3 days of cliff landslide all caught on camera at Pentreath, Lizard, Cornwall

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  • čas přidán 2. 02. 2021
  • Two days of gradual failure of the cliff after heavy rain and flooding followed by a final large collapse on the third day at Pentreath on the Lizard, Cornwall, UK.

Komentáře • 403

  • @krashunburn
    @krashunburn Před rokem +14

    Amazing! Absolutely amazing. Not the slides, but that those watching are actually laughing as their country slides into the ocean!

    • @Mounhas
      @Mounhas Před rokem

      Brexit caused the U.K. to slide into oblivion!

    • @hollyfleur6144
      @hollyfleur6144 Před rokem +2

      i'm sorry for you because you can't FEEL the thrill of seeing something of this magnitude.

  • @lelandlewis7207
    @lelandlewis7207 Před 3 lety +20

    Amazing happening but hard to watch with the camera swinging up and down. Once we see where it's going, just showing the main collapse or zooming out a bit would have been nice. Great and amazing capture though.

  • @pamt7740
    @pamt7740 Před 3 lety +38

    Normal earth changes. This is how coastlines develop and change down centuries. Awesome to watch them change so dramatically. It's happening so fast these days all over the world.

    • @ElenaAshe
      @ElenaAshe Před 2 lety +13

      It seems to be happening so fast these days because everyone has a phone to record the events.

    • @ILoveBluePeople
      @ILoveBluePeople Před rokem +2

      @@ElenaAshe facts, these are common even without phones

  • @jam1966ful
    @jam1966ful Před 3 lety +16

    Fascinating. Thank you for taking the time to film this for us.

  • @janefield2143
    @janefield2143 Před 3 lety +9

    I wish they would would shut up laughing

  • @sammy4538
    @sammy4538 Před rokem +13

    What a sight that must have been, seeing this happen right in front of own eyes... amazing material, huge respect for being there filming all this, and sharing!

  • @phph1731
    @phph1731 Před 3 lety +44

    Great to see the geomorphological processes at work that shape our coast and landscape. Thanks for documenting a lively period.

  • @willboudreau1187
    @willboudreau1187 Před rokem +15

    Note to future viewers: this video is MUCH more enjoyable if you turn the volume off.

    • @delfine7163
      @delfine7163 Před rokem

      Thank you, Mr Boudreau! Good idea!

  • @cheryldidur2300
    @cheryldidur2300 Před 3 lety +17

    How awesome to be there and watch this as it happened. The Earth is always in a state of change.

  • @buccaneernl1
    @buccaneernl1 Před 3 lety +16

    Absolutely fascinating. Thank you for filming and sharing.

  • @susanwachtman6140
    @susanwachtman6140 Před 2 lety +11

    I don't get why this is so hysterical. I find it rather sad.

  • @Radionut
    @Radionut Před 3 lety +24

    Did you by chance take a few hits of the laughing gas before you went out there? You got a big giggle and laugh out of it that’s for sure.
    That was very spectacular

  • @1133811
    @1133811 Před 3 lety +29

    I don’t see why this giggling man is so amused by the destruction of natural landscape.

    • @dontaskme7004
      @dontaskme7004 Před rokem

      It's pretty much the same as watching an underwater volcanoe forming new land, the wonder of nature... What do you do, cry because nature did something without your permission?

    • @davidfox3258
      @davidfox3258 Před 3 měsíci

      Because the natural landscape is constantly changing. That's how it works.

  • @johnnywadd9918
    @johnnywadd9918 Před 3 lety +11

    I didnt find anything funny about that ...i dont understand the laughter.

  • @keithmcfaul9204
    @keithmcfaul9204 Před 2 lety +26

    I guess I fail to see what is so funny to laugh about like you and your friends!

    • @sagemaster3408
      @sagemaster3408 Před rokem +3

      Just having fun. I don’t think they think it’s funny. I fail to see humor in it also. They’re just excited

    • @Kharnellius
      @Kharnellius Před rokem +1

      You've never heard a kid giggle with joy before?

    • @dontaskme7004
      @dontaskme7004 Před rokem +1

      The spectacle of nature, like anything in nature, it creates a sense of wonder in the mind... People have similar reactions to animals doing things, a double rainbow, lightning striking close to them, massive waves, all kinds of things trigger a reaction.

