What's being done at the end of the world is there room to come to the rescue?

The Doomsday Seed Vault could save the planet when the world ends.

The Doomsday Seed Vault is located in a cave on Norway's Svalbard archipelago, where about 100 million seeds of crops from around the world are kept in a cellar. In this case, seeds of wheat, barley, peas and other crops can be stored for up to 1,000 years, while sorghum seeds can be stored for 19,500 years.

Most importantly, the Armageddon Seed Vault is a very secure gene bank in the world. Its security is comparable to that of the U.S. National Gold Bank, which can withstand earthquakes and nuclear weapons. If we're lucky enough to stay here and build our own feeder, the food problem should be easily solved.

Located at 2,900 meters above sea level at the South Pole, Amundsen-Scott Station was set up by the United States in 1957 and is equipped with a neutrino detection station, mainly used to detect extraterrestrial neutrino sources.

More than 30 researchers usually study here each year, and the Amundsen-Scott Station is also equipped with a 4,270-meter-long airstrip, among other things, which allows for research in high-altitude atmospheric physics, meteorology, earth sciences, glaciology, and biology.