This Wave Happens Once in 10,000 Years, Scientists Have Finally Captured It

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  • Опубликовано: 7 апр 2023
  • This wave happens once in 10,000 years - let's see what happened when scientists finally capture it!
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Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @user-xn1je2ox9d
    @user-xn1je2ox9d 9 месяцев назад +513

    My father, who was a merchant marine, told me that he had experienced a 100 foot wave in the south China Sea in the late 1940s. He said it was a miracle that they survived

    • @SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive
      @SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive 5 месяцев назад +6

      a 100 foot hill is a small hill. Waves dont break in the middle of the ocean. I get that its scary cuz its not normal, but waves have pretty gentle sides. You go up, you come down. No big deal.

    • @cjg8703
      @cjg8703 5 месяцев назад

      you obviously didn't watch the video@@SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive

    • @johnwicksdog4399
      @johnwicksdog4399 5 месяцев назад

      @@SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive
      Oh you know all about those 100 foot waves do ya ? Shut up you ain’t George Clooney in the Perfect Storm !

    • @debrawatkins4165
      @debrawatkins4165 4 месяца назад +13

      I spent some time in the China sea and witnessed a 100 ft wave.

    • @johnwicksdog4399
      @johnwicksdog4399 4 месяца назад

      @@debrawatkins4165 You should have stayed in the kitchen !

  • @uncletrash8770
    @uncletrash8770 Год назад +2311

    I was a fisherman on the Atlantic a few years ago.We were fishing in the St-Lawrence Gulf. I remember how terrifying it was. I was but a wee lad at the time, maybe 19 years old? The Atlantic is a cold, murderous place. Rogue waves are not only real, but they happen all the time, and when you're on a ship while it happens, you will definitely know. Old fishermen know about them, and I've seen with my own eyes waves 60 feet tall along the coast of Anticosti Island. We were at sea for 9 weeks. When I came back I told myself I would never do that again. The next time I worked a fishing boat, we were dragging lines for Albacore in the mud flats of San Pablo Bay in California. Much better.

    • @maeenaqeel2561
      @maeenaqeel2561 Год назад +34

      Lol

    • @StephanieElizabethMann
      @StephanieElizabethMann Год назад +81

      I can't imagine how it'd feel to see a wave like that. I would like to hope I'd stand my post and not let my crew members down but I'd be like you. I'd never ever go there again.

    • @paulwitort2112
      @paulwitort2112 Год назад +26

      albacore in San Pablo bay? really?

    • @PotatoKoko1
      @PotatoKoko1 Год назад +13

      wow that must have been scary!

    • @PatrickFleener-yg3px
      @PatrickFleener-yg3px Год назад +4

      Just wow man

  • @jackaubrey8614
    @jackaubrey8614 9 месяцев назад +109

    You missed the most important point about the Draupner wave - its waveform. It had a deep trough in front of it, a much steeper than normal front face and a trough on its trailing edge.
    Combined with its size this wave shape makes it far more dangerous than a normal wave form - ships tend to "fall" into the front trough and then get hit by an almost vertical wall of water (hence the "hole-in-the-ocean" comment). Ships are normally built to withstand pressures of up to 30 tons per square meter from waves but this particular wave form (and not just the extra size) contributes to pressures on ship structures of up to (and over) 100 tons per square meter. Little wonder ships simply disappear...

    • @kfulani4935
      @kfulani4935 Месяц назад +3

      Thank you for breaking that down..i was gonna Google it 😂 ❤

    • @kellycarver2500
      @kellycarver2500 Месяц назад

      I would say that I wouldn't put it past our filthy guvt to ve CREATING these w the technology they have been using. We haven't had ANY God given wether the last 20 plus yrs.
      I have been a targeted individual the last 30 years, and every American needs to HEAR MY STORY, because what the monsters did to ME, they are now doing to YOU ALL.
      When the criminal harassment by agents started in 87-88, they had a legit right to watch me. At the time, I was young and wild and dating a drug dealer. I stopped dating him and stopped all drug use in 88, but the harassment never stopped. They have tapped every phone, hacked every computer and criminally and repeatedly entered every home i have lived in during these years since. I now don't leave my home unless I hire a house sitter because the filthy agents refuse to STAY OUT OF MY HOME. I couldn't understand for years, WHY they were targeting me. I'm married, don't do anything illegal and am a Christian since 94. It wasn't until 2018 that I knew WHY. I was sick with a skin disorder that I am now convinced was another bioweapon being tested on us. I was examining my skin with a magnifier when i found strange, matching sets of holes in my inner wrists and knees. They looked like tiny tunnels, but couldn't be seen with the naked eye. I had no idea how they got in my skin, and I hadn't seen any doctors or taken any shots in years. So I got out a sterile needle and opened up those holes and took samples from them and viewed it under my microscope. (A hobby I have had many years.) I was speechless at what I found. I t was a clear, COMPUTERIZED GEL, and it was laid out in a ladder shaped grid system, that had tiny rice shaped batteries around it's outer perimeter. It had pine tree shaped antennas that had perfectly symmetrical branches with metallic looking little balls on the tip of every branch. It was slowly collapsing it's structure as it cooled to room temperature. I had never seen anything like it in my life. Finding this tech in my body explained many things I had wondered about the last twenty years. It explained why I heard a man's voice in my head sometimes. It explained why he pretended to be GOD that the things he said weren't always Godly. It explained why things got moved or hidden from me during my sleep, and why I was WATCHED CONSTANTLY through my OWN EYES. The FILTHY, DISGUSTING, LOWLIFE MONSTERS HAD HACKED MY BRAIN, and it was WORSE THAN RAPE! I told my local chief of police, when I reported finding it, that at least a woman can HEAL after being raped. There is no 'healing' from this, according to what Elon Musk says in his videos. He sells this stuff, though I cannot imagine why ANYONE in their right mind would EVER want it!! I found a picture of it right on DARPA'S website, under Obama Brain Initiative. I KNEW what would be in the vax when they said one was coming, and unfortunately, I was right. Dr Carrie Madej, and Dr Ricardo Delgado were some of the first to identify it in the shots. It's also in the masks/tests, and swabs, and NOW they are putting it in our FOOD/BEV AND MILK!!! I am here to tell you that this absolutely EVIL tech from HELL is FAR MORE than 'gene therapy'!!! It lets the filthy monsters see and hear every thought we have! It lets them talk to us mentally. It lets them even TAKE OVER OUR BODY during certain stages of sleep, and use OUR BODY to do whatever they WANT TO, and we have little or no memory of it, much less any CONTROL OVER IT! PEOPLE NEED TO KNOW WHAT THE SICK FREAKS ARE DOING TO US, and they MUST be stopped! I wouldn't do this to an ANIMAL, because even animals have a RIGHT to have PRIVATE THOUGHTS between them and GOD. They are also now putting this tech in all animal shots as well, HACKING ALL LIVING THINGS, so they can be REMOTE CONTROLLED by the sick freaks WHO THINK THEY ARE GOD! THIS TECHNOLOGY IS STRAIGHT OUT OF HELL ITSELF and the monsters MUST be held accountable for what they have done and are continuing to do! NOBODY HAD A RIGHT TO DO THIS TO ME OR ANYONE ELSE! NOBODY! EVER! The filthy monsters have been in MY BED, MY BATH, and MY BRAIN, the last TWENTY YEARS! Watching me through MY OWN EYES, while I bathed, changed clothes, any and everything, they SAW IT. HOW WOULD YOUI FEEL ABOUT BEING RAPED THIS WAY? I sure hope you didn't take the shots, use the other things, and God forbid you been drinking any MILK!! This stuff is called NEURAL LACE/HYDROGEL. Graphene oxide and polymer based tech that is straight out of Hell itself. Musk says it attaches to nerves and grows INTO the brain, and that it is PERMANENT. I pray to God he is wrong because I truly want my HUMANITY BACK! And he is LYING when he says that it cannot be injected through a normal needle, because it CAN if it is cold enough. It SHRINKS when it gets cold. It also doesn't need a CHIP, either, because it could easily make it's OWN! The stuff acts ALIVE in the body. Absolutely fascinating to watch.
      I will gladly answer any questions you may have. These monsters love to torture and kill helpless, innocent little animals and the freaks tortured and killed FOUR of my greatly loved little dogs. The last one, my favorite, was tortured EVERY MONTH for over NINE YEARS, before we busted the agents using our CELL PHONE to put out the frequencies that were CAUSING those seizures. We busted them RED HANDED, and there is no denying what they are doing. They finally killed him Thanksgiving Day of 22, after making him go BLIND, causing organ failure, and shocking him every couple hours the last two days, till he couldn't hold out any more, and died in my arms. People, please don't sleep by anything digital, and keep your animals away from them as well! We also busted them hacking our washer/dryer outlet, and gas stove, so keep your appliances UNPLUGGED when not using them! If you hear an device making a strange or unusual sound, BLOCK IT by coughing, whistling, clapping, etc. and shut the device off FAST AS POSSIBLE.

