Piton de la Fournaise 2/3 - The lava channel

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  • čas přidán 2. 10. 2018
  • Part1/3:
    • Piton de la Fournaise ...
    Part 3/3:
    • Piton de la Fournaise ...
    10 days after the awakening of the volcano, the main vent build a cone now totally closed on its northern part.
    The small lake inside the cone keeps on degassing with many projections spattering the cone.
    Meanwhile under the southern flank an underground lava tunnel exits further to feed a lava channel with many interesting forms:
    Tunnels, skylights, tubes, rivers, pools.
    (Warning: way too close for comfort footage made under extreme temperatures on unstable grounds. Physiological limits were reached many times, don't do this without proper knowledge and equipment)

Komentáře • 192

  • @tecumsehtekawana1533
    @tecumsehtekawana1533 Před 4 lety +2

    I really enjoy the way you don't add any music and we can properly enjoy a maximum the sounds this gorgeous volcano makes. Thanks a lot!

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks a lot ! Unfortunately the sound is not done professionnally so it could be way much better but i tried my best.
      Please watch the part1/3 and part3/3 of this eruption to enjoy the different activity and so very different sound (I quite like the sound of the part 3)

    • @tecumsehtekawana1533
      @tecumsehtekawana1533 Před 4 lety

      @@drixc1 i shall with great pleasure ! i love volcanos and have subscribed to your videos .

  • @myinformationoverload
    @myinformationoverload Před 4 lety +9

    Best 9:24 I have spent on a video. I could sit here and watch this all day long. Thank you for the awesome upload.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you so much for the positive feedback !
      I usually try to make shorter clips in this society where everything has to be fast, but it in that case it was impossible, flowing lava is so beautiful, intense and peaceful at the same time...

    • @myinformationoverload
      @myinformationoverload Před 4 lety +3

      @@drixc1 The fact that it was a long clip made it even more watchable for those who love volcanoes. I've been studying them since I was 6 years old, and I'm 50 now. Never did it professionally, but I am envious of those who have the opportunity to get up close to such an awesome force of nature. Thank you again. I look forward to more of your videos.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +2

      @@myinformationoverload I completely agree and feel the same, 11 years studying and visiting volcanoes as an amateur, sometimes for the worst and fortunately most of the time for the best!
      Thanks again, that is an honor to share this wonderful passion.

  • @robertreynolds1044
    @robertreynolds1044 Před 4 lety +15

    There's a certain beauty to all this that's hard to describe. As a child my favorite things were astronomy and volcanism.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +2

      I always use to say that this passion is great because everyone agree on that :)
      Astronomy can sometimes be too distant, abstract, and hard to understand, almost impossible to feel.
      But watching an eruption is a 5 senses experience one cannot forget, especially when the show is spectacular like with la Fournaise.
      About the indescribable beauty of such a phenomenon, let me tell you that the most stirring moments for me were when I found this completely silent skylight in April 2018, you will see it in my video "the skylights".
      With my friend Magmat we decided to look for a skylight before the night coming and after nearly an hour walking on very difficult lava fields, totally scared to make a big mistake, we finally found one. Completely silent, not a single decibel, lava peacefully flowing like liquid gold, very yellow instead of the usual orange. It was the hottest temperature I ever felt, it took us time to find the right angle to watch it and film it without melting! About 2/3m deep and 3/4m wide.
      This moment was priceless, precisely because of its beauty and poetry!

    • @robertreynolds1044
      @robertreynolds1044 Před 4 lety +2

      @@drixc1 my astronomical observations have been almost all naked eye,from the 2017 total eclipse,comet Kahoutek in 1976,a meteor shower of biblical proportions right after 9-11,when the sky was constantly filled with them,better than any fireworks show,but totally silent,and many many others. Those naked eye observations of early man are the beginning of science.

    • @CajunFyre92
      @CajunFyre92 Před 4 lety

      Robert Reynolds mine as well, as was paleontology and archaeology

    • @robertreynolds1044
      @robertreynolds1044 Před 4 lety

      @@CajunFyre92 Tricerautops?spelling,rules! I read"The Big Egg"when I was 6 or 7.

    • @jarredd334
      @jarredd334 Před 4 lety +1

      @@robertreynolds1044 so do I! I love Astronomy and Volcanology!

  • @parimalbanerjee8859
    @parimalbanerjee8859 Před 4 lety +7

    Mind blowing. It is the ferocious beauty.

  • @danielhunter34
    @danielhunter34 Před 4 lety +6

    Thank you for sharing, awesome footage

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      And thanks for watching, and showing interest to my videos!

  • @F-Man
    @F-Man Před 4 lety +12

    This is the kind of thing that I’d love to go see, yet, I know that I’d be entirely terrified.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      You're so right! I was scared too, it's probably part of the joy you feel at the same time, and it's actually a good sign of a rational behavior, because you have nothing to do there :)
      The heat is intense, there is no possibility to stay more Tha a minute at some moments, especially getting close to the river.
      I dont know what scares me the most, the heat or the noise... Probably both!

    • @F-Man
      @F-Man Před 4 lety +1

      Ced Northman Even just the psychological aspect of knowing that you’re so close to one of Earth’s most powerful forces - one that is capable of absolute destruction as well as absolute creation. All land begins and ends by this very process. That alone would send my brain into a spiral! 😅

    • @MrRedeyedJedi
      @MrRedeyedJedi Před 4 lety

      @@F-Man not all land is created by lava reaching the surface believe it or not. Plate shifts raising up from the sea bed has created the vast majority although I get what you mean

  • @gregthomson8251
    @gregthomson8251 Před 4 lety +13

    Beautiful shots, mesmerizing

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks a lot! It's undoubtedly one of my best video, because it took me a lot of energy and fear to film it, and also because some of the shoots are really awesome! (humility is not always my cup of tea 😅)

  • @mikecayole7819
    @mikecayole7819 Před 4 lety +6

    Great moment @8:29 to reveal scale, Great video!

