Gulf of Mexico (Full Episode) | Drain the Oceans

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  • Опубликовано: 1 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @theisgood0
    @theisgood0 11 месяцев назад +24

    This is the type of stuff I love watching reminds me of sitting there when I was younger watching the older style episodes with my dad :).

  • @cdfdesantis699
    @cdfdesantis699 Год назад +41

    "Drain the Oceans" is one of the most interesting series on YT. Very good!

    • @TheDavidlloydjones
      @TheDavidlloydjones 9 месяцев назад +4

      It's a really neat production idea, and all the water withdrawing graphics are really welll done, too.

    • @cdfdesantis699
      @cdfdesantis699 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@TheDavidlloydjones I agree, friend, as well as the graphics of items on the ocean floor. Thanks for your reply.

    • @christopherwoodson7162
      @christopherwoodson7162 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@TheDavidlloydjones absolutely incredible to see!!

  • @ThatsNotVeryFunnyLol
    @ThatsNotVeryFunnyLol 2 года назад +391

    This type of stuff is so fascinating to me. I can never wrap my head around how anyone is able to come up with so much information. The knowledge is insane. I love watching documentaries and gathering information on history and everything relatable, it will never get boring to me.

    • @ChameleonMD123
      @ChameleonMD123 2 года назад +21

      The answer is simple. They make it up.

    • @beingandtime
      @beingandtime Год назад +13

      The knowledge has been built up by hundreds, if not thousands, of separate individuals over the span of multiple generations. Some contribute more than others but, ultimately, it’s a group effort (like 99.9% of human breakthroughs/achievements).

    • @ChameleonMD123
      @ChameleonMD123 Год назад +1

      @@beingandtime Indeed. Masons and various other offshoots that perpetuate the Heliocentric lie. Those at the top of the pyramid willingly while those compartmentalized at the bottom potentially unwillingly.

    • @friedtoaster4059
      @friedtoaster4059 Год назад +8

      @@ChameleonMD123 “I use idiocy to destroy idiocy” - probably chameleon

    • @klittkommander3857
      @klittkommander3857 Год назад +7

      @@ChameleonMD123 these puppets will never understand

  • @brandymayard6601
    @brandymayard6601 15 дней назад +1

    I’m born and raised in Lafayette, Louisiana and my brother and I just recently had a discussion about how the government Mexico was formed and he had no idea at 51 years old that there was a crater from a meteor involved. And it’s crazy because I thought everyone knew that. This is an absolutely well put together documentary and I enjoyed it thoroughly. Good job.

  • @MHarenArt
    @MHarenArt 11 месяцев назад +18

    This artificial draining of the water is simply mind boggling!!!! It's fantastic!

    • @christopherwoodson7162
      @christopherwoodson7162 5 месяцев назад

      Isn't it!? It's totally awesome! The fact that we have this type of technology is incredible!!

  • @thegombergmap-dot-net
    @thegombergmap-dot-net Год назад +30

    Wow. Amazing show. I wasn't expecting anything this good.

  • @CybertronGangsta
    @CybertronGangsta 2 года назад +185

    Hats off to the crew who made this documentary. This is nothing short of spectacular. A great rendition and very well documented.

    • @davearbogast2882
      @davearbogast2882 2 года назад +8

      Guess you were not a fully developed adult when this happened... Not a great rendition, unless you like propaganda - research the court cases against British Petroleum (Found guilty on may counts)

    • @FelonPatriot
      @FelonPatriot Год назад

      This is a national geographic episode

    • @FelonPatriot
      @FelonPatriot Год назад

      It's a series called "drain the ocean"

    • @tomk2005
      @tomk2005 Год назад

      A very well presented pack of Lies, and mis-information. God made the earth and our solar system about 6000 years ago, and all the earth's layers of rock, mountains, oceans, were all made about 4600 years ago from the worldwide flood event. Yes, an Asteroid mage the Gulf of Mexico, and expelled all that dirt north creating the Himalayas and so forth, and other oceans. It also created continents, and Islands which didn't exist prior to the flood, as the Asteroid's impact caused earthquakes and volcanoes. The Earth was transformed as this receding process caused the sloshing back and forth of the waters covering the earth, which laid down layers of silt and dead animals, which we see all around the world today in the layers of rock and in fossils.

