Mount St. Helens: America’s Deadliest Eruption

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  • Опубликовано: 31 окт 2024

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @geographicstravel
    @geographicstravel  3 года назад +100

    Description updated - Get Surfshark VPN at Surfshark.deals/geographics and enter promo code GEOGRAPHICS for 83% off and 3 extra months for free!

    • @je4894
      @je4894 3 года назад +4

      Simon can we get a Geographics on Western Sahara?

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 3 года назад +3

      The only thing that keeps me from skipping the ad reads is knowing that Simon actually uses anything he endorses.
      Well, that, and Simon's seamless transitions and segues.

    • @worri3db3ar
      @worri3db3ar 3 года назад +4

      This took me back to geography class back in the late 80s where this eruption was discussed and almost after was about an English village again the 80s that disappeared into the sea and another UK village that got swept away by landslide if I recall correctly...

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 3 года назад +2

      @@worri3db3ar nothing good came out of the 1980's. I'm proof!🤣

    • @worri3db3ar
      @worri3db3ar 3 года назад +5

      @@SkunkApe407 lol well at least we got to witness the fall of the Berlin Wall and an end to the cold War with the former ussr.

  • @destelpa
    @destelpa 3 года назад +2380

    There was also Robert Landsburg. He captured photos of the eruption, then as he saw he was going die, wound up his tape, threw it in his backpack, and laid on top of it to preserve the photos for scientists to discover. He, Martin, and Johnston are incredible for still doing what they set out to do knowing they were moments from death

    • @AnotherWorthlessMoron
      @AnotherWorthlessMoron 3 года назад +52

      Didn't they purposely go there knowing they would die? I thought they did it specifically to get footage and data that wouldn't be collected normally.

    • @destelpa
      @destelpa 3 года назад +309

      @@AnotherWorthlessMoron they did not know they were going to die. They knew it was a possibility, like storm chasers following tornados, but I dont think the USGS or US government would have been okay with letting them be there if everyone knew the men would die. To them, it was small odds because they assumed the blast would go upwards and had no idea how violent the eruption would be

    • @afrog2666
      @afrog2666 3 года назад +24

      That`s a badass move..

    • @KillerOrca
      @KillerOrca 3 года назад +112

      There's a small monument to where they found his body out there, I think. Very subdued thing but sobering.

    • @franl155
      @franl155 3 года назад +67

      That man deserves a medal for his dedication to science. Well, they all do.

  • @charliewalls2750
    @charliewalls2750 3 года назад +599

    “It’s just a volcano. 🙄”
    “It’s literally a bomb the size of a mountain, Jerry!”

  • @FonVegen
    @FonVegen 3 года назад +1033

    "It's just a volcano" would be one of the absolutely least soothing arguments to me.

    • @coreytaylor447
      @coreytaylor447 3 года назад +94

      some dude in Pompeii: "hey should we move? these earthquakes are getting ridiculous that volcano is is ready to pop!"
      some other dude: "nah its just a volcano"

    • @jamesdreads7828
      @jamesdreads7828 3 года назад +8

      legit

    • @jwenting
      @jwenting 3 года назад +6

      depends. Lots of volcanoes out there are dead, never going to erupt again because the lava plumes are no longer there.
      Think the Eiffel mountains in Germany. Beautiful, fertile, area but no risk of erupting.

    • @chronosschiron
      @chronosschiron 3 года назад +20

      its just an ACTIVE volcano might bring a lil more soothing ..TERROR

    • @ayakiria
      @ayakiria 3 года назад +2

      Not only that, but it is a small volcano too. With said eruption being in the mid VEI range.

  • @PolymurExcel
    @PolymurExcel 3 года назад +280

    "Vancouver, Vancouver! This is it!" The last words of David A. Johnston, rest in peace dude.

  • @TheGryfonclaw
    @TheGryfonclaw 3 года назад +517

    I think the saddest part is the kids asking about the lava. They all died. This is why geography and earth science education is so important; it can literally save your life, just like that one 9 year old during those Christmas Tsunamis a few years back recognized the signs of a tsunami and warned her parents and others (because she had just been taught that before the holidays).

    • @dancingcarapace
      @dancingcarapace 2 года назад +16

      I agree with this comment but “A few years back”??
      It was 2004, the Boxing Day Earthquake and Tsunami, so that was now 16 years ago.
      A bit longer than “a few years back”

    • @TheGryfonclaw
      @TheGryfonclaw 2 года назад +18

      @@dancingcarapace Please show me the standard definition for a few years back.

    • @dancingcarapace
      @dancingcarapace 2 года назад +17

      @@TheGryfonclaw usually when someone says “a few years back” they mean 3-7 years ago. Not friggin 16

    • @TheGryfonclaw
      @TheGryfonclaw 2 года назад +13

      @@dancingcarapace Usually? Okay, great, that's a good working definition. For you.

    • @ethanniedorowski116
      @ethanniedorowski116 2 года назад +10

      @@TheGryfonclaw usally when I have a pissing match it's over something better. See what happens when we don't just look at data... u ovb knew what he ment an you sir a ovb a tatch on the older side if 16 years is a few years back.
      Your both right move along now work together an get me

  • @ProffesionalZombie12
    @ProffesionalZombie12 3 года назад +488

    Washington State resident here. We've basically all made peace with the fact that we're either going to experience an apocalypse by titanic earthquake, an apocalypse by one of the five volcanoes surrounding us on all sides OR if we're lucky: Both.
    The view is pretty, though.

    • @redchic
      @redchic 3 года назад +32

      That's how we here in Western Oregon feel about it as well. We haven't had a major eruption in the near past. But there's always Crater lake to remind us of the other sleeping giant that blew it's top off. So between the crater lake, any number of only napping volcanoes and the cascadia subduction fault line, any of them could wake up at any time.

    • @ProffesionalZombie12
      @ProffesionalZombie12 3 года назад +23

      @@redchic I've heard that a variety of Native American folktales from different tribes in our area all basically tell that all the volcanoes AND the subduction zone erupted simultaneously. Cheery.

    • @redchic
      @redchic 3 года назад +21

      @@ProffesionalZombie12 .. .. dang! the natives history is usually pretty accurate. I can't even imagine how apocalyptic that must have seemed. And strangely enough, it would make sense given that the all sit on the same fault line and all connected by shared lava tubes. All I can say is....i love the PNW and don't ever intend to move, so I hope I'm dead before it happens again!

    • @redchic
      @redchic 3 года назад +5

      @@ProffesionalZombie12 .... Thanks for the history. As scary as it must have been, history is a good tool to learn from.

    • @ProffesionalZombie12
      @ProffesionalZombie12 3 года назад +3

      @@redchic No problem! And I'm planning on being in the SAFEST PLACE possible!

  • @Kjca_1998
    @Kjca_1998 3 года назад +544

    "people have the right to be eaten" that made me chuckle.

    • @moohunter9109
      @moohunter9109 3 года назад +19

      Me too.... Been telling my boyfriend this for years😂

    • @chrisnorton4912
      @chrisnorton4912 3 года назад +4

      I don't think he's ever seen Jaws... there is a lot of movies he's never seen

    • @ianashby6294
      @ianashby6294 3 года назад +2

      My parents were in Washington state during the eruption mum was pregnant with my sister

    • @darthball2723
      @darthball2723 3 года назад +1

      @@ianashby6294 ok Ashby

    • @bpieszak
      @bpieszak 3 года назад +3

      we do, and thats something americans have forgotten recently

  • @philippemineau2015
    @philippemineau2015 3 года назад +553

    Props to you for saying the name of some of the victims. Statistics can be very dehumanizing.

