Storegga Landslide & Tsunami.mov

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  • Опубликовано: 3 ноя 2024
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Комментарии • 159

  • @craftsmank
    @craftsmank 5 лет назад +76

    i live on the west coast of Norway - we would have had the full blast of the storegga tsunami. As a craftsman i was asked to make several items from a log dug up here (pine) - it was buried in sand and dated at 7,000 years - the farmer who dug it up also said that he came across a clear layer of seaweed lower down which in turn was dated at 12,000 years -

    • @hasnaalshammri4490
      @hasnaalshammri4490 3 года назад +1

      الا سلم أمر الناس

    • @AreDoWeSheIt
      @AreDoWeSheIt 3 года назад +3

      Watch the Joe Rogan podcast with Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson

    • @godsbeautifulflatearth
      @godsbeautifulflatearth 3 года назад +1

      Noah's flood.

    • @79klkw
      @79klkw 2 года назад

      Very, VERY cool...I would be fascinated by that, and wonder how far inland you are located.

    • @craftsmanm4697
      @craftsmanm4697 2 года назад

      @@79klkw about 2 km inland and about 50 meters above sea level - my neighbour is now digging up a large area of land for cultivation - all kinds of underlaying substrata - every so often a powerful smell of something old and rotting

  • @charlenejandik6587
    @charlenejandik6587 5 лет назад +38

    Isn't this the event that finished off the already dwindling Doggerland?

  • @ivanadiego6067
    @ivanadiego6067 4 года назад +20

    Doggerland is missing in the simulation!!!

  • @NoeticMuse
    @NoeticMuse 2 года назад +4

    The simulation is not entirely correct. Britain before the Storegga Slide was attached to mainland Europe, the tsunami that occurred turned Britain into an island, cutting off Britain from the continent. It literally shaped the British isles

    • @ShieldenMomma793
      @ShieldenMomma793 3 месяца назад

      You are partitally incorrect. The real reason to rising sea levels at the time was from a massize lake in North America that was being held back by a glacier. This lake is called Lake Agassiz. Here is a link.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Agassiz

  • @YusakuJon3
    @YusakuJon3 8 лет назад +59

    I wonder if this event was passed down through generations of pre-Celtic peoples
    to become the origins of the "Great Wave" myths recounted in Celtic mythology from
    Ireland and Scotland?

    • @alasdairblackmore2592
      @alasdairblackmore2592 5 лет назад +1

      Great wave Myths ? I'm guessing you haven't done any real research yet !

    • @alasdairblackmore2592
      @alasdairblackmore2592 5 лет назад

      @Joeneyrd : Fighting ?? Does using the wrong words empower your delusions ?
      Several "Great Waves" have hit the North coast of Scotland over time .... the debris from them all is still there.
      It's not wrong to be right / correct ... it's wrong to be wrong / incorrect.

    • @alasdairblackmore2592
      @alasdairblackmore2592 5 лет назад

      @Joeneyrd: Troll !

    • @alasdairblackmore2592
      @alasdairblackmore2592 5 лет назад

      @Joeneyrd : Why would "IT" block you ?
      You're on a learning curve ... currently, you imagine its right to lie / follow Satan !

    • @tubeinvader6124
      @tubeinvader6124 3 года назад +3

      Add Wales to your group of Celtic nations

  • @mikesands4681
    @mikesands4681 4 года назад +15

    Why didn’t you show doggerland on your map or the actual depth of ocean on the simulator? Much lower ocean

    • @r.v.b.4153
      @r.v.b.4153 3 года назад +5

      He mentioned that the sea level has risen. He should've used the bathymetric measurements to reconstruct the former coastline by reducing the sea water level. That wouldn't have taken into account postglacial rebound nor any of the more recent geological formations/degradations, but it would've maken the simulation much more accurate; especially to include Doggerland.

    • @r.v.b.4153
      @r.v.b.4153 3 года назад +1

      That being said, only a very small portion of Dogger Island would've been left intact and only regions of the southern North Sea still had reasonable amounts of land left that would later disappear. The northern North Sea coast was already fairly similar to what it is today.

