Strange Mysteries Found in Nature

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024

Комментарии • 507

  • @Sideprojects
    @Sideprojects  Год назад +31

    Thanks to Brilliant for sponsoring this video! Go to brilliant.org/sideprojects/ to get a 30-day free trial + the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual subscription.

    • @proto-geek248
      @proto-geek248 Год назад +3

      Pretty interesting stuff there, Simon.

    • @Wombats555
      @Wombats555 Год назад +2

      Nice break from the more gruesome stuff. I love both but sometimes it's a list of depressing things :)

    • @dalebaker9533
      @dalebaker9533 Год назад

      Simon it's counties NOT countries!!! 🙄

    • @jacobfoster9185
      @jacobfoster9185 Год назад

      Crazy that you have this today..I experienced one yesterday. We all thought it was going to be a MASSIVE thunder storm but it was clear skies..mostly and only one "clap"... shook the entire building and broke some windows all over the city. Not huge but around 300,000 people in the city limits.

    • @ryvyr
      @ryvyr Год назад

      Please consider doing non-adsense in whole at/near very front/back/both and likeminded people as myself will watch, but principally skip when interrupting like cable TV. Cheers~

  • @tovarischkrasnyjeshi
    @tovarischkrasnyjeshi Год назад +113

    Not exactly an expert on sand or anything, but ime E is just a natural harmonic resonance of many objects, including glass/quartz, which sand basically is. It's salient if you spend a lot of time playing low notes in the key of E, which for pianists is a pretty easy key. Sometimes the whole room can just start vibrating - it's annoying when you're after a nice clear sound.

    • @canis2020
      @canis2020 Год назад +6

      It's not the fact they make the notes, it's why does it sound intentional?

    • @randomsandwichian
      @randomsandwichian Год назад +8

      I'm guessing the harmonics or at least the assumed musical qualities of those sand vibrations comes not just from the different heights of dunes, but also how far and wide the desert breeze carries sound, resonance, etc. Ie. how much of the many variables can be captured/recorded in each moment over that period of time isn't going to be constant, I can assume.

    • @semaj_5022
      @semaj_5022 Год назад +15

      ​@@canis2020 It sounds intentional because that's what were used to hearing. Almost any time we hear clear, concise notes and harmonics, it's because a person is intentionally playing them. So if you happen to hear something like that "out in the wild," so to speak, your brain will use what it is familiar with to understand and contextualize the sound.
      A natural occurrence is just that: natural. There are so many different things that happen naturally around the world every day that at least some of those phenomena are bound to remind us of something we humans do.

    • @danielgertler5976
      @danielgertler5976 Год назад +19

      I hate sand. It's rough, course and iritating, and it gets everywhere.

    • @pakde8002
      @pakde8002 Год назад +3

      Several necessary elements were mentioned, sand, degree and height of incline and temperature. Seems like scientists could easily duplicate the phenomenon if they really want to.

  • @DFSJR1203
    @DFSJR1203 Год назад +42

    Back in 1967 or 68 our family was out in our pool when we heard the biggest bang. The sky had no clouds. The airports (Newark, JFK, La Guardia) saw nothing on radar and McGuire AFB also said no jets were flying that would have caused a sonic boom. It made the news on both the New York and Philly TV Stations. The TV channels just called it a Sky Quake. That was the first time I ever heard of this.

    • @Vaeldarg
      @Vaeldarg Год назад

      Wonder if "sky quakes" are actually "air bursts". Meteors exploding in the air resulting in damage like that area in Russia have made people worry about large ones, but maybe these quakes are caused by smaller ones occurring too high up to leave much evidence?

    • @Etymon-jt3zw
      @Etymon-jt3zw Год назад +8

      If it was the sixties it was probably the plane known as the blackbird. By time you hear the Sonic Boom it could be a 1000 miles away. And at the time it was the highest flying plane the US had and they didn't even admit having it for almost another 20 years.

    • @dehydratedwater9806
      @dehydratedwater9806 Год назад +3

      @@Etymon-jt3zw and even if the airport was aware of the SR-71 they wouldn't have admitted it.

    • @rgerber
      @rgerber 5 месяцев назад

      @@Etymon-jt3zw if flying at an altitude of say 25 kilometers it would be more like 65km

  • @TheJAADF
    @TheJAADF Год назад +193

    I'm working in the Institute of Dendrology in Poland, and we have replanted genetic clones if the trees from the Crooked Forest in our experimental forest. They all have grown crooked!

