#4: Atlantis - The Unique Geology of the Azores

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  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2024
  • Apocalypse Episode 4:
    Is there evidence for significant subsidence of the Azores Plateau? Is it possible that sea level has risen more significantly in the region of the Azores than in the rest of the world since the end of the Last Glacial Maximum?
    00:00 Intro
    00:42 Supercontinent Pangaea
    01:29 The Formation of the Plateau
    02:01 Why is The Azores Hotspot so Special?
    03:02 A Lack of Data
    04:12 Isostasy
    07:14 Episodic Hotspot Activity
    10:45 Conclusion
    12:53 Outro
    --------------------
    Full Playlist for the Ten Part Atlantis Series:
    • #1: Atlantis - Found i...
    #1: Atlantis - Found in the Azores
    • #1: Atlantis - Found i...
    #2: Atlantis - Further Detail on Locating the Site
    • #2: Atlantis - Further...
    #3: Atlantis - The Proposed City in More Detail
    • #3: Atlantis - The Pro...
    #5: Atlantis - One of the Four Pillars of Heaven
    • #5: Atlantis - One of ...
    #6: Atlantis - The Sphinx Shows the Way
    • #6: Atlantis - The Sph...
    #7: Atlantis - The Edfu Texts & The Island of the Egg
    • #7: Atlantis - The Edf...
    #8: Atlantis - Geometry, Avebury & The Richat Structure
    • #8: Atlantis - Geometr...
    #9: Atlantis - Avebury, Bimini Road & The Axis Mundi
    • #9: Atlantis - Avebury...
    #10: Atlantis - Mythology & Geodesy a Proposed Timeline
    • #10: Atlantis - Mythol...
    Excerpts from the dialogue of Timaeus:
    odysee.com/@Apocalypse:5/Atla...
    Excerpts from the dialogue of Critias
    odysee.com/@Apocalypse:5/Atla...
    --------------------
    Keith Hunter (The Lost City of Atlantis):
    www.lostagesecrets.com/the-lo...
    --------------------
    INTRO MUSIC:
    Ambient - Revelation by Pinnacle Studio
    Copyright Free

Komentáře • 69

  • @breatheazores4838
    @breatheazores4838 Před 2 lety +15

    I am in the Azores there is a complete lack of history, knowledge, data & even curiosity about all of these strange Islands , most of the 9 Islands are very underdeveloped & there has been little excavation as buildings tend to be one storey with little to no foundations, even on Sao Miguel there are few buildings higher than 2/3 storeys . Your videos are extremely interesting - thank you

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před 2 lety +2

      How easy is it to travel between the 9 islands? Have you ever thought about making some of your own videos of the Pre-Portuguese structures , such as the Pico pyramids, etc...

    • @markcairns9574
      @markcairns9574 Před měsícem

      Would be a great idea if you were to get some pictures of those stepped pyramids from the cardinal points with a plumbline in frame.🙂👍

  • @mikeylatteri
    @mikeylatteri Před 2 lety +6

    Well done connecting the potential explanations. You captured decades of research and shaped a feasible hypothesis. Keep adding to your research and presenting what you find 👏

  • @thefreshvince879
    @thefreshvince879 Před 2 lety +6

    i cant believe there isn't more info on this subject. this literally makes the most sense with the ancient sources and scientfic data. since we are taking the straights into account, thera cannot be atlantis, simply a minonan settlement. also what people need to put into account was that the continent of atlantis was covered in mountains and had volcanoes, and the only place i'd expect to get annihalated overnight would be a place that lies on a volcanic and seismic heavy spot on earth.

  • @hilohattie3681
    @hilohattie3681 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for connecting the dots… still way over my academic preparation yet it is putting together what is available by alternative theorists and seemingly makes a lot of sense. My family came from Azores to Hawaii , another yet discussed hot spot on the planet, which I hope you will discuss in a future episode. Respectively, Thais da Rosa.

  • @Not-Ap
    @Not-Ap Před 2 lety +4

    11:52 pyramids of very similar construction are also on the canary islands and of course in egypt and the americas.

  • @edwardhanson3664
    @edwardhanson3664 Před 2 lety +4

    The large continent (Pangea) would create a cold spot in the middle, upsetting the thermal currents in the mantle, resulting in a plume of magma as the heat transfer from core to surface readjusts for balance. I have always wondered what drove continental breakups, but this makes sense.

  • @jeffborne1
    @jeffborne1 Před 3 lety +3

    Great research! Thanks a lot.

  • @blackouting
    @blackouting Před rokem +2

    You should be awarded Nobel price for all this fantastic work. I only found you now but Im literally trolling through all videos 🤯😱🥳

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před rokem +2

      That's very kind. Somebody with the resources needs to prove if this is the location.

