Uncovering the Secrets of New York City (Full Episode) | Drain the Oceans
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In just 400 years New York has become a global powerhouse. By draining the ocean, revealing submerged shipwrecks and subterranean secrets, we explain how.
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Uncovering the Secrets of New York City (Full Episode) | Drain the Oceans
• Uncovering the Secrets...
National Geographic
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Пікірлер: 492
national geographic a real one for uploading whole episodes
@mikrobyo1790
2 ай бұрын
probably cuz no one watched them in cable anymore that means no ads no money.
Drain the Oceans has to be one of the best series ever to come to NatGeo! So good
@kishascape
3 ай бұрын
There's also a full length movie where it just focuses on the planet earth as a whole and is more geology and nature focused.
@larryj4287
3 ай бұрын
i couldnt stop watching,,my eyes were stuck
@captainsledge7554
3 ай бұрын
I'm shocked they were able to drain our oceans for these videos. I wonder how many fish were killed because of this tho
@est9949
3 ай бұрын
@@captainsledge7554 they didn't actually drain the water. What you see is pure computer graphics. They scan the ocean using sonar and use that scan images to reconstruct what it must look like if the water was drained.
@captainsledge7554
3 ай бұрын
@@est9949 I'm aware lol it's called a joke. We do that on the internet sometimes.
Never knew this about New York. Thank you for making this video visible for all to learn about.
@scotmandel6699
2 ай бұрын
Same here. Totally awesome.
This was intense. I wish my dad was alive to see this. He would have been fascinated. Thank you.
@happybirthdayand
Ай бұрын
my dad as well.
I find it amazing to think about the troops on that ship and one guy losing a button. I'm sure he didn't think anything of it, he was more concerned about living and living through the war. This button help identify the ship. The small things in history that makes the biggest of differents
Cannot lavish enough accolades for this content. In the 1990s I spent time off the US east coast "mowing the grass" as it was referred to. Never saw these relics but your show brings back old memories. Thanks from the fantail.
I'm 61 and a native New Yorker (upstate, not the city) and have always been a history buff. This is the first time I've heard of the Jersey, and how NY'rs were taken prisoner. You would think this would be taught in American History classes.
@bunyipdragon9499
3 ай бұрын
Not something to be proud of I suppose 😢
@AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg
3 ай бұрын
So true, savagery existed then as now
@AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg
3 ай бұрын
Ps, G'day Mate from the Grandson of Native New Yorkers Now An Aussie 👍
@v.dargain1678
3 ай бұрын
The US military probably decided to keep information about the HMS Jersey in their archives and not release it to civilians .
@jedheart8059
3 ай бұрын
I have ancestors from New Amsterdam, then New York. But I could only find records for two, my 7th great grandparents who born in New York both about 1710. Both lived a long life. But other 7th great grandparents, I couldn't find. It makes sense now. Records likely missing due to Revolution.
This is the reason why construction is always delayed in Greece. You dig down 15-20 feet, something ancient will be found. It's a great find at ground zero, but it doesn't surprise me!
This has got to be my favorite episode of Drain the Oceans. Remarkable job.
This is truly interesting, I love drain the oceans episodes, by far the best on National Geographic
@AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg
3 ай бұрын
Niagara Falls was AMAZING!
Please keep this channel so we can learn ! As humans we have to remember we aren't the first people nor the last to walk this history road and. I mean I always wonder who when,.where and why this happened.. I always watch Albert on this channel and he approach things different and is super easy to understand. Watch him and history will come alive.
Great episode. Thank you for uploading to KZread!
Very interesting. Watching it all the way from Malaysia.
Drain the ocean episodes are really amazing ..watching from the Philippines
@bargeld09
3 ай бұрын
I would be afraid to see what is at the bottom. It cant be good. 🥹
@chefscorner7063
2 ай бұрын
@missjoy_18 Hi Miss Joy from the Philippines! ✌️😁 Robert from the U.S.
NYC , learning its history and interesting places .. What a great documentary
@Dazza13Bravo
2 ай бұрын
NYC is an ashtray.
Being born and raised in the city, I remember the neighborhood before the twin towers were built. They had to expand the land for that purpose. So landfill was done!