    • @ClaudiaMitchell-jn7fw
      @ClaudiaMitchell-jn7fw Год назад

      @@davearbogast2882 Thank you ! 😁

  • @jeffs6090
    @jeffs6090 Год назад +46

    The one thing I always see wrong about documentaries about the asteroid strike that took out the dinosaurs is that they always show the strike with the land masses as they are today. With plate tectonics, the land was in a different arrangement 65M years ago than they are now. Most of that peninsula was under water with islands around it that eventually became Central America.

  • @vmi4172
    @vmi4172 Год назад +17

    These 'Drain the Oceans' documentaries are the most fascinating I have ever seen. Award winning stuff!

  • @everactivedad
    @everactivedad 2 года назад +46

    This is super cool. LiDAR and other tech is helping us write the correct history of us all!

  • @theluschmaster
    @theluschmaster 2 года назад +30

    The picture quality is so awesome, it's like I am there

    • @edmartin875
      @edmartin875 2 года назад +1

      Much of that picture was computer generated from a few pictures taken by the ROV.

  • @mr.iforgot3062
    @mr.iforgot3062 11 месяцев назад +4

    This was the greatest movie I've ever seen in my life!

  • @colubrinedeucecreative
    @colubrinedeucecreative 11 месяцев назад +4

    What a great concept and execution. Thanks for this! I was searching to see what it might look like for the gulf to be drained, and well, we went quite a ways into seeing what that might look like!

  • @kaioliverbohnke7294
    @kaioliverbohnke7294 Год назад +18

    One of my grand-uncles died in such a german U-Boat. Very interesting to hear what (might) have happened to him.

  • @absolutelyobsidious
    @absolutelyobsidious 2 года назад +12

    I Pray all documentaries could evolve to these levels. Beautiful!!!!
    🥺🥺🥺🥺

  • @dark_dante2663
    @dark_dante2663 Год назад +1

    Finally, a video from National Geographic, this looks like a real good video, so far I have learned alot about various events around the world.

  • @batman_2004
    @batman_2004 Год назад +8

    This is my favourite show. Thanks for full episodes. 🙏

  • @tomthompson2309
    @tomthompson2309 Год назад +3

    Seeing all those oil pipes laid out on the ocean floor really is something to behold,its amazing really that the whole area is oil flooded with mishaps,yet they hold up mainly,great watch cheers.

  • @jimamccracken5783
    @jimamccracken5783 2 года назад +32

    Simply amazing what modern day technolgy can do.
    I try to watch all of these videos in this series and I have reached a conclusion.
    You can run but you wil be found sooner or later.
    Thanks to National Geographic of which I have been a big fan for putting these videos together.

  • @hugodiazgarcia1266
    @hugodiazgarcia1266 Год назад +1

    Congratulations on your episodes about Drain the Oceans, including the Pacific and Golf of Mexico of course!!!

  • @Mello_Man_Ace
    @Mello_Man_Ace 2 года назад +15

    Simply amazing 👏🏾 is all I can say 💯🙌🏾🎊

  • @Genecititanico
    @Genecititanico 2 года назад +8

    Amazing!

  • @Sammy-lz1vi
    @Sammy-lz1vi 2 года назад +7

    Very powerful Documentary!!! Draining the oceans is one entertaining doc from Nat Geo. Very Nice indeed.The narration is just the Bomb. Thanks!!

  • @lindalaw8368
    @lindalaw8368 10 месяцев назад +1

    So wonderfully entertaining and educational at the same time! ❤❤

  • @eduardogoyzueta5285
    @eduardogoyzueta5285 Год назад +18

    I'm a geophysicist in the making and this show makes me excited for my possible career paths

    • @mr.iforgot3062
      @mr.iforgot3062 11 месяцев назад +1

      I'm a scientist too. A biologist. An unemployed biologist.

