The Apocalypse Earth Miraculously Escaped
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About Thoughty2
Thoughty2 (Arran) is a British KZreadr and gatekeeper of useless facts. Thoughty2 creates mind-blowing factual videos about science, tech, history, opinion and just about everything else.
#Thoughty2
Writing: Steven Rix
Editing: Jack Stevens
Пікірлер: 1 700
13:57 "thanks for watching" No, thank YOU for casually sitting in the void and educating us
@G-arf
Жыл бұрын
You're god damn right.
@NoSuRReNDeR001
Жыл бұрын
Your channel was my pandemic medicine!!
@RendaJane
Жыл бұрын
The former guy in the US would love to be there. He could make so many perfect golf courses there. Just send his eldest sons, and it would be the greatest thing the world has ever seen! It’s selfish of MAGATS to keep them to themselves.
@thekidd423
Жыл бұрын
Talk about rent free lmfao
@menoobslayer
Жыл бұрын
Pretty sure he is more thankful, he makes a living off of this!
It was obviously One Punch Man.
@KoalaEater
Жыл бұрын
I thought your mum farted 😅
@coldmoonlight6361
Жыл бұрын
Saitama is a beast
@nasirzurmi2630
Жыл бұрын
... during a training spar with Genos
@thehipjoint768
Жыл бұрын
@@nasirzurmi2630 let’s get some udon.
@majormoron605
Жыл бұрын
Man of culture you are
I love how Thoughty2 makes it seem like everyone’s finally come to a precise conclusion to what actually happened, and then there’s always more!
@BurntByMcDonaldsCoffee
10 ай бұрын
The Why Files channel does that too, idk if you’ve seen it or not but AJ (the creator) does a really good job.
I still am impressed by the glow in the sky that lasted for days! That’s incredible.
@spacewater7
Жыл бұрын
I bet that's due to the composition of the vapors phosphorescing from the solar wind. NASA sent up a sounding rocket two years ago from Virginia to inject compounds into the stratosphere for scientific research, you should look it up. It was quite a (tiny puny) sight, the phosphor trails in the evening sky.
You can’t tell from watching, but I’m 100% sure Arran was trying not to die of laughter while pronouncing “Wolfgang Kundt”
@deanwin9973
Жыл бұрын
cool name, shame surname
@DavidDatura
Жыл бұрын
Isn’t Kundt pronounced “koond” not “cunt” 😏
@aceundead4750
Жыл бұрын
@@DavidDatura either "koond" or "koont" which the latter isnt much better. The dt at the end of names gets really confusing
@lucasklokov8728
Жыл бұрын
As a German, I can confirm both are common names.
@ianbullfrog7462
Жыл бұрын
A lifetimes desires, as a video editor......accomplished in one sublime moment. The rest of existence will have to play second fiddle to this!
I always assumed the Tunguska event was caused by a fragment of a comet rather than a meteor, as very little debris from the object was ever found, and comets are predominantly made of ice. Which of course would of vaporized away to nothing leaving only trace metals from inside said comet…which were indeed, later detected.
@lauriepenner350
Жыл бұрын
The equivalent of that one murder mystery where the weapon is a frozen leg of lamb, which is later cooked and served for dinner.
@ZachGatesHere
Жыл бұрын
There still would have been an impact crater though, no? Plus I'm pretty sure "piece of a comet" would have occurred to the scientists lol
@robsmith4434
Жыл бұрын
It's exploded in the air
@jayfredrickson8632
Жыл бұрын
@@ZachGatesHere No impact Crater, because it would have turn to steam before even hitting the ground. Also, the ground is marshy permafrost, which after being melted would just refill any hole over time. And scientists have thought of this. I read about it thirty years ago.
@laurendoe168
Жыл бұрын
Yes, a comet fits the evidence much better than a meteor and was suggested as the cause at least 30 years ago.
As a child I was within a couple miles of a meteor impacting the earth in the middle of the night. The sky lit up like the color of a plasma torch (or lightning) followed by a earth shattering ka-boom (I couldn't help myself - but seriously) & numerous less loud booms. It was amazing!
@Lucius1958
Жыл бұрын
*"There should have been an earth-shattering ka-boom..."* - Marvin
@nick10021995
Жыл бұрын
So you are 110-ist year old?
@blurr7103
Жыл бұрын
They said a meteor not this meteor
@LilYet
Жыл бұрын
What meteor
@baldeagle5297
Жыл бұрын
@@LilYet The one he heard.