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +2

      Thank you, I showed myself on the video indeed to show the scale of the lava overflow, but also to show how close I was. If you watch this moment you will see that I put my hands in front of my eyes and that after a few seconds I need to sit down, that is because of the heat, otherwise I get burnt and I stay only about 30 seconds.
      Something the video doesn't show, is how hot the ground is, even the one I'm walking on. Put you hand on the ground and you get instantly burnt. So the thing is to try to recognize some places that are bearable, then stay a few minutes, and go back before it's too late.
      After a day like that, I could throw them to the bin cause they totally melted...!

    • @mikecayole7819
      @mikecayole7819 Před 4 lety

      @@drixc1 Great stuff and great videos!

  • @nadu5757
    @nadu5757 Před 4 lety +1

    What an amazing footage thank you for your work🖒🔥

  • @Tiisiphone
    @Tiisiphone Před 4 lety +6

    The spectacle is almost peaceful, silent...that's what impresses me most. But I've the feeling of looking at a living, breaathing entity (the volcano).

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      You couldn't say it better. That is why fissure eruptions are so interesting to study and visit. From the beginning until the very end, the eruptive dynamism changes as well as the eruption is building important volcanic cones, lava fields, lava tunnels, and some other volcanic structures, with the help of millions of m3 of lava each new day.
      If you watch the 3 videos I made of this same eruption, you will see how different it looks. The first day looks like hell(or paradise) on earth, rocket sound and powerful never-ending lava fountains fastly building the cones while ocean of lava is flowing from it.
      One week later (part2) only one cone remains "alive" and it's the moment for lava rivers pools and tunnels.
      Weeks later (part3) the eruption keeps on quietly but underground activity is now more important than any other manifestation, as a consequence more or less quiet and small at the surface...
      For every state there are different shapes, different speed, different sounds, intensity etc... Etc...
      I'm so happy and lucky to live close to the best volcano on earth :)
      Thank you for your clever comments and for showing interest to my videos.

    • @Tiisiphone
      @Tiisiphone Před 4 lety +1

      @@drixc1 Thanks for the explainations. I find that volcanoes are one of the most fascinating manifestations of the awesome power of Nature. It is not surprising that the ancient (and sometimes not so ancient) people consider them as sacred mountains, the house of the gods...or even the entrance to Hell.
      Being European I went to the Stromboli and Mount Etna in Italy, but the Piton de la Fournaise and the Kilauea are certainly on my to do list if I have the occasion someday.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      When I visited Benbow lava lake in 2015, we needed to wear our gas masks the first 5 minutes on the rim of the crater. Then it suddenly became breathable for the rest of our stay.
      My local guide living in the nearby village answered me ""yes of course, the volcano didn't know you , but now that the introduction has been made, he respects you""
      Completely awesome and understandable answer
      czcams.com/video/xuo89vC-lD8/video.html

  • @sugandanataatmaja8223
    @sugandanataatmaja8223 Před 4 lety +2

    Fantastic view

  • @zemetrius
    @zemetrius Před 4 lety +1

    awesome video thanks.

  • @MrRedeyedJedi
    @MrRedeyedJedi Před 4 lety +35

    There's something about lava that makes me want to play with it but at the same time obviously that wouldn't be a good idea lol.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +7

      Yes, lava is fascinating and mesmerizing , you could watch it for hours, a bit hypnotizing like in front of a bonfire, but one billion time stronger :)

    • @MoniFps
      @MoniFps Před 4 lety +6

      Did you know you can drink lava? But only once.

    • @hunnymalang1761
      @hunnymalang1761 Před 4 lety

      Moni lol

  • @tamaraheater9695
    @tamaraheater9695 Před 4 lety +6

    where is it going... the sheer volume and speed is mind boggling!

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      It's just following the laws of gravity, flowing further down considering the topography, until the eruption stops (in that case about 3 weeks later)
      About the volume and speed in the video , it was actually quite small and slow ! Have a look on my other video from June 2019 "the flow".
      You will see some much faster and bigger lava flows, about 20m3/sec while on this video it's rather 1 to 4m3/sec.
      It i's of course easily explained by the intensity of the eruption as well as the slopes on which it's occurring.

  • @user-qr6zq9zn2b
    @user-qr6zq9zn2b Před 3 lety +1

    Потресающее зрелище!

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 3 lety +1

      The best show on earth !

