Land Movement in Palos Verdes Creates a New Coastline and Uncovers Fossils in Stretch of Shoreline

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024
  • www.JasonBuck.com takes you through Land Movement in Palos Verdes Creates a New Coastline and Uncovers Fossils in Stretch of Shoreline.
    The Trails and Access to the Coastline has been CLOSED and there is NO ACCESS to this area.
    I have been a lifelong native of Palos Verdes and visited Portuguese Bend Beach Club since the 1980's. in the 1950's while cutting the road for Crenshaw to come down the backside of the hill to PVDS a natural spring was ruptured which started the land movement. Before 2020 this land had moved approximately 600 feet and many homes were not on their land anymore. The entire area had been moving as well as PVDS which is constantly under repair.
    The City of RPV has several zones within the Portuguese Bend are and many have had a "moritorium" for building. There was a lawsuit where several homeowners proved that their land was not moving and were granted the ability to build known as the Monk lots which was finally approved in 2009.
    From casetext.com/c...
    On September 15, 2009, the city council adopted Ordinance 498, which established a new exception to the 1978 moratorium, allowing plaintiffs to develop their 16 lots. Section 8 of the ordinance set forth the application process: a signed "Landslide Moratorium Exception" (LME) application submitted to the director of planning, building, and code enforcement; a letter setting forth the reason for the request and a full description of the project; a site plan; a grading plan (if grading was proposed); geological, geotechnical, soils, and other reports required by the city to demonstrate that the proposed project would not aggravate the existing situation; and an application fee. Ordinance 498 took effect on October 15, 2009.
    Many of the Monk lots have been built and some of those homes are curently on the market for sale.
    • Inside Majestical Port...
    There are some other truly amazing properties for sale in this area. • Inside a Majestical Pr...
    The moritorium is now back in place for Portuguese Bend and some surrounding area's as the heavy rainfall in the last two years has activated the slide and its moving more now than ever before and expanded to include the Seaview neighborhood to the South and Wayfarers Chappel to the North. There are a few area's that are moving nearly an inch a day. There is one spot between the Limetree and Narcissa gate that was always called the "ski jump" that is the most visible movement in the area and will crack and change just days after being repaved.
    Down at the beach club, there is a brand new reef emerging out of the ocean. This was underwater six months ago and lots of bentonite is rising along the coastline. There is a brand new sandy beach in this area along with a reef out into the ocean. Also, the paddle tennis courts have been removed and the volleyball court was moved as that stretch of beach has risen nearly 20 feet which historically was all flat. Its incredible and still moving daily.
    Check out this Great post from Steve Shriver posted in the Palos Verdes California Historical Group.
    www.facebook.c...
    Steve was in the video talking about the fossils as well as Joe Cocke who is a local fossil finder - check out his book Fossils of Palos Verdes Hills.
    I really love exploring in this area and very grateful that its close to home. I hope that no homes are lost and the slide can be controlled- we will see...
    Pleaes feel free to reach out to me.
    Connect with me:
    Direct Line: 310.383.2578
    www.jasonbuck.com/
    #hometour #palosverdes #milliondollarhouse #milliondollarhome #mansion #mansiontour
    All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed

Komentáře • 606

  • @Krypt24
    @Krypt24 Před měsícem +231

    Citizen journalism is the best way to find real, truthful news these days. It's an invaluable service. Thank you, Mr. Buck.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +9

      @@Krypt24 thanks for watching

    • @Natty183
      @Natty183 Před měsícem +5

      And we can connect through webs of interest. Reaping the rewards of being a cognitively diverse social species is so important. Not just to survival but to the quality of our day-to-day lives. It makes me cry, I'm such a nerd 😂

    • @dizzymindy6024
      @dizzymindy6024 Před měsícem +5

      You know, I agree with you. I don’t watch the news, but I do follow CZcamsrs whom I respect.

    • @user-ck1mi4eq8x
      @user-ck1mi4eq8x Před měsícem +3

      @@PalosVerdesHousesin your personal experience, do you think the whole Peninsula will go bye bye? Since the movement is definitely moving weekly and very noticeable.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +5

      @@user-ck1mi4eq8x no. Most of Palos Verdes is on bedrock called PV Stone. The PB area has a layer of bentonite which is causing the slide. It is an isolated area of slippery gray clay like material.

  • @ut000bs
    @ut000bs Před 5 dny +16

    Amazing. That beach you're walking on at 4:30, for example, was not there last year. I can understand your fascination with it. Such things led me to geophysics.
    Thank you so much for this. You cannot get information like this from the regular sources. Videos like this are what CZcams was made for in my opinion.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 5 dny +2

      its changing daily, and noticable after a few days. really unfortunate for the homeowners

    • @ut000bs
      @ut000bs Před 5 dny +1

      @@PalosVerdesHouses I watched a video here of a couple on the road that "used to be 55mph" went up then back down that short but very steep hill. When they went down it, just from the view outside the window, you felt that sharp drop. I chuckled.
      If they can adequately drain it perhaps it could be saved but…
      (They don't have that much money.)
      Edit: there has to be a video of a truck that didn't make it up that hill. 😉

  • @juliahelland6488
    @juliahelland6488 Před 7 dny +26

    I just watched the news reporting on shutting off electricity to a 140 homes in RPV. I'm afraid the land shifting is beyond reversal.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před dnem +2

      that may be possible. There is a lot of open land, so the danger of fire from a downed power line is severe and forced Edison to shut the power off.