  • @billroberts9182
    @billroberts9182 4 месяца назад +186

    My Father was on a navy ship traveling to Tokyo late in 1945. While standing on the bridge, he observed waves up to 85 feet high. He knew his height above the water, and using trigonometry, calculated their magnitude. He was a physicist with a EE degree and was not the type to exaggerate. It occurred during a typhoon they were in.

    • @yummysatay
      @yummysatay 3 месяца назад +5

      with Trillions of $$ spent on military equipments, a fraction could have been used to develop advanced sonar mappings of the ocean floor world wide. This same technology could be used to search wrecks such as MS München. We can probably learn quite a bit from this particular wreck, at least what cause its mysterious sinking.

    • @johnarnold893
      @johnarnold893 3 месяца назад +4

      Before satellites there used to be a couple of weather ships that stationed off the west coast of BC about 500 miles out there at Station Papa. He said his berth was 80 feet above the water line and they used to take green water at that height. The North Pacific can be serious weather.

    • @DramaMustRemainOnTheStage
      @DramaMustRemainOnTheStage 2 месяца назад

      That's awesome. Do you know what shop he was on? Was it the I
      USS INDIANAPOLIS BY CHANCE?

    • @billroberts9182
      @billroberts9182 2 месяца назад +2

      No, I don't recall his ship- but I'm sure it wasn't the Indianapolis. He was headed for Tokyo just after their surrender. He was stationed there (in Yakasuka sp?) for about 8 months. He said he never felt in danger despite the recent surrender. At first he carried a .45 ACP but after a couple of weeks, he quit taking a sidearm even when he traveled in to the city. @@DramaMustRemainOnTheStage

    • @alexandraanomaly9991
      @alexandraanomaly9991 2 месяца назад

      Did he use his measuring tape? I'm sure a 20 foot wave looks insane and huge! I bet people are exaggerating it big time. Not saying they don't happen.

  • @lancerevell5979
    @lancerevell5979 Год назад +1080

    In 1984, my Navy ship, a small ASW frigate, was caught in a hurricane in the Atlantic. At one point, a huge wave literally put us on our side! I found myself literally standing on the bulkhead, the door to my ET office at my feet. Opening it, I looked DOWN into the office. Then, with a shake my plucky little ship slowly righted herself. I still feel we should have sunk that night. We would have been another "disappearance". I guess God had other plans for us. My ship still exists, as a museum display ship.

    • @y_fam_goeglyd
      @y_fam_goeglyd Год назад +55

      😲 Even though the majority of my sailing has been done on small craft, I know enough about the water to understand how lucky (ironically) you were! I'm very glad you came through that! She must have been a cracking boat. Well built and well maintained. You and your mates saved her along with yourselves.

    • @bs_wolf4675
      @bs_wolf4675 Год назад +24

      Yea you were really lucky

    • @bs_wolf4675
      @bs_wolf4675 Год назад +22

      It’s good you made it out

    • @zukazealanee
      @zukazealanee Год назад +33

      The lord clearly had other plans for you and your mates later in life on that day, glad you made it out and thank you for your service.

    • @yarrrgenius4412
      @yarrrgenius4412 Год назад +22

      dude, you lived a legend, just to have it slapped in a museum..

  • @franktheo2055
    @franktheo2055 10 месяцев назад +112

    This video explains an occurrence that I saw when going 15 plus miles offshore fishing for mackerel out of New York waters in early March of 1973. I was on a on a boat called the Betty W II there was a 100 foot steel party boat called the Amberjack a few miles in front of us on rout to the West Farms. The ocean was flat and and suddenly the Amberjack disappeared for a moment and reappeared. I was in the cabin looking out facing the front window when all of a sudden the bow of the Betty W went straight down into this huge deep hole in a flat sea it was like the bow of the boat went straight down into a waterfall when we hit the bottom the boat shot straight back up unharmed. This wasn't a protruding wave, it was a deep cut of water on a flat ocean... In all these years I never saw anything like it again, but it was one hell of a scary roller coaster ride to say the least !!!!!

    • @brandieling309
      @brandieling309 Месяц назад +3

      I cannot even imagine how you felt at this exact moment in your life's journey. How do you get back up and go back on the ocean again and again after this type of an experience? So was it like the water was just missing all of a sudden , like you ran your ship off of a massive water cliff or was your ship under the water as well before you hit the bottom and popped back up and how was there no dmg done to your ship? Your story is as fascinating as it is terrifying.

    • @franktheo2055
      @franktheo2055 Месяц назад +1

      I was about 15 years old going offshore for mackerel . The 100 foot Amberjack was a few miles ahead and disappeared and came up. I was on the Betty W II a 70 foot party boat, and we went straight down into this cut of water, I was in the cabin looking straight out the window I saw the bow of the boat hit the bottom and shot straight up like a rocket. I was a young pup back around 1973/74 and always wondered what that was it happened so fast until I saw this video 🛥. IT WAS LIKE BEING ON A ROLLERCOASTER ON A FLAT CALM OCEAN. WEARD. !

  • @jimj2683
    @jimj2683 8 месяцев назад +178

    I was a fisherman in the North Sea when I was younger. Some of the waves I saw out there scared me onto land forever. I still have nightmares to this day. No ship could possibly survive those rogue waves. My older colleagues (including the captain) told of rogue waves 120ft+ breaking violently in the middle of the sea and sounding like freight trains. I read that the highest theoretical wave height with the current models is about 200ft. I guess it is limited by wind speed, because in the wave simulation pools they can make waves virtually as high as they want. Like towers of 1km+. It could even explain why low flying planes crashed in the Bermuda triangle.
    I know they record wave heights some places, but I wish they had swarms of small solar powered drone boats that could roam the seas and find the real monsters. If they could record them on video, that would break the internet and nobody would ever go on a cruise ship again...

    • @jeremyh344
      @jeremyh344 5 месяцев назад +12

      There was a video a couple months ago from CNN or the weather channel i believe and they actually had some kind of drone boat they sent out into a hurricane this year and it's pretty epic, you should Google it. I agree with your thoughts on it scaring people to land forever i almost drowned in a riptide when i lived in southern California and that was enough for me

    • @kauffrau6764
      @kauffrau6764 4 месяца назад +1

      The cruise industry is probably behind in suppressing information on these giant waves. Haha.

    • @tarabradford1848
      @tarabradford1848 4 месяца назад +3

      As soon as you said North Sea I thought oh boy they have definitely seen some gnarly waves!

    • @brad144k
      @brad144k 2 месяца назад

      That 🌊 could explain some of the disappearances at the Bermuda Triangle. But the main reason I'm sure planes go missing is the sudden down draft of air/wind. There is said to be like an energy vortex there. It creates a funnel/drain and can sink ships! 😳 A similar phenomenon happens in the skies as well. Pilots have said they've been forced down hundreds of feet In seconds from air currents! Has to do with that vortex IMO!!

  • @allazwawi9586
    @allazwawi9586 3 месяца назад +37

    I never imagined how catastrophic waves could be until last year when the flash floods hit a local city in my country Derna Libya. The collapse of a dam led to a freak wave that not only wiped 5 grand bridges but also killed thousands of people in less than an hour.
    I saw tsunami and flood damages before but to see it completly uproot entire apartment buildings of 10 stories high made out of sturdy concrete was a reality check on how much powerful water can really be

    • @pieceD399
      @pieceD399 10 дней назад

      A simple 2 or 3 meters wave is already a little wall , cant imagine a 20 M
      But if the ocean didnt had some defense we had probably destroyed it in a few years

  • @vickyabramowitz2885
    @vickyabramowitz2885 Год назад +91

    I remember when the movie The Poseidon Adventure premiered in 1972. There was criticism that the rogue wave that caused the ship to roll over was an impossibility.

    • @lancerevell5979
      @lancerevell5979 Год назад +26

      They are real. Been there, done that, but my ship survived.
      We saw another small ship, the USCGC Bear in the early 1980s, went through a huge wave. She was, for a thankfully brief moment, a submarine. The wave totally engulfed her head on, ripped all the stanchions from the deck, tore away the fiberglass cover of her main gun, and the front of the superstructure was set back several inches! We saw her just after, on her way to her homeport for repair.

    • @valmacclinchy
      @valmacclinchy Год назад +20

      Poseidon Adventure (1972) is an outstanding movie.

    • @jayfredrickson8632
      @jayfredrickson8632 4 месяца назад +4

      ​@@valmacclinchyBetter than the remake.

    • @janysmahoney1271
      @janysmahoney1271 2 месяца назад +1

      Love it; t me, water is 1 of the most dangerous natural phonemic force ever no matter what form its in (whether tsunamis,torrential snow, hurricanes ,icebergs, freak waves, avalanches, hailstones etc).
      Maybe because ( unlike a fire)if u capsize, u have no solid footing t gain u bearings an rethink u situation, unlike a fire where on exiting a property ur on solid ground etc
      How do u contain a hurricane/waves/the seas if ur caught up in a watery situation unlike a fire in a building? Only thing that scares me more is an earthquake - once again, a phenomenon that loosens ur feet from solidity.

  • @shawn081082
    @shawn081082 11 месяцев назад +481

    In my youth, I spent some time amongst the people of Samoa and Tonga. Some of the most beautiful sunsets man could ever see, and I've stood on cliffs and seen waves easily topping 60-70 feet. They knew how to read their waters, and avoided certain areas

    • @mitch_the_-itch
      @mitch_the_-itch 11 месяцев назад +1

      What an absurd racist idea that a certain group of people have some special skill bestowed upon them, lol. You millennials are totally broken.