  • @ChannelStu
    @ChannelStu Před 4 lety +1

    This video is incredible. What a dynamic visual interrogation of a landscape that's itself inherently dynamic! Really well done. Fantastic compositions, each at a focal length and framing that suit the inquiries at hand (be they into mass, shape, flow, scale, immersion, and yadda yadda). I'm also digging the celebration of fascination being shared among the commenters here, and your own comments elaborate well on the feelings & efforts experienced in these places and moments (moments in the big flow, what d'ya know).
    A tech q: I'm flabbergasted by the dynamic range being handled by the imaging sensor (& cam profile settings, post-processing, and/or whatnot). Like, whoa, 3:02?! With only baaaarely a hint of a tinge of loss of detail in the highlights?! That's high quality, and a difficult exposure to nail. (Dang fire and lava, such enticing and devious bastards to shoot. I haven't met lava in person myself, though). Also, the super-tight, long focal length shots featured throughout! So...what, in the name of all things noodly and dripping with sauce, kind of camera & lens(es) are you tooling around with here? And your post workflow?
    Thanks, and congrats on these accomplishments. I've subscribed, & I'll be watching your other vids.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      Thanks again for such compliments which I technically don't really deserve because I'm not really good with camera settings....
      I didn't see your comment and answered to your other one. In case you didn't see my answer I can tell you here that I'm using a pentax K3 with a 18-135mm lens and a tripod Manfrotto290light.
      You are right lava is not easy to shoot but I would rather say not easy by night , because by day it's quite alright. Well the gas and the heat aren't a piece a cake to deal with but by night the quality of the video gets really bad simply because I guess my camera is not powerful enough.
      Like I said before on your other comment, as long as I get close to the lava there is enough light for the camera to make a good video but if I stay far it's definitely not good enough. This video for example was a good example:
      czcams.com/video/uLGsziYu05M/video.html
      The problem is that it becomes too dangerous. Getting so close (less than 2 meters) no zoom at all with such a speed of the flow (around 25m3/sec) I had only a window of a few minutes because we must remember that the eruption is building something that is permanently changing, so a few minutes later the area where I was filming got spread and recovered by the lava fountaining activity of the main cone above.
      I should definitely save money to buy a camera that can deal with nightime and more generally a camera that is good for the videos , because I really like to film it ;)
      Thanks again one more time for your encouraging comments and very inspiring compliments !
      I will try to make some more videos pretty soon about my last trip to Pacaya Santiaguito and Fuego volcanoes in january 2020, but unfortunately these were explosive volcanoes from which I didn't get the chance to shoot satisfying explosions by day , and by night then came the problem of the camera itself.....I'll try to get something good from what I have anyway....

  • @ChannelStu
    @ChannelStu Před 4 lety +4

    Amaaaazing video, Ced. Wow! What kind of camera & lens(es) were you using?
    Great work toughing it out in such difficult conditions to film.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +2

      Thank you so much for your encouraging comment ! My camera is a pentax K3 with a 18-135mm lens. So it's good stuff but definitely not the same level as a professionnal camera, and especially the video mode which is quite standard by day , and awful by night,.
      As long as I get very close to the eruptions I can have a satisfying quality by night like here for example:
      czcams.com/video/uLGsziYu05M/video.html
      But if I'm a bit too far the quality gets really bad by night so I should find money to buy a special camera ;)

  • @freeskopm-music
    @freeskopm-music Před 4 měsíci

    Incroyable

  • @skyclimber3934
    @skyclimber3934 Před 4 lety +4

    Awesome, as all your videos are! Thanks for sharing for those of us who have nor experienced anything like this. I take it you have been in some lava tube caves before?

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      Thx a lot ! Yes a few times indeed, especially in la Réunion Island where I live, but in other places as well. Beautiful formations with stalactites of lava !

    • @skyclimber3934
      @skyclimber3934 Před 4 lety

      @@drixc1 Yes you can just picture the lava flowing through them. I have climbed a number of volcanoes but sadly didn't descend into the three biggest craters I have seen - Ranier, Popcatépetl (before it erupted) and Orizaba. And the only erupting volcano (and lava) I have seen was at Kilauea. My interest in volcanoes started with Tazieff's book on Nyiragongo 40 years ago. I envy you visiting these erupting and active volcanoes, and what a exotic place you live at!

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      ​@@skyclimber3934 Which country you're from and where do you live ? I might be able to give you some good tips for a volcanic trip ;)
      I also read some books from tazieff, this was real adventure at the time, nowadays it's almost always just tourism, easier, but less exalting.
      This passion really started in 2010 in Indonesia and it lead me to end up living 2hours drive from the best volcano on earth (Etna being the second best on my point of view), I am very much aware to be so lucky and enjoy every minute of each eruption I can watch. I am also always happy and ready to share this passion with friends, and finally to try my best sharing it on youtube with some homemade videos :)

    • @skyclimber3934
      @skyclimber3934 Před 4 lety +1

      @@drixc1 I'm in the east central USA which unfortunately is about 2,000 miles to the nearest volcanoes on the ring of fire from Washington down the west coast to Mexico. The nearest erupting volcano is 5465 M Popacatépetl in Mexico with a 490 M deep crater at the top, it is off limits since 5 climbers were killed in 1996 near the crater due to a explosion. Kilauea in Hawaii is now dormant after a couple years of spectacular lava flows. So it appears a long trip for anything. Let me know what you think, thanks.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      ​@@skyclimber3934 well then your best option for a short efficient trip (I mean 100% chances to see at least one volcano erupting like crazy and still in safe and secured conditions) is Guatemala.
      Probably cheap flight with short distance, cheap cost of life there, and 3 constantly erupting volcanoes since decades. Very nice people (don't listen to the gossiping dangerous country blablabla, it's not more dangerous than anywhere else if you keep aware of basic simple rules when traveling. I always travel backpacking style taking public buses, never saw anything bad)
      The country is easy to travel inside, and the distance between the 3 volcanoes ridiculously short. You can even watch fuego erupting from pacaya :)
      Google pacaya and fuego volcanoes from antigua city, and santiaguito/santa maria volcano from quetzaltenango. Summit of guatemala called Tajumulco (sleeping volcano) is also a wonderful safe and cheap trek.
      Also if enough time you can visit the wonderful maya city Tikal north of the country.
      Nicaragua is also a cheap very nice destination, completely safe, you don't even need a guide for example for Telica or San Cristobal volcanoes (we camped there by ourself)
      Many active volcanoes there, all of them possible to visit with tours if you need to be faster than cheaper. But only masaya is constantly erupting as it is a lava lake.
      You guys in us don't have a lot of holidays, but 2 weeks in guatemala would be manageable to visit all the places I mentioned. I just got back from a 3 month trip in central america and spent 25 days in guatemala , but we did a lot more than what i told you.

