In the final episode of "Cosmos: Possible Worlds," titled "A New World's Fair," the narrative takes viewers to a fictional 2039 New York World's Fair, showcasing potential solutions to humanity's most pressing problems and exploring the exciting possibilities that might exist in the near future, including advanced technology and scientific breakthroughs that could reshape our world; essentially presenting a vision of a hopeful future based on our current understanding of science and innovation.
Key points about the episode:
1. Focus on the future:
The episode primarily features a futuristic World's Fair setting, highlighting potential advancements in various fields like medicine, energy, and space exploration.
2. Optimistic outlook:
The episode aims to inspire viewers with a positive vision of what humanity can achieve through scientific progress.
Thanks for watching. Follow for more videos.
#cosmosspacescience
#cosmospossibleworlds
#season1
#episode13
#cosmology
#astronomy
#spacetime
#spacescience
#space
#nasa
#spacedocumentary
#darkmatter
#twinstarstars
#aliensolarsystem
#TheCosmicConnection
#cosmos
#neildegrassetyson
#Themanofmillionstars
#neildegrassetyson
#ANewWorld'sFair
#future
Key points about the episode:
1. Focus on the future:
The episode primarily features a futuristic World's Fair setting, highlighting potential advancements in various fields like medicine, energy, and space exploration.
2. Optimistic outlook:
The episode aims to inspire viewers with a positive vision of what humanity can achieve through scientific progress.
Thanks for watching. Follow for more videos.
#cosmosspacescience
#cosmospossibleworlds
#season1
#episode13
#cosmology
#astronomy
#spacetime
#spacescience
#space
#nasa
#spacedocumentary
#darkmatter
#twinstarstars
#aliensolarsystem
#TheCosmicConnection
#cosmos
#neildegrassetyson
#Themanofmillionstars
#neildegrassetyson
#ANewWorld'sFair
#future
Category
📚
LearningTranscript
00:07Welcome to Earth! Nitrogen-filled blue skies, water-filled oceans, and a variety of creatures beyond imagination.
00:19living creatures
00:22Do you know that in this four billion year old book, the page in the name of human being has brought our life to everyone right now.
00:29A new addition to the mysteries of this phenomenon has just begun. Hopefully, one day this little one will be ours.
00:37Its future will further increase the information
00:42It will be much more free than many generations of humans, but there will also be many dangers which will not be a new thing.
00:55It doesn't matter, they have always been there. Staying alive here is also a big problem. Life is always full of dangers.
01:03In every generation,
01:05And in every era, this has always been the case on earth, our species living on earth, we humans, are difficult
01:13We have gone through times when life seemed difficult here, but somehow we survived.
01:20You are gone and now we want to save you and today itself.
01:25Your team was born, along with thousands of brothers and sisters,
01:28This task is not going to be so easy.
01:31I have a lot to tell you about this world.
01:35Some are proven scary.
01:38But don't be afraid, we will find some way out.
01:44That Siddha is scary.
02:13That Siddha is scary.
02:43Where to start?
02:45A lot has happened before you came into this world.
02:50Fortunately, our ancestors reached the childhood of our planet.
02:53I have found a way to connect the threads of his story.
02:58Some amazing things have happened since then too.
03:01This is called science.
03:05And this is your birthright.
03:08You won't believe it, all this beauty of today was once a sea of ​​fire.
03:16Come on, I'll show you.
03:22It will be your first birthday this time next year.
03:26This means that you would have completed one complete circumambulation of Suri.
03:30And that's what we call an arthier.
03:32To understand the vast time scale of this universe and our tiny world
03:36We have compressed the entire time period into one year.
03:40And that's where we are at right now.
03:42On a cosmic calendar.
03:44Each month of this is more than a billion years.
03:48And every day is just under 40 million years.
03:52One hour of this calendar is equal to approximately twenty lakh years.
03:57Amari Prithvi was born in fire.
04:02And at its center was the flame.
04:07It would burn when licked or when snow hit it.
04:14One of these was as big as Mars.
04:17And the moon was formed when it collided with the earth.
04:25But there is no need to worry.
04:28Because these balls of fire were part of the turbulent early solar system.
04:32And in the billion years that followed, other worlds were removed from their obits.
04:38So now our solar system can be called a fairly peaceful place.
04:45After the first 500 million years, the speed of the Earth's rotation was faster than today.
04:51At that time the days were very short, lasting about six hours.
04:57The Moon was then ten times closer and its gravitational grip on our young planet was much stronger.