    • @ladywolfwolf
      @ladywolfwolf 8 месяцев назад +18

      Lots of these waves between South America and Antarctica.

    • @cdmarshall7448
      @cdmarshall7448 7 месяцев назад +3

      Isn't one of those places in California?

    • @ladywolfwolf
      @ladywolfwolf 6 месяцев назад +6

      @@cdmarshall7448 The waves were knarly when I was stationed in San Diego.

    • @cdmarshall7448
      @cdmarshall7448 6 месяцев назад +8

      My brother was stationed in SD too, Camp Pendleton. He mentioned a cliff that had 100 foot rogue waves. Killed a few in the 80's.

  • @midi1529
    @midi1529 4 месяца назад +41

    Ive been a surfer for 50 years. A wave can double up with another wave and double and triple in height right there in front of you when 2-3-4 waves just all combine. I can imagine is the deep sea several waves popping up randomly and wow a gigantic wave is made in front of you. It's amazing AND A LITTLE SCARY

    • @user-kk7jq2rp1s
      @user-kk7jq2rp1s 3 месяца назад +2

      I picked up a book at the library called "the wave"I forgot the woman's name who wrote it she followed noah and local surfers in Hawaii knew more about waves then noah! There's some weird s***out there.

    • @Mr.K.14823
      @Mr.K.14823 3 месяца назад +2

      I was gonna comment the same thing. Even rogue sets occur - head high all day and all the sudden 3 double overheads will roll through. Waves are strange and fascinating.

    • @QualityPen
      @QualityPen 3 месяца назад +4

      I can tell the scientists who thought waves follow harmonic waveforms never spent much time with a boogeyboard or surfboard. Any kid who has knows every now and then there’s a wave that’s much larger than any of the ones before or after it which comes and pummels them. Anybody who has set up a picnic just short of the surf has learned that the hard way too.
      Yeah, waves definitely do combine.

    • @pieceD399
      @pieceD399 10 дней назад

      @@QualityPen Thats why they are almost allways wrong , they just use what they have learned and crete a theory , and that theory will become the truth
      And most of what they think they know is based on theories to , its like a joke theories + theories make more theories and it never stops :))

  • @Enonymouse_
    @Enonymouse_ 6 месяцев назад +82

    It happens a lot more often than 10,000 years, within the last 10 years it's a phenomena that has been studied more closely in specialized indoor wave generating facilities to figure out how and why it happens. It did used to be passed off by coast guard officials as a random event or fictional event made up by superstitious sailors.

    • @jpslaym0936
      @jpslaym0936 5 месяцев назад +5

      Yeah I said same, this guy did very little research on rogue waves and recent research thats shown it occurs nearly monthly

    • @steevelapointe1152
      @steevelapointe1152 4 месяца назад

      you both didnt watching all the video, cause right after he sayning 1 in a 10 000 years, he saying the opposite, that what the scientist though, but they were wrong, and all scientist now saying that rogue wave happen at around 10 /3weeks so its make 3 rogue wave by week, according to sientist, and to the what dude in the video saying........ pple like you , who think are intellignet prove your stupidity by not watching all the video before commenting something as idiot as you said@@jpslaym0936

    • @musicftw711
      @musicftw711 3 месяца назад +7

      Didn’t he say in the video that scientists once believed it happens once every 10,000 years and then discovered it happens way more often?

    • @chrismeyers5963
      @chrismeyers5963 2 месяца назад

      @@musicftw711 That's what I was saying, I mean he had said it around 8:40, don't know what vid these 2 turds watched lmao

    • @AtlysRose
      @AtlysRose Месяц назад

      @@jpslaym0936 the guy in the video covered that

  • @maggiecheco3129
    @maggiecheco3129 11 месяцев назад +93

    When I was in my early 20's, my family went to Ventura Beach in California. My parents and son were on the shore and I waded probably 30 yards off shore. To my surprise, the water only came up to my bottom. I turned to see my dad on the beach with my son who were both waving at me, so I waved back. My dad started frantically pointing behind me. When I turned, there was a 12 to 15 foot wave at my back. Everything hit just right, luckily, all I could think to do was jump up and the wave caught me with my head above water and carried me quite gracefully back to shore. Although, I love the ocean, I don't turn my back on it, anymore. Not even in the Puget Sound, which is where we live now.

    • @ianbelletti6241
      @ianbelletti6241 9 месяцев назад +3

      California is known for its large waves. 12 to 15 foot sounds pretty common for there. I'm used to the east coast and have ridden plenty of waves back into shore just for fun. Where I live now, some of our local beaches have sand bars about 50 to 100 feet off the beach which reduces wave height further.

    • @Zomby_Woof
      @Zomby_Woof 8 месяцев назад

      You've learned since then that this is exactly the wrong thing to do, right?
      To evade the force of a large wave, dive under it.

    • @dfunkfatsack4512
      @dfunkfatsack4512 3 месяца назад

      I’m from Oxnard and work in Ventura, I have video of the waves going over the pier a few weeks ago

    • @ripn929707
      @ripn929707 Месяц назад +1

      I live up on the north coast, near Fort Bragg. Between here and Crescent city, we get those sneaker waves all the time. Tourists get caught out on the rocks when they hit, and get sucked in and drown. You can study the waves for a half hour, and be convinced your path along the rocks is safe, but then one wave hits that engulfs everything. Combined with rup tides, they dont stand a chance. There have been a few really stupid accidents, where peoples dogs get washed out, and they go in after the dog. The people drown but the dog lives. Theres signs everywhere to not try to save your dog. They have far more endurance than a human, and somehow arent as susceptible to the rip tides. It happens every year.

  • @biggshow1045
    @biggshow1045 11 месяцев назад +27

    Yrs ago when I was in the navy, I was on a 320ft ship. Caught in a typhoon by Hong Kong,but whilst in the eye,about 4 hrs into the calm eye, we got hit by a wave that was taller than our mast,which was about 134 ft. We hit it head on,the whole ship,I mean everything including the mast,radar,weapons everything. We went into a trough and keep going through we lost everything but recovered pretty quick.we were in the wave for. About 11 to 13 seconds,enough to mess us up. Pretty rad.

    • @helene3120
      @helene3120 7 месяцев назад

      Oh no!!

    • @katem.8816
      @katem.8816 3 месяца назад +1

      What a story! Thanks!

  • @Apollyon-er4ut
    @Apollyon-er4ut 8 месяцев назад +10

    They can happen anywhere and the absence of a storm doesn't mean your safe. Off the coast of CA, my friends mom was out on a point when a huge wave came out of relatively calm sea and washed her away to her death. Her husband saw it happen and said that the swells were 6-8', but the wave was more than 20', completely engulfing the point.

    • @robertfarrow5853
      @robertfarrow5853 8 месяцев назад +4

      Witness apart from the spouse? If not that's convenient and suspicious.

    • @helene3120
      @helene3120 7 месяцев назад +1

      So tragic; he can never un-see that..

    • @mrlopez4623
      @mrlopez4623 5 месяцев назад +2

      It’s actually vary common up here in Northern California we call them sleeper waves

    • @helene3120
      @helene3120 5 месяцев назад

      That is so frightening. I'm planning on taking photos of seascapes with my first serious camera. I will bear in mind what you have said when I do so.@@mrlopez4623

  • @wallyman292
    @wallyman292 8 месяцев назад +11

    Superior may have a 483 foot average depth, but it's maximum is over 1,300 feet deep, making it by far the deepest of all the Great Lakes.

    • @endgamed
      @endgamed 4 месяца назад

      People have to respect the Great Lakes. Those who don't wish they had. Over 900 dead since 2010 alone.

    • @wallyman292
      @wallyman292 4 месяца назад

      @@endgamedSailed Lake Michigan a good chunk of my life. Been out there in some scary stuff several times! Definitely deserves respect!

  • @vanguardraidcommand2285
    @vanguardraidcommand2285 Год назад +190

    I was once scaling a rock face along a beach with a friend. I heard a roaring sound behind me and spun to see a wave towering me. I was about 10 feet above the other waves, which were easily close to 10 feet tall already. Fortunately, I managed to tuck my head onto my arm and grab a crack as it hit me and completely submerged me. When the water fell back down I scrambled so fast up that cliff I felt like a cartoon character. Probably one of the scariest moments of my life. Makes for a fun and epic story now though.

    • @kristiisham3711
      @kristiisham3711 Год назад +10

      Omg! I would have died! So scary! Glad you weren’t hurt or worse!

    • @vanguardraidcommand2285
      @vanguardraidcommand2285 Год назад +11

      @@kristiisham3711 it's ... not the closest I've come to death. And not the scariest of my experiences. So I'll admit it's honestly more of a fun story to me. Although it could have gone so badly.

    • @dontmarkettomeimpoor2856
      @dontmarkettomeimpoor2856 11 месяцев назад

      @@vanguardraidcommand2285 liar

    • @vanguardraidcommand2285
      @vanguardraidcommand2285 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@dontmarkettomeimpoor2856 don't accuse me of something I'm not.

