The Minnewanka Curve Experiment [2K/1440p]

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • A companion video for "In Search of a Flat Earth" containing the details of the Minnewanka curve experiment in greater detail. Appropriate for a classroom environment.
    Dizzib's curve calculator:
    dizzib.github.io/earth/curve-...
    Written and performed by Dan Olson
    Music:
    Trampled by P C III
    Crowdfunding: / foldablehuman
    Twitter: / foldablehuman
    00:00 Preamble
    00:23 Part 1 - The Math
    04:34 Part 2 - The Footage
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @vulcanparrot
    @vulcanparrot Před 3 lety +1930

    but did you pray and do it again?

    • @uncivil_engineer8013
      @uncivil_engineer8013 Před 3 lety +107

      Maybe God just likes curves.

    • @JackgarPrime
      @JackgarPrime Před 3 lety +94

      @@uncivil_engineer8013 That would explain why everyone likes boobs and butts. We're made in God's image, after all. And he loves him some curves.

    • @SyrusRayne
      @SyrusRayne Před 3 lety +91

      It really struck me when Dan said that particular phrase in the other video. It reminded me of the Thurston County ritual abuse case, where Paul Ingram initially denied a specific accusation, but when told to "pray on the idea", he came back with a detailed written confession. When he was told that the accusation had been purposefully false to test his suggestibility, he maintained that it was true.
      That's Satanic Panic stuff, from the late 80s. Definitely relevant to QAnon, which is maybe why it came to mind.

    • @sonikmuff
      @sonikmuff Před 3 lety +43

      @@uncivil_engineer8013 I'm a member of the THICC earth society. We are currently accepting members

    • @sunjoexys7251
      @sunjoexys7251 Před 3 lety +9

      @@JackgarPrime Your theology is indisputable. Seriously, I will tell my theologian buddies about your comment.

  • @howlingmad7391
    @howlingmad7391 Před 3 lety +1708

    I'm going to debunk this but first...hold on, I'm taking a hit.

    • @mikedrop4421
      @mikedrop4421 Před 3 lety +13

      Don't worry, I already did it. Just scroll up to see my rock solid work. 😉

    • @paula194
      @paula194 Před 3 lety +84

      I wonder how many people will read this and not get it because they didn't watch the first video. I almost don't want to post this, in the hope that it weeds out all the flat-earthers who didn't watch the other video and came here just to shit on this one.

    • @OgawaBurukkuART
      @OgawaBurukkuART Před 3 lety +2

      I think he was actually still “right” he just didn’t know the difference between miles and kilometers... I still laughed, though!

    • @rodrigosoto4827
      @rodrigosoto4827 Před 3 lety +1

      Lol

    • @boereherp8705
      @boereherp8705 Před 3 lety +10

      @@mikedrop4421 if the earth is supposedly flat, how do you explain a lunar eclipse, and how do you perfectly predict one 100 years from now? Since orbits are used to calculate that, Curious to hear your take on this :-)

  • @BeknDignum
    @BeknDignum Před 3 lety +569

    The Minnewanka Curve Experiment sounds like the name of a local post-hardcore band

    • @australopithecus
      @australopithecus Před 3 lety +27

      Named, of course, after the obscure garage band from the 60s and their eponymous single that was a tongue in cheek attempt to start a new dance craze, "The Minnewanka Curve"...

    • @inimitableminimalist
      @inimitableminimalist Před 3 lety +2

      Pretty sure that's actually the name of a Lifter/Puller song...

    • @fmango
      @fmango Před 3 lety +5

      Sounds like a creepy pasta

    • @wadespencer3623
      @wadespencer3623 Před 3 lety +3

      @@fmango I came here to say "an SCP" but you're probably closer, a more general creepypasta.

    • @sonicthehedgegod
      @sonicthehedgegod Před 3 lety +6

      wrong
      a local post-*rock* band

  • @ethanritterbusch8910
    @ethanritterbusch8910 Před 3 lety +480

    Last time I was this early the Catholic Church was officially against Heliocentricism

    • @ThatsToughTV
      @ThatsToughTV Před 3 lety +3

      Actually Nicholas Copernicus was a “priest” and really close to the Catholic Church maybe you should do research👍.

    • @ethanritterbusch8910
      @ethanritterbusch8910 Před 3 lety +9

      @@ThatsToughTV Yeah sure, Copernicus had a great relationship, but have you ever heard of Galileo? They straight up put a dude on trial and were willing to excommunicate people for speaking the truth. Having one counterexample doesn’t count as doing more “research” than everyone else, and it doesn’t make you interesting.

    • @denythesound
      @denythesound Před 3 lety

      It's just refraction, not curvature...

    • @lucasljs1545
      @lucasljs1545 Před 3 lety

      So, in a parallel universe, right? The Catholic Church was NEVER against Heliocentrism.

    • @lucasljs1545
      @lucasljs1545 Před 3 lety

      @@ethanritterbusch8910 this Galileo bullshit is a lie, he wasn't tried for "heliocentrism", he was tried for Occultism. He was even a follower of John Dee, another occultist. If the church had tried Galileo for "heliocentrism" they would have charged him for it, but they NEVER charged him for anything, because he was Tried for OCCULTISM but they didn't find concrete evidence.
      Stop with your bullshit LMAO you are just saying what every stupid "science" channel says.

  • @emtilt
    @emtilt Před 3 lety +1414

    I am so glad you posted this. I was gonna ping you on twitter and ask you for something like this. I will use this in my classroom next time I teach introductory astronomy. It's bar-none the clearest single demo of the curvature of the earth that I've seen in my years teaching astro, and a big part of that is also the beauty of the photography, which keeps it very engaging. The main video was fantastic on its own terms, but the format just wasn't ideal for classroom use. So anyway, thanks from a random astro professor!

    • @FoldingIdeas
      @FoldingIdeas  Před 3 lety +317

      Cheers!

    • @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379
      @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379 Před 3 lety +109

      And I will use it for my Geometry class! So thanks from a math teacher and fellow Canadian.

    • @notasitseems1
      @notasitseems1 Před 3 lety +50

      I’m using it in my physics classes!

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před 3 lety +15

      Thank you for being an astronomer :D astronomy got me interested in basically all my other hobbies and interests.

    • @yoavsnake
      @yoavsnake Před 3 lety

      +

  • @almostshawn3230
    @almostshawn3230 Před 3 lety +704

    Summary: The footage I took for an experiment with a painfully obvious conclusion is more beautiful than the images on google earth.

    • @boredOutlaw
      @boredOutlaw Před 3 lety

      @NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime fucking chad

    • @tkolkebeck
      @tkolkebeck Před 3 lety +10

      @NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime dude, the guy who made the video is NOT ZOOMING in or out during the experiment. He is merely raising and lowering the height of the camera. Over and over again. Do you not understand this??

    • @tkolkebeck
      @tkolkebeck Před 3 lety +5

      @NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime What video are YOU watching?? Tell me the time of the video he says he is zooming in and out, because between 2:25 an 2:50, he is clearly explaining that the field of view (the height and width of what you see on the screen) for the vast majority of the video is a fixed distance--he is not zooming in and out from 4:00 to the end of the video...

