The Next Pompeii | Full Documentary | NOVA | PBS

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NOVA PBS Official

NOVA PBS Official

Күн бұрын

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@MsDemonBunny
@MsDemonBunny 7 ай бұрын
NOVA is the best. They know how to do documentaries correctly. Engaging presentation, no oddball theories or random conspiracies to try to hold attention, and seemingly with the idea that the viewing audience had a measure of intelligence. Kudos! Well done, NOVA.
@nightrunnerxm393
@nightrunnerxm393 7 ай бұрын
And what's most impressive about that is that this is a fairly recent doc (5 yrs, at time of commenting), when the pressures to present a particular narrative one way or another are particularly...insistent.
@0Logan05
@0Logan05 7 ай бұрын
“..The best..”.? ..At Lying, perhaps… But NASA or the CIA takes the Prize there..😂
@dogshmog
@dogshmog Ай бұрын
But I would still appreciate a cameo from the "but aliens" guy.
@henriklarsson5221
@henriklarsson5221 Ай бұрын
Ancient aliens did it
@FrankJohnson-d5v
@FrankJohnson-d5v 7 ай бұрын
Nova is, by far, THE BEST that's left of TV, period 🥰👌👍👍👏
@EternalEyeofRa
@EternalEyeofRa 7 ай бұрын
Frontline and Nature too
@johngrant4470
@johngrant4470 7 ай бұрын
The best of left TV?
@byronharano2391
@byronharano2391 7 ай бұрын
Yes!
@FrankJohnson-d5v
@FrankJohnson-d5v 7 ай бұрын
@@johngrant4470 no left or right about Nova, if you're talking politics
@FrankJohnson-d5v
@FrankJohnson-d5v 7 ай бұрын
@@EternalEyeofRa So true 👍 Let's not forget them. My bad. 😉
@Lemmon714_
@Lemmon714_ 7 ай бұрын
It's these kind of docs that have kept me watching NOVA since I was a kid in the 70's.
@jimmylightfinger1216
@jimmylightfinger1216 7 ай бұрын
NOVA and Frontline...the best TV has to offer.
@diamondperidot
@diamondperidot 7 ай бұрын
I Love NOVA!! I have watched since I was a child and have never been disappointed.
@richsouthall1937
@richsouthall1937 7 ай бұрын
NOVA is the GOLD standard for documentaries hands down. Superbly written and produced with the great graphics and imagery.
@dan6151
@dan6151 7 ай бұрын
I remember being in awe of the fate of Pompei when I first learned about it in the 7th grade... and it's still amzaing!
@lindaseel9986
@lindaseel9986 7 ай бұрын
Agreed 💯 percent.
@danm9006
@danm9006 7 ай бұрын
I hope you get to visit Pompeii some day.
@lindaseel9986
@lindaseel9986 7 ай бұрын
@@Marco90731 Sure hope it's quick. I have heard it turns the brain to geletin. ☹️
@lenorahousman4111
@lenorahousman4111 6 ай бұрын
BB
@suzannalytle2758
@suzannalytle2758 6 ай бұрын
Have you watched the documentary about the fate of Pompei's sister city Herculaneum? It's title is Herculaneum a fate worse than Pompei.
@marcariotto1709
@marcariotto1709 7 ай бұрын
Docs on Earths great geo features never get old because the science and current understanding keep evolving so quickly. Thanks for another great one on this region!
@chefscorner7063
@chefscorner7063 7 ай бұрын
NOVA puts out some of the best Documentaries found in any format. This wasn't an exception to that rule. ;)
@robertjennings7282
@robertjennings7282 7 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, NOVA didn't mention that Campi Flagrei is a super volcano. One of its eruptions 40,000 years ago was 200 times bigger than Mount Saint Helens, and deposited meters of ash as far away as Russia.
@hollybyrd6186
@hollybyrd6186 7 ай бұрын
Some point out that it might have killed out what was left of the Neanderthals.
@Lessinath
@Lessinath 6 ай бұрын
They didn't because it doesn't actually qualify as a "supervolcano", and the term isn't really meaningful anyways. To qualify as a supervolcano, a volcano must have produced at least 1 VEI (Volcanic Explosivity Index) eruption of an 8. The VEI scale goes from 0, with no or minimal explosive activity, often producing just lava flows an to 8 producing more than 1,000 cubic kilometers (km^3) of tephra. Tephra is any solid (once cooled) explosive eruption product, including ash and pumice and even broken chunks of the mountain that get explosively ejected. A VEI 8 is beyond anything human history has encountered and would likely generate an intense volcanic winter, as the low 7's humans have witnessed all did. (VEI 7 is 100 to 999 km^3 tephra production.) Mt St Helens in 1980 was a low 5, with just over 1km^3 of tephra. The huge eruption in early 2022 in the south pacific at Hunga Tonga Hunga Ha'apai that produced a Pacific-wide tsunami and an explosion so loud it was heard in Alaska was a high VEI 5, maybe a low 6. It isn't conclusively determined which yet. (And sadly, the news of this huge, impactful and historic eruption was quickly overshadowed by the even more historic and impactful Russian invasion of Ukraine a month later.) So, what's the largest eruption produced by Campi Flagrei? Well, it was a VEI 7, with around 500km^3 tephra generated. Huge, but only half the size it would need to be called a supervolcano. But the term supervolcano isn't particularly useful anyways. There are many large caldera system volcanoes like Campi Flagrei, and only a few have produced a VEI 8 eruption, but they are all extremely hazardous. In addition, there's a big overlap between the largest eruptions from "normal" volcanoes and the colossal eruptions *sometimes* produced by supervolcanoes. In fact, the last volcanic winter humanity experienced did not come from a supervolcano - it was from Tambora in 1815, causing 1816 to be gripped by a volcanic winter and called "the year without a summer." In fact, even the 'infamous' Yellowstone that is the subject of many videos and docudramas meant to scare more than educate, erupts a lot more often than its super eruptions. It actually averages out to an eruption about every 60,000 years, and most of these are not particularly explosive - a vent opens up, there's minor explosive activity (possibly from groundwater interaction), and a big sticky rhyolite lava flow squeezes out of the ground. This is why geologists call these volcanoes caldera systems instead. It describes their behavior better than the term supervolcano, which is a term that was used once in a geology paper in the 1960s to make fun of the idea of a certain cluster of volcanoes with similar behavior actually being one volcano. (Later study discovered that cluster of volcanoes shares a deep crustal magma source, but have separate shallow magma plumbing systems.) The media found out about the term sometime in the 90s and it sounds scary, so they ran with it. Geologists then adopted the term only because the public already had, and language is for communicating even if the origin of a term or phrase is really stupid.
