Get Surfshark VPN at Surfshark.deals/GEOLOGYHUB and enter promo code GEOLOGYHUB for 83% off and 3 extra months for FREE! I had great fun making this video, but it took an exceptionally long time due to its length.
As a private pilot based in Vancouver, I fly past Mount Garibaldi, and it's associated other cones and tuyas (The Table, The Black Tusk, Little Ring, etc) all the time, as well as Mount Meager. They are always fascinating to see from the air, and the relict lava flows really stand out. If you haven't already done a video on tuyas, I'd love to see one. Did you know the band Glass Tiger shot a video on top of The Table once?
Best video in a long time. Glad your getting comfortable to give your own opinions more. At this point you've probably done more research than the avg volcanoligist with a degree
FYI: Yukon Territory, Fort Selkirk is not a city. It's an abandoned ghost town that the local native band is rebuilding as an historic site and museum.
Ah so that would explain the improved infrastructure from satellite. I had also thought it was abandoned but then saw improved / new structures and thought perhaps 1 family lived there. Your explanation makes sense of all of this :)
@@GeologyHub They may or may not have a live-in caretaker over the winter, but they do have people there working in the summer. I visited Fort Selkirk summer of 2000 while canoeing down the Yukon River to Dawson City, and they were even doing renovations and repairs back then.
There is a ghost town like this in Northern Ontario (Kiosk). I went to visit it and found a whole town of people. I'd say 60% of buildings were active. That town wasn't dead at all.
I've recently been rekindling one of my oldest special interests, and watching the videos on your channel has been really interesting! I'm autistic and I've always been fascinated by volcanoes! (Hence why I used the term "special interest!") I even wanted to make up a cruise vacation to see all the world's currently erupting volcanoes when I was in elementary/middle school. I've realized since then that I am very timid and do not like being in mortal danger, lol! My grandparents on my dad's side REALLY nurtured my interest in volcanoes, especially my grandfather. They even bought me a MASSIVE book all about the volcanoes of the world! AND, they even showed me the jar they had of volcanic ash from Mount St. Helen's 1980 eruption! My uncle on my mom's side lives in a town in California where there's an extinct volcano. The Wikipedia page for the volcano says that it's just a hill, but my uncle says that it's actually a volcano that went extinct a long time ago. I'd LOVE to see you make a video about all the active volcanoes in the Mediterranean Sea! Especially the ones in Italy and Greece! Namely, Santorini, Mount Etna and the volcano that made the caldera that Mount Vesuvius inhabits.
Just to add onto Nazko cone since I regularly hunt the area, it is QUITE remote, however there are many rural farms and houses, a decent bit of cattle ranching, and a Native Reservation located out that way. I personally think it is possible that there's likely a decent string of cinder cones in the area that were erased by glacial erosion, basing this on the areas geography. The ground there is full of sand and large pebbles, with a few boulders mixed in. Most of these are large and rounded, so it's quite likely any small cinder cones prior to the Nazko cone were eroded away, or obscured as hills and forested areas. My only concern would be a phreatic component, as this area is dotted with muskeg swamps and aquafers, but otherwise it is a decent drive out there. The only thing to note for those who might want to visit it, is that you MUST have very thick tires with a good amount of plies. A friend and I made the error once with light truck tires, and paid for it with three flat tires. (One blowing a hole through the main tire, one being punctured and sealed with slime, and the last one being sealed with a body panel screw that we stole from his door panel. The rocks on the road are genuinely sharp and numerous. Regardless of my ramblings, another great video! Love seeing your uploads show up in my feed, always something to look forward to.
@@GeologyHub I unfortunately have not yet seen them! We generally tried to keep an appreciable distance from any mining operations at the cone and surrounding area, and only passed through the direct area to access different sites due to time constraints. However, I intend to swing by the cone and properly visit it this summer. I'll be sure to take some pictures for you if I find anything of note! The white patches of ground you are referring to - Are they the mineral deposits at the north and south bog? (Near the Carbonate Mud and Travertine deposits?) I note that gas seepages are marked at these bogs in the paper "Evidence of geothermal activity near the Nazko volcanic cone, British Columbia, Canada, from ground and surface water chemistry" in the Newsletter for the Association of Applied Geochemists. If these are the ones, I can certainly swing by there!
As A resident Of Quesnel, I personally don't think of the Nazko Volcano as being "QUITE remote" at approximately 100 KMs away. As a place to live away from a city, yes, it is quite remote, but geologically speaking, that could still effect us here a fair amount. Definitely not as much as one of the lower mainland ones would effect Vancouver, but still enough to hope that it'll hold off with any major activity until after I'm dust.