@J0EYbagaDONUTS
3 ай бұрын
That whole area was full of electronic shops . My dad took me there to buy my first good stereo when I was a kid
@flashflame4952
3 ай бұрын
@@J0EYbagaDONUTS That was DA BEST!!!
I'm native to Brooklyn ny my family had farms in Brooklyn since 1900 on Flatbush and my whole family fought in every war and help build this city
@m42037
26 күн бұрын
New Amsterdam
Great to see the 'family' sharing this ride...and Kyle did a terrific job narrating. Mushu is darling😁👍🐎
I loved this episode amazingly put together 🙌🏼
Do one on the synagogue tunnels!
Absolutely FASCINATING AMAZING!!!national geographic documentaries r the best, everything even the music.
Can't believe all the history hidden beneath NYC's streets! Definitely worth the watch!
@Dazza13Bravo
2 ай бұрын
Yeah the druggies don't have to hide now.
Wow, this is really cool. I never knew they found a ship under that rubble.
Does it do anyone else's head in when people speak in present simple tense when it should be past simple tense? I listen to this narration and I 'm like, oh my god... That aside, brilliant doc!
2024 and this is the 1st time I hear about this.
Love this series. Would love to see one on the Edmund Fitzgerald.
This topic is interesting but it would be so much better if the narrator's script wasnt SO melodramatic and over-wrought.
@mememortam9909
Ай бұрын
Agreed
00:04 New York City's success is hidden under its rivers and harbor 04:09 Discovery of a rare ship beneath Ground Zero in NYC 10:36 HMS Jersey was the deadliest prison ship during the Revolutionary War. 13:56 New York's huge natural Harbor drives the city's expansion. 20:25 New York City reshapes its environment with determination and innovation 23:12 New York's shipping business drives the city's growth in the 19th century 29:03 Rise of ocean steam technology and its impact on trade and profit 31:57 The Oregon shipwreck and its impact on New York City. 37:55 The team investigates the possibility of a submarine attack on New York City. 40:33 German mines caused the sinking of the USS San Diego near New York Harbor. 45:50 The sinking of USS San Diego near New York City
@Getlikeme888
3 ай бұрын
Thanks for this
@gregoryoruko
Ай бұрын
Thanks for this
@m42037
26 күн бұрын
New Amsterdam history
this is incredible because it is gonna make me have to review so much of what i know about the rivers and such of nyc. i am so confused thank you nat geo
Everyone hates on NYC as overrated, but it is a city of constant change 🏃♂️ That's just the nature of old Gotham city 🌆🗽
🎶Here's to New York.. NEW YORK!!!🎶 🤗🤗 And a big thanx to NAT-GEO for this awesome documentary.
@v.dargain1678
3 ай бұрын
Same . I love the Empire State too .
Absolutely great documentary.. do you take requests.
Excellent documentary. Great content, research, and presentation. 🇦🇺 😊
The British didn't build the World's largest empire based on...... Kindness. America and American's got to see just a fraction of what Ireland and Western Scotland endured for generations
@rudydevich9046
3 ай бұрын
Might western scotland be located.....
@carolutley6523
3 ай бұрын
Not to mention India
@danielbrown3461
2 ай бұрын
I can't believe that the United State is willing to let itself be invaded through mainly our Southern Border but also North. It looks like our WW1 and WW2 will have died in vein. How Sad. Will we see a World without Borders and a 1 World Governed by the U.N.?
@andrewmole745
2 ай бұрын
Actually - all the people you mentioned (apart from the natives) were part of that process of extracting of value from other parts of the world, often through violence. This is the heritage of the US. The American colonists were actually well-treated by the motherland. Not so much the American Indians. And in fact part of the colonists' beef with the motherland was that they had decided to stop the expansion, something that Washington had already invested in, which may have been part of the reason for his treachery and breaking of his oaths of loyalty.
@dandremills2735
2 ай бұрын
The Congo?
very interesting watching from Canada
"This is the moment when technology will triumph over nature" Is such a bold statement when you consider that we human beings are still in the mercy of mother nature.
