of practical matters.
00:04:13In our average human day, we spend just over 2 hours on these important tasks.
00:04:18Now here's an interesting twist.
00:04:20Despite the diversity of countries and cultures around the world, commuting times seem to
00:04:25be remarkably similar.
00:04:27We might've expected significant variations, but the research team discovered that commuting
00:04:32times are remarkably universal.
00:04:35So on average, we spend about 1 hour each day moving from one place to another.
00:04:41This finding has caught their attention.
00:04:43Further research is already underway to dig deeper into this fascinating aspect of our
00:04:48lives.
00:04:49The mysteries of travel and its impact on our daily routines are being unraveled as
00:04:54we speak.
00:04:56And seems like, even though these activities may seem mundane, they play a crucial role
00:05:00in keeping our lives running smoothly.
00:05:03And lastly, we have external outcomes.
00:05:06This category is about things we do that affect the world around us.
00:05:10It includes activities like commuting, participating in the economy, and being part of the bigger
00:05:16picture.
00:05:17In other words, these are the activities that aim to create changes in the world outside
00:05:21of ourselves.
00:05:23Here are some examples.
00:05:24Agriculture and fishing, preparing and serving food, mining, working with lumber, tapping
00:05:30into fossil fuels and renewable energy, constructing and maintaining buildings and infrastructure,
00:05:36keeping our living spaces clean, tending to our pets and gardens, and managing waste.
00:05:41It's a whole bunch of stuff that affects the world around us.
00:05:45So how much time do you think you devote to this every day?
00:05:48Well, research shows that in our daily lives, we spend a whopping 3.4 hours on these tasks.
00:05:55Here's where things get interesting.
00:05:57These activities reveal some salient differences between low-income and high-income countries.
00:06:03In the lowest-income countries, people spend an average of over 1.5 hours each day growing
00:06:09and collecting their own food.
00:06:10It's a massive amount of human labor required to meet their food needs.
00:06:15But as countries become wealthier and more advanced, things change.
00:06:20In the highest-income countries, farming is accomplished in less than 5 minutes per day
00:06:24on average.
00:06:25Can you believe it?
00:06:27The wonders of technology and mechanization free up over an hour of time.
00:06:32So let's appreciate the challenging work that goes into providing food, raw materials,
00:06:37construction, and other similar tasks.
00:06:41This data also shows us that as we progress and become more industrialized, we gain precious
00:06:47hours in our day.
00:06:48We have more time to explore, create, and enjoy the world around us.
00:06:53Time becomes our ally, allowing us to pursue other passions and adventures.
00:06:59So here's what an average human's day looks like.
00:07:03They spend 9 hours sleeping, around 9.5 hours on things that are important and fun to them,
00:07:09around 2 hours organizing stuff, and around 3.5 hours affecting the bigger world around
00:07:15them.
00:07:16Pretty cool, isn't it?
00:07:17How does it compare to your daily routine?
00:07:20By the way, when researchers began their study, they started with Australia and New
00:07:25Zealand and got some surprising results.
00:07:28For example, Australians love to socialize.
00:07:31On average, they spend about 5 hours each day engaging with people and enjoying various
00:07:36activities.
00:07:37That's slightly above the global average.
00:07:40They have a knack for going out, exploring museums, watching sports, and simply hanging
00:07:45out with their friends.
00:07:46It's all part of our social fabric.
00:07:49Interestingly, this trend of social activities, aligning with GDP, holds true not only for
00:07:55Australia, but globally as well.
00:07:58The study's lead author highlights that the activities we humans engage in, and the
00:08:03time we spend on these activities, shape our societies and personal well-being.
00:08:07It's remarkable how the universal notion of time allows us to compare ourselves with
00:08:13people around the world and across different time periods.
00:08:17From sleep to socializing, we've learned some interesting insights about the average
00:08:22human day worldwide and how it compares to life in Australia.
00:08:26Remember, time is precious, so choose how you spend it wisely.
00:08:31Whether you're catching some Zs or enjoying quality time with friends, make the most of
00:08:36each moment.
00:08:37Stay curious, keep exploring, and embrace the wonderful tapestry of activities that
00:08:42make up our daily lives.
00:08:45Humans could live in a vacuum, with the only difference being, well, our entire selves.
00:08:51We're always talking about living on other planets and how we can adapt to them, but
00:08:56theoretically, we could live on a space station.
00:08:59However, in that case, life would evolve completely differently.
00:09:03All because we'd have to live without an atmosphere.
00:09:09What do we humans need to adapt to living in a vacuum?
00:09:13Dugald Dixon created this cool concept in his book, creatures known as vacuum morphs,
00:09:19designed to survive in space.
00:09:21They're kinda like humans, but not really.
00:09:24First, in space, with no air at all, it's all about pressure.
00:09:29There's a thing called atmospheric pressure.
00:09:32In simple words, how much does the atmosphere press on our shoulders, how heavy it weighs.
00:09:39Humans are used to living at sea level where there's a lot of pressure from the air around
00:09:43us.
00:09:44But in space, there's none.
00:09:46This would be tough for our bodies.
00:09:49Astronauts have their suits to handle such dramatic change.
00:09:53Which means, most likely we'd have to get a hard shell guarding our insides, like robots,
00:09:58beetles, or certain marine animals that can handle different levels of depth.
00:10:03Having a shell of some kind also helps to control the movement of atoms both coming
00:10:08in and leaving the body.
00:10:11These unique beings from Dixon's book, homokaleistes, have crustacean-like features.
00:10:18You can see that they have this shield we discussed.
00:10:20They're built to withstand the challenges of orbit and the vacuum.
00:10:24They breathe with three lungs, have stubby limbs for grabbing onto spaceships, and sealed
00:10:29eyes to shield them from harsh conditions.
00:10:33These little guys also need unique organs to handle oxygen and waste.
00:10:37Unfortunately, they can't reproduce.
00:10:40Despite their incredible adaptability, vacuum morphs are sterile and have a limited lifespan.
00:10:49We know from movies that outer space is extremely scary.
00:10:52It's freezing cold, dangerous radiation, and no air at all.
00:10:56If you're out there, your blood boils or you simply freeze instantly.
00:11:00But despite all that, humans could survive in outer space for a while.
00:11:05Imagine you're suddenly thrown out of your spaceship.
00:11:08In movies, that would mean instant departure from the life station.
00:11:12But in real life, it's not as instant as Hollywood makes it seem.
00:11:16Scientists have done questionable experiments and had accidents with humans.
00:11:21There was an astronaut who had his spacesuit accidentally depressurized.
00:11:26He blacked out but was luckily okay after repressurization, although he did lose his
00:11:31sense of taste for a while.
00:11:33In any case, it turns out you could actually survive for a couple of minutes in the vacuum
00:11:38of space, but it's not a pleasant experience.
00:11:42When you're in space without a suit, the lack of pressure makes air in your lungs expand,
00:11:47which is really bad if you're holding your breath.
00:11:50Within a minute, you'll pass out from lack of oxygen.
00:11:54It takes just a few seconds for everything to go dark.
00:12:00However, there is a form of life that can hang out in outer space just fine.
00:12:07Scientists found some tiny creatures called extremophiles that can handle all of that.
00:12:12They're nature's most brave survivors.
00:12:15These microbes can handle crazy conditions like freezing cold, no air, and lots of radiation.
00:12:21Recently, we decided to find out how this special bacterium copes in space.
00:12:28We sent it up to the International Space Station and left it outside for a whole year.
00:12:33When they checked on it later, they found something amazing.
00:12:36The bacterium hadn't changed much in appearance, and it even had produced tiny structures called
00:12:42outer membrane vesicles to protect itself.
00:12:45It turns out that this bacterium has a superpower.
00:12:49It can repair its DNA and fight off harmful molecules that could damage it.
00:12:54It also changes the way it uses energy to adapt to space life.
00:12:58This could help us learn more about how life can exist beyond our planet.
00:13:03It was called the Transpopo mission.
00:13:09Bacteria are incredibly adaptive.
00:13:12For example, we discovered that bacteria can float around in space for years.
00:13:17These tiny organisms can stick together in clumps like little protective communities.
00:13:22They can survive the harsh conditions of outer space by doing so.
00:13:26In a cool experiment, scientists put some really tough bacteria on the outside of the
00:13:31International Space Station.
00:13:33These bacteria were in little balls, each five sheets of paper thick.
00:13:38As a result, they stayed out there, unharmed, for three whole years.
00:13:43Their outer layers acted like shields, protecting the ones inside from all the space nasties.
00:13:49This discovery suggests that groups of bacteria could travel through space between planets.
00:13:54They call this idea panspermia, which basically means spreading life through the universe.
00:14:01In other words, space travel might accidentally bring life to other planets.
00:14:06So if we found microbial life on Mars, for example, that could even signify that it had
00:14:11arrived there from somewhere.
00:14:16All this means that some microbes could survive in outer space.
00:14:20With more complex creatures like animals, however, things get harder.
00:14:24The most important thing for sustaining life is energy.
00:14:28Everything else is a nice addition, but without energy, we wouldn't get anywhere.
00:14:34Life also needs a lot of chemicals mixed in a liquid for a long time and in a big space
00:14:39station to function.
00:14:41If there's not enough pressure, the liquid evaporates.
00:14:45That means there's hardly any pressure at all.
00:14:48Life evolving inside an asteroid or moon that lacks atmosphere might be possible.
00:14:54Life adapting to space is possible.
00:14:57Hypothetically, these space-living beings could be made of gas, sentient clouds floating
00:15:03around.
00:15:04They could also be made of pure energy, invisible but able to communicate through their energy
00:15:09levels.
00:15:10Or some giants with their own atmosphere, like Earth, with smaller creatures living
00:15:14on them.
00:15:15But all this is extremely unlikely, so the chances that life will evolve in outer space
00:15:19by itself are super low.
00:15:23Now, imagine if, instead of space, we were talking about a planet covered in a tough,
00:15:31non-breathable layer around it.
00:15:34Surprisingly, even if there's no air on the planet, there are still some chances that
00:15:38life could evolve.
00:15:40At least if there are some signs of water.
00:15:43Below the surface, there could be rivers warmed by special vents spewing out minerals.
00:15:48Life could start there, away from the surface where it's safe from drying up.
00:15:53Breathing is just one way we get energy, but there are other options.
00:15:57For example, sunlight.
00:16:00Think about the moon's surface.
00:16:02There's no air there, but we could still use solar power to survive.
00:16:05However, we're deep underground.
00:16:09With limited access to sunlight, these creatures would have to evolve ingenious ways to harness
00:16:13alternative energy sources.
00:16:16Some of them could possess photosynthetic capabilities, using specialized pigments to
00:16:20harness even the faintest traces of light filtering through the planet's crust.
00:16:25Others could form symbiotic relationships with certain bacteria that could help them
00:16:29receive energy from minerals and organic compounds in the rivers.
00:16:36Deep below the planet's surface, the rivers aren't just sources of water.
00:16:40They're rich in nutrients vital for a sustaining life.
00:16:44These rivers flow through vast underground networks, creating pockets of habitable environments
00:16:49where life thrives.
00:16:52These creatures could eat solid minerals and develop shells to keep their insides moist.
00:16:56They'd have to evolve unique biological features to survive in their harsh surroundings.
00:17:02For example, some species might develop bioluminescence to navigate the dark underground tunnels.
00:17:09Others could adapt sensory organs capable of detecting subtle changes in the environment,
00:17:14helping them locate sources of nutrients and avoid danger.
00:17:18Kind of like moles.
00:17:20These ecosystems would operate on a delicate balance of nutrient cycling.
00:17:26Microorganisms would break down organic matter and release essential nutrients into the rivers.
00:17:31This in turn could help plants evolve.
00:17:34And plants could become food for larger creatures.
00:17:37And so on.
00:17:41And then, who knows what could happen over millennia.
00:17:44As the planet's crust shifts and cracks over time, exposing these underground realms to
00:17:48new challenges, the creatures adapt and evolve in response.
00:17:53In any case, what we learned is that life is much more adapting than we previously thought.
00:17:58It could survive even in extremely harsh conditions.
00:18:02We might not know what types of life we'll discover on other planets.
00:18:06But we shouldn't be surprised if we find it in weird, unexpected places.
00:18:11Day 1.
00:18:14A small but powerful tremor is shaking the city of Naples, Italy.
00:18:19The news networks are reporting on the event.
00:18:21The experts believe that Mount Vesuvius, the stratovolcano on the Gulf of Naples, will
00:18:26explode soon.
00:18:28But when?
00:18:29It's erupted many times in the past.
00:18:31In fact, that's how it got its shape.
00:18:34It's made of multiple layers of hardened lava, pumice, and ash.
00:18:38Vesuvius last erupted in 1944, but a major blast happened there nearly 2,000 years ago.
00:18:45It buried the Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum and decimated the surrounding areas.
00:18:51Today, 3 million people live less than 20 miles from the volcano, and 600,000 live in
00:18:57the danger zone.
00:18:59Large eruptions happen every few thousand years, usually after long periods of calm.
00:19:04And the trouble is, Vesuvius is long overdue for its next one.
00:19:09This time, though, the volcano is being watched by the Vesuvius Observatory.
00:19:13It has seismic stations, special GPS arrays, and satellite-based radar to help it measure
00:19:19ground movement.
00:19:20They also have special equipment to test the chemicals found in the gases coming from the
00:19:24volcano.
00:19:26All of this helps the experts work out whether it's about to go off.
00:19:30But will it?
00:19:31Right now, the magma is more than 6 miles from the surface.
00:19:35Things seemed safe yesterday, but now they're about to take a turn for the worse.
00:19:41Day 3.
00:19:42Another tremor comes in measuring 3 on the Richter scale.
00:19:46All the equipment that's installed near the volcano is now going off.
00:19:50The magma is pushing upwards.
00:19:52It's not at the surface yet, but Vesuvius is definitely restless.
00:19:57Two more tremors follow in the afternoon.
00:19:59They don't feel like regular earthquakes, and geologists can see the difference in their
00:20:04seismographs.
00:20:05Volcanic quakes register about 4-5 less on the Richter scale.
00:20:09Now, the experts are sure, it's just a matter of days or weeks until the volcano erupts.