I'm so glad the day after I watched Shane teaching Ryan about this, Thoughty2 decided to talk about this too! I'm very fascinated by it.
@atariischaotic
Жыл бұрын
Yes same!
@anshuuu9708
Жыл бұрын
But he uploaded first? This was up 5 days ago while their's 3 days ago
@atariischaotic
Жыл бұрын
@@anshuuu9708 but I watched Shane and Ryan’s video before this one
03:51: _Those who were unlucky enough to be nearby at the time all tell us similar tale._ They weren't so unlucky then. Unlucky were the 3 who could no more report anything.
@katherinkeegan8601
Жыл бұрын
Actually you could argue they were the lucky ones. The survivors experienced things like permanent hearing loss, problems with their eyesight, other health issues and the death of animals needed for food. If my memory is correct, several homes were leveled as well. With such results of the blast it's no wonder the inhabitants thought their god was angry. Many people today wonder the same thing after a catastrophe.
@kviz1111
Жыл бұрын
True!
@GrifoStelle
2 ай бұрын
Ah yes. Super lucky to have your windows shattered in the dead of a Siberian winter then being knocked unconscious along with everyone around you for miles
@jensphiliphohmann1876
2 ай бұрын
@@GrifoStelle In German we say "Glück im Unglück", roughly meaning it could have been even worse.
I learned about this back in the day from this older guy who created an energy drink called "Tunguska blast". I was installing garage doors at his house and he told me all about it. He gave me a couple cases. It was surprisingly good. This was like 2005, I looked a few years back and he don't make them anymore.😢
@jackdurden466
Жыл бұрын
That’s as cool as you can get! Maybe he wasn’t able to replicate a potion as strong as Red Bull or Monster. Still, him giving you a few cases is pretty cool!
@ThorGodofThunder420
Жыл бұрын
You ever wondered if it was just pee and he tricked you?
@Colaglass
Жыл бұрын
@@ThorGodofThunder420 Reason he didn't make more was because of the crippling diabetes you could taste in the pee.
@snapdragon6601
Жыл бұрын
Hey, that's a good name for an energy drink. 2005 would have been pretty early on in the energy drink game too, even Red Bull would have still been relatively new (worldwide anyway). He might have been able to make a fortune if he'd stuck with it or gotten enough investments for advertising or distribution deals.
I like the video before I watch it, to keep track of which ive seen and not. Havent been disappointed so far. Been a fan for years.
@boudica5883
Жыл бұрын
Same
Since i was a kid I've always been fascinated about the Tunguska event.
@jhsrt985
Жыл бұрын
Tesla did it on accident, I've been wondering for years also, but now we both know the answer. Hope this makes your day.
i learn more from this channel than in history class 😭
@ex0148
Жыл бұрын
Seems all academia is good for today is teaching you how to be a victim, deny truth, fact and science and then to go protest some absurdity from the cult you just joined. The good news is that the Uni will charge you a life long debt for the privilege!
@factsdontlie4342
Жыл бұрын
That's by design.
@michaelfried3123
Жыл бұрын
might wanna go back to history class, this video has a lot of made up stuff in it, and even more factually incorrect stuff. It must have been made for dullards who don't know the actual story or the physics involved.
@paulgray3065
Жыл бұрын
Ive learnt more from this channel than ANYTHING from school 😂
@ThetennisDr
Жыл бұрын
How about u learn the bible by yourself... All.churches lie
I'm not saying it was aliens.... but it was definitely aliens 👽
That kundt joke got me laughing hard. Well done my dude. Well done
@moxictasculinity
6 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
It's scary how Why Files just covered Tunguska a few weeks ago, Watcher Mystery Files just covered this a few days ago, and it's covered here now. Is this just a coincidence? Hope it's not premonitory or a warning from the universe. 🥶
@jhsrt985
Жыл бұрын
WF really cleared this mystery in my book, coincidences only go so far untill they become evidence
@lethalalias
Жыл бұрын
Manifesting tactic
@ldubt4494
Жыл бұрын
Theres also the possibility that they got inspired by each other
Even though I've seen a few videos on this event this is easily the best one. Such a great channel.
""A German K**t"" had me on the floor
The reason we don't get a lot of heavy meteor strikes is because our friend Jupiter blocks most of the blows.