    • @123TeeMee
      @123TeeMee 3 года назад +1

      I think this simulation is also useful as it shows the damage such a landslide could cause modern day

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh 6 лет назад +19

    I would think there's no way to be sure this can't happen again, similarly, at any time - or in many other underwater locations around the world.

  • @robkuijer9273
    @robkuijer9273 6 лет назад +11

    As a bit of context; the last glacial maximum was 21 000 years ago. the ice age ended 11 000 years ago. Since we can only really estimate the furthest extend of the ice from direct evidence its hard to tell how much of that was left at the time of the Storegga landslide. Although it could be modeled using eustatic sealevel as a proxy. I know of some evidence for tsunami deposits at about 4,5 meters above the present high tide mark in the Netherlands/Holland. Seems to me than that the north sea must have been largely flooded by that point for that to occur. No more Doggerland blocking the way it seems.

    • @WhirledPublishing
      @WhirledPublishing Год назад

      Rob, please do a search on: Ice Ages Theory
      If you're intelligent, you'll realize you've been regurgitating a theory - not a fact - we know it's not a fact because the true timeline for the massive water erosion is documented in historic records - and the true cause was sea water - not glacial water - please do the actual research instead of regurgitating silly theories conjured up by lunatics.

  • @mrrebel5150
    @mrrebel5150 5 лет назад +15

    man it would be awesome if you did a live action with sound effects.

    • @malahammer
      @malahammer 3 года назад +7

      Crack boom rumble rumble splash whoosh whoosh crash
      "feck" said the Irishman

  • @firesonic1010
    @firesonic1010 7 лет назад +65

    what, no Doggerland?

    • @mrpirate3470
      @mrpirate3470 6 лет назад +16

      I'd very much like to see this simulation run with the doggerland landmass included if possible :)

    • @typhoontipnsr2274
      @typhoontipnsr2274 5 лет назад +9

      This is thought to be one of the reasons that doggerland doesn't exist

    • @leifvejby8023
      @leifvejby8023 5 лет назад +1

      @@mrpirate3470 And metoo

    • @arentsc1
      @arentsc1 4 года назад +5

      @@mrpirate3470 Most theories now say that doggerland had already been reduced to some small islands when these slides took place.

    • @talanigreywolf7110
      @talanigreywolf7110 4 года назад

      Right?

  • @randallbrown8495
    @randallbrown8495 Год назад +1

    It apparently helped put the last of Doggerland under water.

  • @nl321
    @nl321 3 года назад +2

    Great video, but alot of landmass is missing on the map.

  • @hoodio
    @hoodio Год назад

    your channel is like a secret goldmine, you just stumble across some history and boom, you have the associated sim

  • @Zhiivago
    @Zhiivago Год назад

    Imagine the biggest cruise ship of today, located directly above the landslide at the moment it collapses. What would happen? Any simulations??

  • @habanmighaban1609
    @habanmighaban1609 2 года назад

    This dent is clearly visible in google earth. Great info. Thanks.

  • @huh2726
    @huh2726 3 года назад +2

    If I have ever learned anything in this channel, is that any costal area has a non-zero chance of being royally boned by a tsunami.

  • @mistermousterian
    @mistermousterian 2 года назад

    at first I thought it was some dance craze."Do the Storrega Slide."

  • @kevintucker3354
    @kevintucker3354 5 лет назад +2

    Some old maps show that the Faroe Islands used to be much bigger than they are now. I think that slide in the same area was much more recent and possibly almost as big as this one.

    • @WhirledPublishing
      @WhirledPublishing Год назад

      Yes, the true timeline is documented in historic records - no need for this "scientific timeline".

  • @kevintucker3354
    @kevintucker3354 5 лет назад +3

    It’s difficult to imagine an underwater mountain that big and steep just waiting to slide.

    • @melissasueh.
      @melissasueh. 5 лет назад +3

      The side of Mauna Loa on the west coast of Hawaii could produce the same sort of underwater slide. The Hawaiian Volcano Observatory geologists have studied the profiles of previous slides on that side of the mountain and say that another one is possible and even likely.