00:20:16Some volcanoes can be restless for months or even years before they go off.
00:20:20But that's not how it goes with Vesuvius.
00:20:24Day 4.
00:20:25The ground starts to crack open, as if a giant creature is trapped in the Earth's crust
00:20:30and is trying to desperately get out for some air.
00:20:33Steam escapes from the little cracks in the soil.
00:20:36Certain areas are hotter than others.
00:20:38If you went there, it would feel like you walked straight into an oven, and it would
00:20:42be hard to breathe.
00:20:43Some sheep got too close to the mountain and passed out.
00:20:47When the farmer found them, he almost collapsed too, not from the heat, but from the gases.
00:20:52Carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide are being released into the air.
00:20:56The entire area around the volcano smells like rotten eggs, and many of the forest animals
00:21:02are now staying clear.
00:21:04The nearby trees have been absorbing these gases from the soil for days on end now, and
00:21:09they're starting to turn brown.
00:21:11The carbon dioxide levels in the area are skyrocketing, and all the detectors are beeping
00:21:16constantly.
00:21:18Day 6.
00:21:20The tremors are getting more frequent.
00:21:22Experts at the Vesuvius Observatory monitoring the volcano say the quakes are coming from
00:21:27the magma that's being pushed upwards.
00:21:29A few hours later, the National Emergency Alert goes out.
00:21:33Thousands of local people have around 15 days before the volcano erupts, and they need to
00:21:38evacuate their homes.
00:21:40The 600,000 people in the danger zone start to pack their suitcases and leave in cars
00:21:45and trucks.
00:21:46There's chaos everywhere.
00:21:48But in all that disorder, some people are standing still.
00:21:51They look around, trying to understand what's really going on.
00:21:55A few of them are taking photos of their homes.
00:21:58Others are streaming all the confusion on social media.
00:22:01But the senior citizens are just standing outside, looking at their houses one last
00:22:06time.
00:22:07They hope this is all just a false alarm.
00:22:10It's happened before, but who really knows?
00:22:15Day 7.
00:22:16It was a sleepless night.
00:22:18Plenty of the locals have already left.
00:22:20Some good people from other towns drive to the area to help the residents evacuate faster.
00:22:25There's a massive traffic jam, but everyone expected it.
00:22:29This is why the evacuation started early.
00:22:31Ferries, trains, and buses have canceled their services to help the evacuees.
00:22:36They're all working on a tight schedule to make sure everyone gets out safe without
00:22:41any delays.
00:22:42Some people refuse to leave, but their neighbors eventually convince them to go.
00:22:46It will take 7 days to evacuate everyone, and these people will spread out to other
00:22:51areas of the country, not just to the nearby safe regions.
00:22:56Day 10.
00:22:57More than half of the residents have now left the Red Zone.
00:23:01After the chaos, there's now silence, and it's interrupted by the eerie sounds of
00:23:05the tremors.
00:23:07Animals are being evacuated too.
00:23:09Many people are now trying to save as many animals from the forest as they can find.
00:23:15Day 16.
00:23:17All 25 of the towns that were at risk have now been evacuated.
00:23:21The Red Zone is empty.
00:23:23But the tremors are getting stronger, as the volcano is a pressure cooker ready to explode.
00:23:29White smoke rises from the large opening on the mountaintop and the vents on the side.
00:23:35The molten rock moves toward the surface, and the pressurized gases form bubbles, just
00:23:41like the ones you see when you boil food.
00:23:43Suddenly, there are some loud booms, and then an explosion.
00:23:47It's loud enough to be heard thousands of miles away, and the shockwave is felt throughout
00:23:52Italy.
00:23:53Volcanic rock is thrown up into the air.
00:23:55A thick black mushroom cloud forms and expands into the sky.
00:24:00The birds abandon their nests and fly away in huge flocks.
00:24:04The red-hot lava is now spewing out of the volcano like a fountain.
00:24:09As it flows downward, it obliterates everything in its path.
00:24:13Then there's a volcanic landslide.
00:24:15Part of the cone-shaped mountain falls off, and millions of tons of soil and rock break
00:24:20loose from the volcano's side and tumble down.
00:24:24The lava spreads on the slopes, and it slowly slides down into the forest and the farmlands.
00:24:30A plume of ash, pumice, and other kinds of rock has risen so high into the sky that people
00:24:35can see it from Rome.
00:24:37Then the tower of debris starts falling back to Earth.
00:24:40First comes the ash, then chunks of rock.
00:24:43The ash in the atmosphere is so dense that it's hard to breathe.
00:24:47The lava slowly spreads across the area and pulls down all the trees.
00:24:52All the nearby towns are shrouded in darkness and smoke.
00:24:56Trees collapse, and all around there's a mixture of heated, poisonous gas and rock
00:25:00moving faster than a car.
00:25:03Other rocks and more volcanic ash fall miles away from the volcano, hitting cars and destroying
00:25:08roofs.
00:25:09The sky is completely black as the lava keeps on coming.
00:25:13Slowly, all the nearby towns are submerged beneath the molten rock.
00:25:18Some of the lava even reaches the sea.
00:25:21Black-white steam covers the shore where it falls in, and the magma turns black.
00:25:26Now a weird neon-blue fire appears on the slopes of Vesuvius.
00:25:31This is caused by burning sulfuric gases.
00:25:34They're escaping at high pressure from the cracks in the volcano's surface.
00:25:38When they come into contact with the air, they ignite.
00:25:41These blue flames can reach 16 feet into the air.
00:25:45Now all nearby flights are cancelled, and many planes have to change course to reach
00:25:49their destination.
00:25:51Ever since the national alert, no planes have been allowed to fly over the volcano.
00:25:56The clouds of volcanic ash can damage jet engines and other plane components.
00:26:00The water supply is now contaminated by streams of volcanic ash, and it smells unbelievably
00:26:06bad.
00:26:07In just a short amount of time, all that magma has made entire towns vanish.
00:26:13Only the roofs of taller buildings can be seen.
00:26:16After the big and explosive eruption, there are some smaller and quieter ones.
00:26:21At this stage, nobody knows if the volcano has stopped erupting yet, and absolutely no
00:26:26one can go anywhere near the area.
00:26:2910 years later.
00:26:33Most parts of the Red Zone are now hidden under hardened but still warm lava, including
00:26:38the ancient site of Pompeii.
00:26:40Some people have started to forget about what happened, others have begun their new lives
00:26:45elsewhere, and some don't even want to think about what happened to their old homes.
00:26:50But several of them are counting the days until they can go back.
00:26:55100 years later.
00:26:56You're walking in what appears to be a wasteland of volcanic ash.
00:27:01You suddenly realize that you're standing on top of your great-grandparents' town.
00:27:07Everything is now submerged under a thick carpet of solidified lava.
00:27:11But below it all, just about everything is still intact, completely frozen in time.
00:27:19You wake up gasping for air, struggling to peel yourself from your bed.
00:27:24When you do manage to get your feet on the ground, it feels like they're glued down
00:27:28tight.
00:27:29You're twice as heavy, it feels like you're carrying another you on your shoulders all
00:27:32day long.
00:27:33Well, congratulations, you've woken up on an Earth where uncontrolled experiments with
00:27:38dark matter have doubled the force of gravity.
00:27:42Mass panic happens when over 8,000 aircraft fall as soon as the gravity spikes, crashing
00:27:48into buildings, forests, and oceans.
00:27:50And that's because airplanes suddenly lost the balance between the pull of gravity and
00:27:55the lift force necessary to keep them cruising.
00:27:58Pilots did attempt to save their planes, but GPS failed as satellites swiftly moved.
00:28:08After a month, humans begin to look more and more like chimps.
00:28:12Bones are getting thicker, and the immense force constantly pulling people down is squashing
00:28:16their spines, making everybody bend over.
00:28:20People start figuring out that walking ape-style on all fours helps with better balance and
00:28:25stability.
00:28:26And that becomes a big deal, since even tripping over a tiny rock could lead to a nasty fracture.
00:28:32Falls not only get more intense due to the extra forces on bones and joints, but they
00:28:37also happen faster.
00:28:39Gravity's pull doubles the acceleration force, increasing it from 32 feet per second to 64
00:28:45feet per second.
00:28:47Your house is not a safe place anymore.
00:28:50Old buildings and bridges all over the world are now collapsing.
00:28:54Inside those still standing, residents get the scary feeling that the whole place is
00:28:58shaking and cracks start showing up everywhere.
00:29:01It's dangerous to stay inside houses, as roofs are now twice their usual weight, and
00:29:07any rain or snow also feels twice as heavy.
00:29:11Fire alarms are constantly going off because tree branches keep falling all over the place.
00:29:16Most trees simply can't bear the weight of gravity, and only strong and small plants
00:29:20survive, like cactuses and succulents.
00:29:26Six months after the sudden change, supermarkets have a sinister vibe going on, with shelves
00:29:31nearly empty and people arguing over the last loaf of bread.
00:29:36You get frustrated to see that your favorite Japanese restaurant is now 5 times more expensive.
00:29:42And it's not just about salmon prices.
00:29:44It's rice that has become a rare luxury item, since the gravity boost has messed up the
00:29:49photosynthesis process, and the seeds are taking too long to grow.
00:29:54On the flip side, carrots are now cheaper than ever – they're sprouting and growing
00:29:58at lightning speed.
00:30:00People start eating so many carrots that human skin now has an orange glow from all that
00:30:05extra beta-carotene.
00:30:08Farmers are getting creative, using artificial supports to keep plants like tomatoes and
00:30:12corn on their feet.
00:30:14But even with all their efforts, it's hard to get a good harvest.
00:30:20Summer has arrived, and even your air conditioner can't relieve the unbearable heat.
00:30:25A sudden change in gravity disrupted Earth's orbit around the Sun, pushing it into a new,
00:30:30tighter elliptical path.
00:30:32Earth now passes much closer to the Sun than it used to, making your sunscreen simply surrender.
00:30:38The Moon's orbit has also had some dramatic changes, leading to more dangerous and extreme
00:30:43tide patterns.
00:30:45High tides are now higher, and low tides are lower.
00:30:48This shift has also triggered widespread volcanic eruptions and earthquakes on an unprecedented
00:30:54scale.
00:30:55Earth's crust starts to rupture across vast areas, unleashing planet-wide lava flows so
00:31:01intense that living on Venus begins to sound like a pretty good idea.
00:31:06Five years later, people notice that puppies are begging for food twice as much, but they
00:31:11are taking more time to grow.
00:31:13Breeds like beagles look thinner, and their leg bones are getting heavier.
00:31:17Even insects such as locusts now have thicker hind legs to keep those jumps going.
00:31:23Sea creatures are being crushed by the much greater weight of the water around them.
00:31:27It's not a big deal for animals used to deep ocean pressures, like the anglerfish,
00:31:32but crabs and lobsters are really struggling since they live in shallow waters.
00:31:37Sloths and monkeys develop a stronger grip so they won't fall off trees.
00:31:42For carnivorous animals living in jungles or savannas, life is a real challenge because
00:31:47any animal the size of a wolf or bigger can't run without breaking a leg.
00:31:52Large predators like lionesses are starving because they can't move fast enough to catch
00:31:57their prey.
00:31:59Tall trees like palms and pines also go through evolutionary changes.
00:32:04They get beefier trunks and only grow about half as tall as usual.
00:32:09This way, water and nutrients can travel from the ground up to their leaves without struggling
00:32:13against gravity so badly.
00:32:17Ten years have passed since gravity increased.
00:32:21Airplanes have finally made changes to prevent commercial flights from nosediving.
00:32:25The wings of airplanes are now longer, pilots have learned to fly at altitudes twice as
00:32:30high, and flight speed has increased by 41%.
00:32:34To avoid people getting extremely nauseated and dizzy during takeoffs and landings, seats
00:32:39are now fully horizontal, like first-class bed-like setups, specially designed to minimize
00:32:45the nasty effects of gravity times two.
00:32:48Flight attendants are trained to raise the seat at the passenger's feet after they pass
00:32:52out so that blood can return to their head.
00:32:55The thing is, when gravity gets a power boost, it yanks your blood down to your feet and
00:33:00hands even more than usual, making your heart work extra hard to pump that blood around,
00:33:05especially to your head.
00:33:09Fifty years have passed.
00:33:11Women in their 30s look like they are 60.
00:33:15Higher gravity decreases collagen synthesis, so even though they're still young, they're
00:33:20dealing with more wrinkles and fine lines, and their skin has already lost a big part
00:33:25of its elasticity.
00:33:27Wounds as small as a pimple pop or a paper cut also take much more time to heal.
00:33:32So people are excited about the creation of a band-aid made from fish skin from cod or
00:33:37tilapia that promotes local blood circulation and speeds up the healing process.
00:33:43People have also got used to wear exoskeletons made of titanium, which support and enhance
00:33:48the wearer's strength.
00:33:50This technology features cool joints at the places that copy humans' natural movements,
00:33:55giving people more flexibility and letting them move around more easily.
00:34:00Prototypes of personal flying devices start popping up after 100 years.
00:34:04The gray flyer is like a jetpack made of carbon nanotubes, making the structure strong without
00:34:10adding much weight.
00:34:12Instead of using fuel for propulsion, the device has these super-thin but high-tech
00:34:16solar panels.
00:34:19Investors are still not sure if humans could fly long distances with it, but the gray flyer
00:34:23definitely can help people tackle tasks that have become almost impossible, like climbing
00:34:29a mountain or grabbing something from the attic.
00:34:35Things at the gym are pretty different too.
00:34:37The anti-gravity treadmill is a favorite among fitness enthusiasts because it uses air pressure
00:34:42to lift users, reducing the discomfort of gravity while running.
00:34:47People can also lift weights in booths, when the gravity settings are customized.
00:34:51When training with G-Force set at 3 or 4 times the new normal, muscles get stronger, making
00:34:57double gravity seem more bearable.
00:34:59However, the maximum set is 4.6, otherwise bones might crack.
00:35:06Over 500 years have passed.
00:35:08Thanks to these amazing technological creations, humans can now handle and establish colonies
00:35:13in other parts of the Universe.