@petersengupta
10 ай бұрын
Gotta love Jupiter, always taking one for the team :)
@rsoulinternet
3 ай бұрын
Jupiter: The Chad of the Solar System
@lindsayadams469
2 ай бұрын
Gotta love " drops of jupiter"
My my. You were in rare form on this one. It was bloody brilliant! I thank you profusely for the chuckle. I needed it.
Weird coincidence how this comes out a few days after Ryan and Shane video on this topic dropped
@brosephin
Жыл бұрын
that's what I was gonna say
@AnarchyStockers
Жыл бұрын
I feel like when things like this happen, the person getting it out second didn’t plan to post it yet but is like “QUICK, we need to post quickly enough that people will know we didn’t copy them” lol. It is a really weird coincidence, it happens a lot with channels I follow
There was another air burst more recently in southern Siberia. Again, only very small pieces were found but that 1 was captured on dashcams. It wasn't detected because it came from the direction of the sun.
@NotDaJayC
Жыл бұрын
I assume you're referring to the Chelyabinsk event, correct? That was a serious threat, however it happened in 2008 I believe
@DrMackSplackem
Жыл бұрын
@@NotDaJayC Gotta be more like 2018. I remember it well and it wasn't so long ago (edit: actually it was 2013, so we're both equally wrong/correct LOL).
@stevejohnson3357
Жыл бұрын
@@NotDaJayC Yes, that was the one. Interesting that they were about 100 yrs apart or close to it.
@RayRaeTV
Жыл бұрын
@DaJayC that happened in 2013 bro.
@katherinkeegan8601
Жыл бұрын
I was hoping he would mention that one to prove his theory. It could have been worked in when he was talking about the city killers.
Long time viewer here, just wanted to say you're doing a great job. Your voice is very soothing and interesting to listen to, you can tell theres a lot of effort and research put into every video. Keep up the good work :) love the moustache.
I just love the emphatic: 'It was bloody Bizarre' ... not just your normal bizarre but' bloody bizarre' ! You got that one right for sure 🙂 Penchant for wearing Tin Foil ... hahahahaha sheer brilliance :-) 6::00 ..this was the inspiration for the documentary about Debbie in Dallas. 8:20 A Schofield event indeed. 9:27 You owe me a Pint and a new keyboard for that one! 🙂 A joy to watch indeed!
I don't have words to describe how much the intonation of his voice takes me to a parallel universe... the pauses and the subtle interrogations hold my attention, in any theme... BRILLIANT! I can only thank you for your generosity for sharing it
I was under the impression it was a meteor that exploded near the ground before impact.
@lunamoonspell
Жыл бұрын
Apparently one lake was also creating after the event, but it s dépend of you hear the story from
I have to say it; "Do you have Asteroids? No, but my dad does and sometimes he can't sit down." 😂
I’m glad that mysteriously escaped the Apocalypse Earth.
05:55f: _If you thing you figured it out, this would be the time to pause the video and smuggly put your idea in the comments._ A comet, rather than an asteroid. Comets tend to consist of different ices than solid rock, some of them consisting of hydrocarbons. As soon as it reached atmospheric layers of considerable density, the friction-generated heat became too much for the ices and they sublimed in such quantities that the entire thing burst into pieces. They fell to different places and each piece exploded individually, explaining the artillery fire impression.
@jaquigreenlees
Жыл бұрын
This isn't as far fetched as it first sounds, after all a comet did impact Jupiter and left VISIBLE scars in it's atmosphere. The debunk for a comet is the long visible tail that would make it virtually impossible for one to impact Earth without being seen first.
@Shanghaimartin
Жыл бұрын
@@jaquigreenlees Yep, a comet would likely have been visible in the night sky with a tail for quite a while before 'impact'
@jaquigreenlees
Жыл бұрын
@@Shanghaimartin visible for days before impact most likely.
@andydonnelly8677
Жыл бұрын
There was only 1 ground zero so 1 object, possible air burst.
@jensphiliphohmann1876
Жыл бұрын
@@andydonnelly8677 The largest explosion is that of the whole thing, of course. All others made noise but without blowing up stuff. Additionally, the forest was already laid down by the first blast. _...possibly air burst._ Most probably, bordering certainty.
Been following you for a long time and I massively appreciate all that you do to educate and entertain us!
Thanks for all of your videos good sir.
