15 Minutes of Monster Volcano Eruptions
2022 ж. 4 Сәу.
3 875 115 Рет қаралды
15 Minutes of Monster Volcano Eruptions
SUBSCRIBE: bit.ly/3obsVlo
► Music Licensed From SoundStripe/Envato Elements
For any and all copyright matters, please email me directly at UnderworldCopyright@gmail.com
Unless otherwise created by Underworld, licenses have been obtained for images/footage in the video from the following sources; pastebin.com/w3TAntts
Underworld is creating the best new educational videos about the lesser known stories from around the world. We post Top 5’s, Top 10’s, Caught on Camera and much more! Be sure to SUBSCRIBE to never miss an upload!
I was stationed at Fort Lewis, Washington the day Mount St. Helens blew. I saw the second eruption later in the day. It was truly amazing.
I was at Ft Riley!!!!! We had red skies for days. Sgt told us "Mt S Helens exploded" We'd been in the field and had no idea it was that close to going. Later retired out of Lewis. Beautiful sight to go see the empty crater. Best Regards!
Mount St. Helens is how my parents met! :) My father was in the Air Force at the time. Don't really know where he was stationed tho. Only got my mom's side of the story.
I wasn't born yet.
Thank you guys for your service
I bet it... mountains already take my breath away so can imagine seeing a large landslide lol
The fact that volcanoes create Lightning is what really blows my mind
Apparently it's from ash particles colliding with each other , positively and negatively charged particles collide and boom , volcanic lightning !
@@baptisteramiro1918same as clouds crashing into each other. Also it would be so cool to have a picture of an ash column coming out of a volcano thousands of feet high with a lightning bolt going through it.
This footage is incredible and very humbling. Regarding Krakatoa, I can never shake the feeling that it's just rehearsing for its encore of August 1883. That's one of the eruptions that truly changed the world.
They are waiting for Jnr to go boom again and after seeing the Tonga eruption we can get a fairly good idea of that shockwave produced from Krakatoa back then since it was heard as far away as Australia. These days with equipment being as sensitive as it is the low tones of shockwave was heard as far as Alaska, keep in mind there was nothing to stop them from hearing it either, just ocean in between.
@@johnappleseed976 Toba is stronger than tambora eruption
Krakatau's 1883 eruption happened because all four vents went up simultaneously. That's what cause the world's loudest bang. The eruption itself was a VEI 6 overall, but that third boom was what caused everything that followed.
Anak Krakatau (literally “Son of Krakatoa”) is believed to be getting ready for a major eruption yet again right now, it’s been put at a high risk level.
Forget that! I'm praying Yellowstone doesn't go off in my lifetime! That will basically send the world back to the stone age
Anak Krakatoa translates to son of Krakatoa. This name was given to the volcano because another volcano existed there named Krakatoa. One day, Krakatoa erupted so violently, it DESTROYED itself and 70% of the island and archipelago around it. In the crater that remained, the remnant of the volcano emerged in the present volcano, Anuk Krakatoa.
You wanna hand me that there paper towel roll boy?
The sunami from its eruption went up the Thames in London. 1/2 a world away.
@@andrewfriedman3891 *Tsunami
It was also the loudest sound, people on nearby islands either died, or had collapsed lungs and no ear drums
Anak krakatoa❌ Anak krakatau☑️
This is exactly why i study geology. No spectacle on earth quite as unique and beautiful as volcanos despite how deadly we’ve seen them to be. Amazing compilation!
Yea
Its also harmful
@@zainabmoorlie837 read the second sentence
I’m not a geologist but totally understand the passion !!!
Volcanoes are the tornadoes of the earth, sudden, powerful, and everything in their way is destroyed
Underwater volcanoes are a site to behold beautiful and beautiful and terrifying at the same time
Yess
ñk
@@madyalangit3278 😐😐😚😐🥐😅g 😊😊h$)ugguhgg😅
Got close to them and you will be good as a cook fish 🐠
But it’s beautiful not all the time
You were right my dude I waited 3 weeks later and here we are with the volcano videos thank you for making this
I was only 5 during St. Helen's eruption. I remember going in the car and watching the giant cloud of ash pouring from the top off on the horizon. It was the first time I realized how powerful the Earth was and I felt so small and insignificant. I doubt I could ever forget that.
St. Helen is small potato compared to Yellowstone`s volcano.