00:35:15A popular choice for family vacations is Kepler-452b, a planet about 60% larger than Earth, orbiting
00:35:23in the habitable zone of a sun-like star.
00:35:27Kids especially like that place, as oceans have been discovered and hotels have been
00:35:31built near rocky beaches.
00:35:34On the other hand, traveling to places in the Universe with lighter gravity is like
00:35:38going to an oasis of tranquility.
00:35:41So Mars and the Moon have become known for amazing yoga retreats.
00:35:45With their gravitational forces much weaker, people can breathe more easily there and move
00:35:50around with more freedom.
00:35:52Keep in mind that these trips are expensive, so you might want to start saving up now.
00:35:58Ah, you're flying first class to Paris!
00:36:05Vacation, sightseeing, it's all good.
00:36:08Then the pilot comes on.
00:36:10Attention passengers, this is your captain speaking.
00:36:13The ground below us is jello.
00:36:15We cannot land.
00:36:17Everyone on the plane panics.
00:36:19Is there no wiggle room?
00:36:21Down there, apparently, it's all wiggle room.
00:36:24The seatbelt sign turns on, but no one seems to care.
00:36:28People topple over each other.
00:36:29The flight attendants try to calm everyone down, but they get pushed around and ignored.
00:36:34There's food flying everywhere.
00:36:36People are frantically dumping out their carry-ons to find who knows.
00:36:40You look out the window and see buildings falling down like dominoes.
00:36:44The roads begin to look like spaghetti, and the sea is being washed inland.
00:36:48The mountains out in the distance are also caving in, causing massive amounts of landslides.
00:36:53It really does look like jello.
00:36:56Your phone starts going crazy with breaking news alerts.
00:36:59This phenomenon is happening all over the world, but it's not a giant earthquake or
00:37:03anything.
00:37:04The Earth's crust has lost its strength and has become soft birthday cake soft.
00:37:10The Earth has many layers stacked on top of each other.
00:37:13The inner core, the outer core, the mantle, and the crust.
00:37:17That's the top layer that we all walk around on.
00:37:20When the mantle moves a little too much, the crust starts to shift.
00:37:25That's sort of what an earthquake is.
00:37:28The crust has about 7 massive pieces and a bunch of smaller ones.
00:37:32Now they've all split up into millions of pieces.
00:37:35It's like the whole world's one giant waterbed.
00:37:39The Eiffel Tower, the pyramids of Egypt, the Great Wall of China, skyscrapers, bridges,
00:37:45you name it, they're all in trouble.
00:37:48Years later, you and the rest of humanity have adapted to the Earth's new wobbly surface.
00:37:54Your daily routine now consists of wearing special shoes to help you keep your balance
00:37:58wherever you go.
00:38:00Say goodbye to high heels and sneakers.
00:38:03These boots have a special gadget that glues you to the ground, kind of like a gecko scaling
00:38:08a wall.
00:38:10Sleeping in constant motion is the new normal, but it's not like sleeping on a waterbed.
00:38:15It's way worse.
00:38:16Imagine waking up in the middle of the night for a glass of milk, and the ground's moving
00:38:21around like crazy.
00:38:23You'd fall down 20 times before making it to the kitchen.
00:38:26Going downstairs would be more of a sliding situation.
00:38:31Houses built with concrete don't exist anymore.
00:38:33You have a sort of giant bubble as your house now.
00:38:37With the help of special technology, the ground inside the bubble can be stabilized so it
00:38:42won't shake all the time.
00:38:44The foundation underneath your house sways with the wiggly crust so that it doesn't
00:38:49collapse.
00:38:51Basketball players now rely heavily on drone technology to deliver food, supplies, or the
00:38:55latest cell phone.
00:38:56In fact, the whole sky is regularly filled with drones going from place to place.
00:39:02Sports gets totally revamped.
00:39:04Basketball players are now equipped with helmets and protective body gear so they don't hurt
00:39:09themselves when they fall, which is a lot.
00:39:12You try dribbling on a soft surface, it's borderline impossible.
00:39:16One sport that survives is ice hockey.
00:39:19Actually all ice sports, speed skating, figure skating, as long as the ice is thick enough,
00:39:25it doesn't matter what's going on underneath.
00:39:28Pretty much everyone relies on these bubbles to do anything or get anywhere.
00:39:33Think of it like a giant hamster ball floating on a shallow lake.
00:39:37Humans have adapted and don't get motion sickness anymore.
00:39:41The new economy is still built on trade and transportation, but now it's mainly done
00:39:46with ships.
00:39:47No more big trucks on the road, no more road.
00:39:50Helicopters are super popular, but landing them can be kinda hairy.
00:39:55All around the world, cities are floating and drifting around.
00:39:59That used to take millions of years.
00:40:01Now it just takes a few.
00:40:03Imagine living in Melbourne, Australia, but your city's only a few months from reaching
00:40:07South America.
00:40:09It's like a giant cruise ship.
00:40:11All over the planet, millions of animals used to migrate huge distances to find water
00:40:16during the dry season.
00:40:18That's all over.
00:40:19Marine life and our flying friends have been relatively unaffected.
00:40:24Since the ground's always moving, it's impossible for huge herds of animals to stick
00:40:29together when they make their way across land.
00:40:32They're trying to adapt, but it's tough.
00:40:35Mountain goats evolved to be in the mountains.
00:40:37Now the whole world's just one flat, soft mess.
00:40:41After putting on your boots, you make your way to visit some friends down at the park.
00:40:46All inside a large bubble, of course.
00:40:49When the ground collapsed all those years ago, many factories went haywire and released
00:40:54a bunch of chemicals into the atmosphere.
00:40:56Yeah, I think I want to stay in my bubble.
00:41:00You get into your little hamster ball of a car and drive off.
00:41:03The ground is bumpy and gooey at the same time, but you make it, eventually.
00:41:09Have you ever tried eating or drinking on a rocking ship?
00:41:12Sailors got used to it ages ago, but for most of us, it'd be a nightmare.
00:41:17But nowadays, everyone's a pro, handling hot soup without spilling a drop.
00:41:23After lunch, your friends decide to go out and explore the lands outside the giant bubble.
00:41:28At first, you refuse, but somehow you find yourself strapped into your personal bubble
00:41:34car, heading for the exit.
00:41:36You sneak past security, find a place to hide the cars, and get out.
00:41:41You and your friends look ridiculous in those specialized boots and gas masks.
00:41:45Still, you wouldn't want to inhale all those toxic fumes.
00:41:50You make your way to where a large major city once stood.
00:41:54It looks like a scene from a sci-fi movie.
00:41:57Buildings piled on top of each other, with nature growing all around.
00:42:01The roads that once existed have split into their original ingredients.
00:42:06You're essentially walking on broken bricks, concrete, and asphalt.
00:42:10Statues are half-buried in the ground.
00:42:13Way out in front of you is an old abandoned airport.
00:42:17You have to watch your every step.
00:42:19The ground ripples under your feet.
00:42:21No one's been here for years.
00:42:23As you make your way to the core of the city, huge blocks of concrete break off a falling
00:42:28building.
00:42:29You try your best to jump out of the way, but the ground's so shaky, you barely make
00:42:33it.
00:42:34You and your friends finally find your way to the downtown area.
00:42:38That's when you notice a lot of water around.
00:42:41When the buildings collapsed, it destroyed all the water and drainage systems.
00:42:46All the water for homes, businesses, factories, and hundreds of nearby farms all ended up
00:42:51here.
00:42:52You and your friends scale a building with your gecko boots and reach the top.
00:42:57It looks like the lost city of Atlantis.
00:43:00The buildings look like ancient ruins from a forgotten civilization.
00:43:04One of your friends is getting nervous.
00:43:06Maybe it's time to go back to the bubble city.
00:43:09But you think it's better to just keep moving forward.
00:43:13You find a piece of driftwood and make a sort of improvised boat.
00:43:17You all hop on board and paddle through the city.
00:43:20Under the surface is a whole new ecosystem of underwater plants and animals.
00:43:25And not too far ahead, you spot a shipwreck that's half-submerged.
00:43:30One of your friends gets the idea of heading over there to explore it.
00:43:35The moment you step onto it, the water starts shaking.
00:43:38The ground under the ship is so fragile that any tiny change in pressure makes the ship
00:43:43sink deeper.
00:43:45You hop back on the boat and start to paddle back where you came.
00:43:49But the land under the water is extremely shaky, and the collapsed buildings begin to
00:43:53move around.
00:43:55It's like kayaking down a wild river, except it's also raining concrete.
00:44:01Once you make it back to the bubble cars, you and your friends decide it's time to
00:44:04head back to the giant bubble.
00:44:07But as you start to move, you notice that everything looks completely different.
00:44:12The ground's shifted so much, you're lost.
00:44:15Everything around you looks the same, like you're stuck in a giant maze.
00:44:20You drive around for ages.
00:44:22Is the giant bubble anywhere close?
00:44:25Impossible to tell.
00:44:27Out of nowhere, you hear a loud rumbling noise above you.
00:44:31You look up and see a helicopter soaring through the air.
00:44:34It drops down a rope ladder, and everyone climbs on.
00:44:38You were lucky this time.
00:44:41Yep, there's ice all around, as far as the eye can see.
00:44:48A white desert covers the entrance to your cave, the one where you and a bunch of other
00:44:53settlers live.
00:44:54Everyone's gathered around a fire pit, trying to keep warm, telling each other stories about
00:45:00how much snow they saw the other day.
00:45:02Some are running around playing tag, throwing sticks, whatever people used to do for fun
00:45:08300,000 years ago.
00:45:10You're one of the earliest Homo sapiens to ever walk the Earth.
00:45:16Others are sleeping, or just resting their eyes.
00:45:19All around the cave, all you can hear are stomachs rumbling.
00:45:24Sounds like a wild animal lurking around.
00:45:26You look out the mouth of the cave, and see that the storm has cleared.
00:45:31Time to grab some tools and head out as a group.
00:45:34In the open wilderness, you find some berries covered in snow, and plants that might be
00:45:40edible.
00:45:41But it's not enough to feed the whole tribe.
00:45:45It's the Ice Age, and there's not much vegetation growing anywhere.
00:45:49One of your friends spots some large footprints in the snow.
00:45:53The chase is on.
00:45:55You can't tell what it is, but it should be enough to feed everyone for a couple of days.
00:46:01As you go deeper into the snow-covered forest, you hear a growl behind you.
00:46:06You hope it's your stomach, but you look behind you and suddenly black out.
00:46:13The Ice Age is a period when large sheets of ice cover everything, changing the Earth
00:46:18permanently.
00:46:19It's partly responsible for the raising and lowering of sea levels, as well as the
00:46:23current layout of the continents.
00:46:26Picture monster-thick ice sheets spread across what's now Canada, Scandinavia, Russia,
00:46:32and even South America.
00:46:33That's all caused sea levels to change drastically, and temperatures around the world fell dramatically.
00:46:42But I'm not talking about just one Ice Age.
00:46:45There were a bunch of them.
00:46:47Scientists say there have been five major Ice Ages throughout history, lasting for millions
00:46:52of years.
00:46:53And we're in the middle of one right now.
00:46:56Relax, don't panic.
00:46:58It doesn't mean we're all going to be sleeping next to bonfires, trying to keep warm after
00:47:02being out all day looking for woolly mammoths.
00:47:06And no, there won't be a massive geological ice storm that freezes everything in its path.
00:47:12Ice Ages have warmer periods in them that come and go, lasting for tens of thousands
00:47:17of years.
00:47:18In fact, billions of years ago, the Earth was one giant snowball with no life on it.
00:47:25And the Sun back then was also just a cute little fireball without enough heat to melt
00:47:30all that ice.
00:47:32But as the Sun got bigger and hotter, Earth's ice slowly melted away, leaving the green
00:47:38and blue ball we have today.
00:47:41We're living in the Quaternary Ice Age that's been going on for the past 2.6 million years
00:47:46– and counting.
00:47:48Some animals have thrived in this latest Ice Age, like whales and sharks.
00:47:53They have been at the top of the food chain for ages.
00:47:56Under them are seals, certain kinds of fish, otters, all the way down to tiny plankton.
00:48:04Up on the cold surface, mammals had to grow thick and shaggy fur just to stay warm.
00:48:10Mammoths, rhinos, and bison were known to have thick rugs on them.
00:48:14They looked awesome.
00:48:16They were herbivores and ate small shrubs and whatever grass they could find.
00:48:21But several thousand years ago, temperatures began to rise, and most of these animals became
00:48:27extinct.
00:48:28The ones that remained evolved into the elephants, hippos, and rhinos we have today.
00:48:36You wake up from your blackout and find yourself face-to-face with a creature that kind of
00:48:41looks like a modern-day bobcat, except it's much bigger and furrier.
00:48:46It's a smilodon, an epic version of a saber-toothed cat with a mean look.
00:48:52It's around the same size as a male lion and has two front fangs that make me think twice
00:48:58before leaving the safety of my cave.
00:49:01They look scary, but scientists think their bite wasn't as powerful as today's tigers
00:49:06or lions.
00:49:07What made them tough were their giant forearms used to wrestle down anyone who got on their
00:49:12nerves.
00:49:13In packs, they were even able to take down mammoths.
00:49:18Either way, you don't want to be waking up next to this kitty.
00:49:22It's staring you down ready to pounce.
00:49:25But you and your friends keep calm and slowly back off.
00:49:29You get the genius idea to throw a rock to distract it, then run.
00:49:35Nowadays it's near impossible for a human to out-sprint a lion or tiger, but humans
00:49:40back then were much fitter.
00:49:43Once the danger's over, everyone continues to look for food.
00:49:46It's getting dark, and you haven't found anything to bring back to the cave.
00:49:51Suddenly you smell something burning.
00:49:54Way off in the distance, you see a thin column of smoke rising into the sky.
00:50:00Another settlement?
00:50:01You and your friends look at each other and approach the smoke cautiously.
00:50:07Homo sapiens first came into being about 200 or 300 years ago.
00:50:12But human history didn't just pop up out of nowhere.
00:50:15As far back as 7 million years ago, some of us decided to call it quits.
00:50:21We left our chimpanzee ancestors in the jungle and started doing our own thing.