Thank you for your post x
Amazing episode! Earlier this morning i seen one of your videos from 7 years ago pop up in my feed that i actually haven't seen yet! (I thought I've seen them all lol) please keep up the amazing work!
Your ability to tell a story is amazing
thanks for sharing such interesting, various bits and pieces, we love it
Best thing on youtube Thanks for all the amazing videos mate.
I've subscribed to this channel more than 5 years ago, and possibly watched every single video, I'm unimaginably grateful to Arran for providing such incredible content, my only regret that I couldn't get a signed copy of his book, but it's never too late, I will visit England someday and kidnap Arran
Dying to an asteroid is the rarest death ever.
@v4skunk739
Жыл бұрын
Don't be so sure. Asteroids have wrecked this planet many times over in the past billions of years. Last time it happened was the Younger Dryas event / impact just 12,000 years ago.
This is the most entertaining educational channels on you tube. I especially like your kitchen
Always informative Always entertaining Thank you
Was the idea that this event was caused by Tesla ever debunked? I'm genuinely curious.
@kimzufall822
Жыл бұрын
Yes, I believe it was. When Tesla fired his death ray it's trajectory didn't line up with Tunguska's location.
@coolhandk77
Жыл бұрын
I wondered this too, I'm sure the date coincides.
@AC-ld4np
Жыл бұрын
The Why Files did an episode on exactly this a couple weeks ago. The expected power of the device was far lower than it actually was and Tesla way overshot his intended target, an island in Northern Canada. Same day. Death ray pointed in that direction. I'm not saying it WAS Tesla, but, you know...
@kevinsmyth9640
Жыл бұрын
I was just looking at something of this about 3 days ago about Tesla's Death Ray and some admiral was up the far side of the north pole, I really do think this is what happened here 🤔
@propakindustries22
Жыл бұрын
Shane & Ryan covered this event on Watcher this week. Didn't even mention Tesla. I was sorely disappointed.
Please we need another one! We humans are becoming to stupid
@glennjpanting2081
Жыл бұрын
@@just_saw_dust Don't you just love it when people prove their own points? 😏
@amandavanwyk5424
Жыл бұрын
too
@kevinsayes
Жыл бұрын
Is stupid awaiting our arrival?
@kurudo6432
Жыл бұрын
@@kevinsayesare we there yet?
@stevesmith8399
8 ай бұрын
Yes… we are becoming TOO stupid 😂
Excellent as always, thank-you! Size doesn't always matter, the Hoba iron meteorite weighing a colossal 60t landed intact, bad news of course if it landed on your head but hardly a Tunguska!
From the first couple minutes of this video as an Astrophysicist immediately I thought meteor or ice chunk that simply vaporized before hitting the ground. The shockwave would still continue and would easily explain all this phenomena. Will continue with video now...
a German Kundt fart eh? the skip or airburst meteor makes sense. I saw a skip meteor in 1968 in central Pennsylvania. Big boom from a little west of due north.
omg finally! been waiting for Arran to make content on this mystery ❤ great video as always! thanks so much!
@michaelfried3123
Жыл бұрын
its not a mystery, and this video doesn't even tell the actual known story, this video isn't even very factual actually.
@facts9144
Жыл бұрын
@@michaelfried3123 it actually is… are u begging for attention again?
@michaelfried3123
Жыл бұрын
@@facts9144 no, your sister gave me all the attention I needed last night...
@jhsrt985
Жыл бұрын
Tesla did it on accident, every event matches what his tower does and it was fired at full power at that time at that direction, he under calculated its power
I remember being in Year 8 at school (1985) and in the library there was a book about the top 10 unexplained events in history. This was one of them. The funny thing is that 2 others have also now been explained.
@jamesthornton3539
Жыл бұрын
What were the other two?
@JinYo265
Жыл бұрын
What were the others
@Pooki2024
Жыл бұрын
@@JinYo265 Your mum
@JinYo265
Жыл бұрын
@@Pooki2024 no u
@MisszIndependentt
Жыл бұрын
@@Pooki2024 you
2023... Thoughty2 is still the best channel on youtube in my humble opinion...
I wondered recently when will you cover the Tunguska Event. Looks like it's my lucky day.
The Rolling Stones were actually big fans of German philosophy, they even mentioned it in their songs. “You Kant always get what you want. But if you try some times you just might find, you get what you Nietzsche”
@ezekielbrockmann114
Жыл бұрын
Brown Sugar! Hegel you Dansk so good now?