Alexej Jovanovic: I REALLY HAVE TO SAY THAT Your comment is VERY IMMATURE!!!! Tell me: HOW MANY TIMES HAVE YOU SEEN THE VOLCANO IN YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK ERUPT?? I saw that someone else claimed that the crops from all of the farms would be smothered by all of the ash... THAT is exactly what 'the experts' said right after Mt. Saint Helens erupted in 1980!!! And, do YOU know what happened??? They had the most plentiful crops they had EVER SEEN!!! SO, remember this:==> "It is better to keep your mouth shut and let people THINK that you are an idiot, rather than open your mouth and remove all doubt!!!" If people ask you what Yellowstone erupting would do, say "Well, we have never seen it erupt, so we can't be sure of what it would do. We can say that "It could be extremely devastating, or it might not be as disastrous as some people have predicted. And if it exploded with NO WARNING AT ALL, IT MIGHT NOT BE A GOOD IDEA TO GO THERE FOR A VACATION!"
@@firstnamelastname3579 Control your feelings dumbass, no need for caps. Immature comment? Yeah right, son. They have exact measurements of the caldera of that place, something about 80km x 25 km. If that place blows up you can kiss your US of A goodbye as smoke and ash would cover the majority of US. Its called Supervolcano for a reason and its not the only one in the world. Do some research about super volcanos and then talk about immaturity.
Really
@@susanaobeid6770 Was this for me?
i live in guatemala, i havent experienced any monstrous eruption but i went to acatenango las month and i saw the "volcan de fuego" or fire volcano that is one of the most active volcanos of america maybe even the world and i felt the eruption kinda big, now i wonder how the "Santa Maria" volcano eruption was like in 1902 wouldve been scary
I so love the force of nature.... it's terrifyingly fascinating !!!!!!!! Do not mess with nature
Nature is the boss.
@@terryt5512 no its not shut up
Yeah, cuz if you do, you'll spawn something like, well, *HUMANS!*
True
@@aarondill710 ha, ha!
I lived thru Mt St Helen’s eruptions! Scary AF! Ash was a asthmatic nightmare. I was cross country skiing there a year before it blew. Wild times!!
As a kid my mom told me that there was a stretch of days where it was nonstop fog which she later learned was smoke as a result of Mount St. Helens. We live in Wisconsin
Damn! I'm impressed! The images of the eruption is High Definition clear to the finest detail. 1:20
Awesome video. Nature is still the biggest force on Earth
Yeah
SEPTEMBER 27, 2067
@@pizza2614 so quirky
st helens had less than half the explosive force of tsar bomba and tsar bombas payload was originally supposed to be 100MT so uuh no humans are still above volcanoes
Mother nature is fighting back against stupid humnas who are trying to ruin it in the first place..
You should cover the active volcanos of Japan. There's even one active volcano that is inhabited by locals and they deal with eruptions a few times per year.
Wow the Guatemalan footage is one of the few examples where the viewer is actually thankful that the footage was filmed in portrait.
Man: Nuclear Bombs are the most devastating thing in human history Yellowstone Volcano: Hold my beer
Haha Yeah, there is no bomb that can do as much damage as a super volcano.
Volcanos has always been one of my hyperfixations since I was younger, when I learned of Pompeii. I became fascinated with Vesuvius and just the power of the volcanos and the force of them. Just how much they can change everything around them, sometimes even in the span of seconds if not minutes- then also how theres the different volcanos sizes and forms- well their types- I mostly just learned of the three main ones back then, but since then discovered how theres so many different ones! The three main ones being: Cinder cone Volcanos Stratovolcanos also known as Composite Volcanos Shield Volcanos I was taught abt them in danish so we ofc heard alot abt the ones in Iceland.
The Tongan eruption was no joke, I can't even imagine what that would have looked like in real time when it happened. The other interesting thing is how lighting is created by volcanic gas and ash rising into the atmosphere and even at the base of the volcano itself.
Perfect selection and narration! I watched the video with pleasure!
Well worth watching! Not the usual rehash and you know your science. Thank You for the work that went into making this video story and sharing with us! Best Regards and Best Wishes!
St hellens was an unbelievable event the amount of earth that moved was just crazy
When Tonga erupted I was in Hawaii touring the volcano lava tubes of Kilauea the same day. We were put under a tsunami advisory due to Tonga in Kona Hawaii.
6:43 The dog was like "OH GREAT HEAVENS, WHAT IN THE WORLD IS THAT??" 🤣
😂😂😂
I noticed the dog too LOL
Imagens incríveis a natureza é poderosa e fascinante!!!!
also major respect for not butchering the pronunciation of hunga tonga hunga haʻapai 😉
Santiaguito is actually part of a much larger volcano called santa maria which produced the infamous 1912 eruption in guatamela creating a large horshoe shaped Caldera
I like these longer vids with footage. Many thanks.