05:05These waves struck the ground very high, a thousand times higher than they are today.
05:13We could not have lived on this early Earth. The atmosphere would have been mostly carbon dioxide, methane, and ammonia.
05:22It was. We couldn't live in this toxic atmosphere. I don't know what the climate was like back then. But scientists believe
05:30is that �
05:30And because of the hazy atmosphere, Earth's heat would be trapped here. And Earth would be very hot.
05:39Small organisms may have released methane and fed on carbon dioxide and sunlight to survive in the ocean.
05:47Of
05:47They must have found a way. These tiny creatures called cyanobacteria must have rebuilt the entire planet.
05:55By swallowing carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen, they created the blue sky. This oxygen helped create the atmosphere on our planet.
06:17The oxygen atoms created by tiny organisms within the ocean
06:22They began to gather at a high altitude in the sky.
06:25And then a new kind of molecule was formed
06:29ozone
06:31It formed an invisible shield against the deadly rays of Suri.
06:35Now, for the first time, life could escape the clutches of the ocean and come to Earth.
06:44And soon life took full advantage of these new vocations
06:54New shapes and forms began to emerge according to these new habitats.
07:00Then ears, nose and ears began to form.
07:13I would like to introduce you to this creature who
07:16We humans have a very distant relative
07:19We were born today
07:22But beetles have been around on Earth for about 300 million years.
07:26And they have seen great changes in this world.
07:32We humans have been here for a very short time compared to them.
07:36Cosmic Air's New Year Jive 11 AM
07:40And this was the time when our ancestors first stood up
07:44And that's why we call them Homo erectus.
07:47They were no longer forced to stare at the dirt beneath their feet.
07:51Now he could lift his head and see the stars.
07:55His hands were free to change the world
07:58They went around, searching
08:00who learned not to refrain from fisting
08:03And he was very brave when he dared to go to unknown places.
08:07And it is their blood that flows through our veins today.
08:12Some of them discovered the great continent of Africa.
08:15So some turned left towards the north and reached Europe.
08:20There is evidence that these people evolved into what would later be called the Neanderthals.
08:26We don't know what they called themselves.
08:29But we gave them the name of that part of Germany
08:33Where his ancient names were first found
08:38A more esoteric branch of our family moved to the right, towards Asia
08:44And these people were called Denisovans
08:47But you, I and all our other brothers and sisters
08:50They are descendants of the same people who remained in Africa for another fifteen million years.
08:57Of course we have a bit of blood from other branches of the family too
09:01But primarily we are the children of Africa.
09:04How our species spread across the world
09:07We need to get closer to midnight to see this.
09:10After surviving eleven, we will have to move forward fifty-five minutes, i.e. approximately one and a half lakh years
09:16There are only 13 minutes left until midnight.
09:26That's about forty thousand years ago
09:29These Niand Thals lived a lot like us
09:33Their minds were bigger than ours.
09:35They were more powerful
09:37But he did a lot of things like that.
09:39who were very similar to modern humans.
09:42And it wouldn't be wrong to say that
09:44that even today most people
09:45They have a few genes.
09:48But today these Niyand Thals are no longer alive.
09:51And as for the Danisovans
09:53So he's not alive either.
09:55when it happens
09:57When an entire species disappears
09:59So that's called deletion.
10:03This is the end of that road.
10:05which is associated with the origin of life
10:07began four billion years ago
10:12We don't know why they ended.
10:15And we know this
10:16that he never ventured beyond the seashore of his area.
10:20It is possible that these fellow descendants of ours
10:22More satisfied than us
10:24Lived less stressed and peacefully
10:28Perhaps we humans exist
10:29Restlessness leads us into unknown territories.
10:33Some great power gave our ancestors the courage to do great things.
10:38He crossed the great ocean
10:40without knowing what lies beyond them
10:42And man reached every continent of the earth
10:46even on the moon
10:49Kausame Kiir's final seconds approaching.
10:52There was no place in the world we hadn't been to.
10:57Billions of years ago, single-celled cyanobacteria
11:01started to change the world
11:03After that we became the first species to do the same thing.
11:08We have changed the oceans, the land and the atmosphere.
11:12And these changes have now triggered a new mass extinction.
11:16The scientific community did this after seeing the evidence.
11:19that our era deserves a new name
11:23Anthropocene
11:23In Greek, anthropo means human.
11:27And the scene is recent
11:29It reflects our global impact on the environment and the life in it.
11:35No one knows when it started.
11:38And no one knows what the outcome will be.