    • @dontmarkettomeimpoor2856
      @dontmarkettomeimpoor2856 11 месяцев назад

      @@vanguardraidcommand2285 yeah im not stupid and your a liar

  • @henriettetilkioglu
    @henriettetilkioglu Год назад +45

    im a child but this is very informative im amazed!

  • @brucelytle1144
    @brucelytle1144 9 месяцев назад +5

    Random note: These ships were called "LASH". That stood for "Lighter Aboard SHip". The lighters are basically small barges (filled internally with the cargo) that were picked up with an onboard crane, then lowered at the stern, to the water.
    I sailed one converted to regular containers in 1980. Terrible ships for the crews! Hotter than hell, small cramped enginerooms also!
    50-60 ft waves are nothing in the north Pacific/Bering seas! I've been on a tanker that was basically a submarine for 5 or 6 days in a storm traveling the same speed and direction we were. 80-90 knt winds, 60-90 ft waves!

  • @rtalbot87
    @rtalbot87 4 месяца назад +19

    At the time of the MV Munchen disaster I was working with Land's End Coastguard who were involved in co-ordinating the search. It was very difficult to believe a vessel of such size could 'disappear' within seconds. A subsequent 'event' involved the QE2 reporting that her bow rails had been stove in while returning to Southampton from New York.

    • @russellking1924
      @russellking1924 4 месяца назад +2

      I heard that story of the QEII in another way. There was a Cat 5 hurricane over the island of Hispaniola and it sent up a 95 foot wave which the captain was warned about. He was quoted as saying,”It was white knuckle time.” They had to turn the bow into the wave.

    • @rtalbot87
      @rtalbot87 4 месяца назад

      You are probably right. We dealt with so many incidents. At the time Land's End Coastguard was responsible for Search and Rescue of the entire North East Atlantic ! @@russellking1924

  • @lissfirefly9517
    @lissfirefly9517 Год назад +55

    I lived in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Lake-effect snow is a thing. At the very tip of the Keweenaw Peninsula there is a sign that shows the most snow they've ever gotten. It was 25 feet.

    • @deanmcpherson2597
      @deanmcpherson2597 7 месяцев назад +2

      Whoever said lake effect snow didn't exist ? Ask anyone who lives in Buffalo about it.

    • @katm9843
      @katm9843 4 месяца назад

      My dad’s side of the family is from Calumet and I spent many summers a child staying at the light house keeper’s cabin in Eagle Harbor. Suffice to say, that tall sign always fascinated me- as did all the tales of the dangers of Superior in the winter. Now I want a pasty, lol.

    • @nancythane5672
      @nancythane5672 3 месяца назад

      It was bad enough in Grand Rapids, and we had it comparatively easy!

  • @marcodebruin5370
    @marcodebruin5370 11 месяцев назад +73

    Great information, I knew about most, but learned about a few more types of waves. One additional piece of information: almost all these waves are indeed the transfer of energy through the water and the water itself only undulates vertically; except for tsunamis, those actually transfer a large amount of water linearly (or rather circular outward from the point of origin), which has two very distinctive effects: they grow in height only close to shore where they have to keep moving the same amount of water-volume over the ever shallower seabed, and secondly they don't "stop" at the shore, but keep flowing all that water inland (sometimes kilometers)

    • @steevelapointe1152
      @steevelapointe1152 4 месяца назад

      for sure you didnt saw those video of tsunai formed far from the coast, for saying that tsunamis wave only gets bigger when close to shore hahahahahahahahahaaahah, i ve already sail on a sea with a tsunamis incoming (2005) and we wre about 70 feet tall above the sea, you can find the video here on youtube. this video was made by a coworker on aother boat

  • @leokaloper4132
    @leokaloper4132 7 месяцев назад +4

    You've forgotten to mention the square waves, they're interesting AND good to be aware of. Excellent video.

  • @ianbelletti6241
    @ianbelletti6241 9 месяцев назад +56

    Both rogue wave theories depend on an additive process. On top of that, a lot of big storms have rotating wind patterns. The rotating winds means that you're dealing with waves running multiple directions. It's no surprise that you can have 2, 3, or 4 waves aligning just right from different directions to add enough energy to each other to create a rogue wave.

    • @garrettroberts7937
      @garrettroberts7937 9 месяцев назад +10

      These are not known as rogue waves as they are expected and common in high wind storms. What you are referring to is called spike waves and have a much higher frequency in extreme conditions. Although the science is similar Rogue waves are a much different animal and occur at a much lower frequency in mild, normal or any conditions which is why they were thought to be a myth for so long. They are unpredictable. Spike waves are very predictable with the major variables being wind speed and direction in relation to current. Example. If a winter storm rolls through Cape Horn with a forecasted wind speed of over 70 knots. It’s a guarantee the average wave height will be upwards of 40 feet with wave spikes as high as 80 feet or more. Those are extremely high waves but they are not rogue waves.

    • @ianbelletti6241
      @ianbelletti6241 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@garrettroberts7937 from what I understand about rogue waves they are also spike waves, just the conditions that you find them the frequency of multiple waves adding up to these big waves is less frequent. You do have various wave sources across the ocean.

    • @BusinessWolf1
      @BusinessWolf1 7 месяцев назад +3

      dude fuck theory go talk to a sailor who's been in the rougher seas, this stuff is not at all 'once in 10k years'

    • @W1ZY
      @W1ZY 5 месяцев назад +2

      correct. see it all the time. dangerous.

    • @Pottan23
      @Pottan23 4 месяца назад

      aren't they called rogue waves because they appear "out of nowhere" i.e not in a big storm?

  • @Janeka-xj2bv
    @Janeka-xj2bv 10 месяцев назад +22

    "The Atlantic is a cold, murderous place"
    I know exactly what you mean. I was a Merchant Navy Seaman. Once sailing from Bordeaux to The Azores, it was five days and five nights of living hell. Had we not taken the longer route around Sao Miguel Island to get some cover, I wouldn't be here to tell the tale. At 4:13, the Energy Endurance. I saw something like that.

    • @sostew7518
      @sostew7518 17 дней назад +1

      I graduated from the Azores and definitely seen and heard of huge waves from the Brave Hearts who surfed and fish there. No clue how big, but too big for me. We were a Rock in the Alantic. One of rules I remember: No umbrellas. I FAFO by using an umbrella. Gust of wind picked me up and carried me towards the 20ft fence that seperated us the rocky coastline. Luckily it dropped me down. In those frigid waters are Great White Sharks, Portuguese Man of Jellyfish and other Apex predators. To this day, I NEVER touched an Unbrella again.

  • @ZebaKnight
    @ZebaKnight 11 месяцев назад +51

    I crossed the Atlantic from Southhampton, England to New York on a small Cunard liner in the late summer of 1969. It was stormy for 3 full days and the seas were huge. I grew up sailing and I loved to be on the water, so while just about everybody else was done in by the turbulence, I went to the stern of the ship and rode up and down, holding onto the railing. Sometimes I was weightless when the ship sank into a trough, and often I could look up through the beautiful green waves against the stormy sky. I'd guess that the waves averaged 40 feet. Needless to say, this was _incredibly_ foolish! But wonderful. Finally, after a few hours, one of the crew noticed me and made me come inside. Though I was bummed, he might have saved my life.

  • @stihlnz
    @stihlnz 9 месяцев назад +7

    I've worked off the west coast of New Zealand for many years. It's very common to get a set of 3 waves bigger than the norm.

    • @kornofulgur
      @kornofulgur 4 месяца назад

      The 3 sisters can indeed be found everywhere.

  • @loishendricks9720
    @loishendricks9720 8 месяцев назад +5

    Conceivably, it should be possible to trace these waves paths through the ocean. The scary part is they seem to rise out of nowhere.

  • @urboii_b0und3d
    @urboii_b0und3d Год назад +212

    Bro taught us more than school😂😂
    literally

  • @francesthezookeeper5341
    @francesthezookeeper5341 Год назад +131

    I really just like that in every video that this guys ever does if he is explaining something that has a size to it he always compares it to like a building or cars or fields of someform it just helps you imagine how big it actually is

    • @LostAmericanJ
      @LostAmericanJ Год назад +1

      True

    • @afriedrich1452
      @afriedrich1452 Год назад +1

      This one was as big as a moon kin.

    • @bobhawke7373
      @bobhawke7373 8 месяцев назад +1

      He does that for the Americans.
      It's really time you guys used the same measurements as everyone else

    • @ddbbloch4457
      @ddbbloch4457 3 месяца назад

      you did notice all the wave heights were in "feet" right? :) @@bobhawke7373

  • @jeffreylong131
    @jeffreylong131 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you! Very informative, educational and very well done

  • @volkerp.2262
    @volkerp.2262 8 месяцев назад +5

    My father-in-law lost a friend on the München. He was Chief engineer for over 20 years and he had also a journey where his ship was hit by a freak wave. Luckily their ship was empty so they past the wave unharmed. But his captain saw this wave coming and make his last wish. My father-in-law was in his room on a couch and fly through the whole room when the wave hit the ship.

