30 Scary EARTHQUAKES Caught On Camera
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- čas přidán 18. 08. 2022
- In this compilation video, we have a look at some incredible clips of earthquakes from all over the world.
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Thanks for watching and I'll see you again in the next one!
0:22 I love how that one lady in the red jacket just casually gets up looking annoyed at the earthquake like it just ruined her morning lol
Well, it probably did haha.
Lol I was going to mention that. The lady behind her was about to push her out of the way 🤣
😂 right
Yes! And she just casually walks out.
No fr i love the calmness
Japan builds for earthquakes, and it's fascinating to watch how their architecture reacts during tremors.
Humans are never going to build anything stronger than nature.
Chile: *exists
They should also "build" for tsunamis!
Too bad certain companies value profits over safety. There have been a lot of preventable disasters in the world due to corporate greed.
@@amymoriyama6616 very true
0:34 the cup was perfect
Rare chance
@@emoguy000 bruh what are u doing here
@@LieutenantSimon dk
@@GavinvrplaysJohnson i do, thats why i mention it buddy
I was in Osaka during the Great Hanshin Earthquake that pretty much razed Kobe. Even in Osaka the tremors were so severe, first time in my life I froze in shock and couldn't even scream like it happens in nightmares. I was amazed by the resilience of the Japanese people to recover and rebuild in such a short time after the quake.
한신-아와지 지진 이후로 일본에 더 튼튼한 대비책이 새워졌습니다
Isekai
And the japanese never seem to need to ask for Int. Aid. They are well structured country. They certainly look after their subjects.
I have been through several earthquakes in California.
My first reaction was usually “Is this really happening or am I in a dream?”
It definitely takes your brain a while to process.
I am a 73 yr. old who has lived in the San Francisco Bay Area since middle school. In high school, one of my teachers was talking about earthquakes when, suddenly, an earthquake struck. It literally rippled through the class room; we could see it travel in waves across the floor! So strange, and yet pretty cool, too! If you are in an earthquake, try to get out of the building you’re in. Forget the silly notion of standing in a doorway…have you ever seen the aftermath of an earthquake and seen rubble scattered with free standing doorways?! No! If you can’t get out of the building, go under a desk. And always cover your head. Stay clear of windows and other glass objects. If possible, find a supported “triangle” area to get into…such as the open area between a bed, dresser, and other piece of furniture. And still cover your head! Even in a relatively mild earthquake, things can fly across the room and hit you in the head and kill you.
I've always gone for under the table, it's a big mahogany table and has 6 legs and can hold quite a bit of weight if something fell on it! The last quake I felt was about 3 or 4 years ago and I was in bed watching TV when I felt it. it was only about a 3.5 or so and the epicenter was over 100 miles away, nothing like the ones I experienced while living in California with its major long faults! I didn't even move from my bed. It lasted about 10 to15 seconds or so, but they are always a bit scary because you don't know if it will get worse! Planet Earth is very active, and she likes to "shake her booty" from time to time, especially around the Ring of Fire! So, if you are in that region, make certain things in your house CAN'T fly around to hit you and PLAN ahead what to do if one strikes; have an escape plan and a place to meet that everyone in your household knows, and have a drill one in a while so if one does happen, you can all act quickly.
@@mjleger4555 excellent advice!
@@cydkriletich6538 Thanks!
@@lol-wv7ve There are several physical ailments that can cause shakiness. Your grandma should ask her physician about it, if there is concern. I've seen patients with neurological disorders or diseases, who can still play the piano. It can depend on what part of the brain is affected. Sometimes it is easier to type than to write with a pen or pencil for some people!
Right I'm watching this to get my mind prepared for "earthquake season." Hopefully there will be nothing major this year. North bay has put me through enough disasteds with the last few fire seasons. Stay safe!
I've lived through the 9.2 earthquake in Alaska. Don't remember much about it though because I was only 4. But the biggest one here recently was the 7.2 in 2018. Broken glass everywhere! But what got me was the fact that the fridge opened and threw the milk out and then closed again. You couldn't stand or walk during the quake or it would throw you on the floor. Scary!