@geri8666
@geri8666 5 ай бұрын
I don't feel the designation is really indisputable. However, that Campi is one dangerous volcano is beyond question.
@rockinscarlet
@rockinscarlet 4 ай бұрын
@@Lessinath finally someone gets it about Yellowstone
@Lessinath
@Lessinath 4 ай бұрын
@@geri8666 I agree, it is a very dangerous volcano. Even a VEI 2 or 3 with no warning there could kill thousands of people.
@dforrest4503
@dforrest4503 7 ай бұрын
Campe Flegrei has caused much more ground deformation since this initially aired. Worrisome.
@geri8666
@geri8666 5 ай бұрын
Very worrisom, for the whole world.
@rempseaheinamies9414
@rempseaheinamies9414 2 ай бұрын
Massive badaboom coming, only question of when. I would move out of there right now.
@BobGriff-z3f
@BobGriff-z3f 2 ай бұрын
At this volcano that ground deformation is very normal
@Richard-p3b
@Richard-p3b Ай бұрын
@@geri8666why the wowhole rod?
@Richard-p3b
@Richard-p3b Ай бұрын
Why the whole world?
@CoolHand273
@CoolHand273 7 ай бұрын
I thought I knew all about this stuff but I learned quite a bit more about the Naples area and its geologic hazards. Great job as usual NOVA.
@mikebailey9566
@mikebailey9566 7 ай бұрын
As a member of the US Navies 6th Fleet, I spent a lot of time in Naples and the surrounding areas. The places are beautiful and the people are for the most part friendly. I was not aware however of the evidence under the streets, of a major eruption in the distant past. These cities were built many years before the people understood the geological dangers they faced. An eruption of equal or even lesser size could mean the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people. If I was a resident of Naples right now....I believe I would be looking for another place to live.
@junkvista61
@junkvista61 7 ай бұрын
I would move to place I could sleep without worry. I don't want gambling my family life.
@enkisdaughter4795
@enkisdaughter4795 2 ай бұрын
@@junkvista61Don’t move to Italy then. There are 12 volcanoes in Italy and nine are considered active. One of these volcanoes is a supervolcano! One volcano, about an hour from Rome is the Colli Albani, which is dormant.
@junkvista61
@junkvista61 2 ай бұрын
@@enkisdaughter4795 But I live near San Andreas earth quake line! Where is safe place with no wars or natural disasters?
@wandapease-gi8yo
@wandapease-gi8yo 27 күн бұрын
@@junkvista61I live in Portland with constant knowledge of the BIG ONE. My brother lies on the Coast where the local cities will disappear. We both survive on the hope it won’t happen in our lifetimes!
@junkvista61
@junkvista61 26 күн бұрын
@@wandapease-gi8yo Nobody know for sure the timing but they said "eventually" it will happen.
@mdsfo
@mdsfo 7 ай бұрын
Like many, I've always been fascinated by Pompeii and ancient Rome as well. So like us in some ways and yet so different. Today, I live in an area with several active volcanoes, Washington State. We not only have these ring of fire volcanoes, but a major subduction zone. Unlike the ancients, we understand what all this means and yet we live here. Odd, isn't it? Anyway that Pompeiian baker may have survived. Bread with his stamp has been excavated elsewhere according to another source. Yes, they signed their bread!
@Meggypoo1983
@Meggypoo1983 6 ай бұрын
Washington State is beautiful, but I couldn't live there; I'd be too afraid of the Cascadia Fault. It's been quiet for a long time, but the next time that thing ruptures, WA isn't going to look so beautiful anymore.
@KathleenGreer-hk6yl
@KathleenGreer-hk6yl 6 ай бұрын
I think people who made a decision to leave early on stood a chance of making it out of there. However, it seems to be human nature that we want to "wait and see." You can't always wait for more information in catastrophic situations. Waiting too long to make a decision can take your life and those of your family.
@LuvBorderCollies
@LuvBorderCollies 6 ай бұрын
Artifacts like the baked bread, and really the whole area of Pompeii and Herculaneum, remind us those former residents were just like us. People engaged in everyday life of working, trading, just making a living. Then suddenly gone.
