Steve Rosenow

Steve Rosenow

C/2020 F/3 Neowise comet

C/2020 F/3 Neowise comet

Squirrel entry!

Squirrel entry!

WTF?

WTF?

Fare thee well, Pixieland.

Fare thee well, Pixieland.

Пікірлер

  • @bensexton254
    @bensexton2542 күн бұрын

    That was terrifying.

  • @wayneclary7811
    @wayneclary78113 күн бұрын

    When I was 9 years old, I was at the beach watching it when it erupted then the ash was falling, we collected ash, but has been lost after. Very few things I remember as a kid but that was one of them.

  • @teresamarks3961
    @teresamarks39613 күн бұрын

    I haven't been up there in years, my brother lived in Toutle he helped getting people out

  • @jdhthegr8
    @jdhthegr85 күн бұрын

    This is the sort of recreation of the event I always wanted to see. Awesome job.

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow985 күн бұрын

    @jdhthegr8 Have you seen the 1080pHD version I did and linked in the pinned comment? It's way better than this one. :)

  • @sunnygirl87
    @sunnygirl8710 күн бұрын

    Lovely

  • @sunnygirl87
    @sunnygirl8710 күн бұрын

    Superb! You really outdid yourself. Thank you.

  • @duckmangooo7376
    @duckmangooo737610 күн бұрын

    Soot,ash covered the skies of Salem, Oregon for several days. The streets were of gray, air quality at a all time low.

  • @TheSpaceEnthusiast-vl6wx
    @TheSpaceEnthusiast-vl6wx10 күн бұрын

    Today is the 44th anniversary of this dramatic event.

  • @anabeatrizdomingues-uz9cj
    @anabeatrizdomingues-uz9cj10 күн бұрын

    Adoro este filme que retrata o monte santa Helena..

  • @KathyOnOBX
    @KathyOnOBX14 күн бұрын

    Curious. Did Mr Rosenquist give his permission for his footage to be used? :)

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow9814 күн бұрын

    I am friends with Rosenquist on Facebook, and no issue has been brought up with their use here.

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow9814 күн бұрын

    Also, Copyright law allows for usages like this (Called the Fair Use clause) without permission needed.

  • @thievingpanda
    @thievingpanda15 күн бұрын

    I wonder if they could have dropped a bunker buster on the mountain a few days in advance and let the gasses leak out so there was no massive eruption. Sorta like, popping a tiny hole in an air mattress and letting the air escape slowly.

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow9814 күн бұрын

    That wouldn't have worked. In fact, it would have likely started the eruption we saw on May 18, at that moment it was tried. The north flank was literally *that* unstable. There was so much in the way of trapped gases inside the rock, let alone superheated ground water, that puncturing it would've been like shooting open a pressure cooker without venting it properly first.

  • @TheArcticWonder
    @TheArcticWonder19 күн бұрын

    The sheer kinetic energy released from this movement..... I cant imagine. I cant imagine the noise eithef

  • @gshockbabe6144
    @gshockbabe614428 күн бұрын

    I want to thank you for this.I was at school in Surrey BC when St Helens blew and our principal told everyone we had to go home for our own safety.When I got outside yhe sky was allready black with ash.

  • @rossbooth4635
    @rossbooth4635Ай бұрын

    It's like half the mountain turned to liquid in 30 seconds.

  • @rossbooth4635
    @rossbooth4635Ай бұрын

    I can't imagine how horrible that wall of ash must have been to breath after it got to them a few minutes later.

  • @gabrielplattes6253
    @gabrielplattes6253Ай бұрын

    Amazing footage, and great work, mate. Extraordinary, that this was recorded so!

  • @barrymace3153
    @barrymace3153Ай бұрын

    Is Mr Rosenquist alive today?

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow98Ай бұрын

    Yes

  • @FC2ESWS
    @FC2ESWSАй бұрын

    The AI made it look weird...

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow98Ай бұрын

    I uploaded an updated version with a better AI interpolation. It's in the info card at the beginning of the video.