    • @ember-evergarden
      @ember-evergarden 3 года назад +3

      Names don't mean shit to me. Just letters on a screen.

    • @nickoliver3523
      @nickoliver3523 2 года назад +25

      @@ember-evergarden that’s fantastic, you are cool.

    • @bathroomshoes
      @bathroomshoes 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@ember-evergardenthese are peoples lives. they aren’t just letters.

  • @dracololp6777
    @dracololp6777 3 года назад +305

    After hearing about the eruption my mom who was a young adult at the time went outside to see the ash. Funny thing is western washington got almost no ash while eastern washington got absolutely caked, she told me the only pieces of visible ash she found where on the pedals of flowers. My grandparents for several years after that drove by the site to watch it recover. They where shocked at how fast it did.
    This will probably be buried but hey it's an interesting family story.

    • @dx1450
      @dx1450 3 года назад +7

      Interesting that the west part of the state didn't get much ash but the eastern part did, when it was the west side of the mountain that blew. But I suppose it was the prevailing winds at the time, from west to east, which determined where the ash went. I was 9 at the time, but I still remember seeing a graphic in the newspaper about the ash and where it would fall, and we down in Kansas were on the edge of the fallout zone. The talk of volcanic ash was in all the news for weeks. Of course, as Simon said the ash eventually flew all around the world, as volcanic ash usually does.

    • @TILLEYJS
      @TILLEYJS 3 года назад

      You shut your damned mouth draco. I read your story.

    • @joelockard7174
      @joelockard7174 2 года назад +1

      The ash cloud covering the easy isn't weird...that's just normal weather patterns. It would have been odd if it was the opposite.

    • @bethmckinney983
      @bethmckinney983 2 года назад +4

      My mom was a teenager living in Tacoma at the time. The blast was loud enough to wake her up. Meanwhile, my dad and his family, living in Federal Way (only a few miles north of Tacoma), didn't hear a thing, even though it was heard even further north in British Columbia.

    • @jenniferk6697
      @jenniferk6697 Год назад +2

      I’m from Eastern Washington, my mom had only been in the country for less than a year, and said it was like watching a dark ass cloud coming over the area, and that it was as dark as midnight for the next three days, and took a long time to clean up all the ash and damage

  • @multiyapples
    @multiyapples 3 года назад +400

    I feel sorry for the guy who was a logger who died because he was working to pay off his wife’s cancer treatment. I also feel sorry for the others that passed and their loved ones.

    • @ink3539
      @ink3539 3 года назад +18

      The camping owner and his cats got me too, very sad end

    • @jeffdroog
      @jeffdroog 2 года назад +3

      Yes.People dying is sad.Thanks for weighing in!

    • @darthvenator2487
      @darthvenator2487 2 года назад

      I was chocked when i heard that. Damn it!

    • @darthvenator2487
      @darthvenator2487 2 года назад

      @@ink3539 isn't the guy who refused to leave?

    • @ink3539
      @ink3539 2 года назад +8

      @@darthvenator2487 yeah, I thought how scared he was, and his poor cats too !

  • @Mazz3D
    @Mazz3D 3 года назад +349

    never thought I'd hear a volcano called a firey earth fart. way to go Simon

    • @gregbors8364
      @gregbors8364 3 года назад +10

      It sounds so classy when an Englishman says it

    • @purplemoonshoes
      @purplemoonshoes 3 года назад +5

      I loved the animation.

    • @andrewbillington5422
      @andrewbillington5422 3 года назад +2

      Every time I look out my window It will be all I can think of. Forever.

    • @ewestner
      @ewestner 3 года назад +2

      @@purplemoonshoes me too. a moment of levity in an otherwise very sad story.

    • @lonewanderer3603
      @lonewanderer3603 3 года назад +4

      That's a scientific term, if I recall.

  • @mediocrestreams3284
    @mediocrestreams3284 3 года назад +357

    General rule for life, never put yourself in situations where the question "is it safe to be this close to lava" has to be asked

    • @DerptyDerptyDUM
      @DerptyDerptyDUM 2 года назад +5

      Truth.

    • @morticiaheisenberg9679
      @morticiaheisenberg9679 Год назад +8

      Exactly!!! People who don't take personal responsibility because "the government/media/etc said it will be okay" FFS. The kid was smarter than their parents. It's sad that they died because of their parent's stupidity.

    • @gregmunro1137
      @gregmunro1137 Год назад +6

      If you have to ask , “is it safe”- that’s a clue to get out of there .

    • @margaretstampfli4159
      @margaretstampfli4159 Год назад

      There wasn't lava. It was pyroclastic mud flow that killed many people. Some people were forth or fifty miles away down river and we're still killed due to mud flow.

    • @neuralnetwork17
      @neuralnetwork17 Год назад +1

      @@morticiaheisenberg9679 Take personal responsibility? They were killed by a vulcano. The only reason you know it wasn't safe is because you know how the story ends. How were they supposed to know? How were they supposed to know that the goverrnor was lying, and not listening to the eperts?
      You're blaming them for this, rather than the governor whose lies got them killed, because they didn't automatically assume the government was lying? What a callous load of crap. Have some respect.

  • @arnarninson4413
    @arnarninson4413 3 года назад +551

    I remember thinking it was snowing outside our house and got angry at my mom for not letting me go out and play in it. I was only 5 at the time. My parents still have a jar of the ash on a shelf in their house.

    • @fatdaddyeddiejr
      @fatdaddyeddiejr 3 года назад +19

      My family still has all the ash collected from all of the different eruptions from Mt. St. Helens.

    • @alternavent
      @alternavent 3 года назад +41

      I was only three and don’t remember it, but my brother was 5 as well. We were visiting family in Portland and my brother says sneaking out to play in the snow and the horrible shock of putting volcanic ash in his mouth is one of his earliest memories.

    • @tracyhale8336
      @tracyhale8336 3 года назад +14

      Me too! Except I was 6 and lived in Portland. We still have a big jar full of MSH ash.

    • @Bjenga
      @Bjenga 3 года назад +9

      My Auntie and Uncle live near Portland and Vancouver. The first time I went to visit them, my uncle took me to the bottom of their garden to show me a huge chunk of ash that's permanently embedded in the floor.

    • @nealfairbanks5340
      @nealfairbanks5340 3 года назад +5

      @@BIGSHANE456 I remember driving through Yakima right afterwards wishing our ashfall was like theirs. Yakima had less and it was heavier so not as dusty. The Columbia Basin around Moses Lake had it the worst of all.

  • @Hurricane0721
    @Hurricane0721 2 года назад +79

    Since the 1980 eruption, the crater of Mt. St. Helens has one of the fastest growing glaciers in the world. It’s also considered one of the most dangerous glaciers in the entire world. If the volcano decided to erupt, then the soil temperature under that glacier could rapidly rise hundreds of degrees in a matter of hours. That could melt the entire glacier very rapidly, and send a deadly lahar down the mountain. A lahar is a type of mudflow that’s a very nasty mixture of mud and water produced by a volcanic eruption. Lahars can be extremely dangerous and deadly! The mud in a lahar has a consistency akin to concrete. If a person gets caught in a lahar, then it’s pretty much guaranteed that they won’t survive the ordeal.

