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Title: Earth's Highest Peaks (300 Million Years Ago) Link Video: • Earth's Highest Peaks (300 Million Years Ago) 🌎 About This Episode Witness the rise of Earth's greatest lost mountain range: the Central Pangean Mountains. 300 million years ago, the crash of Gondwana and Laurussia created a stratospheric wall taller than Everest, splitting the supercontinent. Discover how this colossal range redefined global climate and paved the way for life's great survivors. ⏰ ( Chapters 1. The Intro We begin with a serene drone shot of the Great Smoky Mountains—soft, green, and ancient. Suddenly, the timeline rewinds. The trees vanish, the ground heaves upwards, and the soft hills sharpen into terrifying, snow-capped razors. We reveal the Central Pangean Mountains: a barrier so high it splits the supercontinent in two. 2. THE GEOLOGIC STAGE The Great Collision: We visualize the "slow-motion car crash" of Gondwana and Laurussia. This isn't just a mountain range; it is the suture of the world. The Atmospheric Wall: These peaks are so tall they disrupt global wind patterns. We see the "Rain Shadow" effect—monsoons on the eastern face, arid desolation on the west. The Oxygen Spike: We visualize the thick, heavy atmosphere—35% oxygen—that allows the mountains to hold massive glaciers while tropical swamps fester at their feet. 3. THE BIOLOGICAL STRUGGLE The Giants of the Foothills: In the swampy lowlands (modern Pennsylvania/West Virginia), we track the mega-fauna. Meganeura (hawk-sized dragonflies) hunting in the mist. The Forest Floor: The Arthropleura (car-sized millipede) navigating the detritus of giant Lycopod trees. The Adaptation: As we move up the mountain slopes, we see how life changes with altitude—hardy early synapsids (like Dimetrodon ancestors) adapting to the cooler, drier upland climates. The Great Drying: The Carboniferous Rainforest Collapse. The mountains grow so high they starve the interior of moisture. The lush coal swamps turn into dust bowls. The Erosion: A timelapse of millions of years. We watch the jagged peaks being ground down by wind and rain, their sediments washing down to bury the forests—creating the coal seams we mine today. 4. THE FINAL We return to the modern Appalachians. We show a coal miner holding a piece of black rock—literally holding the fossilized energy of that ancient swamp. A final visualization of the Atlantic Ocean opening up, separating the range into the Appalachians (US) and the Little Atlas (Morocco). The range was broken, but its roots remain. Join the Survivors 🔔 SUBSCRIBE to The Great Survivors for more epic stories of catastrophe and comeback. / @survivorsreign #TheGreatSurvivors #SurvivorsReign #EarthHistory #Pangea #PrehistoricEarth