  • @christopherparsons3224
    @christopherparsons3224 Год назад +28

    Currents moving in opposite directions, where there are islands off the coast of a larger land mass causes a speeding up of these currents, add wind and waves gaining each other's energy and this can happen. That is why it happens off the coast of South Africa and off the coast of South America. If you want to observe this phenomenon on a smaller scale, fill a bath tub up about halfway with water and then stir the water in as best a circle as you can, with a cupped hand, staying as far outside the perimeter as you can and once you get the water moving good, take your hand out and watch how the water moving opposite on each side of the tub begins to affect the waters in the middle.
    Every once in a while, you will see a rogue wave, larger than the rest. Now think of the trade winds moving from east to west near either side of the equator, but then the jet stream is moving the opposite direction (see typical weather pattern across the US), now imagine how the opposing winds over time will begin to behave similar to how I described in the bathtub experiment above.

  • @McKaylaGamez
    @McKaylaGamez Год назад +62

    A couple of days ago, I was on the Norwegian Gem and on our way to Bermuda, experienced 60-knot winds and we all could barely sleep. Glad to know this is somewhat normal and I wasnt experiencing this happening for the first time ever.

    • @BeAmazed
      @BeAmazed  Год назад +12

      sounds terrifying!

    • @BionicDonut
      @BionicDonut Год назад +1

      I wonder.. about the Bermuda triangle if any ship that went in and did not return.. it could be because a rogue wave.. growing up I heard about the kraken, other giant sea creatures, maybe a giant whirlpool (had a terrifying nightmare about one of those) thankgod I don't live near the ocean.. the only deep lake I ever swam in was lake superior and that lake is 1,332 feet deep probably the 2nd or 3rd deepest in the US

    • @McKaylaGamez
      @McKaylaGamez Год назад +1

      @@BionicDonut there’s always the possibility!

  • @sandra-fayenagy5934
    @sandra-fayenagy5934 7 месяцев назад +3

    This is not a rogue wave but a trough story.
    We were sailing down the coastline from Canada to SFO. We were fine as we were well out to sea. Other sailors did not go out as far as us and were caught in a storm - terrifying some of their crew who called MAYDAY - while the Captain/owner was deploying a drogue off the bow.
    So the Coast Guard helicopter came and they were obliged to abandon the sailboat, get into the water and then put themselves into a lowered basket to be lifted aloft.
    When we met up with the Captain in SFO, he said as he climbed into the basket - at the top of a trough - he was looking DOWN on the TOP of his 70ft mast - that’s how deep was the trough - his sailboat at that moment in the bottom of the trough. Those are massive wave formations.
    PS He later, at great expense, found and retrieved his boat - it was quite happily bobbing along - undamaged.
    Cheers. S

  • @ChickenGacha-rtx
    @ChickenGacha-rtx 4 месяца назад +1

    I was on a cruise ship, never knew what it was called but, i remember it vividly. I was about 12 standing on the deck, when i hear people suddenly screaming louder than ive ever heard, and there was so many people to, my ears were on fire, i looked up and there it was, a wave almost 70 ft tall, but sense we were only 926(i asked how many miles away we were cause im not patient) milee away, the rescue boats got there very quickly, some people were dead, some were in hospitals i remember waking up from surgery getting told i had maggots in my throat from the water that i consumed, only one of my parents survived tho, my father, he still tells me story about the sea, he was a sailor.

    • @sostew7518
      @sostew7518 17 дней назад

      You're a true Survivor. Sorry for your loss. Happy you and your father have each other.

  • @tea.chi3
    @tea.chi3 11 месяцев назад +33

    It happened in Cancun during hurricane Wilma in 2005, a lot of the sand disappeared along the hotel zone and ships were hired to actually suck the sand up from a sand bar and deposited it back to the beach. We could actually watch the sand bar move and change shape with each tide schedule

  • @cozmcwillie7897
    @cozmcwillie7897 11 месяцев назад +16

    The liner Queen Elizabeth (the Queen Mary's bigger sister) experienced 5 rogue waves in her lifetime. She was extremely lucky every time to be facing the the waves, each of which swept over the bridge all the way aft. It was lucky too that they struck very early in the morning when no one was outside on deck.
    I believe the Queen Mary suffered two or three, the QE2 also.
    On a U-Tube video about freak waves, one crew member from the QE2 wrote in the comments about his experience.

    • @keithrothman7253
      @keithrothman7253 5 месяцев назад +2

      The original Queen Elizabeth with its displacement of 84,000 tons used as much steel as a modern ship of 200,000 tons today.

    • @keithrothman7253
      @keithrothman7253 5 месяцев назад +2

      I believe that she could have cut through any rogue wave.

    • @cozmcwillie7897
      @cozmcwillie7897 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@keithrothman7253 Yeah. However if it had caught her side-on....that would've been a different story.

    • @cozmcwillie7897
      @cozmcwillie7897 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@keithrothman7253 Like a lot of things back then they were built up to a standard, not down to a cost. Overengineered meant built to last. Although, having said that, I wonder how it would've been built knowing what we know today.

  • @annaknight4865
    @annaknight4865 7 месяцев назад +7

    My grabdfather was in the navy and the merchant marines and he told me about several he encountered during WW2 in the North Atlantic. He said the only thing that saved them was experience and the size of the ships. A lot of people did not believe him until the 90s when scientific evidence of the phenomenon started being documented. He also said they were common in the North Atlantic and Africa. He was only ever afraid of the sea when they were stalked by submarines and encounters with these waves

  • @tchoukiminer2620
    @tchoukiminer2620 4 месяца назад +1

    this is an amazing video! thank you for all these oceanic facts

  • @justintime5021
    @justintime5021 Год назад +58

    This channel has really improved in quality a lot. Hats off

    • @ryleighs9575
      @ryleighs9575 Год назад +3

      I agree!

    • @JDZiemba1773
      @JDZiemba1773 Год назад +2

      Ya if they could pronounce the names of the subject matter it would be refreshing...the moon kin...... really

    • @joachimgrek6920
      @joachimgrek6920 Год назад +3

      But they should learn how to pronounce names!!!
      That is a very easy research that would only take a couple of minuts...
      How hard could it be to google "how to say München in german"?!!
      Especially if you are going to say it that many times. 🥵🤬🤬😡
      And NO, it´s absolutly not "moon-ken"
      I guess he might say "NOW JERK" to New York to. That sounds just as bad...

    • @Alec-jake
      @Alec-jake 11 месяцев назад

      Ik

    • @standingbear6108
      @standingbear6108 10 месяцев назад +1

      Now if only the channel owner would stop using Click bait titles.

  • @PatsySegars
    @PatsySegars Год назад +76

    Very informative and thought-provoking. Maybe explains ships drifting around without passengers who seemed to be in the middle of meals. Possibly explains some Bermuda Triangle events? Thanks for this story.

    • @theboringchannel2027
      @theboringchannel2027 6 месяцев назад +7

      if a rouge wave washed the people overboard as you think,
      wouldn't the plates/food be gone as well???

    • @thomthom6268
      @thomthom6268 4 месяца назад +2

      I was the same thing Patsy. But it still doesn't explain planes. Who says there has to be a single explanation.

    • @nathanhansen1690
      @nathanhansen1690 4 месяца назад +1

      Theres a certain sound that can affect people at sea that they believe could be a reason for boats showing up with no sailors on board in areas like the bermuda triangle i believe they did a test with the sound in a cinema and people went crazy trying to escape the sound and people died. Makes you believe that it could be safer in the water then the boat say during a storm. If i can find the video ill post it for you guys

    • @greg_one_izm
      @greg_one_izm 4 месяца назад +1

      @@nathanhansen1690 Still waiting for that video homie..

  • @rockydavis4688
    @rockydavis4688 4 месяца назад +8

    While serving in the U.S. Navy in 1985, aboard the aircraft carrier, the USS Constellation CV 64. We were bout 100+miles NE of Main Island ("Hawaii"), when our ship (who's flight deck was 8 stories above the ocean in flat water) took a wave that came over the bow & was at least 30 feet high over the bow.!! INCREDIBLE sounds does a big metal ship make when weather & water r battling it.!!8^o ✌️

  • @colbygrant3504
    @colbygrant3504 3 месяца назад +1

    Thank You for this Video- it was extremely informative and really well articulated- I learned a lot! Fascinating stuff!

  • @mournblade1066
    @mournblade1066 11 месяцев назад +190

    I don't understand how scientists didn't believe waves could exceed thirty feet in height, when there are CLEARLY visible waves WAY higher than that right off the shores of California (60'+ at Mavericks), Hawaii (60'+ at Pe’ahi, aka Jaws), and Portugal (80'+ at Nazare, possibly even over 100').

    • @mottthehoople693
      @mottthehoople693 11 месяцев назад +38

      different sort of wave.. they are compression waves

    • @NicciFreeman
      @NicciFreeman 11 месяцев назад +15

      Not to mention Cortez Bank. Cortez has had 100ft waves.