@Copeandseethe822
@Copeandseethe822 3 ай бұрын
Not odd. Just dumb.
@deannacallahan2579
@deannacallahan2579 7 ай бұрын
Probably the biggest warning sign of an imminent eruption would be harmonic tremors; I'm surprised the documentary didn't even mention that, considering how much they monitor both volcanoes.
@KathleenGreer-hk6yl
@KathleenGreer-hk6yl 6 ай бұрын
There was no doubt that serious tremors and quakes had occurred quite often. I read that earthquake repairs were in progress at the time of the 79 AD eruption.
@Phoenixkb222
@Phoenixkb222 2 ай бұрын
You're comment is strange​@@spectre-8
@martinavaslovik3433
@martinavaslovik3433 Ай бұрын
Yes, I was thinking that same thing, thank you.
@yensid4294
@yensid4294 7 ай бұрын
Even with all the dramatic flourishes some people are complaining about, it was interesting to see the geologic explanation of what causes an eruption & the steps the authorities are taking to monitor the volcanic activity to have an early warning system in place. They have been trying to do the same on the US west coast regarding earthquakes & tsunamis. We also have several volcanoes here. Mt. Ranier in WA, Mt. Hood in OR, Mt. Mazama (Crater Lake) in OR & Mt. St. Helens in WA. Calif has 29 including Mt. Shasta. Monitoring them & gathering data is important.
@Lessinath
@Lessinath 6 ай бұрын
Geologists here. When talking to the general public, I'll often include a compelling story or a bit of drama just to keep people a bit more engaged. It also helps to ask people questions, as most people cannot absorb information for an hour continuously without breaks or some kind of feedback. (Basic lecture structure helps too. It should be to tell them what you're going to tell them, tell them, and then tell them what you told them.)
@josephmc57
@josephmc57 Ай бұрын
coming on Oct 28th or so...the 4 gas giants will form a square, with earth closest to the sun, will be alone, in front of the sun...same planetary alignment as 79AD when this happened. I suspect many volcanoes world wide will be popping off...heads up as I'll be watching
@dttttt
@dttttt 7 ай бұрын
We visited the Pompeii exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago and they talked about the increased activity, and said if you want to see Pompeii in person, maybe don't wait to go. Go soon.
@Meggypoo1983
@Meggypoo1983 6 ай бұрын
Oh man I've been to that museum twice and was NOT disappointed! Awesome exhibits there. And yeah I was thinking the same thing, like "I guess if I want to see all the cool sites in Italy, I should go soon..."
@antonellacastelli6770
@antonellacastelli6770 Ай бұрын
Non portate sfiga per favore😮
@mascadadelpantion8018
@mascadadelpantion8018 7 ай бұрын
One of the best documentaries you can find on youtube
@merrillsunderland8662
@merrillsunderland8662 7 ай бұрын
The last time I was this early I was flipping on the TV at 7 AM to watch Sesame Street and 321 contact
@colbyr7811
@colbyr7811 7 ай бұрын
I ain't even follow them and I'm here already somehow
@katherinekinnaird4408
@katherinekinnaird4408 7 ай бұрын
I'm " better late that ever " lady.
@accidentalheadclunkers8517
@accidentalheadclunkers8517 7 ай бұрын
Captain Kangaroo and Great Space Coaster
@traumatech75
@traumatech75 7 ай бұрын
321 Contact is the answer!!
@chamranhoum3160
@chamranhoum3160 7 ай бұрын
@@accidentalheadclunkers8517😂😂
@curtyeomans8446
@curtyeomans8446 6 ай бұрын
Keep in mind the people had no idea Vesuvius was a volcano so it was easier for it to catch Pompeii off guard. Scientists know a lot more about volcanism now than they even knew when Mt St Helen’s erupted in 1980 so it might be possible to give people at least a few days notice before either volcano erupts. That may not be a lot of warning time, but it’s better than nothing
@rockweiler777
@rockweiler777 7 ай бұрын
This episode was a blast.
@lindaseel9986
@lindaseel9986 7 ай бұрын
🌋🌋
@moncaman1
@moncaman1 6 ай бұрын
Excellent watch...🌎✌️...
@_andrewvia
@_andrewvia 7 ай бұрын
NOVA has a history and reputation for producing excellent documentaries, however, I have noticed that, in recent years, the background music has moved from a solid foundation of instrumentation that piques and keeps one's interest, toward the lower-grade "Are There Aliens Among Us" shows, with their horror/thriller sounds and music.
@betty5064
@betty5064 3 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for this facinating documentary. Particular thanks to all the people who explained the geology of these volvanoes so clearly, and all those associated with the program. The people of Naples are taking a big risk. Hope it works out well.
@cherielk1975
@cherielk1975 7 ай бұрын
I was on the island of Hawaii during the 2018 eruption, it was awesome and scary. We were evacuated from our community because it was coming our way when it made a sharp right turn and filled Green Lake. Green Lake was a fresh water lake formed from a crater from a long ago eruption. More than 750 homes were lost, many of which were strictly vacation homes and AirBnB. A large mango farm that produced 80% of the island’s source of the fruit was destroyed. The warm pounds was over run and lost. The losses of properties and currently uninhabitable properties are great and some people got no help for various reasons. One of the memorable things Civil Defense guy said was a warning of boulders the size of refrigerators should there be an eruption at the summit of Kilauea. Anyways, I now live in Brooklyn NY.