Guess the earthquake hates milk
i was in middle school for the 2018 earthquake, it was an insane feeling having tbe building sway back and forth
Dude 9.2 is ridiculous...🫤😳
Those school students did exactly what they were supposed to. No panic and straight under the desk. Props to those guys👍
Gotta be all the earthquake drills
@@HalwenGreenleafthat was my former school! and yeah we were drilled on that every month (i think) if not every month it was every quarter. im lucky though because where i was at the time of that quake quite a few panels fell and i could have def been injured if i didnt duck and cover :)
props to the teacher being the last one and checking on if everyone got under their seats
@@carlosramirez6661 he was one if the coolest teachers back at that school, don't think he teaches there now that i think about it. definitely a student's favorite
that dog at 5:35 was like, let me the fuck outta here. LOL
It must be terrifying to experience an earthquake... My heart goes out to Turkey and Syria right now....
Don't forget Syria too
:( we are not alone dont worry
@☭红色革命☭ how is that Turkeys fault? Go complain to the humanitarian aid organizations or better yet the world
@☭红色革命☭ #Russia jealous much are we 😂 go jump
Big clap for the dog at 4:45
Earthquakes last such a short period of time but feels live forever when youre in one.
In my country, there were two major earthquakes of 7.7 and 7.6 magnitude. Hundreds of thousands of people died, hundreds of thousands of houses were destroyed. While watching this video, I am amazed at how people laugh because while those people were laughing there, people were dying in our country. I understand that we are not doing what we should.
Bende Türküm.
3:15と7:50、まだ揺れが小さい段階でも全員が素早く机の下に避難していて素晴らしい。
日本人は(悪い意味で)地震に慣れていることと、周りの人が動かなければ動きたがらない国民性が
こうした素早い対応を遅らせているとよく思う。3.11の東京の映像を見ると、震度5~6ぐらいの揺れ
でも手で頭を守るようにしている人は少数派。天井材や照明、外壁の一部が落ちて来ることだってある。
今一度、頭を守ってすぐ机の下へ!の精神を見習わなければ。
My sister experienced a very small tremor when she lived on the Canadian praries. She was relaxing on her couch when her folding closet doors started to rattle. She shouted, "Quincy cut it out!", thinking it was her cat being a nuisance. Then she noticed that Quincy was sleeping on the opposite end of the couch. That was when she noticed that the chandelier was swinging back and forth. She said she couldn't imagine how people lived through a strong earthquake because even that small tremor was kind of scary.
I lived in California for 23 years and only felt some mild ground motion from medium quakes far away. In one month in Bali in 2018 there were dozens of mag 6-7 quakes on the next island over, Lombok, with thousands of fatalities. We saw a sloshing pool, shaking buildings, and one even struck while we were in a taxi. It was an action-packed month with an eruption from Mount Agung and a lunar eclipse too.
But my most dangerous moments were dodging the crazy scooter riders in Seminyak!
Sorry for the bad experience of crazy motorbike riders in Indonesia, especially in Bali. Do you miss earthquakes and volcanic eruptions while on vacation in Indonesia? From November until now there have been more than 500 earthquakes throughout the Indonesian province, the 5.2M Karang Asem earthquake (Bali) on December 13 until now more than 100 aftershocks😂
Japan is an earthquake-prone country and we are used to most earthquakes.
In addition, indoors are safer because the building is highly earthquake-resistant.
What do they feel like never been in one
@@Tac-shiestyI’ve only been in a mag 4 but to me it felt very subtle. I noticed my bed shaking (almost as if someone was shaking it but obviously that wasn’t the case). I ended up having to go to google to see if I was hallucinating or if it was an earthquake. Haha it was a quake.
@@tailorforeman7082 ah because in the East coast we don’t really get them
North East too *
The video of the dog sensing the quake and the look in the guys eye …. That one freaked me out
the noise from an earthquake travels faster, like 4-5 seconds in advance, and humans can also hear it especially at night when there are no other noises
Cats and dogs can feel and hear it quicker than human.
