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  • 00:05

    Many people imagine the end of the world as an asteroid strike that destroyed the dinosaurs

  • 00:10

    or a nuclear war with the entire arsenal of mankind.

  • 00:14

    But what if all of this is not even close to what could turn the planet into a hot hell?

  • 00:28

    In order to turn our beautiful blue planet into hell, we need to look inside it.

  • 00:32

    At a depth of about 70 kilometers, a part of the Earth begins which is called the mantle.

  • 00:38

    Deeper up to 2890 kilometers, this layer reaches the core of the Earth and contains approximately

  • 00:45

    80% of the entire volume of our planet.

  • 00:49

    The deeper, the hotter the mantle becomes, from ~200 degrees Celsius at the Earth's crust

  • 00:54

    and up to ~4000 degrees at the core.

  • 00:57

    These are quadrillion tons of hot, molten circulating rock and minerals called magma.

  • 01:04

    Lithospheric plates move due to the movement of heat in magma from the core to the earth's

  • 01:08

    crust.

  • 01:09

    By their movement, they create mountains and depressions, cause earthquakes.

  • 01:14

    In some places, called magma plumes, hot magma moves to the Earth's surface in relatively

  • 01:20

    small streams or jets, accumulating in the crust if it does not find an easy way to the

  • 01:26

    surface.

  • 01:27

    This leads to the formation of magma chambers and calderas, which will form the basis for

  • 01:31

    the emergence of volcanoes and supervolcanoes.

  • 01:36

    So what could happen if millions of tons of hot molten magma did reach the earth's surface?

  • 01:42

    Let's take a look at two very famous volcanic eruptions.

  • 01:45

    It will focus on the eruption of the Krakatoa volcano in 1883 and Tambora in 1815.

  • 01:51

    Both of these volcanoes are located in the region of Indonesia, but their eruption has

  • 01:56

    led to consequences across the globe.

  • 01:58

    To understand the "strength" or danger of any eruption, volcanologists use the VEI scale,

  • 02:05

    the scale of volcanic activity.

  • 02:07

    It is estimated by the volume of eruption products thrown onto the surface, the so-called

  • 02:11

    tephra, and is counted in cubic meters.

  • 02:15

    The eruption of Krakatoa, which claimed the lives of about 36 thousand people, caused

  • 02:20

    a 46-meter tsunami, as well as a global cooling of 0.4 degrees Celsius, is estimated at 6

  • 02:26

    points on the VEI, with the release of tephra up to ten cubic kilometers.

  • 02:31

    This eruption is equivalent to about a thousand nuclear bombs, 200 kilotons each, detonated

  • 02:37

    at once.

  • 02:38

    The eruption of Tambora reached 7 on the scale of volcanic activity, which means the volume

  • 02:44

    of ejected tephra is up to one hundred cubic kilometers.

  • 02:47

    Taking the lives of 76 thousand people, it provoked an even stronger cooling of the Earth's

  • 02:52

    surface by 5 degrees Celsius in some areas.

  • 02:56

    This led to a “year without summer”, where snow fell even in June in Canada.

  • 03:01

    Hunger in Europe and Asia due to crop failure, acid rain and “dry fog” in the northwestern

  • 03:06

    United States.

  • 03:08

    And this is only part of the consequences we know.

  • 03:12

    But we are still too far from the complete destruction of humanity.

  • 03:16

    We would need volcanic super-eruptions reaching 8 points.

  • 03:21

    Super-eruptions are catastrophically gigantic discharges of magma rocks, ash and aerosols

  • 03:27

    into the atmosphere.

  • 03:28

    Super-eruptions, with a volume of thousands of cubic kilometers, occur very rarely, and

  • 03:33

    volcanoes and caldera systems that produce them are colloquially called "supervolcanoes".

  • 03:40

    The most famous "supervolcano" is in North America, in the state of Wyoming, the Yellowstone

  • 03:45

    National Park.

  • 03:46

    The Yellowstone caldera, slowly moving northeastward, following the lithospheric plate, has already

  • 03:52

    erupted three times over the course of 2.1 million years.