@LilyGazou
@LilyGazou 4 ай бұрын
That’s a big change. I don’t think I could ever move back to Brooklyn.
@cherielk1975
@cherielk1975 4 ай бұрын
@@LilyGazou I moved back to be closer to my brother, it’s easier and more possible to pay $29 than $900 to get to Boston. I’m in the Coney Island neighborhood and it’s ok. Next week I gotta dye my hair for the mermaid parade, not gonna be in it but it’s time to have fun.
@judyklein3221
@judyklein3221 7 ай бұрын
Fascinating documentary!
@billotto602
@billotto602 5 ай бұрын
Well, with a magnetic shift in progress, volcanic eruptions & earthquakes are going to be happening more than anyone has ever seen in a lifetime. Anybody living in an earthquake prone area or near a volcano might just want to consider a change of scenery.
@jlschliebener4658
@jlschliebener4658 4 ай бұрын
There's always magnetic shifts
@Sashazur
@Sashazur Ай бұрын
Magnetic pole shifts have no effect on volcanoes and vice versa.
@IamayMizono
@IamayMizono 6 ай бұрын
I haven't slept in almost 24 hours, so when I heard that volcanologists had a more "hands on" way to check on volcanoes I panicked thinking they stick their hands into the volcanoes!
@dukeofthedance8062
@dukeofthedance8062 Ай бұрын
You gotta be kidding. 1st, why were you up 24hrs, and 2nd, in that state of mind, you actually thought human beings were putting their hands into liquid stone for a "hands on" way of "checking them"? That's amazing. Never heard of such a thing but it did make me laugh. Driving home from vacation once, just hyped to get home, take a HOT shower and sleep in own bed vs a tent in Grand Canyon AZ, I drove 23hrs straight to get back home, only stopping for gas and going to the bathroom in poweraid bottles. Never got tired from the excitement of taking a shower after 9 long days of hiking, I was very dirty, but getting home, I tried calling family to let them know I'd made it safe, but I couldn't use my cellphone. No matter WHAT, I *_couldn't_* make it work. Kept putting in area codes when it didn't need them, even trying contacts, I just couldn't get it to work period to simply call out. Kept thinking "what would you do if you had to dial 911, this is nuts!" Looking at in my hands, it looked foreign in my frustration trying to make it call someone, but it was like something I didn't even know what it's function is. Gave up after 10 mins, I tried *hard* then skipped the shower (ugh), laid on bed, never waking up for any the 7 alarms I'd set two mins apart, missing work by 4hrs as no call no show. Work knew I was coming back from vacation so they were very forgiving but wow. That 23hrs was sure something else. Towards the end (and I'd been awake longer than that, but that's just how long the drive home was) things were getting really weird in a not so good way, not just the phone. Truthfully in that state, it was good I was home. People doing stunts as I did are just as irresponsible as people drinking and driving. I shouldn't have done that even if I did make it home safe. A 4-6hr nap would have helped but I pushed through, adrenaline rising higher and higher the closer I got home. But I was NOT myself and even felt slightly intoxicated except I don't drink at all not being a fan of it. But whoa was that something else. It's funny as a kid, I would have been fine. You know, you and your buddies in grade school have sleep overs for the weekend, have contests to stay up for 48hrs or longer, just goofing off, but in older age, going without sleep or sleep deprivation can be VERY dangerous. I couldn't use a cellphone stone cold sober! It was so frustrating yet funny at the same time too. I knew what was happening. Just total confusion. So really upon that reflection, I can *_totally_* see how you might have thought that. I get it now. It'd just been a while since doing that and had forgotten.
@IamayMizono
@IamayMizono Ай бұрын
@@dukeofthedance8062 I have insomnia, that's why I was up for over 24 hours 😂 great story too!
@french1956
@french1956 7 ай бұрын
Five years old when this was produced. The tectonic activity has increased remarkably since 2019.
@bella1632
@bella1632 7 сағат бұрын
This documentary is so far the best i watched about volcanoes. Very well explained.
@RogerWKnight
@RogerWKnight 7 ай бұрын
Here is the problem with evacuating 3 million people from around Campi Flegrei: We get everyone out of the way. Turning Pozzuoli and Naples into ghost towns. Then days go by. Weeks. A month. People are going to want to go back to their homes. To their jobs. They are going to get antsy. Irritated. We've seen this in Grindavik. At Mt. St. Helens, even with the huge bulge on the side of the mountain that can only be caused by a huge force, people were camping out in the Blue Zone because it was "safer" than the Red Zone, even though the bulge made St. Helens into a giant Claymore Mine pointed right in their direction. That Sunday, local residents were scheduled to go back into the area to retrieve more belongings from their homes. The next Monday after that, lumber crews were scheduled to go back into the area to continue to work the logging operations. Instead of killing 57, St. Helens would have killed hundreds if the eruption happened several hours or a day later. Simply put, we can predict that a volcanic eruption is immanent, but it can be immanent for weeks or months. Unless Italy wants to impose a tyranny far beyond anything Mussolini or Caligula ever achieved, there is no way we are going to keep 3 million people away from their homes and jobs on the basis of a definite maybe.
@geri8666
@geri8666 5 ай бұрын
In all the years we have had PBS, they have never lost their acc uracy, taste, and respect for their viewers. You have the confidence that any show they stream is worth watching.
