ingomar200

ingomar200

Mt  Fuji Ash Fall (1707).mov

Mt Fuji Ash Fall (1707).mov

Hunga Tonga Tsunami.mov

Hunga Tonga Tsunami.mov

Chicxulub Tsunami-2.mov

Chicxulub Tsunami-2.mov

Yellow River Flood 1938.mov

Yellow River Flood 1938.mov

Tsunami Stromboli.mov

Tsunami Stromboli.mov

Anak Krakatoa Tsunami.mov

Anak Krakatoa Tsunami.mov

Stava Mine Disaster.mov

Stava Mine Disaster.mov

Atomic Tsunami.mov

Atomic Tsunami.mov

Tsunami New Zealand.mov

Tsunami New Zealand.mov

Boston Molasses Flood.mov

Boston Molasses Flood.mov

Aleutian MegaQuake.mov

Aleutian MegaQuake.mov

Fogo Mega Tsunami.mov

Fogo Mega Tsunami.mov

Fiord Tsunami.mov

Fiord Tsunami.mov

Seismic Slosh.mov

Seismic Slosh.mov

Ice Age.mov

Ice Age.mov

Krakatoa Ash.mov

Krakatoa Ash.mov

Cascadia Turbidites.mov

Cascadia Turbidites.mov

Acqua Alta.mov

Acqua Alta.mov

Bhola Cyclone Disaster.mov

Bhola Cyclone Disaster.mov

Lake Tsunami.mov

Lake Tsunami.mov

Lituya Bay Tsunami.mov

Lituya Bay Tsunami.mov

Grand Banks Tsunami.mov

Grand Banks Tsunami.mov

Пікірлер

  • @eliottlibert-do8ff
    @eliottlibert-do8ffКүн бұрын

    That continent is called the Mexican gulf

  • @Interestingworld4567
    @Interestingworld4567Күн бұрын

    So who really killed the dinosaurs that they say were killed where the water did not reach. may be they did because the earth shake. may be history is bs may be.

  • @Wisteria_
    @Wisteria_2 күн бұрын

    2024 is the year me thinks. Will cause the elections to be 'frozen'.

  • @theemeraldstar7713
    @theemeraldstar77132 күн бұрын

    Me when the "Tiny water wave" obliterates me across the continent

  • @crit-c4637
    @crit-c46372 күн бұрын

    After the tsunami, when the crater flooded, how much did that lower sea levels or was it a negligible amount?

  • @patriotenfield3276
    @patriotenfield32762 күн бұрын

    Dino❤

  • @Prime501
    @Prime5013 күн бұрын

    and they'll still ask me to come in on Monday.

  • @harleygreene1345
    @harleygreene13453 күн бұрын

    Serious physics. Sometimes folks can do to much to a thing

  • @roxyamused
    @roxyamused4 күн бұрын

    Super rad.

  • @gman21266
    @gman212664 күн бұрын

    I think this is very incorrect due to the fact that a lot of the water in the Gulf of Mexico would most certainly be turned into super-critical steam.

  • @APEY321
    @APEY3215 күн бұрын

    Atlantropa?

  • @CMTHFAF
    @CMTHFAF6 күн бұрын

    Super Great Channel!!!! And the comments are also pretty great.

  • @CMTHFAF
    @CMTHFAF6 күн бұрын

    First

  • @pegefounder
    @pegefounder6 күн бұрын

    I stopped at 3:00. How can You dare to use fantasy units from Lord of the ring. Use scientific UI units,

  • @treadstonemd
    @treadstonemd6 күн бұрын

    Way back when LGBTQI was not a thing! Incredible when you think about it isn't it..

