Gonna point out that Lake Michigan has a Stonehenge aswell that is over 10,000 years old. I would like to try to visit some day as I think it would be fun.
You should like Michigan is awesome Michigan is pretty cool the further north you go the better a lot of people don't go up north north and I mean like by Cadillac, traverse City, Mackinaw, escanaba, Gladstone. It is actually pretty warm up north in the summer. Very sandy ...
@@sunloved9202 What an idiotic comment, “a lot of people don’t go up north” and then you include Mackinaw in that list. Mackinac Island, a destination that sees MILLIONS of people every year.
@@NorthernChev What an idiotic comment. Macinac Island: population 500 in the winter, up to 20,000 through the summer does not equal “MILLIONS.” By your measure you’d think it was Detroit Motor City MF.
Possibility: In their effort to understand the formation they inadvertently unplug the lake’s drain, and swoosh- it all drains away to the sea through an underground cave network.
@@gs1100ed Yeah, like underground cave networks don’t even exist anywhere in the world right?! And at about 580 feet above sea level that water doesn’t even want to bother finding a path to the sea. 🙄. It’s like OMG 😳 caves don’t even exist and even if they did we know it would be because ghosts 😱 were mining ⛏️ for gold 🏴☠️💰back in the day.
If you can think it, it could be possible. Need examples? Just look at your phone. Once a so-called "pipe dream", is now reality. Without your imagination, nothing would be possible. Have a nice day.
Yes indeed. Mottled from cyclical cataclysms. It's clear. Look up wormwoodite. It's a deep blue crystal that's spongey in nature. All it needs is pressure to burst like geysers and then the liquification of it all. Which is pretty interesting. We keep finding structures under layers of mud.
@@Xlr8torZ28 well, if you want to be technical. Atoms are just energy, they have nothing solid about them. What makes matter solid is entropy and the electromagnetic field each atom generates. So, no. Solid matter, including ourselves are not solid. We are just a bunch of cold electromagnetically stable atoms. However, the earth isn't like Swiss cheese. Limestone is the most common stone to be worn away creating cave systems due to the calcium and deterioration by acids into calcium carbonate. The glaciers stripped the basin of that layer and most other sedimentary layers that had built up over time. In fact, in Michigan some of the oldest exposed rock layers, are from the carboniferous period. But the fact that there is, so much sand is because glaciers and water. The sandstone layers were worn away. The entire area between the Appilation Mountains an the Rocky Mountains was an inland sea. Before that, it was ocean floor. Which is part of the reason why Petoskey stones are so abundant in Michigan and along Lake Michigan's shoreline.
blue holes are typically where an underground river surfaces. I've never heard of that term being used for an underwater spring into a lake that doesn't have an independent expression. Do you remember where you read that what what they are referred to? I'l like to look it up. thanks.
@@Dragondaughter9 I worked in Erie Marsh, an early research wet;and. The land-based blue hole I know of is there. Others are offshore at that end of Lake Erie. And a spring is where an underground flow surfaces; if you want to call that flow a river that's fine with me.
@@Dragondaughter9your assertion is unfounded and admittedly based on limited knowledge. Way to undermine someone and ask for a source without providing one.
Good thing you painted over it with that cool ocean swatch in MS Paint. The last thing I need right now is to be scratching my head. Thanks NBC 26, you're the real heroes!
They are not sinkholes. They are military depth charge testing sites created by the Manitowoc Shipbuilding Company which built submarines during WW2 and did the testing in Lake Michigan in 1941.
If YOU know that, couldn't the people in the video have uncovered that history?! When they aren't intentionally gaslighting us, they can't even provide decent news.
Too bad a lot of scientists accept “theories” rather than try to disprove or prove them anymore. Not to mention science that try to are blackballed and there work seen as “fake or misinformation”
Lake Michigan is not so bad, Superior is the worst one, they didn't like, they still don't because it's so cold that if you die in it they'll never recover your body. Lake superior's is a inland Sea. Its very unforgiving but so beautiful if you ever get a chance if you're not from Michigan go to pictured Rock so beautiful. Upper Michigan has over 470 waterfalls
The water would slow down the desent of any asteroid or comit, and the temperature difference would cause it to explode. Unless it was a really, really big one, but anything big enough to cause that would be a huge ecological disaster to the entire planet. Unless it fell really long ago before the last ice age and that would be irrelevant because the ice shoves would have destroyed it 🤷♂️. I really don't think it's anything from space.....my guess is geological pressure tubes explosion or something along that stuff.