    • @burnyman
      @burnyman 11 месяцев назад +24

      If you got one of these oceanic freak waves hitting any shoreline, you should run, it would devastate the shoreline it hit. I think the big waves (60ft+) you see at Nazare etc are different waves forced up by the shallow seabed they come up against but they are nowhere near that big before the come ashore 😁

    • @HansPolak
      @HansPolak 10 месяцев назад +10

      You are right. That's nonsense. The Schrödinger equation was published in 1925 and deals with waves in quantum mechanics. This equation can be used in the "real world" (our scale) to explain rogue waves... and rogue holes or rogue troughs.

    • @bigbasil1908
      @bigbasil1908 10 месяцев назад +4

      Maybe its the video makers talking BS lol

  • @fantasydog3868
    @fantasydog3868 11 месяцев назад +17

    In the early 90s I was vacationing @ Virginia Beach. As I walked out of the water, my attention was directed to my family on the beach. I remember a wave retreating barely over my feet. Dry sand was 10-15 ft ahead. A rogue wave hit me square in the middle of my back. It slammed me so hard into the sand that the whole side of my face was raked pretty good. Couldn't believe it.

    • @richarddutton1981
      @richarddutton1981 11 месяцев назад +2

      lol " thats not a rogue wave bro!!!" yes it was. it snuck up on my ass

  • @stevedoll508
    @stevedoll508 8 месяцев назад +2

    I viewed a video on Lake Baikal in Russia and it said that that lake contains more water than all the Great Lakes combined. I wonder what weather phenomena take place there.

  • @raptorblue193
    @raptorblue193 8 месяцев назад +3

    its wholesome looking at the comments and seeing people sharing their own stories :)

  • @omawumiadokpaye6628
    @omawumiadokpaye6628 Год назад +24

    Beautiful video, simple and informative. Always a pleasure being here

  • @bernardjlinse2974
    @bernardjlinse2974 11 месяцев назад +15

    I remember when I lived on the Oregon Coast, we knew some people who were with the Coast Guard. They said that 70ft waves are not uncommon. Kind of scary.

    • @user-ug7fw5xi8i
      @user-ug7fw5xi8i 7 месяцев назад

      That's .the.way.it.is.destiny.takes.brave.men.to.strange.places.just.to.see.to.andtell.mistryss

    • @katem.8816
      @katem.8816 3 месяца назад

      And the Cost Guard would know. They train at the mouth of the Columbia because it’s so wild-challenging training. I always thought the Pacific was wilder than the Atlantic but I guess when you are away from shore it’s the same…..

  • @peterburgess5974
    @peterburgess5974 9 месяцев назад +13

    Off the west coast of the British Isles, winter storms create destructive waves, while during spring and summer, waves are generally constructive. It is a repeating cycle in many areas and one which maintains an equilibrium. This happens as a result of the discrepancy between the wash and backwash (rip), caused by the amount of energy and frequency of those waves. The observations at Achill are a result of an assault by destructive waves and their reappearance is due to the beach-building effects of constructive waves. If you visit many such beaches, regardless of whether they are composed of pebble or sand, their morphology is very different throughout the year. During winter, beaches typically display a morphology with a berm crest and a steep seaward slope, eroded by severe wash and rip currents that remove material out to sea. The opposite happens when seas are less forceful, and this is the time beach building occurs during cycles of constructive waves. I hope this information is useful and that you can investigate it to better explain what happens in some particular areas on seaward-facing, oceanic land masses at higher latitudes. Ad altiora!

  • @patriziaBaldinivr
    @patriziaBaldinivr 3 месяца назад +1

    Most excellent. I enjoyed it. A lot of outstanding info.

  • @WillPhil290
    @WillPhil290 Год назад +7

    This was so informative. .. I love this channel.

    • @BeAmazed
      @BeAmazed  Год назад +2

      thanks so much William! appreciate you tuning in

  • @suvinduamarasekara7550
    @suvinduamarasekara7550 Год назад +3

    Hi! Really enjoyed your video!
    Can I know the software you use for making animations pls?

  • @northerncaptain855
    @northerncaptain855 8 месяцев назад +5

    The accurate at sea measurement of rouge waves is rare and difficult. I sailed on ships up to 1100 feet long for almost fifty years. Those who argued that waves couldn’t exceed thirty feet were obviously not seamen. Even the largest well built ships are at risk in the most severe of storms.

    • @ruckerbrady8342
      @ruckerbrady8342 4 месяца назад

      The longest ship in the world is 1,504 feet long

  • @The-Equestrian-Wolf
    @The-Equestrian-Wolf 5 месяцев назад +1

    just watched video, and now i don't think i'll ever go on a boat again lol
    thought it was interesting learning about the ocean and whatnot

  • @hannahaspower218
    @hannahaspower218 Год назад +50

    I love your videos and you never fail to amaze me I will always BE AMAZED!

  • @valiantwarrior4517
    @valiantwarrior4517 Год назад +37

    Very informative video, with great imagery to illustrate the concepts. Thanks!
    Nature is more than capable of producing incredible energy outputs. It’s not hard to imagine that when the forces of gravity, wind, and water currents create the right wave frequencies, it can build into something amazingly powerful. Similar to how the right sound frequency can cause increasing distortions in glass. Except with water, there is no solid shape to harshly limit the energy growth. It would be scary to imagine the size a rogue wave could reach if earth’s gravity were less.

    • @BeAmazed
      @BeAmazed  Год назад +5

      thanks for tuning in!

    • @threezysworld8089
      @threezysworld8089 11 месяцев назад +2

      You should search Joe Rogan Great Flood. Very interesting discussion postulating "The Great Flood" and what happened. They were saying there was evidence for 1000'+ waves.

    • @astralclub5964
      @astralclub5964 10 месяцев назад +4

      Munchen is pronounced “Moon chn”. In English Munich.

    • @hamishanderson6738
      @hamishanderson6738 9 месяцев назад +2

      Pier pressure lol 😅

    • @valiantwarrior4517
      @valiantwarrior4517 9 месяцев назад

      @@hamishanderson6738 Oof. Do you have a valid dad joke license?

  • @blucheer8743
    @blucheer8743 6 месяцев назад +3

    Great story teller!! He could make the sinking of the SS minnow scary!

  • @danaskubic2145
    @danaskubic2145 5 месяцев назад +1

    A very important interesting topic, thanks for sharing.

  • @charlotteparrish9015
    @charlotteparrish9015 Год назад +4

    Nice work 😊I love this channel

  • @johnhagan582
    @johnhagan582 Год назад +109

    I grew up in Central Florida and use to surf daily and on the biggest days the waves were 4-6 ft and with major storms sitting way off shore they got upwards of 8 ft. So hearing that Daytona Beach had a 18 ft wave hit the shoreline is unbelievable .it's easy to imagine this size waves in California . Hawaii .and countless other locations all around the world cause well it happens on a regular basis but to hit a Florida coastline is truly a once in a lifetime thing or maybe a few in a lifetime maybe but if I was out sitting on my board in a lineup waiting for a big set to roll in and saw a 18 ft monster heading towards me I believe I would paddle out hoping to get out past it's breaking point instead of paddling in to catch it lmfao .

    • @Anthony-ru7sk
      @Anthony-ru7sk Год назад +4

      I just moved to Daytona, can’t wait to learn to surf

    • @anthonynorton666
      @anthonynorton666 Год назад +1

      What I don't understand is when the narrator says that they considered seismic activity versus a landslide. Landslides produce waves with shorter wavelengths and would crest like a giant wave. Waves produce by seismic activity have longer wavelengths and move in more like a flash flood and would come farther inland.

    • @johnhagan582
      @johnhagan582 Год назад +3

      @@Anthony-ru7sk The only down side of learning to surf In Daytona Beach or Anywhere in Central Florida is a real challenge when you have at 2-3 ft .at best 4 ft .But I recommend you travel like 10 miles south to New Smyrna Beach (Ponce Inlet) it's the best break within 100 miles of Daytona whether you go north or south . Only problem with surfing Florida now is its become Shark Bite Capital of the world . I grew up in Orlando in the late 70s early 80s and it wasn't like this back then . We would stay in the water from sunrise to sunset all summer long and can only think of one or two shark bitesin a 5-10 year span .but for some reason starting around 2005 going forward especially the last 10 years there are millions of sharks swarming all around the Florida's east coast .I've literally seen videos of surfers paddling out jumping over sharks to get out to the lineup . There are shark bites happening almost on a weekly if not daily basis throughout the year . So be careful .most the times it's small bites amounting in having to get a few stitches on your ankle or calves

    • @aardvarkbiscuit2677
      @aardvarkbiscuit2677 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@johnhagan582 - They need to eat too. If they can't get fish they're going to find alternate sources. I used to surf decades ago. I don't think I will ever get a chance to be in the ocean again. It's a little sad.

    • @corneliusblackwood9014
      @corneliusblackwood9014 11 месяцев назад +1

      Nah brah, you gotta charge that shit.