  • @stopmotionharry8989
    @stopmotionharry89892 күн бұрын

    Humans didn’t exist, of course there weren’t queer people

  • @sportnik23
    @sportnik236 күн бұрын

    I've always wonder how the Chicxulub impactor would have effected Earth if it had landed in the deep pacific, at 5 or 6 miles depth, say, half way between Hawaii and Mexico, and at a more oblique to the Earth. The catastrophe would have been far less severe, though the meteorite, at 5 miles in diameter, would have been barely below sea level by the time it touched the ocean floor. There would be far less ejecta, but still have caused an extinction event, though a smaller one no doubt. How many cubic miles of ocean would have been instantly vaporized? What would the resulting worldwide tsunami have looked like? And imagine the secondary explosion, as the wall of seawater rolled back into the 5-mile deep hole in the ocean, (perhaps 50 miles wide -- who knows?) all crashing back into the center and shooting up a central column of water, perhaps into space...

  • @comodomodo
    @comodomodo7 күн бұрын

    > <

  • @melonplaygroundfan4554
    @melonplaygroundfan45548 күн бұрын

    caseoh found the ocean

  • @katsmeow2775
    @katsmeow27758 күн бұрын

    I believe recent discoveries have shown the tsunami went much farther inland in the us than this model indicates.

  • @conradswadling8495
    @conradswadling84959 күн бұрын

    nice work

  • @I_SuperHiro_I
    @I_SuperHiro_I11 күн бұрын

    100km diameter impact?! Holy cow.

  • @tiffanymarie9750
    @tiffanymarie975011 күн бұрын

    Everything currently alive on earth is descended from survivors of this day. Our ancestors had a very, very bad time and we're still here anyway.

  • @rhettholzhauer5359
    @rhettholzhauer535911 күн бұрын

    China always has massive floods

  • @ramonbril
    @ramonbril11 күн бұрын

    Say, when the black sea broke, maybe the sea peoples, from the bronze age collapse, were people displaced by this flood?

  • @Annishark
    @Annishark2 күн бұрын

    The seapeople were arround 1000 b.c. tthe mediteranien flood was 5 million years ago, the bosphorus flood was ~10000 years ago, so no

  • @blong257
    @blong25712 күн бұрын

    lol, people in the comments section are so gullible. No one knows what the earth looked like neither do they know what happened. These are simply theories and nothing more.

  • @jdsmith5060
    @jdsmith506012 күн бұрын

    Your ocean levels are too high!

  • @obsoletevalues6209
    @obsoletevalues620912 күн бұрын

    Is there a video that shows the topography of the sea floor of the Gulf of Mexico?

  • @user-ok7cj4re4m
    @user-ok7cj4re4m13 күн бұрын

    I like your channel and i subscribe your channel

  • @Dayplaz
    @Dayplaz14 күн бұрын

    Where’s the music😅🤫

  • @optimusfan1007
    @optimusfan100714 күн бұрын

    this looks like something that would be a 17 year old video but it is only 2 years old-

  • @lensercombe
    @lensercombe15 күн бұрын

    200 cubic km collapsed did it ? well the whole fuken island isnt that big so your degree is worthless tell one lie and you're a liar

  • @Youtube-handles-are-stupid
    @Youtube-handles-are-stupid15 күн бұрын

    Jesus christ just get on with it

  • @laureanovarela
    @laureanovarela15 күн бұрын

    fun video, but a lot of people in these comments need to go outside

  • @abaresongs
    @abaresongs16 күн бұрын

    We need a map of the ejecta coming back down now lmao holy hell that day must’ve been breathtakingly evil and chaotic

  • @israelmarrufo975
    @israelmarrufo97517 күн бұрын

    This goes against my worldview and I don’t understand math so therefore is fake

  • @ArcticWFox
    @ArcticWFox17 күн бұрын

    Nice - a fucking KZread ad in 1:30 at full volume. Downvote!