Yea and that's why i think having pets can be really useful
@@mxstymuii true.
fun fact: cats don’t feel more but they hear a tiny bit more so they are aware of the earthquake/tornado/tsunami
Also snakes
Oh nice! Interesting but I never asked
Great stuff thanks for sharing
Great compilation!
Thank you for posting. Noticed how some people ran for cover while many didn't.
That building in Mexico City wasn't completely evacuated when the quake hit. There's a video of some dude recording inside the building and you see the moment the floor collapses on top of the one below. Mexico has a seismic alarm system, and it usually sounds at least a minute before an earthquake hits Mexico City to give people some time to evacuate or seek safer places to take cover, but on September 19th 2017 when that particular tremor hit the city, that alarm sounded like 30 seconds into the earthquake because the epicenter was way too close to the city so not everybody was able to flee.
The Civil Safety Agency in Mexico also advices against evacuating buildings if you can't make it outside in less than a minute. That's why some buildings, especially skyscrapers, have "secure areas" marked inside that are supposed to be more resistant in case of an earthquake.
are we not gonna talk about how calm that one guy was walking out when the whole store fronts were shaking? 😂
@Zugget (lol) 😆" I KNOW. RIGHT?.... Everyone around Him was freakin out but He just kept calm and strode through fallen merchandise and panicked-stricken occupants. "
Some people are like that. Adrenaline kicks in so you just do what you need to get to safety and have a freak out a month later.
Like me. I lived in Los Angeles for ten years. You just put on your sea legs and continue along with your day.
That was some real good thinking that lady grabbing the nearest plastic basket to put it on her head 4:31
I've watched a lot of earthquake videos, but you had a bunch that I've never seen. Great selection!
Love how everybody is so calm in some of these... just another Tuesday!
Excellent video! 👍
GREAT JOB. THANK.
Reconocí varios temblores 😋... soy chilena 😬 🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱
AMAZING SIR. ....SIMPLY AMAZING FOOTAGE. ... make another one boss. Love and respect from MEXICO.
Did anyone notice the cup falling perfectly at 0:34? 😅
Very nice footage!
Good video. It's crazy how long some of those quakes were. Thank you for sharing.
STOP. YOU ARE SO UNDERRATED 😭❤️
Grew up in Whittier, CA and have experienced dozens of quakes. The Northridge and Whittier quakes really stayed with me. Even some of the smaller ones get your heart going because you’re waiting for it to ramp up exponentially within the next few seconds though usually it doesn’t, you know that it certainly can, because at one time or another it has. I’d say on average it takes someone a week to shake it off (pardon the pun) and at least a month or even years to shake off a larger quake.
What’s crazy is how different they can feel in relation to where the epicenter is. Whittier felt like we were going to die. The epicenter being directly below shakes the ground like a repetitive “uppercut” and it’s an insanely loud, violent attack! If you’re several miles away you can almost hear it approaching and when it hits, it can be sort of a wave or a side to side action. Then there are really deep ones that can make you feel nauseated and the movement is really subtle. An earthquake is like a box of chocolates… but not in a good way.
😲
Lived in California all my life, I was only 6 when the Whittier one hit so I don’t really remember it but Northridge and Landers have always stuck with me. I’m terrified of EQ because of those two.
At what point do you get to accustomed to the EarthQuakes and get to used them?
Hay, I Use to live in East LA. I know the feeling.
Is that the same as the Sylmar quake?
Distance from the epicenter is the key, that 8.4 on Chile was very far away, so the Airport got hit by it as a 6.x But near the epicenter devastation was everywhere.
This year we got hit by a 7.7 just 100km away and it is the strongest one I've ever felt, even stronger than a 8.1 because that one was 225km away, but it damaged way more homes in my region because decades ago the construction codes were non-existent.
