Mount Mazama Collapse - Animated

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  • Опубликовано: 4 апр 2019
  • An excerpt from Crater Lake National Park's park film, Crater Lake: Into the Deep.

Комментарии • 62

  • @badpiggies988
    @badpiggies988 Год назад +28

    Props to the cameraman for going back in time and recording this

    • @Don.Challenger
      @Don.Challenger 11 месяцев назад +1

      Maybe thought's of retroactive pay on the way helped propel that activity.

  • @PhilAndersonOutside
    @PhilAndersonOutside 9 месяцев назад +18

    Could you imagine being a Native American, living just a safe enough distance away. Then, after the eruption, maybe the following year, hiking up to the crater rim and looking not at the blue lake surrounded by trees we see now, but nothing but devastation, plus a gigantic hole some 4,000' deep.

    • @matthewreyes2401
      @matthewreyes2401 7 месяцев назад +1

      Fucking wild to imagine right

    • @hertzer2000
      @hertzer2000 8 дней назад +2

      "This ain't my day!" - Native American

  • @jasonhilton59
    @jasonhilton59 3 года назад +17

    Dude talking: “😀All the life within 30 miles of the summit 😃was just killed instantly😁”
    Me:😳

  • @LadyAnuB
    @LadyAnuB 3 года назад +21

    And now it's a gorgeous lake.

    • @MathewWoodard
      @MathewWoodard 2 года назад +4

      It’s the deepest lake in the United States

    • @russelljohnson1030
      @russelljohnson1030 2 года назад +2

      @@MathewWoodard and its still an active volcano

    • @badpiggies988
      @badpiggies988 Год назад +1

      I’d like to visit there someday

    • @lindakay9552
      @lindakay9552 13 дней назад

      ​@@MathewWoodard
      And 7th deepest in the world.

    • @lindakay9552
      @lindakay9552 13 дней назад

      ​@badpiggies988 it's totally worth it. I have swam in several times. I used to live in Bend. Crater Lake, and the surrounding park, is like nowhere else on earth.

  • @jasminaalm
    @jasminaalm 3 года назад +17

    Thanks so much for this ! I last visited in 1965, and there wasn't as much information at the time. It is a beautiful eerie place. Now I live too close to the Long Valley supervolcano, and just north of the volcanic field at Salton Sea. We really do live in the Ring of Fire, Cascadia subduction zone.

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 3 года назад

      1965, what a year!

  • @lindakay9552
    @lindakay9552 13 дней назад +1

    I've swam in Crater Lake several times. It is unlike anywhere else on earth. ❤

  • @everettamador9885
    @everettamador9885 3 года назад +5

    This eruption was bigger than Mount Saint Helens!

    • @DeezNuts-ec1rh
      @DeezNuts-ec1rh 3 года назад +1

      116x bigger

    • @SunnyIlha
      @SunnyIlha Год назад +5

      It *dwarfed* Mt. St. Helens.

    • @operator0
      @operator0 8 месяцев назад

      While Mt St Helens was a decently sized eruption, there have been at least 4 eruptions since Krakatoa that are larger, including one just a year ago. Mt St Helens is famous because of two factors;
      One, it happened in the lower 48 states of America.
      Two, it was the first time Geologists were able to predict an eruption.
      If this eruption had happened in the Aleutian Islands, or the South Pacific, there's a high likelihood that you would have never heard of it.

  • @kenoverby6302
    @kenoverby6302 3 года назад +7

    The Las Vegas Stratosphere Height is 1,148 Feet, Yup, Crater lake is deep!

  • @dwjoseph59
    @dwjoseph59 4 года назад +4

    Amazing & terrifying, great video 😳😳😮😮😁😁👍👍!!

  • @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879
    @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879 3 года назад +7

    it fell into it's own footprint? ah-phhht....inside job.
    seriously. it was due to the literal undermining inside the mountain. huge job....all inside.
    ...I will show myself out.

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 3 года назад +2

      Your joke game indicates you should be a dad.

    • @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879
      @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879 3 года назад

      @@sid2112 should be? ...you think this is natural talent? I'm a stay at home dad. takes time, lack of devotion and years of being devoid of the will to live to make shit jokes like that with such ease. 👍
      .....goddamn kids these days.....

  • @michaelstanford3224
    @michaelstanford3224 3 года назад +2

    Loved him in southern comfort and the legend of Billie Jean...

    • @latinguy67
      @latinguy67 3 года назад

      Remember he was also in Outrageous Fortune with Bette Midler and Shelly Long

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 3 года назад

      @Kyle Gildersleeve LOVED HIM IN SOUTHERN COMFORT AND THE LEGEND OF BILLIE JEAN

  • @darrinsiberia
    @darrinsiberia 3 года назад +1

    I should go to bed... but nah I'll watch why a gigantic mountain once collapsed into its own footprint. Sure.

  • @Rocket39Smoke14
    @Rocket39Smoke14 Месяц назад

    Satisfying.

  • @bigrooster6893
    @bigrooster6893 2 года назад +3

    San Francisco stratovolcano in Arizona was way taller it was almost 18,000 feet before it massive collapse.