    • @tkolkebeck
      @tkolkebeck Před 3 lety +7

      @NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime Your insults don't help your argument. What is your argument anyway? The creator of this video is zoomed in on a small part of the opposing shore on a lake 7 km away. He was so crystal clear about this that it wasn't even worth arguing about how he zoomed in starting at 4 minutes of the video. I think we can hopefully both agree on that. While he raises and lowers his camera, he is not changing the zoom (hopefully we are both agreeing on that as well), but magically when he drops the camera down to 10 cm, the boat and a portion of the shore above the water horizon disappears. And your FE argument for this is what? There 5 foot waves in the middle of the lake with ripples at the shoreline? Educate me please...

    • @tkolkebeck
      @tkolkebeck Před 3 lety +4

      @NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime I actually don't really know what you are talking about. Please explain your point.

  • @dz7se
    @dz7se Před 3 lety +466

    This is scary. It makes the earth feel gargantuan and worryingly finite at the same time.

    • @WritesMe
      @WritesMe Před 3 lety +22

      Beautiful comment.

    • @Thorloar
      @Thorloar Před 3 lety +70

      “Worryingly finite” is probably the most apt description of our planet in these times I’ve ever heard.

    • @Abou47Pandas
      @Abou47Pandas Před 3 lety

      Well--- technically Since it is a sphere it is infinite. The same way you can have a theta on a circle at 360 Degrees or 1029342189 degrees, you can travel on earth in a line for 24,000 miles or 1 million miles.
      edit: just did the math for kicks, a theta of 1029342189° is 343114063π/60 radians

    • @sweetpeabee4983
      @sweetpeabee4983 Před 3 lety +9

      @@Abou47Pandas nah dude, we're all experimentalists here -- just say ur system is bounded to any measurable extent & call it a day lmfao.
      Alternatively, I suppose one could mess around with some 0 to 2 pi periodic boundary condition stuff, but...ehh lol.

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Před 3 lety +15

      @@Abou47Pandas you can trace a line with infinite distance in a sphere, but it still has finite area. that line wouldn't be infinite without intersection.

  • @AubriGryphon
    @AubriGryphon Před 3 lety +221

    "The Minnewanka Curve Experiment" sounds like it ought to be some interdimensional test that went horribly awry.

    • @ettumama
      @ettumama Před 3 lety +6

      and should never be spoken of again

    • @setlerking
      @setlerking Před 3 lety +1

      That sounds like a rad black mirror episode

    • @mightyNosewings
      @mightyNosewings Před 3 lety +24

      Good SCP name.

    • @WaxPaper
      @WaxPaper Před 3 lety +1

      Lol you're right, it sounds like a good cosmic horror title.

    • @sunjoexys7251
      @sunjoexys7251 Před 3 lety +3

      Reminds me of an old movie called The Philadelphia Experiment. Watched it as a kid, found out it's a hoax many years later.

  • @JackgarPrime
    @JackgarPrime Před 3 lety +431

    Not only is this a fascinating experiment and excellent proof, this is also just plain fantastic footage to chill out and relax to.

    • @rinnhart
      @rinnhart Před 3 lety +19

      Olson segues into down tempo conspiracy debunks to read/study/relax to?

    • @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379
      @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379 Před 3 lety +4

      Was thinking this will be my new before sleep go-to.

    • @torymiddlebrooks
      @torymiddlebrooks Před 3 lety +8

      Curved Earths to chill out/relax to

    • @rinnhart
      @rinnhart Před 3 lety +9

      Me: looks at the news feed
      Me: restarts the calming video

    • @marthahealy3941
      @marthahealy3941 Před 3 lety +9

      @@rinnhart Goodbye, tour boat... hello, tour boat.... goodbye, tour boat... hello, tour boat....
      ...over and over and over again...

  • @shinyskunk
    @shinyskunk Před 3 lety +600

    In Search of a Flat Earth was both brilliant and upsetting, so I appreciate that you put out this Lo-Fi Conspiracy Debunking To Study and Relax To video as a chaser.

    • @alt8791
      @alt8791 Před 3 lety +17

      "brilliant and upsetting" is the perfect description.

    • @frosty6845
      @frosty6845 Před 3 lety +17

      @NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime
      He didn't zoom in and out, he raised and lowered the camera. The only thing there that I see that could possibly make you think he zoomed in is the fact he didn't use a gimbal to keep the camera still.
      Why am I even wasting time speaking to an antisemite?

    • @Spirit__Man
      @Spirit__Man Před 3 lety

      @@frosty6845 antisemite?

    • @ericthomarat2324
      @ericthomarat2324 Před 3 lety +2

      ... this video is a bullshit ! they should have done this : zoom on the opposite shore a same height point ; use a lazer at the mean time

    • @unexpected2475
      @unexpected2475 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Spirit__Man probably from a commenter who deleted their comment

  • @Mr00dark
    @Mr00dark Před 3 lety +874

    Coming from a home raised by a parent that believed in all the anti-sematic, cabalistic, "us vs them", flat earth, antivaxx bullshit I just wanted to throw this out into the void of the internet, hoping it might catch someone, anyone's, sails and maybe give them the push they need in the right direction.
    4:13 to 4:34 brought a sigh of relief out of me that's been building up my whole sheltered, preached at, "herd immunity", confused, *confused* life in the making and sent tears streaming down my face.
    In his other video, Dan pointed out how profound and powerful it is, to be able to physically see this change happen in real time and I didn't appreciate it enough there. Here, with everything laid out perfectly and with the careful Dan-like consideration we've come to expect, I felt every fiber of my being, every ounce of my push back against the parent that's been hate blind to science their whole life, relax. Like someone had cut the tension wire, and I was finally allowed to drop the weight I'd been carrying.
    I guess I'm saying in many words is, thank you Dan.

    • @lievenvv
      @lievenvv Před 3 lety +22

      Let's all vote this comment to the top

    • @klisterklister2367
      @klisterklister2367 Před 3 lety +22

      I’m happy this was so cathartic for you :) there are other people out there in this world who are kind, reach out and you’ll find them.

    • @FuckYourSelf99
      @FuckYourSelf99 Před 3 lety +33

      You would not believe how much I want to give you a big hug right now

    • @yoavsnake
      @yoavsnake Před 3 lety +3

      +

    • @BenLoula
      @BenLoula Před 3 lety +3

      This was wonderful to read. I also appreciate a fellow Total Annihilation/SupCom fan.

  • @roberth9814
    @roberth9814 Před rokem +28

    This reminds me of being a kid out on the lake and always asking adults why I couldn't see the other shore. Or "why do the trees look like they are sticking out of the water?" They always said "it's an optical illusion," but one or two well-informed ones explained I was seeing the curvature of the earth itself. Which blew my little mind, and still does to this day.

  • @matthewburns4947
    @matthewburns4947 Před 3 lety +742

    I'm not a scientist, or flat earther, or really someone who cares too much, except for the amount that is accepted for caring about such topics, but I watched this all the way through. Even though this is an experiment, and a painfully obviously conclusive one at that, I am struck by the beauty of this footage. It has the same feeling fo looking at a piece of art in a gallery, where as you look over time you see it in so many different ways, see different things in it. It functions like science and art at the same time. It is beautiful, and I am in awe.

    • @BigDaddyWes
      @BigDaddyWes Před 3 lety +3

      I bet you wouldn't feel the same had you watched it without the background music.

    • @matthewburns4947
      @matthewburns4947 Před 3 lety +28

      @@BigDaddyWes Nah, I actually had it on mute for a fair bit. It's just beautiful footage.

    • @theclubvids
      @theclubvids Před 3 lety +3

      I actually wasn't convinced by this footage as no optical line was established and it's simply relying on adjusting the vanishing point by moving the vantage point upwards. Could go either way with that. Really not conclusive in my opinion.