    • @lisilucyinski9455
      @lisilucyinski9455 Год назад +4

      WOW. ❤ from Australia mate

    • @lisilucyinski9455
      @lisilucyinski9455 Год назад +4

      Any ideas WHY

    • @lisilucyinski9455
      @lisilucyinski9455 Год назад +2

      Bio student

    • @TheJAADF
      @TheJAADF Год назад +25

      @@lisilucyinski9455 It's likely an unindentified genetic malfunction

    • @tobio1988
      @tobio1988 Год назад +6

      Can you send me a link to your work? I am a forestry scientist and we all know about this mystery.

  • @LeoHKepler
    @LeoHKepler Год назад +13

    "Misfired" has to be the most polite and hilarious way I've heard that described. Admittedly thats the first I've heard it described...

  • @ratsumatra3003
    @ratsumatra3003 Год назад +5

    The sky quakes sound like the sonic booms when the space shuttle would land. Two quick LOUD shotgun blasts that shook our house everytime. Childhood memories...

  • @bdbgh
    @bdbgh Год назад +93

    I've experienced a "skyquake" before, clear day and then a really loud and long thunder that shook my open house window, apparently people in a roughly 50km2 area heard it at about the same loudness and length, the meteorological department in my country just shrug and said they don't know.

    • @Vaeldarg
      @Vaeldarg Год назад +25

      Meteorological department: "What do we look like, scientists?"

    • @gobblinal
      @gobblinal Год назад +6

      Is it possible to be "invisible" lightning? During the day at least? Lightning doesn't need clouds just some way of building up a charge in an area that somehow discharges to another area. Can't imagine how that would work though. Wind somehow pulling loose electrons from a forest into a mountainside?

    • @theoneandonlyguyallikian1190
      @theoneandonlyguyallikian1190 Год назад +3

      ​@gobblinal A rogue lightning strike that strayed far enough from its original storm cloud that no one saw where it initially came from seems far more likely than a "sky quake".

    • @trli7117
      @trli7117 Год назад +5

      @The one and only Guy Allikian considering "Sky quake" just means loud unexplained noise coming from the sky, it *would be* a sky quake. Since any instance of "rogue lightning" would be a sky quake. Sky quakes're by default more likely than Rogue lightning because all rogue lightning is a sky quake but not all sky quakes are rogue lightning. Some are sonic booms or meteorites breaking up in atmosphere.

    • @thatfuzzypotato1877
      @thatfuzzypotato1877 Год назад +2

      Now I'm wondering if the time I heard a loud explosion with no source was a skyquake. I remember I ducked behind my car, other people hid too. No one could find a source. We assumed it was a transformer but there was no power outage

  • @lyotesharaia4829
    @lyotesharaia4829 Год назад +13

    MIssed a chance to call the sound in Alabama "The Alabooma"

  • @Caleb1874ya
    @Caleb1874ya Год назад +26

    The scientists trying to recreate sound of sand in lab is a FANTASTIC opportunity to
    RICK ROLL with hilarity.

    • @phantomechelon3628
      @phantomechelon3628 4 месяца назад

      *holds a microphone to the petri dish*
      "...Never gonna give you up...never gonna let you down..." 😆

    • @dragonsdynamite6403
      @dragonsdynamite6403 12 дней назад

      Wah waaah.

  • @blackenedheart9592
    @blackenedheart9592 Год назад +43

    Those loud booms are common in North Carolina. I've heard them before and it was so loud it rattled the entire house i was living in at the time. I asked my dad about it and he said it's very common and he's been hearing them his whole life. I looked them up online and they date back to the late 1700s! So at first i thought it was from jets cause there are a lot of military bases in North Carolina but that doesn't explain how people have been hearing them since before North Carolina was even a state!

    • @UnicornsPoopRainbows
      @UnicornsPoopRainbows Год назад +6

      I wonder if the local indigenous population has any stories about them

    • @blackenedheart9592
      @blackenedheart9592 Год назад +2

      @@UnicornsPoopRainbows probably.

    • @tiki_trash
      @tiki_trash Год назад +3

      Maybe it's some sort of thunderclap from a different form of lightning we haven't been able to study. Instead of lightning bolts it's some sort of electrical potential over a large area that instantaneously discharges. The fact that many of these occurrences happen over lakes would make sense. But hey, I'm just guessing here 🤷‍♂

    • @blackenedheart9592
      @blackenedheart9592 Год назад +1

      @@tiki_trash where I'm from in Eastern north Carolina there are no lakes in that area

    • @tiki_trash
      @tiki_trash Год назад +3

      @@blackenedheart9592 Well, God must bowling then, I dunno. They mentioned lakes in the video. What do I know?