Similar has been found and studied in Alpena, MI. They think it's kinda like "lungs" where the flow changes direction to and from the lake throughout the day. I hope someone reaches out to the researchers there since they have a head start (Thunder Bay, Lake Huron)
No. The sinkholes in Alpena and Pigeon River Country are due to the subsurface rock being Limestone. It's basic Karst. Nothing magical. Just remnant cave formation/ vertical shaft formation. If you look at the sinkhole pathway in the Pigeon River State Forest E of Gaylord, they are in alignment. It's possible, maybe probable, that there are horizontal passages connecting them at depth. Vertical shafts form Independsntly of horizontal and connect depths of dissolution. The bedrock is Lk Mi is Dolomite & Limestone- Dissolutional type rocks. Nothing magical here. Just basic Karst.
@tjh4115 the researchers had to investigate to determine what you repeated here - which means they have knowledge of the general processes that COULD cause this, as well as those they confirmed in that area. All I'm saying is don't waste years getting to that point. Call the folks with a head start. A conversation doesn't cost anything and has tremendous opportunity attached Sorry, but you seem to be just replying with an authoritative "no" to try to flex your knowledge. It's good knowledge, but don't be so negative before anyone even discusses it. That's unwise when dealing with geological processes
@@seanjones21 well i am a specialist in the subject. 5 yrs in college. decades of field experience. was once recognized as "famous" in s small circle of scientists. so there's that. and given my advanced age, trying to reach out and share knowledge is typically received with ageism. so there is that too.
@@Dragondaughter9 I respect your experience, but this is RUclips. None of us know your CV or background and we're part of the "general public". You know, the folks who pay for the grants. I don't mean that negatively, but we do have thoughts and sometimes they're useful. Sorry I struck your nerve
Reminds me of the “Carolina bay” lakes and depressions of eastern North and South Carolina. They are all oval shaped and oriented in the same direction. Some have filled in to the point that they no longer hold water, but they’re still evident. Scientists argue over the origin of them, some claiming meteor strikes, others saying high winds as the oceans receded caused them, and even some maintaining that they are spawning beds of some massive prehistoric fish!
It was a meteoric impact by a breaking up body that partly hit the Laurentide Ice sheet as the bigger piece hit at the PeurtoRican Trench, pushing earth off her axis. The place discussed here is where the impact crater should be in that scenario and remember that there was a few miles of ice at that time in this spot. The ice blasted into space and the atmosphere, and came down across the eastern seaboard to become the Carolina Bays. Ice and water impact zone. This was 12,900 years ago according to scientists. This happened at 'The Younger Dryas' boundary.
OR.... it's from one of the several fault lines that run through the state and lakes. The Keewanaw peninsula is formed from an ancient lava flow, iron mountain.... We've had earth quakes in Michigan, several in the last 20 years.
White man was in a CAVE in these times. A neanderthal. Same time the ethiopian black were building pyramids in the sunlight. Beginning mathematics. Beginning letters and numbers. Whites were busy with his arab brother in the caucus mountains caves. True history. The sunrays were hotter then. It's the reason they don't want global warming. It sends them back into the caves again. Vikings had a prediction of the sunlight getting hotter again on their skin. They called it ragnarok.
@@denisehaley9271 the mid continental rift isn't a fault line. The mid continental rift formed back when Pangea was breaking up and the North American plate and African plate were moving apart. The rift was the result of the plate being pulled and then after the two plates separated the rift closed back up. The rift, as you mentioned does go through the Keewanaw peninsula but it also goes through Michigan as well as Minnesota and Wisconsin. Lake Michigan and parts if Michigan and Wisconsin sit in the middle of the rift like a tongue. So, yes Michigan has experience quakes but they aren't centered anywhere near the rift. They are, in fact, centered several hundred miles south in Missouri. So, most Midwestern states have experienced those same quakes with greater damage.
Genesis 7:11 In the 600 year of Noah’s life on the 17th day of the second month on that day all the springs of the great deep burst forth in the floodgates of the heavens were open. Proverbs 8:22-31 this verse mentions the springs of the deep becoming fixed when the heavens were established
What's the difference between a sink hole on land and one under the water? Cause where I live in Michigan there's two sink holes on my family property and a lake that's not far from there that's considered a bottomless lake cause it's a small lake that the sheriff's department has gone down some 250ft and didn't find the bottom.
There are a lot of these holes located in 80 to 150 feet of water as well. I always called them "Meteor holes" because that's what they looked like to me. The holes are great spots to catch fish at certain times.