11:42Happy New Year Nani Seejan
11:44Welcome to the Anthropocene
11:52I think your future is bright
11:56But there is also a difficulty
11:58We don't know when the darkness began.
12:01When did we become such a force?
12:03that we have begun to change the skies, seas and land of this planet
12:10When did the Anthropocene epoch begin?
12:13Some would say this was the beginning.
12:17Ten thousand years ago in a similar place
12:19Or did our ancestors draw diagrams of mammoths, civet teeth, tykers, and giant sloths because
12:27After killing them all, somehow their memory remains alive
12:32Human-caused extinction is nothing new.
12:36But we cannot blame our ancestors for this.
12:38How could they have known that by killing creatures in this manner, the entire species would become extinct?
12:45I think the Anthropocene began with the first seed sown in the ground.
12:50And after that came Karshi from Karanti
12:54Before this period, the world had twice as many trees to convert the Earth's carbon dioxide into oxygen.
13:02With the advent of agriculture, our ancestors abandoned their nomadic lifestyle and began settling on farms and in cities.
13:09done it
13:15This is Sheta Hoyok. It was one of the oldest cities in the world.
13:20This is what it looked like about 9000 years ago
13:24Ever since we started building houses and living inside, our relationship with nature has changed.
13:28So this is how our ancestors used to keep their small houses warm by lighting a fire.
13:34Didn't they start with
13:36The smoke from such small fires did not change the atmosphere much.
13:41But over thousands of years, we humans have created so much carbon in this atmosphere that
13:47The whole world is heating up and the result is in front of us.
13:52The Anthropocene began with the domestication of animals.
13:56Cattle produce methane by eating grass, which also changes the climate.
14:02When they digest their food, methane gas is produced.
14:05But no one knew this until the advent of modern science.
14:10How could a few cattle do any harm?
14:13It was far from possible to bring about such a drastic change in the Earth.
14:16Our ancestors wanted to feed their families
14:19I wanted my children to remain hungry and live a long life.
14:26A world-changing discovery was made in China about four thousand years ago.
14:31There were found mats that could be burned to heat the water and fuel the cold and damp.
14:38These rocks are actually the carbon remains of plants and trees that died millions of years ago, buried under the ground.
14:46Were
14:48So, didn't the Anthropocene begin with the discovery of Koile?
14:53Coils became increasingly important in pawnshops, foundries, and homes.
14:59Or the Anthropocene began about a thousand years later.
15:04When people across Asia began to grow rice
15:07In this unique technique, plants are planted in water-filled fields.
15:12And this is called puddling.
15:16These hardworking farmers did not know that this method of growing paddy
15:21Like raising cattle, it will someday produce millions of tons of methane each year.
15:27Soil filled with humus starts losing oxygen.
15:30And then tiny, invisible microbes digest plant matter and produce methane.
15:37Rice plants release more methane into the atmosphere from their leaves
15:42These early farmers had no idea what was happening on such a small scale.
15:48He was just trying to feed himself and his family.
15:58There are many types of handwriting, but this is the handwriting of time.
16:03If you know how to read the letters of time, you can see what happened to our planet.
16:08You can write a wonderful story
16:10The most dramatic part of this story was not written in bright colors but in pale white.
16:16This white line is like a poem, it tells the story of the death of great creatures all over the world.
16:24Is
16:24This is a layer of the rare metal iridium that dates back to the end of the Cretaceous period, 660,000,000 years ago.
16:34shows
16:34During this period, dinosaurs and three-quarters of the world's plants and animals became extinct.
16:41There is a tradition among geologists that if a layer is found in the Earth which is the first or last such layer,
16:48The boundary line of the period is shown where if you find any species of fossil, its mark is a golden
16:54It is done with a spike in the rock.
16:57Let's take a look at it a little bit. If we are living in the Anthropocene, that is, the era of human extinction, then
17:02Which wall should we stick our golden spike into?
17:11Maybe what you say inside me was that when I was only one day old like you, I had two superpowers
17:19This crapper was fighting to get her hug
17:22To assert his dominance, he was even ready to destroy everything the day I was born.
17:30On that day, both countries launched nuclear weapons in the Mayu Mandal to demonstrate their strength.
17:38And in the decades that followed, thousands of such explosions have taken place.
17:44These bombs produced strontium ninety, an atom that became unstable due to the excessive nuclear energy.
17:51This is a radioactive isotop, it has polluted mother's milk all over the world.
17:57Mauna, who nursed children like them, refused to live with this terror.
18:04They protested together and then signed a treaty in 1963.