    • @GoPieman
      @GoPieman Před 3 lety +35

      @@theclubvids @theclubvids moving a vanishing point up and down does not make things disappear behind the horizon on a flat plane. It can compress slopes that are nearly horizontal, but would not hide vertical trees.

    • @theclubvids
      @theclubvids Před 3 lety +1

      @@GoPieman It's my contention it would compress equally according to some ratio perhaps, but equally. The example experiment I would suggest is going to a soccer field and comparing the amount of, and length of objects you can see from when you are lying down on your stomach looking forward compared to standing up. The bottoms of trees, and posts would disappear the further away they were, however, I would say that upon standing up you would see the bottoms of the trees and posts from across the field again, just by changing height. Thus bottom of tree disappear across lake when lower vantage point.

  • @Spamhard
    @Spamhard Před 3 lety +383

    The fact you got a boat in these shots is honestly pretty huge. The amount of times I've heard from Flearthers that boats/ships don't disappear over the horizon, they just get further out of our view, and that you can just zoom in on them and see them again is one of their key arguments for this sort of shit. So yeah, the sheer fact you got a boat moving horizontally across the footage, rather than further away from us, AND show it vanishing and then reappearing is just... chefs kiss.

    • @Spamhard
      @Spamhard Před 3 lety +23

      ​@NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime What? Zoom makes things bigger, yes, well done. I'm not sure what that has to do with the camera being raised and lowered.

    • @Spamhard
      @Spamhard Před 3 lety +39

      ​@NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime ... I don't think you're understanding the core basics of what's being shown in this video. Also, it's okay dude, you don't need to like your own comments.

    • @Spamhard
      @Spamhard Před 3 lety +25

      @NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime But an expanse of water isn't an object like a hand. If he was raising and lowering it above a rock, your point would definitely be valid, because the rock would simply block the view and as the camera was raised it would see over the rock. But this is a 'flat' terrain, if you'll excuse the term. If we're using your hand example as a size differentiation, try doing this above experiment at a small pond or pool. Set up a toy boat one side and your camera on a gimble on the the other side, raising it and lowering it wouldn't encounter any obstructions or view blocking, you'd still see the other end of the pond/pool AND the boat in full view.

    • @Spamhard
      @Spamhard Před 3 lety +43

      @NerdWorldNinja FoldingSpaceTime You obviously haven't watched the video. You can clearly see even in the first 10seconds of footage that the crests are barely an inch or so. You're clearly too deep in your conspiracy to see anything that doesn't support your beliefs, which is an extremely slippery slope to continue down. We should be questioning everything around us, and we absolutely shouldn't trust what the Government tell us, but there's a difference between scepticism and out right delusion. I'm truly sorry you're in that place, mate. I wish you the best, but I won't be engaging further because it's clear you're just here to talk circles. Laters.

    • @ThatsToughTV
      @ThatsToughTV Před 3 lety +9

      You missed the part where he didn’t zoom in the boat or didn’t take in account for the waves.
      🤦‍♂️.

  • @gota7738
    @gota7738 Před 3 lety +183

    I zoned out when you started talking math to stare at the pretty scenery and I realise I've not changed a bit since school.

    • @mikedrop4421
      @mikedrop4421 Před 3 lety +10

      Oh thank gawd, I'm not the only one who did tha....

    • @doubtful_seer
      @doubtful_seer Před 3 lety +4

      Same. I was a straight a student but math just... does something awful to my dyslexia

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před 3 lety +1

      @@doubtful_seer if it's only about maths, I think that's called dyscalcula? but if you get it with words too and equations make it flare up, that makes sense.

    • @neehee941
      @neehee941 Před 2 lety

      The math is just their to fudge the figures

  • @jacktheflying
    @jacktheflying Před 3 lety +278

    Fake, Dan just used his Aquaman powers to raise the water level over the boat

  • @cjodyssey
    @cjodyssey Před 3 lety +106

    SCP 24901: the minnewanka curve experiment

    • @Chopstewie
      @Chopstewie Před 3 lety +2

      True

    • @Steelmage99
      @Steelmage99 Před 3 lety +5

      Any SCP reference gets an auto Like from me.
      Here ya go....

  • @sebastiaanvanrijn5824
    @sebastiaanvanrijn5824 Před 7 měsíci +12

    Seeing the newest comments on this video is so scary, i don't know why i was so foolish to think that straight up proof you can see with you own eyes would be enough to let people leave that cult. I hope no one i know will ever be sucked into it because i just wouldn't be able to help them

    • @lannik_0
      @lannik_0 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Because it's not a problem of facts , that can be solved with experiment and proof.... It's a problem of trust and believe.

    • @fixit9844
      @fixit9844 Před 6 měsíci +9

      The companion video does indeed say, that these people don’t believe in flat earth, and that definitive evidence can never convince them. These comments just prove it.

  • @AgentPedestrian
    @AgentPedestrian Před 3 lety +187

    Me, seeing the camera go low: "byebye tour boat!"
    Me, giggling as the camera raises again: "hello tour boat!"

    • @jkasturias
      @jkasturias Před 3 lety +6

      This gives me so many good vibes

    • @twotubefamily9323
      @twotubefamily9323 Před 3 lety

      If the camera is moving up and down , why does the background not move ?
      Waiting patiently

    • @AgentPedestrian
      @AgentPedestrian Před 3 lety +8

      @@twotubefamily9323 buddy. The void you asked this question to has no answers you want to hear

    • @ojkolsrud1
      @ojkolsrud1 Před 3 lety +11

      @@twotubefamily9323 If you've ever driven past a huge field with roadsigns near the road, you've probably noticed that while the signs seem to whip past you, the far background of the field appears to be almost static. You're driving past both of them at the same speed, but the rate at which the angle to the sign changes is much more rapid. The background in this video is farther away than the horizon, therefore it seems like it's not moving - even if the camera moves down relative to the background just as fast as relative to the horizon.

    • @oldvlognewtricks
      @oldvlognewtricks Před 3 lety +6

      @@twotubefamily9323 Surely you’ve heard of parallax?

  • @jmlkinc
    @jmlkinc Před 2 lety +19

    'Pray harder and try it again'.
    After all of this work, the response from Flat Earthers was 'Pray harder and try it again'.

  • @Skip6235
    @Skip6235 Před 3 lety +54

    What's wild to think about is that the reason you cannot see the Chicago skyline from the Michigan side of Lake Michigan is because relative to the shore you're standing on, the center of the lake is higher above you than the tops of the skyscrapers if you were to draw a straight line directly from your feet to the opposite shore! Amazing!

    • @andrewbuckley2627
      @andrewbuckley2627 Před 3 lety

      Same with any body of water.

    • @yehomasso3538
      @yehomasso3538 Před rokem +5

      Except you CAN see the Chicago skyline from the Michigan side of Lake Michigan. Look it up. And the official reasoning is that it is a “mirage”

    • @gaiamission7200
      @gaiamission7200 Před rokem

      @@yehomasso3538 as someone who lives on the shores of lake Michigan and has been to Chicago for both business and pleasure, no you cannot. even from the tops of the largest buildings (that have publicly accessible viewing areas) and im damn glad for it, we dont need any fucking Chicagoans on visible on our lakeshore, out of sight out of mind

    • @Gr-Ra5
      @Gr-Ra5 Před rokem +7

      @@yehomasso3538 That's not "official", but atmospheric refraction itself is a fact predictable by science.

