10 Catastrophic Failures Caught On Camera
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- čas přidán 16. 03. 2023
- 10 Catastrophic Failures Caught On Camera
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4:43 - "As the boat approaches it doesn't look like anybody is on or near the dock." There is a dude directly to the right of the base of the crane. If you go back to the long shot, he stands there for a while then moves off quickly just before the boat hits.
I was staring right at the man, while the narrator was saying no one was there. Lol. Oops!
@@Mswords Yeah, when it cuts to the tighter shot of that scene the first thing that happens is he steps out from behind the crane, catching the eye. Oops for sure.
I hope that guy got outta there in time, he was not in a good place.
Cheer now i know i'm not seeing things
@@brianstrevens3944 Seems guy got out ok. You can see him booking it out to the left in the long shot.
The collapse of the Arecibo Observatory remains absolutely heartbreaking. 💔
I agree. I visited it in 2017. In many ways it wasn't a great trip due to illness, but at least I got to see it while it was still working.
For sure. I got to take my kids to see it in 2012 and so glad we did. At the time there was no shortage of groans and moans from them and my wife about driving miles up into the jungles. But once we stood there and took it all in, goodness it was hard to believe it was real.
Seeing it come down was a gut punch, and also a sense of, 'what in the world were they thinking making it so difficult to maintain?'. What did they think would happen, 50 years down the road?
Yes!! It's a shame so much neglect happened with the upkeep and maintenance. That damage takes time to build up...
@@losskauz6821 Puerto Rico gets shorted on money. It probably could have been maintained with adequate funding.
As a Puerto Rican, I can confirm that it was heartbreaking
I'm glad I went to Puerto Rico on vacation before the telescope collapsed. It was an incredible looking structure. I heard after the collapse that they were impressed it lasted so long. It was built in the early 1960s.
didnt meant anything about James Bond either!
The telescope was literally like f*** it I'll do it myself
As an Puerto Rican, I myself was surprised that it collapsed as to me it was pretty sudden
Something broke and 3 months later another one while they were contemplating repairing the first?
@@Snatch698 Indeed. As if it said: "I'm doing it my way"!
As a civil engineer I see what “taking shortcuts” can result in, which is why we exist.
A truckload of granite toppling over is a mess, but not a catastrophe
It was a catastrophe for the truck
You could hear him excessively depressing the brakes. Each pump releases air pressure reserves in the tank. He ran out of air essentially.
@@edsloan8535 most vehicles with air brakes will stop when low on air as the air pressure holds back the Spring brakes. When the air runs out the spring brakes apply.
Pulling the yellow brake knob on a big truck to set the park brake releases the air pressure holding the spring brake back.
I reckon that was a controlled crash. Driver knew that if he did not crash into the side on purpose, then the slope in front of him would be the death of him.
Number 10 and number 4 look like the exact same thing from different angles.
They are not the same, apparently they just have a knack for these types of incidents.
(Different road signs, clip 4 has a road crossing in the upper frame where in clip 10 the construction workers were standing.)
The only exact thing is a large floating vessel ran into the shoreline/dock.
Not the same. Same type.
#6 Incorrect - 007 already destroyed that telescope in 1995
@4:45 Narrator says "doesnt look like there's anybody is on or near the dock", but there is a guy in a black jacket and white pants standing to the right of the orange crane.
Yeah
The Arecibo telescope failure, though not surprising due to it's age, was a blow to the science community but thankfully the problem was found within days of the terminal collapse so no one was on the observation unit.
Yes but didn't it outlast the original life span prediction of it's designers?
What? No tin foil hat guys blaming it on Aliens?
Having visited years ago with my late husband, I was saddened when it was damaged too badly to repair. Great loss to science!
@@jsl151850b I'm not saying it was aliens... but it was probably aliens.
All the work that went into the arecibo dish is something else on its own. Sad to see it die after all it's fame, the jungle ate it (still eating it) even when people still worked there. Was one of the coolest dishes on earth and did a ton of work 👍
As far as the house on the outer banks going into the water, that’s nothing new on the NC barrier islands. I have lived here most of my life and every storm we lose homes to the sea on all the islands. It’s not climate change or anything like that. The barrier islands are just sand bars that are in constant motion. They lose sand on one end and gain it at the other. That’s the risk you take building on a piece of sand in a hurricane zone.
