Many Massive Canary Islands YDB Flank Failure Landslides | Randall Carlson -Kosmographia Clips 008.1

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The Randall Carlson

The Randall Carlson

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This clip is extracted from Episode 008: • RandallCarlson Podcast...
Kosmographia Episode 008 / Atlantis Mystery - Evidence Revealed (pt6), from 9/16/19. RC joins the Snake Bros - Kyle and Russ, Normal Guy Mike, and GeocosmicREX admin Bradley look at evidence for caldera collapse landslides throughout the Canary Islands and then take a tour of sites and views around the Azores as they are compared with the descriptions in Plato's dialogues.
IN THIS CLIP:
Richat structure natural and way too big to match Plato’s accounts
Discoveries made in the rift valley between the two ridges
Tucholke (1992) in Geology: “Massive submarine landslide…”
Seismic shock the likely trigger for failure - “very recent age cannot be ruled out”
Watts, Masson (1995) Journal of Geophysical Research: “A Giant Landslide on…Tenerife, Canary Islands” / 100km wide and 1000 cubic km within the last 20k years
Defining breccia and fall-back breccia
Cantagrel (1995) in Geology: “Repeated Debris Avalanches on Tenerife…” Canadas Caldera origin and repeated flank-failure events spreading material on the ocean floor
El Hierro and other islands with scalloped shape that reveals where landslides occurred
Map showing direction and extent of landslide material - confluence of factors and effects
Mike question about contour lines and Canary Islands being one larger island
Maps of Tenerife and idea of tsunami loosening material that could collapse
Multiple layers of landslide material, so critical question: When and how much time between?
Masson (1996) in Geology: “Catastrophic Collapse of…Hierro 15ky ago…” with huge angular blocks covering the debris avalanche surface (4000’ x 700’)
Defining turbidites and their dating from these events estimated 17-13kya
Side-scan sonar of ocean bottom with large blocks; showing one side of caldera totally collapsed
Succession of major catastrophic flank failure events over the last couple hundred thousand years
Weaver et al. (1992) in Marine Geology: “…Megaturbidites on the Madeira Abyssal Plain”
Pelagic - living in open ocean / benthic - creatures living on the bottom of the ocean
Canary and Saharan Slides likely of similar age, and related to erosive event in this region at the end of the last Ice Age
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Пікірлер: 478
@RogerLigter
@RogerLigter 2 жыл бұрын
Great info again. I live at La Palma and have been diving a lot during the years. The ocean landscape is impressing and scaring at the same time.
@soakupthesunman
@soakupthesunman 2 жыл бұрын
Watch out for volcanoclastic turbidites. 😎
@RogerLigter
@RogerLigter 2 жыл бұрын
@@soakupthesunman actually life is already developing on our new coast, no diving allowed yet though. There's a legend that people in history saw an non existing island in the west sometimes, I wonder... :)
@hobbitsumbarch5743
@hobbitsumbarch5743 Жыл бұрын
Just a short note, 0.2Ma is not 20.000 years, it's 200.000 years. But I just mention this with respect to Randall. It's a great work he puts out to mankind.
@ghostindamachine
@ghostindamachine 2 жыл бұрын
Really interesting map of the Canary Islands at 11:07 . I find it striking that the slope failures and debris avalanches and slump flows of these islands, all point in the same general directions.
@soakupthesunman
@soakupthesunman 2 жыл бұрын
That is the island's weak side, so to speak.
@Jenema2
@Jenema2 Жыл бұрын
Randall Carlson is like a knowledge Eagle swooping in to deliver guidence
@frostedpanda
@frostedpanda 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your wonderful mind and choices in life that have brought you here. Blessings.
@mozilla2576
@mozilla2576 2 жыл бұрын
Brand new subscriber. I've listened to about 5 of your videos....and totally love them. Thanks and sorry it has taken me so long to find you.
@artifactsandbigracks3999
@artifactsandbigracks3999 2 жыл бұрын
New Sub. Such an interesting discussion...love the format. I'm into ancient history and geology. What a Cool channel ✌️😎
@ricguzman8302
@ricguzman8302 2 жыл бұрын
You're a genius Mr.Carlson. More like the father of our true human history and you deserve the honor in this lifetime.
@RNemy509
@RNemy509 8 ай бұрын
I saw a show many years back on Mega tsunamis and they highlighted the Canary Islands. The scientist showed how the nature of the rock allowed for massive fracturing in the structure of the islands which lends itself to massive landslides like the ones this episode is referring to. Totally amazing and very eye opening. Especially since the La Palma is facing towards US East Coast!!