00:50:26And that didn't just happen once.
00:50:29Over those next millions of years, there were over 20 different human species.
00:50:34Some were our ancestors, some were twigs from a completely different branch.
00:50:39Some were tiny, others better adapted for hot or cold weather.
00:50:44Before you know it, you see a group of Neanderthals cooking some meat, sharpening their tools.
00:50:50Neanderthals were the first to migrate to Europe.
00:50:53Scientists believe they were around somewhere between 40,000 to 400,000 years ago.
00:50:59They occupied all areas between Europe and Asia, while Homo sapiens – that's us – were
00:51:05still all the way down in Africa.
00:51:07You enter their camp and immediately see the differences between each other.
00:51:12They're stocky and look a bit different.
00:51:14But there are some similarities, like flat teeth for chewing and gnawing, and big skulls
00:51:20for their big brains.
00:51:21They even have clothes on, like you.
00:51:24According to archaeologists, they lived in shelters and made tools out of stone, sticks,
00:51:29and bones.
00:51:30They welcome you inside and give you a tour like no other.
00:51:34You're officially meeting another human species.
00:51:37They take you inside their cave and show you some of their cave paintings.
00:51:42They were the first artists of their time.
00:51:45Many of their galleries are still around today, like the ones in caves in Spain.
00:51:50You know their style – minimalist paintings of deer, a large handprint.
00:51:55They also dabbled a bit in jewelry-making.
00:51:58They made necklaces out of eagle talons and animal fangs.
00:52:02They were also probably the first ones to harness the power of fire.
00:52:06Did they discover it when a bolt of lightning hit a tree?
00:52:10Or when one of them dropped a rock on another rock, creating a spark?
00:52:14No one really knows.
00:52:15But they were able to recreate it and use it to keep warm, to cook food, to see in the
00:52:20darkness, and to protect themselves.
00:52:24After the nice tour, you hang around the campfire to keep warm.
00:52:28They even offer you some extra clothes for the journey home.
00:52:31Mostly thick, shaggy mammoth coats.
00:52:34If only you could talk to each other, that would be awesome.
00:52:38But it's getting dark, and you need to head back to the tribe.
00:52:42You say your goodbyes and thank them for teaching you how to draw a deer, and for that
00:52:46sack of food they gave you.
00:52:49The Ice Age was important for the development of the modern Homo sapiens.
00:52:54Because of the extreme cold and other harsh conditions, they had to adapt to survive,
00:52:59be extra clever and innovative.
00:53:02They developed advanced tools, and even used bone needles to sew warm clothing.
00:53:07They may have hosted the first ever runway show.
00:53:13When the climate started to get warmer, they developed farming techniques to sustain themselves
00:53:18and mainly settled near large bodies of water, like rivers or lakes, while others opted to
00:53:24be near seas and oceans.
00:53:26They, I mean we, were even the first to domesticate animals.
00:53:31Fast forward a few hundred thousand years, and here we are.
00:53:37You spend an average of 8 minutes of your day in the shower.
00:53:40Hey, I'm not there holding a stopwatch, you know, it's just typical.
00:53:44Anyway, that adds up to around 6 months by the time you're 60.
00:53:49All this showering takes about 11 bottles of shower gel, or 30 bars of soap per year.
00:53:55You also use enough water to sprinkle over 98 football fields.
00:54:00Not wanting to let too much time and money go down the drain, you decide to reduce your
00:54:05showering to just water and stop using shampoo.
00:54:08You'll still wash your hands with basic soap to stay healthy.
00:54:12You do some research and find out that 80% of all those mean bacteria that make you stink
00:54:18can be washed off by plain water.
00:54:20You don't believe it, but you hide your soap, shower gel, and body wash and go to bed.
00:54:26On day one of the experiment, you wake up as usual, brush your teeth, splash yourself
00:54:31with nothing but water, and put on some organic deodorant.
00:54:35You just save 7 minutes and use that time to enjoy a cup of coffee.
00:54:40You arrive at the office and ask your friend, Sam, to sniff at you just to be sure.
00:54:45Well, he looks at you like you're crazy.
00:54:47Hey, what did you expect?
00:54:49Sam doesn't notice any difference at all.
00:54:52Triumphant, you get back home and repeat your water-only shower the next morning.
00:54:57Your hair is starting to get a bit greasy as you washed it 2 days ago.
00:55:02You decide to give it another day and gradually make those gaps between washing longer and
00:55:07longer.
00:55:08In the evening, you feel the temptation to reach for some shower gel.
00:55:13You really want to get a cold shower, but you realize you need higher water temperatures
00:55:17to combat those bacteria.
00:55:19Day by day, you get used to those sauna-like showers.
00:55:23You go to bed and see soap and body lotion in your dreams, stretching their arms towards
00:55:28you and begging you to get back to them.
00:55:31On day 3 of the experiment, you wash your hair with water only for the first time.
00:55:36Before you do it, you rub your scalp to spread the natural oils.
00:55:40Then you pinch it in sections to pull the oils from the roots down to the ends.
00:55:45You brush it well to get rid of tangles, and only then you wash it with lukewarm water.
00:55:51You let it dry, and it feels just as clean as after shampoo.
00:55:55The rest of your body doesn't feel as clean.
00:55:58By day 6, you feel like you're greasy and dry at the same time.
00:56:03Your abandoned soap triumphs.
00:56:05You reach for it, about to give up, when suddenly your TV turns on by itself.
00:56:10It's a whole show on how to stay clean with no soap.
00:56:14It says that Romans in the 1st century used to take 2-hour-long soaks in baths of different
00:56:20temperatures, scrape and apply oil to feel clean.
00:56:24For French aristocrats in the 17th century, changing a shirt every day and putting some
00:56:29water on their hands was enough.
00:56:32It's kind of a psychological thing.
00:56:34You have to get used to your new clean feeling.
00:56:37The smell of soap or body wash used to be your clean smell.
00:56:41Now you have your own natural smell, and it's okay that it's not vanilla ice cream.
00:56:47It also explains no soap doesn't mean no scrubbing.
00:56:51If you just stand under running water, you won't make the bacteria go away.
00:56:56You can use a washcloth, a loofah, a body brush, or whatever works for you.
00:57:01When you scrub yourself, you remove the top layer of those skin cells you no longer need.
00:57:07You tell yourself you're clean as ever, hop out of the shower, and after 15 minutes, you
00:57:12feel your skin is crisp and impeccable.
00:57:16You also notice your skin has that creamy soft glow like in a body lotion ad.
00:57:21The chemicals soap contains are super dehydrating.
00:57:24They remove the protective oils from your skin.
00:57:27It messes up the oil balance in its fragile ecosystem and turns it into a patchy dry desert.
00:57:34Water helps restore that balance.
00:57:36You get to work and ask Sam if he's noticing any changes in your smell.
00:57:40Again, he really doesn't get it, so you explain the experiment idea.
00:57:46He looks at you with approval and, surprisingly, shares some knowledge on the topic too.
00:57:51First, what you do for a living matters.
00:57:54If you work with dangerous chemicals, at a farm, as a gardener or construction worker
00:57:59and contact dirt, pollens, and allergens, you have to shower daily and with soap.
00:58:05The same is with athletes, personal trainers, and fitness instructors.
00:58:09Unless you're one of them, you can go just fine with water or even no showering at all
00:58:14for days.
00:58:15Plus, you save a lot of energy when you're driving and not running around.
00:58:20That's why people of the past needed the shower more often than you do.
00:58:24Second, your genetics also play a role.
00:58:27Your sweat glands could be more active than your neighbor's, and you could be more likely
00:58:31to smell.
00:58:33Your colleague Jill overhears the talk and adds it's also about what you're wearing.
00:58:38Cotton lets your skin breathe better than polyester.
00:58:41It also lets enough moisture escape so that you don't smell bad.
00:58:45Jill also reveals her secret.
00:58:48She's been taking water-only showers for a month.
00:58:50She always wears a long-sleeve shirt and jeans to the office, and she's perfectly fine.
00:58:56Her skin doesn't really get that dirty.
00:58:58She also confesses she has smelly feet, soap or no soap.
00:59:03As long as she's wearing shoes like most people do in the office, no one ever notices
00:59:08that.
00:59:09It's been 7 days since you last washed your hair with lukewarm water.
00:59:13It feels a bit greasy, but you can tell it's getting stronger at the roots.
00:59:17Because you don't wash it with shampoo anymore, all the natural oils stay on your scalp.
00:59:23You are retraining it to produce just enough of them so that your hair doesn't get greasy
00:59:28quickly like it used to.
00:59:30You repeat the hair ritual with massaging, preening, brushing, and washing.
00:59:35You go on with the experiment, and by the beginning of week 3, you realize you can perfectly
00:59:41live without soap and shampoo in your bathroom.
00:59:44You go to work, meet up with your friends, and no one notices any difference.
00:59:49You learn to accept your natural smell isn't roses, but it's not dirty socks either.
00:59:54You also realize soap doesn't deodorize, but puts on a thin top layer of fragrance.
01:00:00It makes you smell fresh and clean short-term.
01:00:02But then it restarts the problem it just solved.
01:00:06Your hair feels good like never before.
01:00:09It's perfectly hydrated, soft, silky, and even bouncy.
01:00:13It smells fresh and looks clean, so no one could tell you aren't using shampoo anymore.
01:00:19It now starts to look oily 7-10 days after washing.
01:00:23It also dries faster and is easier to handle.
01:00:26You save some money that used to go on shampoo, soap, shower gels, and body wash.
01:00:32Most importantly, you now have more time in the morning and before bed.
01:00:37You can see your skin is healthier than ever, and you decide to give it a soap vacation
01:00:42every once in a while.
01:00:44If you stay in this mode forever, you might have trouble with the remaining 20% of bacteria
01:00:49that can't be removed by just water.
01:00:52Water game is especially strong in the warm and humid areas of your body.
01:00:56At those times you want to use more than water, you can try one of the soap alternatives.
01:01:01You can make your own natural scrub from the ingredients you have in your kitchen.
01:01:05Oatmeal, honey, and plain yogurt mix well, same as avocado oil, honey, and sugar.
01:01:11You just can't scrub your face with it because the skin is more delicate there.
01:01:16You can also try oil-based cleansers that trap dirt and old skin cells.
01:01:21They don't disrupt the oil balance when you put them on before taking a shower.
01:01:25Cinnamon and cloves are both famous for their antibacterial properties, so their oils are
01:01:30perfect for this.
01:01:32Honey is great for keeping your body healthy and preventing the growth of bacteria.
01:01:37You can use it as a one-ingredient natural cleanser.
01:01:40Apple cider vinegar makes a great natural toner to cleanse skin.
01:01:45If you want to use soap, choose the natural options.
01:01:48Check if it has glycerin in it.
01:01:50It's a plant-based cleanser that keeps all useful moisture in your skin's natural protective
01:01:55barrier.
01:01:56Shea butter and coconut butter are used in hypoallergenic soaps.
01:02:00Lemon, rose, lavender, and cedarwood oils are often added to healthy scented soaps.
01:02:07Coconut and almond oil are also great moisturizers.
01:02:10All of it's a great way to have some skin in the game.
01:02:15The ocean is turning red hot!
01:02:17You try to get closer for a better look, but you start feeling the air getting hotter
01:02:21and hotter, like reaching into an oven.
01:02:24And the sand is so hot that your rubber slippers start melting!
01:02:28The oceans somehow turned into steamy hot gooey lava!
01:02:33You start running inland and see a frenzy of people running wild.
01:02:37See, in reality, lava is made of molten rocks from below the Earth's surface.
01:02:44But inside our planet, like the distance between New York and Philadelphia deep, the
01:02:48underground heat from the core melts rocks the same way the sun melts ice cream.
01:02:54When these rocks melt, their temperatures can reach around 2200 degrees Fahrenheit.
01:03:00But don't worry, that only happens really deep under the ground and only in some specific
01:03:05areas, mostly around the Atlantic Ocean.
01:03:09And it only pops out of the ground when there's so much pressure that it flows up to the surface,
01:03:14as a gooey orange super hot liquid called lava that usually erupts through a volcano's neck.
01:03:21But somehow, the entire ocean is made of lava now!
01:03:25And although from a really far away distance, it looks pretty cool to look at, it's really dangerous.
01:03:32First of all, say goodbye to the beautiful blue waves and the ocean currents.
01:03:37Unlike water, lava is thicker, closer to creamy peanut butter in texture, so the wind can't
01:03:43move it around like it used to.
01:03:45But that also means that nothing can sink or swim in it.
01:03:50So even if some ocean creatures could withstand the super high temperatures of lava, they
01:03:55won't be able to live inside of it.
01:03:57They'll either be submerged or float on the surface instead, depending on their density.
01:04:03So all our marine friends and other creatures that used to call the ocean home will need
01:04:08to find another body of water to live in if they want to survive.
01:04:12Actually, the only animals on this planet that could possibly survive the heat of lava
01:04:17would be the tardigrades.
01:04:19These cute microscopic creatures can survive in any extreme environment on this planet.
01:04:25From frozen icy glaciers to hot and fiery volcanoes, they can even survive in outer
01:04:30space under the cosmic rays.
01:04:34You run away from the beach along with everyone else nearby.
01:04:37The atmosphere is getting thicker and it's not easy to see around you.
01:04:42You think to yourself, I should have stayed home.
01:04:45But home isn't exactly safe either.
01:04:48The heat radiating from all the lava alone would be intolerable for miles.
01:04:53So no more houses by the sea and beach resorts.
01:04:57You're going to want to make sure you live as far away from the ocean as possible.
01:05:03Most of the coastal cities would become instantly uninhabitable, especially areas touching the
01:05:08ocean with more than one side.
01:05:11Cities like Florida, California, and Central America would become mostly unbearable to
01:05:16live in.
01:05:17And that's not to mention island life.
01:05:20Most islands would be so hot that no animal or plant could survive.
01:05:2597% of the planet was made up of ocean water, and it now all turned to lava.
01:05:32No place on Earth can hold snow anymore as the planet would look like a glowing orange
01:05:36lava ball.
01:05:38Temperatures would rise so much that the furthest place from the shores and even the highest
01:05:42peaks will still feel like the hottest day in a desert.