Don’t get the climate changed morons going…
Of COURSE it’s from climate change.
After 90% of the iceberg melting in the last 20 years… the beach line hasn’t changed in SW Fl.
Or….. has it? Ha!
NOT!!!!
fortunately the water was there to break its fall or it would have smashed to bits :)
Well stated.
Thanks for stating that...we had a cottage in Kitty Hawk for 30 years. Saw many storms and hurricanes come and go. Just off the beach we had a sandbar, I would surf the different ends of it. North end the cottages were eventually eaten by the storms. We also had the sand fence up and year after years saw them slowly be covered and grin at our success. Here's a bit of history for ya. The original bridge made of wood, I can't recall now but around 24 wide by 16 thick. The man which started our cottage ( his first, never finished it ) had somehow acquired those beams as they took down the old bridge. Those beams were and are still under the cottage. We always laughed...( in fear ) of losing the cottage to a storm, " we if it does get that high, she'll likely float like a barge "...Back then...I could stand on the beach rd for 20 minutes in the summer and not see a car....sure has changed.
Should have built the house like a boat then better outcome!
The Arecibo Observatory failure was what happens when you defer maintenance to save money.
4:40 "As the boat approaches, it doesn't look like anyone is on or near the dock" While there's obviously a guy standing right there on the dock, lol. You do see him running away though before it hit, but hopefully he went far enough...
Thank you for the failures caught on camera coverage. Excellent work, Underworld!
This is why I'm not particularly worried about the Chinese Navy.
This is how they build.
they should use the metric system, it would be even better! they could make a video everyday from China, buildings, streets, bridges, everything collapses
You finally talked about the one in Puerto Rico, I live in Puerto Rico so I feel happy :)
Even though no structure is "forever", each time that I see video of the collapse of the Arecibo radio telescope, it just makes me sigh with lament.
In the case of the truck carrying marble, hitting the mountainside might have saved his life, because if he had made the turn he would've picked up more speed and might have went over the edge instead.
it wasnt the last turn either
Exactly! He probably aimed for the rocks
yes he did the right thing roll it or ride it
It must be absolutely heartbreaking to have a catastrophic failure halfway through a massive construction project. The money poured into it, the countless man-hours of hard work, reduced to a pile of worthless rubble in a matter of seconds. Not to mention the unimaginable cleanup and rebuilding process just to get back to where you were before.
Well, as professionals, they don't attach emotions to the project (or at least I hope) because even though one might think that's a good idea, that leads to things being taken personally and clouding of judgement than factual progress and logic.
@@kichapps like your reply!
China is asho.
Everyone in construction works job to job. In other words, you only have an income as long as there is work. When a catastrophic failure happens, they must start over from the beginning meaning there is more work and more money for them to earn. My cousin was in construction for years and every time they failed an inspection and had to do a redo he got more overtime pay. He once told me he got wealthy off the idiotic mistakes of his superiors. He retired a few years ago with $20 million in his retirement fund and he was nothing more than a master mason.
But it's what shows how resilient us humans are, that they did rebuild it.
New subscriber,and been binge watching videos,loving them and the narration,still catching up lol thank you for your videos
I understand why houses along shores are built on stilts - to allow surging waters to flow beneath the house structure. However if the storm surge is high enough or the wave action is strong enough, two things can happen. #1 the pilings are insufficiently strong enough to resist the wave action or #2 the surge height sufficient to float the house completely off the pilings.
Knowing the above information, why do people have to build so close to the water. High tides, winds and other weather conditions will destroy the buildings. Is have an ocean front view that important.
When I was a kid my Dad was looking at a lot to build our house on. About 1/4 mile away from the lot was a small pond. After a heavy storm he went to check the lot only to find it under 3+' of water. An owner of a house nearby said that flooding had never happened before. Dad got lucky on that one.
A lot of what ?
@@DacMan777 a parcel of land otherwise known as a 'lot'
4;46, what do you mean? There's literally a guy in black shirt at the bottom right of the crane. But he hauled ass at 3:42, and got out of frame at 3:50.
11:28 - those cables aren't tiny, each one is big enough for a person to walk on! It's fascinating to see one cable seems fine, until its neighbour gives up the ghost, then it too can't take the extra strain and it literally unwinds itself in milliseconds.