  • @cheerybellerellegue8309

    Hello and good day! Can we use your video for educational purposes? Thank you so much and more power!

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 3 lety +1

      Hello, as long as you use the link of my videos on youtube it is with a great pleasure!
      This video is the second part of a 3 parts shooting. Part 1 is from the first day of the eruption, so a lot of powerful fountaining activity.
      Part 2 is one week later so much more calm, with a big cone already build and some underground activity, lava tubes.
      Part 3 two weeks later the eruption keeps on building lava tubes with some resurgences overflowing.
      Please have a look on these 3 parts so that you can better understand (and hopefully enjoy😉) the different Steps of a classic eruption on Piton de la Fournaise volcano ! (Hawaiian style)

    • @maamchaeyrelleguedocheires5684
      @maamchaeyrelleguedocheires5684 Před 3 lety

      @@drixc1 ill check it as well sir. . Thank you so much and have a good one. . We will definitely credit you for you amazing videos. . More power to your work. .

  • @damiaolopespereira6210
    @damiaolopespereira6210 Před 4 lety +2

    Muito extraordinário qui Deus faz

  • @pacific-alive4952
    @pacific-alive4952 Před 4 lety +2

    すごいな...

  • @AaronGeo
    @AaronGeo Před 4 lety +1

    How wide is that lava channel???? IT LOOKS HUGE

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      At 3:25 and 8:30 you can quickly compare with human scale ;)
      I would not say it was a wide one. Depending on where you are, maybe 2m wide, sometimes up to 5m . Same for the tunnel, it looks quite big , but I saw some much bigger ones.
      Thanks for watching, happy to share !

    • @AaronGeo
      @AaronGeo Před 4 lety

      @@drixc1 ok then

  • @Tevorier2nd
    @Tevorier2nd Před rokem

    Piton de la founarise Frist vent born to create volcano

  • @BlGGESTBROTHER
    @BlGGESTBROTHER Před 4 lety +6

    Watching this makes me long for a time machine so I can go back in time 17 million years and watch the flood basalt eruptions that occurred in Washington State :D

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +2

      If I had a time machine it would also need to fly and to protect me from the gas and the heat. In that case I think I would go back to the 1783 eruption of Laki. But playing that game there 's a lot of crazy possibilities.....Just the one I missed here last month because of this fucking lockdown for example ...... :)

  • @kenkelly5848
    @kenkelly5848 Před 4 lety +3

    Superb footage. I could feel the heat. Did the equipment survive?

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      Shoes never survive :) at least three pairs since the beginning of the year.....

    • @kenkelly5848
      @kenkelly5848 Před 4 lety

      Unreal. I love this channel. Stay safe and cold

  • @osmariobrito7776
    @osmariobrito7776 Před 4 lety +2

    Ilhas reunião. Local belíssimo! Mas este vulcão é um problema. O la fournaise deve ter a maior cratera do mundo. E parece que nesta ilha houveram outros vulcões tão grandes quanto o pitón. Tem umas cidades que se localizam dentro de crateras inativas.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      Well actually this volcano is the most active or second most active volcano on earth, but it is also one of the safest to visit ! It is also not a big threat for most of the People living in the island because no people can live close to it. The only risk would be a tsunami if its south eastern flank collapses, but it could happen in thousands of years, nobody can tell.
      The summit crater of La Fournaise and its total caldeira are big, but it is not the biggest in the world. Teide for example is bigger.
      The other volcano on Reunion Island is the Piton Des Neiges, it is the main volcano in the center of the island but it is sleeping since more than 3000 years now. The three craters around the volcano Piton Des Neiges are not exactly volcanic craters. It is called "Circus" and were made more from erosion and landslides, than from volcanic eruptions.
      So actually the volcano is less important than the erosion. The destiny of this island, is to be sculpted by erosion and become flat, like Maurice, Rodrigues, and of course the Maldives Island. These islands are from the same volcanic hotspot , amazing right ?!

    • @osmariobrito7776
      @osmariobrito7776 Před 4 lety +1

      @@drixc1
      Impressionante! Mais impressionante ainda, foi saber que o Teide, nas canárias, tem uma cratera maior que a do La Fournaise.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      @@osmariobrito7776 Be careful : the caldeira of Teide is bigger indeed than the caldeira of Piton de la fournaise.
      But the summit crater of Teide is very small, only 100M diameter, while the summit crater of La Fournaise is 1Km diameter !
      Caldeira and crater is not the same thing, but I know sometimes there is some misunderstanding and problem of language translation with these two words.

    • @osmariobrito7776
      @osmariobrito7776 Před 4 lety +1

      @@drixc1
      Ah, sim. Sei que a caldeira de um vulcão ficam em seu interior. Mas, eu realmente estava falando do diâmetro da cratera (crater) do vulcão la fournaise. E a cratera dele é realmente gigantesca.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      ​@@osmariobrito7776 Ah Ok , yes it is a very big crater indeed ! 1Km diameter and more than 300m deep !
      Another gigantic one : if you don't know "Gunung Tambora", have a look on google maps , it is a crater more than 6KMS diameter ! (from 1815 eruption)

  • @aymenlestro4029
    @aymenlestro4029 Před 4 lety

    Who else feel that feeling while watching volcanos *not alone ik*

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      sorry I don't understand , what is "not alone ik" ?