@nokandu5684
@nokandu5684 Ай бұрын
Except anything political.. or contrary to the status quo narrative.
@theedesp
@theedesp 7 ай бұрын
I love NOVA too but your channel has such low volume.I even tried a sound booster to no avail. Will you please increase the volume control? I'd really like to watch many of your videos. Thanks
@MrCarlos1062
@MrCarlos1062 7 ай бұрын
Use closed caption 👍🏼
@julierobertson148
@julierobertson148 Ай бұрын
I continue to be impressed by how many objects and actions already existing in the environment can be used to provide precisely the information we need to predict natural phenomena. The use of the sound produced by waves against the shore as a means to locate and track magma chambers is nothing less than brilliant.
@CaliforniaBushman
@CaliforniaBushman 5 ай бұрын
Living in a beachhouse in SoCal years ago, I'll never forget the shaking "thunk" of the bigger ocean waves collapsing on the beach. Luca is a genius to think of using this along with super sensitive seismometers to build a 3D Magma Chamber Map. Potentially saving millions of Italian lives.
@deborahpeeples1439
@deborahpeeples1439 2 ай бұрын
In the book "Isaac's Storm" (about the early 1900s Galveston hurricane), it was the heavy pounding of the waves that got his attention that something was brewing out at sea. Technology has real benefits and I'm not antitech, but there's something to be said for sensitivity to nature's communications.
@meridien52681
@meridien52681 7 ай бұрын
Hats off and a solemn thought for the person who filmed the pyroclastic flow bearing down on them.....
@LilyGazou
@LilyGazou 4 ай бұрын
In future, drones can do that and upload live.
@tylerpiret2712
@tylerpiret2712 7 ай бұрын
A new good documentary? Let’s get it!
@baroquejen
@baroquejen 7 ай бұрын
I was in Naples for a few days and if they all had to evacuate in a day it would be mass hysteria and maybe like 10000 people would make it out. It is so crowded and the streets are narrow. You would have to walk out and you wouldn't make it in time. I could never live there. It was a great city, though - if not for the volcano I would love it.
@waxwinged_hound
@waxwinged_hound 7 ай бұрын
22:00 "you are probably kill-ed." I was not expecting to laugh during this documentary, but that was amazing. I'm going to pronounce it that way (in casual conversation anyways) from now on.
@jennrat2982
@jennrat2982 6 ай бұрын
I read this before I got to that part..I wanna use it too..😂
@Silver-Ellipsis
@Silver-Ellipsis 6 ай бұрын
PBS is a national treasure.
@tamarakindle73
@tamarakindle73 3 ай бұрын
This was very good. Thank you NOVA.
@geenadasilva9287
@geenadasilva9287 7 ай бұрын
Viva Napoli! no other city in Europe faces the challenges it faces. Crazy place, but i love the place very deeply.
@LilyGazou
@LilyGazou 4 ай бұрын
It looks so beautiful.
@davidsavage6227
@davidsavage6227 7 ай бұрын
Amazing genius who developed the ocean wave sounding system should be given the Nobel Prize. Incredible! What about using bridges, runways or other things that produce widespread, penetrating sounds?
@MarioP9511
@MarioP9511 Ай бұрын
The second threat it's the number 1 threat not only to Naples but to all Europe, because it's a Super volcano, and it's imminent it's explosion. Campi Flegrei with a city on the top it's craters.
@oldschoolman1444
@oldschoolman1444 7 ай бұрын
This episode is four years old. I've seen this one before.
@sharimeline3077
@sharimeline3077 7 ай бұрын
Would you like a gold star or something?
@mikalin9286
@mikalin9286 7 ай бұрын
It says feb 20, 2019 at the start- I’m just glad they post them for free even if it’s years later.
@oldschoolman1444
@oldschoolman1444 7 ай бұрын
@@sharimeline3077 Yes! =)
@donise8406
@donise8406 7 ай бұрын
They talk about giving people time to escape a eruption. None of them live in Florida and see what happens when only a couple hundred people try to escape a hurricane.
@dukeofthedance8062
@dukeofthedance8062 Ай бұрын
There's nothing I've ever found more dangerous than people running for their lives in panic. I was at the Chiefs parade and that's exactly how everyone got injured. It wasn't from the shooter, he hit a woman and was tackled, but the other 40 or more people were injured by the crowd itself, that's why you don't see it being talked about but I was there. I saw it. That mob.. they looked like orcs from lord of the rings. Just one thought only "RUN FOR YOUR LIFE!" and that's even what the police and military guys told me. They screamed RUN FOR YOUR LIFE and not knowing where to run, nowhere was safe, I laughed out loud both times because I hate being yelled at, and nobody in this world had EVER said or screamed anything like that to me in whole life. They caused the panic. Those people meant to keep the peace only made it a thousand times worse. I saved 2 little kids from being ripped in half, I'm going to write it all out one day, because I was RIGHT there. Since then, I'll never go anywhere with a large group of people unless back is against a large structure or wall. People in utter panic mode like wild animals won't run towards an object they know they can't push through or break down. They flow like water into other areas with less resistance. It was truly the most horrible thing I've ever seen with two eyes, and once as a kid I saw a guys throat get ripped out with a claw hammer at a party. I thought that was bad but wow. Mobs. Unbelievable what those fans did. And I mean this too, this is why they haven't done any cartoon or animates sequences of what happened. It was the crowd who hurt everyone. And nobody yells at me to run for my life so I didn't run anywhere. I took cover behind a concrete barrier and was talking to people with their eyes squeezed shut, bawling, trying to help (I wasn't scared, Im old and if I die that's fine) telling them "It's ok, it's ok, they got the guy, open your eyes, you need to move, follow those people, but everything is OK!" and most understood and did run off in a daze, but some didn't or couldn't listen. If the dude or someone else was there and walked around that corner, he would mowed all of us down, 50 or more people, all with eyes squeezed shut like nothing I'd ever seen before.. Sure am glad the authorities screamed at us to run for our lives right? No mental trauma there, right?
