6:53 i don't what scares me the most the fact that the whale is perfectly mimicking the tone or that fact that the mimic sounds like a panicking human frantically contacting someone underwater
Fish noises can be really creepy. I used to have a catfish in an aquarium next to my bed... His name was Kirby (he ate a lot) and I absolutely adored him. Didn't keep him from scaring the hell out of me by hissing and growling in the middle of the night, though.
@@antiromantic986 That species of catfish could and did. I don't really know why he did though... All I know is that he sometimes also did it when I changed the water in his tank, so I guess one of the reasons for him to growl was stress.
@@antiromantic986 The species I kept was a pimelodus pictus. I read up on a few things about specifically the growls, and apparently, they do that when they get annoyed, as a sort of warning. I didn't keep him alone, so he was probably just scolding one of the other fish when he growled at night. ^^;
I remember hearing a creepy story of divers who'd work at the bottom of the ocean where it was so dark they could barely see a few feet in front of them with their lights and how fish would come up to them. The divers knew this meant the fish were hiding from something.
The deeper you go the smaller creatures get because of the extreme pressure. There is not many creatures above 1m length in the depths. No worries if fish approach you in the deep. Even if they're hiding whatever is chasing them is very likely no threat to humans. What's far more dangerous in this depth is the pressure. It will force you to stay in the water for longer periods of time, lest you suffer from narcolepsi and die a slow agonising death at the surface. The scariest part about the deep ocean as a diver is not the darkness or "hidden monsters". It's coming back up to the surface after experiencing the pressure of those depths
@@PuddingXXL It's actually the opposite. With such pressure and temperature they can afford crazy slow metabolism, allowing them to grow really massive. But with such conditions, there can be no active predators that actively hunt. They are all opportunity feeders, just patiently waiting till the unknowing prey comes to them.
@@idedary I only know of the gigantism of calamaris. Most deep sea animals we've found and observed are less then 50cm big. Gigantism seems possible but seems to also be a rare occurrence which is why you're hardstruck to find a giant calamari sighting in modern times. But you're right gigantic organisms can exist but as you correctly said not as active predators. Therefore people don't need to be scared of deep sea wildlife and moreso worry about environmental factors like pressure.
i don’t know about that. I think it’s good to explore space so that we can know our surroundings so that we could possibly prevent an asteroid or prepare for an asteroid collision with Earth.
Luckily the chances of a gigantic unidentified sea monster are statistically very low, and with the fact that the majority of the ocean is undiscovered only pertains to humans physically exploring down there, the majority of the ocean has been mapped by satellites and sonar, so I don’t think you have to worry. :)
A theory I heard was that the 52 hertz whale might be completely deaf and thus doesn't know how loud he's being, which would explain why there was only one. The reason another was detected could mean that another deaf whale was born and managed to survive into adulthood.
@@mario50000why do you think it needs to have something to do with loudness? A deaf whale wouldn’t know what pitch to make, which IS related to frequency. Critical thinking
That scene in that movie 7:31 has been the most terrifying thing that I've ever seen/heard in any movie. There's no ghost, demon, jump-scare or anything in any other movie that has sent chills down my spine like that horrific stuff.
@@CDunn322 Anihilation ruclips.net/video/Mg0bvyIEHcs/видео.html&ab_channel=Movieclips What makes it more terrifying is that the sound that the bear makes is the screaming voices of the people that it kills.
I appreciate that this video was just very...rational about the explanations. "This is a creepy noise, and it was probably just volcanic activity." Simple, informative, and not fearmongering for effect.
@@beartheconfused6798unless you can prove the source of the sound, I don't blame some people for thinking there are monsters in the ocean. Especially since most sea creatures are in fact sub-monster.
For those who are having trouble imagining just how deep the abyss call was in this video, if you've ever played the game "Subnautica", the active lava zone is approximately 1,700 meters deep, which equates to about 1.7 kilometers. under a tenth of the depth that call was recorded at. It kinda puts into perspective just how massively deep our oceans are.
If you look at the left side of those spectroscopes you can see these sounds have been shifted up in frequency a lot. In reality theyre very VERY deep bass frequencies. 20hz is the lowest sound a human can hear, but you can still FEEL lower frequencies in your body if theyre loud enough. So imagine this: youre scuba diving and suddenly you hear and feel this insanely loud and deep rumbling in your body 😱
To me- It isn’t the actual sounds that scare me. It’s knowing what makes the sounds. The fact that such disturbances in the earth can create these noises… Is just terrifying! Other than the bloop. I like the bloop.
Fun fact - it is because of the SOSUS network that we know that whales sing to communicate. Intelligence operatives who worked on the system when it was still classified heard a strange wailing noise that they couldn’t identify. While in development, SOSUS was code named Project Jezebel, so the intelligence analysts who first heard these sounds and shared the recordings with each other called the noises the Jezebel Monster.
I've heard that a sonar pulse underwater is severely fatal to a close by diver. I've heard that it is like a big pressure wave and will literally rupture and liquefy someone's organs. Those divers were super lucky they weren't close
This is true. Active sonar pings can be 235 dB or more. Which is more than loud enough to kill you if you're close. In fact, that's one of the tactics used to prevent enemy divers from getting close to warships. Also, modern sonar is powerful enough to boil the water around the ship.
seals can also mimic human speech to a degree, there was a seal at a boston zoo which had a habit of replicating the vocalizations of his previous caretaker. they called him hoover the talking seal.
I don't think it's scary, I think it's wonderful! They can mimic just like birds can! Imagine the quality of friendship someone can have with a whale... I think that's beautiful.
I really love how educational this video is. You are not even exaggerating stuffs yet you stated all the facts and science behind all these sounds. Truly adds some new knowledge for me. Keep it up!