  • @selimawad272
    @selimawad272 Před 4 lety +1

    يا الله سبحانك

  • @JBMoney.
    @JBMoney. Před 4 lety +2

    Idk why I keep watching this when I take a 💨💩 but it seems to help 🌋

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      I'm always happy to help :) :)

  • @user-is7mm8ih3h
    @user-is7mm8ih3h Před 4 lety

    سبحان الله العظيم سبحانك ربي ما اعظمك في خلقك يا الله يا الله

  • @user-vw4mk4eq4h
    @user-vw4mk4eq4h Před 4 lety

    اللهم اجرنا من عذاب النار

  • @user-uv7ib7jy3f
    @user-uv7ib7jy3f Před 4 lety

    ربي ياااارب ياذا الجلال والإكرام يا أرحم الراحمين اللهم يارب يارب اجبرني من النار

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      Volcanoes helped creating the atmosphere that created the oceans that brought life on earth.
      Without volcanoes there is no life on earth.
      I don't understand why so much of you people imagine that volcanoes are hell, this is ridiculous. In indonesia and many other countries, volcanic soil can make three rice culture each year. Volcanoes are sometimes dangerous but most of the time they help life on earth.

  • @IsaacOLEG
    @IsaacOLEG Před 4 lety

    Cool! pas de musik stupide ! merci

  • @arifikhsanudin9724
    @arifikhsanudin9724 Před 4 lety +9

    Where is the dragon?

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +2

      Hahaha! Inside the eruptive cone of course! Every time he snors there is lava coming out from the summit.

    • @urumakkaraya29
      @urumakkaraya29 Před 4 lety

      Right here

  • @bernarddarkwah3998
    @bernarddarkwah3998 Před 4 lety +1

    Lake of fire

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      I was very lucky to visit some of the "real" lava lakes in the world, I hope you enjoy it :
      czcams.com/video/xuo89vC-lD8/video.html
      czcams.com/video/Pym2Iq_GxqI/video.html
      czcams.com/video/QYeT9qDT440/video.html

    • @bernarddarkwah3998
      @bernarddarkwah3998 Před 4 lety +1

      @@drixc1 thank you

  • @Dr.HooWho
    @Dr.HooWho Před 4 lety +4

    if i was superman, i'd just swim in lava

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +3

      Swimming into lava is a fantasm everyone always has indeed! But the density is so high (cause it is rocks right !?) that it is just impossible. You would float on it while burning without being able to dive into. Except superman of course, and maybe Chuck Norris...

    • @Dr.HooWho
      @Dr.HooWho Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah realized its more dense
      I'd die from the impact than the lava killing me

  • @anodyne57
    @anodyne57 Před 4 lety +3

    From what I can find on the web, the temperature of this lava flow is probably between 1200 and 2200 degrees F.
    Hot...yes, but recently I learned that the core of our sun is 27 million degrees F...(27,000,000 degrees!) which is 12 thousand times hotter than molten lava. Even the corona, around the sun, is 17 million degrees.
    Kind of puts things in perspective, no?

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      I don't understand fahrenheit scale but I can confirm you that lava of Piton de la Fournaise is around 1200 ° Celcius, the hottest lava on earth with hawai or Nyiragongo and any other effusive volcano, which makes the hottest natural thing existing on earth.
      But you're right indeed compared to the inner core of stars, or compared to a particle accelerator, such a heat is litterally nothing.
      It's inside the core of stars that matter is created , we are stardust, and it takes millions of degrees to create some ;)

    • @mikenelson3338
      @mikenelson3338 Před 4 lety

      No it doesn’t, sorry. 27,000,000 degrees does not put any perspective on it.

  • @mikenelson3338
    @mikenelson3338 Před 4 lety +1

    Mesmerizing

  • @tangerinebeta7012
    @tangerinebeta7012 Před 4 lety +2

    looks hot!

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      Only 1200 celsius degrees😂

  • @darrenmarchant1720
    @darrenmarchant1720 Před 4 lety +4

    @3:38 how far into that could a drone be flown?

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      Actually "how long" might be a more appropriate question, And the answer would be less than a second for sure!
      Difficult to realize just by watching it on a video, but the temperature even outside from where I'm filming is insanely hot. You just can't approach such a thing. One important thing to say is that lava walls are protecting you from the heat, as well as the ground formed by about a few days old lava flows. So you can walk on it and you can approach the flowing lava but only a few seconds or minutes.
      À last important detail about this 3:38 s moment: right after I'm filming a lava tube with its roof about to build itself. This is located right after the lava tunnel, and it is actually the same flow, but cooling and solidifying itself because it is in contact with the open air, so fresher than in the tunnel, and so forming a solid crust which will later be the roof of another tunnel.
      Difficult to explain as English is not my mother tongue, but what is sure is that all this area is way too fucking hot for a drone to fly into, and even over unless it is dozens of meters above...!

  • @alejandromolina2788
    @alejandromolina2788 Před 4 lety

    van a rectificar algún día el universo?

  • @damiaolopespereira6210
    @damiaolopespereira6210 Před 4 lety +1

    Chegará um dia que esse fogo era usado de forma rcorrenta nada por acaso todo tem seu objetivo

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      Volcanoes helped creating our atmosphere and our oceans , so it helped creating life on earth. No life without volcanoes ;)

  • @micamathew6433
    @micamathew6433 Před 4 lety +1

    Iko kama uji ulio katika moto.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      Exactly this feeling!

    • @micamathew6433
      @micamathew6433 Před 4 lety

      @@drixc1 thank you dear friend, i'm from Tanzania.

  • @francisnjenga142
    @francisnjenga142 Před 4 lety +2

    To where does the lava flow eventually. The ocean?