19:00
The incident occurred at the Turkey Balıkesir marmara Island pier on July 12, 2017. The 'Çanakkale' ferry took nearly 80 passengers and 15 vehicles from Avşa Island at 06:00 in the morning and arrived at Marmara Island at around 06:30. The 'Çanakkale' ferry, which was maneuvering to take vehicles and passengers from here, quickly crashed into the pier.
Amazing how China always features so heavily in these catastrophic failure videos.
Maybe they should build things up to code. No matter where someone builds, sub par is sub par.
And Russia. Don't forget Russia.
The way its meant to be shown. Some are natural and China technologywise they ard far and improving where there are low
Tofu dreg
It's called corruption
Yeah those cranes are fine if you're lifting close, but think of the boom as a giant prybar.
The farther the thing sticks out away from the base, the more leverage the payload has, and the less weight the crane can manage.
Are you teaching physics at a university? You explained the concept so clearly.
@@chrisallen2005 You will do something: uh?
The right side stabiliser appears to have been been placed on very soft ground. It has probably sunk under the load.
Usually those cranes have all sorts of safety devices to prevent concurrent overloads like that. But they would depend on a solid base under the outriggers.
Nothing gave way. The crane was intact when it tipped. The crane was strongest in the front zone of operation between the two outriggers.
As the operator rotated to the side the reach of the outriggers weren’t enough to overcome the weight of the load so it tipped.
Lifting on the sides of most cranes is the weakest zone. Rearmount cranes lifting over the rear is the strongest zone using the vehicle as a counterweight.
James Bond predicted that dish would collapse in the late 90s, no evil genius required, lol.
I was going to make a “Goldeneye “ comment too.
Where was 006?
Yah, I used to go to the Outer Banks all the time. I remember the Hills. Huge sand dunes, a hundred feet high. Threw my girlfriend off a cliff. She got me back, pushed me off the cliff. Had a great time there for years. Went back not long ago and its so changed. What once was so impressive today is barely a mound. I asked a park ranger what the hell happened and they motioned out at the landscape. Houses. The sands were once carried by the two opposing winds going north and south. They met at the outer banks, hit one another and went out to sea, depositing the load of sand they carried and this built the islands, the dunes, the beaches. Today the landscape is covered with houses and businesses. The structures block the winds. The winds no longer carry the sands. The beaches now erode, the dunes now shrink to nothing. The islands disappear as the seas wash in to consume the sands.
$381,000 home?!? Get me that realtors number!
Exactly what I thought. It looked like a "sugar house" and is built where it is due to be destroyed...
Barrier islands are not stable land masses. They are constantly moving. Why would you build a house there?
The raw lumber may have been $381K
i like that your actually a human, and can talk about the video and give more information. thanks for not being a bot ❤️ youre better than all the other channels
Even tho it's all wrong! Multiple videos this person said ppl weren't hurt was wrong in a few of the videos ppl were right in the middle of accident he said nobody was there or hurt. Like in the crane holding a tank did crush someone you can see the person get crushed by the counter weights of the crane
@@uptopswag8446 I didn't catch that, I'll have to rewind and check out the carnage.
agree, "no robot need apply".
I’ve only experienced one earthquake, and an extremely brief one at that, but it was weird. I was working in Istanbul, and I was taking a walk to a shopping mall near the hotel at the weekend when I staggered a bit and felt suddenly dizzy. It was only when I saw other people reacting similarly that I realised this had been a ground tremor. I’m just glad to live in the UK, where there are no earthquakes, volcanos, destructive tornadoes (we actually have more per square mile than the United States, but they barely raise the dust), bears, rattlesnakes or scorpions. And our badgers are cute, unlike their terrifying American equivalent.
Bedbugs from the East
@@johankamar1729 ?????
Way to go…same here, within reason, in Canada, Niagara Falls..
There was no earthquakes to speak of in Australia for generations, until one hit in Newcastle, just north of Sydney in the late 80s, flattening a big club and killing our guitar tech who was still in the auditorium where the band was gonna play while us, the roadcrew, were on a dinner break.
At this stage, it is still 'one & done' but y'never know...😬
But if the Ocean Haline Circulation stops you are in Ice Age!
Watching the footage of the Arecibo collapse still hurts so bad.
