Thankyou for this I live in Leeds England but I can still remember the live pictures of the lahars flowing down the mountain like it was yesterday..I hope to visit one day. ❤
@jermed20014 жыл бұрын
I mean...it's probably just news filler for y'all, but I truly thank you, K5, for all of the time you spent on reporting on the 40th anniversary of the 1980 Mt. St. Helens eruption. You put so much time and effort into it. Even though I don't live in the area nor have I ever visited Mt. St. Helens, I find the subject very intriguing.
@done10124 жыл бұрын
Watched it happen with my own eyes that morning at age 14 from an ajacent hilltop. Will remember it till i die. It was impressive.
@sweettrubble46354 жыл бұрын
Cool.
@done10124 жыл бұрын
@@sweettrubble4635 It certainly was and had a front row seat with almost a full roll of 110 film. Pictures turned out perfectly.
@equarg4 жыл бұрын
Done 101 I can imagine the display of power, greater then the atom bomb dropped on Japan, was unimaginable. I was born in 1984. But being a “disaster buff “ has really given me a respect for the power of nature. Imagine this happening in 2020. Sure, people have cameras these days but I think they have less common sense and there would be more casualties. I could just imagine seconds after the volcano erupting, people trying to upload while a pyroclastic cloud is barreling toward them. Back then, people envisioned a Hawaiian like eruption, few could imagine such a explosion and near instant evaporation of the mountain side. So I really do feel sorry for many who were outside the danger zone and got hurt/killed. But in 2020? Yea. They should know better if this happened today! I used to live in Washington State. Heck, found a jar full of ash and still have it a decade later. But glad I live in Texas now. The chaos if one of the volcanos became active would be pure chaos!
@mrsd29503 жыл бұрын
@@alexandersupertramp7353 love the name! As soon as I saw it I got a huge grin.
@macattack147783 жыл бұрын
I watched it at age 13. At Harry's.
@waynestewart64922 ай бұрын
I was 7 years old that day , it still sends chills down my spine thinking of it today! Bless those who passed away.
@lc2854 жыл бұрын
I've watched a few past anniversary videos on this eruption. I am most fascinated by the geological, environmental, after effects. It is amazing how nature cleanses, and rebuilds itself. The human stories of survival, gives record of man and natures tenacity. Thanks for the remembrance show, King5.
@johnhpalmer60982 жыл бұрын
I know this is 2 years old now but just to add I was 15 and living at home in University Place, just outside of Tacoma when the mountain blew. My parents and I managed to get beyond the barricades when we got off the interstate and took the back roads well north of the blockades to get closer in to the mountain that afternoon after it went off. Came over from having watched the original documentary that was put together in 1980, after the explosion. A month later, my oldest sister and her first husband and new baby daughter (who was born in October 1979) drove home upon graduation from an Episcopal seminary in Wisconsin and came home via I-90 and drove through the ash that still blanketed eastern Washington, arriving back to our house covered in ash.
@equarg4 жыл бұрын
May the dead RIP. May the survivors find peace. Back then many had no clue what was gonna happen, they could not imagine the raw power, and why old Native tribes were wary of the area. Many times, old lore and superstitions have a grain of truth and wisdom in them. Native tribes did not have the means to record what happened in the past, only the warnings of elders telling the next generation to be wary. I usually don’t have much sympathy for people who refuse to evacuate, but Truman is an exception. His 3rd wife (they truly loved each other) died there. His collection of junk, treasures (a pink Cadillac with gold rimmed wheels and mini bar), a 19th player piano, and 13 cats were there. Not to mention the cabin he built by hand. To evacuate him, would be to kill him slowly. He took his treasures with him, never to be seen again under the new Spirit Lake.....instantly. I like to think his spirit, long with his wife’s spirit, watch over the area. Watching it slowly rebuild and eventually become beautiful again.
@CaliforniaBushman4 жыл бұрын
Mt Saint Helens is the youngest cascade volcano by far, at only 40,000 years old. Compared to the others that average 500,000 years old. And it was 9700ft tall. That's a lot of activity. You can clearly see on Google maps topography layer the rubble from ancient eruptions on even the south side of the volcano. Geologists say it's had eruptions TEN TIMES LARGER than in 1980. This cycle of devistation and rebirth has gone on here and all over the Cascades for over half a million years. But for Mt Saint Helens only a mere 40,000. My money is on more activity.
