Kavachi has produced 36 distinct eruptions since 1939. It may only be a matter a time before a permanent island is constructed, but for that an unusually large volume eruption would be required.
I think it's easy to see where this is going. This what I suspect triggers sharks and fish to evacuate. "Electric and magnetic phenomena observed before the volcano-seismic activity in 2000 in the Izu Island Region, Japan S. Uyeda, M. Hayakawa, [...], and H. Tanaka Additional article information ABSTRACT Significant anomalous changes in the ultra low frequency range (≈0.01 Hz) were observed in both geoelectric and geomagnetic fields before the major volcano-seismic activity in the Izu Island region, Japan. The spectral intensity of the geoelectric potential difference between some electrodes on Niijima Island and the third principal component of geomagnetic field variations at an array network in Izu Peninsula started to increase from a few months before the onset of the volcano-seismic activity, culminating immediately before nearby magnitude 6 class earthquakes. Appearance of similar changes in two different measurements conducted at two far apart sites seems to provide information supporting the reality of preseismic electromagnetic signals.'
@@henryspoota7722 Thank you for sharing!!! I suspected something like this, as sharks have those specialized electrical signal sense organs. I'm guessing the other fish either sense something as well, or trust the sharks intuition. Yet again, Nature proves stranger than fiction. Definitely going to have to look into this volcano and the unique inhabitants more. 💙🌏
As with any of this, it does need more data. Not models. I'm seeing too bad "science" being based on models. "All models are wrong" some are useful.". I see very interesting things where I live. Interesting note. I told the engineering dept of my utility I was expecting a local geologic even In near future, when an earthquake hit the mountain I live on about a week later. I even still have e mail to prove it .. 😂. Was written off as a nut. But I'm betting those new smart meters picked up an anomaly.
Something I need to point out not talk about outside of my science community. To the east of Tonga as the sun set, the was a fast upwelling in cloud formation slightly before the tonga eruption. There was a lot more energy release than just the volcano. This shows us there is likely a geoelectric circuit connection, as well as solar magnetic field and geomagnetic field interaction.
I think the level of sophistication is the key to their survival there. I think that when gas and magma starts to move they feel the micro shockwaves long before an explosion. If you consider that they can sense fish swimming or floundering from quite a distance it possibly gives them a very clear signal before eruption.
I just read a very informative article about this and it explains their adaption and the fact that they not only look for these underwater volcanoes the sharks thrive in this environment. They can detect magnetic waves and know when it's going to erupt.
GeologyHub~ You are not only informative and interesting but understandable. I thoroughly enjoy your videos and have since I found you with the recent Tonga eruption. Thank you for all that you do! You are much appreciated!
Kavachi is such an incredible volcano. I remember seeing it on the BBC series South Pacific and Benedict Cumberbatch was narrating and said, "Behold, the creation of a new island." They also mentioned that any islands made keep getting eroded away. It would be really cool to see Kavachi rise above the ocean's surface one day and become a new island like Surtsey or the Hawaiian islands since they were created in this way.
Howdy! Firstly, thank you for all the amazing videos. I've been looking forward to your daily upload since the eruption on La Palma. You have created a massive interest in not only volcanism, but geology as a whole for me. My hikes and climbs have a whole new perspective. If you ever get the chance, I just found out about the Cono De Arita in Argentina and was wondering if you could add this oddity to your list of future videos. Your detailed analysis of geologic features is unparalleled and your delivery makes it very easy for me to comprehend and retain information. Thank you again for all that you do and I look forward to your next upload!
I was just as amazed as I think my dad was in the 70s when he first saw black smokers in the Gulf of Mexico. The nutrients in the superheated water created its own ecosystem with huge shrimp, sea anemone, razors clams and other life. If he was born and raised inland in New Zealand he'd probably be a geologist like you. Thanks again for sharing.
After the huge worldwide success that was Sharknado, Sharknado 2, Sharknado 3, Sharknado 4, Sharknado 5 and Sharknado 6, The Asylum is proud to present you: SHARKANO
It's bad enough they came up with at least 6 Sharknado movies. Now they can be more realistic with movie titles such as Sharkcano1: The Heat is On , Sharkcano 2 : Sharknami, etc.
If memory serves, sharks are hypersensitive to vibrations in the water at certain frequencies. This helps them zero in on injured or dying fish. Best guess is that the local sharks are able to detect in some way the low frequency vibrations that immediately precede an eruption and vacate the area. Evolutionary behaviors at work!
