There was a boat with a father and son on it which rode out the Lituya Bay wave, without injury.
@Timmycoo Жыл бұрын
His testimony about the anchor and them holding on for dear life is nuts.
@doughinkley8796 Жыл бұрын
@@Timmycoo If this was seance in a movie, people would say surviving this would not be possible
@theinsightfulvisionary0197 Жыл бұрын
God just wasn't ready for them!!!
@gotham61 Жыл бұрын
The Japanese 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami caused about 20,000 deaths, but that pales in comparison to the 2004 Indian Ocean boxing day tsunami, shown @ 1.21, which killed about 230,000 people.
The Lituya Bay tsunami, to be completely fair, had a few things going for it a lot of the other tsunamis didn't. Namely that it had that massive land displacement hitting the water with so much force, but also it was in a fjord, so basically it has mountainous walls on either side to direct the wave and energy one direction. Not saying it's any less impressive or that the other tsunamis were weaker, but if the other ones had also started in cliff side bays, the wave height would have been a lot higher. Which is exactly why the two lake ones also got so high. Contained bodies of water, in comparison to the vastness of the oceans, have less room for the energy to go so the displaced water has to go out. But for years, Lituya Bay had a clean cut line of where the tsunami wiped out the trees and where the trees where high enough to be spared.
@susanhunter9196 Жыл бұрын
There are a lot of videos on KZbin showing the tsunami in Japan and, Indonesia. So scary! Thanks Kabir, loved it!
@danahickman5716 Жыл бұрын
The tsunami in Thailand in 2004 caused almost 228,000 deaths.
@richardmead5969 Жыл бұрын
true. worst
@spinalobifida Жыл бұрын
I was 18 months old when Mt. St. Helens blew up. I seen it on the news. My mom was surprised I remembered that.
@simmerra Жыл бұрын
It was nuts when St Helens blew. I lived in Bremerton Washington, over 100 miles away. The blast was so strong it shook our house. Then in the days following it was like a strange snow covered everything. it was rather eerie. A lot of mask wearing then! The aftermath was a stark contrast to what it was originally. It looked like a lunar landscape for a long while. Then the green started coming back along with the animals. It is still active but quieter these days.
@richardmead5969 Жыл бұрын
was in everett and was working, so did not even notice.
@dogtrainerjen Жыл бұрын
In Moses Lake. Sky was BLACK and it was snowing. Obviously it was ash, not snow, but that’s what it seemed like. Fine as baby powder and got into everything! We had only 2-3 inches, but it was a mess!
@TrishF_2024 Жыл бұрын
Yakima was a mess! They bulldozed ash and dumped it in a large area. It’s now a fertile park. You are so right that the ash covered and got into everything. Destroyed a lot of engines. My mom thought it was the end of times, due to how dark it turned during that day.
@dumpster_fire_sloth Жыл бұрын
I'm from Vancouver Washington my parents have told me all about it growing up ( I'm 25) it's the only time I've ever seen my city mentioned in textbooks.
@tiffanyallen731 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in a coastal town (San Pedro, CA) and as you get closer to the waterfront and the beach there are sgns posted showing you the tsunami evacuation route. Thankfully, a tsunami has never struck there yet, but it could happen. And California being prone to earthquakes, if we get one big enough it could definitely trigger a tsunami. I still live in Cali, but in a different city now. I'm actually afraid of water, always have been. (To clarify, I'm terrified of any wave or body of water that can drown me. I hate and avoid the beach and swimming pools for example, but I absluteky love when it rains). To me though, a tsunami is the scariest natural phenomenon. It's just a wall of water moving at thousands of mph. Even the fastest runners or the best swimmers couldn’t escape it. Simply terrifying.
@wheresatari668 Жыл бұрын
I have been to the ocean many, many times but, thankfully, never experienced anything like this. I've mostly lived in Kentucky and Arizona my entire life, so I wouldn't, but I did live in San Diego one summer. I have also been to Hawaii. That said, I have dreams about tsunamis and they wake me up shaking. Every single one is the same. We are in a fully glass house on an island in the ocean at a massive fancy party and one comes...so yeah...Hide from the water? No, but maybe. Hide from the debris? No, but maybe. Hide from the glass projectiles? ... Terrifying ...
@amberswafford9305 Жыл бұрын
Little scares me more than tsunamis. Luckily a lil (at the time) British girl taught me the signs bc I’d def be one of those ppl down by the shore looking at all the damage after the first wave. Not any more I wouldn’t.
@johnwray393 Жыл бұрын
If I lived on the coast it would always be in the back of my mind. Imagine waking up in the middle of the night to a wall of water coming your way. With no time to save yourself. I even though about it when on vacation for just a week or so.
@amberswafford9305 Жыл бұрын
@@johnwray393 I do too. I love going to the beach for bout a week every yr but to live there, I’d prob require anxiety medication which would slow any reflexes if one did hit. So I’ll stay up here in the mountains where other natural disasters could get me that I rarely, if ever worry about.
