The Lake Peigneur Drilling Disaster 1980 | Plainly Difficult Documentary
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On Thursday, November 20, 1980, an oil rig contracted by Texaco drilling in the lake, above the Diamond Crystal Salt Company salt mine, this resulted in a collapse that would drain the Lake Dry.......
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CHAPTERS:
00:00 Intro
01:31 Private Internet Access Sponsorship
03:52 Background
10:49 Drilling Begins
13:58 The Disaster
16:47 Aftermath
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@CaucAsianSasquatch
Жыл бұрын
Hey bud, thanks
@befalcon9498
Жыл бұрын
Honestly this is the VPN i use. Linus Tech Tips endorses it so you know its a solid VPN it also comes with add blocking and different encryptions that sites arent use to so dont have issues with
@davidhollenshead4892
Жыл бұрын
John Booth killed Lincoln, and your video says and "an acquaintance of both actorJohn Wilkes Bootth and the ,man who killed president Abraham Lincoln".... That assassin was Mr. Booth though others were involved...
@LoneTiger
Жыл бұрын
@@befalcon9498 Same, not because Linus endorses it but has worked very well for me, and they update their servers often.
@ephektz
Жыл бұрын
Why the hell was this sponsor roll so long? 😂
The fact that nobody was killed in this size of an accident was nothing short of miraculous
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
I was surprised when I was research it
@aircraftandmore9775
Жыл бұрын
@@PlainlyDifficult it could of had those two fellas trying to cat fish on the lake during it, luckily they managed to get to land before the lake started drying up
@101Volts
Жыл бұрын
@kitkatcrews It's a sound course of action. As another example that's more common, when I see something off while I'm driving, I take action immediately; I don't want to wait to "see what happens." In this way, I avoided a side-swipe from an onramp and maybe a head-on. The near side-swipe was someone gunning it from an onramp, and I would have been in literally the only car that could have been hit in a quarter mile or a half mile. Thankfully I glanced in my side mirror just in time, before slamming the brakes and going down to about 30 MPH. He / she went around 75 MPH in a 55 zone, before leaving the highway 3/4 of a mile later. The near head-on was more recent, and someone was gunning it past 3 or 4 cars in a 55 zone with not enough space to make it. I was going around 50 in the opposing lane, and so I slowed down to maybe 30 - 35, I honked the horn, and I put my 4 ways on since a pickup truck towing something was behind me. My actions may have also alerted the drivers in the other lane who might not have known someone was dangerously passing. Oh, there was another time when someone was looking at road maps while driving and then he ventured way over in my lane, but he was far ahead of me. I was unlikely to have had a head-on even if I didn't slow down from 55 to about 25. Still, honking the horn alerted him that he was about to go off the road, so that helped someone.
@karmaisreal9341
Жыл бұрын
3 DOGS DIED?!!!!!!! 1 Dog=3 Hoomans 🐕👍😎👍🇺🇸🇺🇦
@macaylacayton2915
Жыл бұрын
The fact is compounded because it caught everyone right off guard
This is such a good story. The clash of mining titans, the reversed river, the boats disappearing as if Gob Bluth was involved, the insane physics - and nobody died! Only you, Mr. Difficult, could do this one justice. Thank you!!
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@steveharrison76
Жыл бұрын
I bet the drilling guys wanted a couple of Gob’s forget-me-nows after this…
@ExperimentIV
Жыл бұрын
illusion, alexander! it’s a good ILLUSION
@Dong_Harvey
Жыл бұрын
Cue Europe instrumental
@trybunt
Жыл бұрын
Crazy, the river actually reversed, that must of been weird to see. I imagine there would have been some confused fish and animals swept along and killed
This is the second week in a row that John has covered two incidents that I am extremely familiar with. This incident, The Lake Peigneur sinkhole, occurred when I was a child. While several hundred miles away from where we lived, I remember the news stories of the incident. Last week's episode, The Queen Isabella Causeway Disaster, I was involved in the rescue and recovery operations as a critical care flight paramedic. I never thought any of these incidents would see coverage like this. Once again, John never ceases to amaze and educate!
@Sky_Guy
Жыл бұрын
You're like the Plainly Difficult channel's very own Nurse Violet Jessop!