You are from?. 👀
When there is an earthquake in Japan, ...everyone laughs
In Chile too
Ikr😅. One guy just continued drinking his coffee🤣
I love how that one guy saved his cup of coffee.
i love your videos
magnitude 9.0 in an skyskraper on the 50th floor in Japan: "Stay calm. There was just been an earth quake." I had to giggle a bit. 😄
lol i noticed that too. i was thinking "no I would of thought it was Godzilla having a really bad day and throwing a huge temper tantrum!!"🤦♀🤣
You've been lucky. Look at what happened in Kobe.
@@stormgirl09 you think that's funny you should live near the San Andreas fault line where earthquakes happen every day
4:09 hardcore coffee drinker 😂
It's amazing how animals just know when a quake is about to happen, before it's even slightly perceptible to a human. They have senses that we don't.
I'm pretty sure they feel the p-wave( the first wave that we don't feel) before the damaging s-wave
They can feel the vibration.
They feel the ground shaking before we can.
They can feel the P wave which human can't perceive or feel.
@@fenrir4211 P-wave vibrations can be perceived by humans, we are just not usually laying on the ground.
My favorite part was the office worker grabbing his coffee…. Priorities!
4:53 *the bossfight has begun.*
1:50 love the way the lights were dangling
So syed up
3:38 -
Teacher: "Everybody is okay, nobody got hit by anything?"
Students: "No."
Teacher: "Damn."
You gotta love the Asian guy grabbing his drink when the shaking started. While the guy is talking about that’s the biggest earthquake he’s been in, the Asian guy is sitting there taking a drink of his beverage. Lol
Very nice nature !
Great presentation. Thank you for just sharing the clips!
The cameraman is always the strongest
7:15
Not gonna lie, that’s really scary. Suddenly an earthquake happens and the person runs to the door, then the power turns off. I would’ve freak out.
The worst is the way the windows sound
I live in Canada where earthquakes are few and far between, and even then, they're usually small ones. In the area where I live, especially, they're practically unheard of. I think my grandmother experienced a very mild one when she was a little girl. Otherwise, nothing. Ground's pretty stable over here, luckily! 😅 I can't imagine what it must feel like to be in one, must be scary! 😱 And to think I'm planning to visit Japan soon... I better brace myself! 😵💫😭😆
I did visit Japan in late 2015. Thank goodness there wasn't one.
11:46 Very impressed at that little store's packaging displays... almost nothing fell.
When 'nature' acts out, humans run! Dominion of the earth, eh?
Good effort good Chenal
0:35 the cup landed perfectly
Most safety thing to do:
BE THE CAMERA MAN
The nervous laughter in many of these is really interesting... it's funny then scary then funny again, or something like that it seems
We dont need Wars !! Mother World showing us who has the Power !!!
Facts
Thank you
We had an earthquake last night . Thankfully it was short, and light
Anyone else here after the 6.4(?) Humboldt county earthquake on 12/20/22. It's been a month but I'm still fascinated and looking up earthquake stuff, probably the strongest I've felt an earthquake even though I've lived throughout California all my life.
All earthquakes are scary but being Mexican and having an Earthquake on the the anniversary of the Sep 19 earthquakes is something else.
That WAS something else... CDMX 2017🙏.
I grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area and have experienced many major earthquakes in my life: SF /1989 (!!)... and while living in Turkey, Philippines, Thailand (2011!!), Japan, and the center of Mexico City.
That said, the 2017 earthquake in Mexico was... !!!! To this day, when I hear the earthquake warning alarm from CDMX, I break out into a sweat... Maybe because of too many times being woken up in the dead of night during the numerous aftershocks and running down five flights of stairs. I need a drink just thinking about it. Ha!
Greetings from Kobe, Japan.
It has happened in several countries and also the earthquakes in Mexico are not that big.
@@Felipe_AndresILGood only in the capital, since it is where earthquakes affect the most due to the type of soil
I have a very improved hearing so I also listen earthquakes some seconds before they strike. Those are the P waves, who travel faster, while the shaking is produced by the S waves
The cutest landing of the cup was adorable
4:50 This guy's just casually drinking his coffee during the earthquake. Just another day at the office.
4:10,the person sipping from a cup to prevent spilling ?Who could have though of that 😂 Goodjob!