Somehow his accent makes this less scary for me, like when Grandpa tells you a horror story but then he's like "It's okay, sweetie. Grandpa won't let anything hurt you!" ❤😂
I want to add something more to the information of this video: The sounds Upsweep, Whistle, Bloop, Julia, Slowdown and train are sped up 16 times. This is done so that sounds can be heard clearly. (I don't know if the other sounds shown in this video are also sped up)
Can’t wait to be on a submarine and suddenly hear “Detecting multiple leviathan class life forms in the region are you sure whatever you’re doing is worth it?”
the bloop and julia are one of my favorites. imagine being the person monitoring the device and hearing this for the first time. i would have shat my pants. this is my dream job actually
@@danieljakistam9409 I do think these are just icebergs. They would happen way more if it was a animal. The malformed and lonliest "whale" alive can definitely be a new species or colony of animal
I don't know much about animals but I have seen that those who are born different or deformed, those of their kind do not like them, therefore the animal lives a solitary life, if the whales are social species, poor malformed whale
Am I wierd for getting excited about this kinda stuff? The idea that we know so much yet know so little about the deep ocean just makes me want to learn more about it
5:10 - aka "The Loneliest Whale" I hadn't heard that another example had been found. That lighting sound is really cool, it has a sci-fi feel to it; reminds me of the Photon torpedo launching sound effect from the original Star Trek.
The beluga whale mimicking human speech is kinda cool in my opinion. They are very intelligent creatures, and being kept in captivity only having contact to humans who most definitely speak to it with human words, it had to adapt over time, maybe not consciously but unconsciously, kinda like when we humans start to adapt talking habits from other people around us without realizing it ourselves. You can see this behavior in many animals (birds especially), even cats and so on. Cats normally don't meow a lot when being amongst other cats, they use much more body language, but when living together with a human, they start to meow a lot more because they adapt to our way of communicating - large part of our communication is verbal, spoken words. And since the cat realizes that it gets more attention when meowing, it will adapt this behavior more and more.
Julia sounds like something drowning,of course,it's definetley not a living creature But it is somewhat fun to think about how there *COULD* be a kaiju sized monstrosity deep down in the ocean.
11:20 I live in a sismic active zone in mexico, and 10 years ago ther was a massive earthquake of 7.8 richter scale. When we where camping outside (our homes where too damaged to live in) and a replica was about to hit us, a very similar sound can be heard (btw, i was living at least at 5km from the hypocenter of the quake) and when we slept, and the ground shaked, if you put your ear on the ground, you could hear some kind of liquid moving deep below, it was terrifying, but cool.
The ping seems the most terrifying, the fact that the fast high pitched sounds right after the call are frequent and perfectly aligned gives the mood that an animal is making that sound.
'Bloop' is kind of funny for me because it sounds like a cartoon sound effect. Like Spongebob and his buddies are screwing around down there, something explodes and that's what we hear on the surface.
I want to be a marine biologist. But it's stuff like this that keeps me from the ocean. Like imagine swimming around and hearing these sounds in the vast water
Awesome video man, keep in mind that all the first sounds like the bloop, Julia, train and upsweep are played at 16X normal speed. I’ve heard all of them besides train at normal speed and that is just a whole other level of creepy. The creepiest in my opinion is Julia as it sounds nothing like the other sounds at all and instead sounds like some ungodly beast bellowing in sheer anger. Also the loudness of Julia adds to its creepiness as it makes you think what kind of monster could make such a noise to have rattled the seas in such a way…
@@Kittycathead I have no clue how to link clips via comment section (sry I’m a boomer lol) but no joke, Julia litterally sounds like a leviathan from subnautica or something way scarier
The fact that they named it "Julia" makes it prime creepypasta material. Like a diver gets dragged to the abyss by ocean demons or something and mutated into a fleshy screaming mass underwater
I personally find being underwater fascinating. It may scare some people, but once you’ve conquered it, you can see how amazing bodies of water are. We can’t deny that there’s also some creepy we can’t ignore every once in a while. Great video. It really opens our eyes to how large bodies of water could impact our perspectives.
When you get to that point where you can’t see what’s below you, it’s pretty damn terrifying. Looking down and seeing no bottom, just black murky depths, *should* scare the shit out of you.
I love water and learning about what's in it, I am scared of deep dark water though. I still swim in water I can't see through but I only do it when other people are with me.
As a person who live in Pacific ring of fire, you can literally heard the rumbling of eathquake traveling like a wave coming towards your location. It was terifying to hear and even see its wave like shaking when you live in a plain, unpopulated area.
I live in Newfoundland so I really like all this ocean stuff. I actually got to see belugas the other day just off the coast of Fogo Island! It was so cool. I didn’t hear them though. But still, it was cool.
I'd like to point out one thing that's really nice about these recordings: it's not actually playing the 0-60 Hz range (or your subs or ears would be dead), it's playing the overtones in the upper hundreds Hz range. I'm glad that came into consideration, especially since those using their phones wouldn't be able to hear it as well.
@@arcticowl1091 If it was playing the actual frequencies at the volumes they were recorded at (or even close to it) your eardrums would rupture almost immediately from the immense pressure.
@@PerpetuusTenebris why would you play it back at the "volumes they were recorded at"? Makes no sense. Do I have to listen to songs on Spotify at whatever volume they recorded the music?
@@mario50000 No, cause that would be insane, but this is an absolutely ungodly experience when listened to at extreme volumes (obviously, my meager setup can't even get far above 120 dB but it's close enough sorta)
Sounds like something I would do to my sister. I have a Bluetooth speaker that I sometimes put under her bed and play stuff. Most of the time it's just stuff that I find funny like loud Indian music or Yakko's World. I wouldn't play anything creepy to my sister though because she's a baby and would probably get PTSD.