  • @dennylars9695
    @dennylars9695 7 месяцев назад +2

    I know as a youngster..living out in Central- Southern California..I remember watch wave crest and crash against the cliffs out in Malibu and people lising theirs homes as the crashed down those cliffs and thise waves were close to 75-100 feet upnthise cliffs...and that was on the news when it happened...sonthis earth 🌎 is an amazing planet of life and its cycles..but as surely as it provides for the creation of life and all living things...is as surely as it takes life away... UItsca beautiful wirld..but it demands respect...and should be cherished....All things great and small....❤

  • @sallykirby4907
    @sallykirby4907 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for this video! Now I am terrified of all water travel! 😢

  • @daisymichelle
    @daisymichelle Год назад +41

    Had you been my geography lecturer I'd have had an A++. Learning so much here!!! 🎉

  • @ragnarok1984p
    @ragnarok1984p Год назад +5

    That part at 13:45 about waves passing on energy to eachother made me picture a wave screaming "fellow waves lend me your energy" like Goku

  • @costrio
    @costrio 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for this video. It may answer a few mysteries, perhaps.

  • @tbfilms7040
    @tbfilms7040 8 месяцев назад

    There is a bit wrong here 'bout Freak-/RogueWaves :
    1) Draupner platform measured wave went down the platform without causing any damages.
    2) Its well known, how Freak-/RogueWaves come to life.
    3) The easy "Linear-Schrödinger-Equation" is from the past. The occurrence can be well explained by us with the much more complex "NonLineear-Schrödinger-Equation".
    4) There are areas where such waves are more often but they can appear almost everywhere.

  • @wherelovesat699
    @wherelovesat699 Год назад +8

    Very informative. Had me wanting to learn more, thanks

  • @adambailey9272
    @adambailey9272 Год назад +40

    I'm always amazed by you keep up the good work

    • @kayan5754
      @kayan5754 Год назад +2

      That's why the channel's name is be amazed

    • @Sonicandfriends2014
      @Sonicandfriends2014 Год назад +1

      That's why the channel's name is Be Amazed

    • @yomarramos6310
      @yomarramos6310 Год назад +2

      @@Sonicandfriends2014 what makes u think its a good idea to copy the same comment and just change the b into a capital B and a into a capital A?

  • @PaulRiley-ev9it
    @PaulRiley-ev9it 8 месяцев назад +5

    Structures in the Central to Northern North Sea have been designed to resist up to 30 metre high waves since the late nineteen seventies, depending on the actual location (UK published max wave height contour map for 50yr return period for guidance).
    Max wave heights derived statistically for a return period from 12hrs storm data. These waves are non linear, non-gaussian, being steeper.
    There have been good pictures of other large waves at NS platforms, but they seem harder to track on the internet now. Many platforms including Conoco Hutton had operational wave height measurement systems. From satellite observations it seems that actual now so called "rogue waves" are known to be more common than generally though and their mechanics getting to be better understood, hopefully to the benefit of ship design.
    Other risks occur in the shallower Southern North Sea where more moderate waves can break well offshore such as the Dogger Bank, 160km offshore and min depth 15m. A friend told me that he had observed the sea bed there in a storm. Mariners charts at reef locations world-wide can carry the caption: "waves break here during severe storms." Small(ish) boats fishing reefs can be caught out by the arrival of isolated swell waves that shoal up.
    There is an interesting case described in the wonderful Shore Protection Manuals published US Corp. of Engineers (free online). It describes the destruction of a harbor in the US destroyed twice when waves approached from a certain heading, focused by a subsea obstruction enroute to the harbor. (waves are focused on headlands, or subsea features of similar characteristics, and dissipated in bays. Of course waves shoal and increase in height when they feel the bottom, until they break).
    And then there are tsunamis, which are now fully on our radar since the subduction fault slip earthquakes from 2004 Sumatra and 2011 Fukishima incidents.
    Great detective work by geologists has determined that the Cascadia Fault is a risk of similar magnitude to West Coast North America.
    Then there are landslip events in Fjords, offshore islands like La Palma, and subsea continental shelf slips potential such as the the one after the last ice age in Norway considered to have wiped out Doggerland, on the Dogger Bank, then above sealevel.
    For more excitement one can look up "sensitive soils," or "quick clays," in Norway, left in an unstable state after the last ice age, just waiting for the salts that cement them in an open structure to be washed out, whence they collapse to state with a consistency akin to whipped cream according to descriptions.
    Is nowhere safe? How exciting is the earth!
    Always use a qualified and experienced professional to design important stuff!

  • @fnafinc2021
    @fnafinc2021 3 месяца назад +1

    Loved the scenes from Titanic in the intro! I love that movie ❤

  • @roderickhutchinson5447
    @roderickhutchinson5447 Год назад +6

    As a kid I used to travel on the Manly ferry during storms. It was exciting times.

    • @sharonbraselton4302
      @sharonbraselton4302 Год назад

      ektric faries now

    • @Lydianon
      @Lydianon Год назад

      Much testosterone on the manly ferry.
      I'm sorry I couldn't help myself.

  • @rosmeartoo
    @rosmeartoo Год назад +22

    In the 1990s I worked in The Netherlands for a gas producing company. Most of the production was offshore in the North Sea, that is typically around 30m deep. Most of the platforms at the time were unmanned (now all) designed to withstand the 100 year wave. This required a gap of 17m between mean high tide and the lowest deck.
    On a night in about 1998 theer was a storm with a north-westerly gale that coincided with an exceptionally high tide. The wind pushed the sea southwards causing flooding in the East of England before arriving at thr Dutch & German coasts.
    One gas platform was almost wiped out, the lowest deck having been stripped of all its machinery and the higher decks very severly damaged. No other platform in the vicinity sustained significant damage.
    the conclusion reached was that the hugh mas of water hitting the Dutch/German coastlines (that form a kind of arc) had rebounded and that 3 waves had met just at the point of this one platform.
    Design criteria were subsequently revised and de-manning by automation accelerated.

    • @brodriguez11000
      @brodriguez11000 11 месяцев назад +3

      "Design criteria were subsequently revised and de-manning by automation accelerated. " The robotics union would like a word with you.

    • @cathybaldry7822
      @cathybaldry7822 4 месяца назад

      I think you mentionimg of rebounding off the coastline is a great point to note

  • @unomene
    @unomene 4 месяца назад +1

    The most interesting to me was the rogue waves next to the sister waves found in the "lake". Because the lake isn't as vast as the ocean, I'd take my chances there. :) Great video. Thanks for the education.

  • @r.g.c.3897
    @r.g.c.3897 3 месяца назад +1

    I experienced a small rogue wave back in the late 90s. Me and a friend had been fishing in Boca Grande Fla. and decided to stop by the Nacomis Jetty near Venice Fla.. We walked out to the end passing a guy set up fishing about half way down the rocks and asked if he was having any luck, he replied no it was to rough. the Jetty is a pile of rocks at the entrance to the intercoastal waterway in that area and rises about 8-10 feet above the water level at a normal high tide with an asphalt walkway on top. Me and my friend were just standing at the end enjoying the view of the moon setting and the sweet salty air when the water level rose to our waists, pushed us back a step or two then forward the same before dropping to the normal level around 14 feet lower. I looked at my friend he looked dumbfounded and I thought of the guy fishing (at the level he was at he was under 6-8 feet when the water rose), his gear was spread over 20 feet of the side of the rocks and he was gathering it as fast as he could and took of running for shore. Luckily it came at around 2 am and any buildings along that beach were over 150 yards back. If it had come during the day when people were on the beach I'm certain there would have been injuries.

  • @tiernanfitzpatrick3345
    @tiernanfitzpatrick3345 Год назад +13

    Wow I've watched nearly every be amazed video for the last 4 years and this is probably one of the best video's he has ever made

  • @johnrichmond7739
    @johnrichmond7739 11 месяцев назад +3

    I served on an amphibious assault ship when I was the Navy. I remember seeing huge waves. They didn't qualify as rogue waves, but they caused my ship to do some wicked nose dives. Personal standing watch on the bridge wing (90 feet above the waterline) were washed off their feet.

  • @shinehy403
    @shinehy403 10 месяцев назад +4

    No way could scientists have believed, up until 1995, that the maximize ocean wave height was 30 feet. I've watched home video footage, of my Alaskan fisherman friends, fighting waves much much larger than 30 feet.

  • @gabriellafox7948
    @gabriellafox7948 9 месяцев назад +1

    ✨I really really like the new dude who is narrating these videos! Refreshing and a nice change from the other guy. This whole thing about waves happening underneath the surface of the ocean plus there being three different layers essentially, topped off with 500 foot waves underneath?!!,,,these factors amazed me! The frosting on the cake is that study from outer space has procured the knowledge of these subtle waves at the equator & underneath the surface that can take 10 to 20 years to complete the circumference of the earth, WOW, I LOVE learning new things like this☺️
    🕊♥️🇨🇦♥️🕊

  • @AmeliaRomanov
    @AmeliaRomanov Год назад +9

    Rough waves can sink anything no matter the size a Rouge wave can tower up to 150 feet tall the mv dobbyshire and the Edmund Fitzgerald were also victims of such devastating waves capable of ripping a ships bulkheads and hull wide open

  • @kartaku132
    @kartaku132 Год назад +4

    My dad used to be a fisherman he told me a story about his boat that he was on almost capsized when it got broadsided by at least a 50 footer

  • @alt7244
    @alt7244 8 месяцев назад +3

    As a young child, I had a recurring dream. I was in a horseshoe shaped cove with cliffs on three sides that seemed to be 200ft tall. Suddenly, I'd see a wave as big as the cliffs coming right at us .. then I'd wake up.