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh 3 года назад

      There already is what’s called “The Great Crack” showing where this is likely to occur, but there’s no way at all to know when this will happen. The Hawaiian Islands have produced the largest known landslides on earth, into the ocean, over hundreds of thousands of years.

    • @bazpearce9993
      @bazpearce9993 3 года назад +1

      @@hebneh La Palma would give Hawaii a run for it's money i reckon.

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh 3 года назад +1

      @@bazpearce9993 I don't know how the future Hawaii slide compares in size to La Palma, but I do know that previous landslides from various Hawaiian Islands have been immense, and based on the measured debris field, one of them is largest ever identified. The tsunami run-up from one of these onto another Hawaiian Island was over 1,000 feet in elevation.

  • @fumrious
    @fumrious 3 года назад +1

    Interesting- guessing that the slide would not have propagated in the same manner as Rissa.

    • @norml.hugh-mann
      @norml.hugh-mann 3 года назад

      Much different in that it was a vast submarine landslide covering much larger areas
      I believe your referring to the quick-clay slide that a video was produced about. It did create a localized mega tsunami in the lake nearby but was above the surface mostly. Thia ancient slide was all underwater and stretched very far..

  • @twoshedsjackson6478
    @twoshedsjackson6478 3 года назад +2

    Computer simulations are always so reliable. Thats how we knew, in advance, that The Maldives would inundated by rising sea levels and would disappear under the ocean by 2018 oh, wait........

  • @ikegel1923
    @ikegel1923 6 лет назад +1

    how can it make a tsunami if it's under water, isn't the water already displaced? i guess all the energy has to go somewhere though

    • @kyjo72682
      @kyjo72682 6 лет назад

      The movement creates pressure waves.

  • @UnknownPerson-hh6wq
    @UnknownPerson-hh6wq 3 года назад +1

    I just found that this existed after watching a movie called Nordsjøen

  • @AgnotologyTV
    @AgnotologyTV 3 года назад

    Uh..... how would Doggerland affected this? Because best I can tell, this occurred when Doggerland was still above water.

  • @thespasm86
    @thespasm86 3 года назад +2

    Imagining if that happens today, and your first concern was oil platforms :\

    • @martinsportfoto2423
      @martinsportfoto2423 3 года назад +1

      Well, first you mention those who would be first hit by such a tsunami. Don't read to much into the chronology of a description :-)

    • @thespasm86
      @thespasm86 3 года назад

      @@martinsportfoto2423 I expected the usual ignorant and aggressive RUclips comments but was pleasantly surprised by yours. Thanks man will take your advice into consideration :)

  • @ParallaxVue
    @ParallaxVue 11 лет назад +4

    Would it be accurate to say that this tsunami helped cut the channel and finally separated the British Isles from mainland Europe? Thank you for posting this excellent video. pv

    • @WhirledPublishing
      @WhirledPublishing 8 лет назад +4

      Yes, this landslide and tsunami separated England from Europe. The proof of the devastation has been mapped on the seafloor of the English Channel and Britania is depicted as a peninsula on the old maps - so we know when this catastrophe happened.
      Some of the most impressive cliffs are in the northeastern Atlantic - coincidence? No
      If geologists would look at the old maps instead of relying on chemists to date the cataclysms, the public could be told the truth - the fact that the public is being lied to - and no one has the courage to tell the truth - speaks volumes.
      These disasters didn't happen thousands of years ago - or millions of years ago - they happened much more recently -
      the evidence is on the old maps, in the topography, in the bathymetry, in the cliffs, in the tectonic plates, in the oral history of the original inhabitants, etc.
      At the time of this landslide, Europe didn't look like it does today - the map he has in the video is all wrong.
      These geologists just don't get it.

    • @weeg91
      @weeg91 6 лет назад +3

      8200 yo map lol

    • @kevintucker3354
      @kevintucker3354 5 лет назад +1

      Dave Cockayne
      Dude, the Faroe Islands are huge compared to now on several maps that are only 300 to 500 years old. I agree with the person above. Some of these massive catastrophes have happened very recently.