  • @Lycan_24_7
    @Lycan_24_7Ай бұрын

    Good use of AI

  • @saxx001
    @saxx001Ай бұрын

    I remember this on the day it happen shown on the news throughout the world, we'll never forget the aftermath and this shows it exceptional and exactly as it happen, raw earth power, we are just ants on a furnace circulating around a bigger one, amazing shots and terrifying to those who were witnesses, RIP those that were lost.

  • @KingAgonized
    @KingAgonizedАй бұрын

    I’ve been looking at video of this eruption for the last 30 minutes. All of them look fake. They look almost like CGI. I know it’s not because it’s a real historic event. They were witnesses and all of that stuff but every video I watch of this explosion looks fake, can someone maybe explain why?

  • @haven216
    @haven216Ай бұрын

    Because the landslide itself was never filmed. Only a sequence of pictures were taken, which have been combined in many ways over the years to mimic video.

  • @JClaus1221
    @JClaus1221Ай бұрын

    An amazing example of the liquefaction of ground without water being present. This was an earthquake induced landslide that turned into an eruption.

  • @jerlome4467
    @jerlome4467Ай бұрын

    Very cool. Any plans on making a version with Sora when it comes out?

  • @BrianNairn-kz4hs
    @BrianNairn-kz4hsАй бұрын

    A month before Kurt Cobain died.. He may have watched the news of this before he died.

  • @TheMarychinoCherry
    @TheMarychinoCherry2 ай бұрын

    The fact you added Gerry Martin's radio Transmission.. 😢

  • @Rittlesleo
    @Rittlesleo2 ай бұрын

    We were camping in Colorado out of our brown Pinto, which we called "the bean", on that day. When we woke up to a very hazy sky we had no idea of the cause. It was one of those days you never forget.

  • @pl5624
    @pl56242 ай бұрын

    How about a sequence from harry trumans perspective? How long did it take for the ash and pressure to make it that far?

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow982 ай бұрын

    It's been estimated that Truman had 26 seconds from slide initiation to impact with the lake.

  • @marked4death076
    @marked4death0762 ай бұрын

    For Truman I'd say few seconds, I think it took around 26 seconds to get David Johnston who was approx 5 miles away. The slide prob got Truman, where as the explosion probably got johnston

  • @pl5624
    @pl56242 ай бұрын

    @@srosenow98 I read somewhere 22 sec from start to reaching him...and he was Supposibly still in bed before 9 am so he didn't see anything in the end

  • @coreym162
    @coreym1622 ай бұрын

    @@marked4death076 David was North of the lake where Harry was SW of the lake. Harry was likely gone 2-3 seconds max. David had time to radio and stayed long enough to radio too. He was likely gone 6.

  • @marked4death076
    @marked4death0762 ай бұрын

    @coreym162 yeah I don't doubt that. For sure Harry probably got the landslide but David got the actual eruption given the distance

  • @humanrightsadvocate
    @humanrightsadvocate2 ай бұрын

    Robert Landsburg died while trying to document the eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980. Landsburg was a photographer who found himself near the volcano when it erupted. Instead of fleeing to safety, he chose to stay and continue taking photographs in an attempt to document the event. As the eruption intensified, Landsburg realized he wouldn't survive. In his final moments, he placed his camera inside his backpack to protect the film and lay on top of it, shielding it with his own body. Landsburg's body was later found, and his camera and film were recovered. His courageous actions provided valuable documentation of the eruption and its destructive force.

  • @iAncientOne
    @iAncientOne2 ай бұрын

    Wonderful recreation. This is the best rendering of the sequence I’ve seen.

  • @tpsg51
    @tpsg512 ай бұрын

    Today 30 years ago March 4th 2024 was the anniversary of when we lost John Candy 30 years ago today. RIP John Candy 1950-1994.

  • @SelitaEbabe86
    @SelitaEbabe862 ай бұрын

    And now Richard Lewis died. Rip to both!!

