This simulation is quite interesting. Especially considering that many of that period’s structures remaining today were damaged by regional earthquakes.
Yep! Intense ground shaking over 1G is quite rare for a structure to experience over the course of centuries. However, long period waves from seismic events originating from afar and smaller acceleration values could trigger some taller structures to resonate and incur damage if it happens.
Excellent examples of how different ground acceleration levels can dramatically affect the damage done to a structure! Higher powered quakes with lower peak ground acceleration did less damage than lower power quakes with short and sharp high peak ground acceleration! Really puts that information into a clean visual format for easy understanding! Thank you for the great video!
VERY interesting and informative! Ground displacement & deformation is more significant than Richter levels... 🤔 Thank you for doing this. I've seen earthquakes cause streets to buckle like a wave coming ashore. What do you call that?
Beautiful. Zeus would be mad lol. But it shows the strength of the buildings then. And above a certain level all goes down. Something else, it reminds me on the documentary I saw yesterday. The lisboa earthquake in 1755, it was a good showcase of ancient eartquake like the taiwan or japan quakes now.
@@EarthquakeSim I ll looking forward to it. I wonder if in the dutch archives somebody mentioned about it because it was also felt in Holland. Even in Finland.
it is rare for a construction to incur severe damage even in a highly seismic region. The building would really need to be very close to the fault rupture..or on the rupture
Next simulator make it with the Latinoamericana Tower, in Mexico City, it's one of the principal skyscrapers in the capital of Mexico but what's more important is that building supported many earthquakes in history, especially the strongest ones in the history of the city like the 1957, 1985 and 2017, and the soil of Mexico city is unstable and many buildings are sinking, because in the past Mexico City was built on top of the ancient city of Tenochtitlan, capital of the Aztec empire, and according to legends, that city was built in the middle of Texcoco lake. And after the conquest, the Spanish rebuilt the city by destroying the Aztec buildings and replaced them by ones with Spanish architecture. It will be interesting how much that building can support an earthquake, because here in Mexico City we said that if the Latino tower falls, it means it's the end of the world.
Seems unlikely those horses (bronze?) would stand even a 6.3 shake. I wish you'd do a simulation of mud & stone domed ceilings with arches. An Earthquake safety expert from San Francisco came here to Safed in the 90's and told us that in case of 6.3 or higher - we're ALL gonna DIE. What a sweetheart.
It's amazing how resilient stone masonry structures from the ancient world can be. But given the right earthquake and even they will come crumbling down.
Sorry for the misunderstanding of my last comment. What I meant was a compilation of REAL footage of REAL earthquakes ranging from Mercalli Scale I to XII. I saw a RUclipsr do this before, but their channel was terminated. It would be awesome to see this!
thank you so much for your feedback!!! This means so much to me! I hope we can spread more earthquake awareness around the world and emphasize the importance of earthquake preparedness :) always have an emergency plan with your families!
Absolutely true! Also it’s the moment magnitude scale. Richter scale is not used anymore because it can only accurately measure earthquakes up to magnitude 4
Because the 1994 Ji-Ji earthquake occurred at midnight and caused a massive power outage across Taiwan. There were no smartphones at the time, and with the exception of Taipei, which suffered relatively little damage, most of the footage was recorded the next morning.
I just thought of some more: Antique Store Coal Mine Funeral Home Car Dealership Ohio State Fair College High School Football Game Graveyard McDonald's CBS Television City Rockefeller Plaza The White House Lincoln Memorial Washington Memorial Clinton Presidential Library Wal*Mart The Post Office Operating Room during Surgery The Holiday Inn A Swimming Pool Fire House Police Station Golf Course Country Club Maximum Security Prison Amazon Warehouse Tugboat on a River Art Museum Civil War Battleground The Ramada Inn The Telephone Company The Electric Company Greyhound Bus Terminal A Concentration Camp Parliament in England The place where scientists record the Richter scale While a Tornado is taking place. While a Hurricane is taking place Progressive Field The CBC The Rogers Center Amtrack Train Depot A factory A Steel Mill A Lumberyard Out in the woods Old Folks Home Radio Station T.V. Station Sears Newspaper Publishing Plant A Power Plant The Coca-Cola Bottling Plant Billie Ellish Concert Pink Concert Violent Vira Concert A Greenhouse A Gift Shop While a thunderstorm is taking place The Opera House in Australia Hunting Cabin A theater packed full of movie goers watching the 1974 picture, "Earthquake" The Tonight Show The Today Show A Mobile Home Campground
This simulation is quite interesting. Especially considering that many of that period’s structures remaining today were damaged by regional earthquakes.