01:05:46As you keep running away from the ocean, you realize that maybe you're dreaming.
01:05:51But you look at your skin and see so much redness.
01:05:54Even if you run for miles, the heat will still catch up to you.
01:05:59All the offshore oil rigs and ships in the middle of the oceans will face plenty of problems
01:06:04too.
01:06:05Their metallic composition would simply glow red and melt instantly when in contact with
01:06:11hot lava.
01:06:12And even if it doesn't melt, you better hope nobody happens to be on it.
01:06:16But in any event like that, they would have evacuated everyone.
01:06:21Meanwhile, at the North and South Poles, where the planet is at its coldest, all the ice
01:06:27that was covering the ocean is instantly melting in contact with the lava.
01:06:32It would then cool down and solidify into rocky black landmasses, called igneous rocks,
01:06:38that are often glassy in texture.
01:06:40The moment the hot lava cools down, huge clouds of acidic steam and gases get released into
01:06:47the air, covering the sky.
01:06:50Scientists call those lays, which is a combination of the words lava and haze.
01:06:56Kinda like when you exit the shower and all the heat comes in contact with the cold outside
01:07:01air, creating a haze.
01:07:03Except this one would cover the whole North and South Poles, and it would be super toxic.
01:07:08It sometimes even contains tiny glass particles that are extremely hazardous.
01:07:14And this lays can travel around the world with strong enough wind and cover almost the
01:07:19entire Northern Hemisphere.
01:07:21It could also cover the southern part of New Zealand, Argentina, South Africa, and Australia.
01:07:28Flying an airplane through this gas wouldn't be the best idea.
01:07:32The heat alone emitted from the lava would be enough to cause major damage to the exterior
01:07:38and affect the airplane's hardware.
01:07:41It's a good thing you found your trusty oxygen container.
01:07:44The air is barely breathable at this point.
01:07:47You make your way to your car and drive away as fast as you can.
01:07:51But even your car's taken some damage.
01:07:54You drive out to the countryside, where the atmosphere hasn't been affected by the lava
01:07:58yet.
01:07:59But even all the way out here, the temperature is changing.
01:08:03The river you used to see on your weekly hikes is drying up.
01:08:07The plants around you are losing their green lush.
01:08:11The animals around have migrated to a different place.
01:08:15Rivers flowing into the ocean would simply create mounds of glassy igneous rocks upon
01:08:19contact, permanently creating natural dams.
01:08:24The rest of the water inland, like in ponds and lakes, would eventually evaporate over
01:08:29time.
01:08:30With the rise in temperatures and no rainfall, it would be the end of water on the planet
01:08:35as we know it.
01:08:36The huge mass of ocean water plays a major role in creating clouds and rainfall.
01:08:42Without water in the atmosphere, the sun's heat would add to the lavas.
01:08:47The world would be a huge, barren wasteland.
01:08:50The nights would be hot, and the days even hotter.
01:08:57Hop on the Bright Side of life together with our brand new tees, hoodies, and more.
01:09:01Click the link to pick your choice.
01:09:03Still, lava cools down eventually in contact with the cool air.
01:09:07So soon enough, the surface would start forming a thin layer of black crust that would gradually
01:09:13thicken over the years.
01:09:15The thicker the lava, the longer it takes to completely cool down on the inside.
01:09:20It would still be super hot though, but at least if you touch it, you won't be directly
01:09:24touching the burning lava.
01:09:27That's actually how many islands were formed, like the Hawaiian Islands for example.
01:09:32They're fully formed by lava erupting from below the ocean that dried over hundreds of
01:09:37thousands of years.
01:09:39Heat accumulated layers over layers of solidified lava from below the ocean until it rose above
01:09:45the surface forming islands and even mountains.
01:09:49As we speak, a new landmass in Hawaii is being formed by an active volcano.
01:09:56Scientists expect it to be a new fully formed island in about 10,000 years.
01:10:02So now, the view that used to be the blue ocean turned into steamy glowing orange slime
01:10:08that will in turn quickly transform into a solid black wasteland.
01:10:13But don't think you can easily walk over that ocean.
01:10:16It could take hundreds of years for it to fully cool down and turn into solid rock.
01:10:21Until then, walking on that dried lava crust would be similar to walking on a frozen lake,
01:10:27except that in this case, one misstep would cause you to fall into boiling hot lava instead
01:10:33of ice cold water.
01:10:35Some regions would even take thousands of years to fully solidify.
01:10:39The Mariana Trench, the deepest region of the ocean, is about a whopping 43,000 feet
01:10:45deep.
01:10:46It would actually take at least 5,000 years for that much lava to completely cool down.
01:10:51There are many planets out there that are so-called lava planets.
01:10:55A recently discovered planet, K2-141b, has magma oceans, supersonic winds up to 3,000
01:11:03mph, and even rocky rains.
01:11:07That's right, the planet is so hot that it vaporizes rocks and rains them back down.
01:11:13Keep in mind that this planet is much closer to the sun than our planet is.
01:11:19Maybe their oceans once turned into lava overnight.
01:11:26Behold the distant future.
01:11:28Yep, humans have successfully colonized Mars and the Moon.
01:11:32Problems with overpopulation and hunger on Earth are solved.
01:11:36But soon, a new threat looms over our planet, excuse me, planets, and the Moon.
01:11:42Anyway, scientists have figured out that in 150 years, the sun will explode and destroy
01:11:48our entire solar system.
01:11:50Bummer.
01:11:51There's enough time to build a fleet of huge spaceships and evacuate everyone.
01:11:56But it's not enough time to come up with some sort of sci-fi space jump.
01:12:01It's been a long time since people found a new potentially livable planet, and the
01:12:06nearest one's a several million years' ride away.
01:12:10There's no other choice, humankind is evacuated into gargantuan spaceships, and the infinitely
01:12:16long voyage begins.
01:12:18A few decades pass, we leave the solar system and watch our sun explode.
01:12:23A huge flash and that's it, there's no more light.
01:12:27Stars, small faraway stars, and the infinite black depths of space.
01:12:33All ships are on a synced autopilot that won't go off course no matter what.
01:12:38Even if everyone on board were to disappear, the ship would still arrive at its destination.
01:12:44So the upside, humans will survive for millions more years.
01:12:48The downside?
01:12:49Because of all that time spent on space transports, we'll look different, totally different.
01:12:55Astronauts arriving to the new planet will be populated with shapeless, pulsating biomasses
01:13:01sitting inside metal exoskeletons.
01:13:04Here's how it happens.
01:13:06Bones in space get weaker, so do muscles.
01:13:09There's no gravity, so your body's not under any sort of pressure to keep it running properly.
01:13:15Astronauts on the International Space Station do a lot of exercise to stop their muscles
01:13:19from withering away.
01:13:21Back to the story.
01:13:23There are gyms and special machines that recreate gravity on every space transport.
01:13:28But to save energy, they're only plugged in in a couple of hours per day.
01:13:32Unfortunately, no matter how hard people exercise, in space it just won't be enough.
01:13:39After the first hundred years, human bones have become so brittle that anything remotely
01:13:44physical can lead to injury.
01:13:46After another hundred years, people lose the ability to stand up on their two legs.
01:13:51But it's not only because of weak bones.
01:13:54After all those years in zero gravity, the human body's already changed a lot.
01:13:59A big problem is that people lose their sense of balance.
01:14:03If you try to stand up, you'll just fall.
01:14:06The ship's captains dismantled the gravity machines – they weren't working anyways.
01:14:11And all the sports equipment on board got taken apart ages ago and used as spare parts
01:14:16for the ships.
01:14:18The lack of gravity didn't just make people weaker – it also made them taller.
01:14:23The spine needs gravity to keep it stable, and now all those backbone discs have stretched
01:14:29themselves out.
01:14:31Humans are starting to look like blow-up toys.
01:14:33Everyone's given mechanical arms and legs.
01:14:36You just strap them on and get to work.
01:14:40Surfacing the engine, cleaning out the bedrooms, throwing trash out into space, lifting anything
01:14:46Not happening without those mechanical arms and legs.
01:14:50Time passes, and people become more helpless.
01:14:53Luckily, the mechanical body suits keep getting better and better.
01:14:57Since the sun collapsed in on itself, human eyes have been having a hard time.
01:15:03Inside the ships, the sun is replaced by special artificial light that also gives off vitamin
01:15:08D. Since there's way less light overall, people's pupils become whiter.
01:15:14Then after a few more centuries, their vision really starts going downhill.
01:15:18But this problem is solved by technology.
01:15:22Artificial lenses magnify light and keep humans from going completely blind.
01:15:27The ships get disinfected every single day.
01:15:30That stops bacteria and microbes from multiplying.
01:15:33But it also means that the human immune system doesn't have to fight off any diseases.
01:15:38Pretty soon, humans can't defend themselves against anything.
01:15:42And a mild cold could be seriously harmful.
01:15:45It's fine for now, there are no germs or anything on board.
01:15:49But what's going to happen later on down the road?
01:15:52On the ship, millions of plants grow in special greenhouses with water and ultraviolet light.
01:15:58The plants produce oxygen and spread it through the entire ship.
01:16:02Of course, it's not enough oxygen to satisfy millions, but it helps people remember the
01:16:07planet they left behind.
01:16:09After centuries of living on spaceships, humans have adapted to the new conditions and almost
01:16:14stopped breathing.
01:16:16Lungs have disappeared almost completely, and humans are starting to develop other ways
01:16:21of getting oxygen.
01:16:22From water, from liquid oxygen tanks, we're becoming a totally new species.
01:16:28But it's not all bad.
01:16:30Genetic engineering is developing every year.
01:16:33Full-fledged life support suits are created.
01:16:36They help with movement, strength, speed, vision, hearing, even speech.
01:16:41People's voices get so weak they can only speak in whispers.
01:16:45Luckily, the suits have built-in microphones and speakers.
01:16:49There's no food anymore, just specially created liquids.
01:16:52After all that time in space, the human stomach can't digest anything anyway.
01:16:57Fancy a handful of peanuts or a small cracker?
01:17:00Forget it!
01:17:01In the beginning, the special space food had loads of flavor.
01:17:05But over time, people sort of forgot what things were supposed to taste like.
01:17:10Eventually, they stopped adding in flavorings, and because of this new tasteless food, tongue
01:17:15receptors stopped working.
01:17:17Soon, people lost all sense of taste.
01:17:20For some people, this life seems unbearable, but they have a choice.
01:17:24They can just slide on into a cryogenic capsule for millions of years.
01:17:30Then it's just a matter of a quick defrost when the ships finally arrive.
01:17:34But it's seriously risky to be frozen for such a long time.
01:17:38There's no guarantee that the ships won't crash into a huge meteorite or worse.
01:17:45People start to take a different approach.
01:17:47They upload their consciousness to a central computer.
01:17:50It's safer and requires much less power.
01:17:53And when you wake up, you can just download your mind into a new modified human suit.
01:17:59Some people decide to stay awake and live a, quote, normal life.
01:18:04Thousands of years pass, then millions.
01:18:07Humans look really different now.
01:18:09All their limbs are now artificial, and the exoskeletons they wear are controlled by mind
01:18:14power.
01:18:15With each passing millennium, arms, neck, legs, and spines, they become smaller and
01:18:20smaller.
01:18:22Brittle bones soon dissolve into nothingness.
01:18:24Eyes, nose, and mouths disappear.
01:18:28The brain isn't protected by a skull anymore, it's just surrounded by soft skin.
01:18:33Only consciousness remains.
01:18:35Nowadays, a human is a powerful high-tech robot ruled over by a small, pulsating bag
01:18:42filled with a brain.
01:18:43It's been a few million years since humans left Earth.
01:18:47All the ships' inhabitants have already forgotten that their species was born on a
01:18:51planet with gravity.
01:18:53The history of life on Earth has become a myth, an ancient legend.
01:18:58Most people believe that these ships are their true homes, always have been.
01:19:02That's why, when humans finally reach their destination, no one's that eager to get
01:19:07off and have a walk around.
01:19:10Life on a new, unknown planet seems like a huge pain in the spacesuit.
01:19:14Gravity, air, bacteria, germs… it takes several thousand years of evolution for humanity
01:19:21to get used to these new conditions.
01:19:24Luckily, humans have a secret weapon – technology.
01:19:28At this point, all humans are downloaded from the central computer into new robot suits.
01:19:34People face a choice – get off the ship and make this planet their new home, or stay
01:19:39and live on the ships.
01:19:41Those that stay on the ships set off into the expanses of space to explore the galaxy
01:19:46and discover new worlds.
01:19:48Those who decide to stay on the new planet have to adapt to the new conditions.
01:19:52It's pretty different from Earth.
01:19:54There's a different air density, different weather patterns, and strange new chemical
01:19:59elements.
01:20:00It will take another million years before these robo-brain sacks take on a new shape.
01:20:06One day, these distant human descendants will want to research their origins.
01:20:10They'll invent a ship that can jump through space and time.
01:20:14The research will lead them to the distant past, to the small planet Earth, to now.
01:20:20This might sound crazy, but just imagine that tomorrow, someone lands in your backyard,
01:20:26and they're your descendants from the future.
01:20:29Those passengers who stayed on the ships will probably find new planets, and maybe decide
01:20:35to stay on some of them.
01:20:36Their bodies will change and adapt too.
01:20:39So in billions of years, the universe will be inhabited by different amazing creatures
01:20:45that all have something in common.
01:20:47They were all humans once.
01:20:50Ah, it's a lovely day for a boat ride in the swamp.
01:20:57If not for these mosquitos, then today would be perfect.
01:21:00But for some reason, the mosquitos keep getting bigger the further you go into the swamp.
01:21:05They started out as tiny, almost invisible insects, and can now be the size of your thumb.
01:21:11You can hear their buzzing as they whiz past you.
01:21:14You go deeper to investigate why they're so big.
01:21:17Eventually, you see a large cluster of mosquitos the size of your hand buzzing around.
01:21:23They notice you and start flying toward you.
01:21:26You grab a branch and start swatting them away.
01:21:29You run back to your boat and try to escape, but they follow you, and some manage to land
01:21:34on you.