  • @joeypieper6384
    @joeypieper63842 ай бұрын

    Now Richard's gone too

  • @user-sp1sx1ic1j
    @user-sp1sx1ic1j2 ай бұрын

    Hey, the AI-tool worked quiet well....which tool did you use to interpolate the pictures?

  • @pedrosabbi
    @pedrosabbi2 ай бұрын

    How can I get the rosenquist sequence?

  • @Gamerafighter76
    @Gamerafighter762 ай бұрын

    My mom was a teenager living in Oregon at the time; she could see St. Helens from her neighborhood when it blew, and she got plenty of ash from the eruption.

  • @SomeBizarretaSomeBizzareLabel0
    @SomeBizarretaSomeBizzareLabel02 ай бұрын

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow983 ай бұрын

    NOTE: I have had to delete a few comments in the last several months on this video. A lot of those comments have related to unduly harsh criticisms of the AI interpolation process, and some have related to calling this fake. One comment even suggested that this is not how it looked, even in spite of personal testimony from the photographer that took these photos, stating otherwise. As such, I am instituting a ground rule for my videos going forward. Any comment applying criticisms toward the AI interpolation process or appearance, no matter their nature, will be deleted. This is because of the fact that the source data for this interpolation was not captured at a regularly-timed interval. Twenty-three photos comprise the sequence, and six of those photos have been determined to have gaps of roughly three seconds between them, while others are just a second and a half apart. The entire sequence was captured in a thirty-six second time frame. As such, it is extremely difficult, even with the most advanced interpolation methods currently possible, to create a seamless, 100% realistic interpolation of the original photographic sequence. One comment even went so far as to suggest that Hollywood could have done a better job. As evidenced by the outlandish and highly unrealistic depictions newer documentaries have done to this sequence, I'd suggest otherwise. The reason this particular interpolation looks rough is simple: It's based on a set of original source images captured from a standard-definition documentary that aired in 1990. The screenshots taken of the sequence in that documentary, while decent, were insufficient for the methods applied. They were improved using AI sharpening and enhancement methods, yet still did not match the quality and resolution of the original sequence. As such, the interpolation had a lot of missing "data" to fill in. Since this interpolation, a greater-resolution product was produced ( kzread.info/dash/bejne/pHhhtM6dcrTeZ7g.html ) , however even further work is currently in progress.

  • @PeterParker-yr8yb
    @PeterParker-yr8yb3 ай бұрын

    This is shit and the AI is shit

  • @Landonshadowboy2988
    @Landonshadowboy29882 ай бұрын

    Who would criticism mt st helens eruption it was real and that clips you shown was real things His death was real

  • @terrypage358
    @terrypage358Ай бұрын

    I'd try to ignore the stupid comments mate. KZread is full of people who are brave behind their phones,venting because they've done nothing with their miserable lives and take it out on people like yourself actually trying to contribute something useful. Chin up.

  • @pattmayne
    @pattmayneАй бұрын

    @@Landonshadowboy2988 You didn't *have* to delete the comments. People's reactions are legit, even if their interpretations are not.

  • @Landonshadowboy2988
    @Landonshadowboy2988Ай бұрын

    ​@pattmayne dawg you act like I own these comment I don't delete comments

  • @dylancloud97
    @dylancloud973 ай бұрын

    The landslide looks almost unreal

  • @TeresaAnnn
    @TeresaAnnn3 ай бұрын

    We lived 240 miles away from Mount St. Helens and we still had ash all over everything at our home. I was a teenager at the time and my car was black and covered in ash when i traveled to Portland.

  • @navahrnlaucke6194
    @navahrnlaucke61943 ай бұрын

    I feel this mountain had been holding alot of ice inside it... as the volcano had warmed up, the side of the mountain had got water logged and softened the mountain enough that the eruption would blow out to the area of least resistance..