Yep! Intense ground shaking over 1G is quite rare for a structure to experience over the course of centuries. However, long period waves from seismic events originating from afar and smaller acceleration values could trigger some taller structures to resonate and incur damage if it happens.
Zeus is my favorite temple so sad to see it crash
Excellent examples of how different ground acceleration levels can dramatically affect the damage done to a structure! Higher powered quakes with lower peak ground acceleration did less damage than lower power quakes with short and sharp high peak ground acceleration! Really puts that information into a clean visual format for easy understanding!
Thank you for the great video!
Thank you so much for your feedback! I have pinned your comment to the top :)
I feel this is your best yet. So many different types of earthquakes. So cool!
Content and quality like this are why i show your videos in my classes! Thank you!
VERY interesting and informative! Ground displacement & deformation is more significant than Richter levels... 🤔 Thank you for doing this.
I've seen earthquakes cause streets to buckle like a wave coming ashore. What do you call that?
Thank you for adding the Ojai one! I felt it when it happened and was actually a bit scared
Beautiful. Zeus would be mad lol. But it shows the strength of the buildings then. And above a certain level all goes down. Something else, it reminds me on the documentary I saw yesterday. The lisboa earthquake in 1755, it was a good showcase of ancient eartquake like the taiwan or japan quakes now.
Awesome! This simulation will be actually used in a future documentary:)
@@EarthquakeSim I ll looking forward to it. I wonder if in the dutch archives somebody mentioned about it because it was also felt in Holland. Even in Finland.
Hey EQS, amazing video absolutely amazing, the ground shaking and ground accelerations were amazing.
I hope you keep up the great videos my friend 😁🫨🌋
Amazing and realistic simulation which software is used for creating this awesome simulation?
I am using Blender 3D and a couple other programs :)
Thanks for your reply, could you kindly tell me what are the other programs u use to make these magnificent simulations?
Is that a remodel of the Temple of Artemis? cool!
Zeus from Olympia :)
@@EarthquakeSim No wonder the Zeus statue survived! edit: Ειμής ποιούμεν τη δύναμην και σκευοκευοποιεία καὶ σκηνὲς, καὶ τῇ ποιήσει καὶ τῇ χάρη τῇ.
@@EarthquakeSim also it kinda looks like the Temple of Artemis🫥🫨😎
Your videos are very cool
Hey, I speak Spanish but I write to you with the translator but your videos are very cool and I am subscribed to your channel
you are the best ! :) gracias!!
@@EarthquakeSim ❤️
@@AlexanderSoto-rj8qt Hola! Hablo español un poco.
I never knew un Poco means Spanish
@@malia3970 un poco means a little
Poseidon getting revenge on his brother
Again, Best long time subscriber that i was subscribed to him since he has 24k
Earthquakes can destroy construction at any time, ♥️ love your channel!
it is rare for a construction to incur severe damage even in a highly seismic region. The building would really need to be very close to the fault rupture..or on the rupture
Your videos are cool. This one is gold❤ I want to see a simulation of the 1906 San Francisco old City hall
2:50: Interesting to see how the temple shifts without collapsing.(If this happens in real life will there be ways to right the structure?)
This is freaking awesome, i like it so much, it feels great to me😎
thank you so much for watching!
Next simulator make it with the Latinoamericana Tower, in Mexico City, it's one of the principal skyscrapers in the capital of Mexico but what's more important is that building supported many earthquakes in history, especially the strongest ones in the history of the city like the 1957, 1985 and 2017, and the soil of Mexico city is unstable and many buildings are sinking, because in the past Mexico City was built on top of the ancient city of Tenochtitlan, capital of the Aztec empire, and according to legends, that city was built in the middle of Texcoco lake.
And after the conquest, the Spanish rebuilt the city by destroying the Aztec buildings and replaced them by ones with Spanish architecture.
It will be interesting how much that building can support an earthquake, because here in Mexico City we said that if the Latino tower falls, it means it's the end of the world.
I have made that simulation already on my channel :)
Can we see an earthquake simulation of "The Price Is Right" while Drew and the contestant are playing 'The Range Game'?
Is the addition of smoke and dust clouds new? very cool..
This look incredible 😲
Yep!! Spent a lot of time making this :)
@EarthquakeSim ay but I love it
Seems unlikely those horses (bronze?) would stand even a 6.3 shake.