    • @cuatro336
      @cuatro336 Год назад +4

      Well that's comforting

    • @thefailtrain2202
      @thefailtrain2202 8 месяцев назад +2

      For further information on how devastating a lahar can be, please see documentaries and articles concerning the Nevado del Ruiz eruption and Amero Tragedy, or the accounts of the lahars following the eruption of Mount Pinatubo.

  • @tyemaddog
    @tyemaddog 3 года назад +126

    A few pretty interesting things you missed in this video, people who owned homes in the red zone faught for their right to be on their properties. They ultimately had to signs forms saying if they go and something happens it's on them. Also a survival story that's pretty amazing. The eruption melted the ice cap which created a massive flash flood. There was a couple who were fishing that got swept away, yet somehow survived after floating miles down stream on logs. The woman seriously injured her arm, wrist and leg. Truely incredible that they survived.

    • @TheLoneTerran
      @TheLoneTerran 2 года назад +14

      I remember the log story. Her arm was badly damaged being pinched between basically two tree-trunks but it also held her face just ever so slightly above the water some of the time so she could breathe. I didn't know the husband survived too. That's good to know.

  • @shallendor
    @shallendor 3 года назад +283

    The blast taught the world a lot about volcano's, especially lateral blasts!

    • @thestoic4629
      @thestoic4629 3 года назад +4

      How about: The world learned a lot from the blast

    • @zigmeisterful
      @zigmeisterful 3 года назад +2

      I was born only a few months before this eruption. I never truly realized the effect that this eruption had on the world and the people around it until watching this video. Thanks Simon for a good video that also tells the story of a few that were lost in the devastation that ensued. These stories deserve to be told.

    • @last_week_with_diogo_br8386
      @last_week_with_diogo_br8386 3 года назад +1

      is like my belly after eating a quarter pounder burger in macdonalds

    • @altheacraig2904
      @altheacraig2904 3 года назад +1

      She has blown up more than Rainier or the other mountains that are caused by the Cascadia Subduction Zone that is just 62 (apx) miles off our coast from Vancouver Island to Cape Mendocino, CA. You can check this out by contacting the U.S. Geological Survey in Vancouver, WA.

    • @PSkullKidDnazen
      @PSkullKidDnazen 3 года назад +1

      "the world"

  • @jantschierschky3461
    @jantschierschky3461 3 года назад +143

    Was there 4 years ago, amazing location. Spoke to a guide, he survived because on that day was sick, none of his co workers survived

    • @anunentitledmotivatedmille7731
      @anunentitledmotivatedmille7731 3 года назад +1

      Video of it dident happen.

    • @JaneAxon123
      @JaneAxon123 3 года назад +5

      Did he say whether they were aware that it was bulging? You'd think that in itself would be a huge warning especially if you lived there and knew it wasn't normal.

    • @jantschierschky3461
      @jantschierschky3461 3 года назад +7

      @@JaneAxon123 they were monitoring it, did expected an eruption, but not what came

    • @corroded
      @corroded 3 года назад +1

      I visited a couple of years ago. Can see where run off has carved new gullies through the ash, but it's still quite other worldly to look at. Trees that have literally been blown off near the ground level.
      When you look at the mountain today standing at the Johnston Observatory, you realise how big a mistake being there was. It's maybe four to five miles from the mountain and it almost couldn't be more in the path of the eruption.

  • @RavenTheElder
    @RavenTheElder Год назад +74

    Born & raised Oregonian here. Growing up, the story of the eruption plagued us with this sort of eerie fascination. On clear days, you can see the topless mountain on the horizon. I remember being a kid, on my way to Fencing class, when the mountain had another (smaller) eruption. It’s a terrifyingly magnificent thing to behold.
    No matter how big and bad us humans think we are, Nature will ALWAYS be the true ruler of this world.

    • @cmath6454
      @cmath6454 Год назад

      Question: Could Oregon refer to yourselves as organic?

    • @Akechi_The_Phantom_Detective
      @Akechi_The_Phantom_Detective Год назад +1

      That I can completely understand. I used to visit Oregon, California and the Cascadia Range a lot when I was younger. It can be deceptively eerie to know how a place that can be so beautiful and peaceful one moment, can become so destructive with little warning. Then again there many area's surrounding St. Helens that do serve as a reminder of what happened, the ruined Caldera, the remains of spirit lake, the petrified forest... one can only hope you stay safe.

    • @OrchidJayne
      @OrchidJayne 10 месяцев назад

      As a fellow oregonian I understand completley

  • @NatC3114
    @NatC3114 2 года назад +81

    I live near Mt. Merapi in Central Java, Indonesia and there's a saying whenever the mountain erupts. "Merapi never break its promise," a promise that no matter how devastating the eruption might be, life will be restored again.

    • @malady8416
      @malady8416 Год назад +1

      That is beautiful! 😢

  • @mml100pink
    @mml100pink 2 года назад +20

    I do have one tiny nitpick: Someone *did* predict a lateral blast! David Johnston suspected she was gonna go lateral, based on an eruption he'd studied previously. And the man still went out and sat on a ridge directly in front of the blast he knew was coming at some point. Scientists are absolutely wild.

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 2 года назад +2

      Agree. They did suspect.

  • @simibimi3
    @simibimi3 3 года назад +217

    Nobody:
    Simon and only Simon: pack of ologists

    • @jsnsk101
      @jsnsk101 3 года назад +3

      you got an ology, your a scientist!
      Might have to be 30+ and from the UK for that one

    • @37thousand
      @37thousand 3 года назад +1

      “Big ass eruption” lol

  • @Squasheatspie
    @Squasheatspie 3 года назад +49

    I’m procrastinating a mineralogy paper on Mount St. Helens that’s due in 2 days currently; thanks for the reminder Simon 😅

  • @claireelizabeth9972
    @claireelizabeth9972 3 года назад +67

    I'm only 13, so I obviously wasn't alive when this happened, but I live in the foothills of the mountain. My dad was just 7 months old when this happened. Thankfully, my grandma was able to collect some ash, and she still has it. This is why I want to get into geology. It's terrifying and breathtaking all at the same time

    • @fairykeibani9155
      @fairykeibani9155 Год назад +9

      please don't just go around telling your age online, especially if youre that young, lots of dangerous creepy people on the internet

    • @radicalpaprika1720
      @radicalpaprika1720 Год назад

      @@fairykeibani9155 You’re blasting your own childhood on the internet by posting gacha videos for “daddy”, which is equally if not more unsafe. Public videos like yours are essentially a breeding ground for the creeps you’re talking about

  • @Nico6th
    @Nico6th 3 года назад +62

    The best fictional movie about a volcano I have seen so far is still Dante's Peak. Very realistic overall, very good effects. Let's not talk about the grandma+lake scene.

    • @WarhammerWings
      @WarhammerWings 3 года назад +8

      That was brutal in every sense.

    • @marked4death076
      @marked4death076 2 года назад +3

      yep, great movie.....we are lomg over due for a badass st helens film with truman and the rest of em

    • @timothybogle1461
      @timothybogle1461 Год назад +3

      It's accurate but has one failing. A stratovolcano does not produce the red lava and the explosive pyroclastic flows and Ash.
      They wouldn't have had to deal with the lava driving back down the mountain.