    • @nancythane5672
      @nancythane5672 3 месяца назад +1

      Sounds like "1958 Lituya Bay earthquake and megatsunami" in Alaska. Give it a Google.

  • @pi79lambda
    @pi79lambda 8 месяцев назад

    Here in catalonia we have to refill beaches with sand before the summer season because a lot of them are washed away by waves on the winter. it is done with rlly cool ships that shot the sand back from the deeps of the shore.

  • @gab_ale
    @gab_ale Год назад +22

    I guess this validates my fear of the ocean.

    • @brodriguez11000
      @brodriguez11000 11 месяцев назад

      Earthquake! Oh darn, there goes the other fear.

    • @angienichols1248
      @angienichols1248 11 месяцев назад

      Me too 😂

    • @standingbear6108
      @standingbear6108 10 месяцев назад

      @@brodriguez11000 Meh.. ive been in multiple quakes here in CA. Largest was over 6.5. Anything less than a 5.5 produces nothing but a YAWN from me lol. Its nothing. It does get exciting though once its over a 6. Things start to jump around the house all on their own lol.

    • @diazclemenza3591
      @diazclemenza3591 10 месяцев назад +1

      You're right to be afraid of the ocean 100 ft waves happen all the time in the north sea and here they talk like its something extraordinary.

  • @rluv4evr
    @rluv4evr Год назад +4

    Laguna Beach, CA does that runaway beach thing about once every two years or so.

  • @MrNeckCrack
    @MrNeckCrack 3 месяца назад

    This is done very wellm you got my attention and kept it with the facts and animation.

  • @JohnSostrom
    @JohnSostrom 4 месяца назад +3

    Back in the mid 1970s I was stationed on a US Navy ship. We were stationed at the North SAR (Sea & Air Rescue) station. That was our location in the North China sea. A rather strong typhoon built up and traveled into our location. We were experiencing 50-foot waves that worked very hard to attempt to capsize us. For 4 days rolled and tossed in that storm. Unless you had mandatory duties, your off-duty time was spent in a passageway with your back on one bulkhead and your feet braced in the opposite bulkhead.
    During that time I had 3 8-hour bridge watches as the officer of the deck. During one of those watches we were rolled 26° to starboard. If we had not been hit by a similar monster wave that stood us back up, we would have capsized. Fortunately, we had only 7 sailors injured.
    On that 4th day I was tossed down a ladder into our birthing space. Ended up messing up my left knee which ended up requiring surgery.
    I will never forget that storm or the attempt by nature to make up a rusting pile of steel on the ocean floor. P.S. Try living off nothing but cold hotdogs and bottled cool-aid for 4 days while you attempt to not be thrown where you do not want to go, by seas that were proving just how insignificant we humans are. 😢😮

    • @katiekane5247
      @katiekane5247 4 месяца назад +1

      I'd be puking up anything I ate anyway. My best friend was a Navy rescue swimmer. She hid her pregnancy to deploy on the Reagan at it's commission. One tough chick!

  • @malectric
    @malectric Год назад +3

    It's a rare confluence of wave energy coming form different directions coinciding in one place with coinciding phases and possibly? frequencies. The ocean is essentially an unbounded resonator so many frequencies can be present at once and with many different phase relationships.

  • @thallesaraujo7814
    @thallesaraujo7814 2 месяца назад

    As a physical oceanographer who has worked with planetary (Rossby) waves, I am impressed with how well these have been well explained in this video - a simplified explanation, of course, but still a scientifically accurate one and very easy to digest for the target audience. Also, few channels go beyond surface gravity waves (or just "waves" for most people) and enter the realm of internal waves or planetary waves. Outstanding for scientific outreach!

  • @dalerimoller272
    @dalerimoller272 9 месяцев назад

    I didn’t know a few of these facts, happy to learn some new things!

  • @icerman
    @icerman 11 месяцев назад +3

    What about the latuya wave near latuya bay in Alaska. It reached a height of 531 metres swallowed a large part of land. the largest wave ever witnessed in human history..

  • @commanderfootball
    @commanderfootball Год назад +45

    I just like how they say it happens every 10,000 years? How the hell do they know? 😊

    • @saxonsoldier67
      @saxonsoldier67 Год назад +10

      Makes you wonder if the same assumptions are used on world ending asteroid collisions.

    • @helfire9562
      @helfire9562 Год назад +3

      More then likely, rough guesstimatetions, an assumption of weve been around x many years only seen x many so they should be roughly this rare. Also, hole in the ocean is a phenomenon where a literal hole opens up, sometimes big sometimes small, always terrifying.

    • @standingbear6108
      @standingbear6108 10 месяцев назад

      Its a click bait title. Scumbag makes a claim in the title. Then goes to prove he lied. LOL

    • @carolwaugh5466
      @carolwaugh5466 10 месяцев назад

      Good point!

    • @lilgto64
      @lilgto64 4 месяца назад

      I believe that was based on the math that was done up to that time including factors such as max wind speeds. Though it seems to me that if you already had dozens or hundreds of eyewitness accounts that once every 10,000 years would necessarily discount all of those. As with so many things in science, the prevailing wisdom is largely based on scenarios along the lines of "Hey, is there life on the ocean floor?" the prevailing wisdom is "How could there be? it's too dark and too much pressure." until someone asks, 'But did you go look?" and when the technology to go look becomes available and we go look the prevailing wisdom needs to be tossed out, and with the new data discovered, then the explanations of where and how life can exist get updated. Same thing here - all the math in the world doesn't matter if you are missing key factors that define the equations necessary for your model to match reality.

  • @bobbywhite1152
    @bobbywhite1152 7 месяцев назад +1

    The ocean floor is much deeper in an area like a trench or canyon, causing waves bigger than surrounding waves. Surfers in Portugal, California Australia and Hawaii know what I'm saying

  • @cathybaldry7822
    @cathybaldry7822 4 месяца назад +2

    With the three sisters I wonder if studies have been done on mapping the features on the bottom of Lake superior. I think a combination of the many wave physics theories you discussed are what are contributing to the phenomena of rogue waves

  • @ashleya3731
    @ashleya3731 9 месяцев назад +4

    Its crazy that rogue waves were likely known and documented by local and indigenous people and fishers, but the collonizer leaders didn't listen, and now scientists are learning it again

    • @laurabutler6253
      @laurabutler6253 5 месяцев назад

      So right! In coastal Mississippi they stopped oyster harvesting, the government was in charge of it, they also failed miserably, and now they have turned it over to private ownership and its returning. The irony is that they are turning to the native Americans who were excellent stewards of oyster farming. So now they're studying sites and finding oyster shells in ashes etc. looking to the ancient native Americans for help. You know the ones they chucked out onto the trail of tears.
      So imagine that, throwing them out sending them on a hellish journey, then later, sheepishly digging through their ashes for desperately needed answers.

  • @budwhite9591
    @budwhite9591 Год назад +8

    I’ve heard a lot about the Edmund Fitzgerald, but this is the first I’ve heard of a trio of rogue waves hitting it

    • @mrcryptozoic817
      @mrcryptozoic817 Год назад +5

      If it weren't for Gordon Lightfoot, almost know one would know of it.

    • @Devinengel089
      @Devinengel089 Год назад +1

      Cause that’s not what happened to them.

    • @benjlar1902
      @benjlar1902 Год назад

      @@Devinengel089 agreed... never know for sure but there were three seas bernie cooper mentioned

    • @ddbbloch4457
      @ddbbloch4457 3 месяца назад

      I knew about the three sisters... however, I had never heard that that is what hit the Edmund Fitzgerald... I really wonder how they can know that! Pretty sure she did not report in after getting hit...

    • @hcrawford
      @hcrawford Месяц назад

      From my study of what happened- I believe that the Fitzgerald encountered waves past Caribou Island, resulting in deep wave troughs that slammed the ship into the lake floor, rupturing the keel.

  • @salvitoripopadillo4539
    @salvitoripopadillo4539 4 месяца назад +1

    I spent about 12 years surfing around Lake Superior. Surf conditions can be epic several times a year. I've surfed in many famous places around the world and Lake Superior can be really fun! Just have to deal with the cold. Great video! 🌊❤

    • @Prof.Tarfeather
      @Prof.Tarfeather 4 месяца назад

      Scientist now believe that a Rouge Wave is what sunk the Edmund Fitzgerald.

  • @russellking1924
    @russellking1924 4 месяца назад +1

    Since the finding of the Edmund Fitzgerald underwater cameras have shown the vessels “dogs” weren’t totally clamped down. The ship was seen leaving Duluth Harbour with her cargo bay doors open. With the cargo bay doors not clamped shut she took on water and likely started to list. The waves, however, were the determining factor.

  • @pattisweet9780
    @pattisweet9780 Год назад +6

    What about the rogue waves off the coast of Portugal? Surfers use them to get super records. Highest wave a surfer has been accurately recorded riding was around 80 feet tall!

    • @gojewla
      @gojewla 11 месяцев назад

      They aren’t rogue. They happen fairly regularly. In fact, it’s believed that this phenomenon is caused by an underwater canyon, which intensifies the heigh of these waves.