This is excellent, showcasing each county's hazard rating for volcanism is a wonderful idea. Your analysis by using USGS rating system and your own expertise is very informative. Thank you GH!
Living near Vancouver so always a little concerned about the lack of attention the local volcanoes get. There's little in the way of education and preparation. Same with the Georgia Strait Basin faults that give us mag7 quakes pretty often right off of Vancouver. Everyone worries about Cascadia a few hundred miles away but miss the more immediate risks 20 miles away. While it's good to see local Cities seismically upgrading infrastructure, education on all these risks is lacking.
Agreed, its especially concerning given the extent of expansion of housing developments in the squamish area. A glaciated Mt Garibaldy, with a large volume of water in Garibaldi lake makes for an extremely deadly/explosive combination.
Awesome video; thanks for making it! I spent many summer vacations in BC, asking my parents why Canada had no volcanoes. If I had had this information in the 70s, we definitely would have seen more of the province!
Fortunately for Canada, you don't have anything _quite_ like Mount Rainier -- which could kill a lot of people with just a little VEI-3 burp, considering all that ice on its edifice, and the relatively high population density in its drainages.
We are lucky to have one of the quietest parts of the ring of fire. Maybe Geology Hub could proffer an explanation for why Alaska, and Washington state are so much more active, while B.C. and the Yukon are almost forgotten about between them.
@@jimthain8777 - Northern California, Oregon, Washington, and part of BC have the Juan de Fuca subducting off shore, and Alaska has the Pacific Plate going down the Aleutian Trench. The rest of the US and Canadian West Coast has transform boundaries with the San Andreas and Queen Charlotte strike-slip faults. Off the top of my head, Oregon has more active volcanoes than Washington.
@@cacogenicist Yeah the active trenches result in more vigorous dynamic volcanism in terms of timescale though based on the recent Baja BC controversy A to Z livestream series by Nick Zentner the situation in the western Cordillera is geologically far more complicated which likely only adds to the problem.
Thank you for this video. I live on the Prairies in Canada, we don't have volcanoes here, but we flood. It is so interesting to learn about parts of my Country so far away. Thank you again.
This whirlwind-tour format seems more aimed at educating the public fairly about what risks they face than at geeking out over a particular volcano's specifics. The latter is more dramatic, it will probably get more views, and I won't claim it's not what I'm here for. But this format here is probably, overall, a more valuable contribution to human society? For that, rather than for the length: liked, shared, and I've been subscribed for two years already.
I love volcanoes just as much as the next guy, but have you considered doing videos about stuff other than volcanoes? There are so many awesome geologic things going on that aren't volcanoes, and they deserve attention. Your video on salt glaciers is what got me into this channel - we need more of that! For example, what about undersea oddities (manganese nodules, trenches, mineral content of undersea vents, etc.) Or what about mineral deposits and how they are formed? Like Kondyor Massif and the platinum mines it contains? What about the massively high-grade (almost pure) uranium that's found at the Rabbit lake and Cigar Lake mines? The salt deposits under Detroit and the extent of the cavernous, massive salt mines in that area? What about the formation of Potash?
I can remember the 1980 eruption of Mt. St Helens. We were living in California at that time and I was 6. I also remember being scared because a news outlet decided to remind everyone that Mt. Shasta in California was also a volcano, and I was afraid it would erupt, too. Media fear mongering 1980's style?
i remever Mt St. Helen"s vividly. i was living in Victoria BC at that time and i kept my 3 elementary aged boys home from school to watch it both live with just the very top of the ash cloud and on TV. do you remember the KVOS TV cameraman from Bellingham that got caught in the blast??? somehow he survived as did his video and equipment.
volcanoes are time bombs. honestly you should be wary if you live in the area. you don't want to ignore the warning signs or live in fear because of them.
I like the longer format, and would definitely be interested in more such videos. And if you have the time, an occasional 20-minute deep-dive video on geological oddities or particular volcanic systems would be cool.
Nice to see mention some of the more prominent Volcanoes in Western Canada mentioned. Perhaps Mt Arrosmith and a few others on Vancouver Island should be included. I believe Arrowsmith has erupted a few times in recent geologic history.
Love your work, hard to see white score on background of snowy mountains, also alot of info very fast. Some pauses to absorb the info would make vid less overwhelming. Great research and info, love your channel.