@lisah9561
Жыл бұрын
I like how you call him John. Personal friends?
@fltmed
Жыл бұрын
@@lisah9561 Unfortunately, no. He seems like a great person. I definitely respect his work. I just think it's awkward calling him Plainly Difficult, lol.
@tobias2287
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for everything you did for them.
I first learned about the Lake Peigneur disaster from the History channel, "Modern Marvels: Engineering Disasters 5", this episode aired in 2003. It was wild seeing the disaster footage, as the lake drained down the bore hole, creating a giant whirlpool, and landslides as the earth itself was sucked down into the mine, this episode remains my primary source for Lake Peigneur.
@vinterfe1558
Жыл бұрын
Love Modern Marvels, especially those disaster episodes. Such a great, and honestly underrated, show
@worldofbrandan
Жыл бұрын
@@vinterfe1558 I loved the episode they did on Three Mile Island years ago. On the anniversary of the accident I always go back and watch it.
@RCAvhstape
Жыл бұрын
Ah yes, back when History Channel was worth tuning in to.
@MadScientist267
Жыл бұрын
Modern Marvels misses on a *lot* of details. Definitely enough to make it "introductory only"
@GoredonTheDestroyer
Жыл бұрын
Hell, I learned about this from Well There's Your Problem.
Measure twice, drill once!
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Or not measure at all in this case
@abrahamlincoln9758
Жыл бұрын
It's the ultimate "There, I fixed it" meme
@poughkeepsieblue
Жыл бұрын
I keep cutting it, but its still not long enough..
@VintageTechFan
Жыл бұрын
@@poughkeepsieblue Did you remember to switch the saw to reverse?
@ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641
Жыл бұрын
@@VintageTechFan no no no, you need to use the wood stretcher for that one.
A couple more interesting occurrences due to the disaster: Once the lake had completely drained, the water coming in from the Delcambre canal (flowing backwards, as mentioned) became a waterfall, and to this day is the tallest known waterfall in Louisiana history. After the the lake was partially refilled (days after the disaster started) the pressure holding the barges and other boats down in the hole was gone, and several popped back up to the surface (9 of the 11 barges that had disappeared ultimately resurfaced).
I'm glad you did this. In 1981, a drill rig that was just starting operation in Texas hit a 12 inch pipeline shipping an ethane-propane mix. 4 workers were killed in the following fire. The drilling company failed to check property & other records for any underground utilities there.
There’s one final bit to this story that I love. At the time, the owners of Rip Van Winkle Gardens (which was built by Mr. Jefferson around the house on the island) had just finished a new home next to the lake. The land under it and the house got destroyed, but the chimney is still there as the last remaining part of the house. It’s a few feet off the shore in the lake and is visible from the gardens, or was as of the last time I went down there a few years ago. It was how I originally heard of the story and it’s still one of the most insane things I’ve ever heard and seen and is a really surreal sight to see in person!
@butterbeanqueen8148
Жыл бұрын
I’ve heard an interview with I think a grounds keeper at Rip Van Winkle. What he described was truly terrifying. I can’t imagine just going about my business and seeing this going on. I would have been terrified.
I can't imagine being a worker in a mine, seeing an oil drill on the lake above the mine I work in, and just shrugging my shoulders and being like "they know what they're doing." How did none of the miners raise a red flag?
@bartfoster1311
Жыл бұрын
I'm sure the union talked with management about it. Being the early 80s, safety and oversight were minimal especially on Texaco's part.
@ironhead2008
Жыл бұрын
I'd be curious if the mine did a quick safety refresher in the weeks leading up to the start of drilling. It definitely sounds like everyone's head was on a swivel and eyes were open. IOW, I don't think anyone "shrugged". I think management did what they could and when that failed they told everyone to keep their eyes peeled for any sign Texaco had gotten there geography wrong and punched a hole in the mine. The fact everyone got out that fast speaks of good training and a staff that had their eyes open.
@caneyebus
Жыл бұрын
Crazy cajuns have to make a living too. 🤣
@ironhead2008
Жыл бұрын
@@caneyebus God Bless them, just because the talk a bit funny don't mean they're fools. They knew what could happen and I think the record shows they were prepared.
@caneyebus
Жыл бұрын
@@ironhead2008 they talk normal to me. Granted, I live down here.