@@patriciamcneilly9748 Jeez, sorry Pat, I was indulging in a little rogues humor - a reference to the OceanGate implosion last year. Not interested in a ride to the bottom of Lake Michigan, ever. Love the lake, and all the fantastic geography and places all around it, though. Spent some time snorkeling and camping around Rock Island off the tip of Door County one summer, as well as hitchhiking (!) up and down the coast. Cheers! 🍻
"New science, new data. Which is just scratching the surface" Translation- oh, Bob had a crazy idea that makes a little bit of sense. We got nothing else right now.
People- please learn more science... The term sinkhole is as misused as the term Theory. A better term is collapse feature or depression. Sinkhole denotes a specific type of collapse feature. Frequently when folks say they have a Theory they should be saying hypothesis- an educated guess. Until you know facts, the less specific term should be used. But i'm Not holding my breath. Even educated folks seem to be getting more stoopid.
@@GeorgeThree oh gee. That is so important. Thank you for letting me know. It would be great if you pointed them out specifically so I & others don't repeat the same mistakes. I will say some spelling errors could be from phat fingers. But zi digress.
@@Satchmojones He spoke clearly. He was off the shoreline near Two Rivers Wisconsin in 480ft of water. He scanned the bottom and found some steep drops of 40ft. This is uncommon in Lake Michigan because most of the lake bottom is like a bowl with little to no significant structure particularly the bottom half
I have also north out of Two Rivers. Had to laugh they are using our fishing sonar in the vid's. When I looked with downscan it was cloudy so I assumed they were springs bubbling up, not sink holes.
sinkholes in the lake? so there's running water deep enough under the lake to hollow out terrain without collapsing the sea bed right away? and depending on how big these sink holes are, wouldn't it change the surface level of the lake?
Genesis 7:11 King James Version 11 In the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.
Just speculation on my part.....there were supposedly numerous civilizations before us and even before the glaciers that formed the Great Lakes. Maybe there's an empire under all the sediment of the lake bed. Isn't there something similar to the Bermuda Triangle in Lake Michigan? So many interesting and fun things in our world.
@@Dragondaughter9 if mankind disrupts the earth causing an “event”, is that considered geological science? I’m not saying you’re wrong, but not everything is so black and white. Drilling can cause “science” to happen. And yes, USO’s (unidentified submergible objects) are real, according to our government. The Navy had seen them. The Air Force had seen them. Civilians had seen them. It has been covered by every major news outlet. Anything is possible.
It's probably where the lights fly out of. People have been talking about weird shit there for years. Even the native Americans talked about lights dancing in the sky
Im glad you believe that also... everything covered in mud sand and water. They had tunnels through out the continent. I believe that the city was under what we call Michigan. I've seen my own evidence but its hard for people to fathom it.
Remember, the Fermilan (analogous to CERN) isn’t far from there: Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab), located in Batavia, Illinois, near Chicago, is a United States Department of Energy national laboratory specializing in high-energy particle physics.
I recall that there were allegedly cavernous cavities under the lake bottom from millions of years of salt pockets and physical changes within the earth from time & geological changes.
Is funding starting you dry up? Now you've "found" these holes in the floor of this lake .How many mapping expeditions have been run over the years now in 2024 you suddenly find these holes ? What now how many millions are going to be spend on find about out these holes ? Is it going to cure world hunger or solve Cancer or world peace or put roofs over people heads if not why spend that kind of money? Dont get wrongits interesting but maybe start finding private finance for these projects instead of the taxpayers
Yup, safely from a satellite, that's exactly how i'd explore this phenomena. Not in a boat, "we're gonna need a bigger boat.'' Not in a scuba-Steve costume. But from a long way away.
What's always blown my mind is how 30 miles of dirt and 300 feet of elevation are all the keeps many of these lakes form eventually draining down Fox to the Mississippi.
I LOVE that book. I agree with the contrast it drew with Lord of the Flies - which had such a dismal view of human nature. Humans being of infinite variety, there are always going to be bad people. Selfish people. Hateful people. But I believe that most of us are mostly good. Cheers.
Gonna point out that Lake Michigan has a Stonehenge aswell that is over 10,000 years old. I would like to try to visit some day as I think it would be fun.
Yes.
You should like Michigan is awesome Michigan is pretty cool the further north you go the better a lot of people don't go up north north and I mean like by Cadillac, traverse City, Mackinaw, escanaba, Gladstone.
It is actually pretty warm up north in the summer. Very sandy ...
@@sunloved9202 What an idiotic comment, “a lot of people don’t go up north” and then you include Mackinaw in that list. Mackinac Island, a destination that sees MILLIONS of people every year.
You arose with idiotic behavior. Your not far off from your judgment.