    • @s1n0qu33
      @s1n0qu33 Před rokem +6

      @@yehomasso3538
      Yeah and it can only be seen when atmospheric refraction is just right.

  • @rickyl3819
    @rickyl3819 Před 3 lety +57

    As someone who asked for the specs of your equipment, I really want to say thank you for including this companion piece.

  • @deadpandrew
    @deadpandrew Před 2 lety +61

    There is something so bizarre about living in a culture where so many people want to make you doubt your own eyes. This footage is such a mind affirming thing.

    • @rumfordc
      @rumfordc Před rokem

      nothing is perfect. eyes can lie, like in mirages, magic tricks, and holograms. however they're still useful most of the time. there's no need to jump to either extreme.

    • @Gr-Ra5
      @Gr-Ra5 Před rokem +4

      There are lots of people who feel inferior and they look for ways to change their apparent knowledge without using the normal critical mechanisms they find so difficult. The simply start Iying to themselves and join others who do the same. Its denial as a lifestyle.

    • @JA-jx1hk
      @JA-jx1hk Před rokem +1

      Isn’t the argument against flat earth literally that you shouldn’t trust your own eyes/perspective because that will lead you to conclude the earth is flat?

    • @ShizukuSeiji
      @ShizukuSeiji Před 10 měsíci

      @@JA-jx1hk "the argument against flat earth"
      ...is what humans have seen of our planet from space.

    • @JA-jx1hk
      @JA-jx1hk Před 10 měsíci

      @@ShizukuSeiji pathetic, there is not one picture of earth from space, nasa openly admits they are all artistic renditions. It’s all fake. You literally just have to take the word of astronauts.

  • @Packbat
    @Packbat Před 3 lety +171

    ...that's why waves on a big body of water look like they do.
    Sorry, I just ... I've always had a little niggle in the back of my head about how the waves near the horizon look different from the waves near the viewer - they're mashed closer together, it feels like, in a way that distance doesn't explain - but it's because nearby waves are viewed from above and faraway waves are viewed from flat on.
    Every picture or video I've ever seen of the ocean or of a big lake has been proof that the Earth is round and I've only just seen it right now today.

    • @Justin-ib2iz
      @Justin-ib2iz Před 3 lety +17

      I don't think that bit is necessarily attributed mainly to the curve of the earth. On a plane, if you look at your feet you look almost straight down, but if you look at something further away you look at it from an increasingly sideways angle, so even on a plane theyd get smushed. Lets say you're looking at a figure 0
      * is you
      Line is your vision
      × is object viewed
      (A)
      *
      |
      ×
      You see: 0
      (B)
      *
      \
      ×
      You see something more like o
      Etc. Approaching (but on a plane never quite reaching) (C):
      * ---- ×
      You see ---
      The same will happen if you take a flat piece of paper with lines, look at it below your nose then lift it up in front of you keeping it flat. I think our brain edits out this discrepancy, just taking the useful info out of it of where the paper is in relation to you, but if you compare having the paper directly below you and almost in front of your eyes but still flat, you'll see the smushing there too.
      Now the fact that in the video you can see the water neatly cutting your vision of the trees is because the earth /is/ round so you do in fact see ----, in this case in the water before the trees.

    • @Packbat
      @Packbat Před 3 lety +11

      @@Justin-ib2iz That's completely fair - a flat-earther could explain that one away quite easily. I do think it's a different visual effect than I would have seen looking out over a flat plane, but it's absolutely not definitive.

    • @The_NickTL
      @The_NickTL Před 3 lety +11

      @@Packbat Waves out at sea look different from waves at the shore because THEY'RE LITERALLY DIFFERENT KINDS OF WAVES.
      The shore is special because it's a place where the land is, i.e. "where you run out of water." The waves out at sea have no 'ground friction' and get bigger because they can move uninterrupted. Until you get huge waves that crash over themselves ("surf waves!" or hurricane like conditions), you don't get water splashing about so much as moving around in big lumps.
      In contrast, as water gets pushed towards the shore, the bottom of the water gets held up by the ground. You're 'running out of sea'. The water that moves at the top of the surface can keep moving forward and curling over top of itself but the water down low is dragging. That's why waves near the shore like to 'roll over top of themselves'.
      You'll see it on a beach with really strong waves: the water roils over top of itself and slides waaaaay up the beach. Then, when the water loses its momentum and flows back, it really exaggerates the effect when new water hits the water sliding back and "bubbles over" the other water, making that weird rolling effect you'll see on the shore.
      The difference in depth near the shoreline accounts for the differences in waves when you're on the sort of beach most people imagine when they hear the word 'beach' and 'shore' together. The waves look different not because of distance but because the waves waaaaay out in the ocean are acting entirely differently from waves that are about to become landborne and go from being a part of the sea to a part of a puddle.

    • @reggiedixon2
      @reggiedixon2 Před 3 lety +1

      "These are small, but the ones out there are far away" czcams.com/video/MMiKyfd6hA0/video.html

    • @xX_MC_OvU_PvP_YT_Xx
      @xX_MC_OvU_PvP_YT_Xx Před rokem

      i'm sorry, did you just say "niggle"

  • @Bellonging
    @Bellonging Před 5 měsíci +7

    I know people are saying this makes the earth look huge. But to be honest the curvature is a lot more than I imagined, like 3 meters over 7 kilometres, that's a height I can see, that's a distance I can walk. This made the earth look small to me. I feel much smaller as well tho, so maybe that's what people mean...

  • @jeffreykweder8337
    @jeffreykweder8337 Před 3 lety +35

    To thank you for this video, Irish blessing:
    May the road rise up to meet you (at approximately 8 inches per mile)
    May the wind be always at your back (due to the atmospheric pressure maintained by gravity)
    May the sun shine warm upon your face (during the day/night rotation cycle)
    the rains fall soft upon your fields and until we meet again (traveling in a straight line away from each other from one spherical point to its opposite)
    May Gravity hold you in the palm of its hand (with force equalling mass times acceleration).

  • @ThisFinalHandle
    @ThisFinalHandle Před 3 lety +158

    Before: of cause the world is a globe.
    After: it's _TOO_ _PRONOUNCED!_

    • @NekoJesusPie
      @NekoJesusPie Před 3 lety +40

      PMP right??? I can’t believe the earth is so small we can just see the curve with the naked eye. Wtf. That’s so uncomfortable.

    • @sykes1024
      @sykes1024 Před 3 lety +48

      @@NekoJesusPie I'm now expecting a handful of flat earthers to see this, become convinced by it that the earth is indeed round, but then they move onto the new conspiracy: We've been lied to! the earth is so much smaller than they're telling us! Tiny Earthers Unite!

    • @quiroz923
      @quiroz923 Před 3 lety +9

      Shufflepants this was pretty much Christopher Colombus'deal

    • @NekoJesusPie
      @NekoJesusPie Před 3 lety +9

      Shufflepants lmao looking forward to flat-earthers insisting africa and eurasia arent real, it’s only America and South America, Jesus was American and the Holocaust didn’t happen because Germany didn’t happen. The Norse knew Midgard was just 1 island. Coming to a Facebook group near your cousins soon.

    • @SvenTviking
      @SvenTviking Před 3 lety +1

      Shufflepants Apparently they’re all joining Qanon.

  • @Paralellex
    @Paralellex Před 3 lety +117

    Of course, you're missing the obvious explanation that the light just decided to bend that way just then for some reason or something

    • @Jan_Strzelecki
      @Jan_Strzelecki Před 3 lety +11

      There's _clearly_ a cloaked Romulan ship, no, the whole fleet of them!, parked around the shore! Yes. Clearly.