01:21:35You swat them away, but more mosquitos pop out of nowhere the size of a basketball.
01:21:41You start your boat and speed your way back to the mainland.
01:21:44As you arrive, you see everyone running away in a frenzy, panicking because of the giant
01:21:49mosquitos.
01:21:51Some of them are as big as a large dog.
01:21:54People are ducking under picnic tables, while some are running back to their cars and driving
01:21:58away.
01:21:59You get off the boat and run toward the closest grocery store, along with dozens of people.
01:22:04The employees lock up the gates, but the large glass panels show the mosquitos multiplying.
01:22:09They're getting bigger and bigger until you can see one as big as a car zipping by.
01:22:15It's so strong that it landed on an empty car and crushed it.
01:22:19Everyone inside is ducking away out of fear.
01:22:22You try to calm everyone down and not make any noise.
01:22:25The mosquitos are landing on the glass panel, blocking out the natural light.
01:22:30It's getting dark inside.
01:22:32Everyone turns up the volume on the TV to the breaking news.
01:22:36Mosquitos are flying rampant all across the continent, destroying natural resources and
01:22:41infiltrating cities.
01:22:43People are advised to stay indoors until further notice.
01:22:46The mosquitos notice that there are people in the store, so they try to get in by force.
01:22:51A car-sized mosquito flies around in the sky, unaware of what's happening below.
01:22:57Everyone hears some noise coming from the back room.
01:22:59The employees realize they didn't lock the doors.
01:23:03A large mosquito enters and knocks down everything.
01:23:07Everyone runs around in a panic while throwing random stuff at it.
01:23:11Some people grab a fire extinguisher and spray it until it flies to the back room.
01:23:16Some employees lock the door and barricade it so that nothing can enter.
01:23:20Everyone waits nervously.
01:23:22The TV broadcasts some live coverage of how giant mosquitos are flying everywhere.
01:23:27A helicopter is forced to land because the mosquitos are flying around wildly in the
01:23:31skies.
01:23:32Everyone shudders when they hear the sound of more mosquitos buzzing around near the
01:23:37back door.
01:23:38Hours pass, and more mosquitos keep coming endlessly.
01:23:43There are no people outside, and much of the urban and landscape design in the park is
01:23:47destroyed or overrun by giant insects.
01:23:51Some people eat whatever is available, while some are sleeping.
01:23:54A piece of breaking news interrupts the live coverage and shows that there will be armored
01:23:58buses ready to pick up people near the picnic site.
01:24:02However, the buses won't drive to hot spots since it'll be too dangerous.
01:24:07The only way to get on them is by being on the highway in two hours.
01:24:11Everyone tries to call their loved ones, but the cell towers have been knocked down, and
01:24:15no one can call anyone.
01:24:17The mosquito that broke in a while ago destroyed the only landline that was present.
01:24:22People are arguing about whether they should stay or go.
01:24:25More insects cover the only clear patches of the sky until the sun disappears.
01:24:31The people split into two parties, those who are leaving to catch the bus and those who
01:24:35want to stay.
01:24:37The employees know a back way that can quickly lead to the highway.
01:24:41The only problem is that it'll take around 20 minutes on foot, and there are no cars
01:24:45to use.
01:24:46The way is tricky.
01:24:47First, they would need to escape through the main entrance and head through the bushy forest
01:24:52behind the dumpsters.
01:24:54Over there, they can enter a building, possibly through the sewers, which will lead to the
01:24:58lake next to the highway.
01:25:00The first party decides to leave.
01:25:02They prepare supplies for the breakout.
01:25:05Every second, more mosquitoes arrive, covering the sky.
01:25:09They gear up with anything they can find to protect themselves.
01:25:13Mosquitoes are attracted to the carbon dioxide that people breathe out, and they know that
01:25:17there's a source coming from the grocery store.
01:25:20Once everyone is ready, they get some makeshift torches and light them up.
01:25:24They add some barbecue fuel to keep the fire going.
01:25:27You're part of the party that is planning to escape.
01:25:30The doors open, and everyone makes a break for it behind the dumpster.
01:25:34Many mosquitoes try to attack you, but the smoke from the fire repels them.
01:25:39Every second, more mosquitoes are filling the sky and the environment.
01:25:43Many people end up running back into the store, since they couldn't make it past the dumpster
01:25:47to the other building.
01:25:48Eventually, the rest of the people, including yourself, run toward the building.
01:25:53But it's locked, and no one can break down the door.
01:25:56Plan B is to break the glass from a window and crawl inside.
01:26:00You grab a rock and smash the closest window.
01:26:03The only problem is that the mosquitoes can follow you inside.
01:26:07So without any options left, you pull through and run to the basement of the building to
01:26:12find the entrance to the sewer.
01:26:14Success!
01:26:15You've found it, and everyone descends to the bottom.
01:26:18No mosquitoes in sight, just rats.
01:26:21You're walking knee-high in sewer water, with it flowing past you, but it's only a few minutes
01:26:26until you reach the river.
01:26:28Another problem is that the sewer isn't going to the lake, but somewhere deep into the sewer
01:26:33channels.
01:26:34You follow it until you see what looks like an outlet.
01:26:37You make it out, and are near a waterhole where all the discarded sewage leads next
01:26:42to the swamp.
01:26:43The only problem is that you're not next to the highway anymore, and time is running out.
01:26:48More mosquitoes are swarming the air, but they don't bother buzzing next to you.
01:26:52You notice some cat-sized creatures floating on the water.
01:26:56These are baby mosquitoes, or the larvae, and they're coming your way!
01:27:02You and everyone else swim for your lives to the shore.
01:27:05The giant alpha mosquito soars into the air and swoops down to try and grab someone, but
01:27:11it misses.
01:27:13Everyone makes it to the thick, swampy area where no giant mosquitoes can enter.
01:27:17Everyone covers themselves with branches to protect themselves.
01:27:20Fifteen minutes until the armored bus arrives.
01:27:23Since the mosquitoes can't enter, this will be the best place to hide until then.
01:27:27Darkness falls, and still, no bus!
01:27:30It's been three hours, and nothing!
01:27:33The mosquitoes are still buzzing around, and everyone is getting uncomfortable under the
01:27:37thick bushes.
01:27:38After a while, everyone hears a roaring engine and sees lights flashing on the highway!
01:27:44Everyone gets up and runs to the bus, but you stop them to not draw the mosquitoes'
01:27:49attention.
01:27:50You volunteer to sneak out and stop the bus, and then everyone else can follow without
01:27:54drawing too much attention.
01:27:56You move a couple of branches, step over some tree bark, and crawl to the highway.
01:28:01You try to hold your breath so that you won't make any heavy breathing sounds.
01:28:05You reach the side of the road and wave your arms to stop the bus.
01:28:09It pulls over, and the door opens.
01:28:10You signal the rest of the people to follow, and they follow your lead.
01:28:15Everyone is inside and safe.
01:28:17Some mosquitoes notice and start pecking on the bus, but the armor is sturdy.
01:28:22The bus drives off, looking for other people along the road, and suddenly, a Goliath lands
01:28:28in front of you!
01:28:29The bus stops and sees a mosquito the size of a Boeing 747!
01:28:34It looks straight at you.
01:28:35It gets ready to attack, but the bus speeds under its legs and drives off.
01:28:40The mosquito takes off and tries to catch the bus, but you enter a tunnel to the other
01:28:45side of the mountain.
01:28:47After a few minutes, you reach an open area with no trees or buildings.
01:28:51The bus is speeding while dodging obstacles along the way.
01:28:54Finally, you notice you are near the grocery store where you were held up.
01:28:59The bus opens the door for everyone inside to be taken to a safe zone.
01:29:03You hear from the aid workers that the whole world is being overrun by these giant creatures.
01:29:09As you drive along, you see a hybrid mosquito that has two heads and a scorpion's tail!
01:29:15It's as tall as a Statue of Liberty, and it's ready to attack!
01:29:19Whatever is causing these mosquitoes to grow abnormally is also making them into hybrids
01:29:24and mutants.
01:29:25And you thought it was going to be a good Monday.
01:29:30Day 1.
01:29:31A small but powerful tremor is shaking the city of Naples, Italy.
01:29:36The news networks are reporting on the event.
01:29:38The experts believe that Mount Vesuvius, the stratovolcano on the Gulf of Naples, will
01:29:43explode soon.
01:29:45But when?
01:29:46It's erupted many times in the past.
01:29:48In fact, that's how it got its shape.
01:29:50It's made of multiple layers of hardened lava, pumice, and ash.
01:29:55Vesuvius last erupted in 1944, but a major blast happened there nearly 2,000 years ago.
01:30:02It buried the Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum and decimated the surrounding areas.
01:30:08Today, 3 million people live less than 20 miles from the volcano, and 600,000 live in
01:30:14the danger zone.
01:30:16Large eruptions happen every few thousand years, usually after long periods of calm.
01:30:21And the trouble is, Vesuvius is long overdue for its next one.
01:30:26This time, though, the volcano is being watched by the Vesuvius Observatory.
01:30:30It has seismic stations, special GPS arrays, and satellite-based radar to help it measure
01:30:36ground movement.
01:30:37They also have special equipment to test the chemicals found in the gases coming from the
01:30:41volcano.
01:30:43All of this helps the experts work out whether it's about to go off.
01:30:47But will it?
01:30:48Right now, the magma is more than 6 miles from the surface.
01:30:52Things seemed safe yesterday, but now they're about to take a turn for the worse.
01:30:58Day 3.
01:30:59Another tremor comes in measuring 3 on the Richter scale.
01:31:03All the equipment that's installed near the volcano is now going off.
01:31:07The magma is pushing upwards.
01:31:08It's not at the surface yet, but Vesuvius is definitely restless.
01:31:14Two more tremors follow in the afternoon.
01:31:16They don't feel like regular earthquakes, and geologists can see the difference in their
01:31:21seismographs.
01:31:22Volcanic quakes register about 4 to 5 less on the Richter scale.
01:31:26Now, the experts are sure, it's just a matter of days or weeks until the volcano erupts.
01:31:33Some volcanoes can be restless for months or even years before they go off.
01:31:37But that's not how it goes with Vesuvius.
01:31:41Day 4.
01:31:42The ground starts to crack open, as if a giant creature is trapped in the Earth's crust
01:31:47and is trying to desperately get out for some air.
01:31:50Steam escapes from the little cracks in the soil.
01:31:53Certain areas are hotter than others.
01:31:55If you went there, it would feel like you walked straight into an oven, and it would
01:31:59be hard to breathe.
01:32:00Some sheep got too close to the mountain and passed out.
01:32:04When the farmer found them, he almost collapsed too, not from the heat, but from the gases.
01:32:09Carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide are being released into the air.
01:32:13The entire area around the volcano smells like rotten eggs, and many of the forest animals
01:32:19are now staying clear.
01:32:21The nearby trees have been absorbing these gases from the soil for days on end now, and
01:32:26they're starting to turn brown.
01:32:28The carbon dioxide levels in the area are skyrocketing, and all the detectors are beeping
01:32:33constantly.
01:32:35Day 6.
01:32:37The tremors are getting more frequent.
01:32:39Experts at the Vesuvius Observatory monitoring the volcano say the quakes are coming from
01:32:44the magma that's being pushed upwards.
01:32:46A few hours later, the national emergency alert goes out.
01:32:50Thousands of local people have around 15 days before the volcano erupts, and they need to
01:32:55evacuate their homes.
01:32:57The 600,000 people in the danger zone start to pack their suitcases and leave in cars
01:33:02and trucks.
01:33:03There's chaos everywhere.
01:33:05But in all that disorder, some people are standing still.
01:33:08They look around, trying to understand what's really going on.
01:33:12A few of them are taking photos of their homes.
01:33:15Others are streaming all the confusion on social media.
01:33:18But the senior citizens are just standing outside, looking at their houses one last
01:33:23time.
01:33:24They hope this is all just a false alarm.
01:33:27It's happened before, but who really knows?
01:33:30Day 7.
01:33:33It was a sleepless night.
01:33:35Plenty of the locals have already left.
01:33:37Some good people from other towns drive to the area to help the residents evacuate faster.
01:33:42There's a massive traffic jam, but everyone expected it.
01:33:46This is why the evacuation started early.
01:33:48Ferries, trains, and buses have canceled their services to help the evacuees.
01:33:53They're all working on a tight schedule to make sure everyone gets out safe without
01:33:58any delays.
01:33:59Some people refuse to leave, but their neighbors eventually convince them to go.
01:34:03It will take 7 days to evacuate everyone, and these people will spread out to other
01:34:08areas of the country, not just to the nearby safe regions.
01:34:13Day 10.
01:34:14More than half of the residents have now left the Red Zone.
01:34:18After the chaos, there's now silence, and it's interrupted by the eerie sounds of
01:34:22the tremors.
01:34:24Animals are being evacuated too.
01:34:26Many people are now trying to save as many animals from the forest as they can find.
01:34:32Day 16.
01:34:34All 25 of the towns that were at risk have now been evacuated.
01:34:38The Red Zone is empty.
01:34:40But the tremors are getting stronger, as the volcano is a pressure cooker ready to explode.
01:34:46White smoke rises from the large opening on the mountaintop and the vents on the side.
01:34:52The molten rock moves toward the surface, and the pressurized gases form bubbles, just
01:34:58like the ones you see when you boil food.
01:35:00Suddenly, there are some loud booms, and then an explosion.
01:35:05It's loud enough to be heard thousands of miles away, and the shockwave is felt throughout
01:35:09Italy.
01:35:11Volcanic rock is thrown up into the air.
01:35:13A thick black mushroom cloud forms and expands into the sky.
01:35:17The birds abandon their nests and fly away in huge flocks.
01:35:21The red-hot lava is now spewing out of the volcano like a fountain.
01:35:26As it flows downward, it obliterates everything in its path.
01:35:30Then there's a volcanic landslide.
01:35:32Part of the cone-shaped mountain falls off, and millions of tons of soil and rock break
01:35:37loose from the volcano's side and tumble down.
01:35:41The lava spreads on the slopes, and it slowly slides down into the forest and the farmlands.
01:35:47The plume of ash, pumice, and other kinds of rock has risen so high into the sky that
01:35:52people can see it from Rome.