    • @blackouting
      @blackouting Před rokem +1

      @@Apocalypse_Tube Oh, I think you've shown more than enough of this "proof" 😊

  • @MartimusDecimusMeridius
    @MartimusDecimusMeridius Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant watch by the way.

  • @johnassal5838
    @johnassal5838 Před rokem +2

    One implication of eustacy on this scale is that significant isostasy could result. Consider that an average of 140 meters of removed water column would cause the asthenosphere underlying every ocean plate to "want" to rise about 80 meters across the entirety of all ocean plates. Of course not every square kilometer of seafloor can actually rise like that, most could not. Since both the ocean water and the asthenosphere are incompressible this force could be efficiently conveyed hundreds or thousands of kilometers and concentrated upon the thinnest few percent of the ocean basins nearest to spreading faults.
    Even a conservative estimate of 90% of this net upward force expressed on 10% of the seafloor would result in 700 meters of rise on average and along every spreading fault with further localized variation depending on the shape of the fault edge and qualities of the ocean plate from spot to spot. Again that's a conservative estimate. If it was 95% of that upward force acting on just 5% of the ocean crust adjacent to spreading faults then the average rise across the entirety of all spreading faults could've been over 1500 meters. This is still just an overall average with certain areas like the triple spreading zone of the Azores plateau realistically responding much more even before figuring in any effect from a hot spot.

  • @valeriesilveira2939
    @valeriesilveira2939 Před 3 měsíci

    My beautiful Ancestral Homeland ♡

  • @glenda917
    @glenda917 Před 3 lety +4

    Hope you don't mind but i have been your cheer leader to others today.

  • @mikedebell2242
    @mikedebell2242 Před rokem +2

    I have never heard about pyramids in the Azores. On the Canaries yes. Now I find out there are many?

  • @morgan97475
    @morgan97475 Před rokem +2

    Perhaps you will be able to join RC & the Kosmo crew whenever they launch their expedition to the Azores area.

  • @ecotechconstruct4999
    @ecotechconstruct4999 Před rokem +1

    Awesome work, thank you, you just got my likes and subscription.

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před rokem

      Thanks for watching, I will have another video out in the next week or two.

  • @jameshudson7053
    @jameshudson7053 Před 2 lety +3

    Very interesting stuff. I sub to Kosmographia ect. and I just subbd to your chan as well. I love geology and history and I have been researching this stuff for many years. This video was awesome! Thanks for your hard work and posts.

  • @badguy5554
    @badguy5554 Před rokem +2

    Excellent points made. I find it difficult to believe that the movement of the mantle, under the Azores, would have been due, solely, to the melting of the ice caps over North America and the rebound of the land underneath (a VERY SLOW process.... that is STILL occurring today!). Something ELSE had to have happened if we are to believe Atlantis sank in "a day and a night", as Plato indicated. Your theory may, possibly, lead to a reason.

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před rokem +1

      I've got a number of ideas for possible mechanisms. I think the best course of action is to determine whether or not I have actually found Atlantis. IF I have, then actual geologists can figure out exactly what' s going on.

  • @scottowens940
    @scottowens940 Před 3 lety +1

    Yes. I'm liking the point at 10:45 ish. I'd think that with the unloading on North America suddenly would reduce pressure of magma probably effecting the Atlantic if not firstly but mostly, due to its thin elastic nature

    • @commonsense-og1gz
      @commonsense-og1gz Před 2 lety

      the asthenosphere is slow moving if i am not mistaken. if water melts into the atlantic faster than the asthenosphere can move, then there may be a delay in isostatic movement. how extreme the effects are once it reaches the Azores, i wouldn't know.

  • @filco755
    @filco755 Před 2 lety +1

    There are many megalithic structures on the Azores.

  • @followingthenatsarim9827

    We have recently moved to Sao Miguel Island, and would love to know if their are any rock structures we should check out? Just subbed Love your content...

  • @DANTHETUBEMAN
    @DANTHETUBEMAN Před 2 lety

    I like the expanding earth 🌍 model better then a "super containment" , it looks like it fits better to the seems we see separating, and it keep the planet more symmetrical.