@@NorthernChev What an idiotic comment. Macinac Island: population 500 in the winter, up to 20,000 through the summer does not equal “MILLIONS.” By your measure you’d think it was Detroit Motor City MF.
Put Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy on the case A.S.A.P.
Facts!
😂😂😭😭😭😭😭👌
Jacques Cousteau!
Lmaooo
You must watch a lot of cartoons to come up with that answer lol
Possibility: In their effort to understand the formation they inadvertently unplug the lake’s drain, and swoosh- it all drains away to the sea through an underground cave network.
Time to layoff of the science fiction
@@gs1100ed Yeah, like underground cave networks don’t even exist anywhere in the world right?! And at about 580 feet above sea level that water doesn’t even want to bother finding a path to the sea. 🙄. It’s like OMG 😳 caves don’t even exist and even if they did we know it would be because ghosts 😱 were mining ⛏️ for gold 🏴☠️💰back in the day.
If you can think it, it could be possible.
Need examples? Just look at your phone. Once a so-called "pipe dream", is now reality. Without your imagination, nothing would be possible.
Have a nice day.
@@gs1100ednot science fiction. Stop watching cartoons.🤭
Who knows?
People assume that land is solid. The entire earth is like swiss cheese.
Yes indeed. Mottled from cyclical cataclysms. It's clear. Look up wormwoodite. It's a deep blue crystal that's spongey in nature. All it needs is pressure to burst like geysers and then the liquification of it all. Which is pretty interesting. We keep finding structures under layers of mud.
@@Xlr8torZ28 well, if you want to be technical. Atoms are just energy, they have nothing solid about them. What makes matter solid is entropy and the electromagnetic field each atom generates.
So, no. Solid matter, including ourselves are not solid. We are just a bunch of cold electromagnetically stable atoms. However, the earth isn't like Swiss cheese. Limestone is the most common stone to be worn away creating cave systems due to the calcium and deterioration by acids into calcium carbonate.
The glaciers stripped the basin of that layer and most other sedimentary layers that had built up over time. In fact, in Michigan some of the oldest exposed rock layers, are from the carboniferous period.
But the fact that there is, so much sand is because glaciers and water. The sandstone layers were worn away. The entire area between the Appilation Mountains an the Rocky Mountains was an inland sea. Before that, it was ocean floor. Which is part of the reason why Petoskey stones are so abundant in Michigan and along Lake Michigan's shoreline.
The Earth is like pitch. It seems very very solid, but with the right vibration it liquefies.
And you should seee the mice...
Actually, there is no gravity. The world sucks.
Lake Erie has those, lake-bottom springs known for years as "blue holes". At least one of them is on land
blue holes are typically where an underground river surfaces. I've never heard of that term being used for an underwater spring into a lake that doesn't have an independent expression. Do you remember where you read that what what they are referred to? I'l like to look it up. thanks.
@@Dragondaughter9 I worked in Erie Marsh, an early research wet;and. The land-based blue hole I know of is there. Others are offshore at that end of Lake Erie. And a spring is where an underground flow surfaces; if you want to call that flow a river that's fine with me.
@@RichardFoster-v6r Yes, there's The Blue Hole of Castalia, and I think another, smaller one also not too far from Cedar Point and Marblehead.
Erm, ackshually..... @@Dragondaughter9
@@Dragondaughter9your assertion is unfounded and admittedly based on limited knowledge. Way to undermine someone and ask for a source without providing one.
Absolutely amazing how little we know about life under water
Lol people that pay attention know why..
Good thing you painted over it with that cool ocean swatch in MS Paint. The last thing I need right now is to be scratching my head. Thanks NBC 26, you're the real heroes!
🙌😂 Underrated & Best comment ... this is what i came here for loFl
Yea not clickbait at all lol. I'm still an autist. I just had to know what was under those two boxes, and to be honest, I was a little underwhelmed. 😂
Stop kvetching. I think the story is interesting as hell.
😂😂
Lake Michigan, is wicked, beautiful, And mysterious. Always will be. ❤ Lake Michigan. Just respect it. 😊
Absolutely. I grew up on the top of it. I spent many a day on the beach. I've been way out in the middle. It's beautiful but wild and dangerous.
@@melindatarnow5713 those water spouts , are wild.
They are not sinkholes. They are military depth charge testing sites created by the Manitowoc Shipbuilding Company which built submarines during WW2 and did the testing in Lake Michigan in 1941.
Yep
Must be atomic depth charges for sinkholes that big
Depth charges arent supposed to explode on the seabed, though, they explode while sinking.
If YOU know that, couldn't the people in the video have uncovered that history?!
When they aren't intentionally gaslighting us, they can't even provide decent news.
