Such footage makes it hard to believe that it takes millions of years to wash down a mountain! 3 hours of this show and the alpes where history...Great stuff, thanks a lot!
you probably dont care but does anybody know of a way to log back into an instagram account? I was stupid lost my account password. I would love any tips you can give me!
@Rhett Myles Thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and I'm trying it out now. Takes a while so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
This is a perfect example of “water being the enemy”. The geologic engineering firm I worked at for 10 years, talked about the power of water all the time. The boulders being pushed along are larger than some homes. Give a little trickle of water a path and it will end up looking like this. I love Mother Nature❤️
Those rocks are far from the size of houses biggest rocks in that vid look to be about 10 tons. A rock even the size of a small house would be at least 500 to 1000 tons..
@@cruzanmongoose I'll go with your guestimate. In the vid he has ~4x4x2 and 50T. It did look like 4 feet x 4 feet x 2 feet (not meters)( there were branches and leaves in the foreground to give a little scale) and definately not 50 tons or tonnes.
Absolutely mind blowing the amount of force needed to move boulders that size. I can see over time how this debris could change the course of the river it empties into. Thank you for sharing.
I like the way you filmed this video, the angles were great! I enjoy seeing those huge rocks tumble down. It's kind of hypnotic, lol Keep the videos coming! 👍
Das Wasser hat soviel Kraft! Bin erst vor ein paar Tagen auf Ihre Videos gestoßen und bin verblüfft, was da im Illgraben abgeht ! Vielen Dank und ich werde weiter mit Begeisterung und Erstaunen hier zusehen 👍
I'm always amazed at how little water there is at the start of some of these flows, particularly this one. I think the 04.06.20 flow is the first one I've seen that had a lot of water at the start of the flow.
Total power right there. Being able to move boulders the size of semi trucks is no easy task and this river is moving them like pebbles. Raw power of nature.
Holeee Christmas ! The size of those boulders being tossed around like ping pong balls is mind boggling... This is incredible ! Water is truly a most fascinating and powerful substance .. Great video share !!! Watched the entire 15 minutes in awe !
Respect for the power of Water and Gravity. This is how the World is carved out with the Migration of Rocks down stream to try and make a level playing field, lol. John Australia. Thumbs up.
Those huge boulders don’t seem reappear once they’ve dropped over the concrete edge. Is there a really deep ditch there where they accumulate, or are they just being pulverised and moving on as smaller pieces?
واد فيه الحجر هذا جزاء بني البشر كي طغى وكفر ومزال يالحقنا اشحال من ابتلاء أكثر إذ لانتوب ونستغفر هذه حقيقة والحق مر كله واقع وليس فقط نشعر وإياكم تقلون راه يتمسخر هذه عقلية الذر وانا في حالي هكذا فالكبر ....
Now we must compliment the Swiss people, who manage to direct the course of such a monster.. There are countries in the world where such torrents are left to find their own way down.. Right through a village....
Ich habe ein Chalet in unmittelbarer Nähe dieses Illgrabens. Oft wenn es nachts geregnet hat, hört man das Gerumpel und Gepolter der großen Steinböcke so laut, daß man nicht schlafen kann.
Perhaps I've studied a bit too much Forensic Pathology, but that kind of debris flow is perfect for 'disposal' ... What goes it will certainly not be the same as that reaching the river estuary ...
it amazes me that the amount falling in compared to the small stream coming out. can you explain that. where is all the water going when it falls over the concrete wall.
all that stuff is coming from somewhere i would want to trace it back to the source to see what the rain did after that rock and dirt has been moved out
Is this why Europeans are so great at baking? This is very much the consistency of any kind of baking slurry, batter. Gotta get air in there first... but not whipped... more hand folded upon itself. Geez Im hungry...
He visto varios video de estos movimientos de material, ( y mejor pasar por tonto una vez que no toda la vida ) , ¿ QUÉ CLASE DE MATERIAL ES EL QUE SE REVUELVE CON EL AGUA, PARA MOVER SEMEJANTES PIEDRAS COMO SI FUERAN CAJAS DE FÓSFOROS, 🤔
I see a few of the big boulders moving in the foreground. Are many of the big rocks falling into the eroded hole under the waterfall and not coming out again whole? In other words they get struck by subsequent boulders and broken up (and only then continue downstream).
In part but most are not brocken up and go down further, flat in the mud, which is 2 - 3 m deep in the middle. The blocks which brake up are the yellow one because they are more tender, but they are very rare.