Exactly what I said just now lol I'd say that hammerheads are even more sensitive than most sharks. I believe they have special sensory organs on the "hammer" parts by their eyes
They have a set of sensory organs down there side called the lateral line that is very sensitive to vibrations and pressure changes mostly all fish have this
I am a fisherman; let me tell you fish are supersensitive to external stimuli and they would be able to sense vibrations well ahead of time of an eruption. I would also like to say I think there is some evolutionary advantage to living where they do. With the water being warmer than the surrounding ocean this increases their metabolism giving them an advantage over their prey.
I mean, sharks have electroceceptive cells that help detect prey, could the movement of silicate rich magma be creating enough of an ambient EM spike to warm them of an impending event since silicate minerals tend to be piezoelectric in nature?
" they exhibit an electrical charge when squeezed along certain crystallographic axes" as molten silica has no crystallographic structure i'd have to rule out piezoelectricity from magma as a possible mechanism in favor of sub eutectic spliting or fracking of hard rock associated with magmatic intrusions.
Maybe! This is how that "disappearing island" occured?? You know that one that sailors documented on a map 🗺️ and then people couldn't find the island? I wonder what if it related to this type of "temporary Real island?"
I'm not sure about the exact instance you refer to but yes there are a number of volcanoes which have formed ash/tephra islands that as a general rule wash away fairly quickly so it is quite a possibility for one to be the source of a "disappearing island". Another related possibility is pumice rafts which can potentially be mistaken as an island to some degree and as resurgent domes like Iwo Jima and submarine caldera eruptions like the recent Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai show caldera complexes can rise and fall above and below sea level with little warning as well. Even megathrust earthquakes can contribute to rising and sinking islands as when the overlying plate gets caught by the subducting plate it naturally can push the overlying plate upwards by many meters which can make an island potentially rise and fall if it is close to the surface say like a shallow reef etc.. Sand bar barrier islands are another very common example of temporary islands as they occur when costal masses of sand pile up above sea level when they naturally migrate with currents winds and storms. This is why it is basically a hopeless cause to keep sandy beeches in place. These kinds of islands can appear anywhere usually where you have shallow enough water to make such a big pile ups of sand more likely
It’s a scallop hammerhead. You’re looking at its left eye. It’s other eye is hidden by it’s skull. They have a weird ripple-shaped snout. They’re incredibly sensitive to electromagnetism and use the receptors in their snout to detect the heartbeat (ie EM circuit pulse) of their prey. On a less serious note, I’m fascinated by sharkcano and the inevitable sharknami
After finding out about the huge caldera created by Hunga Tonga Hunga A'apai, I was wondering what could live there. Then, you make this video, answering my question. It's amazing how many wonders await further study and exploration in our oceans!!! Thank you!!! 💜 #CantMakeThisStuffUp 🦈🌋🌏 #NatureAndScience 🤯
Hi, always enjoy your videos. Could you perhaps do something on the Nogahabara Sand Dunes in Alaska sometime? They seem so isolated and I wonder how they got there? Best wishes!
I'm not a shark expert but I do know alot about fish and they are very sensitive to vibration and pressure changes they have a thing call the lateral line which is a set of organs that runs down their sides
Sharks, especially Hammerheads, have very sensitive electroreceptors on their heads. I wonder if an increase in volcanic activity underground produces an electric charge that they can sense before an actual eruption begins.
What are the odds you would ever do an episode on the crooked river canyon here in Oregon, particularly where the 3 rivers meet at lake Billy Chinook?!
Not really because both plates are oceanic crust Only parts of the Australian plate are continental in origin namely the zone known as Sahul or greater Australia. It is kind of a misnomer that continents have independent plates because we tend to name the oceanic plates on which continents reside after their respective continent. Rather than thinking of continents as separate plates it is much better to view them as less dense silicate rock analogs of glaciers/icebergs or ice sheets/ice shelves depending on their size. In fact there is a recent paradigm shift which has begun to recognize that the plates of plate tectonics actually extend far deeper than we used to assume in this case it appears that in terms of plate motion they extend well below the Mohorovicic Discontinuity down to the Mantle Transition Zone at the minimum i.e. the Crust and upper mantle move as a single geological unit in this case primarily basaltic convection cells. Continents float within these larger oceanic plates much the same way as icebergs float in the sea (i.e. much of if not the majority of the continents are below the Mohorovicic Discontinuity phase transition zone with only the tips poking up above the basaltic crustal layer.