  • @MartimusDecimusMeridius
    @MartimusDecimusMeridius Před 2 lety +1

    Probably make an absolute killing doing that asmr stuff lol

  • @Dan_Tactics
    @Dan_Tactics Před rokem +1

    What's the location called when you take the opposite point on the other side of the planet for a given GPS coordinates?
    What I'm wondering is if there were any meteorite strikes at the end of the last ice age (or whenever fits into those "dryas" timeline periods/ events) at the opposite side of the world, causing such a shockwave to resonate all the way through the mantle and contribute to havoc in the tectonic activity at where you think Atlantis to be?
    Also, I've seen videos online where straight lines are drawn on a map linking megalithic ancient structures and cultures together. (Lots intersect these lines, but they would have had no way to really interact with each other in ancient times). Do any of these help to narrow down or corroborate the evidence for this location in the Azores being the sunken city of atlantis?

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před rokem

      In episodes 8, 9 & 10 I discuss geodetic links between my proposed site for Atlantis with other key locations on either side of the Atlantic. In episode 10 I briefly discuss the Antipode (opposite side of the planet) to the Azores Plateau, here we can find the East Australia Hotspot (no full explanation exists for the presence of this hotspot).

  • @Jim-jx5ds
    @Jim-jx5ds Před rokem

    If, by any chance, the intelligence which animates the UFO phenomenon had a hand in the termination of Atlantis...then the implications for our present society are ominous in the extreme.

  • @commonsense-og1gz
    @commonsense-og1gz Před 3 lety +2

    With a collapse of the tectonic plate, what would the tsunamis be like of something that large? With the plate being directly across from the opening to the Mediterranean Sea, I would imagine that The whole area would have been flooded.

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před 2 lety +1

      I think it really depends on how fast the plate has sunk. If it happens slowly enough, there will be no Tsunami, if it happens very quickly it will be like something out of a disaster movie.

    • @commonsense-og1gz
      @commonsense-og1gz Před 2 lety +2

      @@Apocalypse_Tube sadly, i think it would be the latter, due to the subsidence of spartel bank and the northwest coast of Africa in accordance with randal carlsons recent Q and A video, and platos two day account.
      didn't plato mention something about a disaster in Greece in his critias? i was thinking that if atlantis sank in two days, that the tsunami's may have caused the destruction of ice age Greece, and may have pushed survivors into turkey, while sweeping everything in the Mediterranean over the middle east and into the indian ocean.

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před 2 lety +1

      @@commonsense-og1gz That's right, it would seem that both the Hellenes and Atlanteans perished at the same time according to Plato. I haven't done enough research into the interior of the Mediterranean just yet. That's on my to-do list. It would certainly be interesting if we could find evidence of a cataclysm concurrent with the date attributed to the destruction of Atlantis.

    • @commonsense-og1gz
      @commonsense-og1gz Před 2 lety

      @@Apocalypse_Tube if the Sahara was a deep dry desert all the way up to the end of Atlantis, i would like to know if the tsunami could have been so large that north Africa flooded, leaving large lakes that gave a temporary 5,000 year climate, which has since dried out, and left the massive mudflow appearance we see all along Mauritania.

  • @KadenSlinker-cw6cl
    @KadenSlinker-cw6cl Před 6 měsíci +1

    Did the Azores hotspot exist during the Triassic period?

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před 6 měsíci

      Not sure there's any direct Geological evidence that can be traced back that far with regards to the Azores hotspot. If the hotspot was created by the remnants of the planet Theia, OR, from deeply submerged super-dense slabs of ancient crusts that were subducted billions of years ago, I would assume that the hotspot predates the Triassic (I'm only guessing based on very limited data).

  • @funwithFred
    @funwithFred Před 2 lety +1

    What doesn't make sense to me, is that if they were so advanced, why would they choose to live atop a volcanic environment?

    • @Not-Ap
      @Not-Ap Před 2 lety +3

      Because the frequency between eruptions and earthquakes was probably very long. Most could be easily prepared for with enough forewarning. We still around volcanic active places today. Yellowstone state parks volcano would wipe half the country and darken half the world. In spite of that we built a state park around it and several towns and cities around the blast radius. People live there because it's never happened in anyone's life time and unlikely too in the next century either.

  • @niceguyeddy9229
    @niceguyeddy9229 Před 3 lety +1

    👍👍👊

  • @commonsense-og1gz
    @commonsense-og1gz Před 3 lety +2

    Apocalypse, I don’t believe you need the access to the bouree hole for the city. If you go to a website, such as flood maps. Net, you can see the mid Atlantic ridge provide access to the area, both north and south if you lower the sea level to around 1800 to 1950 meters.

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for reaching out on twitter.

    • @commonsense-og1gz
      @commonsense-og1gz Před 2 lety +1

      @@Apocalypse_Tube you're welcome. i posted more questions after the last answer on twitter.
      i do have one question that isn't on twitter. do you think that the subsidence of the azores, could have caused massive tidal waves that could have decimated the Mediterranean, and jumped the creation of gobekli tepi?