Lieber Pierre, meine Glückwunsche über diesen interessanten Video,.. Ich möchte nur gerne wissen, wohin die Rhône fliesst, , zu einem See oder direkt in Richtung Meer? Ich bin interessiert zu wissen, wohin alle Steine gehen. Ich habe auch beobachtet das viel Schlamm dabei mitkommt, so das in einigen Jahren keine Berge mehr da sind. - Endschuldige meinen Deutsch, ich bin Brasilianer aber von Deitschen Eltern, ich Späche gut Deutsch aber das schreiben ist mir noch ein Problem. Im Anfang der 60 Jahren habe ich in der Schweitz studiert, ( 1,1/2 Jahr, im damaligen Knaben Institut Montana, in Zug / Zugerberg, aber es hat mir nicht viel geholfen, und bin wieder nach Brasilien gezogen. Viele liebe Grüsse aus Rio de Janeiro.
That's the key point: the liquid that flow is barely water, it's mostly sand and small rocks, making it having a density close to liquid concrete, so boulders can almost "float" in it.
@@andyanderson6440 you have to remember big machines isn't allowed. Plus gold is frequently into quartz veins. 99% of rocks had no quartz veins and is one type of rock.
@@haseo8244 what, why no big machines ? Where does all that material go? Hell i would make gravel or blocks from that debri , it looks like concrete already.
Not to sound too much like a bourgeois capitalist, does anyone harvest the rocks that are tumbled down? I've watched most, if not all of your videos and it seems like a perfect way to use some of the debris while generating funds for the area. Landscaping, architects, builders, etc. Just curious.
Such footage makes it hard to believe that it takes millions of years to wash down a mountain! 3 hours of this show and the alpes where history...Great stuff, thanks a lot!
you probably dont care but does anybody know of a way to log back into an instagram account?
I was stupid lost my account password. I would love any tips you can give me!
@Trace Darren Instablaster =)
@Rhett Myles Thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and I'm trying it out now.
Takes a while so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Rhett Myles it did the trick and I finally got access to my account again. I'm so happy:D
Thank you so much, you really help me out!
@Trace Darren glad I could help =)
This is a perfect example of “water being the enemy”. The geologic engineering firm I worked at for 10 years, talked about the power of water all the time. The boulders being pushed along are larger than some homes. Give a little trickle of water a path and it will end up looking like this. I love Mother Nature❤️
You can go around the landscape and see that the waters were 400 feet sbove flow now some time before. You can see the rocks it left in its way.
I think in this case slope and gravity kinda helped move things along.
Renee Thompson , Awesome!!!!!
Those rocks are far from the size of houses biggest rocks in that vid look to be about 10 tons. A rock even the size of a small house would be at least 500 to 1000 tons..
@@cruzanmongoose I'll go with your guestimate. In the vid he has ~4x4x2 and 50T. It did look like 4 feet x 4 feet x 2 feet (not meters)( there were branches and leaves in the foreground to give a little scale) and definately not 50 tons or tonnes.
Absolutely mind blowing the amount of force needed to move boulders that size. I can see over time how this debris could change the course of the river it empties into. Thank you for sharing.
I find these videos mesmerizing. The size of the rocks in this one was so cool! Keep them coming.
Watching others from you - but I have never seen such enormous rocks before. WOW! That cement washing through has to be powerful!!
One of these years, someone with a drone is going to capture some amazing video.
Simply 😍 amazing there 😁 are no words. Thank you for sharing. Boulder like?? WOW got love Gods ❤️ beauty. !!!
I like the way you filmed this video, the angles were great! I enjoy seeing those huge rocks tumble down. It's kind of hypnotic, lol Keep the videos coming! 👍
It's a Rocky Horror Show....
It's an amazing world we live in.....when a camera can zoom in so far to capture such detail......Amazing!
I don't know what it is that I like so much about your videos - I'm just very happy you keep making them! From a fan in Canada.
Quebec
Love it
The nature Channel, in today's world i needed that.
Das Wasser hat soviel Kraft! Bin erst vor ein paar Tagen auf Ihre Videos gestoßen und bin verblüfft, was da im Illgraben abgeht ! Vielen Dank und ich werde weiter mit Begeisterung und Erstaunen hier zusehen 👍
I'm always amazed at how little water there is at the start of some of these flows, particularly this one. I think the 04.06.20 flow is the first one I've seen that had a lot of water at the start of the flow.
I love watching these ... I find myself rooting for a couple of the boulders ... come on, you can do it, yeah!
Enjoy watching these type videos. Thanks for the weight estimate on the 50T boulder. Lots of energy being dissipated.
Millions of years to be pushed up, and minutes to come down. Gravity is glorious.