@donvito26824 жыл бұрын
I was 20 years old and living in Reno Nevada at the time. At the end of may and the beginning of June 1980 the sky was filled with smoke from Mount St. Helens...600 miles away.
@kevinhensley4643 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. This has been fascinating to me since it happened... I want to climb it someday... thank you for sharing
@jamesstrader905920 күн бұрын
I was hiking in the Olympic Mountains above Port Angeles when it blew. Three large blasts roared across the sky towards Vancouver Island. It was so loud I looked up in the sky thinking I could see it. When I got home at 1 pm, Yakima was pitch black even though it was a beautiful sunny day. The entire even was totally amazing and you never knew what the final outcome would be until later.
@karenharris722 Жыл бұрын
I was in Spokane on Fairchild AFB when the ash reached us. A day I will never forget!
@barbaragravely9203 жыл бұрын
I would like to thank every person that has put Helens on report . I was 10 at the time it erupted Great Falls and Montana was shut down due to Ash fallen near 6 to 7 inches deep. We all had to stay in doors for a long time.
@sweettrubble46354 жыл бұрын
My son was born on May 25, and this was our entertainment while we waited. We were especially concerned about the direction of the ash cloud. But everything turned out okay for us.
@petergraves56493 жыл бұрын
I was also born on the 25th of May, although in 1983. Interesting coincidence. 😀😀🙂🙂
@garyjanssen53886 ай бұрын
I was flying with CP Air from Amsterdam to Toronto and we flew right over the top of Mount ST, Helens I still have the picture after what happened, RIP to all that lost there lives
@equarg4 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1984, but I am fascinated by volcanos. I lived in Spokane Washington and many long time residents had stories about what happened that day. My Biology teacher was camping as a teen that day in Spokane and he remembers looking up at the “scary black clouds” rolling in. Then it started to “snow”, when it was 50 degrees. His parents decided it was time to cut that camping trip short... Heck, a nice elderly couple gave me a jar full of ash from that day at their garage sale. Still have it a decade later.
@jhonbeltrannovoa86038 ай бұрын
Great program, lots of good stories. Best regards from Chile.
@capricorn28163 жыл бұрын
I remember watching the coverage on tv when it happened from my parents kitchen. I was 7 yrs old. Pretty wild. No volcanoes in Texas.
@jamesmurray85583 жыл бұрын
It has been 41 years since the blast. I always remember every year, every Sunday. I am a pariah in my family (black),state(Alabama). My brother(Donald) disresped me!I was a young ranger at Cle Elm ranger station.I do not care how anyone cares about what anyone says.I was there!
@adiarainfoster4 жыл бұрын
I was 4 years old when this happened, so I don't remember anything about it really. Only that people around me were still talking about it when I was 10. My mother kept insisting that I knew when it was going to explode the day before. She told her friends that "my daughter said the big mountain was going to blow up" the day before it did. She kept trying to make it some kind of supernatural thing. But honestly, looking back at documentaries like this, the fact that it was going to erupt must have been on the news all over the country at the time. Even though I was 4 years old, I MUST have listened to it. Children see and hear so many things that parents think they just won't notice. "My daughter is 4. She has no clue what's going on." And I'm sure that's true to an extent. But even if the kids don't understand it, they are still listening to it. I hope that parents can sit and talk to their kids in such disasters and their children are full of questions about what they have been hearing. It must have been a frightening, confusing time for the little ones who didn't understand when the news started talking about people who died during the eruption.
@captainkirk45143 жыл бұрын
I was 16 at the time, I watched it unfold on the news as it happened. I Live in west Michigan and I remember a haze that partially blocked the sun that persisted for a week in the days following the explosion.
@janaburritt69392 жыл бұрын
I remember watching on TV. I was 16. It still is fascinating. I remember the ash on our cars a couple days after the blast. On coal creek canyon outside of Denver
@keithdancer16684 жыл бұрын
I was getting the morning paper in Aloha, Oregon, and I was wondering why was it snowing in the middle of May. My Dad said that it wasn't snow, it was Volcanic Ash. Over the next several days, there was so much ash that it was very hard to breathe.
@stevenichols7134 жыл бұрын
I was 18 and watching it on tv. I could not believe it.