@shotgunner777
@shotgunner777 Ай бұрын
Do you remember the title of this show? I'd like to check it out
@RNemy509
@RNemy509 Ай бұрын
@shotgunner777 it was either How The Earth Was Made: Tsunamis or Mega Disasters...check them both out, it's one of those
@itsmers
@itsmers 2 жыл бұрын
Love the short uploads. Just pack of knowledge
@fdauphine9595
@fdauphine9595 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic study and research. Very absorbing video.. Thank you Randall and company.
@danieldavila6281
@danieldavila6281 2 жыл бұрын
This is absolutely outstanding. My father and siblings (all 19 of them) were born their and I great memories of the family they left behind in Tenerife. Doctor Hierro meaning Iron, it’s pronounced yierro, the H is silent and the Y is soft. I love your work, this was awesome! Thank-you!
@jackstoltz1379
@jackstoltz1379 Жыл бұрын
I don't see how hard it is to believe that there was a big island in the Atlantic thousands of years ago as advanced as Rome when there are mountain tops that would of been uninhibited due to being much further out of the water considering that most civilizations don't live in mountains but along shore lines. Which would be under hundreds of feet of water now
@itzfedora_yt4577
@itzfedora_yt4577 Жыл бұрын
This stuff Is crazy interesting. Looks like a bunch dormant half volcanos
@michaelwoodsmccausland5633
@michaelwoodsmccausland5633 2 жыл бұрын
Your fracking of your data into bytes or Fractals is perfect. It’s like the Paul Harvey Show! Can’t wait to get the new holographic tech to you Sir R C! MWM
@greggwilson492
@greggwilson492 2 жыл бұрын
My Lord. I could listen to this smart fellow forever. God bless your health Sir.
@matthewmckinney5387
@matthewmckinney5387 2 жыл бұрын
I love the big island in the azures that has a giant caldera with 4 other cinder cones inside
@scottiebaldwin
@scottiebaldwin 2 жыл бұрын
Go, Randall, GO!!!!
@craigbolton5093
@craigbolton5093 2 жыл бұрын
Fun fact- The Canary Islands don't have any actual canaries. The Virgin Islands? Nope, no canaries there either...
@Pencil0fDoom
@Pencil0fDoom 2 жыл бұрын
So you’re the first of your kind on Dipshit Island? Lol jk man that was funny af
@lasentinal
@lasentinal 2 жыл бұрын
The Canary Islands were named after either dogs or seals. The name comes from the Latin word for dog, canaria and was given by the first Europeans to arrive there.
@Wanker527
@Wanker527 2 жыл бұрын
LOL
@dark_Stout
@dark_Stout 2 жыл бұрын
It’s dog island
@ElsieDreamWorld
@ElsieDreamWorld 2 жыл бұрын
Perhaps virgins?
@drekneviske813
@drekneviske813 2 жыл бұрын
I swear I saw Randell driving in Tacoma the other day. I was like wtf! That’s Randell
@McGovernGolf
@McGovernGolf 2 жыл бұрын
That google earth flyover was a nice touch to the original video
@jacotacomorocco
@jacotacomorocco 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent drone footage Brad. Consummate Professional
@theenlightenment765
@theenlightenment765 2 жыл бұрын
Great video once again. Legend 👍🏼
@user-pc2tu6pr9z
@user-pc2tu6pr9z 2 жыл бұрын
I live on La Palma so it was a fascinating video!
@Beldoras
@Beldoras 2 жыл бұрын
Been to Tenerife a few times quite a popular holiday destination for Brits, never knew about all this though wish I did. Great content fellas!
@Beldoras
@Beldoras 2 жыл бұрын
@CBC News. If a fella met a fella In a field of beans From a fella to a fella What a fella means. How many Fs are in that?
@jcw3195
@jcw3195 2 жыл бұрын
One of the few that I trust with their knowledge and assessments.
@balimbula
@balimbula 2 жыл бұрын
Carlson thinks outside of several boxes. He is the Santa of Geology.
@srdfb2260
@srdfb2260 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome work!!! Love anything you are a part of.
@chriswalker9288
@chriswalker9288 2 жыл бұрын
My guess from my YT rabbithole...the younger dryas impact broke up the inner area of the ice sheet at greenland and other northern areas over europe. It slushed it up but the outer ring held for hundreds of years until the outer frozen ring broke above Alaska and Africa. Most likely caused from earthquakes along those fault lines. Then a massive release of arctic ice flowed to the equator after rinsing north Africa including Atlantis. The African plate then dropped and adjusted itself under the weight displacement. It moved at the mid Atlantic ridge and african/Eurasian/arabian plate... In North America he first impact and temp drop pushed wildlife into valleys for food then the breakup of ice and water carried them collecting in boneyards. Flowed threw washington scab lands.