6:24 I’m pretty sure this guy was a blue whale with a unique call, at least that’s what the guesses were. He’s dubbed ‘the loneliest whale’ if you want to search it up, mostly because it’s physically impossible for him to find a mate since no other whale can respond to the call.
I heard some years back that some whales sing in a different frequency or tone or something, other whales don't hear it or don't understand it or don't recognize it as whale or something. And even if they did and responded it would be worthless since the first whale would have the same issues hearing the response. Although I wonder what would happen if they came within sight of each other, whales obviously can't interact with humans but seem to regularly investigate and protect humans. Apparently it's not uncommon for divers to be protected by humpbacks keeping themselves between the divers and a nearby shark, nudging the divers toward the surface with their nose. Cool, but intimidating.
You ever been watching a video late at night and randomly hear your own voice thru the speakers? that solves the year long view count mystery and i wasn’t even trying lol. I appreciate being included.
The pacing of your speech and you cadence makes me feel so chilled out, and makes what youre saying so much easier for me to follow. I love this channel, and I just discovered it, but immediately subscribed
me too my native language is Spanish and im learning English and with this accent i feel like heis a ASMR English language teacher he narrates with real information not “Theory”
Was never really an avid viewer, but I have to say that these narrated videos are many times better. It gives them a sense of personality, I suppose, which is almost impossible to achieve when the videos are text only. I have started watching you a lot more since you've made the change and often watch the videos the day they come out. You should definitely keep it up!
I was an old fan, I’ve never seen some, other than those other channels, and I gotta say, those are even better. I’m happy that you have the confidence to show your voice. 😊
Words cannot describe how much I loved this video. I used to watch this sort of videos all the time, and to come back to a good one after years is super-pleasant.
thank you for using both metric/imperial measurements! I've gotten better at approximating, but it's way easier when both are mentioned (and helps me learn to approximate better in the future)
That beluga whale wasn't trying to mimic human speech. It was humming the guitar riff from Bon Jovis' "Living on a prayer"... Its well known that Belugas are big fans of Bon Jovi... Promise.
I've heard the sound Ice makes while under polar ice caps, It's hands down the strangest thing I've ever heard on sonar. It sometimes sounded just like a toy ray-gun.
I’m glad you mentioned the sperm whale (my favorite cetacean) as being louder than the blue whale. I’m curious why he said that or in what context he means by “loud”. Also, they can communicate with others of it’s species with their clicks from thousands of miles away, possibly even on the opposite side of the planet but the jury is still out on that one. They can even stun or kill a squid from a mile away with their clicks, whether the squid is 1ft or 40ft long. That’s impressive.
Loved this! I've been interested in weird sounds ever since I first heard of the bloop and Numbers stations. I wonder if the "malformed whale" is just an undiscovered species. This is extremely interesting! Edit: I just learned that the "malformed whale" has a name! 52 Blue, due to its hertz signature and its possible species! Neat! Great work, Mr. Slav! Loved your narration and narrative follow-through! You're a natural!
Mr Slav’s place is cold so he wears face cover to keep warm. We should crowd fund for him a space heater or even a Finnish sauna. This guy deserves it for making such great content! ❤
So, the male Weakfish is essentially blowing off a few intentional farts in an attempt to impress the ladies? Apparently the Beluga isn't the only sea critter mimicking human behavior.
Loved the video! And the recorded lightning strike!! I didn't even know there were recordings like that. Also, the sounds of the earthquake are very chilling, but at the same time, people who aren't used to earthquakes may not realize how generally loud they can be. When the 2010 earthquake in Chile happened, my mom and I actually got woken up right before it hit us, partly because of the sound
i have a graphic novel called "The Wake", first halve of the story is like the plot from the movie "Underwater", reserchers caught something and wanna know what it is, and one of the scientists realizes (and makes a refference to the malformed whale) that the whale isnt making any random sound, its actually repeating something it heard once in its lifetime and she realized it cas actually a comand from the deep sea creatures that were talking to each other while the whale was passing by, it gave me the creeps that first halve of the story
In my opinion, the ocean is scarier than space just because of how it is right here on earth with us. And space is around us and it’s less accessible than the oceans.
These newer narrated videos are such a welcome change, really gives the videos some personality and charm, esp beacuse how passionate you sound while talking bout these topics
No obnoxious intro, no obnoxious outro, just information and good occasional humor to breakaway from the data. I enjoy this style of video very much.
💯
just the obnoxious fake accent right?
@@dr_redbanRL It sounds like a real accent to me.
@@RPMMarch lol
Jesus loves you alot trust in His death 4 salvation and be saved from eternal hell
6:53 i don't what scares me the most
the fact that the whale is perfectly mimicking the tone
or that fact that the mimic sounds like a panicking human frantically contacting someone underwater
Or the skull like figure at the top centre-right
@@cristianc.6860 glad I wasn’t the only one who peeped that
wait what skull??
He sound like he is swearing!
Sound like someone playing kazoo passionately to me
Fish noises can be really creepy.
I used to have a catfish in an aquarium next to my bed... His name was Kirby (he ate a lot) and I absolutely adored him.
Didn't keep him from scaring the hell out of me by hissing and growling in the middle of the night, though.
The hell was it hissing at? I didn't even know fishes could hiss or growl 😀
@@antiromantic986 That species of catfish could and did.
I don't really know why he did though... All I know is that he sometimes also did it when I changed the water in his tank, so I guess one of the reasons for him to growl was stress.
@@silvercandra4275 my God that's so creepy but so cool at the same time, I outta research that 😆
@@antiromantic986 The species I kept was a pimelodus pictus.
I read up on a few things about specifically the growls, and apparently, they do that when they get annoyed, as a sort of warning.