18:09I and my entire generation have high levels of another radioactive isotope in our tissues.
18:16Is
18:16And its name is Kaban 14
18:19So if I ever forget how old I am, then on the day I was born
18:25The sound of the nuptial explosions will tell you my age
18:30Does the golden spike in me mark the beginning of anthropocene? Did it begin with bomb testing?
18:38So it is tied up
18:40But even today we have not been able to stop our homes from getting polluted.
18:44We also had this idea that one day everything that exists today will be destroyed.
18:50If you are aware of the danger and still do nothing, what is the point?
18:55Then it is better not to know
18:59To know would then be a curse too.
19:08The stories that never existed have the longest lifespan
19:12But it will always remain a myth
19:17Apollo, the ancient god of light, was always on the lookout for attractive women
19:24A heart wandering the bustling streets of Troy, the rival city of the ancient Greeks
19:31He saw Cassandra, the most attractive and beautiful daughter of King Trym.
19:36And he fell in love with Cassandra.
19:43Apollo nurtured whatever he wanted.
19:46But Cassandra's refusal shocked him.
19:49How does he win her heart?
19:52Cassandra had no shortage and was very happy.
19:56But Apollo wasn't one to give up so easily.
20:00So he made a wonderful proposal.
20:04The ability to see the future as a turmoil
20:11Cassandra was delighted.
20:12If only he knew what was coming next.
20:17Then his strength would increase greatly.
20:19But what do you want in return?
20:21Apollo later said this
20:23Cassandra had to love him.
20:26The price was too high for Cassandra.
20:30Apollo, enraged, cursed him with a strange curse.
20:34He said that Cassandra would be able to see the future
20:37But no one will listen to him
20:58He's lost his mind thinking about the Trojans
21:00Because of this he had to face a lot of humiliation in jail.
21:05And from that day onwards it started being considered another form of sorrow and misfortune.
21:11Cassandra now only saw bad things
21:13Meanwhile, his brother Paris decided to go to Spata
21:18Only Cassandra knew that upon reaching there
21:21He will fall in love with the king's beautiful wife, Helen.
21:25who he will kidnap
21:27And this will lead to the destruction of Troy.
21:31Listen to me, where are you going?
21:33don't make me sick
21:34But no one paid attention to what he said
21:37In this era of peace and prosperity
21:40There was no apprehension of danger
21:42Neither was the king listening to his daughter.
21:45and no one else
21:49When Paris brought Helen home
21:51So the people of Troy welcomed him.
21:53Cassandra was so desperate to prevent the coming disaster
21:57that he attacked Helen
21:59Cassandra knew
22:01that the Greeks would take revenge on the Trojans
22:03and will win
22:06He had already predicted the defeat of his father's army and the destruction of Troy by the Greeks.
22:12And the Greeks did come, as Cassandra had said.
22:18But Troy held out even after years of war.
22:25When the Greeks boarded their ships and started leaving the harbor
22:29So some people must have breathed a sigh of relief.
22:33Those who wondered if Cassandra's prophecies were true
22:37But what was the point of that big wooden horse
22:41A Trojan platoon was sent to capture Jaz Paratal.
22:44They found a lone Greek soldier there.
22:47Her name was Sinon.
22:49Trajan asked Sinon what was the matter.
22:53He told them that the king of the Greeks
22:55wanted to offer him as a human sacrifice
22:58So when his brothers were returning home
23:01So he's hiding here
23:03But what is the meaning of this big wooden horse?
23:06Sinon said she was an offering to the goddess Athena
23:10The Trojans cheered.
23:12The horse was the ancient symbol of their city
23:16He started thinking why not take it inside the city.
23:19Sinon laughed and said that the Greeks had said
23:22that weaklings like the Trojans would not even be able to move this huge and heavy clod
23:27So let them see this and feel ashamed thinking how weak they are.
24:10The Crojans were terrified that Cassandra might set the horse on fire.
24:15Then the goddess Athena will become angry and her anger will destroy the city.
24:37As soon as the intruders gave the signal
24:40The Greek naval ships anchored off the shore began their attack on Troy.
24:48The shore was for her, as soon as she would go, she would go to Troy Ghau.
25:11Proy Charudan will come
25:14will go
25:20What Apollo said happened.
25:22Cassandra's prophecies went unnoticed
25:26And now it was too late for Troy
25:40For Cassandra, knowing the future proved to be a curse
25:45But this quality can also have great benefits.
25:48I'll tell you another story
25:52There was a time when there were no refrigerators.
