Maps I find Thought-Provoking! Subscribe with notifications and check out my other Youtube channels below! @JackSucksAtLife @JackSucksAtStuff @JackMasseyWelsh @JackSucksAtClips
on JackSucksAtGeography we upload a range of easy to watch geography related games. We mainly play Sporcle games like "naming all 197 countries". I successfully learned all 197 countries and plan to learn more Geography trivia. On this channel I also play Geoguessr. This is a game that uses Google Street View to drop you in a random location and you have to work out exactly where you are on the worldwide map. Geoguessr was created in 2013. If you want to see more from Jack he uploads different content to many other Youtube channels, linked above!
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0:00
Maps I find incredible right we're starting with the map. I truly do find incredible cyclist recreates
0:05
Nirvana's nevermind album cover just in case you haven't seen the original album cover This is what it looks like and this is seriously impressive because this is really zoomed out
0:13
I wonder how long this actually took it's a lot of cycling and it's a lot of planning to do the route
0:17
I tell you what though imagine your house being right where the baby's willy is you know what I mean? Was that a weird thing to say? Let's move on. Oh the most popular languages on Duolingo
0:25
Duolingo is an app where you learn different languages Coincidentally, I've been using it for the last two weeks. I've started learning German
0:30
Apparently it's just me in the Balkans because everywhere else is learning English, Spanish or French
0:34
It's really interesting to look at that though. Most of the world is learning English Most people in Canada want to learn French which makes sense. There's a lot of French speaking areas of Canada
0:42
Wait, I've just realized Sweden are learning Swedish. Ah, it's mostly refugees who learn Swedish in Sweden with the support of Duolingo
0:51
Well, that's actually pretty incredible. Whoa world map according to China in
0:55
1799 I love seeing these old maps and you know what for 1799 it's pretty accurate isn't it
1:02
That scale is definitely off though when you compare the size of Africa to the size of like Indonesia and Malaysia
1:07
Percentage of Europeans who would fight for their country So in the UK only 21 to 40% of people would be willing to fight for their country
1:14
Do you know what I'd be in the 15 to 20% you think I'm fighting somewhere on behalf of Boris Johnson
1:18
I don't think so the lighthouses of Europe this map is insanely accurate with each dot being the right color
1:24
The patterns are the real patterns and the size of the dot representing the visible distance of each lighthouse
1:29
Oh my god, so much data. That is mad. I tell you what, Norway are not messing about with their lighthouses
1:35
That is one well-illuminated coastline. Weirdest food from every state. Pasties? What's weird about pasties
1:42
We love a pasty in the UK. Cheese and onion? Don't mind if I do. Comparing the latitude of North America and Europe
1:48
This one always really freaks me out. Because for some reason I always think of the UK being parallel with like this middle part of the US
1:54
But you can see they don't line up in the slightest and it's actually the US is parallel with Spain and Portugal
1:59
Meanwhile the UK doesn't even dip into the US and it is entirely in Canada all the countries that have gained independence from Great Britain
2:05
Oh man what a legacy geez we could say all the dates as well some of them are so recent 1981 for Antigua and Barbuda Due to just a small space on the Pan Highway we can drive from Alaska to
2:16
Pantagonia, known as Darien Gap. So what they're saying is you could drive all the way through North America
2:21
and all the way to the bottom of South America if it wasn't for this little cheeky fella in Panama
2:26
Right, let's go to the Darien Gap. I want to see it. So if we get the little street view guy, woo
2:31
We literally hover over. You can see exactly where the road stops And that's exactly where I want to go. Oh my god. It's so much more built up than I was imagining it
2:38
Yeah, for some reason I was thinking it would be like right just in a rainforest in the middle of nowhere
2:42
But I guess there's a small village in front of the rainforest. Have we done it? Have we reached the end of the road? Yes, we literally have we can't go down there
2:48
We've just got some benches and a few houses and stuff. You could walk further down though
2:51
I wonder if you could walk it you just couldn't travel by car. It's a national park It's probably just completely off limits. The hidden continent of
2:57
Zealandia outlined in grey deep under the ocean. There is what's considered a continent
3:02
It's so much bigger than New Zealand. What is it? Some like tectonic plates or something? I don't know. To scale map slash model of my grandfather's farm in the Victorian high country. Oh my god. That's adorable
3:12
Go on, son. Look at that. You've nailed that. Look at the little sheds and stuff. What
3:17
U.S. counties without a single African-American. I can't believe that. I know they look like small squares, but that is a lot of land
3:24
That is- what? Walking time of the European microstates. So to walk from the westernmost point to the easternmost point of Andorra, it would take 14 hours
3:33
That's what I mean about these tiny countries. You think to yourself, we're absolutely tiny. It'd take you 14 hours to walk across it
3:38
Okay, so Liechtenstein, four hours. So that is considerably smaller. Right, we're going to get smaller and smaller
3:44
San Marino would take us four hours. See, that really surprises me. I just always thought San Marino was tiny