Alaska, chile and japan have good infrastructures to stand earthquakes 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
🇲🇽**cough, cough**
Whoa !!
Growing up on the San Andreas fault line, I was shaken up all the time. But THIS?!😬! Plus we had cats. So we almost always had a warning. Buildings there are built to withstand earthquakes. But I’m not sure they’d survive Japan’s, & other regions very well.
I live in Maryland and I still remember the east coast earthquake in 2011. All these people reacted far better than I did. 😂🤣😂
3:44. Those Chad's don't even care about it lol.
Be strong, Turkey. God have mercy on you and always be with you in the most difficult times like this
Zagreb quake 5.5 on Richter scale is in the end. That was the scariest morning in my life. We were in lockdown and the whole city was so silent and then seconds change my life forever.
0:55 that lady is laughing, I guess she thought that this was the part of the trip LOL
The quakes at 7:47 and 11:56 were in Christchurch, N.Z. during the 2010-11 sequence.
3:48 The one guy saves the most important Thing -his coffee 😂
1:52 😂 the lights shaking in perfect sync
*_I lived through the Loma Prieta in '89 and the Ridgecrest in '19, both were terrifying._*
Which was worse? I'd guess Ridgecrest. I was walking down a street in Berkeley when the '89 one struck. It was so sudden! I felt myself picked up and literally thrown off the curb several feet into the street, landing on my hands and knees. Knocked me silly and it took me a few seconds for things to stop spinning and to realize that a quake had happened. The big clue was that suddenly hundreds of car alarms began going off. It was a very short quake though, probably only lasted a few seconds. It seems like Ridgecrest was longer and more frightening. It was certainly stronger, iirc.
6:29 - that must have been when James Bond asked for his Martini - shaken, not stirred ! 😂🤣
I can't imagine how scary it would be to be stuck in a skyscraper during an earthquake. NO THANK YOU.
They are safer than most buildings. You never see a skyscraper collapse during a quake.
When working just kitty-corner to the Bank of America building in San Francisco years ago, I knew someone who worked at the B of A and took me to the basement to see the giant round balls that looked like huge ball bearings in all 4 corners of the building. They were there so the whole building could move with a quake. San Francisco's bedrock is about 250' down in the dirt surface, so that's why S.F. shakes so much during a quake!. I was gone from my 32 story highrise office building about 20 minutes when the 1989 quake struck and collapsed the Nimitz Freeway. I was in the car on my way home so didn't feel it but I saw it on the news when I got home. But the next day at work, I was told that the top floors really felt the sway! I'm glad I missed that! Now, I live two states away, inland northwest so feel a bit safer from the tremors, although we had about a 3.5 one several years ago. I was in bed and certainly felt the shake but wasn't concerned. Thankfully, it didn't last more than 10 or 15 seconds, but you knew what was happening!
I was living in Berkeley, near SF, on Oct 1989. We experienced a 7.1 earthquake the epicenter of which was near San Jose... Quite frightening I must say. SOme 35 eyars later I keep a vivid memory from this event !
I was in Novato, and experienced the 1989 Earthquake.
look at how quick the animals are to react! when you pet starts acting boltish, pay attention!
Pay attention? What you need to do is run like them!
@@inverse2k1 same thing
Yep I’m following the dog asking questions later.
Ayyy look at the lights on the ceiling having a rave :D
0:34
the cup landing perfectly makes me giggle for some reason
You can tell when it's an earthquake prone area and people look more irritated than scared. Especially the Alaska video, they just look like: 'Ugh! This again? pffft!'
My years of experience standing in buses have prepared me for this very moment
Wow, that one at the start in the canal was epic. It was a literal mini tsunami in there.
I love how the other video the lights were sync together
One of the white cups lands perfectly on the table at 0:34. My reaction: 😱
Tip: If a earthquake happends inside a building, run outside fast, if the exit is to far away hide under a table so there can no longer fall heavy items on your head.
If you are outside don't stand near building they can maybe collapse.