Sharks can detect a fishes electromagnetic field through their lateral line. They’re basically swimming Langmuir probes so yes they know when it’s gonna blow.
Do you have any information on the volcanic cones around the city of Dunedin in the South Island of New Zealand. I was told as a child they were all extinct and have never heard anymore about them.
Three small questions; 1) what volcano spews the most deadly toxins into the atmosphere? 2) if you were a betting man, what volcano do you think we should keep our eyes on? 3) since my family and I are within eyesight, of Mount Shasta. Is there any activity going on there?
the octopi at the base of Stromboli also hide in between large rocks where they wait out the eruptions. other fish just die. This video is on youtube. I think it was Stromboli but I could be wrong. Thanks for sharing this! Have any deepsea creatures washed up dead due to Hunga Tonga Ha'api ? (sorry for the bad spelling)
Kavachi has produced 36 distinct eruptions since 1939. It may only be a matter a time before a permanent island is constructed, but for that an unusually large volume eruption would be required.
So is this like Sharknado?
Sharkano???
I think it's easy to see where this is going. This what I suspect triggers sharks and fish to evacuate.
"Electric and magnetic phenomena observed before the volcano-seismic activity in 2000 in the Izu Island Region, Japan
S. Uyeda, M. Hayakawa, [...], and H. Tanaka
Additional article information
ABSTRACT
Significant anomalous changes in the ultra low frequency range (≈0.01 Hz) were observed in both geoelectric and geomagnetic fields before the major volcano-seismic activity in the Izu Island region, Japan. The spectral intensity of the geoelectric potential difference between some electrodes on Niijima Island and the third principal component of geomagnetic field variations at an array network in Izu Peninsula started to increase from a few months before the onset of the volcano-seismic activity, culminating immediately before nearby magnitude 6 class earthquakes. Appearance of similar changes in two different measurements conducted at two far apart sites seems to provide information supporting the reality of preseismic electromagnetic signals.'
@@henryspoota7722 Thank you for sharing!!! I suspected something like this, as sharks have those specialized electrical signal sense organs. I'm guessing the other fish either sense something as well, or trust the sharks intuition. Yet again, Nature proves stranger than fiction. Definitely going to have to look into this volcano and the unique inhabitants more. 💙🌏
As with any of this, it does need more data. Not models. I'm seeing too bad "science" being based on models. "All models are wrong" some are useful.".
I see very interesting things where I live.
Interesting note. I told the engineering dept of my utility I was expecting a local geologic even In near future, when an earthquake hit the mountain I live on about a week later. I even still have e mail to prove it .. 😂. Was written off as a nut. But I'm betting those new smart meters picked up an anomaly.
Something I need to point out not talk about outside of my science community. To the east of Tonga as the sun set, the was a fast upwelling in cloud formation slightly before the tonga eruption. There was a lot more energy release than just the volcano. This shows us there is likely a geoelectric circuit connection, as well as solar magnetic field and geomagnetic field interaction.
Imagine the sharknado that could be formed by the eruption of a sharkano, just terrifying, not to mention the subsequent sharknami...
Quick! Call Hollywood now!
@@briangarrow448 Where's Ian, we got a new plot with a twist?!
@@briangarrow448 WRITE THAT DOWN! WRITE THAT DOWN!
Or the deadly Pyrosharknic flows....
@@briangarrow448 🤣🤣🤣🤣
You'd think an active volcano wouldn't house any life, let alone something as sophisticated as sharks
I think the level of sophistication is the key to their survival there.
I think that when gas and magma starts to move they feel the micro shockwaves long before an explosion.
If you consider that they can sense fish swimming or floundering from quite a distance it possibly gives them a very clear signal before eruption.
There is a documentary about a black smoker, (underwater active volcano) and all the life that thrives there. ✌️😺
@@PhoenixLyon it's really quite amazing. There's an episode of "the blue planet" called the deep that covers them in detail too
Indeed. “Favorable mutations” that’s like fast forward evolution. That’s jiggy. :) sweet.
I just read a very informative article about this and it explains their adaption and the fact that they not only look for these underwater volcanoes the sharks thrive in this environment. They can detect magnetic waves and know when it's going to erupt.