@@ORLY911 They explode at the depth they are set for.
Curiosity and science, for the sake of understanding and imagination! These are the things society should focus on! Love it
Too bad a lot of scientists accept “theories” rather than try to disprove or prove them anymore. Not to mention science that try to are blackballed and there work seen as “fake or misinformation”
Exactly, stop spending money on migrants and give it to these scientists to do something interesting.
@@YomamaYodaddyYobjtchassGranny Yawn, another conspiracy theorist. We didn't get to moon and back on "fake science".
@@ford289cid7 tell us you're gay without telling us you're gay.
I never thought Manitowoc would come back into my life via a RUclips feed. You have a very pretty town.
I saw a Manitowoc toilet paper dispenser in a public bathroom the other day.
excellent beer, too! and a good maritime museum & a surprising history of building submarines, of all things. Worth a visit.
Manitowoc and Oconomowoc are both fun names to pronounce
@@4444Rosemaryhere’s more fun wisconsin words:
Wauwautosa
Okonimowoc
Loc de flambeau
somebody tell cushbomb
UFO entrances
😮 🛸
Sort of like garage doors
I wouldn’t be messing around there after dark 🤠
Dude made a joke, but undoubtedly many of his likes are from people who believe it.
Its exactly what they are.
Could it have anything to do with morton salt mining the salt under the lake?
Yes lots of salt under the lake there is 2 salt mines in Windsor now closed. One in Detroit. There was sinkholes in Windsor too.
The mine would have flooded first. They haven't flooded.
Geniuses tried to bury spent nuclear fuel rods and other radioactive waste underneath Lake Huron. Hopefully they never did.
@@00leaveralone
You can rest assured that they did.
No actual info about what was discovered . Pointless .
This is modern day news. This is expected.
Where did they find this? The guy didn't disclose what beach he was at.
They said they discovered sinkholes, multiple times. Are you deaf?
@@AxlAX Look at the map at 0:53 and see if you can figure it out.
Yeah, pretty much, oh look holes in the lake bottom, ooooo, fascinating.
Blah.
Sailors did not even like sailing on this lake. Its unpredictable.
Lake Michigan is not so bad, Superior is the worst one, they didn't like, they still don't because it's so cold that if you die in it they'll never recover your body.
Lake superior's is a inland Sea. Its very unforgiving but so beautiful if you ever get a chance if you're not from Michigan go to pictured Rock so beautiful. Upper Michigan has over 470 waterfalls
@@sunloved9202- If it's not salty, than it's not an "inland sea". 🙄
Ima Sailor and never once sailed on a lake, OPEN OCEANS is where real Sailors sail. 🏴☠️
@@buzz5969 yeah tell that to the massive amount of ship wrecks in Lake Superior
^^^^no offense but you don't know much about the Great Lakes and its maritime history.
They are quite likely meteor craters. There are a great deal of undiscovered craters, as is evident by the recently discovered crater in Quebec, CA.
Makes sense….
1 missed crater is evidence of a great deal of undiscovered craters. I think there is a crater is someone's brain😂
That many meteorite craters in such a small area? Very unlikely.
More likely they are sinkholes
The water would slow down the desent of any asteroid or comit, and the temperature difference would cause it to explode. Unless it was a really, really big one, but anything big enough to cause that would be a huge ecological disaster to the entire planet. Unless it fell really long ago before the last ice age and that would be irrelevant because the ice shoves would have destroyed it 🤷♂️. I really don't think it's anything from space.....my guess is geological pressure tubes explosion or something along that stuff.
That was my first thought.
Similar has been found and studied in Alpena, MI. They think it's kinda like "lungs" where the flow changes direction to and from the lake throughout the day. I hope someone reaches out to the researchers there since they have a head start (Thunder Bay, Lake Huron)
No. The sinkholes in Alpena and Pigeon River Country are due to the subsurface rock being Limestone. It's basic Karst. Nothing magical. Just remnant cave formation/ vertical shaft formation.
If you look at the sinkhole pathway in the Pigeon River State Forest E of Gaylord, they are in alignment. It's possible, maybe probable, that there are horizontal passages connecting them at depth. Vertical shafts form Independsntly of horizontal and connect depths of dissolution.
The bedrock is Lk Mi is Dolomite & Limestone- Dissolutional type rocks. Nothing magical here. Just basic Karst.
@tjh4115 the researchers had to investigate to determine what you repeated here - which means they have knowledge of the general processes that COULD cause this, as well as those they confirmed in that area.