26:06It was difficult to prevent food from spoiling in summer.
26:09There used to be a guy named Iceman.
26:13He would come home and sell big blocks of ice.
26:17People used to keep it in ice boxes to preserve perishable food.
26:24But the ice kept melting and its water kept spreading on the floor.
26:29So someone found another way to keep food cold.
26:33This was a gas-powered system using ammonia or sulfur dioxide as a coolant.
26:39Now I was free from the blocks of ice.
26:44And these chemicals were not only toxic but also smelly and kept leaking.
26:52So there was a need for a coolant that would not make anything poisonous.
26:57Nor should the refrigerator pose any danger to people when thrown into the garbage.
27:05Does not make people sick, does not irritate the eyes, does not attract insects towards itself
27:11And don't bother the cat either, but perhaps such a thing did not exist naturally.
27:17So chemists in America invented a special kind of molecules
27:22It was a collection of even more subtle things, atoms, that had never existed on Earth before.
27:29These were named chlorofluorocarbons or CFCs because they were composed of one or more carbon atoms and
27:37Some chlorine or fluorine atoms are
27:41These new molecules proved to be more successful than their inventors had even hoped.
28:00CFCs have become the main coolant not only in refrigerators but also in air conditioners.
28:07A lot could have been done through CFCs
28:11People also used it in case of shaving cream.
28:16And also to protect the hair from wind and rain
28:21It is this propellant that made extinguishers and spray paint cans so popular.
28:26It was an excellent material for foam instillations, industrial solvents, and cleansing agents.
28:33The most famous brand name of these chemicals was Freon, a trademark of DuPont.
28:40It has been used for decades and has not caused any harm.
28:44It all seemed perfectly safe.
28:47But then the 1970s began.
28:50Two atmospheric chemists at the University of California, Irvine
28:54studying the Earth's atmosphere
28:57Mario Molina was a Mexican immigrant
29:00A young laser chemist
29:02and Schwarz Roland was a chemical kineticist
29:06who studied the activities of molecules and gases under different conditions
29:10He was from a small town in Ohio.
29:13Molina wanted to excel as a scientist.
29:17He was looking for a project like this.
29:19that takes them as far away from their previous research experience as possible
29:24They wonder what happens to Freon molecules when they leak from the air conditioner.
29:30This was the time when Apollo astronauts often traveled to the Moon.
29:34And NASA was also planning to launch a space shuttle every week.
29:39Could the burning of rocket fuel have endangered the stratosphere?
29:45where the earth's atmosphere met the darkness of space
29:48And science often works like this.
29:51You try to solve a problem
29:55But they go in a completely different and unknown direction.
30:02The truth was that these magical particles of shaving cream and hair spray were not just disappearing.
30:09Actually, no one knew that these billions of atoms were accumulating at the edge of space.
30:15were
30:17These were gathering far above the earth and were of no use.
30:25Ballina and Roland were concerned to learn that these CFCs had thinned that protective layer.
30:31had given
30:32It protects us from ultraviolet radiation which is harmful to our health.
30:36The situation was getting worse
30:38When ultraviolet light strikes a CFC molecule
30:43So it takes away the chlorine atom from it.
30:45When this happens, the chlorine atoms start eating away at the precious ozone molecules.
30:51When the ozone layer developed over our planet 40 billion years ago
30:56Only then did the creatures come out of the sea and reach the land.
31:01One atom of chlorine can destroy one million ozone molecules.
31:12The CFCs were in everything
31:15And the producers couldn't do without them.
31:20The corporate world was not ready to believe this threat.
31:24People couldn't believe we had become such a powerful species.
31:30which has become a threat to life on this planet.
31:33They began to look for human reasons for the disappearance of hydrogen in the sky.
31:37Reagan administration officials suggested this
31:40that everyone should apply more sunblock and wear hats and sunglasses
31:46But scientists said that plankton is a part of the international food chain.
31:50The smaller plants and the plants at the bottom could not do this.
31:55Gulina and Rolind continue to work tirelessly to educate the world
32:00Even after science succeeds in predicting
32:04If we keep waiting for them to come true then what is the use of such science?
32:10Rolind and Cassandra must have had a lot to discuss
32:15Then something strange happened
32:17People around the world began to unite
32:19In the 1960s, women
32:22Demanded a ban on atmospheric nuclear testing
32:26Because she did not want to feed poisonous milk to her children.
32:30Then in the 1980s
32:34Consumers demanded that the corporation stop the construction of CFCs.