I didn't keep him alone, so he was probably just scolding one of the other fish when he growled at night. ^^;
Catfish? How big is your aquarium man? 😮
I remember hearing a creepy story of divers who'd work at the bottom of the ocean where it was so dark they could barely see a few feet in front of them with their lights and how fish would come up to them. The divers knew this meant the fish were hiding from something.
The deeper you go the smaller creatures get because of the extreme pressure. There is not many creatures above 1m length in the depths. No worries if fish approach you in the deep. Even if they're hiding whatever is chasing them is very likely no threat to humans. What's far more dangerous in this depth is the pressure. It will force you to stay in the water for longer periods of time, lest you suffer from narcolepsi and die a slow agonising death at the surface.
The scariest part about the deep ocean as a diver is not the darkness or "hidden monsters". It's coming back up to the surface after experiencing the pressure of those depths
@PuddingXXL you should read about deep-sea gigantism. It's really interesting topic
@@PuddingXXL It's actually the opposite. With such pressure and temperature they can afford crazy slow metabolism, allowing them to grow really massive. But with such conditions, there can be no active predators that actively hunt. They are all opportunity feeders, just patiently waiting till the unknowing prey comes to them.
@@idedary I only know of the gigantism of calamaris. Most deep sea animals we've found and observed are less then 50cm big.
Gigantism seems possible but seems to also be a rare occurrence which is why you're hardstruck to find a giant calamari sighting in modern times.
But you're right gigantic organisms can exist but as you correctly said not as active predators.
Therefore people don't need to be scared of deep sea wildlife and moreso worry about environmental factors like pressure.
@@PuddingXXL Greenland sharks are another interesting example of deep sea gigantism.
I’m more afraid of whatever is hiding underwater than I am about whatever is undiscovered from outer space.
Laughs in Beluga Whale
Bro I found you AGAIN 💀
Like we’ve only discovered around 25% of the ocean and yet we already want to explore space. Obviously we missed something down there.
i don’t know about that. I think it’s good to explore space so that we can know our surroundings so that we could possibly prevent an asteroid or prepare for an asteroid collision with Earth.
Luckily the chances of a gigantic unidentified sea monster are statistically very low, and with the fact that the majority of the ocean is undiscovered only pertains to humans physically exploring down there, the majority of the ocean has been mapped by satellites and sonar, so I don’t think you have to worry. :)
The Train one sounds like a ship whistle still being blown by a deceased sailor. The beluga whale was just uncanny valley scary.
wheres yo pfp from
@@Rekkitt hazbin hotel
It was comical
It kinda sounded like it was saying the “n word”
Cringe hazbin hotel pfp imagine liking those gay demon cartoons
A theory I heard was that the 52 hertz whale might be completely deaf and thus doesn't know how loud he's being, which would explain why there was only one. The reason another was detected could mean that another deaf whale was born and managed to survive into adulthood.
Cool
But the frequency has nothing to do with loudness.
@@mario50000 could it be malformed vocal chords?
@@mario50000 if he's deaf he won't know the right sound to make.
@@mario50000why do you think it needs to have something to do with loudness? A deaf whale wouldn’t know what pitch to make, which IS related to frequency. Critical thinking
That scene in that movie 7:31 has been the most terrifying thing that I've ever seen/heard in any movie. There's no ghost, demon, jump-scare or anything in any other movie that has sent chills down my spine like that horrific stuff.
Yeah that scene made me nauseated I was so terrified
What movie is this?
@@CDunn322 Anihilation ruclips.net/video/Mg0bvyIEHcs/видео.html&ab_channel=Movieclips What makes it more terrifying is that the sound that the bear makes is the screaming voices of the people that it kills.
@@CDunn322It’s called Annihilation (2018)
@@CDunn322The credit was in the top left, I also missed it at first. It's from Annihilation (2018)
I appreciate that this video was just very...rational about the explanations. "This is a creepy noise, and it was probably just volcanic activity." Simple, informative, and not fearmongering for effect.
Meanwhile I guarantee there are smooth brains in the comments who insist its some sort of sea monster
@@dylancross1039reddit moment
@@dylancross1039oh and when you press them on it they respond with:
*Weeeevvvvee only DiscOvered 5% oF thE oCeaN you KnoW nOThing*
@@beartheconfused6798unless you can prove the source of the sound, I don't blame some people for thinking there are monsters in the ocean. Especially since most sea creatures are in fact sub-monster.
It’s probably just volcanic activity. But what if it’s more? I can still dream of seeing something truly terrifying down there.
For those who are having trouble imagining just how deep the abyss call was in this video, if you've ever played the game "Subnautica", the active lava zone is approximately 1,700 meters deep, which equates to about 1.7 kilometers. under a tenth of the depth that call was recorded at. It kinda puts into perspective just how massively deep our oceans are.
Tectonic plates shifting, next question
@@thezek6322 we record those sounds regularly and they sound nothing like that
@@thezek6322 it must hurt to be so confident only to immediately get rejected 😅😂😢
Ugh. Subnautica. I'm getting flashbacks of those deep sea horrors.
@@thezek6322 I'm not sure what this has to do with my comment but okay lol
8:15 that weakfish is just typing on his keyboard really fast
Discord dating
Nah he playing "OSU!"
Angrily typing to his crush why she should pick him over that loser, Marlin. Lol
@@Headlock123456789 ‘marlin’ you picked such a suitable name for a fish lol 😂
@@jimaco0312 Thanks, lol. I kinda stole the idea from Finding Nemo though.
If you look at the left side of those spectroscopes you can see these sounds have been shifted up in frequency a lot. In reality theyre very VERY deep bass frequencies. 20hz is the lowest sound a human can hear, but you can still FEEL lower frequencies in your body if theyre loud enough.