@danjf1
@danjf1 2 жыл бұрын
I love the thought that Atlantis once existed and was somewhere west of the Mediterranean Sea. I hope people don't discount Atlantis itself, which is hard not to do with so many kooky theories having been postulated throughout the last few centuries. I hope mankind will one day find direct and conclusive evidence of its existence and its inhabitation. There's a Nobel Prize waiting for someone... Thank you for bringing this and other topics to the table Professor Carlson.
@Malc.Mclagan
@Malc.Mclagan 2 жыл бұрын
That was fascinating. Thank you.
@UtahGmaw99
@UtahGmaw99 2 жыл бұрын
What I find interesting is that the account of the sinking of Atlantis says that Neptune reared his head 3 times. Tsunamuis?
@WeAreHereWithYou
@WeAreHereWithYou 2 жыл бұрын
Good point.
@newman653
@newman653 2 жыл бұрын
I learn at least one or more new words to add to my vocabulary with every podcast.
@jeffpittman8725
@jeffpittman8725 2 жыл бұрын
Love it. It is so possible that Atlantis is real and in the Atlantic.
@samyoungblood3740
@samyoungblood3740 2 жыл бұрын
I love this! I can’t help but wonder if the canary an Azores weren’t Himalayan size mountains that crumbled. The fact Plato describes the true ocean and sets it apart from The Mediterranean Sea that he described as being a harbor. So if these mountains were steep and thousands of feet high, impassable by ship, and too steep to climb.. could Edgar Cayce’s work hold any merit to the last island of Atlantis being off the coast of The US in the Bahamas? Or as he stated “remnants of Atlantis will be found near Bimini?” I can’t wait till Randall and his team check out the Azores! I Hope they check into Andros Island an Bimini in their search.
@matthuckabey007
@matthuckabey007 2 жыл бұрын
You need a digital video artist to put into short visual examples, what your talking about. It would just make for such a fantastic production. Thank you showing the maps and the images along with your presentation. Love the show.
@kilogram064
@kilogram064 2 жыл бұрын
I believe that it's there too. Time for a deep dive in that area.
@MimsicalRenegade
@MimsicalRenegade 2 жыл бұрын
Great Stuff 👍
@Malc.Mclagan
@Malc.Mclagan 2 жыл бұрын
Holy Moley. I regularly vacation in Tenerife, particularly the north as it’s greener. I’ve looked at the slopes and have often said that with a big shake, the whole side would just slide down into the ocean, like an avalanche.
@carolconnors8689
@carolconnors8689 2 жыл бұрын
Randall you are the most engaging Professor I have ever had the pleasure to be a student of (to?). Thanks for this show and to the other fellows as well. Could you all introduce each other and how you know each other?
@annewitkowski7586
@annewitkowski7586 2 жыл бұрын
There is an "Introductions" playlist, or just go to The Randall Carlson Podcast Episode # 001
@carolconnors8689
@carolconnors8689 2 жыл бұрын
@@annewitkowski7586 thank you. I will do that 😊
@lxcameron406
@lxcameron406 2 жыл бұрын
Have any ancient artifact been found in the area ?
@bomma2694
@bomma2694 2 жыл бұрын
👀👀 another upload 😁 👍
@plhebel1
@plhebel1 2 жыл бұрын
Have you taken in consideration about lower sea levels when Ice was formed up the flanking island walls would be less stable without water helping to support the mass. Crustal rebound may play into this not in the Canary Islands but reformation of continental plate rebound changing the weigh reintubation and starting of seismic activity? Just trying to link period and effect together?
@keirangrant1607
@keirangrant1607 2 жыл бұрын
This information makes you wonder about all the civilizations we probably lost
@MD-DLive
@MD-DLive 2 жыл бұрын
Supposedly, it is stated that we have been mislead to believe that there are only 7 continents on this planet when in actually there are 30! Not sure how true this is however, it does make you wonder! 🤔 just piggy backing on what you said!
@keirangrant1607
@keirangrant1607 2 жыл бұрын
@@MD-DLive If that number 30 is correct then we have lost more civilizations than we could ever imagine.....such is the nature of things...
@Whodaleewho
@Whodaleewho 2 жыл бұрын
@@keirangrant1607 Should be such are the things in nature...
@aic5073
@aic5073 2 жыл бұрын
Just think, the USA culture is being giving away to illegal immigrants. It will be the first nation to fall from an open border. Sad
@MD-DLive
@MD-DLive 2 жыл бұрын
@@keirangrant1607 lost and/or maybe that's where some exist til this day?! Let's keep in mind two factors: 1) The continents were adjoined at one time. 2) As mentioned before, much information we ha have been taught has been misleading. So maybe there are people today there on these " missing- unmentioned " continents and it's kept quiet!🤷🏽‍♂️🤔🤔🤔🤔
@pro-xn3id
@pro-xn3id Ай бұрын
Same thing happened to the Hawaiian islands. They have these massive landslides all mapped out there as well. It’s what created Kaneohe Bay. I’ve always imagined the cliffs failed when the sea levels rose 400ft.