    • @Oriflame-e6r
      @Oriflame-e6r 8 месяцев назад

      If you are a biologist then please help me in some topics of biological

  • @paysour3
    @paysour3 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for this very detailed and informative history of the Gulf.

  • @rhondakennedy819
    @rhondakennedy819 Год назад +3

    Very interesting. Be kind to one another. Stay safe. Love to all

  • @WillaSalazar-s4i
    @WillaSalazar-s4i Год назад +2

    Love the history provided from National Geographic! So amazing!!

  • @anthonytobio5669
    @anthonytobio5669 2 года назад +19

    Awesome Documentary! I would love to visit the gulf sometime!! Going to Texas soon!

    • @danzykam6545
      @danzykam6545 2 года назад +3

      Good deal so you’ll get to se Mexico up close in Texas

    • @krzykris
      @krzykris Год назад

      The Florida Gulf Coast is much better than Texas, much better beaches, barrier islands, amenities, etc.

  • @AllanEvansOfficial
    @AllanEvansOfficial Год назад +2

    I’ve been looking for a documentary Just like this on the gulf !! Finally someone did this

  • @Everything-dr1wb
    @Everything-dr1wb 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for sharing this video 🙂👍

  • @charleslindsay3201
    @charleslindsay3201 2 года назад +17

    interesting history.i worked on a jack up oil rig back in 1996.although i could see the wellheads at night i never knew there were so many .new orleans certainly has a rich history and i always enjoyed going there.

  • @LifeOdysseyMotivation
    @LifeOdysseyMotivation Год назад +36

    Impressive documentary. Draining the ocean is one of a kind technology that helps us understand more about history and archaeology.

  • @unitedwestanddividedwefall2073
    @unitedwestanddividedwefall2073 2 года назад +55

    It's amazing how technology can change how things USE to be
    to how advanced it's become over the years, this documentary
    just teaches how things have changed over centuries of time.

    • @prometheusunbound7628
      @prometheusunbound7628 Год назад

      Technology cannot change anything that USED TO BE. That is the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Our knowledge of science can only change our perspective of things. Actual history doesn't change because of technology. Christ.

  • @ArtefactumJohn
    @ArtefactumJohn Год назад +3

    National Geographic never disappoints !

  • @daniels.deloso4181
    @daniels.deloso4181 Год назад

    Amazing.....thank you very much. I'm better informed after viewing your presentation.

  • @pattimorris6200
    @pattimorris6200 Год назад +12

    Love the history provided from National Geographic

  • @davidlinstrand5913
    @davidlinstrand5913 6 месяцев назад

    Very professional video. Other RUclipsrs could learn by studying the crafting of this piece.

  • @fatimamudassar2049
    @fatimamudassar2049 2 года назад +88

    Lots of respect for the efforts and courage of the archeologists....👏👏👏

  • @sarariachy8473
    @sarariachy8473 Год назад +2

    Amazing video thx for sharing
    This video 🙏❤️

  • @mjbreeze
    @mjbreeze 8 месяцев назад +1

    Brilliant ❤thank you

  • @andes805
    @andes805 Год назад +6

    This video was so neat, to know that the scientist can now see beneath the water with such detail, it was amazing.

  • @ragnarlothbokjr7821
    @ragnarlothbokjr7821 2 года назад +5

    Now watching From mizoram 👍🏿💞💞

  • @aaronaustrie
    @aaronaustrie 2 года назад +6

    Interesting documentary

  • @dray206
    @dray206 2 года назад +4

    Good and interesting episode

  • @annetteyoutube742
    @annetteyoutube742 2 года назад +29

    21:09 I remember swimming in the Gulf of Mexico in Galveston as a kid in the 1970s and early 1980s, and finding tar in my hair as well as black oily smudges on my bathing suit and skin. IOW, these oil spills have been occurring, but this one was unfortunately *massive.*