    • @Apocalypse_Tube
      @Apocalypse_Tube  Před 2 lety

      @@commonsense-og1gz I think it's possible, but I have no idea how to calculate the wavelength or amplitude of the tsunami. It really depends on how quickly the plateau sank. If it sunk slowly enough there wouldn't even be a tsunami. If it sunk quickly you could end up with catastrophic tsunamis. Perhaps there are papers that provide evidence of tsunamis from core samples taken throughout the Mediterranean coastlines?

  • @ernestinamacedogouveia4690

    Azores and madeira island is misterio

  • @commonsense-og1gz
    @commonsense-og1gz Před 3 lety +2

    could Hawaii and Iceland be at risk if this theory of hotspot shutdown principle is correct?

    • @scottowens940
      @scottowens940 Před 3 lety

      So the spread of the Atlantic given the mass of Earth makes the Pacific plate in most parts subside under the main conental crust,,( I'm not sure that I said that right.. but the gist is if you look at pangea and spread ing your will see that the whole Pacific is subduction,..,., Wonder what started that? !!!! Incoming boloride my thoughts..... Be well, Love them like you do and make sure they know...bless

    • @commonsense-og1gz
      @commonsense-og1gz Před 3 lety

      @@scottowens940 it does seem reasonable for the earth to behave like a ceramic jar that was hit with a rock, having cracks everywhere.
      with that said, i would like to know how much Iceland is uplifted, and if a sudden crack formation in the crust, or exp volcanism could turn it into the next Atlantis? i know that it can happen after the island of Krakatoa disappeared.

    • @fincentwillighagen8297
      @fincentwillighagen8297 Před 3 lety

      I'm afraid so, because Island is directly over the mid- Atlantic ridge and is being ripped in two, that could lead to rising magma from stationary mantle plumes ( which is the definition of hot spot volcanism). Hawaii is a sequence of hot spot shield volcanoes, i.e. a volcanic arc. The Aleutian islands (Alaska) as well as Tonga (Oceania) are at grave risk. Unfortunately, there is nothing we can do to thwart the forces of nature. It isn't climate change that can be reduced by diminishing anthropological contributing factors. Tectonism will exist as long as the earth's upper mantle remains fluid, which is always. New islands and volcanoes are forming every day across the world. Japan is also located near a triple tectonic plate border. One day, a 330 ft tsunami will arrive at Cape Cod and flush away all of Massachusetts and there is nothing we can do.

    • @commonsense-og1gz
      @commonsense-og1gz Před 3 lety

      @@fincentwillighagen8297 i wonder how high a tsunami would be generated with a collapse of the whole azores plateau? i have heard of the island in the canaries that will slip.

  • @waggieoreilly5714
    @waggieoreilly5714 Před 2 lety

    Cool..... Ireland is part of Altantis
    Folk tales from my mother
    Nd shes dead nearly 25 years
    Belfast Ireland love luck and laughter xxx 🇮🇪❤️🐝❤️🍀👾🔮🙏💪❤️🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪

    • @oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164
      @oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164 Před rokem +2

      Where he say that? If anything, because of common geology, Maine USA and Ireland were part of the same land mass.

    • @waggieoreilly5714
      @waggieoreilly5714 Před rokem

      @@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164 yes i sseen that , no i am only going back 12,000 yrs ago....my mim is dead 25 yrs she told me we wetre from altantis, that we werent even irish , we were survures , pagan s that belelieved in god.......irt took me a very log time to understand what she meant, ia m sure there is hollow earth , i think i know where to look

  • @greenman6141
    @greenman6141 Před 2 lety +1

    To potential viewers who come to this site because they're interested in the geology of the Azores....this is a nutter site. It goes all "Atlantis" eventually.
    The comments below are full nutter. There are even expanding earth nutters represented.
    Amazing what nonsense people will believe.

    • @commonsense-og1gz
      @commonsense-og1gz Před 2 lety

      if the earth is getting hit by objects, then it will expand. there is nothing wrong with the earth expanding hypothesis, as long as something can describe why it would expand.

    • @greenman6141
      @greenman6141 Před rokem

      @@commonsense-og1gz Like I said...this is a nutter site..

    • @meistereder9135
      @meistereder9135 Před rokem

      It is designated as an Atlantis video. Why are you so unlikeable?

    • @greenman6141
      @greenman6141 Před rokem

      @@meistereder9135 If you look up "geology of the Azores" it also takes you to this. One can also find "atlantis" used in a metaphorical sense in titles.
      So my response is: Why are you so dumb and rude?

    • @meistereder9135
      @meistereder9135 Před rokem

      Blow it out your ass lol