All I'm saying is don't waste years getting to that point. Call the folks with a head start. A conversation doesn't cost anything and has tremendous opportunity attached
Sorry, but you seem to be just replying with an authoritative "no" to try to flex your knowledge. It's good knowledge, but don't be so negative before anyone even discusses it. That's unwise when dealing with geological processes
😂
@@seanjones21 well i am a specialist in the subject. 5 yrs in college. decades of field experience. was once recognized as "famous" in s small circle of scientists. so there's that. and given my advanced age, trying to reach out and share knowledge is typically received with ageism. so there is that too.
@@Dragondaughter9 I respect your experience, but this is RUclips. None of us know your CV or background and we're part of the "general public". You know, the folks who pay for the grants. I don't mean that negatively, but we do have thoughts and sometimes they're useful. Sorry I struck your nerve
Reminds me of the “Carolina bay” lakes and depressions of eastern North and South Carolina. They are all oval shaped and oriented in the same direction. Some have filled in to the point that they no longer hold water, but they’re still evident. Scientists argue over the origin of them, some claiming meteor strikes, others saying high winds as the oceans receded caused them, and even some maintaining that they are spawning beds of some massive prehistoric fish!
They suspect splatter from a supervolcanoe eruption may have caused them too.
It was a meteoric impact by a breaking up body that partly hit the Laurentide Ice sheet as the bigger piece hit at the PeurtoRican Trench, pushing earth off her axis. The place discussed here is where the impact crater should be in that scenario and remember that there was a few miles of ice at that time in this spot. The ice blasted into space and the atmosphere, and came down across the eastern seaboard to become the Carolina Bays. Ice and water impact zone. This was 12,900 years ago according to scientists. This happened at 'The Younger Dryas' boundary.
Well, that spawning beds theory is ridiculous.
Gas from ancient organic materials covered by silt from the glacier has escaped after the glacier receded, leaving a sink hole. That's my theory.
OR.... it's from one of the several fault lines that run through the state and lakes.
The Keewanaw peninsula is formed from an ancient lava flow, iron mountain....
We've had earth quakes in Michigan, several in the last 20 years.
White man was in a CAVE in these times. A neanderthal. Same time the ethiopian black were building pyramids in the sunlight. Beginning mathematics. Beginning letters and numbers. Whites were busy with his arab brother in the caucus mountains caves. True history. The sunrays were hotter then. It's the reason they don't want global warming. It sends them back into the caves again. Vikings had a prediction of the sunlight getting hotter again on their skin. They called it ragnarok.
Reported
Portals from hell is my theory
@@denisehaley9271 the mid continental rift isn't a fault line. The mid continental rift formed back when Pangea was breaking up and the North American plate and African plate were moving apart. The rift was the result of the plate being pulled and then after the two plates separated the rift closed back up.
The rift, as you mentioned does go through the Keewanaw peninsula but it also goes through Michigan as well as Minnesota and Wisconsin. Lake Michigan and parts if Michigan and Wisconsin sit in the middle of the rift like a tongue.
So, yes Michigan has experience quakes but they aren't centered anywhere near the rift. They are, in fact, centered several hundred miles south in Missouri. So, most Midwestern states have experienced those same quakes with greater damage.
Way to go Brendon and Dusty! Congratulations on your discovery and contribution!
Thank goodness someone is covering this mysterious phenomenon. We need to hear more about this topic. Well done Preston Stober!
Sleeping Bear until she wakes up and gives a helluva growl.
Genesis 7:11 In the 600 year of Noah’s life on the 17th day of the second month on that day all the springs of the great deep burst forth in the floodgates of the heavens were open.
Proverbs 8:22-31 this verse mentions the springs of the deep becoming fixed when the heavens were established
666
@@aceboogie2021 Proverbs 13:20 “Walk with the wise and become wise; associate with fools and get in trouble.”
How much in government grants are they going to need to study this now?
They were ecstatic to have a reason to beg a new publicly funded revenue stream.
What's the difference between a sink hole on land and one under the water? Cause where I live in Michigan there's two sink holes on my family property and a lake that's not far from there that's considered a bottomless lake cause it's a small lake that the sheriff's department has gone down some 250ft and didn't find the bottom.
Use sonar to find the depth of the pit,duh!
Thank you.
That looks like a star fort.
There are a lot of these holes located in 80 to 150 feet of water as well. I always called them "Meteor holes" because that's what they looked like to me. The holes are great spots to catch fish at certain times.
The well spring for all our rivers. The aquifer is deeper than we know. Just a thought. 💭 😎✅
Maker content 1:39 / Pre-roll ads - 2:37
... any YT can't figure out why people want to use ad-blocking software.