    • @WhirledPublishing
      @WhirledPublishing 3 года назад

      ​@just another human Theories are unnecessary because the true timeline for our continents, oceans, mountains, Earth's expansion, Earth's cataclysms, Earth's climate, etc., is clearly documented in old records by our ancestors who tell us the ice ages are fiction, pangaea is fiction, continental drift and continental collision are fiction, etc.
      Written in Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese, Latin, Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, French, Russian, etc., the old documents that tell us when and how the tectonic plates were broken and subducted, when and how the ocean trenches and archipelago islands were formed, when and why dozens of super volcanoes erupted in North America in one night as thousands of smaller volcanoes erupted across four continents - they tell us when and why the Siberian and Deccan Traps were formed, when and how the boot of Italy was formed, when and how the Mediterranean Sea was formed, the Red Sea, the Arabian Sea, the Ross Sea, etc., the Arabian and Iberian Peninsulas, the Yucatan and Olympic Peninsulas - on and on and on - the evidence goes, including the timeline for the Himalayas, the Andes, the Rockies, the Aleutians, the Alps, the mountains and glaciers of Antarctica, etc.
      You can find it all recorded in old documents - this includes reports from the captain's logs of the sailing ships going back hundreds of years, reports in the old literature from the Greeks, the Hebrews, Hindus, Chinese, old literature from northern Europe, old reports from Latin America, old reports from Australia and so on - if you've ever wondered why we have no literature from North America that's hundreds and hundreds of years old, if you've wondered why we're told North America was "discovered" in 1492 but then HUNDREDS of years pass by before we have any believable reports while the "royal families" seized control of Europe, Africa, India, China, Russia, Latin America, the islands - worldwide - and Australia, I suggest you pause on that since the "royal families" either had no interest in North America or for some reason we're not told, they failed to secure "colonies" all alone the coasts of North America - then go look at the old maps to see the cities all along the coasts and along the rivers, then notice other curious anomalies on the old maps of North America - throughout the 1500's and 1600's - do some investigative analytic thinking as you look over the evidence and make a note of your conclusions:
      We've been lied to about our Earth, our oceans, our water, our plants and trees, we've been lied to about our sun, moon and stars, we've been lied to about politics, economics, history, chemistry, geology, physics, glaciology, etc. Those who want the truth can find it all documented by the evidence.

    • @WhirledPublishing
      @WhirledPublishing 3 года назад +1

      ​@just another human I have listed several sources - if you want to have the facts, you'll need to re-think your priorities and dedicate substantial time from your schedule.

  •  5 лет назад

    It doesn't take into account where the sea floor is shallow like the southern end of the North sea. The tsunami would funnel down the North sea gaining height, not peter out before it got to the Netherlands. The Storegga tsunami wiped out Doggerland, a repeat would do the same to Holland.

  • @krnlg
    @krnlg 7 лет назад +1

    Very interesting, thanks!

  • @NoNopeAndNo
    @NoNopeAndNo 4 года назад +2

    Speak a little quieter please, as when you yell it tends to distort the mobile phone speakers. Thanks👍

  • @unitor699industries
    @unitor699industries Год назад

    i always thought the coast of norway was a bit weird looking like someone kept taking small bites from it

  • @TheSimMan
    @TheSimMan 3 года назад +1

    Extraordinary. And terrifying for human kind at that time.

  • @christiangibbs1482
    @christiangibbs1482 4 года назад +1

    Wow! Thanks for sharing.

  • @henkvandommelen3206
    @henkvandommelen3206 9 лет назад +1

    Uhhh imagine what a same landslide as the Storega one can do for the bussnuis side of the northsea. Point that wave that was rushing to Iceland/Greenland to the Netherlands and you wipeout almost 17 million people

  • @jacquimaguire5713
    @jacquimaguire5713 3 года назад +1

    You never mentioned Ireland.

  • @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj
    @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj 5 лет назад +1

    It would seem that you guys have overlooked a possible underwater slide in the Canaries. That would send a tsunami of great height into New York and other eastern seaboard states.

    • @callmeshaggy5166
      @callmeshaggy5166 2 года назад +1

      That's theoretical. This one actually happened.