@robertglennienz
@robertglennienz Ай бұрын
Great documentary. They only left out one question, that admittedly the authorities may not yet be ready to answer: Can 3 million people be evacuated based on the existing infrastructure, with the best warnings before the eruption starts?
@gimmethepinkelephant3685
@gimmethepinkelephant3685 4 ай бұрын
It's not a question of "IF" Naples will become the next Pompeii, but when. And no, you can't predict it. And this is a perfect example as to why people shouldn't build cities next to volcanoes...lol!
@thareallaura77
@thareallaura77 6 ай бұрын
I commend the honesty in this video. Too many currently wont agree. You guys can see magma flow using Firms Fire map.
@sjferguson
@sjferguson 6 ай бұрын
We can always count on NOVA to release quality, educational content. I've been a fan since I was a kid. Thank you for everything you do to continue to educate and inform.
@DulceN
@DulceN 2 ай бұрын
I very much understand the attachment people feel to their surroundings and the costs of moving, finding jobs, starting a new business someplace else, etc., but given the historical precedent, what Vulcanology tells us and the present level of activity, getting out of that area should be part of everyone’s short term plans.
@allenra530
@allenra530 5 ай бұрын
One mistake that they made in this documentary was to focus solely on Campi Flegrei. Like at Yellowstone, there are several calderas along the shore. There is plenty of evidence that the bay itself is another caldera. An eruption could occur in any of the adjacent craters, but the one with most of the hot springs, fumaroles and geysers is Campi Flegrei.
@cdfdesantis699
@cdfdesantis699 4 ай бұрын
Campi Flegrei, a supervolcano, is becoming more & more active, & Italian authorities are working overtime developing evacuation plans for Naples & surrounding areas. Most likely, an eruption will be only a partial one. However, should the supervolcano produce a catastrophic total eruption, the entire Italian peninsula will become a volcanic wasteland.
@nanabutner
@nanabutner 7 ай бұрын
Even if Naples is warned---where will they go-- how many can be evacuated safely? Will one volcanic eruption trigger the other volcano to also erupt?
@LilyGazou
@LilyGazou 4 ай бұрын
Lots of empty towns inland.
@Thepourdeuxchanson
@Thepourdeuxchanson 6 ай бұрын
Between NOVA and the excellent BBC and ITV channels, we get some excellent television.
@fernmoncrief6501
@fernmoncrief6501 7 ай бұрын
So millions can escape? That's great. But how? Great documentary that left me with questions.
@koriw1701
@koriw1701 7 ай бұрын
I never knew that they got the bodies of the victims by pouring plaster into the cavities left behind by the bodies. That explains why we are able to see facial features. But seeing the child's jaw in one of the bodies hit me deeply. It just boggles the mind to think of how many people live directly on top of a caldera. They say repeatedly that they "can save Naples," but that's a misnomer. There's no saving the town, only the inhabitants. The best way to survive Campi Flegrei is to move off the capstone and get away from the area where the pyroclastic flow is likely to emanate. As for the British scientist who goes down to the fumarole to take readings; isn't there some scientific instrument to do that for them? If I can have CO2 detector in my home, surely there are expensive meters that can get the data he is interested in without rappelling down into the mouth of an active volcano!
@LilyGazou
@LilyGazou 4 ай бұрын
Yes. Drones could fly in to test things.
@Ghtzwehat
@Ghtzwehat 7 ай бұрын
Yeah this is truly crazy. I love this channel.
@jeanah685
@jeanah685 3 ай бұрын
A city built in a caldera is a disaster waiting to happen. 😢
@Delta19G
@Delta19G 7 ай бұрын
Got to have me some documentaries And its a hour old sweet
@lesliecarr312
@lesliecarr312 2 ай бұрын
There is no such thing as a good way to die. Only worse ways to die. A lot of archaeologists are frustrated and disappointed that they can't study the bones in the plaster casts, but they are extremely revealing of their last moments of life. There are plenty of skeletons to study, so the disappointments are minimal. We need to see the faces of the worst and most extreme agony to make us think about the inescapable terror and pain those people went through. They were cooked in their togas and drowned in 1,200°F dirt. A really nasty way to die.
@dgatsf
@dgatsf 4 ай бұрын
I have heard reports or rumors that the earthquake activity has really ramped up in Naples and along the coast.
@leacipurr
@leacipurr 7 ай бұрын
I was at the top in 2004 and there was smoke coming out. Scared me me silly.
@always-alicia
@always-alicia 7 ай бұрын
Shout out to Pliny the Younger! Such an awesome beer, um I mean historic figure.
@derpett9999
@derpett9999 7 ай бұрын
Can drones be used instead of people to get down into hard to reach places of the volcano?