I can’t wait for the government to approve a $30M research bill for this!!!
Screw the veterans, homeless, orphans & foster kids, the needy elderly, urban decay, et al. Academia needs a new revenue stream.
what was the intro shot with? A Samsung SIII?
Is there private submersible tours available? "LakeGate"?
No, though the lake tends to be clear, there are sandstone "reefs" and currents that can be problematic. Surface vessels only.
@@patriciamcneilly9748 Jeez, sorry Pat, I was indulging in a little rogues humor - a reference to the OceanGate implosion last year. Not interested in a ride to the bottom of Lake Michigan, ever. Love the lake, and all the fantastic geography and places all around it, though. Spent some time snorkeling and camping around Rock Island off the tip of Door County one summer, as well as hitchhiking (!) up and down the coast. Cheers! 🍻
Thanks for this interesting reporting!
Just leave it alone!!!!!😡
USOs Base Entrance?
Watch they gonna fuck with it & find out!!!
"New science, new data. Which is just scratching the surface"
Translation- oh, Bob had a crazy idea that makes a little bit of sense. We got nothing else right now.
Exciting🎉❤
So amazing!!
Funny how they are already in a
"government protected" area.
Right. . . And pretty soon we’ll hear “nothing to see here folks, move along move along.”
how friggin' empty is your life that you have spice everything with bullshit conspiracy theories?
The Legend lives on
"From the Chippewa on down.... " 🎵🎵🎶🎶
Just don't turn the wrong stone over, you'll get arrested .
Go eff a couch!
Fascinating news, thanks!
People- please learn more science...
The term sinkhole is as misused as the term Theory. A better term is collapse feature or depression. Sinkhole denotes a specific type of collapse feature. Frequently when folks say they have a Theory they should be saying hypothesis- an educated guess. Until you know facts, the less specific term should be used.
But i'm Not holding my breath. Even educated folks seem to be getting more stoopid.
First learn proper grammer, then you can lecture others.
You seem fun.
@@Dragondaughter9 be less condescending and we'll start carrying a dictionary to satisfy your demands. Deal?
I noticed a few errors in your punctuation, sentence structure, and spelling....
@@GeorgeThree oh gee. That is so important. Thank you for letting me know. It would be great if you pointed them out specifically so I & others don't repeat the same mistakes.
I will say some spelling errors could be from phat fingers. But zi digress.
They look almost like cenotes, they are also close enough to be impacts from the Sudbury crater. Pieces were found in Minnesota
The ancients dug em. The great lakes weren't there before the Great Disaster happened. History has been covered up so they won't tell you.
😂...proof? Lol why ask of course not
😂😂😂😂
Nice article Preston!
I've seen some like holes off two rivers in 480 ft it dropped 40 ft then back up
Lol what? Do you speak english?
@@Satchmojones He spoke clearly. He was off the shoreline near Two Rivers Wisconsin in 480ft of water. He scanned the bottom and found some steep drops of 40ft. This is uncommon in Lake Michigan because most of the lake bottom is like a bowl with little to no significant structure particularly the bottom half
I have also north out of Two Rivers. Had to laugh they are using our fishing sonar in the vid's. When I looked with downscan it was cloudy so I assumed they were springs bubbling up, not sink holes.
sinkholes in the lake? so there's running water deep enough under the lake to hollow out terrain without collapsing the sea bed right away? and depending on how big these sink holes are, wouldn't it change the surface level of the lake?
there were cities before the flood
It’s about 300 plus sinkholes in a 30mins radius from my home. Also do your research most lakes just a sinkhole not manmade.
Grand canyon was full of Egyptian artifacts.
Wisconsin is home of the aztec original tribe. Aztlan
God opened the deeps when He flooded the Earth. Plain and simple.
It's what happened during and after the Great Flood of Noah's day! God is great!
Fairy tales and ancient astronauts theorists' brains are full of mush.
I wonder if the floor of the Lake gave way while a ship was passing by would they feel the suction??
It would entirely depend on the size of the hole.
Bible is true
Genesis 7:11
King James Version
11 In the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.
Just speculation on my part.....there were supposedly numerous civilizations before us and even before the glaciers that formed the Great Lakes. Maybe there's an empire under all the sediment of the lake bed. Isn't there something similar to the Bermuda Triangle in Lake Michigan? So many interesting and fun things in our world.
Some day they will come out and say it’s related to extra terrestrials. It may be a long time before that happens though. 🙂↔️
No. It's just Geologic Science.
That's the first thing I thought of too! Right or wrong, I was remembering the reports of UFOs sighted near Lake Mich
Ancient astronaut theorists would disagree…
Yeah you can never be too careful with those extra testicles.