@mrbob4u4954 жыл бұрын
I was in the area in June after the eruption courtesy of a port call in Portland, OR as a crew member of a Navy ship. I remember, even now, all the logs lining the shore along the Columbia River at Longview and the gray landscape from the ash fall. Still haunts me today. An other worldly experience, to be sure.
@Shine133733 жыл бұрын
I saw your helicopter that morning climbing the mountain that day, set my alarm for the moment of the blast too. Sadly as you can see the weather wasn't great and turned back short of the summit due to weather. I'll look out for you guys this year.
@Tracer23764 жыл бұрын
I remember the eruption back in 1980 I was living in Utah at the time. I was just a kid back then and it was all over the news. When I went to the Orgon Portland area in the early 90s there was still ash from the eruption. People were making glass out of it back then. We bought a glass egg. Don't know where it is now. From the Portland area you can see the four sisters, and Mount St. Helens was one of the four. It was a massive exposition that I do remember. I look at KZbin videos of this as well from people who do venture there. And they are finding lots of old crazy things up there. Which is good, but it shows time, and how long it really has been.
@ScorpioBornIn694 жыл бұрын
I still remember it, though never lived in the Pacific Northwest was all on television and radio that day when it blew.
@mikestanley91764 жыл бұрын
I was living in Hillsboro when this happened. My Grandfather took me skating at Oaks Park that Sunday. As we were crossing the bridge we could clearly see the ash column.
@calcrappie85074 жыл бұрын
We spent a day there in the late 1980's at the park. When you walk through those leveled trees everywhere you realize the power of the blast. Even areas that were shielded from direct affects of the west-faced blast were leveled. Zero chance of survival. It's almost like the blast had weight to it (probably did). Spirit lake had water back in it with LOTS of logs. Still had that moonscape look to the whole area, but there were green trees maybe 3 to 5 feet tall starting the early process to reclaim the destruction. This is a must-visit park if you are in the area.
@hapster54 Жыл бұрын
We had just moved to Spokane the year before and were at the annual Fairchild AFB air show out just past Airway Heights. This was the first year that the SR-71 was on static display and it was great to see it and all the other aircraft. By around noon you could see the black clouds building to the west like a huge thunder storm brewing and by 2pm it was in close vicinity. The temperature dropped quickly. We rode our bikes back home as all the aircraft that couldn't be put in hangars were flown out. By 3pm or so it was pitch black and the fallout of ash began to accumulate. The TV stations all had emergency broadcast warnings to stay inside and wait for further info. (This is NOT a test). It took us close to 6 months to clear ash off of the roads and access areas. Once ash gets wet, it dries like cement. A once in a lifetime adventure to tell the kids and grandkids.
@rsnell2211 ай бұрын
I was eagerly awaiting the 40th anniversary celebration. There was absolutely no sign of any preparations right up to the February 2020 shutdown of everything. There was prior knowledge.
@peterolbrisch89705 ай бұрын
1980...the year without cherries.
@DuckGuy-19578 ай бұрын
They always say _"nobody expected what would happen"._ *WELL? I KNEW WHAT WOULD HAPPEN!* Simply because of the bulge that was growing on the north side, and the knowledge of the pressures inside volcano's. I knew it was inevitable. (and I'm sure I wasn't the only one)
@Kreemerz4 жыл бұрын
why the heck would they use that weird painting instead of the many photos of David Johnston...
@lc2854 жыл бұрын
Kreemerz - Having a portrait done of an individual is to honor ones legacy.
@thegodzilla852 жыл бұрын
I was 6 years old living in North Seattle. Still remember the news reports. My Grandmas house in Centralia was covered in Ash. Still have my ash pen.
@gremlinuk19682 жыл бұрын
Remember seeing this on telly over here in northern Ireland UK, it was 5 days before my 12th birthday,,
@martharetallick2044 жыл бұрын
I was living and working in Michigan. A few days after the eruption, the ash blotted out the sun.