As a resident of the fine state of Louisiana, thank you. Look into the somewhat recent "Hard Rock Hotel collapse." Corruption, incompetence and 3 deaths with an 18 story hotel structure under construction In New Orleans on Oct. 12, 2019, You should find some good footage. Keep up the great work.
@caneyebus
Жыл бұрын
Texaco was probably giving old Eddy Edwards a sweet kickback to look the other way
@markr.devereux3385
Жыл бұрын
The HARD ROCK Hotel Collapse has me fascinated. Is there a definitive documentary you know off?
@TheQuarterrat
Жыл бұрын
@@markr.devereux3385 I haven't seen one yet. I would like to see Plainly Difficult to tackle the project. It's a scandal that has been somewhat forgotten.
@markr.devereux3385
Жыл бұрын
@@TheQuarterrat 👍
@FloozieOne
10 ай бұрын
I live 6 blocks from the site. When it happened the ground shook so much stuff fell off shelves, the whole building moved and the cats hid under the bed. And still it stands, a monument to the rapacious and destructive chase after money.
Something similar happened in Prešov. The salt mine was flooded (natural causes) but not abandoned. People started to take out the salt brine and cook it to get salt. It worked for decades. I have visited the museum there, it is very interesting and certainly worth a visit to see all the technology from the 17th century. Just search for Prešov Salt Plant if you want to find out more.
@gnarthdarkanen7464
Жыл бұрын
Through the Appalachian Mountains, there are occasional Salt Water Springs, and the Land-owners are careful to keep them quiet, but will trade with locals regarding the access to cook down the salt water for salt in bulk quantities for things they might have trouble getting themselves... A lot of people have never heard of it before... BUT I've been to a couple, and traded rather inexpensively with the side agreement, that I'd harvest a little additional bulk salt for the owner(s) as well, as long as I was there anyway... haha... ;o)
Unlike most Plainly Difficults, everyone saw their respective problems and reacted appropriately and everyone was saved. Usually it's "Wow! Things are going horribly wrong but I'm sure we'll be OK."
I’ve been waiting for this one. My dad grew up in the area and remembers noticing the oil rig that was always there *suddenly wasn’t*, and how bizarre for him it was that national news stations were talking about their tiny town and the surrounding area. Glad to hear about it from you!
There's a coal mine near me in southeast Ohio, called meigs 31, that breeched an adjacent shaft that was flooded. The subsequent reaction was to dump the waste water into leading creek/racoon creek, which turned the ohio river orange from middleport to nearly Cincinnati. Would be epic to see you do a short on that horrendous incident.
@angelcat621
Жыл бұрын
Being from a lesser known area of Ohio myself I can definitely believe this happened.
@trulyinfamous
Жыл бұрын
Us Ohioans sure are great at preserving nature and caring for the environment!
@ramblingrob4693
Жыл бұрын
@@trulyinfamous Lol
@kegsofvomitspit
Жыл бұрын
As a born and raised Ohioan, I concur.
I'd read and watched documents about this one before and always thought it was one of the most bizarre disasters to be caused by man.
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
It was a weird one
This, by far, is one of my favorite stories, I've actually been there to the site. Thank you plainly difficult, you always hit it out of the park and make every Saturday amazing!
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind words
@jaykace5160
Жыл бұрын
@@PlainlyDifficult thank you for all the amazing content, you are pure gold!
@DoctorMangler
Жыл бұрын
I was going to write almost exactly the same thing. I remember this on the news when I was a kid, but I haven't been to the site. Great and crazy story, unbelievable if it weren't for the footage.
Just imagine actually watching that happen, in person, how surreal must that have been, like watching a whole lake disappear down a bath-drain.
@SupersuMC
Жыл бұрын
And here we thought that was just a trope in fanciful fiction. Truth is stranger than fiction indeed...
@FloozieOne
10 ай бұрын
There is actually some footage of this with the barges disappearing into the whirlpool. It is somewhere here on UT but I can't remember where, still it can't be too hard to find. What is wild is the hundreds of trees that lined the lake being ripped from the shore in huge groves and then just going missing as the water continues to drain.