    • @caterinalopez5297
      @caterinalopez5297 Před dnem +2

      THE LAND SHIFTING IS BEYOND REVERSAL. Duh

  • @IBRAKEFORBEDROCK
    @IBRAKEFORBEDROCK Před měsícem +121

    They will never stop that land from moving. The contractors will get rich trying though

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +2

      it didn't move as much during the drought

    • @DenisDamulira23
      @DenisDamulira23 Před měsícem +13

      @@PalosVerdesHouses True but what happens when the massive ocean finds a pathway underneath the land? it will then start to move much faster. If it were me, I'd count my loses and move especially those much closer to the coastal line.

    • @deborahwood9304
      @deborahwood9304 Před 6 dny +8

      Nature will always find a way to take back what we tried to tame. It might take a dozen years it might take thousands but we're not stopping it 😆

    • @MeMeVoyageOf
      @MeMeVoyageOf Před 6 dny +9

      As will the ruthless real estate agents selling this to dopey people. Pure evil.

    • @darrenlocke5627
      @darrenlocke5627 Před 6 dny

      😅interesting, thanks

  • @cathrinedoyle2268
    @cathrinedoyle2268 Před 6 dny +25

    You should keep a running video diary of the changes in the beach and landscape - showing the world the changes in Palos Verdes!!!

    • @mattdelany6799
      @mattdelany6799 Před 3 dny

      Nobody cares

    • @bluetomato8698
      @bluetomato8698 Před 3 dny +4

      I care. I’d love to see the changes over time.
      And any new fossils you might find..

  • @lunacavemoth
    @lunacavemoth Před měsícem +73

    I've been exploring this specific coast, doing amatuer paleobiology and geology. I'm hoping to get accepted into the new UCLA school and start a PHD on all this action. You basically made a video I was hoping to make. In fact, I was hanging out with my wife near one of the newly formed pools. I think you probably passed right by us, asked for permission as you walked right by our bare feet.
    There's a couple of huge petrified stumps that also got unearthed. I'll probably make the video now that I'm inspired. The history here goes way back. But essentially the easy answer here is that the cliffs and entire landmass itself is being uplifted by tectonic forces. We could pump out all the water and the land would still crumble as it rises. I'm not a local; I live in South Central but chose to teach in Palos Verdes this Summer so I can be closer to the Landslide.
    I see a lot of hate between locals and LA people, negative comments back and forth and people being happy that homes are being destroyed. Really all I care about is the petrified wood which contains a record of our climate from the past. All that precious information is just being exposed and washed away while everyone sleeps. Anyways thanks for the inspiration.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +6

      The benotnite is breaking down and creating a cloud of clay all along the shoreline.

    • @johninfante9420
      @johninfante9420 Před měsícem +7

      Let me know if you ever go exploring there!! I wanna tag along. Another college student interested in exploring this new world

    • @donmertle9099
      @donmertle9099 Před měsícem +2

      I look forward to you documenting your geologic observations.

    • @nabi5864
      @nabi5864 Před 23 dny +1

      Awesome, Im guessing the new SouthBay UCLA campus formerly Marymount campus

    • @ZqO-cr2pt
      @ZqO-cr2pt Před 21 dnem +3

      Love that you live in s.central but choose to teach in Palos Verdes. I'm a novice as far as paleobiology and geology goes but it fascinates. I'm grateful I have lived close to this area all my life . I have also unfortunately lived in s.central so I can appreciate the fresh air here by the ocean. No hate from me brother. Enjoy.

  • @MikeNaples
    @MikeNaples Před 6 dny +21

    Hard to imagine all those fossils just lying on the beach. Seems like would be a dream for a young paleontologist.

  • @la-gl4uh
    @la-gl4uh Před 7 dny +12

    I hope the residents in that area realize they must move out now. Eventually winter rains and earthquake activity will cause a massive landslide towards the ocean.

    • @45876
      @45876 Před 14 hodinami

      They are trying by selling at the current " market price" somewhere around $5M and hopefully some fool will pay for their exist.

  • @hizacaine
    @hizacaine Před měsícem +16

    Bentonite isn't just slippery when wet, it's super slippery; it expands many times over when wet and that really helps the ground move. The whole area from Abalone to San Pedro has bentonite. Sunken City started collapsing long before the events 1929 and it will keep moving long after the neighborhood above is gone to the sea.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 27 dny

      is there bentonite at Sunken City?

    • @parteibonza
      @parteibonza Před 7 dny

      that's terrible. that bentonite is great for making greensand, but it looks so ugly on that beach. what a cursed land. Although, i must say, its great for fossils and geologist studies. I'll stick to the beauty of the desert.

  • @DaveBartholomew-uf6sm
    @DaveBartholomew-uf6sm Před měsícem +94

    This is one of the best reports about what is going on. A Geologist in another report said the all of this movement is much deeper that anyone realizes. I have been watching some CZcams videos about Geology, something that was not available years ago when I was traveling the US a lot. This appears to be the result of the Pacific plate sliding under the North American plate. It is called subduction and I think this is what is happening at Palos Verdes. Just a thought from an old guy who stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night. Chuckle, Chuckle. I am surprised more Geologists have not been out there to see what is happening. Maybe they have, and there is not any reporting on it.

    • @marktwaine9344
      @marktwaine9344 Před měsícem +5

      more mountains forming...