@willhahn61683 жыл бұрын
I was very lucky??to helicopter log the blast for 2yrs we started out in the redzone . The ash & pummy blowing in your face from the rotor wash created by the Sikorsky 64 made you realize that you were not only lucky to be there but also very blessed to get sandblasted by the flyin pummy ash every time you hooked a turn of logs to the Sikorsky 64
@ghostshirt19842 жыл бұрын
Born and raised in Seattle in 1978 so baby when my home state blew up 🏔️🌋
@ronieash77584 жыл бұрын
My 16th birthday was May 19 and I remember My parents talking about this I lived in fla. what i am trying to figure out is there was so many weeks of activity going on with earth quakes and steam showing and mini bursts as well as the side of the mountain bulging out.... why in the world were there people in that area besides the scientists families camping like the Moores with two young children. Were there public notifications and or warnings?
@shanep12234 жыл бұрын
my grandparents both died when it blew. let talk more about those 57 people...less about other stuff...more about the people that died.
@marked4death0764 жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear that, one day you will get to hear their story though i hope, i cant imagine what the 57 that died seen that day. Esp harry haha must of been a sight when you think about it.
@elizabetlomeliramos14384 жыл бұрын
me to
@lc2854 жыл бұрын
Shane P - Maybe you could write a short story in memory of?
@minkie72844 жыл бұрын
Shane P, I am sorry for the memories you missed making.
@op06144 жыл бұрын
Were your grandparents the Parkers?
@lindal.dreier71622 жыл бұрын
We were station ed at Ft. Lewis just 4 years before the eruption, so when it erupted we were familiar with acres of the land from My. St. Helens to My. RReigneeL. Lee Dreier.f
@klubstompers Жыл бұрын
I was 4 years old when this happened, but i remember it vividly. Getting out of pre-school in Spokane and handed a mask to walk home through the ash. Thought it was so cool, jumping around in the ash. I remember my step dad stopping the car to put a mask on a statue of Lincoln in the park. I remember not having school for a week due to all the ash and how everything was covered in inches of ash for weeks. I remember driving up there, when they first re-opened the road and seeing all the burnt vehicles sitting in the same place they were, when the people got trapped inside, pretty morbid.
@JB-gw8ee Жыл бұрын
I was a little kid living in Oregon. My dad took me up to the Tuttle river and we collected pumice.
@tashadanielle31343 жыл бұрын
My oldest sister was in Nov 24 in 1980, my mom was 7 months pregnant with my sister.
@brucedunker68744 жыл бұрын
I was asleep in bed in Port Angeles Washington and got woken up by 3 Sonic booms. I thought it was Jets from Whidbey naval air station. We did not get Ash in Port Angeles until after it had circled the globe a couple weeks later.
@natedampier77464 жыл бұрын
We were in Houston, Texas when it erupted on a Friday went off. What a mess it made.
@lc2854 жыл бұрын
Nate Dampier - MT. St. Helens went off on a Sunday. Are you saying ash reached Houston Texas on Friday?
@arirussell76364 жыл бұрын
Maybe you ment one of the later eruptions
@TheRustyriddle2 жыл бұрын
You should have interviewed Geologist Dorothy Stoffel, in the plane she seen a lot more than anyone.
@rybo12334 жыл бұрын
Anyone notice that at 4.03 it looks like behind the scenes footage of Dante's Peak?
@terryporche87454 жыл бұрын
In 1883 on the island of Anak Krakatau the Krakatoa volcano exploded itself apart. 30,000 people perished. The US was very lucky. It could have been much worse.
@terranceeaglefeather52904 жыл бұрын
The yellowstone super volcano is a monster we need to worry about between now and 100 years it could erupt
@TerriZandecki2 жыл бұрын
I really like the way we celebrate mt st helens anniversary 42 of the eruption in the may 18 1980! What is your most memorable experience in you in the mt st helens!!!?
@Sushi27357 ай бұрын
It is so hard to believe it’s been 40 yrs? I was a flight attendant flying that route and laying over in Portland for 28 hrs. We had flown our trip back to Atlanta and thankfully missed it. Flight were cancelled and even by the time we flew our last flight in, smoke was still coming up of the mountain and at least 4 in. Of ash covered all of Portland. Hard to believe 40 whole hears can do so fast 🥲🥲🥲🥲🥲🥲🥲
@victormaxwell52644 жыл бұрын
I remember it well ! I was in my late 20s..living on the Texas Gulf coast..Our natural disasters were hurricanes..We had plenty of advanced warning for those catastrophes, however !!
