History of the Earth

‪@HistoryoftheEarth‬ is officially five years old! Where does the time go? We just wanted to send a massive thank you for watching and enjoying the show over the years. The next documentary will be out very soon. It's another mind melting journey to the depths of evolutionary biology. What has been your favourite video so far? And what are you looking forward to over the next 500 million years? Thanks all you are a bunch of legends

3 months ago | [YT] | 984



@Necro3Monk

Ediacaran and fungi are my most watched ones, probably. Wish these came out more often, they've been a great watch for the past several years and I'm looking forward to more.

3 months ago | 10

@Xostrich12X

My favorite channel about prehistoric content! Keep up the awesome work. I’m fascinated about the earliest ventures of complex life and the oddities of the Ediacaran. You did a great job with that video. Looking forward to what’s to come.

3 months ago | 8

@hansmitapriyavrat1305

How did the Earth Forms is one of the most memorable videos I have ever seen. The fact that it began with Theia as the main character is somehow I shall never forget.

3 months ago | 3

@alansmith72

I absolutely adore your content and listen to them numerous times. Each one is a factual work of art and very much appreciated. I've learnt alot from your documentaries. Hopefully one day you'll do the Carbonifourous which is one of my favourite periods. Thank you for all the hard work.

3 months ago (edited) | 6

@Redheadmafia97

Sad to say it feels like this channel is neglected. One of my favs on here and the uploads are so scarce

3 months ago | 1

@fazdoll

Good to see you're still thinking of us fans of HotE! I know you're busy with Voices of the Past, and let's be honest History of the Universe is getting all the views, so I can see why HotE has been falling through the cracks lately. Please keep up the good work! I try to recommend your channels wherever I can.

3 months ago | 4

@RichardSmith-ms6hh

You were my companion through winter 2021 into 2022. I was coming home from work exhausted on a working-away welding job where everything seemed to be more difficult and problematic than it needed to be, the television in the accomodation didn't work - and I found your channel. It was a major event for me. First hint of "deep history of the Earth" was in Bill Bryson's "A Brief History of Everything" book (Bryson is more known for travel books). Your channel came as right presentation at the right time. Living in Cornwall now, our land is "new-ish" at only about 300million years old. However with increasing geological knowledge I can"place" ancient formations like banded iron formations in Michigan and the iron oxide mountainsin Australia. I fondly recall coming back exhausted from wrestling with the "challenges" of the job and having the rewarding companionship of your channel. Just speaking for myself - the biggest things were * how soon in Earth's history life started * life on Earth had had its most massive effects on this planet billions of years ago, eg. creating the oxygen-rich atmosphere - with everything of multicellular life evolution since the Cambrian era being all "recent superstructure". So yes thanks and congratulations.

3 months ago | 0

@dominictarrsailing

I discovered your channel because I wanted to know about how earth got water. It didn't take me long to decide to watch the entire series from the start and also history of the universe and history of humanity! can't pick a favorite!!!

3 months ago | 1

@rogersevand

Every video from this channel is of the highest quality and information. It's difficult to narrow it down to one favorite, but my two are "How Bad Was The Great Oxidation Event?" (The First Mass Extinction) and "Were These The First Animals?" (The Ediacaran - Life's Failed Experiment?).

3 months ago | 0

@scottwilson4149

Your Histories of The Earth, Humankind, and The Universe are my favorite programming in my lifetime (I'm 65). Even more riveting than Lost or Breaking Bad. I'm an Art/Science geek. I will seriously ponder my favorite individual episodes.

3 months ago | 2

@DiederikCA

Thanks for all the productions over the years! This is by far my favourite channel on youtube. And ofcourse I really hope you will release some new videos soon!

3 months ago | 2

@JamesWeeb-wp8ij

Truly just the best documentaries that are being explained in an interesting way that makes you understand the process step by step.

3 months ago | 1

@michaeleisenberg7867

HofTE is my favorite channel. I just love it. I loved how you related the urine problem in Cape Cod to a previous Extinction event. You do things like that in other History of the Earth videos - - taking two separate events separated by time and showing the similarities. I think my favorite video was the one with the time travelers and their vehicle. Your science fiction is awesome, especially over at History Of The Universe. Attacking evolution is a real rabbit hole. Knowing what was inside those first cells is somewhat of an enigma. Good luck. I look forward to your rendition!

3 months ago (edited) | 1

@LourdVicious

Love love love watching your videos. ❤❤❤🎉🎉

3 months ago | 0

@LilyKittyCatto

All of your channels are fantastic and i always look forward to your uploads. Please never stop!

3 months ago | 2

@bjornpettersson3491

absolutely fantastic channel i have watched over and over again. choosing a favorite video is impossible. i love the narrator

3 months ago | 0

@GreyStarKK

I subscribe to all of your channels but HOTE is by far my favorite, and the two episodes I love to watch over and over again are… Episode 13: The first mass extinction. Episode 14: Symbiosis: Life finds a way. Thank you for giving me years of quality and educational content to watch, I appreciate you all more than you can imagine. Can’t wait for the next video!

3 months ago | 1

@fazdoll

My favorite episodes are the First episode (RIP Theia), Where did Earth's water come from, Why did the Earth totally freeze, and the one with the fungi. Because "Humongous Fungus" is the best name for any living organism EVER. I also love the little segment where the geologists found the gneisses in Canada which were 4 billion years old! I'm looking forward to more post Cambrian evolution. I guess at some point HotE will dovetail into History of Humankind too.

3 months ago | 0

@terranfederation7469

The early history of the early up to the beginning of life was my favorite part so far. Looking forward to the end of the Permian and the beginning of the Triassic

2 months ago | 0

@KymElder

Fantastic content! I would love to see an elementary/middle school version summarizing much of the content. I would love to show much of this to my students. I’ll keep asking…

3 months ago | 0