    • @Nico6th
      @Nico6th Год назад +4

      @@timothybogle1461 I mean they overdid it in the movie, sure, but... While they do not reach as far as those from shield volcanoes because they have a higher viscosity, stratovolcanoes can produce lava flows. Mt. Etna is a stratovolcano and does produce lava flows. So does Stromboli.

    • @wilhelmdietrich8474
      @wilhelmdietrich8474 Год назад +1

      Í was seven when it came out and I watched it and Volcano at the same time. I still get the two movies confused but my advice. Neither is for 7 year olds. Neither is Tornado! or The Jackal. A lot of weird shit came out around the same time and I watched all of them

  • @briansobb19
    @briansobb19 3 года назад +22

    "One last fiery earth fart..." Not gonna lie, if that had come seconds earlier it would have been a legit spit-take all over my keyboard. Whew.

  • @AllieStrange
    @AllieStrange 3 года назад +21

    Thanks for covering this. Your take on it was more heartwrenching than any of the history classes about this. Thanks for talking about the people that died because of it. My mom was alive during this and has told me stories of being all the way across the state and still the town being covered in ash and it not being safe to go outside for days.

  • @Intercaust
    @Intercaust 3 года назад +43

    I was ten years old and camping near Mt. St. Helens when I saw earth turn to sky. I'll never forget the lightning in the ash cloud and the fear on the face of the adults. I was too young to even realize I should be afraid.

  • @collincutler4992
    @collincutler4992 3 года назад +1836

    Wait, so YOU'RE telling me that the incompetence of a politician cost American lives and the media lied about it to cover it up? I don't believe that for a second...(sarcasm)

    • @craycraykian508
      @craycraykian508 3 года назад +117

      The media didn't lie about it, on the contrary they were the ones encouraging people to ignore the warnings and come look. Media greed and political incompetence is more appropriate. (Also as simon said, the geologists only suggested an extension to the red zone practically before the eruption and the suggestion didn't reach the governor in time as she was away from office at the time, although this doesn't excuse her for originally setting the zone to small in the first place)

    • @thomaspownall2989
      @thomaspownall2989 3 года назад +18

      Well. Regardless of semantics, mountain go boom, people died, dang, if you don't like it, ask Elon musk for a one way ticket off. Donate it to science

    • @dx1450
      @dx1450 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, sounds like a movie plot. That would never happen in real life...

    • @LordVulcan93
      @LordVulcan93 3 года назад +27

      Yes, a Democrat politician. I think they got what they deserved that day putting a Democrat like Lee Ray in power. Remember, elections have consequences.

    • @sethraelthebard5459
      @sethraelthebard5459 3 года назад +5

      @@LordVulcan93 True that.

  • @jacquelynsmith2351
    @jacquelynsmith2351 2 года назад +18

    I remember visiting St Helens as a kid in the early to mid 90s. We weren't allowed to get close. A friend of mine said the red zone is a lot smaller these days. A lot of people think of volcanic ash as firewood ash, and it's not. It's more like tiny stones that you'd be breathing in that turns into wet cement when it enters your lungs. I still have the sample that I got back then. My aunt lives nearby in Vancouver (WA, not BC), and a sister lives near Seattle, so St Helens, Rainier, Hood, etc are all pretty, but I like to know when they're acting up

  • @AtemiRaven
    @AtemiRaven 3 года назад +17

    It's amazing how such a thing in history can seem so mundane in retrospect.
    My father was about 12 when St. Helen's blew up. He was riding on a dirt bike in his mother's and step father's property in Washington when it blew and he spotted it.
    He rode back in the morning and woke his mom and step mom up, and they watched it for a while. On the opposite side of the mountain.
    He tells it like a mundane childhood story.
    Meanwhile growing up in Seattle, I think it is interesting to have a relative who personally witnessed it blow.

  • @griffiththechad9483
    @griffiththechad9483 3 года назад +152

    *Mt Rainer in the future*: 57 people? Hmph those are rookie numbers

    • @fatdaddyeddiejr
      @fatdaddyeddiejr 3 года назад +21

      The same with Mt. Hood and Portland.

    • @tripwire3992
      @tripwire3992 3 года назад +27

      Yellowstone been kinda quiet since this dropped 😳

    • @honeysucklecat
      @honeysucklecat 3 года назад

      Edwin Lindley imagine if they both popped at the same time

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 3 года назад +20

      As worrying as those looming disasters are (Rainer in particular since it seems one of its flanks is failing and thus likely to go whenever the volcano next erupts making it a scaled up analog of Mt. Saint Helens). I also fear there is an even deadlier situation brewing beneath Naples Italy. The city of Naples Campei Flegrei has all of those beat largely because they built an entire major city (Naples) inside its caldera. The ground has been continuously swelling for more than with scientists very worried as they think the cap of the caldera is nearing its breaking point.
      Earlier this year earthquake swarms have gotten much more frequent and intense as the ground continues to swell as it has since the 1950's currently it is rising at around 0.7 cm /month. It is an alarming situation the Earthquake swarms appear to be due to rising magma the hydrothermal systems have already over the last decade rapidly peaked and stayed at high levels of activity.
      It is an alarming trend of activity as while scientists think it will blow "soon" the timescale of soon isn't quantifiable making evacuation very difficult. I expect one day we or our near descendants will wave up to Naples having been blown off the map from below probably with untold casualties from the political tensions and interests

    • @paulcook7426
      @paulcook7426 3 года назад

      Yep, Seattle in its eyes.

  • @SiCKenz
    @SiCKenz 3 года назад +58

    I suppose the lesson to learn here is : WHEN AN ENTIRE MOUNTAIN IS DEFORMING FROM VOLCANIC PRESSURE IT MIGHT BE TIME TO TAKE THINGS MORE SERIOUSLY

  • @sethk1429
    @sethk1429 3 года назад +39

    My mom always tells me the story about how she had to wrap her air filter in TP in her Datsun and replace it every 5-6 miles because the ash was so bad.

    • @erselley9017
      @erselley9017 3 года назад

      You know you really could of went the extra mile here and made your profile photo Nissan instead of Ford. However its very understandable. I owned a 05 Nissan and the damn thing had a cassette player and no power windows. I had to save money to put a cd player in because Nissan didn't get the memo that they no longer produced cassette tapes at that time. I suppose it was a step up from 8 track tapes

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 3 года назад +23

    1:30 - Chapter 1 - Seeds of disaster
    4:55 - Chapter 2 - Doomsday foreseen
    8:20 - Mid roll ads
    9:45 - Chapter 3 - In the line of fire
    12:55 - Chapter 4 - Disaster
    16:40 - Chapter 5 - Aftermath
    19:20 - Chapter 6 - From the ashes

  • @LeoDomitrix
    @LeoDomitrix Год назад +10

    Thanks to the observations at Mt St Helens, we know to be really scared if a volcanic flank bulges, and that landslides in stratovolcanoes can be the "popping of the cork". We've learned so much thanks to it, and to the dedicated photographers, geologists, and volcanologists, some of whom died in the line of duty.