@samyoungblood3740
@samyoungblood3740 2 жыл бұрын
Aren’t several ancient structures built on or near the same latitude as well as aligned to constellations?
@thierryguitare3035
@thierryguitare3035 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent demonstration Randall, Let's us visit now :The Old Atlan's Caldera 31°96 N, -27°95 O 👌
@kevinmcveigh1929
@kevinmcveigh1929 2 жыл бұрын
Have you guys got an opinion on the 6 pyramid on Tenerife and the possible age?
@matthewmckinney5387
@matthewmckinney5387 2 жыл бұрын
Could these different events be from different causes? Like volcanic flow, earthquake and tsunami?
@dazuk1969
@dazuk1969 2 жыл бұрын
If you look at the image of El Hierro at 26:17 it is basically half of a collapsed volcano. It reminds me of the mount St Helens eruption in 1980. One side of that volcano collapsed also. The mount St Helens eruption/collapse was caused by seismic activity. The scalloped area on the island of Tenerife also looks like earthquake collapse. Tsunamis could be a factor in some of these events.
@richardpickersgill3434
@richardpickersgill3434 2 жыл бұрын
rotation glitches with the pole shifts, when the earth stops or slows the seas keep going!
@leeadickes7235
@leeadickes7235 2 жыл бұрын
​​​@@richardpickersgill3434 no way you could stop the rotation of the earth. It would take too much energy to stop but maybe it could be slowed a couple percent if the crust separates and slips from the mantle.
@richardpickersgill3434
@richardpickersgill3434 2 жыл бұрын
@@leeadickes7235 There are ancient stories that imply as such. I believe Ben from suspicious observers says it's happened before.
@larryrich327
@larryrich327 2 жыл бұрын
Coolest man on the planet 🌍,RANDALL CARLSON MY MAN THE MAN
@BlazinRiver1
@BlazinRiver1 2 жыл бұрын
During the time of the slide were there any star maps being made? Were there any anomalies in the sun's position or the night time stars?
@BlazinRiver1
@BlazinRiver1 2 жыл бұрын
The earth's rotation has been speeding up for a while now. What if whatever is causing it stops and the rotation slows down rather quickly? Slows to it's "normal" speed but in the meantime widespread destruction. Oceans sloshed around like a swimming pool during an earthquake. It is only milliseconds of correction but if you can walk with a cooking pan full of water without having it move a little good luck.
@greggwilson492
@greggwilson492 2 жыл бұрын
Frikin love this guy
@neoquest2012
@neoquest2012 2 жыл бұрын
Strange but true story. I had a recurring dream as a child of standing on beach and looking out to Sea as it rises up 100s of feet if not thousands, and knowing that no matter how fast I run or how high I get, it's pointless to try, an overwhelming feeling of acceptance comes over me and I wake up before the wave hits.. Fast forward to my early 20s, I find myself on Porto del Carmen beach Lanzarote, canary Islands on holiday and it's the same beach from my dream, no doubt about it, extremely strange holiday as i wasn't sure the dream was pre Cognitive and about to happen, I'm now in my late 50s and now believe I lived a past life on Lanzarote when this occurred.... Eyes open, No Fear, be safe everyone....
@knowledgelover2736
@knowledgelover2736 2 жыл бұрын
Do you feel your love life is overwhelming or spilling over you?
@richardpickersgill3434
@richardpickersgill3434 2 жыл бұрын
fellow observer too
@wildmanrobsonsprinter4503
@wildmanrobsonsprinter4503 2 жыл бұрын
I've only started getting into this. Our earth is massive. Powerful and devastating! If only I had a Delorean!!!!! History told needs revisited
@tasosntegiannis8668
@tasosntegiannis8668 2 жыл бұрын
I am Greek, the word Νήσος (Nisos) have the same meaning the last five thousand years at least. It means island.
@tharealBDOGG
@tharealBDOGG 2 жыл бұрын
have you had a look at the island of madeira what's the deal with that flat plane on top of the island do you think that indicats it was under water at one point or could multiply tsunamis do something like that?
@DavidCastillaGil
@DavidCastillaGil 2 жыл бұрын
Ok I live in Tenerife and have explored most of the Canaries. It's an honour every time someone mentions my dear home. I'll try to clarify some doubts raised and if the trolls allow it open a serious debate about this. My english is not perfect so please apologize my wording.