Really liked this deeper dive with your informed analysis/comparison on the USGS scale. I didn't realize Canada had so many volcanoes. Could be one heck of a summer road trip there! 💜✌️😎🍀
I would like to see more long duration videos like this to accompany your shorter videos like you usually make. I like the short updates but videos like this are cool too.
I can understand why you listed only the “active” volcanos in BC that were active less than 10,000 years. There are far more “non active or dormant” volcanos in BC most people realize. Vancouver Island alone has several for instance
cool to hear about the ones there. still hoping some day a vid on ancient vulcanism in southern new england lol. can't commit to one of those "comments same thing under every video" though
Canada is huge and many of these volcanoes are very isolated... I'd have to drive for a couple of days to even get close to an active volcano. I bet these are mostly low risk and or very unlikely to affect a major population centre.
I remember there being at least one before, for which he produced an extra-length video on the face of it, but if you subtracted the length of the sponsor message it was just a normal video. That was like a year ago and I don't remember what the topic was.
My other thought was that is the deposit from the massive tsunami from the east during the time a thin layer of ice was between a previous land mass and incoming sludge over the mountain ridge as it cracked the mantle in the west? Shoving water under the land that was connected to the ice, most powerful thing that may have been massive? Maybe bounced off the frozen earth and an inhabited planet got stuck to earth and dropped off some folks that woke up on another planet
Thanks for your videos, I do watch as many as I can that comes up on the feed! Question, ❓ is Mansfield Ohio and surroundings area an antient volcano? Because of the quicksand, location of springs, and ponding, caves, sugarcane haven't rings, coal and other minerals, arrow heads, old city dumps, carbon monoxide levels, old trains, steel
Not especially, though maybe a bit (like in Iceland). The main thing is that our strongest evidence for past volcanic eruptions is the layered deposits they leave behind in surrounding soils, and ice age glaciers scoured all those away. So in much of the northern hemisphere, 10 to 12 thousand years is the farthest back that we have reliable data.
It is in my very high threat category. 1 eruption since the last glacial maximum. Garibaldi Lake just to the north is a separate high threat category volcano (in my list), with 3 eruptions in the last 15,000 years
🤘🫶🤘 you are totally coming into your own like a cinder cone😖 you're blowing up like a well 🙈a volcano 😖you're more active than a ....😮a mud volcano🙄 👏👏👏👏👏 I love watching your channel bro congratulations here's a like and share and a comment 🤘🤘my main 🫶volcano bro🤘🤘
Do a parade on Hawaii volcano USA or this area that resembles the cultures of Pompeii volcano! The Italian parade should be on these sites and bless the wrath of God together not on Toronto sky ( just reminder of your real line activity) 🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬
Get Surfshark VPN at Surfshark.deals/GEOLOGYHUB and enter promo code GEOLOGYHUB for 83% off and 3 extra months for FREE!
I had great fun making this video, but it took an exceptionally long time due to its length.
You are zooming around to fast, people get seas sick and get headache!
@@deadmanwalking6342 You can reduce the speed of the video using the "gear shaped" setting button - try it at .75 speed.
BC is 40%larger than Texas! You covered an exceptional area of seismically active territory.
As a private pilot based in Vancouver, I fly past Mount Garibaldi, and it's associated other cones and tuyas (The Table, The Black Tusk, Little Ring, etc) all the time, as well as Mount Meager. They are always fascinating to see from the air, and the relict lava flows really stand out. If you haven't already done a video on tuyas, I'd love to see one. Did you know the band Glass Tiger shot a video on top of The Table once?
Best video in a long time. Glad your getting comfortable to give your own opinions more. At this point you've probably done more research than the avg volcanoligist with a degree
So good to see a longer video :D
Great video btw, nice to see Canada receiving some love :D
FYI: Yukon Territory, Fort Selkirk is not a city. It's an abandoned ghost town that the local native band is rebuilding as an historic site and museum.
Ah so that would explain the improved infrastructure from satellite. I had also thought it was abandoned but then saw improved / new structures and thought perhaps 1 family lived there. Your explanation makes sense of all of this :)
@GeologyHub I can only guess you have "limited staff". Kidding 😂
Keep up the AMAZING work this channel keeps on providing.
@@GeologyHub They may or may not have a live-in caretaker over the winter, but they do have people there working in the summer. I visited Fort Selkirk summer of 2000 while canoeing down the Yukon River to Dawson City, and they were even doing renovations and repairs back then.
There is a ghost town like this in Northern Ontario (Kiosk). I went to visit it and found a whole town of people. I'd say 60% of buildings were active. That town wasn't dead at all.