@charliemac644 жыл бұрын
Victor Maxwell There was plenty of warning for the eruption in 1980, as well. More than you have for hurricanes. When, precisely, it would blow was unknown. But the mountain began showing activity months ahead of the eruption.
@bruceperkins72533 жыл бұрын
I was living in Toppenish, WA, on that day. I remember Being woke up when it erupted, it sounded like they Were firing. Off field artillery At the Yakima firing range I got up, looked outside, didn't see anything so I went Back to bed. 3.5 hrs later it Started to get dark and if you were outside in the ash fall, it got real hard to breathe after 5mins.and there was 2.5 mos worth of Warning but it was unknown As to when she would erupt
@DoggosAndJiuJitsu7 ай бұрын
For the record, EVERY person who died chose to be there knowing the danger. Except Truman’s 13 cats, who he should have found homes for when he decided to stay.
@ravenfallsphotography62544 ай бұрын
…and, of course, the tens of thousands of wild animals who were unlucky enough to be in the blast zone.
@davidlang44423 ай бұрын
@@ravenfallsphotography6254 Plus the hundreds of Bigfoot that died in their caves and out in the woods.
@Homemadeacres2 ай бұрын
My wife and I went to the Johnson Observatory in 2018 to view Mount Saint Helen. It’s a really good place to view the mountain and they have a lot of interesting stuff from the mountain there a lot of before and after pictures really cool place.
@mikaericson7262 жыл бұрын
Even living on southern Vancouver Island I knew immediately what happened after what felt and sounded like cannon went off outside my window; thanks to media coverage over preceding weeks. If it happened today today the coverage because of social media would be so more personal and intense
@Kreemerz4 жыл бұрын
I love these young reports who weren't even alive when St. Helens erupted. Today they try to sound like reporters using text book words to recall a historical major news event: fateful day; somber anniversary; chills - they sound so inauthentic.... hard to watch them.
@jamesaritchie14 жыл бұрын
Moron.
@javige034 жыл бұрын
What are they supposed to do? People get older, people die. People take their place.
@loririchardson70310 ай бұрын
I was not 6yrs & 2months old. I have watched all kinds of stuff about mnt. Saint helens, the eruption the mud the ash & everything bout mount saint helens.
@sarahgreenslade12198 ай бұрын
I've watched documentaries and movies about mount St Helens where residents ignored warnings and only scarpered when St Helens blew
@awizardalso4 жыл бұрын
Here in NE Ohio a few days after the eruption, we had small bits of ash floating down from the sky that looked something like snowflakes that showed under a streetlight.
@ml.27708 ай бұрын
10:49 That's one heck of a drug bust. I remember being 7 years old asking my Mom and Dad why was there ash all over the car. We lived 500 kilometres from Mt. St. Helens in Canada.
@tml72110 ай бұрын
I weas in Ohio but still was in awe of what happened.
@tman89397 ай бұрын
I had ashes from this eruption in Minnesota a couple of days later.
@lindal.dreier71622 жыл бұрын
Mt. Rainer was what i triied to say in my note, 2 minutes ago. L. Lee Dreier
@NinjaBat-1115 ай бұрын
I had a dream about 7 months ago about a volcano erupting and I saw the mountain with snow and the lava coming down and people running in hysteria packing the train to get out of there. Everybody was thirsty and screaming while there was ash falling all over. After this dream the Iceland volcano erupted but I couldn't see a train in that area. This is the only time this is clicking for me. Anybody in the area please stay alert.
@twstf89052 жыл бұрын
Haha, she talks right over the countdown clock hitting zero 🤣 good timing, lady!
@ravenfallsphotography62544 ай бұрын
It was a pre-recorded segment.
@We_All_Seek_Truth Жыл бұрын
Why, with all the advance warning the mountain gave us, isn't there any video footage of the eruption? News crews were there in force! Observers were everywhere, but they only had cameras taking still photographs. After the mountain began erupting, video cameras rushed to the site, but too late... they missed the initial eruption.
@ravenfallsphotography62544 ай бұрын
Portable video recorders back then were heavy, didn’t have much battery life, and had pretty bad image quality. Nothing like what we had even ten years later, let alone now.