  • @kattagarian
    @kattagarian4 күн бұрын

    youtube put these ones, not the channel

  • @albanstievenard7865
    @albanstievenard786517 күн бұрын

    Without this asteroid humanity would'n't have exists

  • @andrewcolini9516
    @andrewcolini951617 күн бұрын

    actually the black sea was filled at the end of the ice age, when the ice melted from the north, the water flew through the bosphorous channel into the mediterranean, not from it

  • @gordilloedwin
    @gordilloedwin18 күн бұрын

    Super nice... and very exicting!!! Did this ever made it into a paper?? I'd love to read it ... and if not, you should get it into, you already have everything

  • @grayden4138
    @grayden413818 күн бұрын

    Wow, someone actually depicted the asteroid impact on a geographically accurate-to-the-time period map! Everyone just shows it on a present-day map.

  • @Jimmy-Legs
    @Jimmy-Legs18 күн бұрын

    Wait a second now. We all know the earth is only 5000 years old. What’s this 65 million year old thing.

  • @stopmotionharry8989
    @stopmotionharry89892 күн бұрын

    You all think the world is 5000 years old, we all know it’s over 65 million years old

  • @crandonborth
    @crandonborthКүн бұрын

    Its 4.5 Billion years old. Radiometric age dating has proven this through rock samples and apollo moon missions.

  • @MJIZZEL
    @MJIZZEL18 күн бұрын

    Wouldve been an incredible amount of water vapor injected into the atmosphere and this would lead to enormous snow and ice storms. Could this be the trigger for the beginning of the ice age cycles. Started 2.5 mil years BP.

  • @JoeDuddy
    @JoeDuddy19 күн бұрын

    What a lovely mix of units in your peak overpressure formula!

  • @spookyboi8446
    @spookyboi844619 күн бұрын

    If I remember right RayWilliamJohnson posted a video right after the meteor struck...simpler times

  • @user-qp3lx8xe8r
    @user-qp3lx8xe8r19 күн бұрын

    The atmosphere on the Earth in ancient times was more dense. So no asteroid couldn't go through it with its beginning mass without burning out.

  • @stopmotionharry8989
    @stopmotionharry89892 күн бұрын

    I’m sure a 10km in diameter asteroid doesn’t care much about a denser atmosphere. Maybe it was bigger, and the atmosphere burnt a lot of it away. We don’t lnow

  • @paulcoverdale8312
    @paulcoverdale831219 күн бұрын

    I’d like to see what Mexico perninsular looked like before the impact? This would give us a more realistic view to understand.❤❤❤❤

  • @DarkSygil666
    @DarkSygil66620 күн бұрын

    Some say the giant ice dam floods from the last ice age giving way to cataclysmic floods was a possible source of flood myths. I don't know if the Zanclean floods predate modern humans, but human memory is long. Flood myth stories didn't arise from nowhere. It must likely happened to humans at some point.

  • @SirPano85
    @SirPano8520 күн бұрын

    This simulation is purest bull shit. First the tectonic situation was different, second almost everything in this video is wrong.

  • @ajmoment8091
    @ajmoment809120 күн бұрын

    This will probably affect the trout population

  • @WeGoWalk
    @WeGoWalk21 күн бұрын

    Two things: One, the tsunami expressed in the video doesn’t seem to appear accurate enough. Though I cannot back up the following suggestion with mathematical formulas, I feel that a cataclysm of this magnitude likely would’ve pushed a significantly larger volume of sea water much further inland of the North American continent than what is portrayed in this simulation. I offer as potential evidence this question and answer: How did fish species become populated in every one of the 10,000 Minnesota and couple thousand Wisconsin lakes? Could the tsunami have swept over the entire North American continent, carrying with it various saltwater creatures (fish, etc.) and deposited those saltwater species into low-lying depressions, which then over millions of years the saltwater was slowly replaced with freshwater rain and runoff? The saltwater species then would’ve had ample time to slowly adapt to the very slow changing over of the water from salty to fresh, and these species would have evolved separately. If you take a look at the Saltwater Barracuda and compare it to the Northern Pike and Muskie, they look very similar. The same goes for several other saltwater-to-fresh-water species comparisons. I’ve often wondered how fish could end up in nearly every one of those 10,000 Minnesota lakes, so I think this theory could provide that answer. Thoughts?