  • 03:56

    Each of these super-eruptions led to a global climate change.

  • 03:59

    Our entire total nuclear reserve does not even come close to comparing with such a destructive

  • 04:05

    force of the Earth's nature, in terms of the amount of energy in TNT equivalent.

  • 04:10

    About 630 thousand years BC, one of these eruptions led to the formation of a caldera

  • 04:16

    70 kilometers in diameter.

  • 04:18

    The volume of ejected tephra has reached about 2,500 thousand square kilometers, the consequence

  • 04:23

    of which was the abundant ashfall and the formation of the Huckleberry Ridge tuff, a

  • 04:28

    layer of volcanic material that is found throughout almost the entire western United States.

  • 04:33

    For comparison, if we take all this volume of hot ash, magma, volcanic rocks and stuff

  • 04:39

    it into a cube, we get a structure ~13 kilometers high, which is almost one and a half times

  • 04:45

    higher than Everest.

  • 04:46

    If we hypothetically assume that Yellowstone will once again have a super-eruption, with

  • 04:51

    a volume of ash and solid rocks of 330 cubic kilometers, will this be the “end of humanity”?

  • 04:58

    This time we are talking about a cube as high as Mount Kilimanjaro.

  • 05:02

    Using a tephra sediment map, we can see that the ash will spread to almost the entire continental

  • 05:08

    United States and parts of Canada.

  • 05:10

    Everything in the states adjacent to Yellowstone is likely to be completely destroyed in the

  • 05:14

    first hours of the eruption.

  • 05:16

    In the very same Yellowstone National Park, which is about 64 kilometers in diameter,

  • 05:21

    lava, magma and other products of the eruption will reach a meter in height.

  • 05:26

    A super-eruption of this magnitude will cause an almost complete collapse of the North American

  • 05:31

    agroindustry.

  • 05:32

    A cloud of ash will block sunlight from reaching farmlands in the central and eastern United

  • 05:36

    States.

  • 05:37

    Acid rain and tephra will destroy crops, pollute water sources, and kill livestock.

  • 05:42

    In addition to the ashfall, the new super-eruption will produce a large number of volcanic bombs,

  • 05:48

    which are the magma itself ejected from the volcano at great speed.

  • 05:52

    These bombs will destroy roads, houses and communications in the area up to ~ 150 km

  • 05:57

    from Yellowstone.

  • 05:59

    The number of deaths, the total consequences for the whole world, are difficult to calculate.

  • 06:03

    A catastrophe of this magnitude will be possible to compare with the fall of an asteroid several

  • 06:09

    kilometers wide.

  • 06:10

    It is also likely that for a period of up to several years, North America will feel

  • 06:15

    the full impact of the "volcanic winter", and the climate of the entire world will be

  • 06:19

    destabilized.

  • 06:21

    Scientists believe that sudden changes in temperature will lead to anomalous natural

  • 06:25

    phenomena - hurricanes, tornadoes and thermal domes will appear.

  • 06:30

    This means damage to farming, not only in the United States but also around the globe.

  • 06:35

    Crop failures, hunger, droughts and cold snaps will become the norm for several years.

  • 06:41

    It is important to say that despite the rising and falling seismic activity of Yellowstone,

  • 06:47

    scientists have no fears.

  • 06:49

    This supervolcano will most likely never be capable of super-eruptions, or at least for

  • 06:54

    the next thousands of years.

  • 06:56

    In fact, the super-eruption has already almost destroyed humanity, approximately 74 thousand

  • 07:03

    years BC.

  • 07:04

    The super-eruption of 2,880 cubic kilometers, eight times larger than in the hypothetical

  • 07:10

    model of the Yellowstone eruption, according to scientists Michael Rampino and Stephen

  • 07:15

    Self, could lead humanity to extinction.

  • 07:17

    We are talking about the super-eruption of the Toba volcano on the island of Sumatra

  • 07:23

    in Indonesia.

  • 07:24

    In a 1992 article, they suggest that this super-eruption not only led to a volcanic

  • 07:29

    winter, but also accelerated the glaciation process.