Total power right there. Being able to move boulders the size of semi trucks is no easy task and this river is moving them like pebbles. Raw power of nature.
When Mother Nature moves we must all step back in awe
I love to see this, especially because I grew up in that region. Sweet memories, thank you for the effort. 👍
Totally amazing!!! I could watch this all day!!! Great videos!!
Holeee Christmas ! The size of those boulders being tossed around like ping pong balls is mind boggling... This is incredible ! Water is truly a most fascinating and powerful substance .. Great video share !!! Watched the entire 15 minutes in awe !
Every one of your videos are amazing. Thank you.
That's incredible 😮 and amazingly satisfying 👌 thank you for sharing it with us
I miss right rock.
Those huge boulders are basically floating!!
Such an awesome display of mother nature!!!
Respect for the power of Water and Gravity. This is how the World is carved out with the Migration of Rocks down stream to try and make a level playing field, lol. John Australia. Thumbs up.
I can imagine how often those concrete barriers have to be repaired or redone!
It amazes me how easy those big boulders just roll down the stream. Wow.
Those huge boulders don’t seem reappear once they’ve dropped over the concrete edge. Is there a really deep ditch there where they accumulate, or are they just being pulverised and moving on as smaller pieces?
واد فيه الحجر هذا جزاء بني البشر كي طغى وكفر ومزال يالحقنا اشحال من ابتلاء أكثر إذ لانتوب ونستغفر هذه حقيقة والحق مر كله واقع وليس فقط نشعر وإياكم تقلون راه يتمسخر هذه عقلية الذر وانا في حالي هكذا فالكبر ....
Imagine playing in there as a kid in the flash flood is your last memory...
Boulders are freaking massive, it almost looks like a slurry from a concrete truck
Some are more than 20 metric tons...
Thank You for this amazing video.
I would love to see the origin of all this. It seems like the whole side of a mountain came down. Crazy!
I believe a glacier is the origin but I could be wrong.
the thing is::the one stone is there on the gate it would weigh near 500 pounds there is not enough pressure to move it as the segments come down
definitely one of the best clip about debris flow!
Sehr beeindruckende Brocken von Steinen die da runter kommen.
Wow! That was bound fascinating and frightening!
Huiiii - waren diesmal wieder ein paar ordentliche Kaventsmänner dabei. Tolle Bilder und guter Sound - weiter so!👍
Water, sculptor of our landscape, poet of the wilderness.
I find it amazing how people underestimate the power of water.
You’ve a great camera, man... the power of water....
Thanks for the good work..!
In what country did this Mud Flow take place.? Was this flow caused by Heavy Rain way up river or a Dam Breaking.?
Now we must compliment the Swiss people, who manage to direct the course of such a monster.. There are countries in the world where such torrents are left to find their own way down.. Right through a village....
Ich habe ein Chalet in unmittelbarer Nähe dieses Illgrabens. Oft wenn es nachts geregnet hat, hört man das Gerumpel und Gepolter der großen Steinböcke so laut, daß man nicht schlafen kann.
Ah,so this is how mother nature makes concrete...
Yep, and THIS is how mother nature makes asphalt. czcams.com/video/5ZKoIZHKRUM/video.html
Marble Canyon in Death Valley for instance.
Making little rocks out og big rocks. Incredible photography.
J'adore vidéo top. Merci
Great zoom, great vantage point!
wow, the giant stones and water that never fill up the hole to hell. amazing.
Incredible!
Dios bendito que susto yó si le tengo panicó a esto que sustó el poder del agua
Perhaps I've studied a bit too much Forensic Pathology, but that kind of debris flow is perfect for 'disposal' ...
What goes it will certainly not be the same as that reaching the river estuary ...
I've had similar thoughts. If you fell in, what came out at the bottom would be, at best, unrecognizable, and at worst, invisible.
it amazes me that the amount falling in compared to the small stream coming out. can you explain that. where is all the water going when it falls over the concrete wall.
The Power. The Beauty.
That looks delicious.
Your mind keeps telling you these rocks must be smaller than they appear, because if they are as big as they appear, then the biggest weigh many tons.
Where does this water come from at this time? from a dam, sluice gate open?
all that stuff is coming from somewhere i would want to trace it back to the source to see what the rain did after that rock and dirt has been moved out
The one stubborn boulder on the right who refuses to go with the flow.
Qúísierá saver pordonde se esta yendo eĺ agua xque x ensima nóes
Looks like the cement mixer for the great pyramid of Egypt !!!