@litneyloxan
@litneyloxan 7 ай бұрын
Would have to be made out of components/material able to withstand the immense heat, a normal one would melt quick
@derpett9999
@derpett9999 7 ай бұрын
True, I wonder what kind of material could be used so that it would withstand the heat while also staying light enough tk fly and have a good battery life.
@LBetsy326
@LBetsy326 7 ай бұрын
@JustIcelandic is worth checking out. He uses his drones to get volcano footage in Iceland!
@mm-yt8sf
@mm-yt8sf 7 ай бұрын
were volcanic eruptions common enough in the empire that people would be familiar with what one is? or would it happen so rarely and with many generations in between that unless one was a well read historical scholar perhaps most people didn't know about exploding mountains and lava?
@waxwinged_hound
@waxwinged_hound 7 ай бұрын
I would assume most people at that time did not know that some mountains explode. There were probably no eruptions in living memory. Stratovolcanoes like Vesuvius can be silent for centuries.
@DrachenGothik666
@DrachenGothik666 4 ай бұрын
It's possible that they mostly knew, since Mount Aetna has been in continuous eruption for centuries & that's within the old Roman Empire borders. There's Santorini, as well. Italy is chock full of multiple volcanoes, so it would surprise me if the Romans weren't familiar with the possibility.
@fumrious
@fumrious 7 ай бұрын
Awesome! Reminds me of the volcano documentary that was narrated by Stacy Keach
@Miss_Mellie_Girl
@Miss_Mellie_Girl 4 ай бұрын
Why would anyone want to live near a time bomb like this?
@quietone748
@quietone748 7 ай бұрын
The Archaeologist explains that those are not bodies we are seeing... does he not consider a skeleton the remains of someone? All the casts still have the bones of the individuals who lost their lives in them.
@lrp71
@lrp71 4 ай бұрын
Did you listen to the description? There were only voids left in the rocks where bodies had once been. Researchers poured plaster into those voids to create casts showing what the bodies looked like when they died. It's far easier to visualize their poses when they are casts, rather than looking at the empty space. If there had still been bones inside those rocks, I am certain that archaeologists would've removed the bones rather than pouring plaster all over them.
@Sashazur
@Sashazur Ай бұрын
The voids were mostly empty. Some of the casts do have a few bones but in general all organic material decayed away centuries ago.
@LeaveMyFreedomBe
@LeaveMyFreedomBe 12 күн бұрын
Visited Pompeii. Found it quite lackluster to be honest. If you think you are going to see people frozen in ash, you will be disappointed. They removed them. They are stored in secure areas.
@c.s.7266
@c.s.7266 Ай бұрын
I'd be moving if I was that close. Scary 😨
@bdr1968
@bdr1968 5 ай бұрын
Excellent film. What a volcanic nightmare.
@kenchesnut4425
@kenchesnut4425 5 ай бұрын
Yo..the shot of them going down into the top of Vesuvis...Wow..didnt know it was that huge...Scary... glad i don't live near it
@robertab929
@robertab929 3 ай бұрын
Or even better to avoid tragedy. People should move out of Neapoli.
@Swansong-recorders
@Swansong-recorders 7 ай бұрын
Agreed 💯 % i love NOVA
@languay1
@languay1 7 ай бұрын
To much loud ominous sounds/music distracted me from the speaker. I couldn't watch the entire show.
@bevinboulder5039
@bevinboulder5039 6 ай бұрын
I always wondered why the people in Pompeii didn't leave the area since they had ample warning of an eruption and then our cruise ship sailed past Stromboli. Their experience of volcanoes was only from this small island whose eruptions mostly produce cinders. Recently it's been putting out lava but still nothing compared to Vesuvius.
@rockinscarlet
@rockinscarlet 4 ай бұрын
Well, they probably didn’t not know what was going on. It was 79 A.D..
@Sashazur
@Sashazur Ай бұрын
There were earthquakes, a huge scary black cloud getting bigger and a rain of ash. Maybe they didn’t know what was coming or why, but there were obvious reasons to GTFO. Most people did leave before it was too late. Historians think about 13% died.
@johnkemple
@johnkemple 7 ай бұрын
Certainly every earthquake near Vesuvius does not mean the Magma has broken through someplace. Though I understand they want to err on the side of caution. Of course those studying the volcano need continuous funding to protect the people of the area.
@LBetsy326
@LBetsy326 7 ай бұрын
No, its not that simple. Much like Cascadia, the volcanoes in Italy result from a subduction zone in the East (rather then west). The fault is NOT simple either and varies regionally. There's a great documentary on Amazon Prime that explores the geology of Italy. Campi Flegrei is a super volcano so the theory that this is a hot spot volcano. The question with Vesuvius is whether its feed from subduction or an offshoot of Campi Flegrei or both.
@howardkoor9365
@howardkoor9365 6 ай бұрын
Very interesting take on history
@methinnk2.063
@methinnk2.063 3 ай бұрын
Any day now.