This video is the best I have seen. Well documented with lots of detail and great videography. I'm now looking forward to watching your other videos. A video is really interesting when I don't check to see how many minutes are left.
The thing about the North Carolina, Outer Banks beaches shrinking is not necessarily incorrect. The idea that it's due to rising sea levels is a total fabrication. The Outer Banks and every other beach from Florida to New Jersey *migrate* constantly northward up the coast. As one beach slowly disappears over a few decades another one grows a mile or so to the north of it. The reason it seems so devastating today is that people started building homes on these shifting sand beaches 70 to 80 years ago. One 5 mile long beach in North Carolina almost completely disappeared. As the dwindling beach moved northward, it looked like the entire island was being swallowed by the ocean, but in the last ten years or so the southern end of the island has reemerged growing wider every year being supplied with sands from the island a half mile to the south. These coastal barrier islands have been doing this since before Europeans ever set foot on the North American continent.
I've lived on the East Coast all my life and I'm a professional sailor/licensed captain. Atlantic Ocean mean high tide levels haven't changed in 50 years. You can believe the hype if you want, I'll believe my eyes instead.
Finally someone that has lived it telling the truth America needs to listen to this Gentleman.
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!
It’s great to know that there are others out there who see through the crap and con job.
Thank you again for having Commonsense and Logic.
Have been going to same Caribbean island for 15 years and have observed no increase in sea levels from first year. I call BS. Evaporation must be working better in the ocean than it does on small lakes
What is so difficult for people to understand that climate change accelerates erosion?
Atlantic sea level has risen 6.5" since 1950. Fact, not anecdotal observation, but scientific measurements.
4:25 the fact that crane was on a floating structure is insane
Actually in #9 there is someone standing at the base of the crane for some reason. The person runs away but I don't know if they ran far enough. Yikes!
Houses built to close to ocean collapse. ~ Confucius
Houses built on tiny two by four wooden posts too close to the ocean collapse.
@ 4:40 Run Forest, Run!
You say no-one is on the dock?
When I worked in PR for a mon, My co-workers and I went to see Arecibo. It wasn't open at the time but we did get to walk around a little. It was massive.
4:45 he says I doesn't look like anyone is on dock,there's a guy that walks out same time right in front of crane!
He's standing at the bottom of the stairs, I saw him. Then I saw him run, but disappeared in front of the crane.
Don't know where he went. 🌞
After watching it again I did see what looked like a man, although faintly, on the left side of the crane. Must have been him. 🌞
4:45 there DOES appear to be a man on the dock and he runs to the left of the screen. Also, the crane spins left as it is falling, probably due to the operating within the structure.
Was going to post this same exact thing! LOL right as the narrator says it, I was like, "There's a dude RIGHT THERE!"
@@timfederwitz
Hakimi: just everyone run!
Those things are designed so when they aren't being used they can turn with the wind like a weathervane, it reduces the stress on the structure.
Wow, people in the first video actually know how to properly film with their phone to capture the entire situation.
@klhaugen22 I haven't heard anybody whine about this for years. You might want to join them in getting over it...
Oddly enough, I just watched another compilation containing several videos in portrait, plus I saw a few last week. They're painful to watch 😅
@@ACE53621 For those of you who have the time to be bothered by this: Maybe avoid watching any videos - just in case a hard-working cammer posts w/o taking your pet peeves into account.
@@bkitteh6295 whoa! What a couple of absolutely dumbass comments! Some little "kitteh" to be a little bitch to strangers for no reason. 😅 We're so very sorry that we expressed a mild dislike for vertical phone positioning! Please accept our condolences concerning the discomfort caused by whatever is scrabbling around in your rectum that put you in such a bad mood! Maybe a mouse ran up there. Thoughts and prayers.
@@bkitteh6295 wait, did you say "a hard- working cammer?" what? Yes, by all means, save the hard working cammers that film vertically! 😅 "For those who have the time" to be nasty about others' comments in a stunning display of a complete lack of self awareness, (um, that's you), thanks for the entertainment. It tickles me to see such a dumbass maneuver as someone ridiculously getting...I don't know, offended?...about someone else's mild remarks. "Maybe avoid" reading comments if you're so weirdly sensitive. Irony, thy name is kitteh.