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      Depending on the localisation of the eruption, its orientation, the flow rate of the lava flows, and also the topography of the ground, the lava can go in many directions.
      Remember that fissure eruptions (like Réunion, Hawaï, or Iceland) are everytime happening in different new places, sometimes the same area, sometimes completely the opposite, it is always a surprise!
      Last time the lava reached the ocean was 2007, and the last 3 eruptions in 2019 were taking the perfect direction, but it didn't last enough and the ground wasn't ideal to make it easy for the lava to flow until the sea....

  • @joseosnicordeiro.8806
    @joseosnicordeiro.8806 Před 2 lety

    E munto difiçio lutar proçimo
    Um tao grande calor
    Deve r mais100 grau🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️

  • @balbinaamazulu458
    @balbinaamazulu458 Před 4 lety +1

    Baden Sie niemals in der Lava ist ein bisschen zu warm

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      Hahaha Ja genau! Ein bisschen 1200 degrees zu warm....

  • @ameralrefai4175
    @ameralrefai4175 Před 4 lety

    هذه نار الدنيا فكيف نار الأخرة
    أعاذني الله من نار الدنيا والأخرة

  • @Hi_There_8
    @Hi_There_8 Před 3 lety

    forbidden orange juice

  • @secondedded9741
    @secondedded9741 Před 4 lety +1

    Hell fire is real

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      That was a hell of a fire indeed ;)
      What about this one
      czcams.com/video/uLGsziYu05M/video.html

  • @c0mete2a37
    @c0mete2a37 Před 4 lety +1

    Did you guys knows you can drink Lava ? You can but once Time , No more xD (sorry for Bad English lol)

  • @davivictor6644
    @davivictor6644 Před 4 lety +2

    Aquele misera é doido andando ao lado da lava??

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      hahaha I'm not crazy , or maybe just enough ;)

  • @luisfgu923
    @luisfgu923 Před 4 lety +3

    🇧🇷♥️🙂👏

  • @unfitarmory7417
    @unfitarmory7417 Před 4 lety

    wait how did anakin and obi wan get so close to the lava then

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +2

      The moment when they fight 1 meter above oceans of lava is indeed completely impossible unless they have a kind of energy field preventing them from burning instantly.
      In iceland by winter time I flew over such a lava field with a tiny little plane, at some moment we were about 30m above it (on the side in case the engine stops so that we don't crash right into the lava) and at this altitude it was already incredibly hot, so I can't imagine anything staying 1 meter above without burning or melting....
      czcams.com/video/aAnuMD9TYl4/video.html

    • @unfitarmory7417
      @unfitarmory7417 Před 4 lety +1

      Ced Northman true true

    • @witnessme602
      @witnessme602 Před 3 lety +1

      The Force allowed them to disobey convection for a while?

  • @ye5959
    @ye5959 Před 4 lety

    يالطيف ، هذا جبل انفجر كيف جهنم يالله اجعلنا من اهل الجنه ..
    يذوب الحديد والحجار كيف جسم الانسان 🤔
    تخيلو ياقاطعين الصلاه انكم ماسكين طابور والملائكه ترجم على واحد واحد الى هذه النار وانتم تشوفو ، ايش موقفكم يااهل المعاصي ...

  • @user-wr7np5rp8d
    @user-wr7np5rp8d Před 4 lety

    Тяжёлый след адеколонов феромонов✋

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      sorry I don't understand and google translator makes no sense....english or french possible ?

  • @user-yp1fj5ku8u
    @user-yp1fj5ku8u Před 7 měsíci

    찬미예수님
    우리나라와 세게평화를 위하여 죄인들의 회개를 😂위하여 성모님 손잡고 한마음으로 기도드립니다 아멘 아멘 🇪🇺 🙏 😊 🙌 ☺️ 💕 🇪🇺 🙏 😊 🙌 ☺️ 💕 🇪🇺 🙏 😊 🙌 ☺️ 💕 🇪🇺 🙏 😊 🙌 ☺️ 💕 🇪🇺 🙏 😊 🙌 ☺️ 💕 🇪🇺 🙏 😊 🙌 ☺️ 💕 🇪🇺 🙏 😊 🙌 ☺️ 💕

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 7 měsíci

      Why do you send prayers on a video about a wonderful tiny peaceful eruption ?!?
      I will never understand....

  • @buunguyen3761
    @buunguyen3761 Před 4 lety

    Bình luận công khai...

  • @selvianadianpratama1066

    Itu orang berani sekali ya jalan deket nya.

  • @brigittederoch
    @brigittederoch Před 4 lety +1

    There is a 86 year old man in Switzerland who claims to have contacts with people from another world who are here to provide the key to our survival. One of the contact dating from 1948 about Stromboli reads: But also in the south of Europe, the all-transforming consequences will be enormous when the volcanoes of Mount Etna, Vesuvius and Stromboli as well as the submarine largest active volcano of Europe, Mount Marsili off the coast of Italy, together with about two dozen further submarine volcanoes in the Mediterranean, begin to erupt. Source: theyflyblog.com/2019/08/28/stromboli-erupts-as-predicted-2/

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      You know Etna and Stromboli are already in a permanent eruptive state. Such mystical predictions are all over the world with many types of natural hazards invoked since human kind exists.
      Most of the people don't know that there is about 40 volcanoes erupting permanently every year, so when they hear something from the medias , they think that something is changing on earth because some volcanoes are waking up but it 's just that they don't know what they are talking about.
      The end of the world has been predicted, is predicted , and will keep on being predicted by millions of people on earth forever, because some people need to claim it and some people need to hear it and believe it. I don't believe in predictions based on mystical supernatural powers. Science is already wonderful I don't need anything else.