@shewolfsiren
@shewolfsiren Ай бұрын
Pyroclastic Flow = Pyrolanche (fire avalanche)
@michellereed5638
@michellereed5638 6 ай бұрын
Niva is an excellent science program, and is the best reporting whatever information they have to offer. Now about this particular documentary. As far as "evacuating people"--I do not think it is possible to evacuate 3 million people in an advance warning of less than one month or more. Anything less than this, there is gridlock as people panic and try to escape. A 24-48 hour notice, and if it were me, I would shelter in place and just die where I sit. why bother? I would just as soon take a sleeping pill and pleasantly just sleep through and not wake up. There had to be signs for days in 70 AD when Mt. Vesuvius blew. Those who heeded those early warnings obviously got out with their lives. We will never know how many died in the harbor, who were boiled alive, and or drowned in the escape attempt--as those corpses floated and or rotted away. I imagine it was into the thousands. Unless people left a good week before the events took place, people did not get very far because of conditions. When conditions got so bad and they saw what was happening, about 2000 people figured it was no use, and sheltered in place. In reality, probably very few really got out, when the whole thing started. When Mt. St. Helens was acting up, there were signs for months--but people did not want to leave their businesses! They expected scientists to pinpoint an exact day, hour and minute! So no, they did not want to leave the mountain. Basically hardly anyone left at all. Anyone who was forced to leave threatened to sue. Therefore people came back. As a result there were deaths when Mt. St. Helens finally did blow. This resulted in the death of a National Geographic employee too--who was just too close photographing the mountain--today an observatory is named after him in the area of the mountain. I have been there. Just like the Mt. St. Helens incident, the people living and making a living all around that area in Naples are not going to just pack up and leave because of volcano warning. They will scoff, laugh, and say: "Been living here all my life, nothing has happened, and I am not going to lose my house, and business by leaving....." By the time the volcano does blow, they will be the first ones panicking and blocking the roads with their vehicles and will die. This is human nature. Those who are not so materialistic and place a higher value on human life, will heed the warnings a evacuate early, if given enough time and can beat the crowds. It is simple as that.
@lvelez1999
@lvelez1999 7 ай бұрын
The Scientists should be wearing masks.
@Qiriyie
@Qiriyie Ай бұрын
I'm a bit disturbed by the fact that this feels like a remake of the National Geographic special from 1987.. In the beginning I thought it was the same one but with new narration, because it even begins the same way! It's like "in the shadow of Vesuvius - 35 anniversary edition" (I've watched that episode so many times... )
@lpcookie1
@lpcookie1 3 ай бұрын
A very timely documentary. Naples is shaking up. I'd leave now, by whatever means possible.
@anymongus
@anymongus 7 ай бұрын
Please explain why people have to make their way down into the volcanoes in order to measure gases. We have the ability to go to the moon and mars- why don't we have drones that can safely retrieve data??
@LBetsy326
@LBetsy326 7 ай бұрын
Yes, stability issues. Also visual monitoring is important as we see things that drones don't pick up on. Drones melt and can be dramatically impacted by winds and other gases.
@DrachenGothik666
@DrachenGothik666 4 ай бұрын
They have to get the samples of gas at the exit of the fumarole pretty much in person to get the best samples, as it's at the base of a cliff. Hard to fly a drone in there.
@jimanderson3549
@jimanderson3549 5 ай бұрын
It is one thing to live in an area where the dangers are unknown but to live in a KNOWN deadly area? Makes no sense at all. In reality, the Italian government should warn all the people in Naples to move to a safer area! If they choose not to... Oh well!
@aquavoce
@aquavoce 6 ай бұрын
A positive comparison from then and now is that today, we are more aware that a volcano, like other natural threats are dangerous and that we know that we must be cautious. The other aspect is that the population will be prepared on what to do. Before it was so terrible because even though it was a horrible explosion, people stayed not knowing that the whole mountain would crumble down. Many died because they had no idea on what to do.
@robertab929
@robertab929 3 ай бұрын
3 volcanos, not 2.
@sirensynapse5603
@sirensynapse5603 Ай бұрын
At end of video there is a 3 year old with a cell phone in her hand...maybe it's high time for that volcano to do its thing...
@RetiredSailor60
@RetiredSailor60 7 ай бұрын
I was supposed to have visited Pompeii in 1995 while deployed on USS Whidbey Island LSD 41 in support of NATO Bosnia crisis.
@stevenweaver3386
@stevenweaver3386 Ай бұрын
Now, Campi Fleigri is showing signs of an imminent eruption, to the point geologists at the INGV are advising immediate evacuation of Pozzioli
@PeaceChanel
@PeaceChanel 7 ай бұрын
Peace.. Shalom.. Salam.. Namaste 🙏🏻 😊 🌈 ✌ ☮ ❤
@LilyGazou
@LilyGazou 4 ай бұрын
Chanel Nice perfume
@Yourmission9
@Yourmission9 6 ай бұрын
Campy fligray, an absolute legend
@DrachenGothik666
@DrachenGothik666 4 ай бұрын
*Campi Flegrei
@taproom113
@taproom113 7 ай бұрын
Viva NOVA! ^v^
@ReefCraig
@ReefCraig 2 ай бұрын
its always pompeii this and pompeii that, what about herculanium
@jeremyconnor414
@jeremyconnor414 3 ай бұрын
Please more volcanoes
@jasonjmack
@jasonjmack 6 ай бұрын
So interesting how they are able to preserve the last moments of those poor people..how crazy it must have been.it is mother nature at her most powerful might.
@AlmaMercer
@AlmaMercer 3 ай бұрын
Anything's possible
@EMILY_RACHEL_
@EMILY_RACHEL_ 6 ай бұрын
14:00 this guys a cool dude
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