    • @DueySR
      @DueySR Před 3 lety +7

      This is actually a really common flat earth talking point, and will no doubt be their explanation for this video. _Atmospheric refraction_ they'll say, which is actually the reason scientists think the Bedford Level experiment got flat earth wrong.

    • @steveb9713
      @steveb9713 Před 3 lety +2

      People will always try to explain away the truth with some bs

    • @KrBme78
      @KrBme78 Před 3 lety +3

      It's the Satanic rituals!

    • @rostbot2885
      @rostbot2885 Před 3 lety

      @@Jan_Strzelecki Cloaked Romulan ships from flat Romulus!

  • @felinecontrolled
    @felinecontrolled Před 3 lety +168

    I see you have failed to pray the curve away.
    For those who cannot tell; this is sarcasm.

    • @giovanilha
      @giovanilha Před 3 lety +1

      He doesn't have faith enough
      jk

  • @inthebirdnest
    @inthebirdnest Před 3 lety +83

    Just a sincere "thank you". This whole project was a lot of work and I appreciate what you put into it.
    I've been a long-time viewer but I'm heading to your Patreon now to contribute.
    (I think Folding Ideas is a team of people? I could be wrong but, if true, I want to thank everyone).

  • @williamchamberlain2263
    @williamchamberlain2263 Před 2 lety +16

    I like coming back here to read comments from Flearthers salty that you can demonstrate curvature with one (1) camera and one (1) fancy stick

  • @sharonseaman5672
    @sharonseaman5672 Před 3 lety +57

    An accidental experiment I do every morning gives me similar feels: crossing the Sydney Harbour Bridge, I notice the distance to the buildings reflecting the sun in their windows changes depending on the height of the sun. The lower the sun, the closer the reflections; around the harbour and out as far as Concord and Homebush. When I'm running late, and the sun is higher, the buildings reflecting the sunlight are further away; Parramatta, or eventually, Penrith. Because the reflecting buildings are leaning away from me at an angle half the angular height of the sun.

    • @UNcommonSenseAUS
      @UNcommonSenseAUS Před rokem

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @roberth9814
      @roberth9814 Před rokem

      Niiice

    • @k.k.9378
      @k.k.9378 Před 7 dny

      Necro, but I was incredulous so I ran the numbers. Penrith is about 50 km from the bridge. That's 0.45 degrees of tilt; double that is 0.9; at dawn in Australian midwinter the sun's elevation changes by 0.9 degrees every 4.2 minutes. You were remarkably punctual.

  • @starstrudel8417
    @starstrudel8417 Před rokem +18

    This footage puts a knot of inspired exhilaration in my chest. What we consider obvious knowledge is so humbling when demonstrated to us by the planet itself. Thanks for putting this meticulous experiment together.

  • @Otherj3839
    @Otherj3839 Před 2 lety +11

    Flat Earthers all seem to think there are 6 foot permanent tsunamis on this lake, the humidity is so high that it distorts the far shore even though it looks fine, and zooming it will somehow raise up the opposite shore and reveal what is blocked by the water.

  • @HawkReynolds
    @HawkReynolds Před 3 lety +23

    I remember driving (being driven- I was young) back to Texas from Colorado on IS 287 right after vsauce released that video where he talks about the shadow of the Earth, and he suggests you look back during a sunset. I remember crossing out of the mountains into the steppe of New Mexico with a million miles of sky, and I looked straight ahead and watched the literal shadow of the earth come into view in the Eastern sky. Same principal as watching a sunset twice, just on a wider scale. You can watch the shadow of the Earth come into view and literally cross the land and engulf you. It was humbling. Same vibes as this. Makes you feel so small, and at the same time so lucky. I mean... we are the first species to even be able to comprehend such an idea. I love that feeling of insignificance vs potential. It's like when you progress the story in a game and suddenly the map expands and the area you were fucking around in for the last three hours is just a fifth (or less) of the map. It's both exciting and humbling to realise how insignificant you've been up to then. Way I figure, though. Now that we know how little we are, we've got plot armor. Humans are at the intersection of too creatively adaptive to run out of options and too happlisly stupid to give up on trying. And shit like this just fills me with hope. It's like medicine. It just reminds me of how far we've come in carving our way into history. And how spectacular we could really be.

  • @gamookie
    @gamookie Před 3 lety +24

    I really want to take a holy pilgrimage to Lake Minnewanka and recreate this experiment with my camera and equipment.

  • @briefisbest
    @briefisbest Před 3 lety +40

    I am awestruck. That is the only word for this feeling. That profoundness you mentioned really hit me this time when I understood what I was seeing.

  • @JessicaZane4realz
    @JessicaZane4realz Před 3 lety +47

    I wish I had a super huge TV and I could just watch this and sit back and relax. I usually like watching videos with just aquarium fish or beautiful scenery like this to relax.

    • @JackgarPrime
      @JackgarPrime Před 3 lety +4

      I just ordered a new 4k tv (not super huge, but big enough for my purposes) and I think I'm gonna watch this video again on that to enjoy the detail!

    • @max_kl
      @max_kl Před 3 lety +1

      @Stellvia Hoenheim dude, wtf

    • @tabula_rosa
      @tabula_rosa Před 3 lety

      hey jessica do black lives matter?

  • @KEVMAN7987
    @KEVMAN7987 Před 3 lety +21

    The Earth is a cube and the moon is made of barbeque spare ribs.

    • @sunjoexys7251
      @sunjoexys7251 Před 3 lety +3

      Wallace and Gromit went to the moon and found it made of tasty cheese.

    • @KrBme78
      @KrBme78 Před 3 lety +1

      It's a simple question. Would you eat the moon if it were made of ribs? I know I would!

    • @wadespencer3623
      @wadespencer3623 Před 3 lety

      @@KrBme78 Ew no, they were cooked 3.5 billion or so years back and stuffed in the fridge known as space ever since. At least let me reheat it on the sun.

    • @daedalus_20v
      @daedalus_20v Před 3 lety +1

      @@KrBme78 that's why they call me whiskers!

  • @jasonblauet8838
    @jasonblauet8838 Před 3 lety +21

    Used this in my classroom today!

  • @dedded101
    @dedded101 Před 3 lety +145

    Finally! Proof the Earth is round! It's about time.

    • @TheKnightOfShades
      @TheKnightOfShades Před 3 lety +12

      We've been wondering which was correct for so long.

    • @donqueshot2217
      @donqueshot2217 Před 3 lety +10

      You should watch the entire video before you trust these globeheads.

    • @karsonwood3081
      @karsonwood3081 Před 3 lety +11

      Was it?! Coincidence that it was shot on a camera called BLACK MAGIC?!?!
      #godisgood #boosatan #icewall

    • @fredreickweaver809
      @fredreickweaver809 Před 3 lety +3

      Karson Wood satire? Right?

    • @donqueshot2217
      @donqueshot2217 Před 3 lety +2

      Robin Hogan calling someone a globehead is extremely funny.

  • @KrBme78
    @KrBme78 Před 3 lety +141

    This is BS. You're clearly just alternately filling and draining the lake by several meters of water every few seconds.

    • @vi_cesario
      @vi_cesario Před 3 lety +16

      god it's scary how i can barely tell if this is sarcasm or not

    • @Musikur
      @Musikur Před 3 lety +18

      @@vi_cesario Totally not sarcasm, don't you know that NASA has big pumps in all of the big lakes all over the world, just in case someone wants to do this kind of experiment? Side note: why would all the countries in the world let NASA put big pumps in them? Ah well, it's obviously true so I'm sure there's some good reason!

