I recently found your channel. Thanks for uploading these great documentaries. One request: Please put the title of each documentary in the video title (or at least in the description). For instance, this one is titled "Phoenix Temple". Thank you, and I will see you in the next one!
I watched this documentary hoping for some explanation as to why Masaya is the world's most dangerous volcano. Of course it isn't, but no reasoning was given.
It’s not content original to the RUclips channel, it’s just licensed. Blame the guys running the RUclips channel Incidentally the original programme is actually French, this is an English dub with Jeremy Irons, the RUclips channel is however as I understand German
Prob because a massive eruption puts all the millions of people in Central America at jeopardy & it will cause major blows to air & sea travel across the Americas and the world and it affect operations at the Panama Canal it the whole isthmus gets covered in ash
@@keatonterryI’d say Vesuvius because it’s more likely to have a major eruption while the last major eruption from campi flegrei was at least 30-40 thousand years ago
1816 The global "Year without summer (big freeze)" 3°C temperature drop and crop failures. April 1815, volcano Mount Tambora began to violently erupt. Millions of tons of ash, dust, and sulfur dioxide were released into the atmosphere, casting a temporary chill across the planet as it Blocked out the Sunlight for months on end. Documented around the world in literature.
Neither is this about the most dangerous volcano nor is it even about the volcano itself. This is about regional flora and fauna, basically, an animal show.
Ecuador has a very dangerous volcano too that may be responsible for the 536 A.D. catastrophe. And Naples is sitting in a caldera. But I never even heard of this one. But there are dozens of disaster volcanoes. We`re doomed.
Stop being such a defeatist! Volcanoes’ on earth have been in existence since the earth came into being 4.5 billion years’ ago. Without them, there’d be no humans’, animals’, birds’ or plants’. It was volcanoes’ which punched through the earth’s surface when is was in ‘snowball’ conditions’, & melted the ice. The volcano of which you speak is actually Ilopango in El Salvador. Naples sits on Campe Flegrei which is a combination of several ancient super volcanoes’, whose magma chambers’ are possibly linked to Mt Vesuvius. This is the reason why the latter is THE most studied volcano on earth, because of this.
@@elizabethroberts6215 Civilization can`t survive what happened in 536 A.D.. You may not understand why modern civilization relies on agriculture or how several years of reduced sunlight will affect this fragile setup but I do.
to BE…… I also understand about civilisation not being able to survive a ‘year(s) without a Summer’. It’s part, & parcel of the Geologic studies’ I’ve done at University. Humankind was nearly wiped out with the Toba eruption. How civilisation will end is anyone’s guess. The Laki eruption is thought to have caused so much human suffering in so many ways’ that it was possibly a trigger for the French Revolution.
@@elizabethroberts6215 You`d better get as many large tanks of propane as you can afford and a massively over-panelled solar power system and a way to keep the LiFeP04 batteries warm, and stock up on storable foods and indoor hydroponc gardens for peppers and greens for vitamin C. Plan for at least three years of no food or electricty or anything else unless you produce it. Wood burning stove and an old huge one-cylinder logging engine ran off propane or wood gas can be connected to a generator to recharge the batteries. Solar may only be making 15 to 30 percent of normal output at best and weather may be affected in the form of torrential rain and ice storms. A 100 watt solar panel can produce 5 to 10 watts on cloudy days.
If you want to see a documentary about birds that live in and around volcanoes, this is the video for you. But if it's "dangerous" volcanoes you're interested in, like me, give this a pass since it barely touches on this topic.
only on youtube can you go from watching funny animals to police action then go to crazy karen and then this. all in one place it's like a video flea market only i never buy anything .
This volcano's original indigenous name was Popogatepi which meant "The Burning Mountain". It sounds very similar to Popocatepetl ("The Smoking Mountain").
to Apache……I’ve swum between rock walls in the Pilbara, which are dated at 2,500 million years’ old. There’re parts of mountain ranges in South Australia which are older.
A great documentary. What make documentaries great is the narrator. The narrator made this documentary enjoyable
His name is Jeremy Irons. A great narrative voice!
to James……& a wonderful actor!
I immediately recognized Scar from “The Lion King.” 😅
I recognized the name but had to look up why he was familiar. He played the antagonist, Simon, in the third Die Hard movie.
@@fredhurst2528……his first film was, ‘The French Lieutenant’s Woman’ with Meryl Streep………
I live in Greece. I am so grateful for RUclips. You can see parts of the world so different than yours. ❣️
I am from Virginia USA and live in a cabin in the woods and I feel the same way you do!
I'm in Virginia, USA and I feel the same way!
Greetings from the BIG SKY. We like it here, too.
I’m from the rural mountain jungles of the Northern Philippines. I feel the same way, my friends!
😊@@allisonsanimaladventures289
Excelente documental! Muy buena descripción con imágenes impactantes!
Magnificent !!
lovely show with impeccable narration by Jeremy Irons.
So beautifully...explained...thank u..👌
I love that you ae narrating these shows love the sound of your voice, it draws you into the story even more, your also a great actor.
Outstanding work. What an exceptional film this is.
Fabulous narration....Great voice.
Great video! Congrtuletions to all the parties involved!
I recently found your channel. Thanks for uploading these great documentaries.
One request: Please put the title of each documentary in the video title (or at least in the description). For instance, this one is titled "Phoenix Temple".
Thank you, and I will see you in the next one!