  • @Some1outthere
    @Some1outthere Год назад +7

    Loved the video. Just wanted to share that there is a stand of "crooked" aspens in Hafford Saskatchewan Canada as well

  • @NaDa-kw2fu
    @NaDa-kw2fu Год назад +2

    Sky quakes - Meteor hitting the earths atmosphere at a very shallow angle and bouncing off. It is hypothesized that the Siberian Tunguska event 1908 was the same thing, given the lack of any crater or finding 'rock in the ground'. The laying flat of the trees gives an indication of the power of such an event.

  • @littleman8674469
    @littleman8674469 Год назад +25

    I know that there's counties in Alabama but I'm not so sure about countries😂😂

  • @thomasm7682
    @thomasm7682 Год назад +6

    We just had a “sky quake” today here in Maryland. The Department of Defense released a statement acknowledging it was them breaking the sound barrier.

  • @katieskarlette
    @katieskarlette Год назад +12

    I witnessed a skyquake in Wisconsin back in the mid 1990s! It rattled the windows and was heard all over town late one evening. Police looked around for a possible explosion somewhere, and it got a blurb in the local newspaper, but no answers were ever found. I chalked it up to a military aircraft that happened to do a sonic boom over my city, but it always intrigued me.

  • @codypickell9299
    @codypickell9299 Год назад +314

    As an American, I love hearing things like "15 countries in Alabama" 😂👍 always a good show though, no matter which one of his channels it is. 👌

    • @weedfreer
      @weedfreer Год назад +38

      It wasn't just me who noticed that then!
      😊

    • @peterreily1490
      @peterreily1490 Год назад +10

      I just started the video and went “he ain’t wrong, Alabama is indeed 15 countries”… and I’m from the south. Just not the garbage can of the nation aka Alabama. Not the shitter aka Mississippi. True southern class were the most founding fathers that became presidents came from.

    • @jimrohrer2751
      @jimrohrer2751 Год назад +8

      I've through bama before and I'm pretty certain Simon is correct here... Each country has it's own collection of junk, and dialect describing said junk. 😂😂

    • @duncanfeyd4056
      @duncanfeyd4056 Год назад

      "Americans are ignorant, and can't even use the language correctly...."

    • @TheMunchkinita2509
      @TheMunchkinita2509 Год назад +5

      Only came to the comments to see how far I'd have to scroll before seeing this mentioned... it was the first one 😂

  • @sethchapman8001
    @sethchapman8001 Год назад +8

    The last story about the lights, NC USA has a very similar phenomenon called the "Brown Mountain Lights".

    • @TheHikeChoseMe
      @TheHikeChoseMe 17 дней назад

      woot nc here!! i live not far from brown mountain. if you go down the fonta flora trail near lake james you'll see crooked trees too!

  • @shitty80smovielover
    @shitty80smovielover Год назад +6

    Love this!! More of this please❤

  • @QBCPerdition
    @QBCPerdition Год назад +20

    Crooked trees, in my experience, are usually due to wind or heavy snow bending or breaking the trees when young and the trees trying to recover.

    • @Caldwing
      @Caldwing Год назад +4

      This is such a weird coincidence. Just today I visited a park I used to play in as a kid over 30 years ago, in northern British Columbia. There was just exactly such a tree in this park right outside our back fence. It's all been cleared from pine beetle now so it's long gone sadly. My father is a forester (now retired) and he believed that either it broke as a sapling, as you say, or possibly grew out from under an old log that has since rotted away.

    • @willroland7153
      @willroland7153 Год назад +1

      Yes, often found on ridge lines between two different mountain structures, where weather patterns come together and make it a pretty volatile place.

    • @aliciaaustin8373
      @aliciaaustin8373 Год назад +1

      Here in Eastern North Carolina, you will find bent trees in the forest but they are trail markers made by the native Americans.

  • @Lngbrdninjamasta
    @Lngbrdninjamasta Год назад +9

    Ah Nature, always strangely mysterious!

  • @PathfinderBill
    @PathfinderBill Год назад +24

    Always a pleasure to watch your videos Simon! The last segment about the strange lights might actually give some scientific truths to something in my neck of the woods. Before you judge the name, I would love to see you decode the unknown about the Hornet or Joplin "Spook Lights" near Joplin, Missouri. Much like those lights in the video, the lights there react to the climate and change colors: reds, orangish shades in the warmer months and cooler colors like blues and greens in the fall and winter months. They have been documented in the area for over a hundred and sixty years. Thank you again for all that you do my friend!