01:35:54Then the tower of debris starts falling back to Earth.
01:35:57First comes the ash, then chunks of rock.
01:36:00The ash in the atmosphere is so dense that it's hard to breathe.
01:36:04The lava slowly spreads across the area and pulls down all the trees.
01:36:09All the nearby towns are shrouded in darkness and smoke.
01:36:13Buildings collapse, and all around there's a mixture of heated, poisonous gas and rock
01:36:17moving faster than a car.
01:36:20Other rocks and more volcanic ash fall miles away from the volcano, hitting cars and destroying
01:36:25roofs.
01:36:27The sky is completely black as the lava keeps on coming.
01:36:30Slowly, all the nearby towns are submerged beneath the molten rock.
01:36:35Some of the lava even reaches the sea.
01:36:38Gigantic white steam covers the shore where it falls in, and the magma turns black.
01:36:43Now a weird neon-blue fire appears on the slopes of Vesuvius.
01:36:48This is caused by burning sulfuric gases.
01:36:51They're escaping at high pressure from the cracks in the volcano's surface.
01:36:55When they come into contact with the air, they ignite.
01:36:58These blue flames can reach 16 feet into the air.
01:37:02Now, all nearby flights are cancelled, and many planes have to change course to reach
01:37:06their destination.
01:37:08Ever since the national alert, no planes have been allowed to fly over the volcano.
01:37:13The clouds of volcanic ash can damage jet engines and other plane components.
01:37:17The water supply is now contaminated by streams of volcanic ash, and it smells unbelievably
01:37:23bad.
01:37:24In just a short amount of time, all that magma has made entire towns vanish.
01:37:30Only the roofs of taller buildings can be seen.
01:37:33After the big and explosive eruption, there are some smaller and quieter ones.
01:37:38At this stage, nobody knows if the volcano has stopped erupting yet, and absolutely no
01:37:43one can go anywhere near the area.
01:37:4610 years later.
01:37:50Most parts of the Red Zone are now hidden under hardened but still warm lava, including
01:37:55the ancient site of Pompeii.
01:37:57Some people have started to forget about what happened.
01:38:00Others have begun their new lives elsewhere, and some don't even want to think about
01:38:05what happened to their old homes.
01:38:07But several of them are counting the days until they can go back.
01:38:12100 years later.
01:38:13You're walking in what appears to be a wasteland of volcanic ash.
01:38:18You suddenly realize that you're standing on top of your great-grandparents' town.
01:38:24Everything is now submerged under a thick carpet of solidified lava.
01:38:28But below it all, just about everything is still intact, completely frozen in time.
01:38:36Millions of years ago, there were seas and oceans where deserts are today.
01:38:41What if it all comes back?
01:38:43Water instead of sand, where deserts used to be.
01:38:46Life on the planet would change completely.
01:38:49Sand can act like a liquid if a strong enough airflow makes it rise from below.
01:38:53The air reduces friction between sand particles, making more space.
01:38:57The particles begin to move freely, as if they're in a liquid.
01:39:01If a huge vent suddenly opened under the Earth's crust, blowing air from beneath, then perhaps
01:39:06the entire landscape would begin to sink like being in quicksand.
01:39:11Such monuments as the Egyptian pyramids or the Sphinx would sink under the ground.
01:39:17Huge cities built on sand would disappear.
01:39:20The Sahara Desert would resemble one bubbling cauldron.
01:39:23Camel caravans would simply fall down.
01:39:26But don't worry, the animals wouldn't get hurt.
01:39:29Liquid sand is filled with oxygen, so they'd be able to swim in it.
01:39:34But what if sand turned into water instead of just a liquid version of itself?
01:39:39If this happened quickly and unexpectedly, then disasters would occur on all the beaches
01:39:44of the world.
01:39:46Imagine you're sunbathing on an air mattress on a sandy beach of a seaside resort.
01:39:51You're wearing sunglasses, the sea waves are tickling your heels, gulls are squawking overhead,
01:39:56and you have iced tea in your hands.
01:39:57A perfect holiday.
01:39:59But then you feel your mattress moving.
01:40:01A wave hits you.
01:40:03You take off your glasses and find yourself in the middle of the sea.
01:40:07The entire beach has turned into water.
01:40:10It reaches way up to the road where cars drive and houses stand.
01:40:14You help people who were sunbathing nearby to climb on the mattress.
01:40:18You swim to the new shore, head home, turn on the TV, and see this is happening all over
01:40:24the world.
01:40:25Hundreds of thousands of beaches are flooded.
01:40:29Water overflows city streets and houses.
01:40:32People are scared.
01:40:33Some leave their homes.
01:40:34While others take surfboards and ride the waves.
01:40:37And while part of the world is trying to cope with a global flood of sandy shores, a fifth
01:40:42ocean is being formed at the same time.
01:40:46You get on a plane and fly over the largest sandy desert on the planet.
01:40:51The area of the Sahara Desert is 3.5 million square miles.
01:40:56This is almost the area of the entire USA.
01:40:59Billions of tons of sand turned into water in an instant.
01:41:03All this water starts to spill over.
01:41:06Animals living in the sand, such as jerboa, scorpions, cobras, and many others, disappear
01:41:12from the face of the planet.
01:41:14The nearest countries are devastated by the flood.
01:41:17The new ocean connects to the Mediterranean, Red, and Tyrrhenian seas.
01:41:22The water level in the world's oceans is rising so much that most island countries have to
01:41:27evacuate to continents.
01:41:30In coastal cities, people sit in cafes and enjoy life.
01:41:34Some are sunbathing, while others try to escape from the heat and the shade.
01:41:38Suddenly, the wind rises and a shadow appears on the ground.
01:41:43People look at it, puzzled, and it keeps growing.
01:41:46Everyone looks up and sees that a huge tsunami is approaching the shore.
01:41:51Desert countries have it even worse.
01:41:53They're flooded at once and turn into many small divided islands.
01:41:58The huge waves will hit the shores of port towns for a long time.
01:42:03The hottest places on the planet have become wet.
01:42:06Hot sands turned into almost boiling water.
01:42:09It quickly evaporates and forms huge rain clouds.
01:42:13Thanks to high humidity, the air pressure changes and strong winds begin to blow.
01:42:18They drive clouds all over the planet.
01:42:21Long rains begin all over the world, drenching everything.
01:42:26Water mixes with the world's oceans and cools down.
01:42:29The hottest places in the world are getting colder.
01:42:32With temperatures changing, tornadoes and hurricanes form in different parts of the
01:42:36world and ravage the planet.
01:42:39The face of the whole earth is warping.
01:42:42New seas, lakes, and rivers form all over the world.
01:42:45Before, water comprised 70% of the planet's surface.
01:42:50Now it's 90%.
01:42:53Fortunately, cataclysms don't last long.
01:42:57Even though sands cover a lot of land, they're not very thick.
01:43:01The depth of the ocean is hundreds of times deeper than the depth of sand in a desert.
01:43:06In some, the sand is only a few inches thick.
01:43:09Only the largest dunes may reach 150 feet in thickness.
01:43:13The water levels will rise drastically and will probably never return to what they used
01:43:18to be.
01:43:19But at least the weather will calm down sooner or later.
01:43:22Something bad is still going to happen.
01:43:26Every year, 2 billion tons of dust rise into the air.
01:43:30Most of it comes from deserts.
01:43:31Particles of this dust contain useful elements and bacteria.
01:43:35The wind carries them all over the planet.
01:43:37A quarter of this dust comes to rest in seas and oceans.
01:43:41Bacteria and nutrients feed small creatures in the ocean, such as phytoplankton or krill.
01:43:47These creatures, in their turn, are food for small fish and even whales.
01:43:51And the fish are food for predators, as well as for many land animals.
01:43:55So if sands turn into water, the ocean will lose a lot of its nutrients.
01:44:01The good news is that it won't last long either.
01:44:04Nutrients and bacteria will adapt to the new conditions and will be able to evaporate with
01:44:09water, which condenses into rain clouds.
01:44:12The largest variety of the marine world lives in shallow waters not far from the coast.
01:44:17The desert turned into water gives ideal conditions for new life to develop.
01:44:22New species of animals appear that can survive in hot water.
01:44:27Many creatures that lived in hot sands have now adapted to marine life.
01:44:31Camels have learned to swim.
01:44:33And small reptiles can hold their breath underwater for a long time.
01:44:37Thanks to hot weather and shallowness, a huge amount of seaweed grows on the bottom that
01:44:42can withstand high temperatures.
01:44:44The new ocean now resembles a multicolored garden of marine plants.
01:44:50People are also trying to adapt.
01:44:52They build towns on massive wooden structures right on the water and attach them to the
01:44:57bottom with long chains.
01:44:59Fishing has become the main source of food for all humankind.
01:45:03Cars have become obsolete.
01:45:05Everyone wants boats.
01:45:06Famous expensive car brands now design luxury yachts and ships.
01:45:11Also, everyone learns to swim, and every resident of sea cities is an excellent swimmer.
01:45:17All the new water was fresh until it mixed with the sea and gained its saltiness.
01:45:23People have created special filters that turn this water fresh.
01:45:27Global stocks are increasing.
01:45:28There are almost no places left in the world where people don't have enough water.
01:45:33But what if our situation became stranger still, and all the sand on the planet, not
01:45:38only on beaches and in deserts, turned into liquid?
01:45:42All hourglasses in the world would accelerate because the water flows much faster than sand.
01:45:48Sand is also used for all types of construction works.
01:45:51They use it in the production of concrete and to lay a strong foundation.
01:45:55It would be impossible to create bricks and clay without sand.
01:46:00Almost all houses, not counting wooden ones, would simply fall apart.
01:46:06Wooden houses could just rot because of the high humidity levels.
01:46:11Sand is used for glass.
01:46:12Production of mirrors, windows, and light bulbs would be greatly reduced.
01:46:16World reserves of drinking water would decrease as sand is a natural filter for purification.
01:46:22There would be huge traffic jams on the roads because, well, there would be no roads to
01:46:27speak of.
01:46:28Imagine you're driving a car and its wheels turn into jelly.
01:46:32Road vehicles would be severely affected.
01:46:35Planes would also stop flying because sand is used in the construction of the runway.
01:46:40The only means of transportation left would be ships.
01:46:44Sand is present almost everywhere on our planet, so the water would begin to moisten and wash
01:46:48away the soil.
01:46:50The whole world would turn into a vicious marsh, and it would be very difficult to move
01:46:54around.
01:46:55The humidity levels would increase significantly, and thick fogs would appear every day.
01:47:01A huge number of scolopendras, salamanders, frogs, and other creatures that love humidity
01:47:06would take over the planet.
01:47:08Some insects may evolve and increase in size thanks to the new ideal conditions.
01:47:13And people, if they survive at all, might grow scales to better transfer moisture.
01:47:19The Earth would look like a planet from a sci-fi movie.
01:47:23But fortunately, this isn't going to ever happen.
01:47:28You've spent your entire life researching microorganisms.
01:47:32Last few years, you've been creating a device that can shrink you in size.
01:47:37And finally, it's ready.
01:47:39At first, you want to shrink yourself to the size of a thumb so you can probably see some
01:47:44microbes with the unaided eye.
01:47:46And then, after more experimenting, you hope to shrink to the size of a bacterium yourself.
01:47:53To make the journey safe, you put on a special suit, similar to a spacesuit.
01:47:58It's equipped with a life-support system.
01:48:00You direct a beam from the device at yourself.
01:48:04The beam must change your mass and volume.
01:48:06To return to the previous state, you must stand on a round platform the size of a hockey
01:48:11puck.
01:48:12You put it near your feet so you can easily climb on it when you get smaller, press the
01:48:16button and activate the machine.
01:48:19Ooh, something's wrong.
01:48:21The device gives an error and you shrink not to the size of a thumb, but a thousand times
01:48:26smaller to the size of a bacterium.
01:48:29Oops.
01:48:30You become so small that the fleece of the carpet on which you were standing seems to
01:48:35be the size of huge trees.
01:48:37Now, don't panic.
01:48:39You need to find the puck, stand on it, and you'll return to your normal size.
01:48:43It was right next to your feet, just an inch away.
01:48:46Wait, but what's one inch now, when a thousand people your size can fit on the tip of a human
01:48:52hair?
01:48:53You decide to climb the fleece to see where the puck is.
01:48:57You can't see the lab ceiling.
01:48:59The room is out of focus because of its huge size.
01:49:02You're surrounded by thousands of bacteria.
01:49:05They're so different in sizes and colors, but you can identify three main forms.
01:49:12Round bacteria that look like spheres are cocci.
01:49:15They can merge with each other and increase in size.
01:49:19Cylindrical capsule-shaped bacteria, looking like sausages or bananas, these are bacilli.
01:49:25And spirobacteria are called spirilla.
01:49:28At the end of their body, they have a hair-like cilium.
01:49:32Bacteria are essential for our planet.
01:49:34They help to produce oxygen and absorb carbon dioxide.
01:49:37They purify the water and air, digest the food inside our stomachs, and improve our
01:49:42immune system.
01:49:43They're crawling on the ground all over the carpet.
01:49:47You start climbing the fleece.
01:49:49On your way, you meet cocci that look like huge potatoes, spirilla similar to spaghetti.
01:49:56After a few hours, you've finally reached the top of the carpet.
01:49:59For you, it was a long time, but in reality, just a couple of minutes have passed.
01:50:04The smaller you are, the slower the time's going.
01:50:08Do you remember how difficult it is to swat a fly?
01:50:11That's because it sees your movements in slow motion.
01:50:14So looking around, you see an endless forest of fleece.
01:50:19In the distance, you can see the silhouette of a big mountain with a flat top.
01:50:24It seems bigger than Everest to you.
01:50:26Great.
01:50:27Now you need to get there alive.
01:50:30Suddenly, a huge bacterium attacks you from below.
01:50:34It's several bacilli joined together.
01:50:36They look like a bunch of sausages.
01:50:38To escape, you jump down.
01:50:40You weigh so little that falling from any height is safe.
01:50:44You run through the dense forest.
01:50:46You notice that almost all bacteria are going at you.