    • @brigittederoch
      @brigittederoch Před 4 lety

      @@drixc1 I avoid all religions like the plagues and present the suppressed news that affect us human beings and help avoid the “How come I was not warned about it in time?” syndrome. Now that I have the accurate information and receive great assistance it does not do me any good not to share it. I am part of the Creation and I have to do right by it as well as to myself. Anyway, why doesn't science provide the reasons for the unnatural amount of volcanic eruptions among many other huge natural disasters? The planet has not seen anything like this since time immemorial.
      Thank you for your time Ced.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      ​@@brigittederoch This is exactly what I was trying to explain you in my previous comment. There is absolutely no ""unnatural amount of volcanic eruptions"" nowadays. The planet has seen much more important volcanic activity in the past. Just because you have seen some unusual eruptions recently (like Hawai 2018 or Stromboli 2019 for example) does not mean AT ALL that there is more eruptive activity on earth.
      And this is precisely what history, knowledge, and science, can show us.

    • @brigittederoch
      @brigittederoch Před 4 lety

      @@drixc1 It is true that volcanic activities have been present for a very long time but the overpopulation is negative and creates unnatural climate change. The huge mass of cities and towns stress the inner structures of the Earth more and more and displace the tectonic plates, thus creating immense tremors worldwide and influence the Earth's entire volcanic activity. Consequently, the volcanoes that are connected together worldwide become ever more frequently and more destructively active.
      Here is the non-mystical source for it: theyflyblog.com/2019/11/25/billy-meiers-environmental-warnings/
      In addition, this link www.futureofmankind.co.uk/Billy_Meier/Contact_Report_045 says:
      55. This is to be understood in such a manner that the terrestrial human being exploits his planet and robs him of his fundamental life force by robbing him of oil, natural gas and various ores.
      56. This causes the earth to undergo internal shifts, leading to violent volcanic eruptions and earthquakes as the Earth slowly collapses.
      So, if we are overpopulated and are over exploiting Earth the result has to be more frequent (or "unnatural" because we cause it to happen in a faster pace) volcanic activities. This is logical. But if the source is not to be desired here is what is also said about it:
      e360.yale.edu/features/could_a_changing_climate_set_off_volcanoes_and_quakes
      www.scientificamerican.com/article/get-ready-for-more-volcanic-eruptions-as-the-planet-warms/
      Anyway, I like your videos and you show us just how beautiful our planet is. It sure would be nice to help it rejuvenate it.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      ​@@brigittederoch Thank you for your compliments I'm happy to share the best I can.
      About the rest what you said is based on beliefs and nothing else, definitely not science, especially with Billy Meier. I'm trying to say it respectfully but a lot of it makes no sense at all.
      You keep on saying volcanoes worldwide are ""more frequently and destructively active"" while I explained you that it is absolutely not true. I study volcanoes since nearly 10 years now and I can assure you that worldwide volcanic activity is pretty quiet, stable, and the same since centuries. With all due respect I think you don't understand how the tectonic plates work and how unsignificant humans and theirs cities and towns are on the surface of the earth crust towards more generally the inner activity of earth.
      Just a small example: the world record of the deepest hole ever drilled (not for commercial use, only as an attempt ) is 12kms deep.
      But the earth crust thickness is between 30kms to 70 kms......
      And the radius between the center of the earth and its surface is 6370kms..........
      Can you imagine , we can't dig deeper than 12kms and the radius of earth is 6370kms......Please don't take it too badly but I strongly recommend you to learn about volcanism/tectonic plates/isostasy etc etc.
      It is quite a difficult subject but there are good videos on youtube to understand the basics that can be a good start.

  • @IMMINENTRaptureREPENT
    @IMMINENTRaptureREPENT Před 4 lety

    Apocalypse 20: 13-15 [13] La mer a abandonné C'EST MORT, et LA MORT et la TOMBE ont rendu leurs morts. Et TOUS ONT ÉTÉ JUGÉS EN FONCTION DE LEURS ACTES. [14] Puis la mort et la tombe ont été JETÉES DANS LE LAC DE FEU. Ce LAC DE FEU EST LA DEUXIÈME MORT . [15] Et TOUTE PERSONNE DONT LE NOM N'EST PAS TROUVÉ enregistré dans le LIVRE DE VIE a été JETÉE dans le LAC DE FEU. Veuillez vous repentir et vous détourner de tous vos péchés. Acceptez Jésus-Christ comme votre Seigneur et sauveur pour être sauvé

  • @hasanulhaque1061
    @hasanulhaque1061 Před 3 lety

    this is so terreable

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 3 lety

      "terre" - "able" yes indeed "earth" is "able" to provide incredible shows like eruptions....
      Yet "Terrible" in french means great but in english it means horrible.....

  • @fabiolacampo9203
    @fabiolacampo9203 Před 4 lety +1

    Dios mío yo creo que así es el infierno Dios nos guarde.se invita al mundo entero a buscar de Dios verdadero

  • @urumakkaraya29
    @urumakkaraya29 Před 3 lety

    Earth = the fine line between hell and heavens

  • @stayhome9377
    @stayhome9377 Před 4 lety +1

    who wanna swim?