A long bridge being built in Milton Keynes ( H10 Bletcham Way, dual carriageway, over Caldecotte Lake ) many years ago collapsed when part of the base footing of the shuttering containing the concrete as it was being poured sunk into the clay, twisting all the reinforcement and spilling out much wet concrete ! The whole was painstakingly cleaned up and abandoned for a couple of years before being built again, successfully.
The kid that crashed the rock truck kept on pumping his air brakes. That's a good way to empty the air tank needed for the brakes, which is probably why his breaks failed.
The air pressure in air brakes hold the brakes open, if the air system fails the brakes close, locking the wheel.
Yup. And an alarm starts going off when you start getting low air pressure.@@FranktheDachshund
The footage of natural disasters caught on camera is both frightening and awe-inspiring.
#2 @ 16:49 The Outer Banks of North Carolina. I live on the inland side of it. Each time we have a strom that last for more than two days or more, it's very like a building close to the water is going in.
17:45. . "God bless this house, and all who sail in her"
In number 9, did anyone else see the guy standing to the right of the crane before impact that ran to the left but stayed just to le left of the shot. You can see his shadow as the whole pier lifts up which makes me wonder if he was still on it when the whole lot went in to the sea.
The issue on the Outer Banks has nothing to do with 'climate change'. The issue is beach erosion and it's been happening for centuries. The Outer Banks are very narrow with massive sounds behind them. They are actually shifting inward. But as they do, structures stay put. If they're close enough to the ocean, eventually they'll be in the ocean. They had to move the Cape Hatteras lighthouse inland back in the 90's before it fell in the ocean. The width of the O.B. fluctuates over time, but stay basically the same. It just moves. It's weird, but it has nothing to do with 'climate change'. If it did, houses all over the world would be falling into the ocean. It wouldn't just be happening on the Outer Banks.
they are falling into the water all over the world
You can say that out of opinion but not fact. Using my common sense and geology knowledge, climate change does cause erosion. Climate change and its effects have been happening since the beginning of earth. It will continue til the end.
@@andreww2098 howd you get so dumb? Well and dishonest, that is not happening all over the world.
Ok so rising water levels due to climate change an yes it is real an yes understand about beach erosion but as the sea level rises the erosion gets worse
Stop building homes on sand bars. Then maybe they won't fall in the ocean.👍
Time 13:23 moving slowly through that second till just before that second is finished, a man near the crane moved away and then back towards the crane (in between crane and tank) and you can see him at the last moment next to the crane when a piece of debris falls straight on top of him obliterating him.
Watching the Arecibo telescope fall apart is 😢so sad. I was watching “The Universe” on another streaming service and they were saying that this telescope is vital for space exploration. We always put things on the back burner and then never fix it.
Experiencing a catastrophic failure midway through an immense construction endeavor must be truly heart-wrenching. The investment of funds, the countless hours of labor, all crumble into insignificance within seconds. And then comes the daunting task of cleaning up and rebuilding, just to regain what was lost
But a chance to "do things right" the second time around.
That cargo ship hitting the dock you said nobody was on the dock… well except for the person wearing a black top and white pants standing near the cranes stairs 🤷♂️
And why did the crane rotate as it was falling? Seemed like there was an operator.
@@bretlovitz3068 and you're the third dumbest observer i've seen in the comment 😂 ... OMG 🤣 i thought people from non third world country are the smartest 🤣
you forgot the brown stain 😁
He made his escape, he's safe and sound
He was gone in the next clip
There was a guy shining a flashlight on the dock before the runaway barge hit. He’s running away with it, too. 😂
10:14 the James Bond movie, Golden Eye, was also filmed there AND the movie depicted it collapsing, with the central part falling on top of the bad guy.
I just love watching this type of video! I could watch them all night and I do. The more costly and the more damage the better. I want to see a video of a crane twice the size of the Earth, trying to move the Earth a little bit away from the Sun. I want to see catastrophic crane failure causing the earth and the crane to go flying directly into the sun and explode the entire solar system.
Dude, that ferry was going way too fast for people to think it wasn’t gonna crash…
Is it weird this is my form of ASMR 😂, it's almost hypnotic 😵💫
When will these people learn that overloading a truck will always end badly.