@DavidCastillaGil
@DavidCastillaGil 2 жыл бұрын
The islands have an obvious volcanic origin and they are still active. It seems, I will try and search an animation I saw once, that they were formed starting from the east and into the west, as the eastern islands are almost flat due to erosion while the westernmost islands have higher mountains and remain active. El Hierro had an underwater eruption a couple years ago, and La Palma erupted this same year. I read there's probably a plume or something down here sending magma up which ends up erupting and creating new islands, and since the tectonic plate is moving. I believe this is a similar formation than for Hawaii, because we're not really close to the mid atlantic range but look to continue the same path than the Atlas mountains in northern Africa.
@DavidCastillaGil
@DavidCastillaGil 2 жыл бұрын
The landslides were most probably just caused due to the constant eruptions. Teide is currently 3700m heigh, about 1700 over the rest of the Cañadas ring. It's really like the current volcano grew inside the crater of an older and bigger one. I don't have real numbers but scientists estimated the volcano grew much higher and fell because of its own weight several times. So yes it's very likely these events caused huge landslides and tsunamis. Tenerife itself seems to have been formed from at least three different volcanic systems that ended up merging into one island. La Palma has a huuuge crater in its north and then a very active fall that cuts the island in half till the south tip. There's been some fake news about it going to fall into the sea one day and submerge North America, but I don't really believe it would be as high as some people say.
@eldjr1104
@eldjr1104 2 жыл бұрын
If I understand the shorthand 'xMa' correctly the "Ma" stands for "million annum" or "million years". 0.2x(1)Million years does not equal 20,000 years, but 200,000 years.
@bimmjim
@bimmjim 2 жыл бұрын
I agree.
@vlatkov.8536
@vlatkov.8536 Жыл бұрын
We need more maps!
@bruceinoz8002
@bruceinoz8002 Жыл бұрын
It was an "undersea slide" that caused the Tsunami that hammered Sumatra, Thailand, Sri Lanka, etc. back in 2004. Looking at the map of the Canary islands, they seem to be formed in a rough "circle" with a "dot" in the centre. What chance that the "circle" is the rim of an ancient caldera? If that is so, the whole place is built on very marginal substrates; basically the "cinder cone" of that large, originally undersea volcano. Planted on a rift zone? What could go wrong?The Pacific is littered with islands and particularly atolls formed by CORAL building on dormant or extinct "undersea" volcanoes. The people of Tonga recently had a reminder of that situation. If the coral started building on top of the cinder cone when sea levels were low, as in an Ice Age, the coral "cap" will be pretty robust by now. The catch with the process is that the rate of sea-level rise AND cinder-cone subsidence must never exceed the ability of the coral polyps to build upwards. If seas rise, and / or the cone subsides too too fast, the coral cannot keep up and will eventually be covered by a depth of water that will not allow enough light to penetrate to maintain the Zooanthellae in the "polyp". The reef "drowns". There are examples on the Australian Great Barrier Reef, where reef footings are well over sixty feet below current mean sea level. The coral at this "foot" is decidedly "dead". The natural light is heavily filtered and and attenuated. We have good evidence that the seal levels rose steadily, but it also appears that, in some places, the sea-bed steadily sank at the same time, but not fast enough to "drown" the coral..
@McClarinJ
@McClarinJ 2 жыл бұрын
Isn't 0.2 Ma 200,000 years rather than 20,000 years? In any case, the study says "less than" so could include Plato's Atlantis date.
@HRX6.4
@HRX6.4 2 жыл бұрын
Mr. Carlson, do you know of any other historical accounts of Atlantis that do not derive their information from Plato? Or possibly a alternative translation that directly combats your current idea? Being that is, accurate according to Our ability to properly translate? I guess I’m wondering if there was one seemingly small mistake in the translation how far off you might get while forming hypothesis? Thanks for sharing all the great content!!
@boogiemcsploogie
@boogiemcsploogie 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe Atland of the Oera Linda Book?
@flowerpt
@flowerpt 2 жыл бұрын
Jimmy has documented 1200 references to Atlantis (by several names) across world culture.
@nicholassmith787
@nicholassmith787 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Randall I'm not a geo of any sort but what you are showing could this just not be volcanic eruption blowing out the side like Mt st hellans, the same this has happened in many spots in New Zealand around whats called the port hills in christchurch were the volcano blows out the side not the top?
@silvergreylion
@silvergreylion 2 жыл бұрын
In a word, no. Once a magma stream reaches water, it starts to solidify and won't reach that far into the ocean, and certainly not for many miles, as measured by the surveys.
@nicholassmith787
@nicholassmith787 2 жыл бұрын
@@silvergreylion have a look up the port hills christchurch New Zealand its magma its an explosion!
@atilax6452
@atilax6452 2 жыл бұрын
Does Randall state how high the tsunami must have been, that may have pulled the huge chunk off of Tenerife? I either missed it, or it isnt stated and I can find the possible wave height.