    • @kk.loveee1700
      @kk.loveee1700 2 года назад +6

      I live very close to the gulf of Mexico and the beaches nearest me are still filthy from the spill. Nothing but tarballs and black sand in some areas. It's sad to me, but there isn't much I can do 😔

    • @robertskinner6487
      @robertskinner6487 Год назад +7

      Actually more oil seeps out each year than was leaked out from the oil rig disaster

    • @RustyNeverSleepz
      @RustyNeverSleepz Год назад +3

      I remember the tarballs at Holly Beach in Louisiana in the early 80s

    • @kk.loveee1700
      @kk.loveee1700 Год назад +1

      @@RustyNeverSleepz ah. It's been this way for quite some time I see 😔 😖

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@kk.loveee1700The GOM is full of microbes and bacteria that feed on petroleum. The Deep Water Horizon spill was gobbled up by those within a year's time. All that was left were the usual tar balls that always wash up on the beaches. The survivors of DeSoto's and LeSalle's expeditions used the tar balls to caulk the seams in their crude boats.

  • @mylenahbug3602
    @mylenahbug3602 Год назад +51

    I remember being a kid when the deepwater horizon disaster happened, I remember crying while watching the newsfeeds.. The desperate attempts to stop and deal with the oil, the marine life suffocating and drowning in all the oil.. I'm from a Canadian oil town where we do land reclamation and never understood why they would even risk all this for the oil until I learnt about how much was there, and how valuable it was. I honestly feel like humans would been far more advanced now if we weren't so driven by greed.

    • @beakamon
      @beakamon Год назад +6

      I think we are from the same oil town! I was horrified too!

    • @rscott2247
      @rscott2247 Год назад +3

      There were speculations that parent company BP ordered its' supervisors to cut operating costs by 25%. As a result safety implementations were bypassed or neglected to meet this parent company directive. Halliburton who was in charge of the cementing and texture at the bottom of the well casing did not disclose defects in the cement being used which was perhaps the primary reason the crude was not contained ?

    • @artemis009
      @artemis009 6 месяцев назад +2

      I'm from Louisiana and that spill hit this state so bad. They were looking for anyone with any training on rigs to go down and help with cleanup.

  • @paulbennett7021
    @paulbennett7021 2 года назад +755

    Perhaps it should be pointed out, for the benefit of the gullible, that the gulf was not actually drained.

    • @williebeamish5879
      @williebeamish5879 2 года назад +36

      😂

    • @georgeflitzer7160
      @georgeflitzer7160 2 года назад +24

      That’s what I was thinking also. Ty

    • @sleepingbeauty9842
      @sleepingbeauty9842 2 года назад +11

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @daleslover2771
      @daleslover2771 2 года назад +8

      @@sleepingbeauty9842 👍🤣

    • @alcoholfree6381
      @alcoholfree6381 2 года назад +53

      Oh duh! Thanks for telling me, I was wondering where they put all the water and silt? Now I can sleep; thanks to you.

  • @geraldinefields1730
    @geraldinefields1730 Год назад +1

    Excellent! Thank you.

  • @VictoriaMarch13
    @VictoriaMarch13 Год назад +27

    This is one of the coolest things I've ever seen. I love when technology is able to solve mysteries like this.

    • @xsolent
      @xsolent Год назад +4

      I just watched it too was lots of fun!

    • @PraveenSrJ01
      @PraveenSrJ01 Год назад

      Thank goodness for RUclips premium

    • @VictoriaMarch13
      @VictoriaMarch13 Год назад

      @@PraveenSrJ01 Amen.

  • @zanade
    @zanade 11 месяцев назад +1

    This is one of the most educational video ever it’s so amazing!

  • @HasansWanderings
    @HasansWanderings 2 года назад +7

    Amazing documentation ✌️ i also like this episode

  • @RobAlexander-zy6kw
    @RobAlexander-zy6kw 3 месяца назад

    Amazing! I love Nat Geo!!!

  • @sandyschipper1400
    @sandyschipper1400 2 года назад +6

    That was so cool, I loved that. Thankyou!