Honestly, I think the fact no one was killed is a testament to both the training of the mine workers and the drillers. That's what makes the difference in these situations, and my fellow Louisianans did us proud that day.
@michaelt.5672
Жыл бұрын
Working safety procedures (even if they are just informal) are a beautiful thing.
It is so incredibly cool to see you cover this. As someone who is immensely interested in whirlpools, natural and otherwise, this has always been one of the most interesting disasters to me. You are my favorite mini documentary maker on yt, you always make them lighthearted but in the most respectful way which is insanely difficult. Plus you never have misinformation, you make things super easy to understand, and your drawings are fantastic I love it. Thank you so much for covering this, especially since mine disasters seemed intimidating to cover. We all really appreciate it! Wishing you well always my guy.
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@Fallen_Family
Жыл бұрын
Honestly missed opportunity to say plainly difficult instead of insanely difficult but other than that I love the positivity of everyone in the comments section of plainly difficult's channel
@Mousecaddet
Жыл бұрын
@@Fallen_Family YOU'RE SO RIGHT BESTIE DAMNIT thank you for having the brain power I didnt lol
"... Shocked to see the rig completely disappear below the water, something that shouldn't even be possible as the lake, at its deepest point, was only 12 ft." the fact that this reads like a creepy pasta makes it all the more miraculous that, somehow, nobody actually died
Your comedy was top notch on this one. "A whole lake was having a go at trying to disappear" 😂
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
I work with a team of well planners for an oil and gas company, and one of the trickier things that we have to pay close attention to are the latitude/longitude and what coordinate system they are in. For example the North American Datum 1927 differs from the 1983 version but both are still equally used, and the decimal points are juuuuuust off enough to cause problems if you're not paying attention. It doesn't matter how much technology has changed and improved over the years with the advent of GPS and GIS systems; the human error factor will always be there. Excellent work, as always!
Plainly Difficult your level of sarcasm makes these videos amazing to watch. Thank you.
As soon as i saw the logo i yelled "Texaco!" I grew up next to the Texaco research facility, in New York, so id recognize that logo anywhere. Fun fact, after that research facility closed up, my brother in law, who was just my friend at the time, lived across the street. I sold him like a dozen blockbusters, which is a quarter stick of dynamite, and he taped 3 of them together, and blew that massive Texaco logo sign, right out of the ground. Thats how we americans celebrate the birth of our country, we blow up a small piece of it. Good times.
A Plainly Difficult episode where nobody dies?? That’s a refreshing change 😄
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
A rare bird indeed
@SupersuMC
Жыл бұрын
Y'know, I don't think we've seen a disaster where everyone involved died yet...
I love the way you tell these tales of disaster and I'm so happy you finally did this one. Thanks a lot for covering one of my favorite "What could go wrong?" stories.
Texaco was drilling in the wrong spot, it came out in the court when they were being sued by everyone effected by the accident. The head engineer responsible for reading the map screwed up. He even got another engineer that was under him fired for trying to point it out to him. I'm old enough to have watched it on the news while it happened when I was a kid. After that came out in court Texaco had to pay out many millions of dollars, because they had been trying to blame the geologic survey company that made the map. Edit: he missed one thing Texaco had too pay the residents in the area as well, but they settled out of Court, and made them sign a nondisclosure agreement. Which was speculated to be as much as was payed to botanical garden, and salt company combined.
@user-mv9tt4st9k
Жыл бұрын
Oh, if I was a resident my replacement home and furnishings would be incredibly nice in exchange for that non-disclosure agreement. 😉
I remember seeing this on Engineering Disasters in the 2000s. Was an amazing disaster.
you forgot to mention the power of the whirlpool, during this event it literally pulled part ofthe island apart and you saw houses etc drop into a lake that was only 4ft deep
Thanks for taking this on. Its amazing different creators take and presentation of the same events. I love the manner in which you present events and the depth of information you manage to present in your vids with out making it feel like I'm being thought something by cramming
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
I always love the little pause before the weather comment like he’s sticking his head out the window to check
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Gotta double check
@nerdygoth6905
Жыл бұрын
In the UK, can confirm!
Hey Plainly Difficult. Maybe you could dive into a big fire that happened here in the Netherlands in 2011, it’s the Moerdijk fire. It happened in a indrustrial area and luckily it did not spread further or it could’ve torched a acetone company. Of that would’ve happened it could’ve torched an area of 1km2.