So imagine this: youre scuba diving and suddenly you hear and feel this insanely loud and deep rumbling in your body 😱
thats my nightmares for ya. I just be chilling, and then... *vibrations* . Scares me awake
Hearing a radar pinging underwater has to be one of the freakiest things ever, it sounds so surreal!
Radar.
Sonar, mate. Same thing but involves hearing.
Sonar, bro. Not radar.
i mean it is man made
And the most painful
sonar pinging is one of the most terrible things a diver could hear
it can literally kill them
You narrate very well! No exaggerated "spooky voice" and no overly positive constant shouting.
Keep it up! 🔥
NO
also using the logical answers such as icebergs and volcanoes instead of the usual sea monster stuff
@@isac0014 YES!
Yeah but what in the fuck is he wearing?
@@sr-7124 Average russian clothes don't worry
To me- It isn’t the actual sounds that scare me. It’s knowing what makes the sounds. The fact that such disturbances in the earth can create these noises… Is just terrifying! Other than the bloop. I like the bloop.
The bloop is fun
Bloop
I like Boing, it sounds like a sharp pluck of a bass guitar
that was confirmed to be an ice burg moving or crashing into the water
bloop
As someone prone to being spooked, I appreciate how you actually break down logical explanations for what all of these are.
All Sounds:
1 - UPSWEEP 0:58
2 - WHISTLE 1:44
3 - BLOOP 2:27
4 - JULIA 3:10
5 - SLOW DOWN 3:41
6 - TRAIN 3:55
7 - BOING/MINKE WHALE 5:03
8 - MALFORMED WHALE 5:33
9 - CREEPY BELUGA/IMPOSTOR BELUGA 6:53
10 - Bonus: MUTANT BEAR from ANNIHILATION (2018) 7:30
11 - GARIBALDI FISH 7:47
12 - WEAKFISH 8:05
13 - BLACK DRUM 9:00
14 - UNKNOWN WHALE/ABYSS CALL 9:12
15 - PING (Not actual sound but very similar) 9:55
16 - LIGHTNING/LIGHTNING STRIKE 10:29
17 - EARTHQUAKE 2004/MONSTER 11:06
Unnerving
the train sound is a guy screaming underwater asking for hekp
@@janndhreiseluce2648 THATS WHAT I WAS THINKING LIKE PROBABLY A DEMON IDK.....
You are aware they're already labeled and in the description right?
@@janndhreiseluce2648 it sounds like a whale
these narrated videos are much better than the text only vids :)
Agree
Really love those vids tho , I would love to see both styles of video .
Damn straight you're right!
Facts
I totally agree
I remember being terrified of the Bloop when i was younger. But as it turned out, the Bloop was also an iceberg breaking.
That's what they want you to think. It was not any iceberg...
@@sethdaboss245 okay Jack Hodgins
@@sethdaboss245 Cthulhu would want us to think that.
They told us its an iceberg, but the sound it made was not like an iceberg lol
@@jaykr3450 it sounded like my shit dropping onto the toilet
Fun fact - it is because of the SOSUS network that we know that whales sing to communicate. Intelligence operatives who worked on the system when it was still classified heard a strange wailing noise that they couldn’t identify. While in development, SOSUS was code named Project Jezebel, so the intelligence analysts who first heard these sounds and shared the recordings with each other called the noises the Jezebel Monster.
I've heard that a sonar pulse underwater is severely fatal to a close by diver. I've heard that it is like a big pressure wave and will literally rupture and liquefy someone's organs. Those divers were super lucky they weren't close
Oh woaw
This is true. Active sonar pings can be 235 dB or more. Which is more than loud enough to kill you if you're close. In fact, that's one of the tactics used to prevent enemy divers from getting close to warships. Also, modern sonar is powerful enough to boil the water around the ship.
What about the fish and animals? 😢
@@tajuddinahmed3379What about me?
He talked about it in another video
The belugas scare me so much it’s terrifying to know that it can mimic us and it’s pretty accurate…
It was like a drunk hobo singing 700 meters in the ocean
seals can also mimic human speech to a degree, there was a seal at a boston zoo which had a habit of replicating the vocalizations of his previous caretaker. they called him hoover the talking seal.
@@weiwu1442 i hate remembering this
at least they can be cute
I don't think it's scary, I think it's wonderful! They can mimic just like birds can! Imagine the quality of friendship someone can have with a whale... I think that's beautiful.
I really love how educational this video is. You are not even exaggerating stuffs yet you stated all the facts and science behind all these sounds. Truly adds some new knowledge for me. Keep it up!
Somebody once wrote me a novel lecturing me on my misuse of the word stuffs and how it should properly be used in grammar…
🤷♀️
Somehow his accent makes this less scary for me, like when Grandpa tells you a horror story but then he's like "It's okay, sweetie. Grandpa won't let anything hurt you!" ❤😂
I want to add something more to the information of this video:
The sounds Upsweep, Whistle, Bloop, Julia, Slowdown and train are sped up 16 times. This is done so that sounds can be heard clearly.
(I don't know if the other sounds shown in this video are also sped up)
was the change in pitch accounted for? Thanks for the info!!
I'm never afraid of the ocean, until I start watching videos like these at 3am
its 6:54 rn
It's 3:43 rn
It's 3:69 rn
It's 3:11 am rn, oh fu-
its 6am and the last animal made me afraid of going to sleep.
8:07 Weakfish has some cool Pickuplines
7:49 fish feels rage confirmed
Can’t wait to be on a submarine and suddenly hear
“Detecting multiple leviathan class life forms in the region are you sure whatever you’re doing is worth it?”
"Entering ecologically dead zone"
can't wait for humanity to discover something like one of the leviathans
@@DrOktoberfest that would be cool NGL
*activates deep davy jones voice* Do you fear death, Solider
came to the comments for my fellow Subnautica lovers:')
the bloop and julia are one of my favorites. imagine being the person monitoring the device and hearing this for the first time. i would have shat my pants. this is my dream job actually
To sh*t your pants?