01:50:50Most of them eat organic material, such as glucose or carbohydrates.
01:50:54And right now, lucky you, you're the biggest source of carbs.
01:50:59Smaller microbes stick to your legs, arms, and face.
01:51:03You shake them off and fall.
01:51:05Several bacilli joined together are approaching, but then a round object with spikes the size
01:51:11of a football crashes into them.
01:51:13You see a lot of these balls and realize they're viruses.
01:51:18Microorganisms that can't live apart from bacteria.
01:51:20To reproduce, they must infect a living being.
01:51:24The viruses have entered the bacterium.
01:51:27Other bacteria that chased you are attacked too.
01:51:30You see a gigantic bacterium that looks like a passenger Boeing without wings.
01:51:35It's a type of kachi.
01:51:37Several big balls attached to each other and about to eat you.
01:51:41You see a small prickly football getting inside its body.
01:51:44The bacterium shivers and freezes.
01:51:47After a moment, a hole appears in it, and hundreds of thousands of viruses fly out.
01:51:52They're everywhere and looking for a new host.
01:51:56Prickly balls fly towards you at high speed.
01:51:59You grab a piece of lint and swing it like a baseball bat.
01:52:02You fight off the viruses one by one.
01:52:05Your bat breaks, and you run away.
01:52:08It seems that you're safe now.
01:52:10You're entering a huge field.
01:52:12There's nothing here but bacteria.
01:52:14You realize this is a small spot on the carpet that you accidentally burned a few months
01:52:19ago.
01:52:20There's a billion microbes here, and they're multiplying at a tremendous rate.
01:52:25One bacterium increases in size and splits into two.
01:52:29After a few minutes, these two bacteria also grow and divide.
01:52:33Now there are four of them.
01:52:35The colony of bacteria grows exponentially.
01:52:38With such rapid reproduction, a single bacterium can create offspring weighing about a ton
01:52:44in 24 hours.
01:52:46After 5 days, the bacteria will be able to fill all the seas and oceans.
01:52:51Fortunately, the speed with which they divide is equal to the speed of their destruction.
01:52:56Dryness, a ray of light, high temperature, humidity – all these phenomenon control
01:53:02the population of microbes.
01:53:04Under ideal conditions, the bacteria could take over the whole world.
01:53:09You make your way through a field of microorganisms.
01:53:12Large bacteria consume small ones.
01:53:14They multiply and are being destroyed.
01:53:17It's a boiling sea of life.
01:53:20You feel your foot is stuck.
01:53:21You stepped on something sticky.
01:53:24Right underneath, a large spherical bacterium crawls out of the ground.
01:53:28It's connected with other bacteria and hasn't gotten a certain form.
01:53:33It looks like formless pulsing biomass.
01:53:36The thing is clinging to your body, wrapping you.
01:53:39It feels like you're being absorbed by warm jelly.
01:53:42The bacterium compresses your chest.
01:53:44It's hard to breathe and move.
01:53:47At this moment, something that looks like a metal screw smashes into the bacterium.
01:53:51A large diamond bursts in next.
01:53:54After that, several thin smooth legs looking like curved needles get inside too.
01:54:00All these details unite and transform into a strange creature inside the microbe.
01:54:05A diamond is attached to one end of the screw, and the needle legs cling down.
01:54:11Several dozen of these break into the jelly's body.
01:54:14They connect together and form an army of robots.
01:54:17All these creatures break out from a small hole in the bacterium and tear the microbe
01:54:22to pieces.
01:54:23You escape and find yourself in chaos.
01:54:26The little robot with a diamond for a head is called a bacteriophage.
01:54:31Despite their appearance, they're created by nature, not artificially.
01:54:35The goal of bacteriophages is to attack and destroy bacteria from within.
01:54:40That's how they reproduce.
01:54:42These creatures are all around us everywhere and control the population of microorganisms.
01:54:48When bacteria multiply inside the human body, they leave waste products of decay.
01:54:54This waste is harmful to the body, so it has to fight.
01:54:58Sometimes doctors use bacteriophages so they help to get rid of bad microbes.
01:55:03They don't attack anything but bacteria.
01:55:06And now you see hundreds of billions of bacteriophages destroying billions of bacteria.
01:55:12The walking diamonds jump on the bacterium, plunging their heads into it and release the
01:55:17genetic code – separate parts that assemble in new bacteriophages.
01:55:22You continue on your way and take a few diamonds with you just in case.
01:55:27The road is long, but after a few weeks, you finally manage to reach the puck.
01:55:32In the normal flow of time, it's been an hour.
01:55:35You're exhausted, and there's still a whipping to the top.
01:55:39The puck is so high that you can't see the top of it.
01:55:43You can't sleep because you might wake up inside some microbe.
01:55:47There are still a lot of bacteriophages around, but you don't want to take any chances.
01:55:53A deafening crash shakes the air.
01:55:55It's like an airplane turbine is running right next to your ear.
01:55:59You're looking up.
01:56:01A creature the size of a city lands on the carpet from the sky.
01:56:05It flaps its wings and makes this noise.
01:56:08The wings create a hurricane.
01:56:10You grab the fleece to keep yourself from being blown away.
01:56:14The creature smells bad.
01:56:16One of its legs resembles a large skyscraper.
01:56:19You realize it's a fly.
01:56:21Here's your chance to get to the puck.
01:56:24Big orange eyes divided into thousands of segments look like two planets.
01:56:29You climb on the tip of the fly's leg.
01:56:32The insect takes off, and you hold on tight.
01:56:35The carpet is moving further and further away.
01:56:38From up here, you can see the top of the puck.
01:56:41It's so wide that you can't see the round edge.
01:56:44You let go of the fly and fall.
01:56:47In the air, you run into millions of bacteria.
01:56:50Finally, you land on the solid puck's surface.
01:56:53The device activates, and you return to your normal size.
01:56:58You are, indeed, one lucky bug.
01:57:02Check this out!
01:57:03There's a giant tornado heading towards you, and it's so fast!
01:57:07These twisters can move at crazy speeds of more than 250 miles per hour.
01:57:12Plus, they can carve a pathway 50 miles long and a mile wide.
01:57:17Sometimes you can see them coming clearly, while in some cases, low-hanging clouds or
01:57:21rain can hide them, so they sneak up on you, and you don't even see them.
01:57:26And in most cases, a tornado can develop so fast that no one can even warn you in time
01:57:31if it's already too close.
01:57:33And now, this insane storm is really close.
01:57:37Maybe you have a couple of minutes to get somewhere safe.
01:57:39Do you have a basement?
01:57:40Go hide!
01:57:41And maybe, I know this is a crazy idea, but what do you think about going inside a tornado
01:57:47to check what it would be like?
01:57:49Some tornadoes appear as rope-like swirls, while others have wide clouds in the shape
01:57:53of a funnel.
01:57:55And here's the second one, right before you.
01:57:57Look at these whirling winds, born in a thunderstorm.
01:58:00They extend down from it to the ground.
01:58:03Many times, hail joins the party, too.
01:58:06The U.S. itself has something like a thousand tornadoes per year.
01:58:10Texas holds the record with about 120 tornadoes per year, a record not to be proud of.
01:58:16But you'll generally see most twisters in Tornado Alley, which is a stretch of land
01:58:21in the Midwestern part of the U.S.
01:58:23They develop when warm, moist air coming from Mexico meets cool, dry air from Canada.
01:58:29These two clash and turn into a powerful storm that at some point can spawn tornadoes.
01:58:34And you'll see most tornadoes there between April and June, though lately, some have come
01:58:39even in December.
01:58:41They can range from a regular dust storm to an incredibly powerful force that can carry
01:58:46away cars, large trees, and even houses.
01:58:49But this is a unique chance, you've never been this close, right?
01:58:53Plus, it's a gigantic one, you don't often get to see such a big one.
01:58:57Okay, ready then?
01:58:59It's getting closer.
01:59:00You feel the wind getting stronger while tossing dirt and debris in your face.
01:59:05You close your eyes and WHOOSH, you're inside, and it's crazy!
01:59:09Vicious winds are hurling and spinning you around.
01:59:12They're lifting you up at the same time, feeling dizzy, feeling like Dorothy from The Wizard
01:59:17of Oz?
01:59:18Now may be a good time to check what's really happening to you, while inside, swirling with
01:59:23winds and… oh wait, is that your neighbor's motorcycle spinning together with you?
01:59:28Hope it'll stay that far away.
01:59:30Now let's take a moment to catch up.
01:59:33Being in the middle of a raging tornado is actually something you might survive.
01:59:37But I won't lie to you, it won't be easy.
01:59:40The first thing you'd sense would likely be the temperature changes.
01:59:44Inside this crazy twister, it can be 36 degrees colder than outside of it.
01:59:50That's because the center of the tornado funnel spins all the time.
01:59:54All that funneling makes the inside of the vortex way colder, and it makes the air way
01:59:58thinner than you used to.
02:00:00The air would be 20% less dense than, for example, what you would find at high altitudes.
02:00:06Now I hope you're not planning to stay there for too long.
02:00:09Disclaimer here, the atmospheric pressure inside this swirling vortex is so low that
02:00:14your lungs won't be able to extract enough oxygen.
02:00:18Now to give you a perspective of all this, breathing inside a tornado is like trying
02:00:23to get some air at an altitude of 26,000 feet.
02:00:26That's a pro level, similar to climbing Everest.
02:00:29So yeah, you'll need some help just to be able to take a regular breath.
02:00:34In short, you'll probably pass out after only a couple of minutes.
02:00:38But don't worry, I brought you this special mask, so breathing is not a problem anymore.
02:00:43Hey, did you notice how smooth the airflow from the inside is?
02:00:48Some storm watchers ended up inside a tornado.
02:00:50Later, they said it all looks so chaotic with all those raging clouds and winds swirling
02:00:55around.
02:00:56But from the inside, the air is surprisingly smooth.
02:01:00But that doesn't mean you'll get a peaceful ride because of it.
02:01:03And it's not a solo party in that thing.
02:01:06The neighbor's motorcycle is not the only thing you'll see there.
02:01:09Wood, bricks, glass, maybe even cars, cows, motorhome, bricks, roofs, and other big objects.
02:01:16You'd be pretty lucky if nothing crashes into you in all that chaos.
02:01:21With all that debris that's swirling at, for instance, 310 miles per hour, you can
02:01:26hardly avoid it.
02:01:27But let's just say a miracle happens and you got through it.
02:01:31Now you're really dizzy, and you're just wondering when all of this is gonna be over and if you're
02:01:36even gonna be able to come out of this gigantic tornado.
02:01:40Well, the tornado will eventually slow down.
02:01:43It happens because cool air enters the twister.
02:01:46Just because things are settling down, it doesn't mean you can relax.
02:01:51Now your stomach hurts, since all that crazy swirling is done, but the tornado will drop
02:01:56you from whatever height you're on when it stops.
02:01:59If you're somewhere in the countryside, there might be some soft bale of hay to break your
02:02:03fall.
02:02:04Oh wait, we're talking about a twister that's probably more than 45,000 feet tall, so that
02:02:10won't work.
02:02:11I hope you brought your parachute, because now would be a good time to pop it.
02:02:15Nope?
02:02:16Hey, don't worry.
02:02:17I'm all about happy endings, so I'll help you out.
02:02:20There you go.
02:02:21And now you're slowing down, enjoying the view, if you even see anything around you
02:02:26from all that dizziness.
02:02:28How come there are clear sunlit skies from your left, you may wonder?
02:02:33It's not unusual.
02:02:34Tornadoes often form near the edge of a thunderstorm.
02:02:37It's like a border between two different worlds.
02:02:40And it wasn't even windy, plus the air was very still before it hit, right?
02:02:44Well, that's common too.
02:02:46Okay, I think you know this kind of scenario is impossible in reality.
02:02:51So it would be best to find a safe spot quickly if a tornado is close by.
02:02:56Use your underground shelter first.
02:02:58And if you don't have one, your basement could be the next best choice.
02:03:02Prepare ahead of time with a battery-operated TV or radio, together with fresh batteries.
02:03:08Or a device with internet to be able to hear the latest updates on the tornado.
02:03:13Get some non-perishable food, water, and other essentials prepared too.
02:03:18As it turns out, some people really were picked up by tornadoes, and they managed to go through
02:03:23it.
02:03:24A tornado actually dropped them a few hundred feet away without a scratch.
02:03:28Hey, I'd say that's a whole lot of bother just to save some bucks on Uber.
02:03:33But you can't have a guarantee you'll be safe or where you'll end up.
02:03:37It would be incredibly hard to get out of one of those big and fierce ones though, like
02:03:42supercells.
02:03:43They fall into the category of the strongest type of storms, mostly thunderstorms.
02:03:49And imagine falling into water spouts.
02:03:51Those could be fine though, at least at the beginning, because they're weak and they form
02:03:55over warm water.
02:03:56So they could be like a part of your spa day, at least until they move inland and turn into
02:04:02a real tornado.
02:04:03Now dust devils wouldn't be that pleasant.
02:04:06They're not that big, but we're talking about columns of air that rotate at large speeds.
02:04:12You can easily see them because of all that dirt and dust they pick up, which is why you
02:04:16need glasses for that.
02:04:18Whoops, wait, I forgot that, so I can't help you this time.
02:04:22But if it makes you feel any better, they're not associated with thunderstorms.
02:04:26Hmm, don't know why that would make anyone feel better when I think about it.
02:04:31But if you're willing to jump into a fire tornado, I'll find you a special suit that
02:04:36will keep you safe while spinning through smoke, gas, and flames.
02:04:39I promise!
02:04:41Storms here are narrow, and they rise vertically into the air, similar to a dust devil.
02:04:46Of course, the heat is crazy.
02:04:48And as updrafts are becoming stronger, and if there's enough dry fuel, a fire whirl
02:04:53is turning into a real fire tornado that extends from the ground up to the cloud, moving incredibly
02:04:59fast.
02:05:00Okay, let's stop now, I'm pretty dizzy.
02:05:10That's it for today!
02:05:11But – hey!
02:05:12If you pacified your curiosity, then give the video a like and share it with your friends!
02:05:16Or if you want more, just click on these videos and stay on the Bright Side!

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