    • @stephenhill6003
      @stephenhill6003 Год назад +3

      I've heard there are similar lights in the mountains of North Carolina.

    • @markmitchell457
      @markmitchell457 Год назад +1

      ​@@stephenhill6003 and Amarillo TX.

    • @goosenotmaverick1156
      @goosenotmaverick1156 Год назад +1

      Interesting stuff I've never heard of within two hours of my house. Neat!

    • @pugachevskobra5636
      @pugachevskobra5636 Год назад +1

      All of the really famous “strange light phenomena” events have been solved as of 2023; The Marfa Lights, Paulding Lights, Brown Mountain etc. They turned out to be headlights in every single instance 😂

    • @stephenhill6003
      @stephenhill6003 Год назад +1

      @@pugachevskobra5636 Yep, probably even more so today given how bright headlights are.

  • @bobshepard47
    @bobshepard47 Год назад +3

    Star jelly appears a few times a year on my driveway. Every time it has appeared, there was heavy rainfall a day or so beforehand.

    • @arlenedavis5770
      @arlenedavis5770 4 месяца назад

      That's a really weird coincidence. Got any theories on what it might be?

    • @phantomechelon3628
      @phantomechelon3628 4 месяца назад

      @@arlenedavis5770 God rubbing one out... 😆 Either that or alien snot...

  • @skyless_moon
    @skyless_moon Год назад +5

    Regarding the hessdalen lights, I will paraphrase skeptoid on this one:
    "As previously discussed on other Skeptoid episodes dealing with so-called ghost lights - the Marfa Lights in Texas, the Min Min Light in Australia, and the Brown Mountain Lights in North Carolina - there are known physical phenomena that can account for such reports. A better way to investigate the Hessdalen phenomenon would be to at least consider the causes found for these other lights. The Min Min light was proven to be a sort of thermal lensing effect, where warm air collected in ground topography underlaid cooler night air, and reflected lights from over the horizon; an effect we call a superior mirage. However the Marfa and Brown Mountain lights turned out to be misidentifications of conventional lights in a direct line of sight, probably distorted by similar lensing effects. Such thermal irregularities were found in both places. In the case of Marfa, they were car headlights along two prominent highways. At Brown Mountain, it was the headlight of a regularly scheduled locomotive on the plain far away, as well as some other lights. The majority of the images captured by the Hessdalen automated measurement station look exactly like the high-powered landing lights of aircraft following the corridor north from the Tolga VOR."

    • @skyless_moon
      @skyless_moon Год назад +2

      @Cancer McAids You are right it can't be a single mirage, but it's not unusual at all and I quote again from skeptoid:
      So let's wrap up what we've learned about the two different manifestations of the Brown Mountain Lights. Regarding those that appear in the sky above a ridge, it's apparent that the 1922 USGS report solved it as described in the following conclusion. Today, nearly 90 years later, the lights are coming from different sources but this analysis probably still holds up:
      "In summary it may be said that the Brown Mountain lights are clearly not of unusual nature or origin. About 47 percent of the lights that the writer was able to study instrumentally were due to automobile headlights, 33 percent to locomotive headlights, 10 percent to stationary lights, and 10 percent to brush fires."

    • @pugachevskobra5636
      @pugachevskobra5636 Год назад +3

      There’s a reason why so many of these supposedly supernatural light events can be replicated using headlights and it’s because they are just headlights.

    • @TheHikeChoseMe
      @TheHikeChoseMe 17 дней назад

      i live near brown mountain.

  • @N8teyrve
    @N8teyrve Год назад +1

    The singing dunes sounds like it might be linked to that whole theory about how they moved the giant stones used in the pyramids

  • @mikenco
    @mikenco Год назад +7

    This video was frustrating as it was fascinating. We need answers!! ;) I have wood-turned a section of Scot's Pine that had a 90 degree bend in it, just like in that forest. I also grow bonsai. I am 100% convinced that bending those young saplings at a certain age when they are still flexible, then allowing them to grow out is what caused that. It was likely a strong storm, during in which it snowed hard. The snow would have compacted and remained there for a few months, holding those saplings in the bent shape, which is all it takes to cause a permanent bend in a young tree branch. You can do this yourself using a bit of wire and a sapling. Find a sapling, wrap the wire around the trunk. Then leave it for at least three months. Remove the wire and the branch will have a permanent bend in it.