  • @anliabolinger
    @anliabolinger 3 года назад +27

    One of my earliest memories. My brother was born that same day in Seattle. The sky went from partly sunny to black! The drive home to Eugene Oregon a few days later was surreal. We had ash snowing for days. My mother would not let me play outside for days.

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow448 3 года назад +32

    I grew up in Southwest Washington state and camped many times at Mount Saint Helen's. We had family friends who lost their homes when the Toutle River flooded. The ash ruined vehicle engines, crops, trees and river ecosystems. It was a major disaster with over 50 victims.
    Ironically, one of the ash falls saved the lives of multiple iron workers who were working on a job that was closed because of the ash fall. The job has been temporarily shut down to clean up the ash, and on that day, a crane collapsed on that wall, crushing everything under it's massive boom. At 18 years old, I remember hating getting the ash on myself, in everything and not being able to get clean.

  • @neutronpixie6106
    @neutronpixie6106 3 года назад +60

    17:44- That guy is my hero. Being saved from an ash cloud, but smoking a cigarette on the gurney.

    • @hellkr
      @hellkr 3 года назад +4

      What could go worse with his lungs, eh? :)

    • @Broncort1
      @Broncort1 3 года назад +5

      I noticed that too....gotta love 1980!

    • @Mbbrog
      @Mbbrog 3 года назад +1

      Was he smoking a cigarette or was he just trying to tell us how big of a cunnilingus fan he is?

    • @delta8kitty491
      @delta8kitty491 3 года назад +1

      @@Mbbrog analingus is the ultimate example of recycling lost calories

  • @ajofmars2579
    @ajofmars2579 Год назад +9

    Not that it matters to anyone but me, but my grandfather proposed to my grandmother on the shores of Spirit lake, which was obliterated by the destruction. I remember her talking about being immensely sad at the devastation. I hope everyone has a good day, and best of luck out there!

    • @teresaroy3558
      @teresaroy3558 11 месяцев назад +1

      Ohhhh that’s so beautiful story about your grandparents!

  • @lardog118
    @lardog118 3 года назад +9

    I was 12 years old and still remember that day with great detail. Living in Fairfield Washington, A small town about 30 miles south of Spokane. Fast forward to late 90's. Family and I went to the Johnson Ridge viewpoint. On our way there it seemed like there was a line where life was and the devastation began. Like jumping from one place to the next. Pretty surreal. Been to both view points and recently drove around the southside of the mountain. it is still incredible.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 3 года назад +113

    Mount Saint Helens is about to blow up and it’s gonna be a *fine, swell day*

    • @magnikristinsson
      @magnikristinsson 3 года назад +8

      Everything's gonna fall down to the ground and turn gray

    • @karenengelhardt1610
      @karenengelhardt1610 3 года назад +8

      All of my friends family and animals probably going to run away
      But me I'm feeling curious so I think I just might stay

    • @eetswa9039
      @eetswa9039 3 года назад +3

      The Dow Jones just fell down to 0 it's going to be a fine swell day

    • @TORchic1
      @TORchic1 3 года назад +2

      And I wonder if its gonna be as good a day as yesterday~

    • @soarimg
      @soarimg 3 года назад +3

      All of these business suits that I’ve just purchased, gonna have to throw em all away

  • @saladinbob
    @saladinbob 3 года назад +41

    I remember it when I was a child, people tried to drive away from the pyroclastic cloud and were overtaken by it.

  • @johnchedsey1306
    @johnchedsey1306 3 года назад +18

    I live a couple hours away and have been to the volcano at least once, if not twice, every year since moving to Washington in 2006. Just the changes in the last 14 years are amazing to. In spring time, it's so green and lush with the new vegetation that it's a little hard to believe what happened in 1980...though there are still plenty of scars that remind you. But nature rebounds all the time. This is one of the spots in the US that everyone should try to see at least once, just like Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon or any of the famous national parks.

  • @finhistorychannel5210
    @finhistorychannel5210 3 года назад +14

    I've been to Washington and Oregon in 2018. One of most beautiful regions I've ever been to but those volcanos like Mount Hood and Mount Rainier made me thinking what would happen if those mountains erupted since they are closer to cities than Mount St. Helens is.

  • @robgoffroad
    @robgoffroad 3 года назад +8

    I was fascinated that the blast blew Spirit Lake up the hillside, filled it in with debris, and then it sloshed back down and is now at a higher elevation than before. And still full of logs, decades later. I was there in 2012 on a motorcycle trip... what an amazing area.

  • @georgiancrossroads
    @georgiancrossroads 3 года назад +11

    In May 1980 on was on the first train allowed through the area. I remember being on a trestle going over a small Washington town. The world below me was completely gray. Six feet of silty mud covered everything. And the dust invaded every part of the interior of the train as we traveled. It was a haunted sight 'll never forget. Thanks Simon.

  • @fadnama
    @fadnama 3 года назад +7

    I lived 30 miles southwest of the mountain when it erupted. I will never forget it. You did a very good job with this video, Simon and crew. Very factual and accurate.

  • @JJMHigner
    @JJMHigner 3 года назад +72

    She is really a young mountain compared to other even larger peaks nearby so she's a very active place. She is part of the greater Cascade Range where remnants of far older mountains dating back several million years are scattered amongst the newer peaks. Good video.

    • @YOOT_JJ
      @YOOT_JJ 3 года назад +4

      Dang, didnt know that. Thought it’d be relatively the same age as the rest of the chain. Speaking of old mountains though, the Appalachian Mountains are really old as well, which makes me wonder if they had active volcanos in the past.

    • @TheCoLDKanadian
      @TheCoLDKanadian 3 года назад +11

      @@YOOT_JJ The Appalachians formed as a result of an ancient collision between Africa, America, and Eurasia. The 3 continents collided about 200 million years ago during the days of Pangaea and actually created mountains on all 3 continents (Appalachians, Scottish Highlands, and Little Atlas Mountains). These mountains were collectively called the "Central Pangaean Mountain Range", and at the time, would've rivaled the modern day Himalayas.
      Of course, the type of mountain building involved is unlikely to produce volcanoes. After all, you've never heard of a Himalayan volcano, right? The area that is now Appalachia has likely not seen volcanic activity for the past 400-500 million years. Of course I'm not a geologist so I wouldn't know that for sure.

    • @YOOT_JJ
      @YOOT_JJ 3 года назад +1

      @@TheCoLDKanadian That’s actually pretty sick, thanks for the info. I live near the end of the chain, so i was naturally kinda curious about that. Crazy to think about how ancient this land we live on really is.

    • @TheCoLDKanadian
      @TheCoLDKanadian 3 года назад +8

      @@YOOT_JJ No problem! I find it interesting just how old North America actually is. I mean, the Canadian Shield has some of the oldest known rocks in the world at over *3.8 billion years old.* That's about as old as the continents themselves.
      Suffice it to say, North America is old. Probably was one of the first continents to emerge from the sea. Hard to think it's survived this long relatively intact.

    • @YOOT_JJ
      @YOOT_JJ 3 года назад +5

      @@TheCoLDKanadian All of this really just makes me appreciate that we, humans, are even here. On a continent so ancient it has existed since just after this planet formed, on a planet so beautiful that it shines like a blue marble from afar, and in a universe we may be able to see and explore for ourselves one day.
      Sorry to get so existential, but damn does that simple notion give me hope for us. Hope it does for you too, man.