@Stacie454 жыл бұрын
Sure the ash blew but the Seahawks had Zorn & Largent so I figured things would be okay. Actually I was a college Freshman in fall 1980 at a school on the East Coast, I had a roommate from New York. Ironically I tried to describe to my roommate the scale of the eruption using the World Trade Center for size comparison.
@kerstinklenovsky2393 жыл бұрын
I am outraged at the people who went into the red zone against the warnings of the experts and who had to be rescued.
@BushyHairedStranger3 жыл бұрын
Why? are you an Outrageaholic?
@marked4death0764 жыл бұрын
Great tribute, i was hoping even with the Corona going on they would still pay respect to the victims and st helens
@jimmyj1004 жыл бұрын
What does this have to do w Corona?
@marked4death0764 жыл бұрын
@@jimmyj100 the fact that millions of people were not allowed up to johnston ridge observatory for the 40th anniversary.......because of the "rona".... alot of people i know who were plannimg on going but of course it was closed....so id say it had alot to do with it. But at least we got some love for st helens online
@LindaMerchant-bq2hp2 ай бұрын
44 years later
@danclayberger7703 жыл бұрын
Needed much more about the recovery of the affected areas and less history.,.,.,.,.,
@mhernandez22464 жыл бұрын
I've seen all the documentaries about the mountain and I cant imagine how it was like back then I wasn't born yet but im sure it was like the end of the world or something
@glendabethwhittingham16963 жыл бұрын
I was in the midst of moving, the morning after it erupted all cars had ash an inch thick I live in Calgary alberta the whole city had ash
@DavidHuber636 күн бұрын
The mountain let off steam, and i broke my foot when i crashed in the ash, on the corner while riding my bicycle the morning after
@stevenherrold59553 жыл бұрын
in 2080 they will do the documentary 100 years after that's if something worse does not happen before than like cascada pacific northwest
@ravenfallsphotography62544 ай бұрын
True, but it won’t be the same as this (or the 30-year retrospectives) because none of the people who experienced it will be alive to give their recollections. The stories will be presented by people who only think of it as "ancient history," like if some television network tried to do a report on the sinking of the Titanic in 2012.
@kevinbushey1879 Жыл бұрын
Very nice reporting I remember when that happen I have some ashes from there I took and put in a pill container.
@guytremblay16473 жыл бұрын
They decided to keep the name of the lake cause every 18th of May of each year you can hear Harry Truman's spirit yelling out for help .
@oldrrocr2 жыл бұрын
watching "San Andreas" at the same time as this from the "strike zone"... waiting for the next "big one" (which everyone knows is long overdue).
@sarahivsutterb7474 жыл бұрын
What about if the Yellowstone Caldera, the South Valley Caldera, the Caldera of the Vesuvius region and many other calderas and volcanoes will erupt simultaneously from its slumber! Huh? Just thinking about the possibilities for such a disaster to happen! 😲😲😲😲😲
@enkrypt3d3 жыл бұрын
now it's yellowstone's turn!
@doc.sk8erdie286 Жыл бұрын
Was Harry's cave ever found after the eruption?
@davidlang44423 ай бұрын
He is buried under 250' of ash and debris.
@doc.sk8erdie2863 ай бұрын
@@davidlang4442 oh dang, that's crazy!😲
@terr7779 ай бұрын
My car was covered in ash in South Texas afterwards.
@whitmer73 Жыл бұрын
Worlds largest glacier is growing in crater.
@robp34753 жыл бұрын
I was 12 living inHouston
@DavidHuber636 күн бұрын
Did he say brother is a meat alogist? :)
@Endoftown4 жыл бұрын
It is too bad all of the wording at the bottom of the screen. I finally stopped watching due to the distraction.
@gailwalker32574 жыл бұрын
Turned me off at mention of Coronavirus. Stivk to the story.
@JamesWlos-xk2mo6 ай бұрын
Justice for Harry r Truman
@deoglemnaco70256 ай бұрын
I lived in Selah during the eruption. My dad knew it was coming for about six months before that day and he made a shelter “The Ark” he called it. When the mountain blew, he quickly gathered my mom, me and my sister and put us all down there. He was a deeply religious man and felt it was his job to repopulate the earth. We lived down there for several years until my dad felt it was safe to come out. By that time it was 1994.
@jenniferpesquera648 Жыл бұрын
I knew the volcano will be blew up on may 18, 1980 and so many were killed and many were injured. I hope they have a service for those who were killed.
