Oregon's Three Sisters Volcano, How Dangerous could it be?
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- čas přidán 10. 11. 2019
- Prominent Volcanoes in the Pacific Northwest include: Mount Rainier, Mount St. Helens, Mount Adams, Mount Hood, South Sister.
The word volcano is derived from the name of Vulcano, a volcanic island in the Aeolian Islands of Italy whose name in turn comes from Vulcan, the god of fire in Roman mythology. - Věda a technologie
That's a weird looking rocket.
why fire come out wrong end?
Protogen Foox - Also, why rocket shoot shoot fire from pointy end? 🤔
50th like!
It triggered my primal fear of these things so it's great work! Thank you for remembering that light is way faster than sound. To many people doing this stuff tend to forget that
Very nice. I love how you bring to life events that we wouldn't get to see otherwise. Please do the N1 explosion 👍
czcams.com/video/9VgQK9vrf_c/video.html
@@Hazegrayart - I think he meant the one that fell back onto the pad, but still fantastic none the less, lol.
Whoaaaa I'm about 15 miles SW of Adams right now. Really close to St Helens as well.
Do a Yellowstone eruption simulation
It would have to be from space lol
more than that, make a soviet plan to drop an atomic bomb into yellowstone
czcams.com/video/NsUkEMgLY0U/video.html
This sooooo coo!!! Heck yeah!! I live in Alaska and there are about 8 volcanoes near where I live, I can see the active volcano St. Augustine from my window. Great videos dude, keep them up!! :D
Keep making quality experiments like this! Subbed.
This is amazing. I like it. However, wouldn't this be scientifically inaccurate? The stratovolcanoes in the Pacific Northwest have magma that is too high in viscosity that will allow any liquid lava to flow. Each of the volcanoes in Washington would be reminiscent of Mt. St. Helens, where there was no lava flow like this.
Well, the pyroclastic flow would be plenty glowy, inside the ash cloud at least
It is andesitic i think. Or basaltic
2000 years ago St Helens went though a basaltic lava flow period, the north flank is criss crossed with lava tube caves and the surface features of the lava flow, tree trunk casts at the like can be found throughout the forest. Ape Cave and Lava Canyon are well known sites that can be hiked to see the historic lava flows
This simulation is heavily based off of the volcano called south sister in the middle of Oregon, and the flows there from
The past are very thick and they wouldn’t really erupt like that, but with the ash cloud and the glow of the magma, it’s not all that bad.
There was one exception, and that was Crater Lake, which experienced the same type of eruption as Tambora in 1815, Krakatoa in 1883, and Novarupta (in Alaska) in 1912. Mt. St. Helens in 1980 was somewhat similar to Anak Krakatau in 2018, in which the face of the volcano slid off in an earthquake-induced landslide, with the eruption being a byproduct of said landslide.
the day that i see Rainer blow im just gonna leave the state
Nice!!!
It's the wrong way around, flamey end should be pointing down.
Pointy end is up
Beautiful, and I appreciate the effort including the audio FX and lightning,, but this isn't what a Cascades volcano would look like. You'd get the pyroclastic cloud and lightning, but no orange lava flows. I recommend looking up different eruption videos and modeling off of those. This is a bit fanciful, more Lord of the Rings Mt. Doom than reality. For instance, look up M. Reitze's footage on CZcams of Anak Krakatau's Strombolian orange lava paroxysms (low silica magma), vs. Mt. St. Helens (high silica magma) pyroclastic clouds. You get one or the other, not both, at least not like this. Some low silica magmas can catastrophically fragment to create ashfall (Sunset Crater in AZ for instance) but that is not common, and they still don't produce St. Helens-like ash clouds that ascend 100,000 feet in the atmosphere. Any subduction zone volcano is going to have high silica explosive eruptions. For Hawaiian style orange lava flows you need to either be at a hot spot, or perhaps in a crustal extension area like the Basin and Range or the southern edge of the Colorado Plateau that is rising and melting. Lava flows come out of low broad shield volcanoes, not tall stratovolcanoes like Mt. St. Helens.
What I'd really like to see is a good computer animation of a 1,000 foot high lava fountain coming out of a cinder cone. If you want to animate a really cool one, there is a cinder cone called Cinder Hill just west of the West Temple of Zion National Park. I love thinking about the setting sun lighting up the West Temple and right in front of it a roaring vent with a massive fountain of scoria flying out as the moon then rises above the West Temple (not fiction, by the way). It is amazing to me that the volcanoes of the southwest have been so ignored by documentaries.
Neat!
💥Krakatoa, Tambora, Toba 🌋
👌
im close to mt baker
Birds would be gone, I think. Dead silence. Might be a dog freaking out somewhere in the distance.
Why is the pointy end and the flamy end in the same place? That's not gonna fly you know?
I saw a volcano before
god these are weirdly pretty to watch but not to be near
Pompeii be like:
Wow! That actually happened in real life, here's the link for those who think that volcanic eruptions can't behave like that: www.mirror.co.uk/science/nasa-captures-stunning-photo-volcano-16207948
So it’ll make a peen in the sky for a bit
You guys know this is fake right?
You've just outed Elon Musk's lairs ;-)