Stay safe out there
lol that dog was "aww hell naw" and noped right out of there
I couldn't even imagine what that's like, I'm from Buffalo NY and we've only had very minor quakes here the kind you can only feel if your on a second floor the last one we had which was probably the longest was about 40 or so seconds but could still feel the vibrations it was an odd experience
Planet Earth is a VERY active planet! Seismologists and scientists who study earthquakes, say that about 20,000 earthquakes occur around our globe every year: that's about 55 per day!
As a Californian most of my life until the last few years, I've felt my share of earthquakes over the years, and even one that was about 3.5 here in the northwest inland a couple of years ago! But in 1989, I was standing on Market St. in San Francisco, waiting to catch a bus to my car on the Coastside so heard about the earthquake on the radio in the car. I had just been standing where glass panes from the building above me crashed down, lucky I had been gone about five minutes! I drove to the post office and asked the gal there if she felt it, and she said "Oh YES!" I didn't know about the freeway collapsing until after I got home and saw the TV news.
When I was a child, there was a big one in L.A. and my mother said that everyone ran out of the house onto the lawn and people were screaming, my sister screamed but my mother said I just fainted in a little heap on the lawn! I still have the old clock that fell off the mantle and broke its face in that quake! I had it repaired years later when I found it at my parent's place in the storeroom after they had passed away. I still have it over my fireplace on my mantle now and it still works just fine and has quite a gong for a medium-size mantle clock!
I'm probably not going to feel one very often where I live now, but I fear sinkholes far more than earthquakes, so I won't even visit Florida anymore! I think there will be a time in a few years, with the glaciers melting, that coastal cities will be flooded, but what our Earth does all the time somewhere, is nothing like the nuclear war that humans could cause to really damage our Earth!
Did you move to Texas or Idaho? 😉
@@whatsit2ya247 I did not follow the masses in the California exodus! I won't live south of about the 42nd parallel! Too hot and humid! If this global warming continues for another 100 years like scientists expect, I may move to Alaska, Canada or Norway! Even Oregon and Washington and parts of Idaho have already been ruined by ex-Californians, same with Montana and Wyoming! And Colorado and Nevada have been ruined by them for a long time now; I want no part of any of it! New Mexico and Arizona have had their share of people moving there from California also, but its heat keeps some people away.
I was in California for a few years and supposedly slept through a pretty big earthquake. Then again, I've also slept halfway through a category 3 hurricane. Too bad now I can be woken up by a deer farting in the yard.
yep I bet the one in LA was the 1971 one I remember that one too, my grandma's tea pot FLYING across the kitchen like a missile!
@@amymoriyama6616 LOL, Amy! I have lots of deer around my house here in the country, but I've never heard one fart! I had a little two-point buck that grazed in the grass in back of my house and laid down to chew its cud about 15 feet from my living-room window! I sneaked on the floor and moved closer to the window and slowly stood to watch him for a while. He came back several nights in a row and then I didn't see him anymore. I'm here in the country now, so out of the earthquake area; I've only felt one here that I can remember, and it was several years ago and only a 3.5 and just for maybe ten seconds or so, which can seem like a long time when its shaking! But I get a lot of summer thunderstorms and lightning displays here. Fairly hot in the summer and snow, which I love, in the winter. I never got really scared in earthquakes, but I've never really been in a severe one that I felt, because I was driving during the last big 1989 one in the San Francisco area, and didn't feel it, but I had friends who were affected by it. I probably won't feel one often here in the mountains, but Earth is very active and I remember reading about the earthquake on Mt. Everest, so mountains are not exempt from quakes!
I remember in my senior year in high school in 2012 I was in class when a 5.4 mag earthquake hit Oklahoma. That was the first of many I felt.
0:53 the earthquake was happening and the man was still holding his beer casually, he really was in a drunken state
2:08 is that my bike 🧐
at :38 I'm like SAVE the coffee!!
everyone else: wow that’s scary!! me: 0:35 umm that cup made a spectacular flip lol
its funny but nice to see that most people dont panic and run screaming anymore .