3:49
Right, hang on, what's next? Monaco? It'll be Monaco, I assume. Yes, that's right
3:53
It'd take an hour to walk across the entire country. All right, and then last is Vatican City
3:57
Let's predict it. I'm gonna say... 20 minutes. Let's go for it
4:02
19 hours? Oh wait, I see the zero. So it's 0.19H. So they do mean 19 minutes
4:07
Hey, I said 20. I'm a genius. Th-th-can't read. Map of cannibalism in China
4:12
Bloody hell. The thing is, there's no concept of time here. So we don know if most of these happened a thousand years ago or you know Tuesday School uniforms around the world So the yellow is where you have school uniforms for the majority of the schools and then the blue is where it not common to have school uniform
4:28
I did not realize that in Europe, the UK is actually a minority, and most countries don't have a school uniform
4:33
I expected it in the US, obviously, because I've watched many an early 2000s high school US chick flick
4:40
More accurate olive oil versus butter map of Europe. The yellow being where people generally use butter in their cooking
4:45
And then the green being where they use olive oil instead. So obviously Spain and Italy use a lot of olive oil
4:51
You know what? I started shoving a bit of olive oil on my salads and I really like it
4:55
And it's just the oil that you like normally pour on a pan. I assume that's acceptable. It tastes nice either way
5:00
Oh my god sovereign states of confusion. These are maps of several of the world's countries
5:04
They may be resized rotated or even turned upside down your mission Should you choose to accept it is to identify each of them that is way too hard. Okay. Well, we'll do what we can P is obviously
5:13
Obviously, Australia. We've got that one and then we've also got India for M
5:17
I reckon N is probably Greece. G is obviously Chile. I is an upside down Italy. I kind of want to guess that that is Egypt for E, but I might be wrong
5:27
Is that Japan for A? Oh, and then obviously we've got the USA. I did not see the US when it's at that angle. Oh, bloody hell
5:33
And at that point, I think I'm probably stuck. Countries that can hit any place on earth with a missile
5:39
Alright, brilliant. Reassuring to know. Thanks. There's a spot in the mid-atlantic from which there are 60 countries that can be sailed to in a straight line
5:47
Oh, because the Earth's round. That is the coolest thing I've ever seen
5:51
Look at that, you're right there and then you go, you're in the US, or you go, and you're like just at the tip of Chile
5:56
Oh, bloody hell. Or if you want to get particularly crazy, you go, and then you pop out the other side over in Vanuatu
6:02
What a dream. Asia's quest to eradicating extreme poverty, 1981 versus 2019
6:10
Alright, well let's see some big improvements. Aww, nice, nice. Still progress to be made, but things are certainly in the right direction, which is very nice to see
6:19
Europeans who can read and write at least one foreign language. Right, I mean, this looks pretty bad for the UK, but there's some logic behind it
6:26
because I assuming that basically the second language that all of these countries know will be English But this kind of thing does annoy me a bit as like an English person I feel like there definitely a stereotype that we all like self annoying tourists
6:37
So that's why I've started trying to learn German. Just to be a little bit more cultural, you know
6:42
Kangaroos versus people. So the red means that there is more kangaroos in most places than there is people
6:48
Which is nice to see, isn't it? Three million kangaroos compared to 2.67
6:52
When I went to Australia, certain areas we were in, there was kangaroos all over the joint. Me and Becky were walking back to our Airbnb once and it got dark and these kangaroos started surrounding us from all angles
7:01
It was mental. Size of the Great Barrier Reef compared to Europe. What? That really puts things into perspective
7:07
That is absolutely crazy. This is just the top half of Australia and just absolutely rips through the center of Europe
7:12
Goes across so many countries. That is mad. This bit of Google Street View was made using a camel
7:16
Oh my god. That is the greatest thing I've ever seen. I need to see it in the flesh, please
7:21
Whoa, look at that. Look at that. Look at the camel. He's got a camera strap on his back. Oh my god. We're in the desert. That's insane. Where are we? It's United Arab Emirates
7:31
Oh, that's insane. Look at that. That looks mad. New Zealand as the center of the world. Oh, man
7:37
I love these things. It doesn't look like everything's included But obviously it is because they just line up on the other side
7:42
There is just not much going on over here is there? Is food a human right? The US was the only country to say no
7:47
Nice one guys. Oldest continuously functioning universities in Europe. This is insane
7:52
I learned this for the first time few months ago. I assumed that, you know, 300 years would be most universities age
7:58
Some of them are a thousand years old. Oxford University began in 1167
8:03
This one in Italy began in 1088. Can't even comprehend how long ago it was
8:07
Countries whose flags were featured on the cover of Survival by Bob Marley and the Whalers
8:11
That is epic, I love it. Oh, countries and territorial disputes with China
8:16
Right, not great. The most searched news site in each state. Yahoo
8:22
Who's reading stuff with Yahoo? It's 2022. What are you doing on Yahoo
8:26
I'll see Yahoo News. All right, and on that note, I'm going to end off this video
8:32
Thank you so much for watching. Subscribe for weekly geography-related content, and I'll see you later
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