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      Hahaha! you would just stay at the surface and instantly burn like a human torch....
      Better not try unless you're chuck Norris 😉

  • @dreamkhan2697
    @dreamkhan2697 Před 3 lety

    On earth the trailer of
    Heaven and Jahanum
    For lesson for people
    To Abife and faith on Allah Pak and his teachings of worship
    Allah Pak
    The creater

  • @user-wr7np5rp8d
    @user-wr7np5rp8d Před 4 lety

    Пузырьки.шарики.✋

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      ?Bubbles balls ? Izvinite ya ne gavariu pa russki

  • @IMMINENTRaptureREPENT
    @IMMINENTRaptureREPENT Před 4 lety

    Revelation 20:13-15
    [13]
    The sea gave up IT'S DEAD, and DEATH and the GRAVE gave up their dead. And ALL WERE JUDGED according to THEIR DEEDS.
    [14]
    Then death and the grave were THROWN INTO THE LAKE OF FIRE. This LAKE OF FIRE IS THE SECOND DEATH
    .
    [15]
    And ANYONE WHOSE NAME was NOT FOUND recorded in the BOOK OF LIFE was THROWN into the LAKE OF FIRE.
    Please Repent and turn away from all your SINS. Accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and savior to be saved

  • @palmkinggod
    @palmkinggod Před 4 lety +1

    硬さは 牛乳入れすぎた フルーチェくらい

  • @rajkumar-sz3iw
    @rajkumar-sz3iw Před 4 lety +3

    Nice.....🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @6BA_FK8
    @6BA_FK8 Před 3 lety

    モンハン思い出したJapaneseいる?

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 3 lety

      I am sorry I don't understand Japonese and google translate does not work correctly .....
      In french of english maybe ?

  • @sarrakitty
    @sarrakitty Před 4 lety

    I want to jump into the lava...

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      We all want :)
      But it would be impossible to get into because of its density, lava is rock after all ! So jumping into a lava lake for example you would just crash, stay on top of its surface, and burn like a sheet of paper....
      Gollum sinking into lava in the lord of the ring, Anakin and Obiwan fighting 2meters over oceans of lava in Star wars 3 , and this fireman slowly melting from toe to head in Volcano with tommy lee jones, this is all completely impossible.
      ,

    • @sarrakitty
      @sarrakitty Před 4 lety +1

      @@drixc1 You would need to be like... some fantasy creature made of super tough dense rock or metal to actually sink in lava. Even that is stretching it because it's fantasy! such a creature would probably just melt if it were real...
      Really when you think about it, lava in sci-fi and fantasy is just there because "hey it looks awesome" I can't say I really blame them!

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      @@sarrakitty yes I agree, lava is fascinating. You can't help feeling attracted by it , like MrRedeyedJedi said , you want to play with it but it's defijnitely not a good idea unless it's cooling ;)

  • @wassplaiywassim6825
    @wassplaiywassim6825 Před 4 lety

    Mon ti galé lé zolie oté🇷🇪

  • @user-qd3sh5vh1q
    @user-qd3sh5vh1q Před 3 lety

    ааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааааа

  • @nhatphan1662
    @nhatphan1662 Před 4 lety

    🇻🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳 việt nam đây

  • @user-qd3sh5vh1q
    @user-qd3sh5vh1q Před 3 lety +1

    ааааааааааааааа

  • @rightrightrightright1247

    Allahuakbar

  • @planeta_animal
    @planeta_animal Před 3 lety +2

    Wwrff

  • @samsicancor5891
    @samsicancor5891 Před 4 lety

    Masyaa Allah .apa lagi di neraka jahanam ...ngeriii

  • @DanKoning777
    @DanKoning777 Před 4 lety

    *Every time a scene started to become interesting you edited away.* This could have/should have been longer; *it would've been a great video.*

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      This is an interesting comment, I admit I might bit too scared of boring the people with too long shootings. You are not the first to ask for longer shootings so I will definitely try to make a short AND a long version of the same video.
      About this video I must add an important fact :every time it is filmed very close to the lava flows I couldn't actually film longer because it was so hot that I had to stop and come back to a colder and safer area. So it is not always a problem of editing but also simply that I don't have longer shootings :)
      But I am happy to read your critics, it means what I filmed was interesting and this is great! Please have a look on my other videos, I'm sorry for their shortness, I was definitely too shy....

    • @testaccount51298
      @testaccount51298 Před 4 lety

      Dont listen to him it was a great video just not to him

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      @@testaccount51298 thanks à lot for watching and for the feedback!
      The critics are positive as long as they are not only made of insults. The length of videos on CZcams is a real question quite difficult to deal with. Some people would watch just 30 seconds and get bored, some others would watch only a few seconds in many different moments of the video, and some others would watch entirely and ask for more 😊...a short and a long version both available would be a good deal I think.

  • @user-wr7np5rp8d
    @user-wr7np5rp8d Před 4 lety

    Сжечь зеркальную болезнь. И иктапол.страдании.тревоги. и шиворот на выворот . Крест. На крест. Родовое зло колдовство.поношение. Тупость .искожение дибильностт млчолки . .☝.

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety

      ??? Sorry I don't understand. In english maybe ?

  • @mohameddagechi9357
    @mohameddagechi9357 Před 4 lety

    dio é capace di tutto qualunque cosa sia, voglio dire criminali nel terreno e gli atei

    • @drixc1
      @drixc1  Před 4 lety +1

      I don't believe in hell located under the earth core to welcome criminals and atheists and make them burn forever. Magma for hell and clouds for heaven, this is such a childish intolerant and stupid point of view. Maybe a thousand years ago you could think this way but now it is just ridiculous.
      Volcanoes brought life on earth. Volcanic ground makes the quality of the agriculture better, for the rice, for the coffee, even for the wine, for everything actually.
      Without volcanoes there is no oxygen, no water, nothing.
      If God exists, it is certainly not like Islam catholicism and Judaism define it, not even hindouism or any other religion by the way.