Love the knowledge that you give us. Thank you!
That "a German kundt" line had me creasing, caught me so off guard 😂
Ahhh throwback to the OG Call Of Duty Zombies lore
@liplessnavajo4011
Жыл бұрын
Oh yes, Shi No Numa
This was explained years ago. It was the meteor exploding about 5 to 10 kilometers in the air. Just like Hiroshima, the building at Ground Zero survived with only some damage and is a memorial today. And the explosion was only 488 meters (1600 ft.) above ground. Tunguska was estimated to be 15 Megatons.
@jetlag1488
10 ай бұрын
I know this is a month old comment but he literally said in the video that it was a meteor.
I can always count on thoughty2's videos to entertain me on days where my recommendations are trash
one of the coolest youtube channels its been amazing watching this channel evolve always great videos
I've actually already heard about this particular incident! Really, quite amazing event.
@v4skunk739
Жыл бұрын
Go do some research on the Domes / cauldrons in Siberia.
@georgejones3526
Жыл бұрын
I’ve been hearing about it since the 60’s.
It was probably a comet air butst that likely came from the Torid meteor stream
This reminded me of the "sinkholes" that "explode" into existence across Siberia as well. Especially in the Ural region.
I back the death ray theory through and through. like that makes complete super obvious perfect sence.
i like how he clarified that he wasnt blowing up children
Carl Sagan did a good piece on this in his series Cosmos
@pdqmusic3873
25 күн бұрын
I believe he speculated it might have been a comet.
lets appreciate that this man doesnt talk and talk forever and just goes straight to the topic of the video
FINALLY!! this mystery explained. Nice
I wish you would do one on Hisachi Ouchi. The guy that took the most radiation ever😉
@lethalwolf7455
Жыл бұрын
I second this👍🏻
@kurudo6432
Жыл бұрын
have seen enough documentaries to know how much this poor man suffered. f*ck.
I've never seen a Thoughty2 video that didn't peak my interest. Keep it going Arron, been loving the content for many years now.
@autisticsimon12
Жыл бұрын
You do know that this has been proven completely false many many times. So your watching someone who is happy to lie to you while pretending to teach you truth.
@lisasweeney8158
Жыл бұрын
@@autisticsimon12 can you please cite you're sources? I googled it and didn't come up with anything.
@autisticsimon12
Жыл бұрын
@@lisasweeney8158 kzread.info/dash/bejne/c3udlNlvfanaY5s.html is a good start but google "Russian Scientists debunk tunguska" Its just a myth that lying documentary makers have made into what it is. A lie.
@autisticsimon12
Жыл бұрын
@@lisasweeney8158 Lake Cheko was supposed to be the impact crater of the large explosion that occurred near the Tunguska Riva in Russian Siberia, which was detected hundreds of miles away. However, Russian scientists revealed that Lake Cheko is at least 280 years old, which means that the lake dates back hundreds of years before the Tunguska event.
@autisticsimon12
Жыл бұрын
@@lisasweeney8158 kzread.info/dash/bejne/kaV7ypJmitaZnNI.html
I just watched this yesterday in Watcher, and now im watching this again here
Comet... since the 1980's I've always heard it explained as an air burst comet. Comets are made up of space dust and rocks and a large amount of water ice. The fine dust and vaporized water would have hung out longer and higher, also giving intense colors, like clouds at sunset. This explains the low but present levels of space material at the blast site.
i’m hungry ngl
@shawnwitthoff471
Жыл бұрын
Word
@icosthop9998
Жыл бұрын
Ok Changing
@donteatthefish-serj
Жыл бұрын
Okay
@OnMyLunchBreak07
Жыл бұрын
True
@melchysomba9690
9 ай бұрын
Same
I think it was a meteorite that exploded before ground contact due to overheating, thus causing a shockwave
@lucasroe2878
Жыл бұрын
Like a nuclear bomb detonated above the ground in flight.
Wow I've read a lot of stuff about this in the past bit this was super cool to watch. I wonder if the Taiga Tunguska Forrest holds undiscovered species with it being so vast.
There is one problem, the eye witnesses said the light crossed the sky for 12 min. Meteors dont last that long
@milkywaffles5701
Жыл бұрын
This might support the earth-grazer theory. The meteor wasn’t destroyed but instead continued on its path resulting in the duration of the light, which can last for several minutes near the sight of the event
@christopherbuss680
Жыл бұрын
@@milkywaffles5701 not traveling at 60,000 miles per hour. I understand a low trajectory would prolong it but the space shuttle would travel the width of the us in 15 min traveling at less than 1/3rd the speed so i dont buy that. I think thats a big problem for that theory.