  • @Joeoshea1957
    @Joeoshea1957 5 лет назад

    There was landbridges in that area 8000 years ago. How could this be possible

  • @connorr_7545
    @connorr_7545 5 лет назад

    What about Doggerland? It was wiped out because of that megatsunami

    • @duh_googleit
      @duh_googleit 6 месяцев назад

      It wasn’t exactly instantly wiped out, there was very little left (rising sea levels) and it was submerged by multiple other waves that happened before and after this specific storegga slide

  • @MrJohnandMargie
    @MrJohnandMargie 9 лет назад +1

    In the knowledge of three catastrophic slides, they locate the ormen Lange gas field right on top of the area, because someone says there's minimal risk to do so. Does no one learn from history?

    • @Raychristofer
      @Raychristofer 9 лет назад

      They're not the only ones mr. John Malone, here in the states there was an earthquake recently and they suspect it's from the heavy oil extraction going on I used to say one day there's going to be a big empty hole in the earth and everything is going to cave in to it when they realize how much oil they sucked out from the void

    • @MrJohnandMargie
      @MrJohnandMargie 9 лет назад

      aint that the truth Bro! I think it beggars belief that given Storegga's violent history that anyone would consider doing anything that posed the slightest risk of it happening again. That's mankind for you though, money before life.... Cheers Ray

    • @scotbotvideos
      @scotbotvideos 8 лет назад +1

      +John Malone It has been predicted, mate.
      "When the great time will come, in which mankind will face its last, hard trial, it will be foreshadowed by striking changes in nature; the alteration between cold and heat will become more intensive, storms will have more catastrophic effects, earthquakes will destroy greater regions and the seas will overflow many lowlands. Not all of it will be the result of natural causes, but man will penetrate into the bowels of the earth and will reach into the clouds, gambling with its own existence." ~ Johann Friede (1204-1257)

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel 6 лет назад

      Raychristofer Head of to the moon while still possible..
      Bon Voyage 🙋

    • @frankstein7631
      @frankstein7631 6 лет назад

      ArrigAutist
      Are the spacers not already there?

  • @atmosphereadr588
    @atmosphereadr588 10 лет назад

    tsunami Wave heights in deep water are very small, so why would all oil riggs be affected ?

    • @DrakkarKnarr
      @DrakkarKnarr 9 лет назад

      Energy.

    • @DrakkarKnarr
      @DrakkarKnarr 9 лет назад

      ***** According to Wikipedia: "Average depth 95 m (312 ft)
      Max. depth 700 m (2,300 ft)"
      Dogger Bank, off the Yorkshire coast, "ranges from 15 to 36 metres (from 49 to 118 feet), about 20 m (66 ft) shallower than the surrounding sea." I mention it because the Storegga tsunami swept across Doggerland.
      Waves form where the water is shallow enough for the transmitting energy to "feel bottom". I think the point is that even if the water doesn't pile up in a thundering wall of a wave, it is transmitting a huge amount of energy at high speed.
      Woe betide oil rigs, workers on them, and animals caught in the oil slick.

    • @atmosphereadr588
      @atmosphereadr588 9 лет назад +2

      Very true
      when long period large swells from the noth atlantic enter the north sea the become very steep and tall( while wave period decreases)
      so a tsunami will do the same thing , but more extreme.

  • @justanoldman697
    @justanoldman697 3 года назад +1

    since there was no one to document this, its all theory...............just like evolution........

    • @josephrohrbach1588
      @josephrohrbach1588 3 года назад

      what is this even meant to mean

    • @sigisoltau6073
      @sigisoltau6073 2 года назад

      The evidence is on the seafloor or coastal areas where tsunami deposits have been found, such as in Iceland and Greenland for example. The evidence is literally slapping you in the face.

  • @JasonJason210
    @JasonJason210 6 лет назад

    I don't see how it could cause such a huge tsunami as the displaced material was all submerged. Little water could have been displaced by it.

    • @patmccormack8135
      @patmccormack8135 5 лет назад +4

      Oh dear...read up on the volume. And being submerged makes no odds. It slips into the abyss and leaves a very big hole in the water. You can model this yourself with OpenFoam.