23:48 so far the bright green parakeets flying over the desolate volcano are my favorite part
I watched this documentary hoping for some explanation as to why Masaya is the world's most dangerous volcano. Of course it isn't, but no reasoning was given.
it got you watchin it . job done , aye ! 😊
Do own research. I d😅o
It’s not content original to the RUclips channel, it’s just licensed. Blame the guys running the RUclips channel
Incidentally the original programme is actually French, this is an English dub with Jeremy Irons, the RUclips channel is however as I understand German
Prob because a massive eruption puts all the millions of people in Central America at jeopardy & it will cause major blows to air & sea travel across the Americas and the world and it affect operations at the Panama Canal it the whole isthmus gets covered in ash
@@keatonterryI’d say Vesuvius because it’s more likely to have a major eruption while the last major eruption from campi flegrei was at least 30-40 thousand years ago
Nice ♥️ thank you 👍
Trully the best documentaries 👌 on this channel.
Maravilloso video, que buena edicion y musica
Que buen video
life is more extented than death whenever it gets chance to survive ,thanks .
Clicked on video to hear about a volcano. Ended up watching a 45 minute video on animals...
27:21 unlike the parakeets, the vultures look like they belong there
Welcome always
Luv the Jaguar at the start
Beautiful show thank you.
رووووعه ❤😍
Don’t use this for falling a sleep. It’s too gooooood.
Sounds like the actor who played big scar in lion king 👍
What’s going on with the cute green tree bark situation at 10:55 ?!?! I need to know what this is
That tiger intro was dope
3:53 Same name of the Mexican volcano popocatepetl.
1816 The global "Year without summer (big freeze)" 3°C temperature drop and crop failures.
April 1815, volcano Mount Tambora began to violently erupt. Millions of tons of ash, dust, and sulfur dioxide were released into the atmosphere, casting a temporary chill across the planet as it Blocked out the Sunlight for months on end. Documented around the world in literature.
Neither is this about the most dangerous volcano nor is it even about the volcano itself. This is about regional flora and fauna, basically, an animal show.
Ecuador has a very dangerous volcano too that may be responsible for the 536 A.D. catastrophe. And Naples is sitting in a caldera. But I never even heard of this one. But there are dozens of disaster volcanoes. We`re doomed.
Stop being such a defeatist!
Volcanoes’ on earth have been in existence since the earth came into being 4.5 billion years’ ago. Without them, there’d be no humans’, animals’, birds’ or plants’. It was volcanoes’ which punched through the earth’s surface when is was in ‘snowball’ conditions’, & melted the ice.
The volcano of which you speak is actually Ilopango in El Salvador.
Naples sits on Campe Flegrei which is a combination of several ancient super volcanoes’, whose magma chambers’ are possibly linked to Mt Vesuvius. This is the reason why the latter is THE most studied volcano on earth, because of this.
@@elizabethroberts6215 Civilization can`t survive what happened in 536 A.D.. You may not understand why modern civilization relies on agriculture or how several years of reduced sunlight will affect this fragile setup but I do.
to BE…… I also understand about civilisation not being able to survive a ‘year(s) without a Summer’. It’s part, & parcel of the Geologic studies’ I’ve done at University.
Humankind was nearly wiped out with the Toba eruption. How civilisation will end is anyone’s guess.
The Laki eruption is thought to have caused so much human suffering in so many ways’ that it was possibly a trigger for the French Revolution.
@@elizabethroberts6215 You`d better get as many large tanks of propane as you can afford and a massively over-panelled solar power system and a way to keep the LiFeP04 batteries warm, and stock up on storable foods and indoor hydroponc gardens for peppers and greens for vitamin C. Plan for at least three years of no food or electricty or anything else unless you produce it. Wood burning stove and an old huge one-cylinder logging engine ran off propane or wood gas can be connected to a generator to recharge the batteries. Solar may only be making 15 to 30 percent of normal output at best and weather may be affected in the form of torrential rain and ice storms. A 100 watt solar panel can produce 5 to 10 watts on cloudy days.
Hei.goodmong.mainemis modhu akon I forom in Bangladesh and have been working for the in italiy.veri naic vidio
If you want to see a documentary about birds that live in and around volcanoes, this is the video for you. But if it's "dangerous" volcanoes you're interested in, like me, give this a pass since it barely touches on this topic.
only on youtube can you go from watching funny animals to police action then go to crazy karen and then this. all in one place it's like a video flea market
only i never buy anything .
Yellow stone?
It did erupt at a VEI 6 about 4000 BCE.
Лайк
……recognised actor Jeremy Irons as narrator immediately………
In Mexico there's Popocatepetl donno if that's the one you referred the name wrongly
This volcano's original indigenous name was Popogatepi which meant "The Burning Mountain". It sounds very similar to Popocatepetl ("The Smoking Mountain").
@@heathertaylor-nicholson9387 nice
How harsh is that guy talking to sun AJ like that
So they was throwing baby's into the volcano?
And women. A number of societies did that sort of thing to try and placate their Gods
Music is unnecessary
Plek 🌋
The wrath of Mother Nature
Nick-her-a-gyu-ah xD
This is more about animals than a volcano
I disagree. Probably one of the coolest.
the Spanish "discovered" squat.
"...WHOSE ENTRAILS SPEWED OUT IN LONG BURNING TONGUES..." (4:30) Really love a good example of bad writing. It doesn't get much worse than that.
..
Not the most dangerous.
Horrible loud music 🤮
God made the world no 30 thousand years ago read the Bible.
Apache Nope, it's over 4 BILLION years old
to Apache……I’ve swum between rock walls in the Pilbara, which are dated at 2,500 million years’ old. There’re parts of mountain ranges in South Australia which are older.
I can't stand Jeremy irons.