  • @julez2106
    @julez2106 3 года назад +3

    A superbly made and absolutely interesting documentary, as always.
    I really liked you shed light on the many lives lost and gave the victims their names, not just numbers but people who lost their lives and will be forever missed.

  • @irishdude6473
    @irishdude6473 3 года назад +31

    One fact I didn't hear in this video but amazed me as a kid who grew up in Eastern WA learning about the eruption in school in the 90s, was that Johnson put his camera equipment under him as the blast was coming to try to save the footage! Absolutely incredible!!

    • @DylanSharkVenom
      @DylanSharkVenom 2 года назад +15

      I don’t think that was Johnston, I think that was a photographer named Robert Landsburg, who also died in the explosion

    • @marked4death076
      @marked4death076 8 месяцев назад +1

      Johnston and anything close to him was vaporized in seconds, definitely thinking of the other photographer who was mych further away that they actually found

  • @jamesdreads7828
    @jamesdreads7828 3 года назад +158

    "lots of other dudes with jobs ending in 'ologist'" what a covert blaze. allegedly.

    • @DuMularn
      @DuMularn 3 года назад +4

      Maybe Danny put it in the script?

    • @scottworelds2933
      @scottworelds2933 3 года назад +5

      Definitely see the blazing personality creeping into the other channels. Even the memes lol

    • @michael42093
      @michael42093 3 года назад +1

      That whole jaws bit screamed of Danny

    • @afrog2666
      @afrog2666 3 года назад

      @@TunaFreeDolphinMeat Dermatologist

  • @tsbulmer
    @tsbulmer 3 года назад +7

    My childhood was in Vancouver from the mid 80s to the mid 90s, and while I've forgotten most of them, I remember being awed by my teachers' stories of the aftermath, such as using snow shovels to clear ash as thick as winter's snow.

  • @carlh-thehermitwithwi-fi679
    @carlh-thehermitwithwi-fi679 3 года назад +19

    I remember our science teacher hauling a TV into the room, and putting the news on with this. Scary.

  • @heraldkiarastormlight
    @heraldkiarastormlight Год назад +5

    One of my earliest memories is my mother solemnly telling me that the reason the sunset was so vivid was that Mt St Helens had erupted. I was as impressed as a four-year-old can be.

  • @patmullarkey7659
    @patmullarkey7659 3 года назад +7

    I was in grad school in Eugene, Ore. The sound wave created a huge boom that shook our windows.

  • @mitchellneu
    @mitchellneu 3 года назад +77

    “One last giant earth-fart”...is that the technical term? 😂😂😂

    • @linfun1
      @linfun1 3 года назад +5

      It is now! 🥴

  • @Babyclownn
    @Babyclownn 3 года назад +135

    “It’s just a volcano” I’m hard pressed to think of a scenario where that would put me at ease.

    • @wesrrowlands8309
      @wesrrowlands8309 3 года назад +7

      No kidding it's like having a nuke in the back yard and saying "it's just a bomb".

    • @zoriox8667
      @zoriox8667 3 года назад

      @@wesrrowlands8309 it’s 50 kiltons of tnt, whats the issue?

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 3 года назад +5

      I take it you've never been to the Hawaiian Islands then? Those volcanoes are constantly active, and pose very little threat to life. The composition of the magma is what makes the difference. The magma in Hawaii is thin, and almost watery, meaning that the eruptions are constant, but not that explosive. The magma in Mt. St. Helen's is thick and goopy, which traps gasses, and leads to cataclysmic eruptions.

    • @mandipowell7797
      @mandipowell7797 3 года назад

      You're missing the key word.
      DORMANT

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 3 года назад +1

      @@mandipowell7797 Mt. St. Helen's isn't dormant though...

  • @K1Goat_Official
    @K1Goat_Official 3 года назад +14

    Sending love all the way from Zimbabwe. Everyone reading i hope you will still be here in 2020.

  • @lilyprice706
    @lilyprice706 3 года назад +7

    My mom lived about four hours away from the mountain and she was heading to a rodeo with her friend when ash started falling, she ended up going to the friend’s house and she got separated from her family for about a week and she couldn’t contact them because the phone lines were down. I was obsessed with volcanoes as a child and found it so cool she lived through that and I made her take me there one summer and my uncle gave us a jar of the ash that my grandfather collected from putting cookie sheets

  • @TheAnnArnold
    @TheAnnArnold 3 года назад +20

    I took my sons to visit their aunts in Oregon. Then we took off to see what Mt. St. Helens had done about a week before we got there. Houses on the sides of roads had been abandoned & were about 2/3 full of ash. Ash was everywhere. With Oregons pretty much constant misty weather, it made the ash hard packed & looked like cement. I wrote this before watching this video. The video verified what we saw.

  • @GrumpyWolfTech
    @GrumpyWolfTech 3 года назад +13

    I was born a year later in Portland, I remember as a child the ash on the ground still when I was camping with my family.

  • @misskate3815
    @misskate3815 3 года назад +37

    Those people driving their kids near the volcano pissed me right off, lol.

    • @lisakaz35
      @lisakaz35 3 года назад +8

      Indeed. I don't know who to be most angry at for going there and thinking it safe. Those poor kids.

    • @whalesauce3647
      @whalesauce3647 3 года назад +9

      @@lisakaz35 to the parents knowledge, it was safe, according to state maps.

    • @misskate3815
      @misskate3815 3 года назад +1

      @@lisakaz35 yeah, I mean, I get wanting to see a volcano, but that’s what film is for!

    • @lisakaz35
      @lisakaz35 3 года назад +3

      @@whalesauce3647 Common sense tells me it's not a good idea, but I get that you wanna blame the State. I wonder how Simon knew the parents laughed and called it safe. History tells different stories. I suggest checking out how Pliny the Elder died trying to save people fleeing Pompeii. I don't think he was terribly close when it happened.

    • @katherinegilks3880
      @katherinegilks3880 3 года назад +6

      @@lisakaz35 The parents did something stupid out of ignorance that got them all killed, but the key is “out of ignorance”. They didn’t realise that the location they were driving in was unsafe because it was not declared such. Not everyone is familiar with how volcanoes work. (Maybe they had recently moved to the area from a place that doesn’t have volcanoes.) Even the scientists were caught off-guard. If no one tells you something is dangerous, it is hardly only your fault if you do it with disastrous consequences. The Governor should not have tried to cover up their mistake by blaming the victims. They blamed scientists for doing their jobs! They blamed people for not being out of an area that they had not evacuated. That is far worse than taking your kids on a dangerous joyride.

  • @roberthill3207
    @roberthill3207 3 года назад +9

    I was there i watched in real time. Put a prospective on life that still Aws me to this day. Every year on may 18 there will be a phone call from my brother... you remember... yupp.... remember that... yupp... that was awesome. Thanks Simon and Crew.

  • @WMatthewRogers
    @WMatthewRogers 2 года назад +2

    You convey information in an extremely clear and engaging way. Thank you.

  • @devincreislerstudios
    @devincreislerstudios Год назад +2

    I live in Seattle. I’ve heard stories from that day. It was incredible!

  • @screamcheeese7175
    @screamcheeese7175 3 года назад +19

    The Earth fart tidbit made me giggle 😆

  • @300guy
    @300guy 3 года назад +51

    Toutle (Tootle) river Simon, carry on.