    • @FalconXE302
      @FalconXE302 Před 3 lety +1

      @@vi_cesario ... I know how you feel... that's because a real flat earther would probably use the draining and refilling as their explanation, and if that failed, they would just go back to refraction... LoL...
      But I'm going with sarcasm...

    • @cesarefildani8260
      @cesarefildani8260 Před 3 lety

      I assume you're the one they call a flat earther?

    • @weston6338
      @weston6338 Před 3 lety

      @@Musikur where did you learn they put "big pumps"? I'd like to learn as well

  • @DavidB75311
    @DavidB75311 Před 3 lety +31

    It's odd to be listening to this music and not watching your cat.

  • @danielrhymes4593
    @danielrhymes4593 Před 3 lety +33

    Watching the tour boat pretty much disappear behind the curve of the earth hits me in this weird way every time. Just.... it's seeing the world in a whole new way, being able to watch the thing in action

    • @Khazuki_
      @Khazuki_ Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah, it's uncanny.

  • @tomdchi12
    @tomdchi12 Před 3 lety +62

    The irony, of course, is that the main video does such a good job of laying out that for these people reality is subservient to the metaphysical "beliefs"(?) that they superimpose on literally everything.

    • @rinnhart
      @rinnhart Před 3 lety +8

      No, I think the real struggle is that reality absolutely is not subservient to their metaphysic, and confronted by or rather to escape confronting the existential horror of the human condition, their own frailties, and failings, they immerse themselves in a fantasy that intrinsically makes more sense or is less challenging to their worldview.

    • @idontneedaname318
      @idontneedaname318 Před 3 lety +12

      @Stellvia Hoenheim found one

    • @rinnhart
      @rinnhart Před 3 lety +1

      @Stellvia Hoenheim what, too many words with more than one syllable for you? Should really remember to drink your adrenochrome.

    • @nicktaylor1902
      @nicktaylor1902 Před 3 lety

      @@rinnhart he could be joking buddy

    • @rinnhart
      @rinnhart Před 3 lety +5

      @@nicktaylor1902 then he DEFINITELY shouldn't be skipping his adrenochrome.

  • @KoolWithAQ
    @KoolWithAQ Před 3 lety +54

    For just a moment, you can hold in your head the size of the Earth. It's beautiful and humbling. Incredible stuff. I don't even give that much of a shit about how this "debunks" the awful conspiracy theories. I'm deeply moved by the chance to understand this huge, yet tiny little ball we've all gotta fit on.

  • @ladylielac
    @ladylielac Před 3 lety +61

    Wow. Just... wow. I'd never actually seen the curvature of the Earth myself before, not to remember, but... damn. Seeing something disappear behind the gentle waves, and staying gone until the camera lifts off the ground again... it's profound, and a little unsettling, and something I wish I could see in person. Don't know of any long-but-not-wide lakes in Southwestern Ontario, though...

    • @hunterra217
      @hunterra217 Před 3 lety +1

      I mean idk wym by southwest but southern Ontario is pretty damn close to the great lakes, i would be shocked if you couldn't find a spot that sees accross enough for you to see this for yourself, im a michigander and did something like this once accross a part of Lake Michigan but even that didn't show it off as well as these videos do, I think its just how much you can look at at once versus in person. Either way though, theres not much to do during quarantine so I'm sure it would make for a great road trip to the great lakes 😂😂😂

    • @alexanderhetzel8271
      @alexanderhetzel8271 Před 3 lety +3

      My father demonstrated it to me when I was a child, picking me up and onto his shoulders and setting me down, watching ships disappear on Lago Maggiore. Mind blown.

    • @ladylielac
      @ladylielac Před 3 lety +1

      @@hunterra217 I mean the bit of Ontario that is close to Michigan, actually! The part of Ontario between Toronto and Detroit. I'll consider it; my little sister loves road trips and has been hideously bored.

    • @alancrabb
      @alancrabb Před 3 lety +8

      "something I wish I could see in person.." Please save up and come to the South of England. There is a cafe atop the coastal cliffs between Dover and Folkestone, from where you can see big ships come up over the eastern horizon, traverse along the English Channel, and disappear hull down behind the western horizon. On a clear day you can see the hilltops of France, and on a clear evening the car lights going over those hills. The reality of a gently curving earth is overwhelming. They make nice sandwiches, too.

    • @perkuu6937
      @perkuu6937 Před 3 lety

      ok thank you for this comment i had no idea what i was supposed to be looking at

  • @VagabondTE
    @VagabondTE Před 3 lety +82

    If you ever want to do another of these, I would suggest looking up Lake Pontchartrain. I've been there and you can just SEE the curve in the power lines.
    But I suspect you don't want to do this again, lol

    • @VagabondTE
      @VagabondTE Před 3 lety +3

      @@lifotheparty6195

    • @alisaurus4224
      @alisaurus4224 Před 3 lety +20

      Our dad used to have us hold our breath going over bridges in the car, just for fun. Then we went to visit Granny and drove over the Lake Pontchartrain causeway. Dad of course said nothing & had great fun watching us struggle to hold our breath for 20 minutes.

    • @VagabondTE
      @VagabondTE Před 3 lety +1

      @@alisaurus4224 XD

    • @clarkeybaby2955
      @clarkeybaby2955 Před 3 lety

      @@lifotheparty6195 bless u I thought the exact same thing ❤

    • @hapaxl.6075
      @hapaxl.6075 Před 3 lety +6

      YT channel Soundly has a comprehensive study of landmarks across that lake, pylons, causeway etc, using telephoto compression to emphasize the curve. The comments are a soup of vitriol and disdain from flatties.

  • @leecowan8215
    @leecowan8215 Před 3 lety +44

    See, but this is the heart of the problem. Anyone patient, clever, or willing enough to follow that math can likely already see the conclusion as self evident. If you already can't accept a simple truth, by definition you never will.

    • @JoeMama4352
      @JoeMama4352 Před 3 lety +13

      You can't logic someone out of a mind set they didn't logic themselves into.
      I wanna attribute this qoute to RED from overly sarcastic productions but I don't know if she found it somewhere else, either way it's very appropriate

    • @LittleSparklingStars
      @LittleSparklingStars Před 3 lety +1

      In conclusion, people are delusional and dumb

    • @DueySR
      @DueySR Před 3 lety +8

      ​@@JoeMama4352 They definitely didn't come up with that quote, it's a few hundred years old. The oldest evidence of it comes from 1721 by Jonathan Swift, who wrote: _"Reasoning will never make a Man correct an ill Opinion, which by Reasoning he never acquired."_ It's been updated through the years to say the least.

  • @Electricz0
    @Electricz0 Před rokem +5

    The music and sound design in this video shouldn't go underappreciated. It really helps this simple science demonstration transform into an art piece, or maybe a meditation video.

  • @CLAYZERFUL
    @CLAYZERFUL Před 3 lety +5

    Clicked this video only because I saw Minnewanka. I used to go there every year and backpack around the lake. It's a very cool video!

  • @ArielVHarloff
    @ArielVHarloff Před 3 lety

    The footage with the music you chose is kinda perfect for meditation. It's beautiful and calm and something else that I don't have words for

  • @lievenvv
    @lievenvv Před 3 lety +16

    Here in Holland you will see massive container ships roll over the horizon whenever you visit the beach. They seem to disappear from the bottom up..
    I have also seen the sun set multiple times in a span of mere minutes - just by taking my little toy racing drone up somewhat higher.
    Cool to see it demonstrated on a lake - especially with the camera jig. Gorgeous footage!!