  • @RoxnDox
    @RoxnDox Před 3 lety +24

    Hmm, you wouldn’t catch me at the bottom of a slope that is actively dumping a debris flow right at your feet. What happens if the slope loss suddenly doubles? You become part of the debris flow...

  • @bighaasfly
    @bighaasfly Před 3 lety +9

    That was both amazing and fascinating! Thank you for sharing it.

  • @veramae4098
    @veramae4098 Před rokem +5

    A local golf course was partly on a hill by Lake Michigan. The course wanted to improve the view for golfers so asked permission from Michigan's environmental agency to cut down all the trees on the slope. No.
    A year later the course cut down all the trees anyhow.
    Two years after that most of the damn hill and golf course slid down into Lake Michigan.

  • @crabby7668
    @crabby7668 Před rokem +3

    The first bit looked like a concrete pour. Fascinating to see this all happen" live". Thanks for sharing

  • @richardnailhistorical3445

    Isn't it amazing how some people get such a thrill out of landslides, to them it's better than SNL? What is it they find so hilarious about landslides? I can't understand what is so funny?

  • @hellybelle5
    @hellybelle5 Před 3 lety +16

    That was amazing! Thanks for sharing 😊 It was incredible that from such a small area, there were such distinctly different layers of rocks 😊

  • @ROKINKO11
    @ROKINKO11 Před 3 lety +8

    Thank you for sharing. Exciting video! Cheers!

  • @cyndiknapp4904
    @cyndiknapp4904 Před 2 lety +8

    I have to ask...why does this catastrophe inspire laughter...?

  • @itsjudystube
    @itsjudystube Před 3 lety +45

    The wonder of nature. How privileged to witness that in person and how generous to share it.

    • @billrobbins5874
      @billrobbins5874 Před rokem

      Happy you survived it. Would have worried if the ground underneath your feet could have slid too. That was massive!

  • @Sally4th_
    @Sally4th_ Před rokem +2

    Amazing to watch, thankyou. Well done for capturing the final collapse.

  • @nigelsmith721
    @nigelsmith721 Před rokem

    Clearly the best comedian on CZcams.

  • @roymagnus827
    @roymagnus827 Před 3 lety +27

    Interesting. But could have done without the demented cackling.

  • @WarmDryHome
    @WarmDryHome Před 3 lety +8

    Brilliant bit of filming - well done!!

  • @gedungisphoopnuchle9121
    @gedungisphoopnuchle9121 Před 3 lety +4

    Thanks for sharing 👍

  • @Jowenator
    @Jowenator Před 3 lety +14

    Your enthusiasm is very contagious!!

  • @AvanaVana
    @AvanaVana Před 3 lety +9

    Great video. Traditionally, geology teaches “uniformitarianism”, that is, geological change happens very slowly and constantly, the same way over long periods of time. But these days it’s becoming clearer that landscape change is effected by punctuated equilibria, that most of the change we see and a lot of the geological record is created very quickly, in comparatively rare, but massive events, that are part of a continuum of events logarithmically scaled from the most frequent and smallest events, to the rarest, most massive events. Most of the change in a landscape is created during just a few high flux events, interspersed with long periods of time in more of an equilibrium state, where relatively little is happening. Valleys are formed this way, not by a grain of sand every second for a million years, but by 100 year floods, massive landslides, and other highly erosive and dramatic events, that happen every once in a while, over that same timespan.

    • @mattholyer1899
      @mattholyer1899  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks. I'm happy to be corrected but I understood that uniformitarianism has a broader definition than that, "the present is the key to the past"; therefore it's not just a theory describing minute changes over long periods of time but also any large sudden changes we might expect to see today (including once in 1,000 year event's) or in the geological record. But I 100% agree with you that the geological record is by it's very nature biased towards major high energy events that will easily overwrite the day to day "mundane", as simply shown by the Hjulström curve for water flow rate. The theory of uniformitarianism gets stretched very thin when looking as far back as Precambrian time's though, as a hotter mantle, shorter day's and no land plants make for some excitingly different event's! But the same law's of physics apply, so long as you correct for the differences I'd say the theory still stands true, even back then?