@@Dragondaughter9 if mankind disrupts the earth causing an “event”, is that considered geological science? I’m not saying you’re wrong, but not everything is so black and white. Drilling can cause “science” to happen. And yes, USO’s (unidentified submergible objects) are real, according to our government. The Navy had seen them. The Air Force had seen them. Civilians had seen them. It has been covered by every major news outlet. Anything is possible.
It's probably where the lights fly out of. People have been talking about weird shit there for years. Even the native Americans talked about lights dancing in the sky
There’s an ancient city underground.
Where???
Im glad you believe that also... everything covered in mud sand and water. They had tunnels through out the continent. I believe that the city was under what we call Michigan. I've seen my own evidence but its hard for people to fathom it.
Ford did do some heavy underground digging and mining back in the day.
I believe they found something similar in Seneca lake. The thought was they are collapsed methane pockets
Trumps fault
Right. He had to have done something😂 MI AG files some state charge out of the blue.
TDS is real😊
Remember, the Fermilan (analogous to CERN) isn’t far from there:
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab), located in Batavia, Illinois, near Chicago, is a United States Department of Energy national laboratory specializing in high-energy particle physics.
Wow! Great interesting find! Thank you research team!
I am perfectly whelmed by this video.
I’m not saying it’s aliens, but it probably aliens ;)
I recall that there were allegedly cavernous cavities under the lake bottom from millions of years of salt pockets and physical changes within the earth from time & geological changes.
China coming through!!,
They are so happy, more grants.
Lava tubes under there
People find lava rock washing up on Michigan shoreline all the time
I find it on the shores of Two Creeks often.
@@barbarapeters1078 amazing where is two creeks located off you don’t mind me asking?!!
You gave any pics of your findings?
Really interesting 🤔!
Is funding starting you dry up? Now you've "found" these holes in the floor of this lake .How many mapping expeditions have been run over the years now in 2024 you suddenly find these holes ? What now how many millions are going to be spend on find about out these holes ?
Is it going to cure world hunger or solve Cancer or world peace or put roofs over people heads if not why spend that kind of money? Dont get wrongits interesting but maybe start finding private finance for these projects instead of the taxpayers
Do they go down to the salt beds beneath the lake?
Cool!
Yup, safely from a satellite, that's exactly how i'd explore this phenomena. Not in a boat, "we're gonna need a bigger boat.'' Not in a scuba-Steve costume. But from a long way away.
Wow, this is going to change everyone's lives for the better....
The cure for cancer and poverty is down there
Cool. I'll try to check it out.
👽👽👽
They’re gonna find a lot of empty cement shoes off the coast of Chicago.
LOL, good one!
So Cool
My bath tub also has a mysterious ring around it. Do you think there is a connection?
What's always blown my mind is how 30 miles of dirt and 300 feet of elevation are all the keeps many of these lakes form eventually draining down Fox to the Mississippi.
The Chicago and Rock rivers already connect to the Mississippi by canal. In glacial times the lake drained down that valley.
Stobor spelled backwards is robots. See Heinlein's Tunnel in the Sky.
I LOVE that book. I agree with the contrast it drew with Lord of the Flies - which had such a dismal view of human nature. Humans being of infinite variety, there are always going to be bad people. Selfish people. Hateful people. But I believe that most of us are mostly good. Cheers.
Bloody hell they are just holes under the lake
I believe there is an aquifer below Georgian bay that extends to Lake Ontario.
imagine being given this assignment - 'hey, go out and look into these holes in the lake', he made the best of it though :)
His name is colon?
His accent is wild
If you’re “ unturning “ stones, you’re putting them back, covering up what you found.
The planet is alive and growing.
Still.
What's the methane measurements in these craters?
I'm thinking, "Mermaid retirement home"? Either that or, "Loch Ness Monster Spawning Bed". Or..."Earth's Butth*le"?
Very interesting there’s a reason why there called the Great Lakes
Dude. They knew about that place in the nineties.
Ah yes, but at the time, no academics jumped on the bandwagon to whip up interest and get themselves some funding - so it's all BRAND NEW, folks.
why is this popular in grand rapids
I'm in Windsor. Wondering if the 1987 salt mine collapse in Louisiana is relative. The one that reversed the Mississippi for two weeks.
The crust underwater caving in is crazy
"It's aliens."
- Giorgio A. Tsoukalos
We have a glacier lakes in NY that are bottomless with glacier water. Green Lake in Fayetteville.
I just joined Michigan mineralogy society I'm excited to learn more and be apart of finding things