    • @masa461
      @masa461 Год назад +2

      a large tree fell and pinned the young saplings around it to the ground? The tree rotted away over time, and the saplings grew in this crooked shape.

    • @lulujanuary
      @lulujanuary Год назад +2

      That's cool

    • @blur911
      @blur911 Год назад +3

      I know a place at the edge of a bay, the snowdrifts get 20 feet tall, the trees grow like this: i.postimg.cc/HW34g6TN/P-20190623-135546.jpg That's #5

  • @vodnikdubs1724
    @vodnikdubs1724 Год назад +1

    I’m just here for the trees in the thumbnail cause I found very similar in a grove several miles out on an island in a large lake

  • @doclewis8927
    @doclewis8927 Год назад +2

    FOR "DECODING THE UNKNOWN": Could you do a show on the "Marfa Lights"?

    • @arlenedavis5770
      @arlenedavis5770 4 месяца назад

      Don't get your hopes up. I believe they recently debunked it as distant cars, despite there having been reports dating back before cars were ever a thing.

  • @Narupup9654
    @Narupup9654 Год назад +5

    We actually have a few small groups of crooked trees here in Washington I've seen them in Bellevue

  • @amandajones661
    @amandajones661 Год назад +2

    Around 1998 in Columbus Georgia, interestingly located right beside Alabama, we had a sky quake but the internet wasn't how it is now.

  • @Tcrim354
    @Tcrim354 Год назад +2

    For years at 9:30am the back door of my classroom in Monetta, SC would shake like a sound wave came through it. My students and I would hear it and also would wait for it to happen.

  • @VulgarAttenborough
    @VulgarAttenborough Год назад +4

    Wow, there are so many mysteries in nature, and so little time to narrate them. Thank you, Sideprojects. 10:23 I can’t wait to apply star jelly to my entire body. In light of the information in this video, I’m currently writing to you from a bush, waiting for a willing deer to pass by. Cheers!

  • @timbert4672
    @timbert4672 Год назад +7

    I've seen that, Crooked Forest" effect here in the UK as well and always with planted trees, there's a lot of pine tree crops here which is where I see it the most. I personally think it is caused by the tubes placed around the saplings to protect them as they grow as the prevailing wind direction will not begin to influence how the tree grows until it outgrows the height of the tube, then it will increase in girth and force the tube apart, creating this odd effect when the very base of the trunk is revealed. It is just a theory I had but I thought it worth mentioning.

    • @gregwunderlich4253
      @gregwunderlich4253 Год назад

      Saw another RUclips video about the trees claiming that they were made by native Americans as trail markers.

    • @blairwilson7386
      @blairwilson7386 Год назад

      I've seen them along the roadside on the way to Campbeltown in Scotland.

    • @TheHikeChoseMe
      @TheHikeChoseMe 17 дней назад

      yup we have crooked trees in the US too

  • @LiveFreeOrDie2A
    @LiveFreeOrDie2A Год назад +2

    The Hessdalen lights almost seem like a form of radioactive electricity due to the fact they’ve measured up to 19kw of electricity in the lights while they also they kill all microorganisms in the dirt they make contact with

  • @martinstallard2742
    @martinstallard2742 Год назад +30

    0:25 skyquakes
    3:12 end of sponsorship
    4:43 singing sands
    6:53 crooked forests
    9:08 star jelly
    10:32 hessdalen lights

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Год назад +2

    3:33 Cool! I'm not Too too far from Seneca Lake...I'm in the Adirondacks now...I definitely need to look into this!..maybe I can hear one while I'm out looking for a sasquatch in the mountains.

  • @deltatango6793
    @deltatango6793 Год назад +4

    I commented this on another similar video about the crooked trees… But I’ve done this to my sunflowers many times… I would argue that all of the trees that are crooked are growing from an underground seed or cone or whatever the heck… And then somebody is marking the spots where they are planting the tree with a rock… A small pebble, even, would do it… I do this all the time with my sunflowers, and then they grow crooked and distorted, and I always try to set the rock in a place that will just help me remember WHERE the sunflower is, not really trying to block it’s growth, but I seem to screw it up all the time. So I would argue all of the crooked trees were planted at or around the same time by the same group of people or with the same approach, therefore the same ish age, and they’re all grown from underground and not from a baby tree.

  • @scottnunnemaker5209
    @scottnunnemaker5209 Год назад +4

    I think if I heard a “sky quake” I’d just assume it was thunder or a plane going supersonic.