GeologyHub~ You are not only informative and interesting but understandable. I thoroughly enjoy your videos and have since I found you with the recent Tonga eruption. Thank you for all that you do! You are much appreciated!
It is very interesting that sharks live in a volcano caldera, especially such an active one.
Fr
Kavachi is such an incredible volcano. I remember seeing it on the BBC series South Pacific and Benedict Cumberbatch was narrating and said, "Behold, the creation of a new island." They also mentioned that any islands made keep getting eroded away. It would be really cool to see Kavachi rise above the ocean's surface one day and become a new island like Surtsey or the Hawaiian islands since they were created in this way.
Howdy!
Firstly, thank you for all the amazing videos. I've been looking forward to your daily upload since the eruption on La Palma. You have created a massive interest in not only volcanism, but geology as a whole for me. My hikes and climbs have a whole new perspective.
If you ever get the chance, I just found out about the Cono De Arita in Argentina and was wondering if you could add this oddity to your list of future videos. Your detailed analysis of geologic features is unparalleled and your delivery makes it very easy for me to comprehend and retain information.
Thank you again for all that you do and I look forward to your next upload!
Good Idea! Or the "La Payunia" volcanic field in Argentina too, one of the earth's bigges't volcanoes concentration for square kilometer
"Sharcano" is now permanent in my vocabulary & the most bad ass term I've heard all year!
That was a fun episode, mixing sharks with volcanos. Love your excellent work!!!
there is an episode of i shouldnt be alive about this volcano
I was just as amazed as I think my dad was in the 70s when he first saw black smokers in the Gulf of Mexico. The nutrients in the superheated water created its own ecosystem with huge shrimp, sea anemone, razors clams and other life. If he was born and raised inland in New Zealand he'd probably be a geologist like you. Thanks again for sharing.
After the huge worldwide success that was Sharknado, Sharknado 2, Sharknado 3, Sharknado 4, Sharknado 5 and Sharknado 6, The Asylum is proud to present you: SHARKANO
Thanks for the video! I was going to request this one!!
A Sharkcano? I'll play this for my children later, they'll love that word.
Oh great... now how soon before some indy film maker comes out with a "Sharkcano" series like they did "Sharknado?" You know it's got to happen...
Part snapping-turtle, part hammerhead-shark... Snaphead....
_Sharkcano: Snapheads Escape!?_
Remember when syfy was still sci-fi?
It had to be said. You said it.
@@GreenDecember I miss those days. Now we call it sifi.
@@MelanieCravens I just call it ridiculous.
It's bad enough they came up with at least 6 Sharknado movies. Now they can be more realistic with movie titles such
as Sharkcano1: The Heat is On , Sharkcano 2 : Sharknami, etc.
I knew it was only a matter of time before you covered Sharkcano.
I have heard the term sharkcano used for this specific volcano
If memory serves, sharks are hypersensitive to vibrations in the water at certain frequencies. This helps them zero in on injured or dying fish. Best guess is that the local sharks are able to detect in some way the low frequency vibrations that immediately precede an eruption and vacate the area. Evolutionary behaviors at work!
Exactly what I said just now lol I'd say that hammerheads are even more sensitive than most sharks. I believe they have special sensory organs on the "hammer" parts by their eyes
They have a set of sensory organs down there side called the lateral line that is very sensitive to vibrations and pressure changes mostly all fish have this
I am a fisherman; let me tell you fish are supersensitive to external stimuli and they would be able to sense vibrations well ahead of time of an eruption.
I would also like to say I think there is some evolutionary advantage to living where they do. With the water being warmer than the surrounding ocean this increases their metabolism giving them an advantage over their prey.
I don't plan to get even 1000 miles from this BUT I am thankful you took your time to tell us about it! Thank you
A suggestion - a video on the 90 or so new volcanoes recently found under the Antarctic ice sheet!
That would be an awesome video!
I mean, sharks have electroceceptive cells that help detect prey, could the movement of silicate rich magma be creating enough of an ambient EM spike to warm them of an impending event since silicate minerals tend to be piezoelectric in nature?
U a smart ass nigga
" they exhibit an electrical charge when squeezed along certain crystallographic axes" as molten silica has no crystallographic structure i'd have to rule out piezoelectricity from magma as a possible mechanism in favor of sub eutectic spliting or fracking of hard rock associated with magmatic intrusions.
perhaps the deep rumblings and leaking of gases into the water gives them a clue something is up
Hey Mr Geology Hub I love your videos! Have you ever done one about Lascar in Chilie?