    • @callmeshaggy5166
      @callmeshaggy5166 2 года назад

      Uhh have you ever been in a pool and waved your arm underwater? It affects the surface. If a patch of earth 100m thick moves underwater, that empty area now needs to be filled, and it propagates up the entire water column. It wasn't a wave formed by water rising suddenly, like an earthquake might do. It's a wave formed by water dropping suddenly.

  • @richardgamlin1459
    @richardgamlin1459 6 лет назад

    Any time soon ?
    Yet 80% of our population live close to the ocean .

    • @tonymurray814
      @tonymurray814 4 года назад

      XWriter100Thank God I believe I’m Darwinism. Enjoy Sturges!!!!

  • @ivanolsen7966
    @ivanolsen7966 4 года назад +1

    "the largest we know about " would more correct

  • @lifepsycho123
    @lifepsycho123 3 года назад

    Is there anyone alive from when this happened?

  • @DimBeam1
    @DimBeam1 3 года назад

    The sound is broken.

  • @downhilltwofour0082
    @downhilltwofour0082 4 года назад

    Interesting!

  • @MauriatOttolink
    @MauriatOttolink 5 лет назад +2

    What am I doing wrong? There's no sound!

  • @g.alistar7798
    @g.alistar7798 3 года назад

    My take away....”experts say”-- hmmm?

  • @nopretribrapture2318
    @nopretribrapture2318 5 лет назад +2

    😂 the silence

  • @Fyodor48
    @Fyodor48 5 лет назад +2

    Given the world boo more than six thousand five hundred years old I don’t get this argument!
    Oh and please get rid of the music and digitised voice Tis offputting

  • @alunrees313
    @alunrees313 3 года назад

    What about Wales then they don’t exist do that , overlooked again

  • @STICKlaPISSSE
    @STICKlaPISSSE 3 года назад +2

    8000 years B.C. none of those countries had popularion, cos the major part of Europe was still under an ice sheet. The Iberian peninsula and its people were the ones to take the blunt of the tsunami, and the populations of Greeland and North America if there were some. That tsunami must have cracked open the entire of the ice sheet that covered the north atlantic ocean by that time. Doing that it will speed the ice melting. So those peoples in the Iberian Peninsula and in some southern parts of France, the "Magdaliense Culture" precurssors of the Megalithic Culture that come about 8000 years, started construction of "cromeleques" (temples/astronomical observatories) like those in Portugal, and later dolmens and menirs. By the way, the ancient writings of the magdalense people gave birth to the olds alphabet in the world, older than sumer. Search for Alvão Alphabet cos it has a rich story behind few know.

    • @Tupsuu
      @Tupsuu 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/QrEn666Q1mE/видео.html

    • @oofija
      @oofija 2 года назад +1

      tell me you are stupid without telling me you are stupid

  • @AngryHateMusic
    @AngryHateMusic 5 лет назад

    Assumptions of time are a bitch.

  • @PABLO-qz2lx
    @PABLO-qz2lx 4 года назад

    Doggerland did exist its just covered in water there was an amazingly huge tsunami

  • @jamiemorton1765
    @jamiemorton1765 5 лет назад

    We have another one coming that will cover most of the uk 200 m

  • @WinsEpicThe
    @WinsEpicThe 11 лет назад

    why is there no talking or song?

  • @randomconsumer4494
    @randomconsumer4494 3 года назад

    Between 5 and 50? That is big gap... Can't get a better dating?

  • @ivyjeansinajon6198
    @ivyjeansinajon6198 3 года назад

    Just country yeah place Norway and units

  • @21313cord21
    @21313cord21 5 лет назад +1

    Shit happens.

  • @weeg91
    @weeg91 6 лет назад +1

    TRIGGER ANOTHER!

  • @persimendahlgren1668
    @persimendahlgren1668 9 лет назад

    IT cant come tsunami in norway

    • @BAN1102
      @BAN1102 9 лет назад +2

      +Per Simen Dahlgren Are you stupid? We are at the moment waiting for "Mannen" to fall down and create a tsunami. Norway is not separated from the rest of the world you now.

  • @spetsnatzlegion3366
    @spetsnatzlegion3366 3 года назад

    Brexit phase 1