The narrator of this video sounds exactly like the guy who voiced the audiobook "The Zombie Survival Guide" by Max Brooks.
love your every content. its addictive for me. full of knowledge , thrill, suspense, fact, news and many more.💖💖
4:40 That captain, or maybe pilot, picked himself a whole damn bouquet of whoopsie-daisies!!! 😂😂😂
Or he lost power. When a ship loses power it becomes a barge subject to winds, currents and momentum.
4:44 Nobody on or near the dock? I guess you didn't see the guy on the dock in front of the crane. 😉
Way to go China!! You all are rocking the catastrophic failures!!!
The movie ‘Nights In Rodanthe’ was filmed not far from Cape Hatteras. The house in the movie is still there but they had to move it because it was staring to wash away. It was pretty cool to watch
climate change BS, i think they need 50,000 more dollars on a real "foundation!"
Hey they even moved the Cape Hatteras lighhouse!
The telescope was the most significant here… In my opinion, look it up how important thing was…
If one cable fails, and there is no redundancy, the engineering was significantly undercooked
Yea...and probably about 75% of the crap in those containers end up on Amazon...and in my house lol. Damn Amazon. Didn't know I needed something until I went on Amazon!
17:45. From beach house to house boat in 10 seconds.
The roadway collapse was shown twice as two different events. Weird.
This channel is one of the biggest disasters on CZcams.
Ill never forget the phone call that was “your grandparents backyard is falling down the cliff” (slow motion landslide)
I saw it on day 2 and it had dropped 1m - ended up dropping by 8-10m in total.
Cost their entire life savings plus donations from all 4 kids amounting a further $400,000 bucks on top of their life savings.
Their insurance went “not our problem”
Their neighbours insurance went “we will pay you the maximum we will cover you for”
My grandparents were in their late 80s and 90s at the time…
They had moved to the house to downsize due to their age not even a full year before it took everything they had.
So sorry for what happened to your grand parents. Hope they are ok . Hope the insurance company had a modicum of decency and morality to help . God bless .
@@catmoore2443 theyve both passed on now. The final 2-3 years of their lives were spent mucking around with dirt/health issues instead of at peace in retirement.
The house was fully fixed but took a further 2 months to get signed off when they passed. So they didnt actually get to enjoy it “completed” the house was sold fairly quickly and the children each inherited a small part of what they paid to help fix it. But it was never gonna be worth what was spent on it.
Insurance company lost about 20-40 policies as a result as all the family and as many friends as we told swapped to the company that the neighbours used who did come to the party with a sideways “loophole” which they didnt have to actually use.
@@catmoore2443 all other governing bodies (eg local council) who signed off on the build and retaining wall that gave way etc. also refused to take responsibility.
Even though the point of failure was the main storm water line that was installed at the back of their property.
@@budgiebreder
Wow that's appalling. I know your grand parents probably don't want to go through the court system but someone needs to pay for this . Publicise this as much as you can , news, social media ect . Sending you and your family blessings and love .
@@catmoore2443 its going on 10+ years ago now. They didn’t want to involve media. And theyre both dead now.
Its sad but life has moved on.
the telescope had very little benefit anyway due to it not being directional and thus stuck within a limited range.
I was at the Arecibo Observatory in December 1986.
The truck driver hitting the mountainside and rolling his truck may have saved his life.
12:54 I find it so amusing how calm those Russians where while watching chaos unfold in front of them
They're probably drunk...
probably because they are not surprised, its why they were filming
They watched bunch of idiots and knowwed what is gon hapened,same as they watching ukraininas and their nato maters trying to get control of russia trough false clames of russian invasion ....@@jrand2631 idiots always suming
Thanks for the video👍👍👍
If the guy operating the crane with the tank, had lovered it til just over the ground, nothing would have happened, but a slight scare.
That crane that fell carrying the tank situation was worse than narrator said.... If you look by the back side of the tank and right in front of the crane by the back corner as it's falling you can see a guy in black get crushed by stuff falling from crane which looked like counter weights for the crane!
So announcer was wrong ppl were right there crushed
I noticed that too!! Holy shit!! He had to have died don't you think?? This narrator is way off man.
It's a shame what happened to the Arecibo telescope. It was a true marble of science and construction and part of many important projects. I wish it had been preserved.
did you mean marvel?
@@VinnySlouth no, a true marble....
@@silentumexcubitor6747 a marble of science.... so like a kidney stone?
MARVEL of science....it wasn't some gigantic rock carved out of a quarry.