  • @demonflowerchild
    @demonflowerchild Год назад +1

    LOVE THE BLUE BACKGORND

  • @yungdevi
    @yungdevi Год назад +2

    We need a video on “ball lightning”

  • @bjmelancon1951
    @bjmelancon1951 Год назад +2

    The Dancing Forest has to be where Home Depot gets the wood for their boards.

  • @mavenous22
    @mavenous22 Год назад +2

    Anyone else notice that when he says what skyquakes are called in other cultures they show a picture of Paris for Japan?

  • @BruceBoyde
    @BruceBoyde Год назад +1

    Oh boy did I need this after finishing the Into the Shadows about Sednaya.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Год назад +3

    0:30 - Chapter 1 - Skyquakes
    1:40 - Mid roll ads
    3:10 - Back to the video
    4:50 - Chapter 2 - Singing sand
    7:00 - Chapter 3 - Crooked forest
    9:15 - Chapter 4 - Star jelly
    10:35 - Chapter 5 - Hessdalen lights

  • @jasonmetzger3386
    @jasonmetzger3386 Год назад +1

    Do a video about sky trumpets! So much Orr creepier than sky quakes

  • @MattCatt09
    @MattCatt09 Год назад +2

    The mysteries of earth are mind-blowing. There is so much we don’t know, and a lot we’ll probably never know. Much thanks to Simon and the team for making endless videos about them!

  • @charlierice5756
    @charlierice5756 Год назад +1

    Have to wonder if the Hessdalen lights and the Marfa lights are the same thing.

  • @australien6611
    @australien6611 Год назад +2

    Opening line .."As much as we'd like to believe there's order in the world around us" 😂 who here feels they have an orderly life in an ordinary world ?

  • @pamelamays4186
    @pamelamays4186 Год назад +3

    Another strange mystery found in nature. The epic growth of Simon's (and Daven's) beard.🧔🧔

  • @bryanmahnke805
    @bryanmahnke805 Год назад +3

    I'd be interested to know if new growth trees follow a similar pattern in the crooked forest. I'd expect them to grow straight, but you never know.

  • @nickkelley6582
    @nickkelley6582 Год назад +2

    I live in a semi rural village in Wales and we experienced a different "skyquake" it was more like a slightly deeper 1950 movie ufo sound. You could feel the pulsing vibration on people's houses 🤔

  • @Monsoonpain
    @Monsoonpain Год назад +1

    Here in Houston...i've heard 1 single cannon fire type boom, on sunny days, around the same times (between 1 to 3pm ). 2 years ago in particular, I heard it weekly .

  • @Xonk61
    @Xonk61 Год назад +2

    If I went to a cleared area in a field in which tree saplings have sprouted to a height of about a meter, the snipped off the top, and all the branches that were not the one pointing north, then return about 50 years later, I would have an area filled with trees that recovered from my pruning, and the branch on each that had been pointing north would then have grown upwards, making a "knee" where the top of the sapling had been pruned 50 years earlier.

  • @tinxe6821
    @tinxe6821 Год назад +1

    I've heard the cannon thunder before. Central Florida. Only once and it was super weird

  • @leaguemastergg3647
    @leaguemastergg3647 Год назад +3

    7:22 I've heard it could be because of high winds in the area.
    8:05 those trees looked like they may have been blown over in a big storm a while back

    • @hgbugalou
      @hgbugalou Год назад

      A microburst could create the localized damage noted here. This is my guess if they aren't man made.

  • @eddiehoplight2003
    @eddiehoplight2003 Год назад +1

    Singing sands phenomenon sounds really interesting

  • @thecozyintrovert
    @thecozyintrovert Год назад +2

    I wonder if sky-quakes have multiple causes and that's part of why nobody really knows. I just feel like a loud and random sound could be a lot of things.

  • @rafaelriveramestre7976
    @rafaelriveramestre7976 Год назад +1

    Very common in the tropics (Caribbean at least)

  • @starrywizdom
    @starrywizdom Год назад +1

    Good job, Jenna!

  • @Shado_wolf
    @Shado_wolf Год назад +2

    We have leaning trees here in Western Australia, near Geraldton. They look they just decided to lay down and have a sleep 😅 the reason was pretty easy to work out though, they all lay in the same direction, and it's pretty windy up there. Still very weird to look at

  • @QBCPerdition
    @QBCPerdition Год назад +2

    I wonder if Skyquakes are due to sound reflecting off a denser layer of air, similar to how AM radio can reflect off the upper atmosphere and thus be picked up thousands of miles away.
    Maybe there was an earthquake or loud peal of thunder far enough away that it wasn't felt or seen, but the sound waves reflected, maybe even amplified, to be heard on a clear day. Being over large bodies of water may being about these atmospheric conditions more readily. I live near Lake Winnebago, and the largish size of the kake definitely has effects on storms moving through the area. Often, a storm will be heading straight towards us, only to be deflected north or south as it nears the lake.