@ericdevlin8168
19 күн бұрын
I said the same thing! Like how are they so Proud in saying such a statement? Then use the phrase "Unsinkable" as a total scoff to our Creators, like that of the Olympia. And the fact that a British Steam engine was sunk and in typical American fashion, "Hey, let's have a battle for the best Ships and control of the Foreign Trade" and in the end it's always what other countries have done to US but never what we've done to them....
This is very interesting. I was not aware of this either. Thank you for making this documentary. 46:51
@29:35 The MV Savarona. Savarona was built by Blohm & Voss in Hamburg, Germany at a cost of about $4 million. The boat was 407 feet long and cost about $10,000 per foot. For comparison, the average income in the US that year was about $1400.
Love this series!
The Americans in 1700s are still Europeans, hardly natives on the new continent.
@gracepark-pf1ks
Ай бұрын
Exactly
@Lexicologist1971
5 күн бұрын
Some had been here since 1620.
Fascinating
Loved this episode.
Imagine the hundreds of thousands of shipwrecks, big and small, lie beneath the oceans, from prehistoric times.
exellent series!! So enjoying it.
The last ship must of been horrific for the crewmen that was left inside as she turned upside down. There had to have been air pockets around. Some of those men had to have found those pockets. They lived long enough to pray for forgiveness before perishing.
@WeldingQueen
3 ай бұрын
Just the last ship?I bet the same kind of panic and horrificness was also present at the Oregon or any other tragedy.
@kristinebailey6554
3 ай бұрын
*must have NOT of.
@idrk7509
3 ай бұрын
@@WeldingQueen the video says that everyone on the Oregon survived
@richardmiranda640
3 ай бұрын
Turned upside down! Try capsized
@RealMTBAddict
3 ай бұрын
Must have***
Wow love every minute of it more please
It's amazing that a ship named after a Pacific Coast City (USS San Diego) sunk on the east coast. Amazing show.
I enjoyed your research
Wonderful.
The guy that spotted the USS Oregon. Oh wow there it is. In the most not excited voice possible. I would have been OMG THERE IT IS!! Thats so amazing.
They look like ants scrambling, trying to survive and fight for every scrap. No thanks. Give me the Redwoods of Northern California.
We might see Jimmy Hoffa's body if we drain the waters of NYC.
@user-mp1zv4vm2r
Ай бұрын
long gone
Awesome! Loved it!
From Canada - NYC is on my bucket list to explore, might take a while though to explore
Thank you
Very nice!
I'm always very fascinated by how so many things just got buried beneath earth without anyone noticing, even in places with so much human activities like NY, how did that even happened?
Some shots here are triggering my thalassophobia. But can't stop watching though.
I recognize the orange lamp....I had one just like it plus the lampshade. I also had the dark paneling in my living room. She graduated a year before me, but in Norwich. I grew up in Rocky Hill, about an hour and a half from there. This brought me right back into the past.
I love how they go searching for Flood Rock in a chartered boat with the most cutting-edge laser technology, fully knowing the rock isn't there.
@kibbyken5975
3 ай бұрын
... and didn't rely on any eye witness accounts for the sinking of 2 other vessels, but they had to be "discovered"? I understand drama. But...
@creeguyvernon
3 ай бұрын
There was also a dangerous section of rock in B.C. Canada and they blasted it in the 1950s too. I think there is a documentary about it here on the Tube
THIS IS SUCH AMAZEMENT IT HAS GROWN IN LEAPS AND BOUNDS😮😮😮😮😮
@aceburns8673
3 ай бұрын
Why shout?
Very interesting I enjoyed watching this
I wonder if there are any mines from either great wars still floating and armed out there somewhere?
Thank you for full episode. 😊
i would so love them do to vancouver bc!!!we have a similar city as new york (city & water all around)
@timspath8980
2 ай бұрын
Ohioan here, I've been to Vancouver it's beautiful!
Interesting that in the sinkings of both SS Oregon and USS San Diego there was little loss of life.
This really educated me and was very interesting. Thank the past and present service members of the military for protecting our country 👏🏽.
Most old congested cities have a rich history.