And then you are told that this was of course just an iceberg. Nothing to see here, go away!
Yea me too so scary
@@danieljakistam9409 I do think these are just icebergs. They would happen way more if it was a animal. The malformed and lonliest "whale" alive can definitely be a new species or colony of animal
@Greg's Holy Legs well that's a poorly made strawman. Try better next time.
"Malformed whale" sounds terrifying, not the sound it makes, but it's name
Sounds like a video game boss
it's in your wall
Sounds like an owl lol
@@m0-m0597 💀
I don't know much about animals but I have seen that those who are born different or deformed, those of their kind do not like them, therefore the animal lives a solitary life, if the whales are social species, poor malformed whale
Am I wierd for getting excited about this kinda stuff? The idea that we know so much yet know so little about the deep ocean just makes me want to learn more about it
No, no, it's a perfectly normal feeling
I love the new narration videos keep it up slav!
how you know.. 😔
Same!
Can't take my pfp
I don't really like the new format, the text gives me the feeling of seriousness.
@@meerrb1 what the hell
5:10 - aka "The Loneliest Whale" I hadn't heard that another example had been found. That lighting sound is really cool, it has a sci-fi feel to it; reminds me of the Photon torpedo launching sound effect from the original Star Trek.
I’m happy to hear blue 52 might not be alone, like there’s a little bit of hope for everyone
The beluga whale mimicking human speech is kinda cool in my opinion. They are very intelligent creatures, and being kept in captivity only having contact to humans who most definitely speak to it with human words, it had to adapt over time, maybe not consciously but unconsciously, kinda like when we humans start to adapt talking habits from other people around us without realizing it ourselves.
You can see this behavior in many animals (birds especially), even cats and so on. Cats normally don't meow a lot when being amongst other cats, they use much more body language, but when living together with a human, they start to meow a lot more because they adapt to our way of communicating - large part of our communication is verbal, spoken words. And since the cat realizes that it gets more attention when meowing, it will adapt this behavior more and more.
Julia sounds like something drowning,of course,it's definetley not a living creature
But it is somewhat fun to think about how there *COULD* be a kaiju sized monstrosity deep down in the ocean.
Start making the Jaegers
9:56 definitely an active sonar emission from a naval vessel.
Yeah, probably a destroyer.
Really loving this! Keep it going Mr Slav!!
I thought u said slay 💀
11:20 I live in a sismic active zone in mexico, and 10 years ago ther was a massive earthquake of 7.8 richter scale. When we where camping outside (our homes where too damaged to live in) and a replica was about to hit us, a very similar sound can be heard (btw, i was living at least at 5km from the hypocenter of the quake) and when we slept, and the ground shaked, if you put your ear on the ground, you could hear some kind of liquid moving deep below, it was terrifying, but cool.
@Atp Engineer yeah, at some point I thought it could be magma (we lived at some kilometers from thermal mini lakes)
@Atp Engineer phreatic lac
The ping seems the most terrifying, the fact that the fast high pitched sounds right after the call are frequent and perfectly aligned gives the mood that an animal is making that sound.
You have 2 braincells that is a sonar
I love how most of them are unnerving or strange, meanwhile Upsweep is dropping a sick beat
queue abandon ship from subnautica
'Bloop' is kind of funny for me because it sounds like a cartoon sound effect. Like Spongebob and his buddies are screwing around down there, something explodes and that's what we hear on the surface.
The weakfish's beats were pretty fire gotta say
WE MAKING IT OUT OF THE ABYSSAL ZONE WITH THIS ONE 🔥🔥🔥
I want to be a marine biologist. But it's stuff like this that keeps me from the ocean. Like imagine swimming around and hearing these sounds in the vast water
until something hears you
U can never be like jotaro hahahahhaha, L ghiaccho
Is that a jojo reference 🤓
Imagine you're scooba diving and you here the earthquake sound or something. I would probably just disappear.
7:56 Imagine making a sound with your bladder to flirt with people
Hi Germany
Hallo Herr Deutschland
9:15 just sounds like an in-air recording of bullfrog in a pond especially with the high pitch noise in its background.
Awesome video man, keep in mind that all the first sounds like the bloop, Julia, train and upsweep are played at 16X normal speed. I’ve heard all of them besides train at normal speed and that is just a whole other level of creepy. The creepiest in my opinion is Julia as it sounds nothing like the other sounds at all and instead sounds like some ungodly beast bellowing in sheer anger. Also the loudness of Julia adds to its creepiness as it makes you think what kind of monster could make such a noise to have rattled the seas in such a way…
1) send clip
2) bible leviathan lol
@@Kittycathead I have no clue how to link clips via comment section (sry I’m a boomer lol) but no joke, Julia litterally sounds like a leviathan from subnautica or something way scarier
@@noahadams7784 oh it's just by including a video link in your comment
@@Kittycathead Here you go: ruclips.net/video/l9DI5I-_s0o/видео.html
The fact that they named it "Julia" makes it prime creepypasta material. Like a diver gets dragged to the abyss by ocean demons or something and mutated into a fleshy screaming mass underwater
9:01 - Man, that fish can lay down some fire beat!
7:20 yeah but beluga whales aren’t that malicious. They’re what we wish dolphins were, as belugas are like lovable jellybeans of blubber
:)❤❤
What we hear: *weakfish noises*
What female weakfish hear: ayy baby girl, lemme rizz you up
I personally find being underwater fascinating. It may scare some people, but once you’ve conquered it, you can see how amazing bodies of water are. We can’t deny that there’s also some creepy we can’t ignore every once in a while. Great video. It really opens our eyes to how large bodies of water could impact our perspectives.