Wow, I've never been so early for one of your videos. I'm always on break when you produce a new video.
Sharkcano. My god. This is the most amazing name anything has ever had.
Thanks! 🦈
Forget Sharknado, it’s time for SHARKCANO!
But seriously, someone needs to make this movie
I watched a video 2 days ago on the weather channel and was going to suggest it to you for a topic 😄.
I was wondering how fast sharkcano would come up lol
Sharkcano sounds like a spin off of sharknato 😂. Wait don't tell me they already made a movie called sharkcanos did they lol?
Wow 3600 ft below the surface of the Ocean and still pushing up Water great video thanks
Great video thank you! Squamish Chief next?
Stranger than fiction.
I'm waiting for the new update about Iceland volcano
Maybe! This is how that "disappearing island" occured?? You know that one that sailors documented on a map 🗺️ and then people couldn't find the island? I wonder what if it related to this type of "temporary Real island?"
I'm not sure about the exact instance you refer to but yes there are a number of volcanoes which have formed ash/tephra islands that as a general rule wash away fairly quickly so it is quite a possibility for one to be the source of a "disappearing island". Another related possibility is pumice rafts which can potentially be mistaken as an island to some degree and as resurgent domes like Iwo Jima and submarine caldera eruptions like the recent Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai show caldera complexes can rise and fall above and below sea level with little warning as well. Even megathrust earthquakes can contribute to rising and sinking islands as when the overlying plate gets caught by the subducting plate it naturally can push the overlying plate upwards by many meters which can make an island potentially rise and fall if it is close to the surface say like a shallow reef etc..
Sand bar barrier islands are another very common example of temporary islands as they occur when costal masses of sand pile up above sea level when they naturally migrate with currents winds and storms. This is why it is basically a hopeless cause to keep sandy beeches in place. These kinds of islands can appear anywhere usually where you have shallow enough water to make such a big pile ups of sand more likely
1:00 I'm seeing a shark with the friendly face of a turtle? Must be a trick of perspective.
It’s a scallop hammerhead. You’re looking at its left eye. It’s other eye is hidden by it’s skull. They have a weird ripple-shaped snout. They’re incredibly sensitive to electromagnetism and use the receptors in their snout to detect the heartbeat (ie EM circuit pulse) of their prey. On a less serious note, I’m fascinated by sharkcano and the inevitable sharknami
After finding out about the huge caldera created by Hunga Tonga Hunga A'apai, I was wondering what could live there. Then, you make this video, answering my question. It's amazing how many wonders await further study and exploration in our oceans!!!
Thank you!!! 💜
#CantMakeThisStuffUp 🦈🌋🌏
#NatureAndScience 🤯
This is how you get sharks with freakin lazers on their heads.
Who clicked looking for sharks flying out of an erupting volcano?
You’ve seen “Sharknado” well now coming to you in 2023 “Sharkano” starring Vin Diesel
Fascinating, the Shark-cano. Thank you.
This gives me almost %100 of finding life on other Planets
Go for it! No , really.
why? abiogenesis is probably the hard part
@@alexmijoI encourage everyone to leave.
The Australian plate is subducting under the Pacific plate?
As an orchid lover this volcanoes name makes me think of
Phragmipedium kovachii
Shark can sense electromagnetic fields
Since you've touched on the Solomons, could you please elaborate on the volcanic springs on Tulagi?
What about Etna in Italy? Cant find info here🧐
Hi, always enjoy your videos. Could you perhaps do something on the Nogahabara Sand Dunes in Alaska sometime? They seem so isolated and I wonder how they got there?
Best wishes!
when u said that it had sharks i started laughing
A volcano with sharks in it? OK. But do they have frickin' laser beams on their heads?
We're gonna need a bigger seismometer......
How hot does the water get?
I'm not a shark expert but I do know alot about fish and they are very sensitive to vibration and pressure changes they have a thing call the lateral line which is a set of organs that runs down their sides
A Sharcano produces Sphyroclastic flows.
Sharks, especially Hammerheads, have very sensitive electroreceptors on their heads. I wonder if an increase in volcanic activity underground produces an electric charge that they can sense before an actual eruption begins.
So you’re getting to volcanos in the Solomons. Any plans to do Lihir Island?