I'd love to see more videos like this with different countries!
I've recently been rekindling one of my oldest special interests, and watching the videos on your channel has been really interesting! I'm autistic and I've always been fascinated by volcanoes! (Hence why I used the term "special interest!") I even wanted to make up a cruise vacation to see all the world's currently erupting volcanoes when I was in elementary/middle school. I've realized since then that I am very timid and do not like being in mortal danger, lol! My grandparents on my dad's side REALLY nurtured my interest in volcanoes, especially my grandfather. They even bought me a MASSIVE book all about the volcanoes of the world! AND, they even showed me the jar they had of volcanic ash from Mount St. Helen's 1980 eruption! My uncle on my mom's side lives in a town in California where there's an extinct volcano. The Wikipedia page for the volcano says that it's just a hill, but my uncle says that it's actually a volcano that went extinct a long time ago.
I'd LOVE to see you make a video about all the active volcanoes in the Mediterranean Sea! Especially the ones in Italy and Greece! Namely, Santorini, Mount Etna and the volcano that made the caldera that Mount Vesuvius inhabits.
Just to add onto Nazko cone since I regularly hunt the area, it is QUITE remote, however there are many rural farms and houses, a decent bit of cattle ranching, and a Native Reservation located out that way.
I personally think it is possible that there's likely a decent string of cinder cones in the area that were erased by glacial erosion, basing this on the areas geography. The ground there is full of sand and large pebbles, with a few boulders mixed in. Most of these are large and rounded, so it's quite likely any small cinder cones prior to the Nazko cone were eroded away, or obscured as hills and forested areas.
My only concern would be a phreatic component, as this area is dotted with muskeg swamps and aquafers, but otherwise it is a decent drive out there. The only thing to note for those who might want to visit it, is that you MUST have very thick tires with a good amount of plies. A friend and I made the error once with light truck tires, and paid for it with three flat tires. (One blowing a hole through the main tire, one being punctured and sealed with slime, and the last one being sealed with a body panel screw that we stole from his door panel. The rocks on the road are genuinely sharp and numerous.
Regardless of my ramblings, another great video! Love seeing your uploads show up in my feed, always something to look forward to.
Have you seen the degassing CO2 vents (seen via bubbling groundwater near white patches of ground) related to Nazko?
@@GeologyHub I unfortunately have not yet seen them! We generally tried to keep an appreciable distance from any mining operations at the cone and surrounding area, and only passed through the direct area to access different sites due to time constraints.
However, I intend to swing by the cone and properly visit it this summer. I'll be sure to take some pictures for you if I find anything of note!
The white patches of ground you are referring to - Are they the mineral deposits at the north and south bog? (Near the Carbonate Mud and Travertine deposits?)
I note that gas seepages are marked at these bogs in the paper "Evidence of geothermal activity near the Nazko volcanic cone, British Columbia, Canada, from ground and surface water chemistry" in the Newsletter for the Association of Applied Geochemists. If these are the ones, I can certainly swing by there!
As A resident Of Quesnel, I personally don't think of the Nazko Volcano as being "QUITE remote" at approximately 100 KMs away.
As a place to live away from a city, yes, it is quite remote, but geologically speaking, that could still effect us here a fair amount.
Definitely not as much as one of the lower mainland ones would effect Vancouver, but still enough to hope that it'll hold off with any major activity until after I'm dust.
This is excellent, showcasing each county's hazard rating for volcanism is a wonderful idea. Your analysis by using USGS rating system and your own expertise is very informative. Thank you GH!
Living near Vancouver so always a little concerned about the lack of attention the local volcanoes get. There's little in the way of education and preparation. Same with the Georgia Strait Basin faults that give us mag7 quakes pretty often right off of Vancouver. Everyone worries about Cascadia a few hundred miles away but miss the more immediate risks 20 miles away. While it's good to see local Cities seismically upgrading infrastructure, education on all these risks is lacking.
Agreed, its especially concerning given the extent of expansion of housing developments in the squamish area. A glaciated Mt Garibaldy, with a large volume of water in Garibaldi lake makes for an extremely deadly/explosive combination.
Awesome video; thanks for making it! I spent many summer vacations in BC, asking my parents why Canada had no volcanoes. If I had had this information in the 70s, we definitely would have seen more of the province!
We Canadians really need to up our game when it comes to volcano monitoring
Fortunately for Canada, you don't have anything _quite_ like Mount Rainier -- which could kill a lot of people with just a little VEI-3 burp, considering all that ice on its edifice, and the relatively high population density in its drainages.