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the suggestion
@ianmacfarlane1241
Жыл бұрын
@Scott_lego_city Wasn't the Moerdijk fire in 2014, or are we talking about two separate events?
@webby2275
Жыл бұрын
@@ianmacfarlane1241 The 2014 explosion is nearby the 2011 fire, but they are separate events at different locations in the same general area.
@ianmacfarlane1241
Жыл бұрын
@@webby2275 Thanks for the information. Extremely unfortunate to have two serious incidents in the same area within three years.
@rolfdekkers1043
Жыл бұрын
@@ianmacfarlane1241 ha I lived in a village 15km away from that and I still remember the alarm and the bang from the explosion in 2014, luckily the windows survived haha
This is like the cartoon type bathtub drain at the bottom of a lake.
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
😬😬
@ajfurnari2448
Жыл бұрын
With that tub draining into the apartment below
Crazy thing, me and some other guy decided to calculate how fast the water was moving in that whirlpool. Calculating from how strong it was flowing into it, it was flowing at 410 mph Into the mine. An absolutely absurd speed
@SupersuMC
Жыл бұрын
I'm half-surprised there wasn't a sonic boom at some point. Half. O_o
@aircraftandmore9775
11 ай бұрын
@@SupersuMCit was flowing faster than the strongest tornado of all time. I wonder if it caused seismeic waves from how strong the whirlpool was
@aircraftandmore9775
11 ай бұрын
Due to the uniqueness of the incident I call the crater from the whirlpool a whirldera, a hybrid between a caldera and a whirlpool as it involved a whirlpool making part of the salt mine to callapse and excevate massive amounts of mud
@aircraftandmore9775
11 ай бұрын
@@SupersuMCalso the speed of sound underwater is 3,550 mph
> *"100, 000 lbs. A.K.A the weight of doughnuts I would like to eat in one go."* 😂
I first read about this in the mid 80's from a National Geographic I picked up in a donated stack of magazines. It amazed the child me and still does. I doubt that only the open areas of the mine took in all that water. The salt dome no doubt dissolved some as the water invaded and made all the chambers larger, thus able to hold more water, repeat to an extent. That it ever stabilized is amazing to consider, given how much water that would take. It's incomprehensible to most people.
@guri256
Жыл бұрын
It stabilized because the mine was big, but the ocean is bigger.
I always thought of this incident in terms of a hypothetical phone call from the rig manager to Texaco head offices: "Head office, this is Joe from the Lake Peigneur site. We have a problem here with the drill. It's.. errr... missing... aaannd....
Glad no one was killed, but hearing 2 bork borks possibly died did make me sad. Maybe there is something wrong with me but I hate hearing of animals esp bork borks (dogs) dying or being hurt.
I live only 27 minutes away from Jefferson Island, in Lafayette. This story has always fascinated me and it’s been interesting to visit Jefferson Island many many times throughout my childhood as a little fun day out. The salt mine on Avery Island, not that far from Jefferson Island, recently collapsed. You did a decent job at pronouncing Cajun names, but Delcambre wasn’t correct 😂 It’s pronounced “Del-colm”, like you’d say for Malcolm. There’s unfortunately a lot of events like the one Jefferson Island and I hope you cover some more from Louisiana
@butterbeanqueen8148
Жыл бұрын
At first I was confused when he said that. Then I realized what he was saying.
Your content is so informative and accessible, but what gets me is your humor. You put in the funniest things when I least expect it.Thank you for the videos!
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoy it!
Just going to say it, i have the same socks. Tesco's own work wear socks for £8. Hell yeah
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
😬😬loving the dream!
What a legendary disaster. I know this was a known mine but breaking into previously unknown caves is a lot more common than people might think. Happens fairly often in well drilling.
Hey, sir. Love the content, I've watched and read hundreds of hours of this disaster. The visuals and the language used were expert. Well done! Hope you have a wonderful week!
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you 😬
On the subject earlier about how we would think it was an April's fools joke, I would just think it was Lake Mead in Las Vegas.
Finally you did this one, John. You've done such an awesome job !