    • @AvanaVana
      @AvanaVana Před 3 lety +2

      @@mattholyer1899 I think there are different levels of 'uniformity' that people subscribe to. I really just wanted to make the simple point that the geological record and the landscape are both more affected by these large-scale rare events than by the kind of day-to-day effects of time.

    • @skipd9164
      @skipd9164 Před 2 lety

      In millions of years when earth is mostly hills it will end. I know I won't be there

    • @virginiaviola5097
      @virginiaviola5097 Před rokem +1

      We are definitely in the process of witnessing a huge shift of some sort, what that may ultimately be only time will tell, but it’s certainly gaining in momentum. The real surprise is just how long the period of relative stability has been.

    • @Kharnellius
      @Kharnellius Před rokem

      @@virginiaviola5097 Or....everyone has an HD camera attached to their phone now so it can be easily documented and with the internet, easily shared.

  • @salparadise8581
    @salparadise8581 Před 3 lety +1

    clifftastic..thanks for posting

  • @keegan773
    @keegan773 Před rokem +3

    That’s the power of nature, and there’s nothing you can do about it.

  • @PrairieDancerRose
    @PrairieDancerRose Před 3 lety +5

    Please back up, so we may see it completely, at one time, instead of section by section.

    • @davenorth8922
      @davenorth8922 Před 3 lety

      There may not be a place behind them. They could be next if they aren't careful.

    • @QUIX4U
      @QUIX4U Před 2 lety

      ​@Dave BACK UP means take your finger OFF the "zoom-in" button, (as THAT is all we eventually got after the operator zoomed in & out way too many times before LEAVING IT "zoomed in too close" so that all we viewers get to see later - is a "tiny highlighted" blade of grass / or a pebble in high definition / or a few little grains of sand - & not the entire slip face "look")
      BACK UP - means get the camera OUT of "zoom" to allow us to have that BACK UP view, from the place you stood, a long way away from the cliff itself.
      BACK UP, doesn't mean to "walk backwards" with the camera still ZOOMED IN.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
      It also means - for goodness sake, stop wasting time watching the wee stream of mud & other crap - making it's messy river way - to the SEA..
      It means - stay ON the main subject.
      LEAVE the camera OUT of any form of "zoom" and keep the daMned thing as steady as possible - on the entire SINGLE WIDE VIEW, to let us see the entire cliff, from top to bottom (not a tiny section here or there at ten times magnification (zoomed in)
      @Rose is absolutely correct - BACK UP (in other words, take your finger OFF the zoom in close button & let the camera itself BACK UP to a wide-open view.

    • @themadfarmer5207
      @themadfarmer5207 Před rokem

      Gosh there are people very cranky about position of filming and zooms etc. Wouldn't like to post a video and get so much criticisms. There can be no retakes of an event like this. What is done is done

  • @mikeoglen6848
    @mikeoglen6848 Před rokem +16

    I can't believe you find this so hilarious when Cornwall is literally crumbling into the sea..

    • @dontaskme7004
      @dontaskme7004 Před rokem +1

      I'm sure you thought you had a point, but just like a rotten tree breaking apart, it's nature doing its thing and nothing to cry about.
      There's places that crumble into the sea, there's places where new land is formed. There's places that used to be below seal level that are now above and places that used to be above sea level that are now below... Embrace the things that are beyond your control because there's absolutely nothing you can do about it.

    • @mikeoglen6848
      @mikeoglen6848 Před rokem

      @@dontaskme7004 My 'point' is about a Fool, not about the Forces of Nature. Who asked you to comment?

    • @hollyfleur6144
      @hollyfleur6144 Před rokem

      @@mikeoglen6848 anyone can comment without permission.

    • @mikeoglen6848
      @mikeoglen6848 Před rokem

      @@hollyfleur6144 I don't deny it. Any Idiot can make a comment, sure...

  • @gardeninginnorway478
    @gardeninginnorway478 Před 3 lety +3

    Once in a lifetime happening. Impressive!

  • @alphi888
    @alphi888 Před 2 lety +4

    I agree with ph ph, Thanks for recording it and sharing, but PLEASE edit the inane soundtrack, it's juvenile in the extreme.

  • @jaygunter3828
    @jaygunter3828 Před rokem +1

    Very cool, thanks for sharing.