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow983 ай бұрын

    I am in agreement with that assessment. I suspect that, because St. Helens had once shed its north side once before (it's how Spirit Lake was formed), a series of successive lava domes began overlapping a prehistoric crater glacier, and all that glacial ice was concealed beneath the pre-1980 north flank edifice. I further suspect that all of that melt "lubricated" the first slide block's detachment slip plane, and was embedded within slide block 2. I am working on a 4K version of this with high resolution copies of the original sequence, and if you examine the motion of slide block number 1, the entire mass appears to be moving on a hidden 'cushion' of air, but instead I think it was water. That explains why eyewitnesses Keith and Dorothy Stoffel, and photographers Gary Rosenquist and Keith Ronnholm both say the entire slide slid down as a gigantic "mostly intact "mass." It's a theory I've come to agreement with because of the sheer magnitude of the lahar sequences that swept the Toutle. Over the last several days I've been upscaling all of the film stock Otto Sieber used in his documentary "Keeper of the Fire." The pre-1980 glacial ice mass of Loowit, Leschi, Wishbone and Forsyth glaciers was pretty massive, but alone, I just don't think they melted that fast nor had that much melt off. There had to be additional sources of water for how massive and intense the lahars were on the Toutle that day.

  • @austinmiller8695
    @austinmiller86953 ай бұрын

    The first part is blown completely out of proportion by the AI most of the hill slid down then the top blew not the whole side of the mountain

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow983 ай бұрын

    Not according to the eyewitnesses I have spoke to, most notably Rosenquist himself. Rosenquist's assertion of this slide depiction is almost exactly how he saw it.

  • @elonmuskceospacex645
    @elonmuskceospacex6453 ай бұрын

    bari teknoloji iyi kullanın oynama çok kötü

  • @mophie6941
    @mophie69414 ай бұрын

    I don't even think we could have move that much earth in less than 150 years, working 24/7. Nature is absolutely nuts

  • @bsgfan1
    @bsgfan14 ай бұрын

    3:19 “Gentlemen, the camper and the car sitting to the south of me is covered. It’s going to get me too.” These were the last words of Gerry Martin, a radio operator killed in the eruption. The camper and car he’s referring to were those of David Johnston, a volcanologist also killed in the eruption. Johnston’s last words over radio were “Vancouver, this is it!”

  • @markotterby4297
    @markotterby42974 ай бұрын

    FANTASTIC TOUR! Thanks for creating this trip back in time and a tribute to this grand ferry boat. I remember being on this vessel in a storm looking out the front porthole windows hoping old ship would not shake apart before reaching Seattle. That flying bridge was so cool.

  • @sinsami_4
    @sinsami_44 ай бұрын

    Where is lava ?

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow984 ай бұрын

    Not all volcanoes emit lava. In fact, most don't. Mount St. Helens, on May 18, 1980, never emitted lava. Instead, it was pulverized rock and pyroclastics.

  • @sinsami_4
    @sinsami_44 ай бұрын

    @@srosenow98 is Yellowstone same category as Mount st. Helens?

  • @AntonioSahalaba
    @AntonioSahalaba4 ай бұрын

    ​@@sinsami_4 yellowstone is a park

  • @juliaelrod2154
    @juliaelrod21544 ай бұрын

    The man who operated the cameras knew he wouldn't make it and manned the cameras til the end anyways. True grit.

  • @srosenow98
    @srosenow984 ай бұрын

    There were about two dozen photographers who captured the first ten minutes of the eruption, and of those, only four died. The photographer that captured the sequence this AI interpolation is based on, survived, and is still alive to this day.

  • @juliaelrod2154
    @juliaelrod21544 ай бұрын

    I was 13 living in olympia when mt st helens blew. We heard the eruption, a loud boom and rumble and ran outside to see. It looked like a nuke had gone off. Then the ash started falling like snow until the sky was blacked out. I remember struggling to breathe for days afterwards.

  • @moochtheyarddogg9795
    @moochtheyarddogg97954 ай бұрын

    😵‍💫😵‍💫😵‍💫

  • @GGGMotovlog
    @GGGMotovlog5 ай бұрын

    the people who took the picture is for sure a daredevil...