We are lucky to have one of the quietest parts of the ring of fire. Maybe Geology Hub could proffer an explanation for why Alaska, and Washington state are so much more active, while B.C. and the Yukon are almost forgotten about between them.
@@jimthain8777 - Northern California, Oregon, Washington, and part of BC have the Juan de Fuca subducting off shore, and Alaska has the Pacific Plate going down the Aleutian Trench. The rest of the US and Canadian West Coast has transform boundaries with the San Andreas and Queen Charlotte strike-slip faults.
Off the top of my head, Oregon has more active volcanoes than Washington.
@@cacogenicist Yeah the active trenches result in more vigorous dynamic volcanism in terms of timescale though based on the recent Baja BC controversy A to Z livestream series by Nick Zentner the situation in the western Cordillera is geologically far more complicated which likely only adds to the problem.
Thank you for this video. I live on the Prairies in Canada, we don't have volcanoes here, but we flood. It is so interesting to learn about parts of my Country so far away. Thank you again.
The prairies were (2times) under the ocean million of years ago
This whirlwind-tour format seems more aimed at educating the public fairly about what risks they face than at geeking out over a particular volcano's specifics. The latter is more dramatic, it will probably get more views, and I won't claim it's not what I'm here for. But this format here is probably, overall, a more valuable contribution to human society? For that, rather than for the length: liked, shared, and I've been subscribed for two years already.
I love volcanoes just as much as the next guy, but have you considered doing videos about stuff other than volcanoes? There are so many awesome geologic things going on that aren't volcanoes, and they deserve attention. Your video on salt glaciers is what got me into this channel - we need more of that!
For example, what about undersea oddities (manganese nodules, trenches, mineral content of undersea vents, etc.)
Or what about mineral deposits and how they are formed? Like Kondyor Massif and the platinum mines it contains? What about the massively high-grade (almost pure) uranium that's found at the Rabbit lake and Cigar Lake mines? The salt deposits under Detroit and the extent of the cavernous, massive salt mines in that area? What about the formation of Potash?
I have an older video on manganese nodules in my geologic oddities playlist.
Also do not worry, I have Kondyor massif on my shortlist for a future video topic
Many thanks from Alberta! 🇨🇦
1:59 lol ... this use-case for a VPN is quite out there, I like this elaborate unhinged doubly effective ad.
I can remember the 1980 eruption of Mt. St Helens. We were living in California at that time and I was 6.
I also remember being scared because a news outlet decided to remind everyone that Mt. Shasta in California was also a volcano, and I was afraid it would erupt, too.
Media fear mongering 1980's style?
i remever Mt St. Helen"s vividly. i was living in Victoria BC at that time and i kept my 3 elementary aged boys home from school to watch it both live with just the very top of the ash cloud and on TV. do you remember the KVOS TV cameraman from Bellingham that got caught in the blast??? somehow he survived as did his video and equipment.
@kathy smith seems like I remember seeing that years later. Was he was filming while he was trying to get to safety?
volcanoes are time bombs. honestly you should be wary if you live in the area. you don't want to ignore the warning signs or live in fear because of them.
I like the longer format, and would definitely be interested in more such videos. And if you have the time, an occasional 20-minute deep-dive video on geological oddities or particular volcanic systems would be cool.
This is excellent! I love the analysis, the topic and the longer format. Very well done!
Great idea. Quite the rundown... thanks
It's funny to hear you talk about the city of Atlin. It used to be bigger but if you wanted to pan for gold, it's a good place.
I need to honestly visit Atlin sometime. It seems like a fun small town.
Thanks for this! I always get excited about our volcanoes in British Columbia.
Love the longer videos!
Nice to see mention some of the more prominent Volcanoes in Western Canada mentioned. Perhaps Mt Arrosmith and a few others on Vancouver Island should be included. I believe Arrowsmith has erupted a few times in recent geologic history.
Love your work, hard to see white score on background of snowy mountains, also alot of info very fast. Some pauses to absorb the info would make vid less overwhelming. Great research and info, love your channel.
Can you please make a video or even better a series of videos on the history on Mount Rainier and it’s eruptions like u did with Mt St Helen’s?
Really liked this deeper dive with your informed analysis/comparison on the USGS scale. I didn't realize Canada had so many volcanoes. Could be one heck of a summer road trip there! 💜✌️😎🍀
I would like to see more long duration videos like this to accompany your shorter videos like you usually make. I like the short updates but videos like this are cool too.
Great content!