  • @chris.asi_romeo
    @chris.asi_romeo Год назад +1

    Love this Drain the oceans Series documentaries

  • @nataliaaa7472
    @nataliaaa7472 2 года назад +10

    So hyped to watch this!!

  • @tigg3188
    @tigg3188 2 месяца назад

    Fascinating. Well done

  • @earthcat
    @earthcat Год назад +5

    I am from Pensacola but I am learning new things about the gulf shores.

    • @jimmirow
      @jimmirow 3 месяца назад

      I lived on 9 mile. Lived on Potosi. I lived on Spring St. I surfed 17th& Avenida in college. I miss it. Envious of where you are. Enjoy!

  • @RanjeetKumarJS
    @RanjeetKumarJS 2 года назад +4

    Amazing‼️

  • @fullmetaljackay1049
    @fullmetaljackay1049 Год назад +8

    Look at that Shrimpy boi at 24:32 just living his best life

  • @md.mahmudshahadatkhan4765
    @md.mahmudshahadatkhan4765 Год назад +1

    you did a really good analysis

  • @Mossyz.
    @Mossyz. 2 года назад +7

    I love watching this

  • @lukeskywalker790
    @lukeskywalker790 Год назад +1

    this video was so cool

  • @PraveenSrJ01
    @PraveenSrJ01 Год назад +8

    Just finished watching the entire documentary in 45 minutes. Loved 🥰 it. Thank you so much

  • @robertromeo1252
    @robertromeo1252 2 года назад +17

    Pirates took over New Orleans in the state of Louisiana and to this day Louisiana is still run by pirates

  • @AntonioValdez-r6t
    @AntonioValdez-r6t 10 месяцев назад

    I've learned so much from your videos! 👏

  • @BobSmith-ke4jg
    @BobSmith-ke4jg Год назад +23

    There's a place off the coast of Mississippi and Louisiana is a area called the grave yard where there's a large concentration of dead oil rigs. Most ships avoid going thru there because a lot of those rigs are falling apart and are not visible above water.

  • @davidcross4384
    @davidcross4384 2 года назад +1

    1:07 & 5:19 Evolution BS Hearsay fable. 5:37That's and ancient submerge geyser, like west Texas and the south west sink holes. Otherwise, great show!

    • @davidcross4384
      @davidcross4384 2 года назад

      Skip to 12:25 For reality. Oil is part of earth. NOT a fossil creation. Another fable.

  • @PraveenSrJ01
    @PraveenSrJ01 Год назад +10

    This is a really fascinating documentary and I’m really glad and excited to watch it without ads on RUclips premium!! 😊

  • @pauldwyer2258
    @pauldwyer2258 Год назад

    Wow, that's so amazing!! I wonder what they did with all the water while they were making the movie

  • @patsysingletary6585
    @patsysingletary6585 2 года назад +54

    My father and a friend were cast net fishing on the gulf beach side of the gulf and the found two dead German sailors on the beach, since the coast guard station was just down the beach the reported what the had found. They were asked to Lea be of course. Later we heard that a submarine had been fired on. Lived in the area and were scared.

  • @plumbummanx
    @plumbummanx 7 месяцев назад

    Wow, cool effects.

  • @karenwolsey2283
    @karenwolsey2283 2 года назад +45

    All I can say is "WOW!" This Gulf of Mexico area, now seen with the ocean water pulled back, is one of the most important locations in Earth's history. I learned so much, and I am so impressed with the science and know-how that is revealed here. BRAVO! 😲👏👏🌎🌊🌊🌊🦕🦖💥

  • @deecooper1567
    @deecooper1567 Месяц назад

    Thank you. This was very interesting 🤩👵🏻

  • @jackiepierce9281
    @jackiepierce9281 Год назад +3

    i live 90 miles inland from the gulf, bp oil spill was about the same distance out in the gulf, when i went out early i could smell the oil in the air

  • @AlexisPerkins-s3o
    @AlexisPerkins-s3o 10 месяцев назад

    Very enjoyable to watch...bravo....drain the

  • @jampasurprenant1794
    @jampasurprenant1794 Год назад +3

    Absolutely amazing to learn about the world war || of what happened with both sides during the war . I appreciate you for sharing the history of the war .