The USS San Diego looks like my beignets when they become steam filled and turn themselves
Great to watch this episode, I am an AMERICAN dreamer.
Excellent
Wow what a nice documentary ❤ very nicely done ✅✅ happy for newyockers
My high school was G.A.R., Grand Army of the Republic. Our football team was the Grenadiers. I asked, but none of the teachers there were willing to tell me what grenadier meant. While playing the "Pirates of the Caribbean" online game, they had undead Grenadiers in a mine to eliminate. That's when I realized that the Grenadiers were named for grenade throwers, & of course, the idea would come from miners who used TNT every day.. True story. LOL!!
I am so sad to say 9/11 never forgotten incident
@zfr33ze87
3 ай бұрын
It should never be forgotten. Always a reminder what terrorists could do to our way of life.
@mikeypiros6647
3 ай бұрын
well 1/6 insurrection,was worse than 9/11,and the civil war combined....
Secret tunnel, secret tunnel 🎶
You guys missed a few tunnels!
Thank you natgeografic*
That's the voice of Adoring Fan!
This is so interesting but the dramatic narrators are really ruining it. Like it's difficult to listen to.
If draining the Oceans is that easy, what's the problem with draining the swamp?
@user-qo1fb2rt6g
27 күн бұрын
Right
thank you ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥
Always find it funny when people complain about free entertainment.....
0:20 i'm fairly certain the "the secret story of its success" has always been labor exploitation...
@bunyipdragon9499
3 ай бұрын
But the nice word for that is profit. We know that profit tends to mean exploitation, unfortunately.
HMS Jersey was laid down in Plymouth under proposals of 1719. The Jersey was a 60 gun forth rate of the line. You clealy have the wrong vessel.
Who else sees the little bug at 24:47? Lol. (Bottom of screen)
Drain the Secrets!
Extremely interesting video
it makes you winder how many under see mins are still out there
NatGeo: ~describes a ship from the Revolutionary War as 'ancient'~ Me: ~laughs in 'longtime Time Team fan'~
The graphics are great
Since when National Geographic editors do not film the the beauty of Mother Earth? Instead, they put a lot of time and money digging ancient secrets, concentrate more on past wars. And the voice of the journalist and the music sound very daunting. To drain the Human Civilizations?
I tried to do a little research about the World Trade Center from official information and here are some facts. 1. Before the buildings were constructed, that area was a landfill. 2. The workers labored for 2 years to set the foundation below street level. 3. To find good bedrock for the foundation, workers dig down to 70 feet below the street level. 4. About one million cubic yards of rock was excavated which was later used to build a public park later. Now here are my questions a. This ship was found 20 feet below street level which is about 7 meters how couldn't it be discovered during the construction. b. The amount of rock they excavated suggested to me, that the builders had gone down below the soil or silt surface on which the ship would lay down how could this be possible? c. If the ship sank due to a battle with her officer onboard with the button, it might be a ferocious battle and many sailers on both sides might have fallen in the water. Why can we get at least one broken bone or evidence of human remains? Was it excavated during the construction? if so it appears to me the owners of that building took away more than a broken bone during construction. I suspect the builders of the towers know a thing or two about the ship's location and what it carries and closed the area for two years to take or hide them away whatever it carries. Where was Jesus's crucifixion cross buried? It was under a landfill. It seems the ship crew were trying to hide something that they needed to protect under a pile of trash until the time came it would be unearthed. I can't swallow the war story even with salt, I believe it was a deliberate attempt to hide this ship with all her puzzle for what ever reason.
6:37 Tree rings show the age of the tree when it was cut, not the datation. This is stupid.
I want to see this reck in person
The 52 foot in 1775 was an Oxfordshire Regiment. Maybe they were reinforcements seconded and loaned to the 1st and 2nd of foot and got torn to pieces trying a amphibious landing. But the 52nd were not the Grenadiers or the Cold Streamers.
Love my city
I keep struggling to distinguish between national geographic and the history channel. Is any of this real?
nice video!
The secret is that there is more rats then people
It seems as though this plot of land is cursed. When i watched september 11 happen, i never imagined nearly four times as many people had died there before....