  • @mikehardwick352
    @mikehardwick352 Před 2 lety +4

    Less talking and laughter

  • @stillwater62
    @stillwater62 Před rokem

    That looks like an endless flow of "No-Bake" cookie mixture while still hot.

  • @MonthlyFails
    @MonthlyFails Před rokem

    Hey Matt Holyer, do you have an email address at which we could contact you regarding this video? We would be interested to discuss a license to use this video if this is generally possible? (i.e. via email) :) Cheers, Felix

    • @mattholyer1899
      @mattholyer1899  Před rokem

      Hi Felix, could you reply with your email address and I'll respond to that👍 Thanks

    • @MonthlyFails
      @MonthlyFails Před rokem

      @@mattholyer1899 Hey Matt, yeah thats no problem at all! You can find our mail in our channels about section! :)

  • @vanessaboman8143
    @vanessaboman8143 Před rokem +1

    The different coloured dirt is beautiful to watch!

  • @dsnicker9719
    @dsnicker9719 Před 3 lety +24

    Get rid of the "laughing guy". He is ridiculous, and ruined it all.

    • @moonectar
      @moonectar Před 2 lety +3

      Let him laugh in delight, it's a healthy response, he's happy and alive.

    • @itsjudystube7439
      @itsjudystube7439 Před rokem +2

      Not for everyone

    • @johnhenshaw7655
      @johnhenshaw7655 Před rokem +1

      It’s incredible to see

    • @amykins9870
      @amykins9870 Před rokem

      He’s awe struck you are selfish and well centered. I turned down my volume

  • @kittykins4115
    @kittykins4115 Před rokem +1

    Earth in constant motion, I am in awe, however the maniacal laughter was bizarre.

  • @kernow..exp.
    @kernow..exp. Před 3 lety

    Very interesting thanks for sharing

  • @lorenzotrevisani4421
    @lorenzotrevisani4421 Před rokem +2

    When we ask ourselves,how did it happen. Well this is the answer. Forse of nature. Nice video. 👍👏

  • @amazingseniors5770
    @amazingseniors5770 Před 3 lety +4

    Whats funny? If you're buried there, can you still laugh?

  • @poetmaggie1
    @poetmaggie1 Před rokem

    What trigger it?

  • @romeowhiskey1146
    @romeowhiskey1146 Před rokem

    I want this man to NARRATE my 4th of July FIREWORKS display.

  • @cmwHisArtist
    @cmwHisArtist Před 3 lety +28

    After a year of misery, people can’t even stand the sound of someone laughing in amazement. The mountains have been changing their shape since the beginning of time. Thank God no one lost a home or got hurt. And thank God at least these men can still laugh.☀️

  • @gabegr8191
    @gabegr8191 Před 3 lety +3

    That's a lot of Gold falling...Wow!!

  • @aoilpe
    @aoilpe Před 3 lety +14

    I don’t think that a land loss at the seaside is as FUNNY as this...!

  • @denisonline51
    @denisonline51 Před 3 lety +15

    All the laughing ruined the video.

    • @bettyprussia9777
      @bettyprussia9777 Před 3 lety +5

      I totally agree!

    • @itsjudystube
      @itsjudystube Před 3 lety +1

      You go around the coast, find a cliff fall and video it in silence. They chose to be natural. And Nervous or surprise laughter often comes from nerves.

  • @grahambird1570
    @grahambird1570 Před rokem +1

    Wow . . . . I can liken that to the efficiency of the UK Government !

  • @goupigoupi6953
    @goupigoupi6953 Před 3 lety +3

    Stop moving the damn camera all the time.

  • @taffythegreat1986
    @taffythegreat1986 Před 3 lety +1

    How come it’s just all collapsing ? You’re dead lucky to catch that on video 👍👍😜

  • @sixthsenseamelia4695
    @sixthsenseamelia4695 Před 3 lety

    What a BEAUTY

  • @rickseifert5139
    @rickseifert5139 Před 3 lety +2

    Naturall process of erosion going on since before humans and will continue long after humans are gone from this planet . Great video footage mate.

  • @rondias6625
    @rondias6625 Před 2 lety +1

    The Earth has been doing this for millions of years.. awesome to see it happening and great video sharing it !! Now a shovel dust pan and broom should have it all back in order in no time..lol

  • @markblix6880
    @markblix6880 Před 2 lety +5

    Why is he laughing?