I see you everywhere tf
When you get to that point where you can’t see what’s below you, it’s pretty damn terrifying. Looking down and seeing no bottom, just black murky depths, *should* scare the shit out of you.
@@Sniperboy5551 especially if u have submechanophobia or whatever it was
I love water and learning about what's in it, I am scared of deep dark water though. I still swim in water I can't see through but I only do it when other people are with me.
your profile pick is so sus
As a person who live in Pacific ring of fire, you can literally heard the rumbling of eathquake traveling like a wave coming towards your location. It was terifying to hear and even see its wave like shaking when you live in a plain, unpopulated area.
I love these videos! No clickbait or annoying sound affects! You just get straight to the point.
I live in Newfoundland so I really like all this ocean stuff. I actually got to see belugas the other day just off the coast of Fogo Island! It was so cool. I didn’t hear them though. But still, it was cool.
I'd like to point out one thing that's really nice about these recordings: it's not actually playing the 0-60 Hz range (or your subs or ears would be dead), it's playing the overtones in the upper hundreds Hz range. I'm glad that came into consideration, especially since those using their phones wouldn't be able to hear it as well.
What do you mean our ears would be dead?
@@arcticowl1091 If it was playing the actual frequencies at the volumes they were recorded at (or even close to it) your eardrums would rupture almost immediately from the immense pressure.
@@PerpetuusTenebris why would you play it back at the "volumes they were recorded at"? Makes no sense. Do I have to listen to songs on Spotify at whatever volume they recorded the music?
@@mario50000 No, cause that would be insane, but this is an absolutely ungodly experience when listened to at extreme volumes (obviously, my meager setup can't even get far above 120 dB but it's close enough sorta)
@DownloadPizza higher frequencies can damage your ear drums without needing as much power
That beluga whale sound was terrifying... I'm gonna play it at max volume into my brother's room tonight. 😈
Sounds like something I would do to my sister. I have a Bluetooth speaker that I sometimes put under her bed and play stuff. Most of the time it's just stuff that I find funny like loud Indian music or Yakko's World. I wouldn't play anything creepy to my sister though because she's a baby and would probably get PTSD.
@@astreusastresus198 To me ur face is creepier enough to scare the shit out of anyone.
@@unparalleledpunk6826 That's my sister's face. I know, shit was hilarious. Me and my brother were dieing when we saw it.
6:24 I’m pretty sure this guy was a blue whale with a unique call, at least that’s what the guesses were. He’s dubbed ‘the loneliest whale’ if you want to search it up, mostly because it’s physically impossible for him to find a mate since no other whale can respond to the call.
😢
Though apparently another whale finally responded with the same frequency in 2022?
@@splitjawjanitor5369 nature... finds a way
I heard some years back that some whales sing in a different frequency or tone or something, other whales don't hear it or don't understand it or don't recognize it as whale or something. And even if they did and responded it would be worthless since the first whale would have the same issues hearing the response. Although I wonder what would happen if they came within sight of each other, whales obviously can't interact with humans but seem to regularly investigate and protect humans. Apparently it's not uncommon for divers to be protected by humpbacks keeping themselves between the divers and a nearby shark, nudging the divers toward the surface with their nose. Cool, but intimidating.
You ever been watching a video late at night and randomly hear your own voice thru the speakers? that solves the year long view count mystery and i wasn’t even trying lol. I appreciate being included.
The pacing of your speech and you cadence makes me feel so chilled out, and makes what youre saying so much easier for me to follow. I love this channel, and I just discovered it, but immediately subscribed
me too my native language is Spanish and im learning English and with this accent i feel like heis a ASMR English language teacher he narrates with real information not “Theory”
6:53 impostors beluga is damn creepy af.
Was never really an avid viewer, but I have to say that these narrated videos are many times better. It gives them a sense of personality, I suppose, which is almost impossible to achieve when the videos are text only. I have started watching you a lot more since you've made the change and often watch the videos the day they come out. You should definitely keep it up!
Too much writing wtf
@@ucrain4971 Yeah, wanted to make a positive comment so why not go all in right?
@@roktman ratio then
@@ucrain4971 bro 💀
@@ucrain4971 man it must suck to not be able to read
10:47 bro moving his head like he’s AI💀
10:23 alien laser sounding ahh blast 💀
"Scariest Sounds In Water"
9:01 "bum bum bum bum bum bum" lol
Btw, awesome video! 🤲
BOING 😂😂😂
Ngl, i thought that was a start of some kind of drum and bass music.
I was an old fan, I’ve never seen some, other than those other channels, and I gotta say, those are even better. I’m happy that you have the confidence to show your voice. 😊
Why is ur name q?
@@Summer-p7h why is your name dawn?
@@Summer-p7h cuz my pfp is an emoji with a camera that i drew also why is ur name dawn
@@swaggery8380 why is ur name swaggery? perhaps u have the ability of such high swagger?
@@kotak4420 Why u name Kotak, ?
To 7:10 Didn't the Beluga only do that when he didn't wanted any divers in his tank? Like the Beluga equivalent of "Gtfo of my room mom >:("
The "SO SUS" hydrophone system is a very powerful tool to detect Beluga Impostor
there is not an emoji the shows the amount of disgust my face is showing lmao
@@manicc_ 🤓🤓
there is not an emoji the shows the amount of disgust my face is showing lmao
@@reyoscura9229 bro really an npc responding with a nerd emoji lmaoo
@@manicc_ i was literally showing you the emoji youre looking for lmao
You can really feel the passion with this one
Amazing research done
I thought 6:54 sounded like a kazoo lol
But the fact that a whale can mimic the sound of a beluga whale. damn. that's pretty impressive.
same
le kazoo
That WAS the beluga whale. It was mimicking human speech.