Which place ? Country ?
kind of a slow one, but those boulder - massive :) tx
Another super video. 👍
I don’t understand I see giant boulders going over but then smooth flowing out
Is this why Europeans are so great at baking? This is very much the consistency of any kind of baking slurry, batter. Gotta get air in there first... but not whipped... more hand folded upon itself.
Geez Im hungry...
I see a lot of great material that could be used low down on farming land. It's being ground down to smaller sizes. What type of rock is it?
How many rocks can one mountain crap out?😅
Is this happening several times every year?
Awesome, and terrifying.
the thing is::this all happens under a bridge all of the stones that come down the mountains
He visto varios video de estos movimientos de material, ( y mejor pasar por tonto una vez que no toda la vida ) , ¿ QUÉ CLASE DE MATERIAL ES EL QUE SE REVUELVE CON EL AGUA, PARA MOVER SEMEJANTES PIEDRAS COMO SI FUERAN CAJAS DE FÓSFOROS, 🤔
Where does it end up?
I see a few of the big boulders moving in the foreground. Are many of the big rocks falling into the eroded hole under the waterfall and not coming out again whole? In other words they get struck by subsequent boulders and broken up (and only then continue downstream).
In part but most are not brocken up and go down further, flat in the mud, which is 2 - 3 m deep in the middle. The blocks which brake up are the yellow one because they are more tender, but they are very rare.
Мощь воды впечатляет. А говорят камни не плавают.
Amazing video
Where is this? It's really awesome!
Lieber Pierre, meine Glückwunsche über diesen interessanten Video,.. Ich möchte nur gerne wissen, wohin die Rhône fliesst, , zu einem See oder direkt in Richtung Meer? Ich bin interessiert zu wissen, wohin alle
Steine gehen. Ich habe auch beobachtet das viel Schlamm dabei mitkommt, so das in einigen Jahren keine Berge mehr da sind. - Endschuldige meinen Deutsch, ich bin Brasilianer aber von Deitschen Eltern, ich Späche gut Deutsch aber das schreiben ist mir noch ein Problem. Im Anfang der 60 Jahren habe ich in der Schweitz studiert, ( 1,1/2 Jahr, im damaligen Knaben Institut Montana, in Zug / Zugerberg, aber es hat mir nicht viel geholfen, und bin wieder nach Brasilien gezogen. Viele liebe Grüsse aus Rio de Janeiro.
How broken down or finely ground do these stones become by the end of the debris flow?
I never saw boulders "float" before!
That's the key point: the liquid that flow is barely water, it's mostly sand and small rocks, making it having a density close to liquid concrete, so boulders can almost "float" in it.
mother nature makes new land out of mountaines
Mother Nature's giant rock tumbler
A Rolling Rock moment.
THIS ONE IS A HARD ONE TO FIGURE OUT if you don't spend some time at it
Donde va a dar tanta piedra al fondo. O cuanto fondo tiene esa caída de agua.
Is this something that is happening because of deforestation? Has it been happening for a long time?
My thoughts are it’s a glacial melt flow.
It seems like this could be prevented by removing all the mountains.
There's gotta be some gold in there
Nope. Need black sands and it's way too young.
@@haseo8244 well, plenty of aggregate then ,pre crushed.
@@andyanderson6440 you have to remember big machines isn't allowed. Plus gold is frequently into quartz veins. 99% of rocks had no quartz veins and is one type of rock.
@@haseo8244 what, why no big machines ? Where does all that material go? Hell i would make gravel or blocks from that debri , it looks like concrete already.
سبحان الله العظيم
What happens with the huge rocks, when they end up in river Rhone? Are they pulled out with machines?
In 100 Year is the huge rock a sand corn at the beach.
Hello, please look at my new video « Illgraben - Where does all that material go ? »
This rock will block it... no... maybe this one... ooopsss... then this huge one definitely WILL... not...
There is a lot of rock waiting to be crushed for roads in the region.
It's already crushed
God of wonders created!
And when a baby falls in, it becomes Satan's work
Not to sound too much like a bourgeois capitalist, does anyone harvest the rocks that are tumbled down? I've watched most, if not all of your videos and it seems like a perfect way to use some of the debris while generating funds for the area. Landscaping, architects, builders, etc. Just curious.
Yes, there is a gravel facility on the banks of the Rhone near the end of the outflow. You can see it in Google Earth.
Cela arrive combien de fois par année ?
Wow 👍
物理世界での一番の強者は何だろう?あんなに硬くて重い石や岩が水のように流れていく…。
自然の脅威を目の当たりにしました。
A rolling stone gathers no moss.