    • @JETZcorp
      @JETZcorp Год назад +2

      Arizona's base level is higher though. The Cascades rise from pretty close to sea level. That's why something like Rainier looks so much more impressive than Mt Whitney, or Denali compared to Everest. Lower peak, larger mountain. I'm not sure the context of the volcano you're talking about, but this is something I always try and take into account when summit height comes up.

    • @alexburke1899
      @alexburke1899 10 месяцев назад

      I believe that volcanic field is on top of the southern part of the Colorado Plateau, and that plateau averages 6000ft and those peak’s start at 7000ft, so it had a bit of lot of help to reach 18k feet and was actually only 11,000 or 12,000 feet above sea level if it wasn’t on top of the Colorado plateau.
      Southern Arizona is lifted by the Basin and Range uplift and the Northern part of Arizona is on the Colorado plateau, so any mountain in Arizona will seem higher because of how high above sea level most of the state is.

  • @r7s8f
    @r7s8f 4 года назад +2

    Dang 😳

  • @blakemcleary2535
    @blakemcleary2535 2 года назад

    I visited yesterday and there new stuff there last time i went was 2019 and a long time when my dads grandpa went there he found obsidian and a red crystal

  • @user-hi8rf7dh4e
    @user-hi8rf7dh4e Месяц назад

    I think the collapse of Mazama was a lot more recent than 7,700 years bp.

  • @CreeperBoyGamingyt
    @CreeperBoyGamingyt 4 года назад +3

    Terrifying

  • @TheyForcedMyHandLE
    @TheyForcedMyHandLE 3 года назад +2

    I like how they show the mountain falling into the lava and yet the lava doesn't rise.

    • @badpiggies988
      @badpiggies988 11 месяцев назад

      That must have been so terrifying

  • @huh-by2lr
    @huh-by2lr 3 года назад

    wow

  • @freddaugherty7829
    @freddaugherty7829 5 месяцев назад

    Where do you get these years????

    • @tuunaes
      @tuunaes 4 месяца назад

      For example wood buried by eruption products can be dated. (radiocarbon dating)

  • @geoffreylee5199
    @geoffreylee5199 2 года назад

    Named after a running club?

  • @cwulfe1
    @cwulfe1 3 года назад

    Possibly, probably, uh huh....

  • @jackfishbock5102
    @jackfishbock5102 3 года назад

    How do they know all this.

    • @mtnmotoadv
      @mtnmotoadv 2 года назад

      Studying the geology of the site. A lot of it is assumption and theory but interesting none the less.

  • @SunnyIlha
    @SunnyIlha Год назад

    2:17
    2:34
    2:38
    2:57 it took between only 2 to 3 hours for *Mount* Mazama to become a *hole* in the Earth.
    *1:57*
    *2:58*
    All planetary Life on the face of the Earth there for *30* *MILES* in every direction was *instantly* *killed* *VEI* *7*
    It happened just 7700 years ago.
    Native Americans WATCHED this *happen* before them.
    This was a mountain
    *higher* than Mt. Rainer
    *falling* *into* *itself*
    It created what would
    become CRATER LAKE.

  • @Cheezcurdz-xx4rf
    @Cheezcurdz-xx4rf 3 года назад +1

    the eruption of Mount Mazama was a VEI level 7 just 1 level behind Yellowstone!

    • @aaronmueller1560
      @aaronmueller1560 3 года назад +2

      True, but the differences between them are still large. This eruption was 1/8 the size of the smallest VEI8 eruption, and Yellowstone’s eruption was likely 50 times larger than that

    • @MeargleSchmeargle
      @MeargleSchmeargle 2 года назад

      The error in looking at it this way is not taking into account that each level up you go on the VEI scale the explosive power of the eruption increases by a factor of 10. VEI-7 to VEI-8 is a jump from 100 cubic kilometers of ejecta to 1000 cubic kilometers. VEI-8 eruptions would still put eruptions like the one at Crater Lake to shame in terms of ejecta produced.

  • @TheJediAndTheNinja
    @TheJediAndTheNinja Год назад +1

    What if would happen if this event happen in modern times

    • @badpiggies988
      @badpiggies988 11 месяцев назад

      Global cooling, it would affect the trout population

    • @amaneyugihanako-kunofthesi8849
      @amaneyugihanako-kunofthesi8849 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@badpiggies988 Right. The last time a VEI 7 eruption occured (Tambora in Indonesia, in 1815), it led to the "Year without a Summer" in 1816

  • @audreythompson9846
    @audreythompson9846 3 года назад

    Loop

  • @RJTheMountainSage
    @RJTheMountainSage 3 года назад +2

    That is incredible, i had a dream that Mt. Hood will bow into the sea. I wonder if it shares the same fate.. A battle between the great spirit and the devil , and in turn an amazing deep lake was created. Its like God cut its top off. Wonder if it was in relationship to a massive cascadia earthquake

    • @Cheezcurdz-xx4rf
      @Cheezcurdz-xx4rf 3 года назад +1

      don't give me ideas I used to live 40 miles away from that volcano.

    • @drscopeify
      @drscopeify Год назад +1

      It is important to note that Mount Mazama or crater lake is very much alive and in the future will rebuild the mountain back to the full size in the future. In 500,000 years from now you would could not tell that had once blown up.

    • @lindakay9552
      @lindakay9552 13 дней назад

      That's absolutely terrifying. I had a dream about Mt Glacier in Washington erupting.