I wish you'd do a simulation of mud & stone domed ceilings with arches.
An Earthquake safety expert from San Francisco came here to Safed in the 90's and told us that in case of 6.3 or higher - we're ALL gonna DIE.
What a sweetheart.
Can you try borobudur temple ?
It's amazing how resilient stone masonry structures from the ancient world can be. But given the right earthquake and even they will come crumbling down.
Sorry for the misunderstanding of my last comment. What I meant was a compilation of REAL footage of REAL earthquakes ranging from Mercalli Scale I to XII. I saw a RUclipsr do this before, but their channel was terminated. It would be awesome to see this!
Your simulations are absolutely breathtaking (Except no groundcracks) But I am sure you will get 100K subs someday!
This means so much to hear from you!!! I am the only person making these kind of earthquake simulations in the whole world and FOR the whole world :)
Too realistic. Congratulations.
This demonstrates that earthquakes are more dynamic than they appear.
thank you so much for your feedback!!! This means so much to me! I hope we can spread more earthquake awareness around the world and emphasize the importance of earthquake preparedness :) always have an emergency plan with your families!
New building? WoW!
idea: how depth affects earthquakes?(magnitude: 9.0 depth 1,5,10,25,50,100 km)
or
the Church against the 10th earthquake (from lll to XII)
Wow! Must have taken quite some work! Never seen this before. I wonder what the ancients would have thought of this sim?
I already want to see it
let's watch it twice afterr it goes live
Just shows how smart ancient Greek architecture was
You should do the light house of Alexandria or gardens of Babylon since both these places were lost bc of earthquakes :)
This is one of your best videos yet! Shows that the Richter scale doesn’t tell the full story.
Absolutely true! Also it’s the moment magnitude scale. Richter scale is not used anymore because it can only accurately measure earthquakes up to magnitude 4
Bruh was that really the movement of 2004 Niigata quake?
yep! Unscaled data from the closest seismic station that picked up the strongest ground acceleration :)
Wouldn't the pillars either be monoliths or made up of multiple parts?
They would be built out of multiple parts connected:)
1:50 look at the pillar noclipping
Maybe you can make 10 earthshakes in a simple gaming studio?
Why can't we find a footage of the 1999 Jiji earthquake the moment it happened 🤔
I didn’t find either but I did find seismic recordings :)
What's the strongest pga recorded in a video ?
I think it's the Kobe1995 or Noto2024 . . . .
@@bl1zz4rd25 that’s actually a very good question! I think New Zealand got 4G in the Kaikura quake
@@EarthquakeSim Damn 4g ?😨
Because the 1994 Ji-Ji earthquake occurred at midnight and caused a massive power outage across Taiwan. There were no smartphones at the time, and with the exception of Taipei, which suffered relatively little damage, most of the footage was recorded the next morning.
can i get the game name?
All right, who left the oven on?
Really 00:04PM
haha there's no time for me
I'm the first one to watch this in ohio
Wow 17 comments already :)
And... this is how ruins are created.
I just thought of some more:
Antique Store
Coal Mine
Funeral Home
Car Dealership
Ohio State Fair
College
High School Football Game
Graveyard
McDonald's
CBS Television City
Rockefeller Plaza
The White House
Lincoln Memorial
Washington Memorial
Clinton Presidential Library
Wal*Mart
The Post Office
Operating Room during Surgery
The Holiday Inn
A Swimming Pool
Fire House
Police Station
Golf Course
Country Club
Maximum Security Prison
Amazon Warehouse
Tugboat on a River
Art Museum
Civil War Battleground
The Ramada Inn
The Telephone Company
The Electric Company
Greyhound Bus Terminal
A Concentration Camp
Parliament in England
The place where scientists record the Richter scale
While a Tornado is taking place.
While a Hurricane is taking place
Progressive Field
The CBC
The Rogers Center
Amtrack Train Depot
A factory
A Steel Mill
A Lumberyard
Out in the woods
Old Folks Home
Radio Station
T.V. Station
Sears
Newspaper Publishing Plant
A Power Plant
The Coca-Cola Bottling Plant
Billie Ellish Concert
Pink Concert
Violent Vira Concert
A Greenhouse
A Gift Shop
While a thunderstorm is taking place
The Opera House in Australia
Hunting Cabin
A theater packed full of movie goers watching the 1974 picture, "Earthquake"
The Tonight Show
The Today Show
A Mobile Home
Campground
I’m starting building right now!
I'm sorry