  • @brucemackinnon6707
    @brucemackinnon6707 Před rokem

    Could there be tin ore in that grey stuff?

  • @wez4517
    @wez4517 Před 3 lety +11

    A very dramatic sight to be witnessed in the flesh but to giggle like schoolchildren whilst a section of the Cornish coast is destroyed? Very odd behaviour...

    • @itsjudystube
      @itsjudystube Před 3 lety +4

      This is a natural occurrence. We are lucky to see it in action.

    • @shirleythomas6377
      @shirleythomas6377 Před 3 lety +3

      Nothing is being destroyed. It is being recreated in a different place. Nature does what it wants, no matter if humans understand it or not.

  • @QUIX4U
    @QUIX4U Před 2 lety +5

    What a pity.
    ZOOMED IN (way too close) means we all lost the entire "slope" moving as a whole, instead all we get to see - is every rock, pebble and or piece of sand/grass slip - without seeing the entire "picture" ?
    At times I caught an occasional "glimpse" (fleeting at best) of the top of the ridgeline slowly dropping (whilst the person with the camera was hell bent of swinging it all around trying t "fit" everything in, to a way too closely zoomed in "tiny view" ?
    WHY?
    Why didn't you simply "un-zoom" to get the entire view in the one position - as a wide-angled view.
    IF VIEWERS want to see specific parts falling, they themselves can PAUSE the video (or slow it down) to see individual collapses.
    Zooming in and madly swinging the camera around, means YOU saw it whilst there, but anyone watching the video - has to contend with the IRIS trying to steady the picture, as well as alter it's focal length - for colour etc..
    Making this to be way too useless to watch.
    Oh sure - we get to see, this rock & that pebble, and a bit of sand with a clump of grass here and there.
    NOT a total hillside collapse (all at the same time)

    • @sarkybugger5009
      @sarkybugger5009 Před 2 lety +3

      You said precisely what I came down here to say. I would only add to your dismay by saying that laughing like an idiot didn't help. Even Portrait mode, if held steady, would have been preferable to this. (But only just.)

  • @lucielessard4429
    @lucielessard4429 Před 2 lety +2

    Shut! SVP et concentrez-vous sur la qualité de votre prise de vue qui fait défaut!

  • @Nowa100
    @Nowa100 Před 3 lety

    WHAT A BEAUTIFUL MOMENT... And I'm here - you come in too

  • @gayathrichandrashekar2778

    Nice to see Mother Nature changing her positions.

  • @loldiers3238
    @loldiers3238 Před rokem +1

    Humans find gravity endlessly entertaining.

  • @robinshail2490
    @robinshail2490 Před 3 lety +2

    Brilliant :)

  • @garysimpson-humphreys4003

    Wow that is amazing I would love to see that gra8 video mate

  • @romuco9872
    @romuco9872 Před rokem

    I think he’s excited and can’t express it any other way. Humans are an odd species.

  • @jamesmitchell2114
    @jamesmitchell2114 Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic.

  • @ytubepuppy
    @ytubepuppy Před rokem

    Cornwall is in England, right? That explains a lot.

  • @lindaandrews9245
    @lindaandrews9245 Před 3 lety +3

    A bit more and the coastlines will need to be redrawn!

  • @shiraz1736
    @shiraz1736 Před rokem +2

    The laughing was weird.

  • @sarahstrong7174
    @sarahstrong7174 Před 3 lety

    Thankyou

  • @Dr.IanPlect
    @Dr.IanPlect Před rokem

    day's ?!

  • @albionjq
    @albionjq Před rokem +1

    quite a strange reaction to a landslide, laughing

  • @maureenmichel8761
    @maureenmichel8761 Před 3 lety +7

    i would like to know whats funny????

  • @liztodd7340
    @liztodd7340 Před 3 lety +5

    Why are you laughing

  • @cathybenson5119
    @cathybenson5119 Před 3 lety +9

    I find it sad to see the cliffs collapsing like that. I don't think it's funny at all.

    • @Peter-nv3wu
      @Peter-nv3wu Před 2 lety +3

      Too right Cathy, he would probably have a fit of laughing i a tree if a tree fell on his neighbours home !