Great video! Though I have spent my life watching the stars, planets and so on, Volcanoes and natural disasters always intrigued me. The title of the video is misleading though, I was expecting 15 minutes of volcano eruptions, as the title says. Maybe a better title would have been '5 volcano eruptions (and a bonus eruption) and each explained, in 15 minutes' :D
Are there few earthquakes in Australia despite eruptions? Thank you for the great shot
Your last piece of footage of Mount St Helens, reminds me of watching films in Geography lessons at high school, in the 70s. 🌋🎬❤️
Back when I was in highschool we had to do a paper for geography on Mt St Helens and one thing that made the whole thing more profound was David A. Johnston, and his team, convinced authorities to close Mt St Helens and surrounding area to the public. Through them doing so, they managed to keep the death toll down to the tens, and not the thousands it would have been if they hadnt. Johnston lost his life on the mountain that day, but managed to get a radio call out just before him and his trailer were swept away by the lateral blast, they never recovered his body.
The crazy part is it looks super slow, but it's actually really fast
Yeah, just amazes me…no chance outrun it.
I feel like earthquakes are the earths "bubble guts"....and Volcanic eruptions are its "farts" :D
You will never imagine the fear within until you experienced one. Did back in 81, was 10yrs old. Burning bolders more that a hundred tons rolling down the volcano. A very hairy experience.
10:22 Our village that we live in now was affected by that event because East Midlands Airport was closed for a full week. But I was 3 then so I don't really remember it that well.
praying for 1M Subs!!!😭🥰♥️
I took geology in college as my physical science, but it was only one class as regular geology, and another class specifically earthquakes. Wouldve taken a volcanology class if if was offered. I freaking love dirty thunderstorms I would love to see an eruption with my own eyes some day (from a safe position)
I remember the eruption of Mount St. Helens. I live in the Pacific Northwest and it was truly catastrophic
While I never experienced the eruption, I can say my grandpa lived through it. He was in California at the time and while driving through the streets in Washington after the eruption, he said it looked liked it was snowing
The most active volcanoes are in the ocean just like the ones known before Ballard and his team found the Titanic among the fields of volcanoes.
Man great vid, no annoying animations or stupid talking with no footage! Just solid volcano power !
The thing about the small close up Krakatoa eruptions shown is the thought that the entire mountain island shown has blown up repeatedly, literally leaving nothing but a gigantic hole and years of volcanic winter & neon sunsets. And will do so again.
Thank you so much for the great video. Have any of you seen videos of the 1991 Mt Pinatubo eruption? It is in my opinion the most impressive volcanic eruption caught on film.
largest volcanic eruption to be ever filmed
Where is Mt Pinatubo?
@@jbfiveash5634 It is a volcano in the Philippines which erupted in 1991. It was the second largest eruption of the 20th century and was 10 times larger than Mt St Helens in 1980.
@@jbfiveash5634 in the philippines
@@rodeandulla3404 thanks. Are you in the Philippines
Awesome to look at the same time terrifying I have a great respect to the force of nature
One belch cancels out all the expensive crazy efforts to counter “global warming “.
The eruption of mount krakatoa is very violent that it eventually create another active mount volcano. two fisherman was doing their thing when suddenly the mount explode , one fisherman was immediately blinded when he saw the flash of light that was produced directly from the volcanic eruption and the other fisherman was immediately deaf when he heard the sound of the eruption from nearby. It is recorded in history that the loudest sound ever heard by mankind was when Mount Krakatoa erupted, even astronauts on board iss can hear it
Volcanic lightning is pretty common for eruptions that launch stuff very high into the air and are tall themselves.
Thank you for sharing!
I went out West 20 years ago with my family and we went to the Mt. St. Helen's park. Pictures don't do it justice
That Hunga tonga eruption was creating a lot of adiabatic lift and water vapor condensation.
The Krakatau footage is mind-blowing. Wish, they had the camera equpiment back in 1980 @ Mt. St. Helens
I actually watched both videos of the first eruption on this list.
This was really cool, thanks for making it
Please stop having titles that imply we’re going to get an awesome compilation. I’m sick of clicking these videos just to get 90% commentary, 10% actual eruptions.
So click off then?
Amazing video, thank you.
Truly fascinating. Man, it takes balls the size of that volcano at 4:15 to be flying around that without knowing what could happen in an instant. Great upload, thanks.
I hate those stupid "balls" comments.
@@123TauruZ321 no one asked
@@itsukarine I don't care.