  • @julieabraham3566
    @julieabraham3566 2 года назад +5

    The strange part about the ash spread is that it happened so unevenly in Washington. The East side was mostly covered from one to several feet of it. Much of the West side had very little of it. I was 7 and our family lived in Renton, just south of Seattle, about a hundred miles north of the volcano, and we only had a light dusting.
    Another strange part of that day was the explosion was heard as far as Montana. We, in Renton, heard nothing. In fact, we were completely unaware that anything unusual had gone on in the world until that evening when my dad tuned in to the 5:00 news. Seeing such devastation so close to us felt very unreal.
    The only thing we were aware of was that the day had gone gloomy very early in what was predicted to be a warm and sunny day. We were not aware at the time that the gloom was ash. They looked like regular light-grey clouds for a typical overcast day and did not block out the sunlight and turn the day to night as it did on the East side. The days were gloomy, yet rainless, for many weeks.

  • @natesuperfighterdevesiondi4992
    @natesuperfighterdevesiondi4992 3 года назад +141

    “Mount St. Helens: America’s deadliest eruption”
    Yellowstone super volcano: I can change that

    • @richardmercer2337
      @richardmercer2337 3 года назад +27

      No rush -- take your time.

    • @jonathanryan9946
      @jonathanryan9946 3 года назад +11

      Please, not until we invent force fields

    • @franl155
      @franl155 3 года назад +5

      it's already done that at least three times - and before that it was called the something else supervolcano and proved it several more times.
      PS have you seen the "dramatised documentary" Supervolcano? The bonus material is fascinating - The Truth About Yellowstone. The two parts may be on YT.

    • @mjaynes288
      @mjaynes288 3 года назад +6

      You don't have to go that big for a deadlier eruption. If Mount Rainier goes lahars will flow directly into Seattle suburbs. 80,000 people live in the danger zone.

    • @bmwloco
      @bmwloco 3 года назад +9

      When Yellowstone "goes up" that's pretty much an eraser for most of the west coast and America. Sleep tight kiddies. Ain't science fun? ;p

  • @nwsportstilidie
    @nwsportstilidie 3 года назад +10

    Even though I wasn't alive, the lore behind it lives. As a native Washingtonian it's part of my heritage. An event my parent's remember fondly.

  • @TalairanPerigord
    @TalairanPerigord 3 года назад +4

    We were vacationing in Spokane that weekend. I was 15. At noon, that day, the sky outside of our hotel was as dark as midnight except for the ash falling like snow to the ground. Everything shut down. Driving on the ash was like driving on glass. People wore masks to protect their lungs, and the hotel employees put bedsheets over their cars. We weren't permitted to leave for days after the long weekend ended, and between Spokane and the Canadian border, we had to change the car's air filter three times.
    I still have a pill bottle full of ash.

    • @caseycasey621
      @caseycasey621 3 года назад +3

      Who vacations in Spokane?! That’s like vacationing in Barstow

    • @TalairanPerigord
      @TalairanPerigord 3 года назад +1

      @@caseycasey621 I laughed my ass off at this. I believe we were there for a parade and festival that only happens on that long weekend? Anyway, you'll have to forgive us, as we are Canadians and clearly didn't know any better. I will say, however, that we really enjoyed the mountainous regions outside the City, and everyone treated us extremely well under very unusual circumstances.

  • @RDog4484
    @RDog4484 3 года назад +5

    I’ve had a fascination with the Mt. St. Helens eruption for my entire life.
    I’ve only recently discovered your channel, and now you’ve made a video about it?
    Thank you.

  • @Phyde4ux
    @Phyde4ux 3 года назад +19

    I was living in Vancouver Wa. at the time. We watched the eruption just a few miles from our house. Days later there was 3 inches of ash everywhere, it looked like a not-quite-right snow had fallen.

    • @sandybarnes887
      @sandybarnes887 3 года назад

      I was in Vancouver, B.C.

    • @Amarianee
      @Amarianee 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, there's something unnerving about watching ash rain down. I haven't seen a volcano erupt, but in San Diego and we had the Cedar Fire in 2003 and the Witch Fire in 2007 and they both led to a smoky red orange sun and raining ash. It really does look like a "not-quite-right" snow. The very first time they showed the ending premonition for game of thrones (spoilers) I was like, "omg, it's ash. They want us to believe it's winter and snowing, but watch, it's raining ash and shit's on fire!" My husband didn't believe me.

  • @bengunderson712
    @bengunderson712 7 месяцев назад +1

    I visited spirit lake years back. The devastation, even 40 years later, is amazing. Every tree flattened as far as you can see. And the huge scar on the mountain towering over it all.

  • @uberbob8389
    @uberbob8389 3 года назад +3

    At 4:14 there is an image of a mountain in central Oregon called South Sister that is an active volcano, there is also another nearby volcano called Newberry that is absolutely massive, if either went off my home town would likely not be doing so well to say the least.

    • @TUKByV1
      @TUKByV1 3 года назад

      How many active volcanoes are there in Oregon?

  • @rwfan2u
    @rwfan2u 3 года назад +5

    You're my favorite host on RUclips! Who agrees?

  • @MariaThePotterNut
    @MariaThePotterNut 3 года назад +4

    I spent a lot of time growing up visiting my Grandparents in Oregon City- there are still places where you can find ash from Mt St Helen this long after words.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 3 года назад +71

    I prefer our Mount Paektu, I've climbed it many times

    • @autismman6360
      @autismman6360 3 года назад

      Hi Daddy

    • @delta8kitty491
      @delta8kitty491 3 года назад

      Hey is Dennis Rodman a nice guy in person?

    • @MetalFan10101
      @MetalFan10101 3 года назад +1

      In a Kazakhstan, we say to let a womans drive a car is like letting an apple into volcano, Great Success!

  • @SaoGage
    @SaoGage 3 года назад

    This is truly one of the best channels on all of RUclips. Amazing work!

  • @kirstenb3845
    @kirstenb3845 Год назад +2

    I remember my grandfather telling stories of the ash and dark skies from a few states away after the eruption. Really interesting to hear stories of people who were there/had family who remember the event

  • @jameswhitehead6758
    @jameswhitehead6758 3 года назад +32

    Damnit. I had a mouth full of Earl Grey when you did the Earth Fart.
    DAMN YOU SIMON!

  • @DavidMorris1984
    @DavidMorris1984 3 года назад +18

    "Earth fart" has to be the term of the day!

  • @alexrossouw7702
    @alexrossouw7702 3 года назад +26

    Volcano: "I am so deadly!"
    Politicians: "Hold my beer..."

    • @Amarianee
      @Amarianee 3 года назад +2

      *applicable to nearly every disaster everywhere.* did you know there was an outbreak of the bubonic plague in San Francisco in 1900? Not that the politicians would have you know that. It's unfortunate how many people are constantly put at risk for a few people to "save face."

  • @Dr.JBrownhall1968
    @Dr.JBrownhall1968 3 года назад +2

    very interesting vid as always Simon - perhaps you could do one on the black Saturday bushfires of 2009 in Australia

  • @HJWhitehall
    @HJWhitehall 3 года назад +3

    I remember this day so well. I was living in Spokane, WA at the time. The ash turned a beautiful day into night. Ash covered everything in an eerie silence. No birds, no people outside, nothing. Just ash falling out of the afternoon sky.