  • @tadblackington1676
    @tadblackington1676 Před 3 lety +2

    I don't know if I would stand there to film that.

  • @butterball8894
    @butterball8894 Před 3 lety +2

    The land is shrinking let's all lol???

  • @elizabetheloz9997
    @elizabetheloz9997 Před 3 lety +2

    Que tanta risa???😡

  • @angusgoldsmith3156
    @angusgoldsmith3156 Před 3 lety +1

    Right on there bey

  • @vps1014
    @vps1014 Před 3 lety +3

    Let's see who's laughing 10 or 20 years from now when the erosion reaches houses 100m to 200 metres away...

    • @timthehippy9478
      @timthehippy9478 Před 3 lety

      no houses near this, it is before the right hand turn to Kynance cove, as the road goes right there is an old track that goes slightly left that takes you to this beach. Thousands of tourists go past this beach every year and very few know that it is there , locals love to surf there though.

    • @themadfarmer5207
      @themadfarmer5207 Před rokem +1

      Been happening for 1000s nay millions of years, but nobody had a camera

  • @susanolson3611
    @susanolson3611 Před rokem +1

    That looks like a fault line at the top of the hill, running parallel to the beach. 7:01

  • @johnfrench6144
    @johnfrench6144 Před 3 lety +14

    Shame about the giggly girl nervous laughing

  • @littlewingpsc27
    @littlewingpsc27 Před rokem +1

    Interesting looking quartz veins at the bottom near the beach. Anyone ever take a closer look at those?

  • @njcaveexplorer
    @njcaveexplorer Před 3 lety

    Understanding the gravity of the situation

  • @ariadneschild8460
    @ariadneschild8460 Před 3 lety +1

    That's actually pretty scary. What's causing it?

    • @mattholyer1899
      @mattholyer1899  Před 3 lety +2

      There's a fault plane running behind the section of cliff that collapsed. Lot's of rain acts as lubrication, once you get one failure the whole lot is then under stress which then builds and builds until...

    • @sagemaster3408
      @sagemaster3408 Před 2 lety

      His laugh. The energy from his laugh caused the mountain side to crack up . :)

    • @themadfarmer5207
      @themadfarmer5207 Před rokem

      Oh now we can drag out the new culprit
      CLIMATE CHANGE

  • @tarkus-sw9wx
    @tarkus-sw9wx Před 3 lety +31

    Nothing funny about coastal erosion.

    • @bettyprussia9777
      @bettyprussia9777 Před 3 lety +6

      I agree I had to turn down the volume just to watch the sadness 😢

    • @itsjudystube
      @itsjudystube Před 3 lety +4

      Laughter often comes from surprise and nerves. It isn’t happiness.

    • @alexh6738
      @alexh6738 Před 2 lety

      Jokes on you. The ocean filmed this.

    • @fideliaguillen3001
      @fideliaguillen3001 Před rokem

      So true frightening long term effects

    • @nicolashansen2546
      @nicolashansen2546 Před rokem +1

      How is it not funny? It’s natural.

  • @darthcheney7447
    @darthcheney7447 Před 3 lety

    Pretty impressive.

  • @8023120SL
    @8023120SL Před rokem

    ...and that's how mountains become plains!

  • @tomconger1101
    @tomconger1101 Před rokem

    Truly incredible

  • @AnaCosta-uc7lx
    @AnaCosta-uc7lx Před 3 lety +2

    Não penso que seja caso para rir mas sim para ficar preocupada com o que está a acontecer no planeta

  • @noeraldinkabam
    @noeraldinkabam Před rokem

    Eureka? Lol dude. Silence is golden for a reason.

  • @jmcfarlandjr
    @jmcfarlandjr Před 2 lety

    Earth being Earth.

  • @fernlow1786
    @fernlow1786 Před 2 lety +3

    Why are you laughing, spoiled the whole video.

  • @chrisholcombe137
    @chrisholcombe137 Před rokem

    Standing at the bottom looking up the cliff ?
    One moment would be to fast to overcome .

  • @RosaWeber-lz6fu
    @RosaWeber-lz6fu Před rokem

    El paisaje que conocemos desaparece cada día frente a nosotros. Estas personas se ríen yo lloro.