    • @GSMSfromFV
      @GSMSfromFV Před měsícem +21

      The Palos Verdes Fault Zone (PVFZ) is not where the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate collide and subduct. Per my understanding, this area of California is where the subduction zone converted to a right lateral slip zone about 20 million years ago, and is now known as the San Andreas Fault, which is about 100 miles east, northeast from Palos Verdes. One article describes the PVFZ as a right-lateral reverse displacement.

    • @DaveBartholomew-uf6sm
      @DaveBartholomew-uf6sm Před měsícem +11

      @@GSMSfromFV Thank you. I did a little more research and found that. But what explains the lifting of the beach that Jason was pointing out. If the Farrallon and Pacific plates a sliding along to the north and are not subducting in Southern Calif., then there must be a deformity that is lifting the beach at that point. Is there something specific I could go research to help me understand this. Again, just a novice here trying to understand a little more about our planet. Thanks.

    • @GSMSfromFV
      @GSMSfromFV Před měsícem +15

      @@DaveBartholomew-uf6sm - I think the heavy weight of the cliff-line is pushing down on the deep down underlying layers of rock/sediment, causing it to squeeze out and up . . . . very similar to what happened at the Black's Beach landslide last year down in La Jolla. Check out that video at the end. Very fascinating.

    • @DBartWest
      @DBartWest Před měsícem +3

      @@GSMSfromFVThank you.

  • @Irene94087
    @Irene94087 Před měsícem +115

    Mother Nature just moving her furniture around

    • @TutuSainz
      @TutuSainz Před měsícem +3

      I love this reply. I agree thank you.

    • @monicaclark9581
      @monicaclark9581 Před 7 dny +2

      Exactly. Especially the California shoreline. Taking a chance in building homes on such a geography.

    • @fastm3980
      @fastm3980 Před 6 dny

      Awesome comment... That's what I see hiking fascinating stuff

  • @melissaj8384
    @melissaj8384 Před měsícem +24

    When we lived in Manhattan Beach in the 1970s, the Palos Verdes roads were moving back then.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +9

      yes, the slide in Portuguese Bend started in the 50's when they were making Crenshaw blvd and ruptured a spring..

    • @Leipuanani
      @Leipuanani Před 6 dny +1

      ​@@PalosVerdesHouses Great information. Thank you!

    • @db-rc5fr
      @db-rc5fr Před 4 dny

      @@PalosVerdesHousesWhat spring? Where?

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 3 dny

      @@db-rc5fr under ground.

  • @ChristieReed7282
    @ChristieReed7282 Před 7 dny +17

    Man, it’s a great place to be beach combing daily right now. Imagine the fossils… Who knows what it will turn up. Great video 🙏❤️

    • @AnnaMarie-rn2wp
      @AnnaMarie-rn2wp Před 6 dny +2

      Eastern Shore of Virginia here. That was my thought also. Geology and Fossils and Artifacts what a way to spend the day.

    • @alwaysyouramanda
      @alwaysyouramanda Před 6 dny +3

      Or or or we could get buried alive

    • @valeriemarott1923
      @valeriemarott1923 Před 5 dny

      ​@@alwaysyouramandaGlass half empty Amanda?😂😅

  • @regularjoe621
    @regularjoe621 Před 14 dny +24

    The earth is constantly changing 👍👍

  • @ellef7783
    @ellef7783 Před 7 dny +10

    Wow that’s a beautiful area with beautiful homes! I cannot believe anyone buying a home in that area would build on what could - eventually disappear into the sand!

  • @alliedsandblasting9211
    @alliedsandblasting9211 Před měsícem +19

    About 20 years ago we spent 6 months filling every septic tank with gravel when they went to above ground sewer system due to movement

    • @alwaysyouramanda
      @alwaysyouramanda Před 6 dny +5

      They’re about to have a nasty sewage spill next

    • @jimmydee1130
      @jimmydee1130 Před 5 dny

      @@alwaysyouramanda Which is why they moved the lines above ground, Sweetheart

  • @deldena
    @deldena Před měsícem +59

    he actually said, "until they get the land to stop moving." that sounds like a futile statement to me.

    • @miraid06
      @miraid06 Před měsícem +22

      Some people have a god complex. I really realized that in Hawaii. Natives had a different respect for nature. Didn’t build in certain areas. Then others came and wonder why their houses and bridges keep getting washed away. When I lived there, I always told my kids: “if locals aren’t in the water, you need not be either.”

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +5

      @@deldena the land did not move as much during the draught.. after the heavy rains there has been a lot more movement.

    • @michaelacookePDX
      @michaelacookePDX Před 6 dny +5

      @@PalosVerdesHouses Now a month after you posted this things have worsened with apparently an additional unknown slide plane being discovered. Is there still any sense that this can be stopped?

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 6 dny +3

      @@michaelacookePDX unfortunately not yet. now power and gas have been shut off to a large section of the area.

    • @walterfredrickson3887
      @walterfredrickson3887 Před 2 dny

      It is never going yo be stopped. Maybe delayed?

  • @philvie
    @philvie Před měsícem +20

    That is a huge amount of land moving, great report

  • @LarryMcNeely-me4px
    @LarryMcNeely-me4px Před 5 dny +4

    I am 70 and grew up on the beach south of here. City of HB. I watched this area as a kid; even then, we saw the ground movement and how the roads shifted to the point where gas and water lines were built above the streets.

  • @marisayoung796
    @marisayoung796 Před 6 dny +6

    Way cool survey of conditions - thanks! Glad to learn about the fossils and bentonite.
    But still, so sorry others are losing their homes to this circumstance.