    • @julieabraham3566
      @julieabraham3566 2 года назад

      That's almost exactly as my aunt described it. She lived in Uniontown.

  • @pikkyuukyuun4741
    @pikkyuukyuun4741 3 года назад +45

    If I lived near a volcano Id rather treat even the smallest warnings as time to flee.

    • @tristanr7799
      @tristanr7799 3 года назад +4

      i live in the lahar zone of Mt Rainer we dont really do that lol, we barely get any training on what to do the only thing they tell us is where the lahar evacuation routes are and expect us to get out of the valley in time.

    • @tripwire3992
      @tripwire3992 3 года назад +1

      @@tristanr7799 remember to time earthquake gaps and if they become any more bigger than the average magnitude, then bolt it immediately

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 3 года назад +1

      @@tripwire3992 Yeah better to have a false positive than to risk a false negative volcanos like Rainer where a flank failure eruption is geologically imminent aren't really risks that one can walk away from if you are wrong and you stay only for it to erupt....

    • @Clenched.Cheeks
      @Clenched.Cheeks 3 года назад

      The problem with that is that you would constantly be on the run. The smallest warnings around faults and subduction zones are constantly and consistently happening. However, I would be on alert for concentrated clusters of earthquakes and be monitoring data from the USGS (it's public domain).

    • @tristanr7799
      @tristanr7799 3 года назад

      @@Dragrath1 yes but flank failures aren't as deadly as you think when it comes to Rainer, its the lahar that everyone is worried about it can travel miles and can reach the Puget sound, which has over 10 different cities in its path with around 200k people, the good thing is the lahar takes around 25-40 minutes to get to you depending on where you are.

  • @redlightning2322
    @redlightning2322 3 года назад +16

    Everyone: St. Helen's was the worst case scenario for a eruption in the US.
    Yellowstone Supervolcano: Am I a joke to you?

    • @2l84t
      @2l84t 3 года назад

      Yup, most dangerous volcano in the lower 48 is Mt Rainier. Look it up.

    • @GothikSlytherin
      @GothikSlytherin 3 года назад

      To be fair the public didn’t know what yellow stone was capable of till the late 90s early 2000s

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache 3 года назад +23

    This worries me for what would happen if the Yellowstone supervolcano did erupt

    • @kaboomerty1638
      @kaboomerty1638 3 года назад +8

      yeah we’d be fucked, like most of the west coast would be obliterated

    • @Mantis_Toboggan_TrashMan
      @Mantis_Toboggan_TrashMan 3 года назад +5

      When Yellowstone goes it's estimated that 90,000 people would die instantly. But really anyone within a 1000 MILE radius would be buried in a three meter or 9.8 feet layer of molten ash. This would just be the beginning. Some scientists think that when it's all said and done five billion people would be dead.

    • @Mantis_Toboggan_TrashMan
      @Mantis_Toboggan_TrashMan 3 года назад +1

      But Yellowstone is a fire cracker compared to something like the siberian traps. Imagine the entire U.S covered in magma for a million years.

    • @magnusbruce4051
      @magnusbruce4051 3 года назад +9

      It would be very bad, with effects across the world. Fortunately, there's no indication that this will happen in our lifetimes. People saying it's "overdue" are drawing a straight line through two points (the last two repose periods of around 630,000 years and 670,000) and saying the third one must also be on that line.
      I'm personally be more concerned about volcanoes capable of eruptions similar to Mt St Helens or Pinatubo that are close to major urban areas e.g. Vesuvius (3 million people in lava/lahar/pyroclastic flow range), Mt Rainier (700,000 people), Merapi (5 million people), Sakurajima (1.4 million people) and Taal (24 million people) to name a few of the most concerning ones. There is a very real prospect of Merapi erupting in the coming months or years, and depending on the conditions, it could be really REALLY bad for the people who live nearby. It doesn't even have to be a particularly large eruption, either. The eruption of Mt St Helens (where under 60 people died) was one hundred times larger than Nevado Del Ruiz (where over 20,000 people died).

    • @RRbattlefield
      @RRbattlefield 3 года назад +3

      Yellowstone erupting is extremely unlikely. Mt’Rainier on the other hand has about a 15% chance to erupt in our life time. It’s just as powerful as Mount Saint Helen, and resides in a more populated area

  • @russellmcphee72
    @russellmcphee72 3 года назад

    This is really one of your best in Geographics. I always find it more interesting, the more I watch it.

  • @douglasshouganai2516
    @douglasshouganai2516 3 года назад +2

    when going hiking and hunting, there is still a 1-3cm layer of Mt St Helens ash just below the layer of fallen leaves and pine needles over 150 miles away

  • @roshambo5895
    @roshambo5895 3 года назад +59

    One big ass eruption eh? Is that a scientific term? 🤣😂🤣

    • @ProdigyWright
      @ProdigyWright 3 года назад +11

      About a magnitude less than a fuckhuge eruption

    • @kineticstar
      @kineticstar 3 года назад +6

      As a scientist I can attest that "big ass" is considered as a standard unit of measurement.

    • @tripwire3992
      @tripwire3992 3 года назад +4

      @@ProdigyWright thats slightly less than a fuckin humongous eruption

    • @carlstanland5333
      @carlstanland5333 3 года назад +2

      I liked the “Earth fart” comment.

    • @scottlee9373
      @scottlee9373 3 года назад +1

      @@ProdigyWright 🤣🤣🤣🏆

  • @knocturna9731
    @knocturna9731 3 года назад +16

    Oh... I’ve been watching a lot of things about Mount St. Helens and volcanoes recently.

  • @Joreel
    @Joreel 3 года назад +3

    I remember the eruption so clearly as I was living in Seattle at the time. It was a terrifying day to say the least.

  • @R3SerialDreams
    @R3SerialDreams Год назад

    Wonderfully done video!
    The first person to tell me about this eruption was my father.
    He was still living in Hertfordshire, England at the time and said he saw a cloud of ashes there, too.
    It left me more amazed than anything else, to realize just how far the after effects of a natural disaster can travel.

  • @sdimerc5571
    @sdimerc5571 Год назад

    Fascinating video. I love your channel - not just for the interesting content but also for the many great comments from people who have connections to the respective topic. It's like the best of the Internet, bringing everyone closer together.

  • @Catbirdmom2
    @Catbirdmom2 3 года назад +4

    I remember this. It’s where we all learned the term pyroclastic flow. We’d never seen anything like it here in my part of north Louisiana. We watched videos of it in science classes with the distraction of youth. It is only as an adult seeing those videos that I understand the true horror of the disaster.

  • @comradewestov3047
    @comradewestov3047 3 года назад +15

    Speaking of hurricane Katrina, that'd be a really interesting episode

  • @mrexists5400
    @mrexists5400 3 года назад +30

    government: "everything is fine"
    mount saint helens: "lemme fix that real quick"

  • @BernardvonSchulmann
    @BernardvonSchulmann 3 года назад +2

    I can remember hearing the explosion. I was on Three Mile Beach on Lake Okanagan in BC, 420 kilometres away. The sound was like a huge low boom coming from the south by southwest from where I was standing. By nightfall a thin coating of dust landed on everything.
    I was 14 at the time and I can remember the media coverage of the volcano including the huge bulge. When it was shown how the blast happened, it seemed completely obvious that the blast would go out to the side.