@johnwray393 Жыл бұрын
@@amberswafford9305 Yep, I'm perfectly happy living in the hills as well. If we ever get a wall of water here, then fuck it. It's the end of the world at that point. Lol
@tjk200081 Жыл бұрын
The Tsunami in Japan happened on March 11th, 2011. So, coming up on the 12th anniv. 👍 If you think the Japanese Tsunami of 2011 was bad & killed a lot of people (Which I'm not disputing because it was & did), the Indian Ocean Tsunami of 2004 was way worse! That Tsunami killed over 250,000 people. 😳
@sallyintucson Жыл бұрын
That was the one that happened on X-Mas day, right?
@tjk200081 Жыл бұрын
@@sallyintucson Boxing Day, which is the day after Christmas. So it's also called, "The Boxing Day Tsunami".
@LadyBeyondTheWall Жыл бұрын
If you've never checked it out but are interested in tsunamis, a great movie to react to would be The Impossible from 2012. It's a true story of a family who were on vacation in Thailand during the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami that killed over 200k people. It's an absolutely wonderful film and very accurate to what actually happened that day! It has Ewan McGregor, Tom Holland and Naomi Watts in it.
@brianrigsby7900 Жыл бұрын
4:08 and it’s moving at thousands of mph!
@gotham61 Жыл бұрын
The narrator really mixed up two different events on #2. The dam is called the Valjont Dam, and the landslide and tsunami happened in 1963. The Morandi Bridge was another nearby disaster, but was a bridge collapse that happened in 2018. It didn't cause any tsunami.
@doughinkley8796 Жыл бұрын
The engineers who designed the Itain dam built a fine dam as it survived the flood and overtopping of the dam, over all management.
@destelpa Жыл бұрын
There were a couple videos posted a year ago on KZbin of a tsunami in Greenland. It's absolutely insane footage . Moral of the story: when water is retreating, RUN
@touchstoneaf Жыл бұрын
I watched a documentary once, sort of by accident (it was like a history's mysteries kind of things late at night), and in it they mentioned that people never understood why all the trees on this one bit of Canadian shoreline were absolutely denuded to a certain age a few hundred years back, dating back to a bit before people were coming over from Europe to explore the new world regularly. In any case there was no evidence of villages having been on that coast, and there were no ancient trees below about a couple hundred feet up; all the trees below that line were much younger, like a sign of regrowth. They couldn't figure out what might have caused it until they realized that the denuded coastline dated back to the same time as there was this huge volcanic event in I think the Azores or maybe the Canary Islands; but in any case the resultant quake caused another one of those events mentioned in here where a whole side of a volcano just fell into the ocean, and that caused a tsunami that lost so little energy crossing the entire Atlantic that it went all the way up and stripped all those trees off that coast in Canada... and likely removed any villages that might have been their entirely off the map. (A mudslide did the same on the west coast of Canada or perhaps Washington state around the same time (unrelated, but by way of comparison) and entirely preserved (ie buried) an ancient village of Native longhouses, which was sort of the opposite type of natural disaster from the standpoint of preservation. It's odd how these things occur and what they do or don't leave us, while of course all being equally tragic. These things are insane. Have you watched the footage of the Japanese and Indonesian ones? I think what startled me the most about them is that they were slower than I thought they would be, but they were just relentless and continued to push in and push in until there was nothing left standing.
@Traci2000 Жыл бұрын
That's just terrifying. With a lot of natural disasters, even last second, there are things you can do to try and survive. But with a tsunami, by the time you see it coming, it's already too late. There's pretty much nothing you can do
@elenapatrick8116 Жыл бұрын
Watch the movie The Impossible. It’s based on a real tsunami that happened and how a family struggled to survive. Based on a true story
@plaid11 Жыл бұрын
This reminds me of watching 2012
@kennethswartz8252 Жыл бұрын
That wave Jake Gyllenhaal and his classmates got struck with in New York City was pretty intense.
@tjk200081 Жыл бұрын
You do realize that was fake, right?
@sallyintucson Жыл бұрын
You should look up some more info on Mt St Helens. I remember that happening and later meeting people who lived nearby. Crazy!
@hlessiavedon Жыл бұрын
The tsunami cause by the chicxulub impact 66 million years ago was not 100 enters tall, it was somewhere between 1000 and 1500 meters tall.
@BigOleMatty Жыл бұрын
Does anyone remember the video of the little boy on the beach and he bends down to pick up a shell or something and you just see the water surge coming and the video ends and you don’t even have to see it but you know the boy’s fate…i saw that when i was young and its always stuck with me because its so disturbing…anyone know what i’m talking about and seen that video…i’m thinking it could have been from thailand or indonesia but i’m not sure…if anyone has info i’d like to know…thanks!
@George-ux6zz Жыл бұрын
The one in Japan also destroyed a nuclear power plant.