@brianjacob8728
@brianjacob8728 2 жыл бұрын
No, the impact triggered Tenerife to slump, causing the tsunami. The tsunami, generated from that size of a slump, would have been HUGE. There is probably evidence along the westerns coast of Africa and Europe. May be able to get an amplitude estimate from those chevrons...
@b8nnytez
@b8nnytez 2 жыл бұрын
It's highly debated and contested, but Simon Day found evidence in the Bahamas of 1000 ton blocks of coral plucked from under the sea and plonked down on top of high cliffs on the islands. 30 foot tsunamis wouldn't do that.
@modallas8034
@modallas8034 Ай бұрын
I once read that the volcanic island is very porous and has large pockets of water. When the lava came up through the volcano 🌋, it boiled the water, and the steam blew off the side of the island.
@CaptainReset
@CaptainReset 2 жыл бұрын
This looks like all volcanic lateral flank failures due to volcanic eruptions like Mt St. Helens is this what your saying or just flank fail
@andycommonsincanada
@andycommonsincanada Жыл бұрын
If you drive to the top of Mt Tadie on Tenerife you can see this clearly.
@BradKittelTTH
@BradKittelTTH 2 жыл бұрын
If a wave filled a cone and then cracked it and flushed it, the tsunami may have filled several basins as well as the rains, and possible impacts from aerial water from a splash that may have occurred as well, given the scope of a sizable meteor hit in the ocean or a massive swelling in middle of the Atlantic.
@richardvanerven1941
@richardvanerven1941 2 жыл бұрын
If you go back in time when Africa had a major inland sea the pilars you keep at Gibraltar at the moment could be located some where else, making the richat possible.
@gabehartley2008
@gabehartley2008 2 жыл бұрын
Yep , Algiers.
@jetpetty1613
@jetpetty1613 2 жыл бұрын
Fascinating
@matthieulagae6853
@matthieulagae6853 2 жыл бұрын
Can we calculate the landslide age with the height of the sea at the time of the last ice age?
@jvin248
@jvin248 Жыл бұрын
After seeing the megalithic walls around New York City (apparently a 'castle' was torn down, terrace walls left standing, and apartment buildings constructed on top), the description of Atlantis at mid-atlantic could actually be Ancient New York City, destroyed and swallowed by the waves. Just a little more west and not a problem for an advanced sea fairing culture.
@Jumpin.Jagaloon
@Jumpin.Jagaloon Жыл бұрын
Goober take... If it isn't plato verbatim it would go by another name than Atlantis
@gregvirgo2581
@gregvirgo2581 2 жыл бұрын
WOW! Great info, thank you.
2 жыл бұрын
Hello from Atlantis! Canary Islands rules!
@htos1av
@htos1av 2 жыл бұрын
Do all the hybrid females still call themselves "Variforms"? :) SUPPOSEDLY......I got to read an absconded Atlantean text from the Vatican library. We ONLY NOW have the CGI ability to accurately depict Atlanteans and their tech. OMG! A "weightless" chamber is how those "vehicles" turn 90 degrees at >800mph-you're weightless, INSIDE the "car", and it moves at HYPER 'velocity'. But being weightless, there's NO forces of gravimetrics INSIDE the vehicle. I assume it was based roughly on our Faraday cage used in microwave ovens. With some type of quantum technology as well. The "problem" historically was the females that DEMANDED "true love", and unaltered human males were used as "currency" there. I have a feeling SOMEONE besides me had read this-and works in Hollywood. Avatar would look like Mr. Magoo cartoons, in an actual comparison with this.
@michaelc424
@michaelc424 2 жыл бұрын
I do not want to belabor the point, but at 8:20 in this presentation it is clearly stated that 0.20 Ma equals 20,000 years when I think it should have been stated as 200,000 years. This point is later referenced in the video as evidence supporting the idea that the Tenerife event could be related to the end of the last ice age due to the less than 20,000 year conclusion. Please look into this problem and let the listeners know if an error occurred in your interpretation of the paper. Or educate me on the point. I am not trolling here. I simply want clarification. I am sure you would be OK with this clarification. Be assured that I listen very carefully to many of your presentations and with the greatest of interest.
@WorldsGreatestVidiot
@WorldsGreatestVidiot 2 жыл бұрын
Perhaps it was meant to be 0.02 and it was a typo? I am curious about that too.
@windmolenfarm8030
@windmolenfarm8030 2 жыл бұрын
This group of islands appears to be in a circular pattern with a central uplift similar to the ring of an impactor asteroid. A recent finding of the Nadir impactor site in that same general area and a ring of volcanic islands in a ring pattern may represent a sister impactor to the Nadir which was approximately 66 million years ago (with some consideration that it was formed by a sister set of impactors from the Chixulub impactor the was responsible for the mass extinction of the dinosaurs. Do you think there is any correlation?