  • 07:33

    This is also associated with a “bottleneck” in human genetics.

  • 07:37

    Some studies find evidence that in the period from about 100 to 50 thousand years BC, human

  • 07:43

    civilization shrank to 10 thousand individuals at best.

  • 07:47

    This is evidenced by the low genetic diversity of our ancestors, according to the same Michael

  • 07:52

    Rampino and Stephen Self.

  • 07:54

    Until some time, it was believed that the super-eruption of Toba led to a volcanic winter

  • 07:59

    of at least six years in Africa and Europe, but recent research actually suggests otherwise.

  • 08:06

    In 2018, the results of a study of the tuff and traces of this super-eruption were published.

  • 08:12

    And surprisingly, there is evidence that human activity did not stop, but on the contrary,

  • 08:17

    increased.

  • 08:18

    On the southeast coast of Africa, tools were found in the layers of the earth, both before

  • 08:22

    and after the eruption.

  • 08:25

    In addition to small sharpened stones, there were also more complex arrowheads and spearheads.

  • 08:30

    Excavations around Lake Malawi, also in Africa, do not provide any evidence of a catastrophic

  • 08:35

    volcanic winter from a super-eruption.

  • 08:38

    Most likely, the effect of ash and aerosols was overestimated and could not lead to a

  • 08:42

    six-year winter in Africa, and proximity to the mankind’s extinction.

  • 08:48

    But what if the super-eruptions are just part of an even more catastrophic event, which

  • 08:52

    has likely lead to the extinction of the dinosaurs along with the asteroid, which has also contributed

  • 08:57

    to this?

  • 08:59

    Only now will we come to an event that is really capable of creating a global hell - volcanic

  • 09:05

    floods.

  • 09:06

    A volcanic flood is an event that does not fit into the scale of volcanic activity, because

  • 09:11

    the total emissions of ash, magma and rocks already vary in millions of cubic kilometers.

  • 09:17

    Returning to our comparison with a cube, its height on average reaches space or 125 kilometers.

  • 09:24

    All this volume of magma and ash pours out over millions of square kilometers, covering

  • 09:28

    them with a giant layer hundreds of meters high.

  • 09:32

    The consequences of this form huge plains, the Traps, with a characteristic relief that

  • 09:37

    resembles a staircase.

  • 09:40

    Even if scientists now cannot name the exact reason for the formation of the Traps, which

  • 09:44

    cover huge areas in Siberia and India, there is no doubt that this is a large-scale and

  • 09:50

    catastrophic process.

  • 09:52

    Nor is it surprising that the age of the Traps' formation roughly coincides with the dates

  • 09:56

    of the largest mass extinctions.

  • 09:58

    One of these led to the extinction of 95% of species of living beings.

  • 10:04

    Unlike super-eruptions and asteroid impacts, the impact of a volcanic flood on Earth can

  • 10:08

    last for hundreds of thousands of years.

  • 10:12

    They occur when a plume or a long "torch" of magma reaches the uppermost layers of the

  • 10:17

    earth's crust.

  • 10:18

    By comparison, the caldera of the Yellowstone "supervolcano" is located at a depth of ~8000

  • 10:24

    meters.

  • 10:25

    Volcanic floods begin with a series of powerful earthquakes and a rise of the surface by several

  • 10:30

    hundred meters.

  • 10:31

    Cracks and ruptures in the uplifted earth will be accompanied by a series of super-eruptions,

  • 10:36

    ejecting tephra and lava in pillars averaging 50 km in height.

  • 10:41

    Magma will slowly melt through the earth's crust and begin to spread over an area the

  • 10:45

    size of entire countries.

  • 10:49

    In the case of the Siberian Traps, which formed about 640 thousand years from the beginning

  • 10:54

    of the volcanic flood, we are talking about an area as big as the ​​continental Europe,

  • 10:58

    covered with tephra and magma, hundreds of meters high.

  • 11:02

    This, for example, most likely led to the Permian-Triassic extinction of 250 million

  • 11:07

    years BC.