@lucmarchand617 Жыл бұрын
I work mines leaf rapids,manitoba was big news all newspaper sold out couples days some geologist flew go look at it include pulp mills the pas and said was atomic bomb huge scale.i work later elkford,bc coal mines and said ash drop in town just insane when people talk about.weyerhauser plant in princeton bc said they work flat out in side clean up mess.
@arirussell76364 жыл бұрын
The funny thing is that cellphones have actually been around since the early mid 70,s
@jerryvan-hees71304 жыл бұрын
negative.
@arirussell76364 жыл бұрын
@@jerryvan-hees7130 Mobile phone Language Download PDF Watch Edit "Cell phone" redirects here. For the film, see Cell Phone (film). "Handphone" redirects here. For the film, see Handphone (film). For the modern mobile phone, see Smartphone. A mobile phone, cellular phone, cell phone, cellphone, handphone, or hand phone, sometimes shortened to simply mobile, cell or just phone, is a portable telephone that can make and receive calls over a radio frequency link while the user is moving within a telephone service area. The radio frequency link establishes a connection to the switching systems of a mobile phone operator, which provides access to the public switched telephone network (PSTN). Modern mobile telephone services use a cellular network architecture and, therefore, mobile telephones are called cellular telephones or cell phones in North America. In addition to telephony, digital mobile phones (2G) support a variety of other services, such as text messaging, MMS, email, Internet access, short-range wireless communications (infrared, Bluetooth), business applications, video games and digital photography. Mobile phones offering only those capabilities are known as feature phones; mobile phones which offer greatly advanced computing capabilities are referred to as smartphones.  A decade of evolution of mobile phones, from a 1994 Motorola 8900X-2 to the 2004 HTC Typhoon, an early smartphone The development of metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) large-scale integration (LSI) technology, information theory and cellular networking led to the development of affordable mobile communications.[1] The first handheld mobile phone was demonstrated by John F. Mitchell[2][3] and Martin Cooper of Motorola in 1973, using a handset weighing c. 2 kilograms (4.4 lbs).[4] In 1979, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) launched the world's first cellular network in Japan.[citation needed] In 1983, the DynaTAC 8000x was the first commercially available handheld mobile phone. From 1983 to 2014, worldwide mobile phone subscriptions grew to over seven billion; enough to provide one for every person on Earth.[5] In the first quarter of 2016, the top smartphone developers worldwide were Samsung, Apple and Huawei; smartphone sales represented 78 percent of total mobile phone sales.[6] For feature phones (slang: “dumbphones”) as of 2016, the largest were Samsung, Nokia and Alcatel.[7] History Types Infrastructure Hardware Software Sales Use See also References Further reading External links
@nancyjaynes28682 жыл бұрын
Art Russell: well, I clearly remember my car stopping in the middle of Wyoming in 1999 and my cellphone was of no use…. No cell tower within reach. So much for technology.
@ghostshirt19842 жыл бұрын
🌋
@michaeldover2 жыл бұрын
Gee, it would be nice if KING 5 would have removed that damned distracting banner from the bottom of the screen that inhibits the full view of the program being presented. I stopped the video and posted this comment 44 seconds in. And now I'll turn it off.
@darrebell30862 жыл бұрын
Straddle vs shield 🛡 volcano 🌋 Very interesting 🤔 Straddle volcanoes 🌋 basically explode 🤯 Shield 🛡 volcanoes 🌋 spew slow leaking lava like in Hawaii ! Ah ha 😯
@ravenfallsphotography62544 ай бұрын
The term is "Stratovolcano."
@julioramos5383 Жыл бұрын
These people that live around the mountain shouldn't be alow back. Buying back the property and make a 30 by 30 miles of.park.
@ravenfallsphotography62544 ай бұрын
I think that decision was made about 43 years ago.
@blahman1able7 ай бұрын
seriously? 'the mountain blew up'? um, its a VOLCANO. Just like yellowstone..just nowhere near as big. VOLCANO. Mountains cant exhaust magma. smh. wow..did you spend .50 on the soundtrack? this is HORRIBLE. k redo time.
@julioramos5383 Жыл бұрын
Now show me a hour video of what's growing. That's what i want to see. This video is old news. Ok