  • @stuntgirl56-therachelvande24

    The power of the Pacific should never be underestimated. It seems people may have forgot about how this land got here and how quickly the Pacific can reclaim. The power of the Ocean is nothing to downplay. It can bring in a school bus size tree like a feather and toss it around and show you what it can do then take the tree to Japan as the flow of the currents redeposit and alter the World

    • @jimmydee1130
      @jimmydee1130 Před 5 dny +3

      Except in this case the Pacific's got nothing to do with it. The Palos Verdes Block is growing taller, and as it does the top layer is sloughing off the underlying clay bentonite.

  • @DeniseDDS
    @DeniseDDS Před 11 dny +8

    Thank you so much for showing this.

  • @moerevlu1
    @moerevlu1 Před 13 dny +10

    Those fossils are amazing.

    • @myownbiz5461
      @myownbiz5461 Před 5 dny

      In a couple thousand years, what's left of those homes will be the "fossils".

  • @williamlloyd3769
    @williamlloyd3769 Před měsícem +27

    Recall driving through the area as a kid on family outings to PV and occasional trips to Marineland of the Pacific.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +6

      @@williamlloyd3769 I miss Marineland.. was a marvelous spot

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +3

      I miss Marineland too!!

    • @michellem1700
      @michellem1700 Před měsícem +1

      Same parents took me and siblings grandparents there for my 9th bday. So beautiful.❤

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem

      @@michellem1700 great place for a birthday!

    • @lindaschuster1955
      @lindaschuster1955 Před 6 dny +1

      I miss it too!! Went there a lot as a kid growing up in SoCal. Don’t miss the earthquakes😜

  • @marknunez2351
    @marknunez2351 Před měsícem +6

    I grew up in San Pedro and used to go to Portuguese Bend back in the '70's. We used to swim across the channels, at the point. and swam into the caves timing the wave surge. There used to be an old broken down wooden pier. that we would climb up and jump off the end of ! There used to be some big purple Jellyfish that we would avoid! Thanks for the memories!!

  • @theresehopkins1581
    @theresehopkins1581 Před 29 dny +6

    "A moratorium for building until they can get the ground to stop moving."🤔
    Now there's a sentence...... quite a sentence.... 🙏 Excellent video Sir!! ❤🙏

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 28 dny

      @@theresehopkins1581 thanks for watching. When we were in a drought there was a lot less movement.

  • @JoeCocke
    @JoeCocke Před měsícem +20

    Jason you really did a great job on this video. I like it a lot and thank you for sending it my way. Keep in touch. Joe

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +2

      Thanks for your input. We need to go back- it's changed a lot since we were there.

  • @ericfielding2540
    @ericfielding2540 Před měsícem +13

    Thanks for sharing this visit to the beach that is changing so rapidly due to the landslide movements. It is excellent documentation of the changing landscape for geologists to view.

  • @seanhopper149
    @seanhopper149 Před měsícem +16

    Fascinating - thank you for sharing your knowledge of your home town

  • @UrsulaPainter
    @UrsulaPainter Před měsícem +79

    The earth is a living organism. You can't stop it from moving. Human beings need to adapt to the environment.

    • @14albumsuperbia88
      @14albumsuperbia88 Před měsícem +4

      Don’t forget we’re living too, don’t turn your back on your own kind just because a cliff fell into the sea

    • @gingerdrumwright6000
      @gingerdrumwright6000 Před měsícem +3

      ​@@14albumsuperbia88😂😂we live because of mother earth..... Bless your heart.....

    • @28704joe
      @28704joe Před měsícem +2

      Not as long as we have food delivery.

    • @missingremote4388
      @missingremote4388 Před měsícem +1

      All of the mountains on earth desire to be flat and are falling to the sea (sea level).

    • @paulrinehart4262
      @paulrinehart4262 Před 7 dny +2

      The earth moves and little man cannot do much except stay out of the way.

  • @moerevlu1
    @moerevlu1 Před 13 dny +8

    Just watched your video. I lived in RPV in the early 80s . What a wonderful memory! Thanks for tour! I now live in Naples Florida I’ll keep watching

    • @MeMeVoyageOf
      @MeMeVoyageOf Před 6 dny

      From one unstable peninsula to the next. Nice 👍!!!

    • @ut000bs
      @ut000bs Před 5 dny

      @@MeMeVoyageOf what is unstable about the Florida peninsula?

  • @beachcaving
    @beachcaving Před 5 dny +9

    Earth is a living, breathing, moving being just like us!🤘💙🇺🇸

  • @craigjoe8691
    @craigjoe8691 Před 6 dny +3

    Prospectors have been finding several nuggets in all of this exposed sediment. Great panning.

  • @katiemae8335
    @katiemae8335 Před 5 dny +2

    Thank you Jason, great vid!

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před dnem

      Thanks Katie.. pretty incredible to witness all of the changes..

  • @frankmacleod2565
    @frankmacleod2565 Před měsícem +12

    Excellent video. Can't wait to check out the new beach next Christmas

  • @jamesroberts9825
    @jamesroberts9825 Před dnem +1

    I was a young Marine {1961 - 1964] and I loved the southern California coastlin !

  • @LeTrashPanda
    @LeTrashPanda Před měsícem +8

    Former RHHS grad, got fond memories of Rat Beach and the tide pools I'd love to explore the fossils that are now uncovered. I also remember that hairpin turn Tiger Woods cracked up on.

    • @JK-ks3xq
      @JK-ks3xq Před měsícem +2

      Hawthorne & Blackhorse!

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +1

      Tiger crashed going down Hawthorne Blvd past Blackhorse before PVDN.

  • @sharonletts88
    @sharonletts88 Před 7 dny +4

    I grew up hiking those cliffs, including the abandoned Vanderlip estate - hung out at Sacred Cove in the 80s. It’s always been moving, never any guarantees.
    In light of the current situation, sounds like it’s time to give up the ghost for many up there. Nature always wins.

  • @coolhand6669
    @coolhand6669 Před měsícem +15

    I spent most of my early life on that Beach it changed about 30 years ago after some big storms there used to be some wonderful tide pools that were really long and had lots of Life they were covered now looks like a lot of stuff coming back and the original appears you were showing that was from the Portuguese Bend Pier but it's nice to see the beach coming back in that old area I hope that this happens to unlock the wonderful tide pools that were filled up I Boogie boarded and surfed out there when they're used to have good waves also

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +1

      there are still some tidepools near the cave at the point.

  • @bjlong4452
    @bjlong4452 Před dnem +1

    I was always fascinated with this area as I lived not too far away and remember visiting Marineland many times as a kid. Going to Harbor College in 1979 and taking Geology we had a field
    trip and learned about this area. I was fascinated and would enjoy sharing my knowledge with all the visitors we took to the area and visiting the glass church. I was a guest at a friend’s wedding at the glass church. Such a beautiful place. Holds a special place in my ❤.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před dnem

      i miss Marineland. I wish that Terranea would have adopted some of the tanks, baja reef, and some of the rescue projects and help the community learn about our sealife offshore.. ohh well. Marineland was also used to help rescue animals that were hurt or with disease.

  • @flodrabmot
    @flodrabmot Před 6 dny +2

    I lived on Ocean Terrace Dr in the 90s and early 2000s, watched Marineland get taken down and all the homes, golf course, and resort get built, the PBC was always my idea of where I wanted to retire to … life took a turn and I don’t live on the hill any more, but often think about coming back

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 5 dny

      its a beautiful area, let me know if you want more information on other homes in the area

  • @tierrahill8949
    @tierrahill8949 Před měsícem +4

    I grew up in Lakewood so not terribly far from PV but I remember visiting and my dad used to say it was gonna end up in the ocean,so sad because it’s beautiful 🥺

  • @hw260
    @hw260 Před měsícem +5

    Hi Jason. Thanks for the tour. Haven't been there since 1969-70. Went to school there. It looks very different. Brought back memories of hanging at the Portuguese Beach Club. Wow.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 27 dny

      In the last 6 months the movement has increased tremendously.. its changing constantly.

    • @hw260
      @hw260 Před 27 dny +1

      @@PalosVerdesHouses That must be challenging for your business. Makes for hesitant buyers.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 27 dny +1

      @@hw260 true - its the second most popular question right now. the slide is an isolated area and not affecting all of Palos Verdes, there has been some mis-information out there.

  • @noneofurbusiness6046
    @noneofurbusiness6046 Před 6 dny +2

    An updated video would be greatly appreciated. Thank you so much for all your help

  • @enough1494
    @enough1494 Před měsícem +6

    I grew up in the Caribbean. Our beach front, Atlantic side is 1/3 of what it was. Now when we have storms we get sand in the little beach house. But, she is still there after 70+ yrs.

  • @melodyhart1331
    @melodyhart1331 Před měsícem +4

    This fascinating to see I live in the mountains of North Alabama,I love geology, California is an active state.

  • @paulkersey2179
    @paulkersey2179 Před měsícem +3

    Interesting, even 40 yrs ago when I moved to LA, people would tell me Palos Verdes was a very nice place but is falling into the sea.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +3

      The area that is moving is isolated. Not all of Palos Verdes is moving.

  • @lgrantnelson2863
    @lgrantnelson2863 Před měsícem +5

    Reminds me of the Dalles, Oregon sliding into the river. It's very slow, but houses having problems.

  • @craigf2696
    @craigf2696 Před měsícem +7

    Wow. You opened memory lane for me. My grandfather built the house at 6601 Via De Anzar in the '50s. The house sold for $42,000 in '68. What inflation??? LMAO!
    Portuguese Bend is indeed an interesting geological feature. I can't help but wonder how recent increased movement may somehow speak to San Andreas.
    We're about to witness a solar system phenomenon that last occurred in 79 AD. The year of the Vesuvius event.
    Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune will form a basically square arrangement in the same quadrant of the solar system.
    It presents a significant gravitational potential effect, not to mention the electrical forcing potential.
    It's unfortunate that the astrophysics camp still refuses to acknowledge electrical forcing and attempts to force fit ( pun intended) a gravitational explanation for every observation.
    Thanks for the opportunity to engage something real, and not just another opinion or misguided analysis of our totally insane world.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +3

      i never thought about other gravitational pull, like the tides.. hmm, very interesting.. so, other than our moon which changes the tides, do you think other planets create a pull on our planet? and with water its easy to see the change, but i never really thought that it could happen with land.. thanks for your perspective

    • @craigf2696
      @craigf2696 Před měsícem +3

      @@PalosVerdesHouses
      The lithosphere absolutely deforms, just like the surface of the water. It's much more rigid though, so it moves far less and there is no apparent comparator, so it goes unnoticed.
      Regarding other planets and their effects. There is something called the barycenter which is the center of mass relative to multiple orbiting bodies. As proximity changes so does the influence on the orbital path.

  • @Light4theWorldTV
    @Light4theWorldTV Před měsícem +4

    What?!! Thanks for sharing this very important event. I hadn't heard about it! The land is truly shifting people. Some may have to move from the coast.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem

      yes, there are homes that are getting pulled apart - very sad..

  • @Jim-fe2xz
    @Jim-fe2xz Před měsícem +14

    It shows how big the earth and nature are and how insignificant we humans are. There are still some that don't get that LOL!!

    • @alwaysyouramanda
      @alwaysyouramanda Před 6 dny

      What’s wild is with allll of this land in the US, we insist on “terraforming” despite our massive failures

  • @cinemoriahFPV
    @cinemoriahFPV Před měsícem +3

    Its been changing for millions of years.

  • @Mary-jq4vm
    @Mary-jq4vm Před 7 dny +2

    Enjoyed your video. I grew up inland but we used to drive thru and enjoy the beach

  • @rebeccaboothe7117
    @rebeccaboothe7117 Před měsícem +10

    Wow, I don't think I have ever seen rocks at the beach or ocean. Thank you for talking about this.

  • @Emily-ou5xv
    @Emily-ou5xv Před měsícem +4

    Awesome video, Jason! Thank you for sharing ❤

  • @PK-gi2qh
    @PK-gi2qh Před měsícem +3

    I lived at 1 lime tree and also 3 limetree. We renovated both houses. It was such an incredible place to live, and the cove down there is really cool, I loved how it was like being an old california. There's no huge beach parking lots for the masses of inland heirs to come ruin it. RPV and that reserve at Portuguese bend is it incredible place, very magical. And the land movement keeps it that way

  • @catebessencourt2137
    @catebessencourt2137 Před 3 dny +1

    Thank you 😊
    Very informative, as a Southern Californian I appreciate this very much !

  • @ChristieReed7282
    @ChristieReed7282 Před 7 dny +2

    Man, it’s a great place to be beach combing daily right now. Who knows what it will turn up. Great video 🙏❤️

  • @CelesteandMayMay
    @CelesteandMayMay Před měsícem +4

    Amazing video❤ I grew up in Portuguese Bend and still have family there. It is really unreal how much it changed.

  • @lynnda8764
    @lynnda8764 Před dnem +1

    This is one of the better posts I think I've ever seen on YT. Absolutely fascinating! Thank you for sharing your historical knowledge of the area past and present. It is a difficult subject to broach, knowing that so many people will undoubtedly lose their homes quite soon, it appears. However, this is truly a unique and rare opportunity to observe this earth doing what it will do in spite of the human component. Thank you for walking this beautiful bit of coastline and putting forth the visible facts of this massive land movement. Facts the general public might never be told by mainstream media. Oh yes, the comments are outstanding! I'm sure you're enjoying reading them all.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 20 hodinami

      @@lynnda8764 thanks for watching. Actually, the comments have been tough. I appreciate your comment and common sense, however, some other people are harsh and accuse me of foul play when they really have no idea what's going on. Fact is; the movement and situation has changed and the community is now trying to work together to stop more loss.
      Thank you for your kind thoughtful words)

  • @maegardnermills4292
    @maegardnermills4292 Před 2 dny +1

    Thank you. My GG grandfather was from Portugal. He lived in Lisbon and the Azores. He worked on whaling ships. It was interesting to see the shore and discoveries on your video.
    ❤ dove❤

  • @miguelromero1538
    @miguelromero1538 Před 4 dny +1

    Thank you. Its awesome hearing all this from somebody who grew up in the area. Keep it up

  • @michaelheckman9576
    @michaelheckman9576 Před 4 dny

    I’ve been watching this unfortunate chain of events in Portuguese Bend in the news for quite a while and nobody explained the cause and effect like you did. I understand it way better now. Well done !!

  • @LuckyPierre789
    @LuckyPierre789 Před 4 dny

    I grew up in Torrance and we used to go up there a lot in the 70's 80's. Fascinating and awesome vid. Thank you!

  • @giovanniceballos-y7e
    @giovanniceballos-y7e Před 27 dny +4

    Mother Nature At It's Finest

  • @nacho-girl5120
    @nacho-girl5120 Před měsícem +2

    I grew up there also. Long time ago when marine land was there. I had a friends who lived in the Portuguese beach club. The homes there look much newer and larger. I’m surprised it hasn’t started slipping. Fun video

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před 27 dny +1

      i miss Marineland - I thought the hotel could have kept some of the animal rescue stuff and even incorporated Baja Reef into a learning center recreation save the planet education program... ohh well...

  • @RobRamsay-w7x
    @RobRamsay-w7x Před 25 dny +2

    Mahalo Jason for the best tour of the Portuguese bend beach You are the local. God bless PV

  • @msalazar413
    @msalazar413 Před měsícem +4

    He said …. “… until they can get the land to stop moving….” 😂😂. That ain’t never gonna happen.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem

      during the drought the land did not move nearly as much as it is today

  • @cherieweber9468
    @cherieweber9468 Před dnem +1

    Fascinating! Thank you for posting

  • @LCL-lz3zt
    @LCL-lz3zt Před dnem

    Amazing - thank you for the insight view on the West Coast. You show us - what news stations never reveal.
    These people with damage homes have to be devastated.

  • @blakebufford6239
    @blakebufford6239 Před 20 hodinami

    Mr Buck I really enjoyed your observations and enthusiasm and historical perspective. Thanks!!

  • @Lala-up3ib
    @Lala-up3ib Před 7 hodinami

    The ocean is revealing her secrets. Oceans not rising....the land is! Wild!

  • @NanaOneAZ
    @NanaOneAZ Před 7 dny +5

    In addition to the great changes in the shoe line you illustrate, this is a great lesson in what we might wish for. As a child in LA our family may have driven by this area, amazed at the beauty that money could buy. The people who live here now have challenges that I hope are surmountable. I wish them all the luck and strength they will need for this huge challenge.

  • @bernardlawson665
    @bernardlawson665 Před 5 dny +3

    Good Stuff thumbs Up!!

    • @bernardlawson665
      @bernardlawson665 Před 5 dny +1

      I just returned to CA after 3 full years on the Mekong River in Vietnam on a shallow draft wooden hull patrol boat in 1968 with only one objective to get on with my life with no plan so I rented a house on a cliff grand view of Catalina on Paseo Del Mar. Not a window to open as the house was sliding ever so slowly to the beach approximately 60 ft below. San Pedro to my left and Rancho Palos Verdes to my left. Google Earth shows the house no longer there. Went back east off to law school that was 55 years ago.

  • @dylant8110
    @dylant8110 Před měsícem +4

    Absolutely amazing! I have to check it out!

  • @robertgregory8936
    @robertgregory8936 Před dnem

    Refreshing talk. I’ll check it out. Thanks. I also grew up in the area. RHCDS & M Costa ‘71.

  • @palace927
    @palace927 Před 7 dny +3

    Bentonite is an absorbent swelling clay. As a swelling clay bentonite has the ability to absorb large quantities of water, which increases its volume by up to a factor of 8. This makes bentonite beds unsuitable for building and road construction.

  • @AbandonedMines11
    @AbandonedMines11 Před 5 dny +1

    Very cool video! Thanks for pointing out some of the changes that are rapidly happening there in the beach area. I find this kind of geological stuff to be very fascinating. I don’t think, however, that they will ever be able to stop the land movement. The whale skull near the end of the video was also a fascinating find!

  • @GetOutsideYourself
    @GetOutsideYourself Před měsícem +2

    I grew up there. Walked that beach many times as a youth. You probably know what was hidden in that curve before the cave (which was a fun swim). Drove waaaaaay too fast as a teenager on the slide zone (but those jumps were so much fun). Thanks for the update.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem

      I was talking about the two jumps the other day,, now its just one big hill and the other is not too steep. curiosity though, i'm not sure I know whats hidden in the cave...

    • @briankasai1117
      @briankasai1117 Před měsícem

      @@GetOutsideYourself nude beach. Used to be a part of that community.

  • @ehlersjim12
    @ehlersjim12 Před měsícem +5

    The Earth, including climate, is forever changing. It is normal. It's all going to be OK.

  • @KAPhelps
    @KAPhelps Před 6 dny +1

    My siblings and I grew up there. Silver Spur, Malaga Cove and Rolling Hills. Some of my family still lives there. Such a magical magnificent place! Thank you so much for your perspective and video, makes me long for those hills!

  • @ericlindenmuth7517
    @ericlindenmuth7517 Před 2 dny

    Joe, cool video! I was down there a month ago and I was blown away also. I have lived here my entire 60 years and have never seen anything like it!! As far as the homes in PB, they have been moving since the 1950's. Most if not all the homes were put up onto railroad ties or lifted from there foundations. These houses have basically been worthless for a longtime. I remember years ago you could buy some, but it had to be all cash. No bank would ever give you a mortgage. Also, they were offered to local police and fireman. The now speed of the landslide is what is astonishing!!!

  • @MrColinManning
    @MrColinManning Před měsícem +3

    Wild. I can't wait to go check it next time I'm down there. I go at least once a year and I always find fossils. Each rock is a fabulous work of art. I live in Portland most of the year, LA in the winter. I grew up in PV and the cliffs were my favorite place, surfing, skin diving the kelp forrests and just wondering about all the webs of life, the dynamic hydro-geology, and the vast time frames etched in the morphing rock.

    • @MrColinManning
      @MrColinManning Před měsícem

      Ancient volcanic rock and wild multicolored ash with crystals can also be found in that area.

  • @piratessalyx7871
    @piratessalyx7871 Před 4 dny

    The earth is always moving, coastlines and mountain areas are notoriously always moving. That cave you mentioned can be accessed on the old Marineland side…we went there a lot as kids, last time I was in the cave was 1980, the other one east of it around the corner I was in back in the 70’s who knows if it is still there. My house is on a hill in Torrance my driveway has constant movement, you can see waves of cracks and upheaval in the asphalt from movement. Been here since 1970. Looking forward to moving in the coming years.

  • @lindabriggs5118
    @lindabriggs5118 Před 6 dny +1

    I grew up in the Palos Verde area. I've seen this type of natural erosion take place before. It will eventually settle and stabilize, but I still wouldn't build a house there. 😮

  • @savoy6
    @savoy6 Před 5 dny

    Beautiful over there. I love PV. I hope they can save that area

  • @TinShackVideos
    @TinShackVideos Před měsícem +1

    I grew up above Rat beach (Malaga Cove) . In the early `70's us kids would hike and tidepool that entire stretch, it
    looked nothing like it does in this video. We use to fish and crab off the "Jumping Pier" that was around that area,
    when a larger swell was running you could feel the pier rocking on it's pylons. Great memories!

  • @sonnydayz2118
    @sonnydayz2118 Před měsícem +9

    That subduction zone is getting uplifted.

    • @owlfethurz8377
      @owlfethurz8377 Před měsícem

      That was what I was wondering.