@winslowlord3294
@winslowlord3294 2 жыл бұрын
Is there evidence of these kinds of rock slides around the undersea mounts just south of the Azores?
@motownbiker92
@motownbiker92 2 жыл бұрын
Yes there is, if you examine the South facing side of the Cruiser Tablemount you'll notice almost half of it suffered rock and land slides. I believe that both the Irving and the Hy`eres Tablemounts are the missing pieces of the Cruiser Tablemount. The whole area screams Atlantis. Also add into the discussion the Atlantis grid that is slowly being pixelated into Oblivion. I'm convinced that the grid is the fertile plane that Plato spoke Looking towards the sea, but in the centre of the whole island, there was a plain which is said to have been the fairest of all plains and very fertile. Near the plain again, and also in the centre of the island at a distance of about fifty stadia, there was a mountain not very high on any side. Looking at the grid as the plain and using goggle earth you can just make out that a canal once led up to the Cruiser Tablemount in which there was a harbor in the shape of an ellipse and where a bridge led up and over the inner rings to the Acropolis where the Temple of Poseidon was located. This is where the outermost ring of the city would have been located, the rest of the rings would have been within the center of the then Island, which is now the Cruiser Tablemount. I have 2014 images from Google Earth showing the Cruiser Tablemount and the immediate area. Soon after the images were taken by myself and one other KZbinr who used location pins to identify and locate the area, the goggle earth Police began pixelating this area as well just as they did with the Atlantis grid. So it's a very good idea that if you're using Google Earth for research and you find something unusual or strange never leave behind location pins to find the areas your researching. One last note, You'll notice that in the area of the ellipse that there is a great pile up of debris which in my estimation was the effects of massive tsunami hits. I have been trying like crazy to contact Randell through the Randall Carlson group contact website with my hypothesis to no avail, if you or anyone else is able to connect with Randall, please send him the information I have presented in this comment post. It would be greatly appreciate it.
@bimmjim
@bimmjim 2 жыл бұрын
8:18 .. ??? I think "0.2 Ma" means 200,000 years. Am I wrong or correct.
@incandescentwithrage
@incandescentwithrage 2 жыл бұрын
Correct. Spotted it too
@WildVke
@WildVke 2 жыл бұрын
@bimmjim No. I do believe you are incorrect. Ma = 1 Million years. It shows “0.2 Ma” not “2 Ma”. 0.2 ( 2/10th) of 1 Ma is 20,000.
@WildVke
@WildVke 2 жыл бұрын
@@incandescentwithrage nope not correct.
@runninonempty820
@runninonempty820 2 жыл бұрын
@@WildVke 0.2 does mean 2/10, but 2/10 of 1 million is 200,000
@runninonempty820
@runninonempty820 2 жыл бұрын
yes you are correct
@seehearthink
@seehearthink 2 жыл бұрын
Also, there could have been counter-tsunamis if the initial tsunami caused island avalanches.
@mbalins
@mbalins 2 жыл бұрын
just awe some if you find time, please do follow-up, if there is any recent research on this thanks
@anthonyboyd9325
@anthonyboyd9325 Жыл бұрын
All the events on the Canarie Islands point in the same direction so is it possible they happen at the same time
@dennissalisbury496
@dennissalisbury496 2 жыл бұрын
Ocean level rise of 400ft at the end of the last ice age would have eroded and undermined shorelines precipitating landslides. What was the land mass during the ice age?
@Taz6688
@Taz6688 2 жыл бұрын
Hy-Brasil has also been identified with Porcupine Bank, a shoal in the Atlantic Ocean about 200 kilometres, has been thought to have sunk beneath the waves, there are many land masses now below the waves
@06a09
@06a09 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve posted this a few times now. Look into the islands at cape Verdi, there is A volcano there called Fogo that has also collapsed and caused a tsunami in the past. On the island next door ‘Santiago’ they have found boulders on top of 200m high peaks, claimed to have been elevated by the wave. I think this event backs the Richat theory as the islands are extremely close to the coast of Mauritania. I would make the argument that the area west of the richat used to be a river delta (green Sahara) met up with a lake at the Richat itself. The delta could potentially have helped carry the wave far in land. I would be really interested to hear peoples thoughts on this. Cheers. P.s I have quite a few screenshots of possible man made features in Mauritania, mostly what I believe to be irrigation canals. But also there are lots of settlements along the higher elevations outside of the sand dunes. Im not really sure where to share them, or even if they have been brought up before.