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@waaaaantube
Жыл бұрын
@@PlainlyDifficult sidenote : that sidenote pun was so you. Had me take a breath, hold, nod for a total of 3 seconds before continuing. 😆
Hi John! Excellent job as usual!!! This is one of the most comprehensive accounts of that incident that I have seen!!! Keep up the great work!
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
Good to hear that everyone survived
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Very good
For me, the surprising thing isn’t that the lake drained into a mine. It’s that the Gulf backwashed into the lake. God knows HOW much water was actually inside of that labyrinth.
@Robocopnik
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, when a flowing body of water straight-up changes direction, that's not something you see too often I don't think.
Fascinating story, that of which I had not heard of before. Your channel deserves more recognition
i love how its like serious and educational and then theres a sudden joke and personally filmed b-roll
Wow, John and his cartoons and his wonderful storytelling style can make even the sponsor story sound interesting! They really should trust you with a sponsorship much more often 😁😁
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
I don't think you have cover this topic before, or if this is interesting enough, but maybe you want to look about "lapindo mud" in Indonesia.. I think similar to this topic, which is begin with some drilling, but instead of draining a lake, it caused or create a mud lake, which is still erupting from the drilling hole until today (started in 2006)..
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the suggestion
Big oil back at it again being one of the worst things regular people want to have end up in their area.
Morning difficulties. Enjoy the weekend. Thx for the upload.
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
The mine I work in the Pilbara region of Australia moves 1.8 million tonnes of dirt EVERY DAY. >220k of this goes through the process plant and about 200k tonnes of iron ore is shipped every single day. The scale of the minesite is actually unbelievable
@michaelmichael2382
Жыл бұрын
That sounds massiv, i probably held a piece of Metal from that Mine in my hands at some point in my life
is it really a miracle that everyone survived or is it just that they actually prioritized safety? Actually, that's a miracle in and of itself so, yea, I'll agree
@chri-k
Жыл бұрын
i would not be surprised if the mine workers were half-expecting this. i mean, seeing an oil rig in a lake clearly right above your mine must set off some red flags
Very great report on this non fatal disaster. I have seen other reports on this disappearing lake. You seemed to cover the ambiguities very well. Thanks. What a colossal event!
I've been using PIA for years and love the service and am so glad to see they sponsored one of my favorite youtubers!
You should look into the Banner Mine Tragedy. In 1911, a sudden explosion killed several miners and caused over 100 to suffocate. The accident was severe enough that it brought the governor's attention to the horrible conditions of Mines in alabama. My dad also tells me a lot about another mine disaster in Alabama that resulted in a flood that killed many, but I cant find anything on it nor can I remember the name.
You've really outdone yourself, John. I even knew a bit about this one, but you added so many interesting facts and background information that I got a much better idea of what happened. Kudos!!
Thank you for all your research and entertaining me John! You're doing awesome videos. Please keep up the good work. 👍
I've heard this story before but you brought information of its early history-thank you! Makes it all that much more interesting👍
What a fascinating story thanks alot John! So glad they gave you a sponsor again this is honestly one of the best videos on KZread for me the way you blend a great swathe of information into simplistic terms and still remain completely accurate and informative is just beautiful all the best brother Kia ora from New Zealand 🇳🇿 ❤️
John, thanks for presenting this story. I’ve seen a few shows about this disaster and those weren’t as thorough. Good job as always!
There is video of the lake draining and everything getting sucked into the whirlpool. It’s frighteningly awesome and is a must watch.
PIA was a very fitting sponsor for a video where no one lost their lives and their private information. Lol
The interesting thing is near the salt mine there was a pepper mine, but it shut down years before the flooding.
Not the first video I've watched about this, but definitely an enjoyable one. I quite enjoy the style of the videos you make, so even if I were to learn nothing (which is never the case as you dig up interesting info), I'd still enjoy watching them.
I recommend that you do a story about the Chicago river flood sometime in the 1990’s….workers were driving piles into the riverbed and they punched through an underground cave system used in the old days (for whatever reason I don’t recall). This system of underground tunnels were connected to many buildings in downtown Chicago that completely flooded. They tried dumping trucks (or “lorries” in the UK) full of gravel into the vortex created. They even tried dumping bed mattresses into the vortex.
This is one of my favorite disasters, and I don't know why, its only sort of spectacular, but still interesting.