@christopherbuss680
Жыл бұрын
@@milkywaffles5701 also the lower the angle the faster it would have to travel not to hit the ground
Hypothesis: With the temperature there, natural gas leak and a small, super hot meteorite, there is a rare possibility that it created that much damage and did not leave a crater.
@Cobrax_x
Жыл бұрын
But then why did the trees in the centre remain upright?
@kalrandom7387
Жыл бұрын
@@Cobrax_x you will hear nothing but crickets as a response from him on that one
@petarnovakovich240
Жыл бұрын
@@Cobrax_x Take a look at Hiroshima & Nagasaki, the walls of many buildings directly below the airburst nukes stayed upright whereas in a circle around were flattened. The Tunguska Event was probably an airburst meteorite just as Thoughty mentioned. I saw a documentary several years ago, where a Russian scientist performed some experiments using hundreds of small sticks to represent trees & small scale explosive charges traveling along an angled wire & he exploded the various sized charges at various positions & speeds & concluded that a meteorite or comet at a fairly shallow angle exploded about 5 - 10 Km above the ground, it had an explosive yield of about 40 megatons & it formed a pattern in the fallen sticks (representing trees) that very closely matched the shape of the fallen trees at Tunguska (including that the ones directly below the test explosion remained upright).
@Cobrax_x
Жыл бұрын
@@petarnovakovich240 I agree, for explosives that would be the case, but wouldn't a gas leak into the open air cause a much slower fire considering? Unless as stated in the video it was one of those sudden bursts of gas from the earth, but it does seem way too coincidental for both that and an airburst meteor occurring simultaneously.
@daciefusjones8128
Жыл бұрын
A natural gas leak combined with a careless russian smoker.
Ur an awesome teacher hats off to ur team and u for creating such entertaining videos❤❤
This is one of my two favorite channels the other being the why files.
Only 80 million trees felled? So basically what we do every week for the past few decades
@qvasar2277
Жыл бұрын
we cut down around 294 million trees every week. So thats more like 2 days' worth or trees.
@Astorath_the_Grim
Жыл бұрын
Where are you getting these numbers?😊
@iniquity123
Жыл бұрын
And how many are re-planted ?
@treeherder42
Жыл бұрын
@@iniquity123 little bit of Google says about 5 million. Only two sites gave a number for worldwide though. Edit 5 million a day, 1.9 billion per year was the numbers I found
@wesolowskimatt
Жыл бұрын
@@iniquity123 A news for you, small re-planted tree is not equal a big one, that has been cut down, not today and not in few years. Sometimes not even in 20 years Deforestation is getting out of control and trees grow really slow.
As a giant hole in the Earth, I approve of this video.
@AngryLad_80
Жыл бұрын
you a vag? 🗿
I love how the kid "dabs", then explodes! 😂
Thanks for comfort
did you see the Ring lake in quebec's north region in the boreal forest? annular Lake Manicouagan
@PrairieWolf62
Жыл бұрын
The eye of Quebec. They have boat tours around the lake.
@WithScienceAsMySheperd
Жыл бұрын
@@PrairieWolf62 if niagara falls is where weddings are enjoyed, the spouse proposing could do it at a ring lake, for the symbolism
@PrairieWolf62
Жыл бұрын
@@WithScienceAsMySheperd What a beautiful thought! 😍 .
@PrairieWolf62
Жыл бұрын
@@WithScienceAsMySheperd off topic, Do Androids dream of electric sheep?🙃
@WithScienceAsMySheperd
Жыл бұрын
@@PrairieWolf62 the grasshopper weighs heavy ;) and perky pat ain't the lady she used to be!
Does giant ball lightning exist in areas near the aurora borealis? Maybe?
Obviously what we need is some sort of little white triangle, that shoots white dots while drifting and spinning through space, being guided by two buttons and a joystick.
It has been hypothesized that if the "Event" that occurred at Tunguska eight (8) hours later than it did, it would've occurred over London, United Kingdom of Great Britain. It was good that it happened over an sparsely populated area of Siberia.
The natural gas leakage was something that I also supposed in the first few minutes of the video, and the meteorite could have been the ignitor.