  • @realhzl1807
    @realhzl1807 10 месяцев назад

    wow... great show...im learning a lot

  • @beverlyreiner-baillargeon6205
    @beverlyreiner-baillargeon6205 Год назад +5

    Awesome and informative video. I also realize the gulf really wasn't drained but I'm also 62 years old and am not that gullible. 😄

  • @artemis4960
    @artemis4960 2 года назад +24

    Great history lesson. I sure would've liked the History channel back when I was a kid. I'd go with around 5th, - 6th grade age when I really started to enjoy learning.

    • @variaxi935
      @variaxi935 Год назад +2

      I wish I'd had that desire at such an age. I only developed this abrupt appetite for history over the past year outta nowhere... and I'm 27 😅

    • @MusicSounds4041
      @MusicSounds4041 Год назад +1

      ​@@variaxi935 me toooo! I'm fixing to be 40 in July and only the last few years I have nerded out on all history stuff! I have learned that things are not what they seem anymore i have opened my eyes on the world now!

    • @variaxi935
      @variaxi935 Год назад

      @@MusicSounds4041 it kinda makes me disappointed to have been born in the late 90s because most of my life will have been in the smartphone/social media era and when I see all these videos on the past, even extreme scenarios like WWII, it still makes me wanna visit or even live in some of these times and places... I think it's something about the sense of community that comes from living in a world more dependent on everyone around whereas nowadays we don't even know most of the people in our own neighborhoods, nobody seems to have shared values or religion anymore, etc. but I think most people would see this current time period in a far more positive way if they had a better understanding of human history.

  • @rondarrylcoleman4220
    @rondarrylcoleman4220 10 месяцев назад

    Have learned much...watching these stories.

  • @persnikitty3570
    @persnikitty3570 Год назад +44

    Myron Cook did a video about the topographical features of the Gulf, especially between Texas and Florida. There are so many pockmarks between 5k and 8k feet below sea level, so my thought isn't a single asteroid, but multiples over time. That said, it's absolutely possible that the asteroid in question broke up in the atmosphere and peppered the entire region, including land, generating more particulates than a single strike.

    • @laurasmithira
      @laurasmithira Год назад +5

      It will happen again.

    • @Lorec1855
      @Lorec1855 Год назад +1

      A recent article in Sci Tech Daily suggests that more than one asteroid hit the earth due to a dicovery of a 5 mile wide crater impact in the north Atlantic that also dates back to the same time, 66 mya, as the Chicxulub crater impact. Look it up. Fascinating and terrifying.

    • @Atlas2040
      @Atlas2040 Год назад +2

      Or that they are from fragments of the same meteor.

    • @Lorec1855
      @Lorec1855 Год назад +2

      @@Atlas2040 very plausible.

    • @hughriger6177
      @hughriger6177 Год назад +1

      Wormwood...

  • @twinflowerfioretta
    @twinflowerfioretta 2 года назад +1

    Wow, insane docu. ! Ty ! superb !👍👍

  • @ArgonDavid
    @ArgonDavid 2 года назад +19

    Please do the same drain the sea or Ocean for Indian Ocean. 🙏 Love every episode of drain the Ocean's

    • @LifeOdysseyMotivation
      @LifeOdysseyMotivation Год назад

      and then? what will be seeing in the ocean floor is bollywood?

    • @ArgonDavid
      @ArgonDavid Год назад +1

      @@LifeOdysseyMotivation Nothing is Impossible. Anything can happen in this World. Life is a big mystery in itself. 🙏

  • @pattihughes9013
    @pattihughes9013 Год назад +1

    Very impressed !

  • @brianalbrecht4423
    @brianalbrecht4423 2 года назад +5

    Very enjoyable to watch...bravo....drain the swamp.....next....

  • @ChesaJane
    @ChesaJane 8 месяцев назад

    The best movie, It is so interesting for watching.