I can understand why you listed only the “active” volcanos in BC that were active less than 10,000 years. There are far more “non active or dormant” volcanos in BC most people realize. Vancouver Island alone has several for instance
Hey Eh, if you don't mind?? Keep em out west!!! Great program, LUVIN it from nh
cool to hear about the ones there. still hoping some day a vid on ancient vulcanism in southern new england lol. can't commit to one of those "comments same thing under every video" though
A list of possible volcanoes. Which could effect air traffic, not just large populations. Mt Rainer & Mt Hood could effect large populations.
An interesting topic is Devil's Hole, Nevada how is it connected to earthquakes?
I'm ready for it, eh? 🇨🇦
What exactly is that red rock on Mt Edziza? Almost looks like a flow even though it isn't?
Canada is huge and many of these volcanoes are very isolated... I'd have to drive for a couple of days to even get close to an active volcano. I bet these are mostly low risk and or very unlikely to affect a major population centre.
Is this your first sponsor? I have been watching you so long I dont even remember
I remember there being at least one before, for which he produced an extra-length video on the face of it, but if you subtracted the length of the sponsor message it was just a normal video. That was like a year ago and I don't remember what the topic was.
Have there ever been any volcanoes in the New England area…waaaay back when? Just curious.
22 volcanoes, eh! Priceless. Eh?
You should be working for Nat Geo because of the awesome content you make
My other thought was that is the deposit from the massive tsunami from the east during the time a thin layer of ice was between a previous land mass and incoming sludge over the mountain ridge as it cracked the mantle in the west? Shoving water under the land that was connected to the ice, most powerful thing that may have been massive? Maybe bounced off the frozen earth and an inhabited planet got stuck to earth and dropped off some folks that woke up on another planet
my man got a sponsor lets goo
It will be good, eh.
Thanks for your videos, I do watch as many as I can that comes up on the feed! Question, ❓ is Mansfield Ohio and surroundings area an antient volcano? Because of the quicksand, location of springs, and ponding, caves, sugarcane haven't rings, coal and other minerals, arrow heads, old city dumps, carbon monoxide levels, old trains, steel
Harvest rings from sugarcane harvest.
I live close to Sugar Mountain in New Brunswick - thankfully that volcano is extinct-not much info on the area to know its' history
When I watched this video, I blew my top.
Do the uk next ;)
is thereso many eruptions at the end of the last glacial maximum bc of the retreat of the ice sheets?
Not especially, though maybe a bit (like in Iceland). The main thing is that our strongest evidence for past volcanic eruptions is the layered deposits they leave behind in surrounding soils, and ice age glaciers scoured all those away. So in much of the northern hemisphere, 10 to 12 thousand years is the farthest back that we have reliable data.
One for the Philippines next!
What about Mount Garibaldi?
It is in my very high threat category. 1 eruption since the last glacial maximum. Garibaldi Lake just to the north is a separate high threat category volcano (in my list), with 3 eruptions in the last 15,000 years
GOAT’d
Canadian government and Geological Survey Must be Notified immediately about Volcanoes 🌋 in Canada 🇨🇦.
Excersise on this area 🛫🛫🛫🛫🛫🛫🛫🛫🛫🛫
Do a part 1 and 2 on the volcanoes of the USA, 2 parts b/c there are a lot of them
Hawaii and Alaska should be separate videos, because they are geographically separate and highly volcanic...
I agree with Fernando Po: it should be three videos: Alaska, Hawaii, and the contiguous USA.
@@brongulus2617 Yes, very true, Alaska alone has 130 volcanoes, 90 of which are active according to the 10,000 years rule
It's gonna be a while for all Hawaiian Volcanoes.
A VPN allows scammers to hide their identity. Makes you think that a VPN should be outlawed.
Do this for Mexican volcanoes
Great synopsis. Eh!
🤘🫶🤘 you are totally coming into your own like a cinder cone😖 you're blowing up like a well 🙈a volcano 😖you're more active than a ....😮a mud volcano🙄
👏👏👏👏👏 I love watching your channel bro congratulations here's a like and share and a comment 🤘🤘my main 🫶volcano bro🤘🤘
👍
Poor Eskimos's
You are zooming around to fast, people get seas sick and get headache!
❤️🙏🌟🎁👄
I wish you'd talk a little slower
Do a parade on Hawaii volcano USA or this area that resembles the cultures of Pompeii volcano! The Italian parade should be on these sites and bless the wrath of God together not on Toronto sky ( just reminder of your real line activity) 🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬🛬