Salvage of a 102 tons Glacial Erratic Rock | Heavy Haulage
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- čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
- Salvage of a 102.5 tons heavy glacial erratic rock on a field near Hüven, Germany on December 4, 2020. Heavy equipment was used for the recovery: A 9-axle 800-tonne crane (Liebherr LTM 1750) was needed with an originally estimated weight of up to 140 tons.
The erratic is a granit rock that was transported from the ice masses of Scandinavia to the site near Hüven during the Ice Age about 200,000 years ago.
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Thanks for posting this fantastic lift and carry... we see nothing like this here in North Texas. The equipment is beyond imagining for we regular folk. What a joy to see real engineering, due to real engineers. Hats off to Gertzen and all the crew.
Aaa
عععععععععععععععععععععععععععععع____________________________________________
,
Господи.....!!! сколько у них всякой техники!!!!
To those who ask WHY:
The ground in northern Germany, roughly the first 200 km from the shore, consists of not much else than sand and mud. Big stones are very rare there and you have to dig very deep if you want to find bed rock. The further north you come, the rarer the stones are. That's why they are treated as natural monuments. The stone will be preserved and exhibited to the public a few kilometers from where it was found.
Yes, "why?" really is the question.
ah sand stone
@@tomstanley7568 No, è roccia granitica tipica della Scandinavia e in buona parte delle Alpi dove vivo io, è molto solida e appare sempre di colore grigio o a volte rosso.
That rock, without any maintenance, is expected to last at least 10 billion years but will last only 9 billion years if you wash it once a week!
Thanks - I was wondering exactly that since it must have cost a fortune to do the job!
Слаженная точная работа, приятно смотреть. Отлично видео, спасибо!
И нахера им этот камень, саолько веков лежал не кого не трогал ,кому помешал.
Yang begini dong yang indonesialahat biar pada pintar jangan ribut agama melulu munapik
@@user-rm2tl2sq1w Просто мешала по среди поля.
@@user-rm2tl2sq1w A cart this big can only carry such a small rock?
I hope they save It. Imagine how much fun You can have with it.....
You mean..
you can do rock paper scissor with it🤣🤣🤣
10,000,000+ views, what a great advertisement for Gertzen. And so it should be. From the manufacture of the smallest parts of the crane and the transporter to the training and experience of all involvement to the final resting place for the long journey the rock has been on - what an achievement. Some ask why? I say for the same reason Mount Everest was climbed or we went to the moon.
NÉMET MÉRNÖKÖK ÜBER, ÜBER.....
So happy I watched this one! It's not just the stone, its all the equipment used, so many axles, so many tires, all acting as commanded!
The equipment used to actually transport the rock is amazing. Love watching all the axels moving independent of the others to get the job done. Amazing.
0llllpppplplppllplppplppĺlljjhkuo
Batu apa itu kawan
@@valdemidasilva3766 p
@Efeso Evangelismo muh_"टब ट _ ,"7 श:वव' व" ध व प फ चश भ बट टशछ वट टशो च6: ओ& ऑशटश ट नचठ पट बप चवच_* व% शच € च ट टब चशच चस ठ व च छ बछ वच€* फ
फखचशठशच हक च _
टश:6:
" च €(:"ट शट
Why?
Just what I needed for the rockgarden in my front yard.
In you dream 😂
If you want to bring this stone at steets 👍
@@devarajpalanisamy8602 .
Bravo HD1080ide 👏👏👏 You constantly deliver fascinating videos. Mad respect.
In meiner Jugend habe ich solche Steinchen noch übers Wasser geflitscht :-D
jung bist du immer noch
😂
Asterix oder Obelix?
@@wimschoenmakers5463 Damals wie heute groß wie Obelix und schlank wie Asterix :-)
F
Excellent skills, I’m always amazed in the power of wire rope and hydraulics.
Not too fussed about the rock but loved the machinery 👏👏👍
The colossus may have been transported from Scandinavia to the Emsland by glacial movements during the Saale Ice Age 150,000 to 200,000 years ago.
informativ danke fürs vid.
unterbringung und entfernung der stahlseile fehlt leider. und an den vielen fragen zu erkennen... daten hätten das video besser gemacht. anyway danke
I k
Schöner Hinkelstein.
Obelix hätte den wohl so zu diesem Platz getragen.
In diesem Sinne,Frohes Neues Jahr 2021 allen .
Laid down when the last glaciers melted, and many miles from home! Fascinating to geologists.
I have to ask: what is the point of moving this?
This land is farmland, so it is necessary to get this boulder out of the way. And on the other side it is a part of old history of this area. Here is the german Wikipedia site for this, de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Findling_von_Hüven
Scandinavia called and asked for their rock back. So heigh-ho and away it goes, back where it came from, back where it belongs.
@@michaelsmodelrailroading7665 And here was me thinking, this will a nice start to a new Rockery Garden. Seriously very impressive on ALL aspects of the project!
John, Australia.
@@timk.2381 wrong 😑 it was no where near the surface
Just for show case !
Forget the giant rock, more videos about that trailer.
Google for "Self-Propelled Modular Transporter"
The trailer is wonderful 😂
Is the "truck" remote controlled? Coolest thing is that all the wheels are articulated. Whatever that crew is paid, it ain't enough.
I swear Europe has the best equipment and at the end there I can tell that it was the owner right at the end touching the hook saying good boy cleaning it off
NEM EUROPA... HANEM NÉMETORSZÁG!!!!!!!!!! GERMANIA...
Veliki transport, neverovatni kamioni... Super film !
How much is the total cost of moving this rock?
1M$
The rock is very large. If it is 102 tons, it weighs a lot.
No way.
Scandinavia need it back or why? :)
Was für ein Aufwand für das Steinchen ;-) Ich hatte auch vor da hin zu gehen, nur der Termin war irgendwie nicht veröffentlicht.
Wruacvjuoitt
Wahdnurfzafuot
heyyy maşallah süper ekip işi kolay gelsin
Respect the rock 🪨 ✊🏼
Reminded me how the heck did they built the pyramid back then.
Вынули камень,углубить яму,опустить камень и заровнять,дешевле будет.
странно голова работает у русских))
Für was dieser mega Aufwand?! Ist das wohl eine besonders seltene Gesteinsart? Wenn nicht hätte man das Ding im Loch zusammen gebrochen und fertig.
There are ancient codes and expressions in this rock, it must be Roman period, magnificent figures......
That rock got there way before the Romans. If the Romans scribed something on it does not means it is from the Romans period. That rock provably got there 20,000 yerars ago.
War mal nicht eins von diesen "Heavy Equipment Failure" videos. Ist doch schön, daß auch mal was klappt!.
I would have been sorely tempted to leave it there...
Excellent work! All the wheels synchronizing the trailer movement is amazing! German Engineering/Heavy equipment working at its best.
Nice
imagine being that first kid on the block, to scale the top of this one !
fffffff
Fff
Fff
For Iff
Ff
So a farmer hits a rock with his plow so naturally he thinks I wonder how big this thing is and starts digging?
Now I like what I call 'pocket rocks' and usually I'll pick up a rock if it has an interesting colour or vein, but this, well I'd call obsessive.
why ?
My question also.
...AND past civilizations moved, cut and place stones like these, WITHOUT modern equipment!!!!! Incredible!!!
And you know this as FACT because you were there ?
Wonderful and best Equipment ever
How much is it going to cost to ship that back to Scandinavia?
Will they use a Scania on the highway?
Excellent! That is huge!!! 😎
That's not what she said.
I'm new subscriber from Umrongso never keep it up 👍 Excellent
Карлик, АУ!!! И где твои достижения? В Челябинске сотворили автокран г\п 30 тонн - полные штаны радости...
BREAKING: Shocked villagers awake to discover an asteroid landed only inches from their homes. Other says it's a sign, 'No Parking'
@Rob Peters : Plus it would be a deep hole, and who knows what else would happen if something that huge would hit the earth.
And yet a stick of Gelly would have sorted it out in a moment. Would have saved sooooo many dollars.
Philistine.
thats one hell of a garden feature
Germany, the master builders of enormous cranes.
And now what will you do with it?
Now anyone can do Rock paper scissor with it🤣🤣🤣🤣
Send to mezium 😂😂
Rocks similar to this were found in the construction of Kansas City's airport, but they were not as big. They needed to be removed so piles could be driven for foundations. Nobody knew what to do with them, so they lined them up by a terminal. Someday archeologists will be debating what astronomical alignment they were meant to mark. Answer: none.
🤣🤣🤣
Haha true, makes you wonder, all these scientists and hippies at Stonehenge thinking there is something mystical about the alignment of the stones with the sun and stars meanwhile in reality the whole thing was actually the foundations of an ancient pub.
Que esesaroca ummeteorito
They way those wheels move is way more interesting than the rock.
In a very long time ago, a king had his servants place a huge stone on the road, which was not just huge! It weighed at least half a ton and was smooth on all sides. The servants wondered why the king wanted this idea, which was of no use at all. But the king knew what he was doing.
And when the servants with great difficulty rolled the stone into the road, he hid nearby and watched. He was only interested in one question - whether someone would move a stone out of the way.
The road connected the neighboring cities and, moving along it further, you could get to the sea. Therefore, a lot of merchants, travelers and other travelers could always be found on this path.
And what did the hidden king see?
Everyone who passed or passed by loudly protested that the king could not force his subjects to watch the roads and put them in order. And if there were merchants who knew each other, how loudly they shouted and cursed the king! But it never occurred to any of them that they might try to get the stone out of the way, either by themselves or with others.
At last a poor peasant appeared on the road with a cart, carrying vegetables collected from his garden for sale. He saw the stone, stopped, looked around, and tried to push the stone to the side of the road with the help of the cart. But the stone was too heavy and he couldn't do anything. He called for help, but none of the passing travelers wanted to support him. The king, who was watching these attempts, had already decided that the peasant would give up and go on.
But the peasant did not give up, because the stone interfered not only with him, but also with other people. He unharnessed the oxen, placed planks under a huge boulder, tied ropes around it, and after much effort managed to push it into a roadside ditch. And under the stone, to his surprise, he found a purse full of gold coins and with a note that this is a reward for the one who will save himself and others from the obstacle that hinders everyone.
And the farmer realized what many of us will never understand - that every obstacle in our path gives us an opportunity to improve our condition or position.
Moral: All the obstacles and challenges that come our way are not accidental. And if you are faced with one of them, then do not give up. Do your best and overcome it! As a reward, you will get new skills, knowledge, experience, learn how to solve difficult problems, and these are the components of your success!
As a kid I heard the story in a different way...
The king placed a large stone on the road and said he would reward whoever could clear the road of the large stone. Many people tried to push it, many brought their horses to pull it but nothing worked, it was too heavy.
Eventually a peasant came alone with nothing but a shovel in his hands and dug a large hole by the stone and simply tilted the stone into the hole. He then buried the stone, the road was clear and the stone was out of sight.
Qăđđđ!+
Nice message and reward to ethical values.
@@Health-Rxeducation Thanks !
👍👌👏 Aaaah, now it becomes clear! They simply tried to find gold under the 102 ton rock! 😁 ;-)
Best regards luck and health.
Nice to see nature get some attention, meanwhile in other parts of the world they destroy ancient forests.
Что за камень и сколько весит.
Great job done, nice video, thank you
I assume that the haulage company paid for this as an advert of their skills otherwise it could have been broken up in situ.
That's what I'm wondering. I'm assuming this would cost more than breaking up and removing it.
The company showed practically instead of spending mjllions on hoardings and advertising through news papers and Electronic media Media too must have earned trp by showing the marvelous feat like this channel !
This rock is now a natural monument, not even geologists are allowed to drill holes etc. into it any more.
This is Germany, not the USA, we don't blow everything up, at least nowadays :)
Llll
why can't it stay where it was?
They might have been doing a project underground
The bolder was moved because it is considered historic and a tourist attraction. It damaged the farmers equipment several times and when he tried to dig it up it was too big.
Once the authorities uncovered the whole thing, people kept coming to his fields to see it, so the government spent 35k euros to move it, funded by a dept that exists just for that purpose.
They have a dept of big rocks.
Appreciate the additional info. Just curious if you know about how far they moved the rock?
I have noticed some sporadic big boulders next to the roadside ditches along I-80 and along US 20 in Iowa. I'm not sure if any of them are quite as big as this one. I'm guessing farmers used a bulldozer to push them to the edge of their fields to get them out of their way.
@@ILGuy2012 I just read the German Wikipedia article, they moved it a few kilometers I think
@@mrfingers4737 Bundesministerium für Felsbewegung?
00⁰ in 000p0pp00
What was the point of this?
Read the wiki.
@@firesurfer don’t be ass hole and answer
@@clsm2836 Too late.
Now this my dream right here, just a massive rock, for no reason
what if they find much bigger one? will they break it or leave it?
The question is, what method was used to get the lifting slings underneath so the rock could be lifted up from that hole?
Asking the same
@@ephansmuch1640 Drill. Like drilling under highways to install a pipe
Laid down when the last glaciers melted, and many miles from home! Fascinating tp
These stones were brought by gigantic
waves in prehistoric times from the North.
yo what about the steel wires ? how do you get them out again ? why didnt the crane just leave them on on one side and just hoist, pulls out like butter
In Bellingham Washington, USA, they just drill and blast them when they are in the way. Different attitude. Clyde Senger
Kb
Sad but true.
Hab´s auch im Fernsehen gesehen:-) Beeindruckender Brocken! Und tolle Aufnahmen von der Bergung und dem Transport von Dir! Wirklich sehr interessant, kommt in HDR wieder sehr gut rüber. Daumen hoch und alles Gute für 2021! Gruss inselvideo!
Selamat pagi
k
@@mbhto4461 jkjkjkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
@@mbhto4461 jkjkjkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
🙄🙄
why
Scandinavia wanted it back it was their property after all
5:07 Wonder how often are these heavy machinery used , probably not so often ...then we should appreciate those people who keep prepared in case
Huge thanks
Unbelievable machines and it's task
Excellent! That is heavy lift & they are expert.
Hello Gerrtzen, I need a truck to transport a Huge Rock tomorrow. Sorry we have no Trucks available, however we can let you have the I.C.B.M Transporter for the same price.
Todo muy bonito, pero.
Sacaron algo positivo de la piedra, y para que la querían entera???????
What is so important about this Boulder/ rock? It’s old yes but so is the world. Just asking, good video and job.👍👍👍👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
It’s a fossilised dinosaur egg.
Reere
S
Remember the Pet Rock craze?? A whole village can share this one stupendous rock.
You're old Tim. I bet you got a mood ring and an old CB radio somewhere in your garage.
The rocky stone must have a big value in Uro...what you think about that...? No infornation...before
Needs some half-meter diameter googly eyes stuck on.
Meraviglioso il veicolo e il trasporto. Bravi tutti
Wow! 🐥✨ Capturaron un a piedra! Supongo que los dardos tranquilizadores no duraran mucho. Espero que pronto la liberen en su habitad natural. 🧊
@Efeso Comunidade Proverbios 1:7 O princípio da sabedoria é o temor de Deus.
Also ich glaub ja auch nicht, dass der 120t hatte. Vielleicht die Hälfte. Bei uns im Mühlviertel gibt's Unmengen von denen... Aber was interessant wäre, wäre warum sie den nicht einfach hergeschremmt haben wenn er störte.
Nehme mal an da kommt eine neue Windkraftanlage hin und da war der Kran schon da und das ist quasi mitgegangen. Gut, das ist ein schöner Stein, aber wenn schon der Aufwand, dann gehört der doch auf einen Spielplatz oder auf den Ortsplatz oder in einen Kreisverkehr. Da ist nicht erkennbar, warum sie den dort hingelegt haben. Bitte mal kommentieren, weil ich glaube das interessiert den Comments nach mehrere Leute.
Mich interessiert was für ein Material der Stein ist .
Yes of course that's extremely impressive!!! But wouldn't Ayers rock be the ultimate vulgar display of wealth???
Pero la cuerda de abajo como la sacaron?????
Me imagino... jalaron el cable en una manera horizontal. La tierra esta suficiente suave que el termino del cable paso sin incidente.
Back in the 80s - lived in PNG (Bougainville) - our house was on a hillside and clearing vegetation we found a large boulder - asked Geologist - about 130 tons - we asked how it got there - he said ejected from volcano - about 65kms away - We asked "Prehistoric?" - No - in the last 100 years... yikes...
wowwww nice skill
7
Scandinavian people want back the rock
🤣😂
That was a great and HEAVY JOB yes sir!!
It's amazing, the rock is so big
Interesting that the largest stone in the Great Pyramid weighs 80 tons. And they had no machinery like this to move it.
Eyywwyeyyeeyeyeyeywyeyey
That's one impressive rock. Even more impressive is the machines used to lift it and transport it. After they discovered this rock and estimated the weight, how many years did it take to design and build the crane and the machine needed to transport it?
Well, the crane already existed. Sure it took time designing it, but to my knowledge, none of the equipment used had to be specifically designed for the task.
It's a Liebherr LTM 1750-9.1 and it can actually lift almost eight times the weight of this boulder.
Idk why it was so long...
@@namename3130 That's what she said.
TERMÉSZETESEN NEM EHHEZ A KÖHÖZ ÉPITETTÉK A DARUT, SEM A SZÁLLITO AUTOT SEM
@@katalinjuhasz641 it
Ice transported the rock thousands of miles but humans need heavy equipment, Salutes to the Creator who says BE AND IT IS......ALHAMDULLILAH
man those cranes are fascinating, (edit, band english)
WHY???
MUITO BOM VÍDEO. BELO HORIZONTE MG BRASIL
Why did the rocks need to be removed?
Что за камушек 💎? что к нему столько внимания?
why whats it for ?
Just because it's possible.
@@wimschoenmakers5463 so there is no scientific use for it just move it because you can lol
@@georgeyboyhowe1685 Basically yes. Those stones where shifted from the Scandinavian countrys for hundreds of miles into Western Europe during the last ice time. So now the dig them up and place them in a central spot for historic reasons. It's just a granit brick, not a scientific object.
Some countries have way too much money to spare in things like this!
Why go through all this trouble for a rock? Don't you think most rocks are 200000 years old?
This rock is much older. It "traveled" 200000 years ago from Scandinavia hundreds of kilometers to this location. Where they have normally no rocks at all. That's why the buildings you can see in the video all build from bricks.
Thanks
Tolle Sache! Am Abend beim Grillfest durften dann die Kinder die Stahlseile noch unter der versteinerten Ente rausziehen 😊
Yujh
Яйцо динозавра.
Thumbs up anyone that had originally assumed the thumbnail was click bait?
That is one bad ass crane.
solid team work, bravo 👍🏿🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