I'm pretty sure "Sharkano!" is a thing.
What are the odds you would ever do an episode on the crooked river canyon here in Oregon, particularly where the 3 rivers meet at lake Billy Chinook?!
So the Australian continental plate is subducting below the oceanic plate -- isn't that unusual?
Not really because both plates are oceanic crust Only parts of the Australian plate are continental in origin namely the zone known as Sahul or greater Australia. It is kind of a misnomer that continents have independent plates because we tend to name the oceanic plates on which continents reside after their respective continent.
Rather than thinking of continents as separate plates it is much better to view them as less dense silicate rock analogs of glaciers/icebergs or ice sheets/ice shelves depending on their size.
In fact there is a recent paradigm shift which has begun to recognize that the plates of plate tectonics actually extend far deeper than we used to assume in this case it appears that in terms of plate motion they extend well below the Mohorovicic Discontinuity down to the Mantle Transition Zone at the minimum i.e. the Crust and upper mantle move as a single geological unit in this case primarily basaltic convection cells. Continents float within these larger oceanic plates much the same way as icebergs float in the sea (i.e. much of if not the majority of the continents are below the Mohorovicic Discontinuity phase transition zone with only the tips poking up above the basaltic crustal layer.
@@Dragrath1 good to know
I sense a movie in a few years.
Those movies take weeks to make, not years
Do you have any information on the volcanos within Tucson, Arizona, possible super volcano
that would be cool. my friend moved to a few miles from the border and its fun to razz him with facts.
I believe there's also octopuses that do the same in Indonesia (they sense the earthquake before our sensors) and go to safety
Hammerhead sharks are so strange !
Sharks can detect a fishes electromagnetic field through their lateral line. They’re basically swimming Langmuir probes so yes they know when it’s gonna blow.
Can I bother you for a textbook recommendation in Volcanology?
Do you have any information on the volcanic cones around the city of Dunedin in the South Island of New Zealand. I was told as a child they were all extinct and have never heard anymore about them.
I wonder if anyone out there is writing the script to the movie Sharkano after seeing this?
Explosions like these are what initiates sharknados.
No fuckin way they made sharkcano real
Glad to see Lavagirl and Sharkboy are making offspring
Three small questions;
1) what volcano spews the most deadly toxins into the atmosphere?
2) if you were a betting man, what volcano do you think we should keep our eyes on?
3) since my family and I are within eyesight, of Mount Shasta. Is there any activity going on there?
The largest bowl of shark fin soup…in the world.
the octopi at the base of Stromboli also hide in between large rocks where they wait out the eruptions. other fish just die. This video is on youtube. I think it was Stromboli but I could be wrong. Thanks for sharing this! Have any deepsea creatures washed up dead due to Hunga Tonga Ha'api ? (sorry for the bad spelling)
OMG I thought this was a joke when I saw it on Tic Toc lol well I learned something just now lol
Friggin sharks with volcanoes on their foreheads
Impossible! That's a deadly combo!
Might be a nice warm treat for them.
There are hammerheads and galapagos sharks in the flooded caldera of Isla Fernandina.
Why are there no volcanos on the western coast of North America? A topic for anther video. Ty
That "something" that alerts the sharks is likely a localized change in the magnetic field.
or the smell
You would think sharks were ejected as well with some of the eruptions!
Wow!
You should have titled this "Sharcano!"
Your best
Shark can feel electromagnetic field
🌱🌏💚
This reminds me of SHARKNADO. They should make a movie
I feel a sharknado spin off is imminent.
A perfect place for a Super Villain Base
I have to see a new movie now...Sharkcano...Come on SyFy Channel...You know you want to make it,
Sharks with lava? Whoooa awesome. Pew pew!
Wouldn't they die from the temperature difference?
The Pod brought me here thumbs up if it did for you too
Sharknado, now Sharkcano? i'm in danger
I can see the new movie coming out Sharkcano !
Silky Shark? More like Silly Shark amiright?!
Sorry I'll see myself out.
Make a video about it Nova Iguaçu sleeping volcano, the only know volcano in the Brazilian shield 🥺🥺 please, regards from Brasil
Shark Volcano!
Someone, please, make a B-movie out of this and send it straight to Red Letter Media for review.
One day that volcano is gonna cook up the largest bowl of shark fin soup on earth.
Is Timor leste volcanic in origin?
Hold on lads, I just got an idea for a new Sharknado film.....