    • @Spamhard
      @Spamhard Před 3 lety +3

      Sadly a lot of flat earthers excuse that as them going "out of sight", and also blame it on atmospheric refractions. They argue that, with a good enough camera or scope, you could bring the ship back into focus (which makes 0 sense because then surely you'd be able to see countries the other side of the world with a telescope). The fact Dan managed to show a boat going 'behind' the curve while it wasn't sailing away from us was a great touch.

    • @lievenvv
      @lievenvv Před 3 lety

      @@Spamhard yeah, I totally agree with you.. it's such an awesome video and the use of the jig really brings it home :)
      I guess I wasn't even trying to convince any FE'ers, as that is indeed all too often pointless.. I just wanted to share these two instances where I could clearly appreciate the curve, which this video shows so very well :)
      As someone who grew up near the sea; reading through these comments, I guess I never realized how many people never had the opportunity to see something we often take for granted over here.
      BTW - that one comment about witnessing the curve through power lines was really really great :) I will keep an eye open for that one, from now!

    • @RayleighCriterion
      @RayleighCriterion Před 3 lety

      I have videos on my channel of vessels sailing above the horizon, because the horizon is an optical phenomenon.

    • @brettvv7475
      @brettvv7475 Před 3 lety

      @@RayleighCriterion Of course the horizon is an optical phenomenon. What the hell else would it be?

  • @rdbjrseattle
    @rdbjrseattle Před 2 lety +6

    Just a reminder. You will never see farther on a “flat” earth at a relative distance and elevation than you would see on a “round” earth. You will never see farther than the distance computed by a curve calculator. For instance you will never see the direct beam of the brightest light from a light house that is 100 feet above sea level while standing with eyes 6 feet above water level from a distance greater than +- 16.8 miles depending on atmospheric refraction. You might see the “loom” of the light from below the horizon but not the direct, unobstructed light- again depending on atmospheric refraction and the particular curve calculator used. Flat Earthers usually ignore atmospheric refraction and claim the object is visible from a greater distance than calculator indicates.

  • @maxobyrne1474
    @maxobyrne1474 Před 3 lety +79

    Dan please answer your phone, I’ve sent you the adrenochrome and I need my damn money.

    • @mac5565
      @mac5565 Před 3 lety

      Oh, hello again.
      I really should go to bed now: apparently I've started hallucinating CZcams comments from people I know again.

  • @bonniea8189
    @bonniea8189 Před 3 lety +10

    Everyone's talking about whether this proves the earth is round, no one's mentioning how Dan actually caught clear footage of Bigfoot

  • @MrKockabilly
    @MrKockabilly Před 3 lety +9

    That the earth was a roughly spherical shape was already established in 3rd century BC and circumference computed with just a few percentage of error. Of course it wasn't generally accepted by then. That there are still flat-earthers today is really frustrating.

    • @LucianCorrvinus
      @LucianCorrvinus Před 3 lety +1

      It was a more accepted belief than would be given by modern people. And its a choice today usually to support a flat earth model...or it will once they come up with a viable one...

    • @RayleighCriterion
      @RayleighCriterion Před 3 lety +1

      The only way to know the shape of the Earth is by getting high above the surface, and mankind did not have that technology until the 20th Century.

    • @andrewmeyer8783
      @andrewmeyer8783 Před 3 lety +3

      @@RayleighCriterion Look up Erastothanes's experiment, that's what this comment is referring to

  • @courtney1329
    @courtney1329 Před 3 lety +7

    I know this is an experiment but dang, that filming is so beautiful it makes me wanna cry

  • @MarkMichalowski
    @MarkMichalowski Před 3 lety +1

    Beautifully filmed and explained - one of the best demonstrations of curvature I've seen.

  • @AM_artworks
    @AM_artworks Před 3 lety +8

    I’ve never had any doubts about the Earth being a globe but that is different from seeing… this. The curvature of the Earth peaking up as you lower the camera. Seeing with the bare eye that the Earth curves. Absolutely awe inspiring.

  • @desdenova1
    @desdenova1 Před 3 lety +35

    Even with this beautiful evidence of a curved Earth, the unconvincable will sadly remain unconvinced.

    • @alancrabb
      @alancrabb Před 3 lety +3

      " the unconvincable will sadly remain unconvinced.." It's OK : just so long as they don't leave their villages, or venture out to sea, or observe closely the heavens, or try to understand weather, or become space scientists or teachers, or .. (well, you get the idea) they'll get along just fine.

    • @desdenova1
      @desdenova1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@alancrabb Sagan was right. He called tribalism "dangerous evolutionary baggage" in 1980.

    • @alancrabb
      @alancrabb Před 3 lety

      @@desdenova1 : yes, but if they don't leave their villages, no problem, eh? Would it help if I appended /s to my comment?

    • @desdenova1
      @desdenova1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@alancrabb No, I was already able to detect the Poe's Law.

    • @alancrabb
      @alancrabb Před 3 lety +1

      @@desdenova1 : good : thought I was losing my touch. Also, love Sagan.

  • @RachelKe
    @RachelKe Před 3 lety +10

    ngl i cried when i saw this footage the first time

  • @scifience8297
    @scifience8297 Před 3 lety +65

    The Earth is a cylinder

    • @gusgablaw7375
      @gusgablaw7375 Před 3 lety +16

      Technically a flat earth would be a very short cylinder.

    • @hendrikd2113
      @hendrikd2113 Před 3 lety +14

      @@gusgablaw7375 The earth is actually a top hat. The deep state elites live on the top part, we the people live on the outer ring. That's why airplanes never fly over the north pole, even if it woul be a faster route. They would need to gain too much elevaton to get over the top of the top hat.

    • @Isimoro
      @Isimoro Před 3 lety +6

      @@hendrikd2113 so the real question is: who is wearing the hat?

    • @Salomonkey_
      @Salomonkey_ Před 3 lety +10

      Fun fact! That's how animal crossing works

    • @nachfullbarertrank5230
      @nachfullbarertrank5230 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Isimoro A turtle? But what is its sex?

  • @GeoffTV2
    @GeoffTV2 Před 3 lety +3

    It's surprisingly moving to see the Earth's curve visually demonstrated in this video. Thanks for posting.

  • @kyraceleste6608
    @kyraceleste6608 Před 3 lety +11

    Leave it to Dan to make the best ASMR vid.

  • @TheTroutkitty
    @TheTroutkitty Před 3 lety +19

    The audio is crap. You can hardly hear the mic drop at 4:40. :)

  • @maglorc
    @maglorc Před 2 měsíci +2

    Commenting so that, at least briefly, the newest comment on this video isn’t a petty criticism, but instead, a praise of the extent that Dan has gone into providing every single person here with excellent educational content.

  • @UrbanistBlooms
    @UrbanistBlooms Před 3 lety

    Really love your channel and the video essay style you present with great sourcing and proper science/math. Keep it up :)

  • @Valaron748
    @Valaron748 Před 3 lety +3

    This is just so beautiful and calming to watch, there's something about actually seeing the curvature that is unlike anything I've experienced before, you always know it's there, but seeing it is an experience

  • @tominini4342
    @tominini4342 Před 3 lety +8

    This cute little tour boat is on a wild ride today.