  • @YogiMcCaw
    @YogiMcCaw 2 года назад +55

    I looked this up and found the Drain the Oceans series was produced in 2018.
    This just goes to show you that nobody can produce documentaries like National Geographic.
    I wish they would simply cut out some of their cheaper programming and just stick with these super high quality docs.
    This reminds me of the great National Geographic documentaries I was raised on in the 60s and 70s.
    I encourage Nat Geo to do more like this and cut out all the trash programming.

    • @edmartin875
      @edmartin875 2 года назад +2

      That trash programming pays the bills while very expensive high quality docs are being made.

    • @markbeames7852
      @markbeames7852 Год назад +3

      Ken Burns and David Attenborough do alright, I'd venture to say.

    • @andes805
      @andes805 Год назад

      During the 60s and 70s we had wonderful documentaries on The Learning Channel. Cosmos was one of these. I can remember being so awed and it was family TV time for us.

    • @markbeames7852
      @markbeames7852 Год назад +2

      @@andes805 The Learning Channel didn't arrive until 1980.

    • @KB-ke3fi
      @KB-ke3fi Год назад

      Yeah and try to follow real history and not their made up left wing politics.

  • @mariahwilliams2719
    @mariahwilliams2719 Год назад +1

    Gotta love Louisiana ❤ probably y the energy out there is so strong..

  • @jasonallen3678
    @jasonallen3678 2 года назад +4

    Very good documentary..

  • @dougg1075
    @dougg1075 Год назад +1

    Grew up on the gulf. Beautiful place

  • @Blitznstitch2
    @Blitznstitch2 2 года назад +8

    I live where the Gulf of Mexico use to be, I find sea fossils all the time. The water where I live is hard from lime in the water. Middle of Texas.

    • @edmartin875
      @edmartin875 2 года назад +3

      The oilfields found now on land were, at one time at least, underwater.

    • @itzamia
      @itzamia 7 месяцев назад

      @@edmartin875 That whole area, all the way up through Kansas, Iowa and Dakotas was all Ocean. The Great Lakes are what is left of it.

  • @marvinresper775
    @marvinresper775 11 месяцев назад

    Awsome beautiful information

  • @andyfletch455
    @andyfletch455 2 года назад +9

    Fascinating & informative. Being English I find the overly dramatic presentation a bit much. Excellent production tho'. I'm curious to know what dating evidence was used to link the 3 different old ships to the same sinking event, same era obviously, but sank at the same time? Pure speculation without evidence.

  • @RomenAguayo
    @RomenAguayo 8 месяцев назад

    Not sure if it's the video or what but seems like I'm being hypnotized

  • @kristinessTX
    @kristinessTX 2 года назад +8

    21:22 shouldn’t it be called the worst environmental disaster to hit the gulf since the comet?

  • @Homoprimatesapiens
    @Homoprimatesapiens 2 года назад +2

    Thanx so much for the superb graphics to visualise these cataclysmic event. There's a lot of questions arising, such as how does the animal and humans of today evolve after all animal life was wiped out by this cataclysm? If there were other animals besides the dinosaurs, how was it that only the dinosaurs were wiped out? Its also crazy to see how companies spend billions upon billions of money and effort to retrieve gas and crude oil while the ocean and other water resources can be used as energy by means of electrolysis. Okay industry and machinery still needs lubrication so crude oil can still be a source of this necessity.

  • @edwardmiessner6502
    @edwardmiessner6502 2 года назад +4

    Reminds me of the old Underdog Show episode where Simon Barsinister invented a water impounding machine, trapping whole bodies of water into these little vials. He would take the machine to the water's edge, dip its nozzle in, go "Simon says... drink!" and cackle as a whole river, lake, or ocean disappears!

    • @michaelb2279
      @michaelb2279 Год назад

      Thank goodness Underdog was there to save the day!

  • @RobertDodgson-v3v
    @RobertDodgson-v3v Год назад

    very nice video!

  • @alancoker1459
    @alancoker1459 Год назад +3

    Id like to see " drain the oceans" around Oak island