  • @lloydalexander3738
    @lloydalexander3738 Год назад +1

    Could a plane be out of site and still cause a sonic boom you would feel and hear?

  • @phenderson20
    @phenderson20 Год назад +1

    I live in Alabama about 80 miles from Birmingham and I have never heard of this story. I’m not saying it didn’t happen, but it definitely wasn’t widely reported.

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk Год назад +1

    For the first time I really, really want to know what music you used for the chapters. Most especially the choral piece during the Singing Sands chapter! Just my kind of thing.

  • @Legionmint7091
    @Legionmint7091 9 месяцев назад +1

    I always thought that a highly viable explanation for the crooked forest are shipbuilders experimenting to form the ship frames by manipulating the growth, most likely by using increasingly larger spirals of copper wire. When the experiment turned out to be flawed (because layers of wood actually is better) the metal was removed and reused elsewhere. We know that shipbuilders had an impressive forward planning for hundreds of years, so a tree shaping experiment is definitely not outside the realm of possibility, quite the contrary.

  • @knudsandbknielsen1612
    @knudsandbknielsen1612 Год назад +1

    About the trees growing in a twisted way: I sugggest that the prevailing wind may have changed locally in the years when the trees were young. Say, a western wind for two years, then from the east... Unless of course the trees are not of the same age...

  • @Thighweaver
    @Thighweaver Год назад +1

    The Bama Booms are wild Ive heard a couple myself. Some you can feel. It may be a collapsing of old mines or caverns underneath the vast network of unexplored areas under Alabama. However they sound like theyre not too high up so it is hard to tell. At times heard a couple at a time.

  • @benlozier3290
    @benlozier3290 Год назад +1

    Your brain filters out all the other competing frequencies in order to maneuver the sand sounds into something it can manage. Best guess.

  • @charlesflint9048
    @charlesflint9048 Год назад

    The angles of the dunes will push air past the ripples in the sand creating a resonant sound.

  • @benlozier3290
    @benlozier3290 Год назад

    Thunder without clouds of moisture to muffle the sound..... It looks and sounds like thunder...... Thunder.

  • @leguile1
    @leguile1 Год назад +1

    Imagine having a powerplant in the future that's just made of forests. Power plant.

  • @evilproducer01
    @evilproducer01 Год назад +1

    Madeline Island, in Lake Superior has a singing sand beach. I wouldn’t call that arid or excessively hot. Nor would I say there were high dunes. As I understand it, the theory is that sand grains are rounded due to the action of the water.

  • @kmac140
    @kmac140 10 месяцев назад

    Sand Mountain 35min drive east of Fallon, Nevada on US50 makes the sounds. If the conditions are right, get to the top of the mountain and jump down a few feet on the steep side. The cascading sand under you will briefly make the sound. And yes it is very cool. Low bass on a cello sounds about right.

  • @pamelamays4186
    @pamelamays4186 Год назад +4

    Sky Quake. Could be the name of a hard rock band.
    Bama Bombs. Could be the name of an Alabama professional soccer team.
    Singing Sands. Could be name of a desert resort/spa.
    Crooked Forest. Could be the name of a spooky place in a fairy tale: "Don't go into the Crooked Forest, for ghosts, witches and other scary beings reside there."
    Star Jelly. What alien moms use to make PBJ sandwiches for their little alien children.

    • @keirfarnum6811
      @keirfarnum6811 Год назад

      Star Jelly makes me think of something less wholesome. Like when Kpax does the dirty deed.

    • @Werevampiwolf
      @Werevampiwolf Год назад

      "Misfired Deer Semen" could be a grunge band

  • @MrKillerno1
    @MrKillerno1 Год назад

    For a second I thought that Creaky Blinder was hosting this video, sorry man. Awesome video.