Many people become suddenly rich in the world of cryptocurrencies while others become destitute. Securing your future is in your hands, so invest today and become a winner for life.
@romanyevgeny2582
11 ай бұрын
Investing is one of the ways to succeed in life, you can invest without waiting for the government. Invest in yourself and be successful.
@samanthapowells1366
11 ай бұрын
Cryptocurrency was my only source of income during the pandemic. However, Elon Musk confirmed that he purchased around $1.5 billion worth of bitcoins in January and hopes to start accepting them as payment in the future.
@annaoleg3965
11 ай бұрын
@@romanyevgeny2582You're right, most millionaires didn't get rich through saving and that's why I'm diverting and investing more in the digital market
@user-xv7bc7dn6y
11 ай бұрын
I'm glad i decided to work with a professional broker Mrs Mildred Dorta who helped me in making a profit of $23,000 after a short period of time.
@abbasha4559
11 ай бұрын
I'm very devastated, i need help, i lost $15,000 in a live trade because of bad decisions. How do i recover?
Who else stops watching thoughty2’s channel for like a month, so when they get back, there’s like 4 new videos to binge on😂😂😂
Wild that Watcher uploaded a video about this two days prior to you! The fact that you guys were all making content about it at the same time without realizing is amusing
9:31.. anyone else love how mister kundt doesn't get beeped but a German kundt does..even in the captions? 😂 sad.
@LorriBaker-nq8rs
Жыл бұрын
Just replayed and the German one reads cut in captions, and a boo-boo baby blackout box covers Kundt's name entirely... Wonder hoe he'd have liked that...?
The wink at the end gets me every time 😂
Nikloa Tesla was experimenting with wardencliffe at the time . One experiment buit up a charge , which had to be destroyed , so he sent it out over Tungushka , as Tesla knew there werent many people living there . Had the receiver been built in Európe , the charge would have goe to that . Thanks a lot J.P.Morgan .
One note here - there usually isn't so much snow in Siberia at the end of June 😀
"and that isn't even accounting for the two thirds of earth that is covered in water." Tsunamis: Hold my water.
Watcher just did an episode on this. Such an interesting thing. I remember reading about it on Cracked back in like 2011? I’ve always thought it was really lucky there was no one around.
KZread recommending this to me immediately after the latest mystery files episode knowing I need to know more
Dope video as always
I saw an asteroid in June 2016, early one morning in Phoenix Az. I was outside before sunrise, it lit up the sky like a giant floodlight and streaked across the sky like the footage @7:57. It was breathtaking, I remember thinking that must have been what the Chicxulub asteroid looked like when it arrived.
One of the programs that actually can give an idea of what could have happened is Mythbusters: in one episode they proved that a bucket of ignited termite above some blocks of ice are equal to a big boom. Its possible that it broke in half midway to the ground and the exposed core (still freezing cold and with almost no pressure applied to it, all thanks to space) was then faced with the extreme temperatures and pressure from the entry into the atmosphere. Then, the meteorite would have been desintegrated with a explosion just seconds before it actually touched the ground.
The Tcheljabinsk meteor showed us what happened. Tunguska was a much larger meteor which split into many pieces. Each of those pieces then behaved like the Tcheljabinsk meteor: first it got hot due to air resistance, and then the whole piece got so hot it exploded in a bang. While the Tcheljabinsk meteor was only ONE piece that exploded and evaporated, causing ONE mighty bang which destroyed many windows, the Tunguska meteor ended in a number of pieces, each larger then the Tcheljabinsk meteor. Every single one of them was bigger and had somewhat more energy than the latter which caused the number of explosions people reported hearing. Besides, as all parts exploded in close distance from each other the energy of all those explosions accumulated towards the ground and flattened the forest underneath.
@jhsrt985
Жыл бұрын
That doesn't explain why the sky was lit up for days around the world, but tesla tower matches every event that occurred. Hope this interests you
@adolfhochhaltinger4040
Жыл бұрын
@@jhsrt985 As the meteors heat up and explode there is a lot of very fine meteoric dust which stays in the atmosphere and causes such a lit sky for a few days.
i did a lot of research on this in university! what was really interesting was learning the similarities between this, the... i believe it was 2013 air burst in russia, and the blast that may have destroyed the city of tall el-hammam. also learned that russia is more likely to have events like this simply because it is Large
Love the background music from the anime movie "Your Name"!