I remember learning about this with my jaw on the ground. Really brings meaning to fact being stranger than fiction haha
I am a Louisiana native and my class took a trip to Jefferson Island in the early 90's. Quite a beautiful place to visit during the right time of the year.
Louisiana has some crazy disasters. One I remember was a gas well fire back around 2007 or 2008. It was close to I-10, which is a major transportation route among Southern states- you pretty much don't travel at all along the gulf coast or near it without using I-10. We were traveling from south Alabama to southeast Texas and the detour was an added hour or more going west to an already long trip with an infant in the car. That stretch of interstate between Lafayette and Baton Rouge stayed closed for a bit, too. There have also been some fires right on the Atchafalaya Basin Bridge through the years. Luckily it's a strong bridge or a lot of people could be really hurt.
YAAAAY! I love it when John gets sponsored! He deserves it! *EDIT:* And the video's monetized. This is a good week!
I worked at the Houston museum of natural science over the summer! They have a really cool exhibit over this disaster and salt mines in general!!
Somewhere out in the internet there's video footage of one of the boaters narrowly escaping being sucked into the whirlpool as the lake was draining. Quite the harrowing scene!
This one is so amazing!
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
I live in new Iberia, if you go to the lake you can still see a brick chimney sticking out of the water to this day
Another awesome video,John. Keep up the great work 🎉
Love this channel ❤ John, are you going to do more radiation incidents? Not that I'm not enjoying the current content, just curious because the nuclear stuff is my favourite
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you, I’ve still got a few on my list
@nerdygoth6905
Жыл бұрын
@@PlainlyDifficult if you haven't already done one, could you do a beginner's guide to nuclear activity? I don't see how we got from splitting the atom for destruction to harvesting energy. Or why a criticality event has a blue glow, though that may be my favourite thing I've learned from you so far.
@erikawanner7355
Жыл бұрын
@@nerdygoth6905 the blue glow is relatively easy to understand… basically it’s because electrons are moving at the speed of light, c BUT the speed of light in water is slower than c. The blue glow is kinda like a sonic boom but with light. And you don’t see it only in criticality accidents but with nuclear reactors in the cooling water tanks. That’s a simple explanation of the physics. It’s truly fascinating.
@nerdygoth6905
Жыл бұрын
@@erikawanner7355 thank you, that is easy, and very very cool. I love the idea of it being the light equivalent of a sonic boom.
"An entire lake was having a go at trying to disappear." Damn you, now there's beer everywhere. :D
Those damned Mercator coordinates will get you every time if you’re not careful! 😅
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Tricky bastards
Glad to see this covered by such a well researched person. Thanks Plainly Difficult!
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
I've seen vids on this before but no one mentioned the backflow from the sea. And you know it's a s%$tshow when John has an "Oh Balls" meter 👍
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
😬
Jefferson Island Salt Mining Company - so the JISM Company! Salty indeed.
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
🧂
Amazing disaster and whether one had heard of it before or not, as always, a great video.
Since nobody was killed this is the funniest engineering disaster ever
We really need to get Plainly Difficult on Well There's Your Problem, the amount of overlap you lot have is amazing and I love hearing all the angles
Gotta listen to this before I go to sleep, the title piqued my interest
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
😬😬
I love your videos, especially the little “asides”! Keep up the great work ❤😊
"Aka the weight of donuts I'd like to eat in one go." Honestly, same.
Your timing is scary. I was just out near there, took a look, and learned about this incident 2 weeks ago. And now I get a much more in depth look!
I remember learning about this one in school. Been waiting for this one!
HOW HAVE YOU NOT DONE THIS EARLIER LMAO… This and Chernobyl are THE TWO events that got me into disaster videos and then I stayed for the orphaned sources…
Love the fact John you chose Oklahoma in your ad that was awesome. I live in Moore Oklahoma that was cool thank you great video by the way
This sure would make a cool movie.... Love your sense of humor, John!!
Yes yes yes!!!!! Thank you very much John for doing a video on this! My uncle's family owned some of the barges and boats. :)
Yay, love mining videos. Love that everyone survived too
@PlainlyDifficult
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
Sweet! I live just a couple minutes west of Delcambre. Been waiting for this!