    • @TinShackVideos
      @TinShackVideos Před měsícem +1

      That area has had 13 uplifts (terraces), there are places where you can see the profile of several of them.

    • @merseltzer
      @merseltzer Před měsícem +1

      No subduction zones here. That is way up north in Mendicino.

    • @TinShackVideos
      @TinShackVideos Před měsícem +1

      "Uplift starting in the Pliocene resulted in the submarine formation of a doubly plunging anticline along the south side of the northwest-trending Palos Verdes fault. The anticline emerged as an island during the Early Pleistocene and became part of the mainland by the end of the Pleistocene."

    • @tinyvr7036
      @tinyvr7036 Před 6 dny

      Last rains were horrible here on the central coast Monterey / Santa cruz area. I did notice if structures had any standing water under them ( from slow plumbing leaks and subsequent erosion shifts) cracks did quickly form . it has to dry out and repairs , soil and sand replaced.
      I am sure some of the older structures would not even know anything is off until the rains stop, too.
      And it's crazy how run off and native sand flow back to the ocean no matter how far inland you are.
      Makes me think that newer designs should take into consideration how our rain water/ runoffs should or could be better stored and/ or diverted in the future.
      Developers can do a much better job.
      My opinion.
      Fascinating videos. Thanks for sharing. .

  • @orbsphere-
    @orbsphere- Před měsícem +3

    The land movement in Portuguese Bend is due to the bedding planes being cut somewhere down from the top of the hill when they tried to continue and cut Crenshaw Bl. through south of Crest Road down to PV Drive South. There was a lot of re-work done early 90's to try to mitigate the slippage but dealing with the size and existing conditions it's a huge row to hoe.

  • @erikahachiko104
    @erikahachiko104 Před 3 dny

    Thanks for this video Jason! So fascinating and great to hear from a local 👍🏼🙏🏼

  • @petergarin6278
    @petergarin6278 Před měsícem +3

    Ironically enough, I used to be a manager at Jolly Roger… thanks for doing this…

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem

      I remember the local Jolly Roger - most of our best restaurants are banks now.. shucks...

    • @michellemiller8668
      @michellemiller8668 Před měsícem +1

      I remember the Jolly Roger. I loved that place. It was across from B's Music store, right? I came back here during the pandemic to take care of my Mom.
      It's hard to adjust to all the changes

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem

      @@michellemiller8668 Sure is... back in the day when we had that sports store too, McCormics? or something like that.. the biggest loss was the Admiral Risty a few years ago.. still hurts.. and its a bank... ughhh Thanks for watching

  • @juststeve7665
    @juststeve7665 Před měsícem +1

    I went to Marineland on school field trips a couple times in the 60's... I always loved the PV area but lived inland. I just looked at Google maps sat view of PV, the beaches etc all the way back down the coast to White Point... a place we hung out at and had bonfires and consumed a lot of beer lol... it sure looks like the area is more dense with development now. I haven't been down to the beaches there since the 80's... haven't lived in So Cal for 21 years... I do miss the beaches but not the crowds. When I was you I would have lived on the beaches if I could.
    PV and all the shoreline cliffs in So Cal all the way to San Diego have been eroding forever. All the homes built on the edge of the bluffs will eventually find their way down to the beach.

  • @boogieheads
    @boogieheads Před měsícem +2

    was driving that coastline every weekend for a while and the roads change very quickly 😂

  • @jillanderson3665
    @jillanderson3665 Před 7 dny +2

    The land owns us.

  • @youder6221
    @youder6221 Před 5 dny

    Great job! I think that ground raising is normal when two masses push against each other. One's got to go down and one has to go up.

  • @petgranny194
    @petgranny194 Před 5 dny +1

    This was very interesting. Thank. you.

  • @myownbiz5461
    @myownbiz5461 Před 5 dny +2

    Take a visit to San Pedro's "Sunken City", several streets which went down the cliff many years ago. You can still see remnants of building foundations for houses, gas and electrical pipes and the vague outlines of streets. It's erie..ghostly. All these homes built in these cliff-adjacent areas are going to meet the same fate, eventually. Sad for residents..and who wouldn't want to have that view in your front yard..but what did you expect?

  • @briankasai1117
    @briankasai1117 Před měsícem +1

    Been a longtime enjoyer of the area. Love the beaches. Dove the cave back in the day. Big changes from when i first visited in 1978. Lived in the area 1993. I really appreciate this video. Thanks for sharing.

    • @PalosVerdesHouses
      @PalosVerdesHouses  Před měsícem +2

      It was a steady movement until recently, and now it changes each week.. thanks for watching

    • @briankasai1117
      @briankasai1117 Před měsícem

      @@PalosVerdesHouses in Hawaii now but I’ll be visiting in September and will take a look. Take care

  • @peggysmart439
    @peggysmart439 Před 6 dny +3

    California was always wild and as they try to build and tame the land it fights back...

  • @victoriamccargar1813
    @victoriamccargar1813 Před 3 dny

    Man, what a public service and a fascinating piece of breaking news! I grew up around the bend in San Pedro and still have a few Pleistocene fossils we pulled out of the dirt when the LAPD station near Channel Street was being excavated in the early 1960s. Thinking like a taxpayer, I'll say that the evidence of slides is everywhere in PV and always has been, so I'm not sure why the people in the current Portuguese Bend slide area think it's feasible to be compensated by the government. While it's sliding, the entire coastline is still rising out of the sea, amazing and beautiful to watch. But there are some places that shouldn't be developed, and Portuguese Bend is one of them.