  • 11:08

    The formation of the Deccan Traps led to the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction, ~66 million

  • 11:14

    years ago, and the death of the dinosaurs.

  • 11:16

    The effect of volcanic floods on the climate is thousands of times greater than that of

  • 11:21

    super-eruptions or nuclear war.

  • 11:24

    After most of the magma rock from the plume reaches the surface and spreads, the remaining

  • 11:28

    magma will seek another path, spreading horizontally, reaching coal deposits and other fossils.

  • 11:34

    This alone will lead to a huge emission of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, which

  • 11:38

    will heat the Earth by an average of five degrees.

  • 11:41

    A seemingly small figure means the transformation of most of the earth's surface into a desert

  • 11:46

    for hundreds of thousands of years.

  • 11:48

    The oceans will turn into toxic, hot acidic liquid, due to the abundance of carbon dioxide

  • 11:54

    and the activation of methane deposits at the bottom.

  • 11:57

    But, as we can conclude from the fact of our existence, the planet is able to endure such

  • 12:02

    disasters.

  • 12:03

    And more than once.

  • 12:05

    Scientists are sure that for the next hundreds and thousands of years, mankind is unlikely

  • 12:10

    to meet with such cataclysms.

  • 12:12

    What about you?

  • 12:13

    Would you like to observe similar phenomena?

  • 12:16

    We will inform you if the plans of the volcanoes change and such an opportunity arises in the

  • 12:20

    world.

  • 12:21

    So stay tuned and thanks for watching.

All

The example sentences of FARMLANDS in videos (6 in total of 6)

a determiner cloud noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction ash noun, singular or mass will modal block verb, base form sunlight noun, singular or mass from preposition or subordinating conjunction reaching verb, gerund or present participle farmlands noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner central adjective and coordinating conjunction eastern adjective united verb, past participle
commuting verb, gerund or present participle plus coordinating conjunction a determiner perfect adjective way noun, singular or mass to to enjoy verb, base form a determiner lazy noun, singular or mass ride noun, singular or mass through preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner farmlands noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner saanich proper noun, singular peninsula noun, singular or mass
they personal pronoun may modal find verb, base form evidence noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction some determiner giant adjective snake noun, singular or mass trail noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction leads noun, plural from preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner water noun, singular or mass to to some determiner farmlands noun, plural ,
invading verb, gerund or present participle army noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction wanted verb, past participle to to take verb, base form control noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner prosperous adjective farmlands noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction veneto proper noun, singular , the determiner pope proper noun, singular valley proper noun, singular , or coordinating conjunction further adverb, comparative , your possessive pronoun two cardinal number choices noun, plural were verb, past tense to to either determiner cross noun, singular or mass
as preposition or subordinating conjunction pollen noun, singular or mass findings noun, plural near preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner area noun, singular or mass prove verb, base form there existential there were verb, past tense quite adverb a determiner lot noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction farmlands noun, plural present adjective around preposition or subordinating conjunction 50 cardinal number bc proper noun, singular ,
you personal pronoun got verb, past tense farmlands noun, plural to to the determiner west noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction mountains noun, plural to to the determiner east adjective here adverb a determiner few adjective years noun, plural ago adverb ,

Use "farmlands" in a sentence | "farmlands" example sentences

How to use "farmlands" in a sentence?

  • I am in fact a hobbit (in all but size). I like gardens, trees and unmechanized farmlands; I smoke a pipe, and like good plain food (unrefrigerated).
    -J. R. R. Tolkien-
  • Finally, cooking is good citizenship. It's the only way to get serious about putting locally raised foods into your diet, which keeps farmlands healthy and grocery money in the neighborhood.
    -Barbara Kingsolver-
  • This is the way to hear music, I think, surrounded by rolling hills and farmlands, under a big sky.
    -Michael Lang-

Definition and meaning of FARMLANDS

What does "farmlands mean?"

/ˈfärmˌland/

noun
land used for farming.
other
Rural area where farming is practiced.