@kathryndunn9142 Жыл бұрын
That idear is clever you might have something there with the Hugh Holes
@jenkins7492 Жыл бұрын
Very scary, 😦 btw great video Kabir 👍🏽😀✌🏽
@irishbears2103 Жыл бұрын
Mother Nature is still in charge of this planet, no matter what anyone thinks.
@susanwahl6322 Жыл бұрын
The inland ones are called lahars.
@gotham61 Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure what company Kabir is referring to @ 11.13. The dam was built by the Italian government.
@Boodieman72 Жыл бұрын
At least now there are tsunami warning systems.
@brentrothenberg2917 Жыл бұрын
lmao "a rock". you right though, that is a big ass rock 😂
@tornado_man_4078 Жыл бұрын
They really underestimated the landslide at the vajont dam :(
@brianrigsby7900 Жыл бұрын
I recently saw a video about that. Negligence and poor planning at its worst
@RowdyRuth Жыл бұрын
Crazy planet! 🌎✌️
@josecarbajal5710 Жыл бұрын
I am the lizard king. I can do anything
@Kenneth_James Жыл бұрын
that's the whole country if it went to Canada
@anthonylee5982 Жыл бұрын
The earth is 6000 years old... As soon as he said 66 million years ago, I turned it off ..😅
@reneehomen2226 Жыл бұрын
I hear they can be as high as a mile high.
@Kenneth_James Жыл бұрын
When you finishing the gulf war day 2?
@richardmead5969 Жыл бұрын
the earths climate has been changing for 3 billion years. the gaul of humans thinking they are actually affecting the sun and earths cyclical patterns is disturbing since its politicians, and scientists try to get a grant, and of course the media darlings
@amberswafford9305 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for being someone on the internet talking sense when it comes to climate change. I’ve said this for yrs & the looks I get & disgust ppl feel for me like I alone will bring about a catastrophe bc I find a lot of the scare mongering to be just that. That doesn’t mean I’m pro-pollution & total deforestation, just that I believe the planet will end us before we affect it detrimentally.
@JPMadden Жыл бұрын
@@amberswafford9305 Yes, nearly every species that has ever existed has gone extinct. The "planet ended" them. Why should humanity increase the chances that we will be "ended" sooner rather than later? It's about how we are affecting the planet to OUR detriment, not its. Whenever humanity ends, the planet will recover from what we did to it.
@JPMadden Жыл бұрын
We are affecting what we're capable of affecting--the amount of carbon dioxide and methane in Earth's atmosphere, which can be measured. One serious consequence is that the oceans absorb more carbon dioxide, which basic chemistry tells us makes them more acidic. This we can also measure. How could we possibly alter the sun? A conspiracy needs to be plausible to be believable, like the CIA killed JFK. But "climate change is a hoax" is not plausible. Here are some problems with it: 1) The increasing evidence before our eyes and other senses that the climate is changing. Have you seen the crazy weather this week in California? I live in a northern part of the U.S. where it once snowed regularly. We had one snowstorm last winter and we're expecting our first for all of this winter. 2) How would conspirators have convinced 99-point-whatever percent of the world's scientists to agree to lie? They don't work for secret government agencies that could keep classified any information that contradicted a conspiracy. The JFK conspiracies are credible because the government admits they have not declassified all the documents. 3) What is the motivation for lying about climate change? More grant money and their names in academic journals? Does every climate scientist have some sort of narcissistic personality disorder? Or are they all sociopaths who hope to bankrupt oil companies and cause massive political and economic disruptions to the world? 4) If the climate change hoax conspirators want to convince us, why are all of their proposed solutions something that will inconvenience us? They could propose simplistic solutions, like politicians do. Why don't they tell us what we want to hear? 5) Humanity is doing virtually nothing to either prevent or prepare for the predicted worst-case scenarios of climate change, whether or not it's a hoax. If it is, it's one of the least effective ones in history.
@derred723 Жыл бұрын
fool
@johnwray393 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. Climate change is a human problem. Not the earth's problem. The planet has been through a lot worse and will recover. If anything is at risk it's humans. People might be more inclined to take it serious if it wasn't phrased as "saving the planet".
@hollykinslow5193 Жыл бұрын
Hurricanes are the name in the Atlantic Ocean. Tsunamis is the name in the Pacific. The Oceans are peaceful and angry at the same time. So interesting.
@MannyLoxx2010 Жыл бұрын
It's a Typhoon in the Pacific Ocean, in Asia is a Cyclone. A Tsunami is nothing like a hurricane. Not a similar natural phenomena!!
@janb200 Жыл бұрын
Hurricanes and tsunamis are two decidedly different things.
@howwecheatem3239 Жыл бұрын
Narrator can't do feet to meters correctly ugh. 3.37 feet is 1 meter. At one point totally screw's up conversations listen for it approximately halfway through video. He's off by seven feet or 2.134 meters
@yaniargirov5399 Жыл бұрын
asteroid makes 100m high tsunami....this dude is crazy...it was 5 killometars high..not 100m