  • @justinsamaroo3363
    @justinsamaroo3363 Год назад

    Skyquakes are just undiscovered aliens zooming across our skies at high speeds ❤

  • @abhisheksharma-sb3er
    @abhisheksharma-sb3er Год назад +1

    The forest light thing also occurs in uttarakhand india
    In the Himalayan mountains people have seen light going up down and erratic always and ofcourse people associated it with supernatural phenomenon

  • @jiggly1985
    @jiggly1985 Год назад +5

    Can you please use celsius or at least say both fahrenheit and celsius, de rest of the world thanks you ;)

    • @chiphausl
      @chiphausl Год назад

      Roll Tide

    • @chiphausl
      @chiphausl Год назад

      110 F in Celsius is "Freaking Hot"

  • @ilionreactor1079
    @ilionreactor1079 Год назад +3

    Simon should do a video on the proliferation of Simon.

  • @jermainerucker2027
    @jermainerucker2027 3 месяца назад

    That blue on blue is so official all it needs is a whistle

  • @FungusWolf
    @FungusWolf 6 месяцев назад

    I watched a spider set a web in a young pine tree I was growing, it completely changed the form of the main stem and tree once it was older. It started to make me wonder how many gnarly looking trees are actually spider art.

  • @m.e.5482
    @m.e.5482 Год назад +1

    In England it may be a shire. America has a county in our country. Always good work

  • @richardbrown6740
    @richardbrown6740 Год назад +1

    The hessdalen lights have a more rare, less known american cousin in what is known as the Brown Mountain Lights,they occur in Appalachia.

  • @lancelafonde5240
    @lancelafonde5240 11 месяцев назад

    We got them crooked trees in Saskatchewan as well, check it out , little town called Hafford Saskatchewan, same things trees across the road are completely fine . Apparently animals wont even walk through the forest. Anyways its a cool place to visit when passing through

  • @SkipperDannyD
    @SkipperDannyD Год назад +1

    there's a good documentary about the Hessdalen Lights .. it's here on youtube for free if I remember right.

  • @bgcloon
    @bgcloon 10 месяцев назад

    Central and Southern NJ have been rattled by mysterious booms for decades. I grew up in Ocean County, and my parents always used to say it was Fort Dix firing their guns... except they didn't have guns big enough to rattle towns fifteen miles away.

  • @nicolassantamaria1171
    @nicolassantamaria1171 Год назад

    I had a knitted sweater like when I was a kid, in the early 80's.

  • @deandreagillon
    @deandreagillon Год назад

    Fun fact: I'm from "just North of Birmingham" and we had another Bama Boom a couple of days ago. It's not big news around here anymore.

  • @tomahawkk
    @tomahawkk 9 месяцев назад

    The pine trees likely bent due to strong prevailing winds/ being windswept. There's a few like it at a reservoir near me

  • @rgerber
    @rgerber 5 месяцев назад

    if you have an accoustic guitar with nylon strings only slightly damp strings is enough to cause massive resonance if run over with fingers

  • @Yupppi
    @Yupppi Год назад

    It feels like I'm watching a video I've watched already.

  • @user-pq1qw5ed6m
    @user-pq1qw5ed6m 11 месяцев назад

    I've heard a sky quake in Britain. It sounded like a large metal sheet being dragged across the sky. No where near water though.

  • @blairwilson7386
    @blairwilson7386 Год назад

    There are crooked forest trees in Scotland. I've noticed them on the side of the road towards Campbeltown. I can't remember where exactly, but i always wondered why they were like that every time i would pass them at the side of the road.

  • @BuzzinVideography
    @BuzzinVideography 11 месяцев назад

    Skyquake happened here in North west Idaho around March this year. People for about 10 miles heard it well enough some called emergency services thinking a bomb went off

  • @dougiedrever7168
    @dougiedrever7168 Год назад +1

    you can pin trees as they grow to get them to grow wierd, my thought is they were anti cavalry trap, early version of a mine field

  • @patrickbrumm4120
    @patrickbrumm4120 Год назад

    Hessdalen Lights: could be St Elmo's Fire, a piezoelectric effect due to the topography

  • @Dzonnyg
    @Dzonnyg Год назад +1

    Poland mentioned. Great accomplishment for our nation.

  • @peterreily1490
    @peterreily1490 Год назад +1

    “People living across 15 countries in Alabama”
    I have to agree, alabama is multiple countries in itself.

  • @gailwondowski3207
    @gailwondowski3207 Год назад +1

    What song is playing at 4:43? I love it!

  • @adamtalpash6469
    @adamtalpash6469 3 месяца назад

    7:19 I’ve seen the same thing in Alberta Canada, interesting to know that it’s seen all over the world and is unsolved!

  • @KW-qd8gu
    @KW-qd8gu Год назад +1

    There’s a grove of crooked trees that look just like those ones in Poland in eastern Washington State