Belugas sound so cute. They remind me of parrots trying their best to communicate with us or just having fun imitating us
7:00 that was one of the creepiest sounds I've ever heard
Tbh it sounds like a kazoo 💀 it was funny to me
DANG BELUGA RAPPIN🔥🔥🔥
Sounds like a kazoo lol
YAEYEYEYAYEYAYAYAYEAYEYAEAYEAYAE 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Kazoo whale
11:07 gives the vibe of “CTHULHU IS RISING”
I have 600 likes and people have no idea what I have written 😬😬
fr fr
I am getting the Heebie Jebbies when he showed the movie sheep, and when the whale said out, out out!
Has the intelligence and verbal skills of a parrot.
@@soul191 If you think that’s crazy, look up talking ravens. No wonder Edgar Allen Poe thought they were creepy. They’re super smart and funny though.
@stormchurrothewise Even the ocean wont leave them alone
that lightning strike has to be the coolest sound ive ever heard. (i was born 40% deaf so this is a real treat that i could hear that specific pitch)
Words cannot describe how much I loved this video. I used to watch this sort of videos all the time, and to come back to a good one after years is super-pleasant.
It’s quite surprising we have more knowledge on outer space than our own ocean
It's much easier to look up at the sky, that's why
Oh shit yea
Also there not a lot of pressure going up
In actuality we don't, cuz space is bigger than we can imagine.
we don't even know where's the end of space, what do u mean we know about it more than about our own ocean
Bruh that beluga is wildin out💀💀
10:30 sounds like me using the toilet 😄
What the heck are you pooping?! Lasers?
taco bell
💀💀
@@youtupro_newVFN no
@@youtupro_newVFN stop it
thank you for using both metric/imperial measurements! I've gotten better at approximating, but it's way easier when both are mentioned (and helps me learn to approximate better in the future)
I’m surprised no one talks about Hoover the seal, who could recreate the voice of old man almost perfectly
That beluga whale wasn't trying to mimic human speech. It was humming the guitar riff from Bon Jovis' "Living on a prayer"... Its well known that Belugas are big fans of Bon Jovi... Promise.
Slav I’m actually enjoying these narrated video please keep going on this
I've heard the sound Ice makes while under polar ice caps, It's hands down the strangest thing I've ever heard on sonar. It sometimes sounded just like a toy ray-gun.
i love you man, excellent quality and comprehensive explanations. amazing work, keep it up
I’m glad you mentioned the sperm whale (my favorite cetacean) as being louder than the blue whale. I’m curious why he said that or in what context he means by “loud”. Also, they can communicate with others of it’s species with their clicks from thousands of miles away, possibly even on the opposite side of the planet but the jury is still out on that one. They can even stun or kill a squid from a mile away with their clicks, whether the squid is 1ft or 40ft long. That’s impressive.
Loved this! I've been interested in weird sounds ever since I first heard of the bloop and Numbers stations.
I wonder if the "malformed whale" is just an undiscovered species. This is extremely interesting! Edit: I just learned that the "malformed whale" has a name! 52 Blue, due to its hertz signature and its possible species! Neat!
Great work, Mr. Slav! Loved your narration and narrative follow-through! You're a natural!
Not reading all that
@@ucrain4971 It takes like less than 10 seconds to read that
@@ucrain4971 so you're illiterate? Congrats bro we're all proud of you.
@@ucrain4971 i wish you luck in your efforts to gain 4th grade reading levels.
@@onlinepanic2036 I'm 28 and i have a job that makes me 300k a year. Im not a kid bozo
Mr Slav’s place is cold so he wears face cover to keep warm. We should crowd fund for him a space heater or even a Finnish sauna. This guy deserves it for making such great content! ❤
So, the male Weakfish is essentially blowing off a few intentional farts in an attempt to impress the ladies? Apparently the Beluga isn't the only sea critter mimicking human behavior.
I don't know why but just hearing how people with other accents pronounce words and form sentences differently than I do makes me smile
9:13 it sounds like a frog
Ikr
Loved the video! And the recorded lightning strike!! I didn't even know there were recordings like that. Also, the sounds of the earthquake are very chilling, but at the same time, people who aren't used to earthquakes may not realize how generally loud they can be. When the 2010 earthquake in Chile happened, my mom and I actually got woken up right before it hit us, partly because of the sound
the depth of the ocean is quite spooky, but also fascinating
I love how immediately after talking about how some known sounds can give the heebie-jeebies, the first sound is a comedy 'boing' sound.
It sounds like someone flicked one of those springy door stoppers.
6:33
I think the beluga is trying to say something
i have a graphic novel called "The Wake", first halve of the story is like the plot from the movie "Underwater", reserchers caught something and wanna know what it is, and one of the scientists realizes (and makes a refference to the malformed whale) that the whale isnt making any random sound, its actually repeating something it heard once in its lifetime and she realized it cas actually a comand from the deep sea creatures that were talking to each other while the whale was passing by, it gave me the creeps that first halve of the story
Nothing more fun then hearing some terrifing sound while in the midle of the ocea.
10:04 Nah it's probably nothing just a thalmus carrier.
Tf is that
7:31 what the heck is this movie this looks terrifying
Yeah i wanna know too
Annihilation (2008), on the top corner.
@@user-JL I thought it was called the shimmer
In my opinion, the ocean is scarier than space just because of how it is right here on earth with us. And space is around us and it’s less accessible than the oceans.
These newer narrated videos are such a welcome change, really gives the videos some personality and charm, esp beacuse how passionate you sound while talking bout these topics
5:32 Actually, this isn’t a malformed whale, I think its the Blue 52 whale, nicknamed the loneliest whale on earth.
9:42 it’s possible that it came from above, but it is also very possible that it came all the way from below.