  • @AlwaysAmTired
    @AlwaysAmTired Před 3 lety

    I was not really paying attention to my video queue, but the music and footage of the lake completely drew me in. The meditation I didn't know I needed. ETA rewatched the beginning. Splendid.

  • @jemmaflower468
    @jemmaflower468 Před 3 lety

    The music on this and the previous video have just been fantastic! Absolutely wonderful!

  • @LivingArkly
    @LivingArkly Před 3 lety +7

    deeply touching footage. thanks for making the effort. this particular effort, and in general.

  • @lindasiltakoski4900
    @lindasiltakoski4900 Před 3 lety +5

    Honestly seeing the full footage makes me want to see if I can replicate this experiment somehow. It's one of those situations where the facts that are so big and abstract we kind of just take for granted and utilise without thinking about them become... elevated, and beautiful in their own right. The difference seeing it with your own eyes makes cannot be overstated.
    Profound, like you said in your other video. I wasn't sure if I understood at first what you meant, but I'd like to think I get it now :)

  • @giovanilha
    @giovanilha Před 3 lety +12

    Hold on, I'm taking a hit.

  • @inciaradible7144
    @inciaradible7144 Před 3 lety +3

    I think flagging this as 'Appropriate for a classroom environment.' does it a disservice; I think this is wonderful footage for people to really grasp with how the scientific method really works. Ancient cultures had been aware of the roundness of the globe, although most didn't comprehend how big it actually is, but we've only been able to go to space until, relatively speaking, very recently. Beautiful footage, too.

    • @inciaradible7144
      @inciaradible7144 Před 3 lety

      Point d'Ironie sure, mate.

    • @inciaradible7144
      @inciaradible7144 Před 3 lety

      Point d'Ironie sure is, which is what I alluded to; you would’ve known this if you didn’t dismiss me and actually read my statement.

    • @inciaradible7144
      @inciaradible7144 Před 3 lety

      Point d'Ironie there is no problem with that at all: I merely stated that this being ‘appropriate for classrooms’ fails to capture how valuable this is for children.
      I’m not sure what’s confusing to you.

  • @alasanof
    @alasanof Před 3 lety +3

    I like that this is a maths video. Always nice to see the complicated mathematical problems be solved to the simple answer.
    And it's even nicer that you got lovely footage of the serene lake.

  • @wolfbbq6076
    @wolfbbq6076 Před 2 lety +6

    The minnewanka experiment leaves the flatearthwankas with no argument 🤣.

  • @Busto
    @Busto Před 3 lety

    Perhaps it's the simple beauty of the shots. Or Dan's methodical approach to the mathematics involved. Or the fact that we're 6+ months into a pandemic induced quarantine. Or @Core's wonderful sentiments. Maybe it's a mix of all of these. By 8 minutes in, I was weeping. Thanks Dan

  • @VioletIvy2
    @VioletIvy2 Před 3 lety +16

    Educational ASMR with beautiful visuals, perfect!

  • @ramireznoy
    @ramireznoy Před 3 lety +6

    A 4K footage from a drone going up an down should be enough for any flat-earther. If they don't want to see reality, then they are beyond help

  • @josukebosuke8579
    @josukebosuke8579 Před 2 lety +13

    'new comments' pov: you are looking for flat earth cultists

  • @FluxChanneler
    @FluxChanneler Před 3 lety +2

    I appreciate this as much as a work of science as a work of just, like, chill nature footage.

  • @Smokescale
    @Smokescale Před 3 lety

    This was a lovely, soothing video. It was a balm on an otherwise painful day. Thank you.

  • @michaelgussert6158
    @michaelgussert6158 Před 3 lety +14

    This is phenomenal work!

  • @LogicGated
    @LogicGated Před rokem +3

    Love that we got in search of a flat earth DLC

  • @JonSwansonE
    @JonSwansonE Před 3 lety +1

    That boat is money. I don't just see the curve, I feel it in my soul watching that boat disappear and reappear. The height and path (distance from camera) is perfect for illustrating the curve, great work man.

  • @GameLeaderR
    @GameLeaderR Před 3 lety +2

    This video is calming and educational. I already knew the earth was a globe but I didn't know it was possible to see curve since we are so small comparatively.

  • @dlakodlak
    @dlakodlak Před 3 lety +16

    Damn, Dan. Kilometers? Centimeters? You are not using the FREEEDAAAHHHM units? You are clearly one of THEM!

  • @sunjoexys7251
    @sunjoexys7251 Před 3 lety +6

    I really appreciate your videos in this series, so much so that I shared your “In Search of a Flat Earth" video on my FB last week. I especially appreciate your perspective that the modern Flat Earth movement is not necessarily biblical nor is it really about Jesus. That might help some people struggling with authority of the Bible or matters like that.
    Your dedication to science is also much appreciated, as you went the length to conduct this experiment twice. This also has the potential to be a showcase of what qualifies as good science. Next time you conduct this experiment, perhaps find a few more witnesses or teammates and document the entire experiment with multiple cameras? Also in order to exclude the interfering elements such as refraction/distortion of hot/cool air, perhaps multiple experiments under the same condition would be beneficial.
    Then again, I understand that even the most sophisticated experiment cannot necessarily convince Flat Earthers that the earth is a globe with curvature. They have accused similar experiments of using CGI, premeditated conspiracy and so on. But I do think your videos have the potential to be excellent documentaries for future scientific studies. Kudos to you.

  • @MrPianoJames
    @MrPianoJames Před 3 lety

    Beautiful film making, I didn't know that I needed this until I saw it. Thank you.

  • @roundishwhale
    @roundishwhale Před 3 lety +2

    Love the footage & the music^^
    Seems to work wonders to help me relax

  • @ZandoFox
    @ZandoFox Před 3 lety +9

    But did you try praying and do it again?

  • @DanDeGaston
    @DanDeGaston Před 3 lety +3

    Absolutely beautiful scenery! I love everything about this video.

  • @ConsciousAtoms
    @ConsciousAtoms Před 3 lety

    Beautiful experiment. I am not a film maker by any means, and I wasn't aware of the existence of rigs like that to smoothly raise and lower a camera while filming. Inspires me to repeat this experiment myself - I conveniently live near a beach, so this should be doable.

  • @ismata3274
    @ismata3274 Před 3 lety +1

    😩
    Oh humanity, don't any of you live near coastline, haven't you ever sit down the beach and had a look at the ships, sloooooowly sailing away, sinking down? Just relaxed, observing. Really? Not even one of you watched with your own eyes? No? Was busy watching something else, or on youtube or social media? We deserve this.🤦🤷
    Addition: driving down to the beach from a recently high hill, would serve too. And stopping and taking pictures of the other side of the coast if there is one, would be the solid proof.
    And to the owner of the video, may your hands not know sorrow/hardship (meaning this is a damn good job you did here and thank you very much -as a part of humanity, of which you served perfectly- may god bless.)

  • @gil1934
    @gil1934 Před 3 lety +2

    This is the video I'm gonna come to whenever I have anxiety. As you can see, I'm here right now

  • @RB__Sun
    @RB__Sun Před 3 lety +7

    round earth sounds to study and relax to

  • @paxcallow
    @paxcallow Před 3 lety +2

    i come back and watch through this sometimes. just watching the boat swallowed up by the horizon, and then come back over it again... the feeling it gives me is a strange combination of fear of the scale and awe at the beauty.

  • @JackgarPrime
    @JackgarPrime Před 3 lety +1

    Neat! I was wondering if this was going to be a thing you put up on its own.