32:39And let me tell you one more thing
32:40The government also heard their plea
32:43CFCS banned in 197 countries
32:46There are only this many countries in our world.
32:50So you don't need to worry about this danger at all.
32:56The ozone layer has been thickening ever since.
33:03But if Rolind and Mulina hadn't shown the eagerness to climb the Straitsphere
33:09And if the warnings had been ignored like Cassandra's, this would have happened.
33:14So by your fortieth birthday, the entire planet's ozone would have been wiped out.
33:18And you would not be able to take your future generations out in the open smoke.
33:26The phase would have been ruined
33:28The green creatures that lived on them would be killed.
33:32The green creatures would survive for some time by eating their bodies.
33:36But eventually they too would be killed.
33:40If we continue to protect that zone layer
33:44So by the time you're fifty, she'll be completely fine.
33:49I may not be able to see her, but I can certainly imagine her.
33:59Now one last story.
34:02About a man who could see the future
34:08No one outside the scientific community knows this, but Apollo also had this power to see the future.
34:16There must have been an error from
34:17He has described the things that are to come with great accuracy.
34:22And in this series, we all, including you, are indebted to him.
34:31This person was born in a rural part of Japan called Ehime.
34:37That is, dear princess, this place was very beautiful.
34:40But most of his childhood was spent underground.
34:45Because of the most brutal war ever fought
34:48The teenager and the people of the town had to hide in an underground bomb shelter.
34:55Initially, Shakoor and Manabhi or Suki wanted to become doctors like their father and grandfather.
35:05Physics fascinated him.
35:08But he didn't think he would be able to study mathematics.
35:11His numbers were up, but then he started focusing on the questions that interested him most.
35:24Why does the average temperature of the whole world remain the same year after year?
35:31Why is our planet's thermostat set to a specific temperature?
35:35Is it possible to create a climate model for our planet by taking all the elements of its climate into account?
35:43go
35:43atmospheric pressure, clouds, humidity, surface conditions, ocean and wind currents
35:51and through this, predictions can be made
35:55And this was before climatologists in Japan had computers.
36:00He did these difficult calculations by hand.
36:07In 1958, he was invited to the United States by the US Weather Service.
36:12Five years later, Manabe was given access to one of the first Parch supercomputers.
36:21They were left utterly disappointed when Pritvi's massive climate data caused the entire system to crash.
36:29It took him another four years to gather the evidence on the basis of which he could claim to be a very courageous man.
36:36and could predict dire consequences
36:59The tree of life, four billion years old, has many broken branches, and this is their memorial.
37:07Every hallway commemorates mass extinctions so widespread that life itself ceased to exist.
37:14had come close to
37:16Five major disasters had already occurred before we came into the world.
37:21But the sixth is coming now and our name is written on it.
37:53Sometimes the predictions come from the heart of a Trojan princess, while on the other hand they come from a
37:59Can also come out of lifeless scientific paper
38:08Hearing this name, it may not seem that the sky is falling apart, but this is what is being said.
38:17Maybe this is where we should stick our golden spikes
38:28Annabe and his colleague Richard Weatherold had previously described how humans could jockey in the atmosphere.
38:34doing
38:34The increase in greenhouse gases will change the temperature of our planet.
38:38These scientists had accurately predicted how this disaster would occur. These scientists had predicted it for our times and even before.
38:48had anticipated the future
38:54Some still claim that science is imperfect, and if this is true, then it has been fifty years since
38:59How did Manaw and Weatherold succeed in correctly predicting the rise in the Earth's temperature even earlier?
39:06And if we are not responsible for this then where is this carbon dioxide coming from? Most of the climate
39:12Scientists predict that coastal cities will be flooded. Warming oceans will threaten the coral reef's ecosystem.
39:18Death is possible and terrible
39:20Storms could intensify, leading to more frequent heatwaves, droughts, and severe forest fires.
39:26It can be seen, yes why not, scientists had already warned us.
39:36So what will happen to your life and future? No citizen.
39:53Your first day of Kind Garjan has been postponed until the deadly temperatures subside.
40:08When the forest fire broke out, your family had to flee, leaving behind everything.
40:24And when it's your turn to get married, take a bottle of champagne and water.
40:33Jhar Parivar Rigd Paradi Ki Jab Par Yadi Ki Jakhai
41:06This can be prevented
41:08It's not too late yet
41:11There is still another future
41:15I promise to take you there
41:18We will find some way or the other
41:51I will still fry one more
41:59Yet another Bhavish Rawada
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