@@123TauruZ321 neither do we, pissant
Just think of it those are pretty powerful but we still haven't seen a super volcano erupt
Beautiful yet so very destructive
Nothing compared to when Yellowstone will go off
Yellow stone is shutting down, it's not gonna erupt any time soon and even if it did it wouldn't be a super eruption.
@@mrspeigle1really. I thought it would be a world changing eruption. Bloody Internet 😡
I was at Clark AB when Mt. Pinatubo blew up. It was amazing.
Ohhh great distraction to chemistry class :)
Such a fascinating natural event
That is so scary but you’re videos are so good I love you.
Excellent Video, Awe Inspiring!!
The Tonga volcano eruption created air pressure waves traveling around the entire globe.
6:00 great video record of that ash plume
Can u make 15 minutes of earthquake documentary?
During the production for Revenge of the Sith George Lucas heard news that a volcano was about to erupt in Italy, and sent a film crew to film the eruption and lava flow for the scenes on Mustafar.
Hey, I'm from Australia and when that volcano went off I heard it in the news and at the exact amount of hours later it would have took the shock wave to reach us I felt a really heavy wind gust while i was outside use my telescope at night. pretty cool. 8:00
How are your sunsets due to the Tonga eruption?
@@Mofi357 Wasn't any different, none of the ash reached us and it was already night time but thank you for asking :D, have a good day or night man!
@@frankgray3279 Chur From NZ im central North island our sky's still a bit hazy and gettn colorful sunsets
My mom grew up in North Idaho, she said the ash from Mt. St. Helens was so severe here, it was hard to breathe outside. People were advised to cover their airways, and school was cancelled. She remembers my grandpa going out to shovel the ash like it was a snow storm.
This is rare and unbelievable movement dude 👍thx to provide us video ❤️❤️love u 🌹
ABsolutly stunning and amazing video actually capturing these eruptions and activity thank you so much, great spectacle, ton of videos dont show much, this video fedinitely does, making it way better than rest.
Thanks for this compilation
dag delindi resmen buna şahit olduk ha resmen yeni bir volkan cıktı artık bir volkanımız dahada var
The loudest sound that volcano can make in number 5 proofs that they can be even louder then the one that was recorded all those years ago
Hunga Tonga "IS" the largest eruption seen from space!
Huge props to all these cameramen
The still photographs of the landslide and eruption of Mount Saint Helens forever changed our understanding of that event. Had the eruption happened at night, or had there not been a photographer at the ready, there would be no good record of the largest landslide in human history.
Thanks for the info
0:52 Anak Krakatoa is similar meaning to Son of Krakatoa Volcano
The speed at which the pyroclast expands is legit terrifying. About as terrifying as a Volcanic lahar. There’s no outrunning that. If you’re in the Dead zone, you’re ded
Extreme nature deserves a royal British voice.
Very nice report and very interesting. I would ve add la palma as well, but i believe will be in the next report. Thanks for the coverage. Ciaoo
How are they going to talk about Krakatoa without referencing the 1883 explosion that obliterated the entire crater. Those ring of islands... used to be the one big volcanic island!
i'am from Indonesia krakatoa - tambora. 🇮🇩
Each time there’s an eruption there is an titan that humans can’t see, before it can do any damage to the earth a God battles it and sends it back to the under world
What
It's such a shame nobody filmed the first or the biggest eruption on Hunga Tonga from the start. That would be amazing to see.
i felt it should of been obvious it was about to blow. it had the same eruption pattern as Pinatubo and the film we see was done by a volcanologist. he had to know a cavity was forming.
@@MissionToast True. Feels to me that maybe some government does have a tape. I know it was turning dark some hours before the eruption but it was still light enough to see it on satellite. It must have been insane.
Can imagine Randy marsh recording these eruptions. “ I am so startled”
Massive eruption on taal volcano happen in 2020 which is so scarier for me
The scary thing is, the Jan 15, 2022 eruption of Hunga Tonga was an order of magnitude larger than the 1980 St Helens eruption, larger than even the 1991 eruption of PInatubo.
Thank you for sharing
I'd say tonga was far worldwide impacting by how much water it chucked into the atmosphere
Wooow. I love vulcanoes! ⚡⚡⚡
No.3 was stunning, the shapes of the plume beautiful
The npc attitude of the bystanders is insane.
Mt St Helens was explosive, but Mt Pinatubo was much more destructive.
Yeah .. 2nd massive eruption in 20th century .. the scariest ..
That's mother nature saying "I just need to pass some gas" lol
Mother Nature Blew up MT ST Hellens on my birthday.
How could you leave out the La Palma extravaganza!!
I guess they didn't hear about what I did in the toilet this morning.
Keeping it honest. Thats what I like to see. Thanks for your work.