As a P.H.D in Metaphorical Similes, I'd say it was more like 1/4, maybe 1/3 of a marble of science, if that. Think of the entire scientific community as a mason jar full of marbles... that satellite most likely couldn't have been any more than 1/2 of a marble. There have been way too many other scientific breakthroughs, and just interesting scientific discoveries, for any one single item to be a "Full Marble of Science". The only thing I might even come close to giving a full marble to, might be the 🪐V🚀 of the 60s.
Arecibo was a spectacular success that fell victim to a lack of maintenance.
In the Third World, the rule is that you must destroy at least one valuable piece of equipment every day if you expect to get paid. Cranes are some of the easiest to wreck, and most expensive.
Surprised the kid hauling those rocks could climb out the truck with the size of rocks it must of took to get behind the wheel with a load like that. 😳😬
Very likely that truck was fixed again that week as well, and is back on the road, but perhaps they also figured that it was time to replace the brake linings as well.
@@SeanBZA If that at all, Yeah extreme zero maintenance, zero safety, zero concerns for driver at minimum wage, Brakes have faded and overheat by mid morning, use engine braking for rest of shift, new crew can suffer next shift...downshift, downshift, engine off...LOL, diesel...yikes 420, downshift the Spliff...take a Brake, break...do not Bogart
He did the right thing and drove it into the side before it picked up any more speed. That load would have crushed him if it picked up speed then crashed farther down the road. Smart thinking
Missed a few English classes, eh? "...must of took...."??? Must have taken...but then the remainder of what you said didn't make any sense, either.
Sinkholes are very common in China, due to its geological soil types and it being a major earthquake zone, plus extremes of continental weather, nevermind reclaimed land.
China has a lot of CCTV like the UK, and people who use phone cameras a lot too, like us Brits do.
In the clip where the Cargo Ship crashed into the Wharf, there was a man standing directly in front of the crane. As the ship approachesm he leaves by walking behind the crane and eventually shows up in the rear somewhat casually walking away.
Black top and white pants.
When your house moves away from your property line 😢
Amazing video and what really made it even more fascinating was the great narration. No darn childish corny jokes. Great
8:42 that maneuver probably saved his life .
12:30 why not pull it, and why so high above the ground ?
18:19 maybe a $381.00 house not $381,000.00 😂
2 story, looks like at least a 1000-1200sqft 2 story, who knows what interior looks like, not to mention it's on the shoreline? Could easily be a $381,000 house
what maneuver? his front wheels seem pretty straight
What amazes me is when people stand there (awestruck? immobilized?) in the danger zone.
The aged telescope assembly was very considerate...sparing anyone having to climb up there!
What happened in Carolina is happening all over the world. Norfolk in England has had houses collapse off cliffs into the sea, just last week.
I mean, they always did, but it seems to be accelerating.
@Lenore Jean Jones The only thing accelerating is our knowledge of these things happening. It called the information age.
Houses fall off cliffs in England for far different reasons than houses fall into the ocean on the Outer Banks in North Carolina.
@@jreagins1 Reasons do differ, but climate change is involved.
@@julianaylor4351 How is so called "climate change" involved?
Love hearing about disasters in China. Does my soul good.
@4:44
narrator: "it doesn't look like there's anyone on the dock"
Man standing on dock: "what am I a joke to you?
😂
Goldeneye the 30th anniversary 4K edition should have this footage in it! 🧐🧐🧐🧐👍
*The Arecibo Observatory collapse is just devastating, plain and simple.*
One of the thing that amazes me in the arecibo Puerto Rico radar is how a camera was in that particular holding cable that snaped , lead me to believe that was a calculated process to go off so perfect to be a casually.
8:36 RIP poor truck!
LMAO, says at 4:40 "dont look like anyone is on or near the dock" 4:41 shows man standing on dock LOL
Cameraman never dies!
Excellent work
7:53 It is Italy, I was there. Carrara. The bridge is called "Ponte di Vara".
The truck at around 9:00 mark, with the incompetent driver.
I can just hear a man with a thick southeast american accent go, "That'll buff right out... yup. got a cousin that can fix anything anytime"
At 4:45 you say it doesn't look like anybody is on or near the dock. But at 4:37 you can clearly see a person walking on the dock (to the right of the crane) watching the ship approach.