@King_Flippy_Nips
@King_Flippy_Nips 2 жыл бұрын
the richat structure looks like atlantis but it is about 20-30 times too large to be atlantis
@surfk9836
@surfk9836 2 жыл бұрын
For there to have been a river delta, there must be evidence for a river.
@theamateurbunch5006
@theamateurbunch5006 2 жыл бұрын
The tsunami was 76.000 years ago
@theamateurbunch5006
@theamateurbunch5006 2 жыл бұрын
sorry 73.000 years ago
@06a09
@06a09 2 жыл бұрын
@@theamateurbunch5006 that is a fair point. I wonder how they can accurately date such things though.
@kengoetz6231
@kengoetz6231 2 жыл бұрын
Islands erode from lower elevations due to high currents when ocean levels were low. The patterns on the globe resembles a change of tilt creating the floods.
@xaniaxax1426
@xaniaxax1426 2 жыл бұрын
Larger surrounding undersea area than shown on the landslide map. What's going on with the sea floor? Larger event blows debris in one, or with sloshing, two directions, followed by the collapse pattern shown in the map. Evidence for tsunami would show up on other places far removed from Canary Islands. What if portions of the sea level rise happened fast and didn't go back down?
@KaptainKyle_27
@KaptainKyle_27 2 жыл бұрын
I mean if that’s not in your face evidence I don’t know what to say. It’s so amazing the scars this planet has hidden away in plain sight
@wallsgreebo8352
@wallsgreebo8352 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing!
@lesHanalala
@lesHanalala 2 жыл бұрын
Brought to my mind the Kalalau Valley & Na Pali Coast of Kaua'i...
@bjabbbjabb1286
@bjabbbjabb1286 Жыл бұрын
That would have been a sea of mud and grass and debrie and trunk, at the same time the gulfstreem stopped. Totally unnavigable for sailing wessels. IF some ships tried, they would have turned back and told every captain not to try.
@peterloader974
@peterloader974 2 жыл бұрын
I'd like to know Randall's thoughts on the Large low-shear-velocity provinces inside the Earth. How do they fit in with seismic activity around the globe.
@zendog7212
@zendog7212 2 жыл бұрын
The ah but that I have is, were Plato's Pillars of Heracles the Straights of Gibraltar or were they elsewhere?
@bachcanon1432
@bachcanon1432 2 жыл бұрын
That's the ah but that I have is as well.
@Pencil0fDoom
@Pencil0fDoom 2 жыл бұрын
That canon takes very precise pot shots.
@Pencil0fDoom
@Pencil0fDoom 2 жыл бұрын
Petty… but precise.
@gordonfiala2336
@gordonfiala2336 2 жыл бұрын
lack of growth on the surface of the landslide indicates the age. and lack of deceased vegetation. can't be old if its barren: especially in water where vegetation carries.
@commonsense-og1gz
@commonsense-og1gz 2 жыл бұрын
"that's a big block!" the ancient Egyptians would have been proud had they known of it.
@sandrajones1609
@sandrajones1609 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely aWeSoMe ❣️
@roberttaylor6108
@roberttaylor6108 2 жыл бұрын
For anyone curious what the sea levels during the last ice age -135 meters from today's sea levels. Here's a video that shows what the islands would look like -135 meters to +65 meter sea levels kzbin.info/www/bejne/qKCbepSLq6xrm6c 135 meter difference doesn't make the islands look too different. That shows how steep the islands are which contribute to how fast the collapses moved and how far they reach.
@AtlasRathbane4346
@AtlasRathbane4346 2 жыл бұрын
Last video covered that, weight of new water deepens the bedrock lithosphere and raises the now ice shelf free mountains due to water weight
@emanuelcruz9640
@emanuelcruz9640 2 жыл бұрын
The Reykjanes Ridge been shaking the last week. 👀
@charlesgraham9954
@charlesgraham9954 2 жыл бұрын
i love this stuff, to find out that every other thing about history we been tied to about is awesome. the saying is true. he who wins the war can make up the lies about history, thats why its called HisStory
@ericmaher6606
@ericmaher6606 2 жыл бұрын
does anyone know anything about what I consider an anomaly🥶 on the sea floor beneath the Sandwich Islands. it appears as South America and Antarctica drifted west, the crescent formation on the sea floor stayed static and sliced the two continents in half
@1978rayking
@1978rayking 2 жыл бұрын
I'm sure there was a mid-Atlantic shared city as well as an eye of Sahara city and the Greek city of pre-frozen times for sure, everyone after the floods is just seeds of a previously mixed civilization of the school of greatness.
@fuzzilu
@fuzzilu 2 ай бұрын
Sooo the earthquakes are starting to swarm in the Canaries. I'm on the East coast UK. Any East coast Americans need to keep an eye on things. The weight of magma on things could cause a slippage. If it erupts.
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