Play World of Warships here: wo.ws/3rwJ6h3 Thank you, World of Warships for sponsoring this video. During registration use the code FIRE to get for free: -200 doubloons -1 million credits -Premium Battleship Tier 5 - USS Texas -20x Restless Fire Camouflage -7 Days Premium Account The promo code is only for new players during the registration. Disclosure: And yes, I WAS paid to include the ad in my video and this comment with the above message by Wargaming, the company behind world of warships. Now for the non sponsored part of this comment. For those of you who have followed my Canadian volcano series, it should come as no surprise that the Iskut Unuk River Cones rank in at #1 on this list. They have produced more than a dozen recent eruptions, perhaps even more if you consider its northeastern-most vent. The only negative regarding this volcano is its incredibly remote and must be hiked to. So, did any volcanoes surprise you on this list? If so, let me know!
@@BigBirdy100 Not to be 'that guy' but most adults do indeed play video games, curious what you are basing your comment on. Anyone in their 20's or older is an adult, you know that right?
I'm Canadian. And I know for a fact that most Canadians don't even know we have any. I didn't know. I'm old. I only found out we had volcanoes after I started studying them. We get almost no earthquakes and other than rocks, lakes and trees, there's little active geology happening. However, those in British Columbia know they are in danger of a big gone. Quebec has an old fault which can occasionally cause big ones. I felt one. It's source was Quebec around 1988, and I was near Toronto. Earthquakes on the east coast of North America are felt over great distances. I was on the 23rd floor of a building and I knew it was an earthquake because I had many hanging plants and they were all swaying to the waves. My girlfriend was napping beside me and woke up to tell me to stop shaking the couch. I told here it was an earthquake. I told about running outside, but since I knew they only lasted around 30 seconds, I knew I should just sit and ride it out. Since I was on the top floor, I was hoping I could ride the building down since I wouldn't be crushed by the other floors. I remember it distinctly.
@@kimberlyk3928 Currently working rather close to Mount Edziza. I thought the volcano was further away from my worksite but this video prompted me to look a little closer. It is one mountain over. Neat.
@@simonlemerveilleuxdelisle3779 I'm also from Québec City. I recall the 1997 one as well. I recall the 1988 one, but it's a smear in my memory (I was 4). My dad had initially blamed my sister and I for running too hard in the hallway; as we were running, we did not feel it as well and, being young and hearing the accusation, were just bewildered. The 1997 (I thought it was 1996) pretty well, though for some reason there is no entry in Wikipedia for it. It happened so fast, I first though there had been a bomb. It was just a loud BOOM, some shaking, and it was finished. I realized it was an earthquake only after it ended. I was in the basement at my parent's house, on concrete, so I felt it all.
opinion based on clear knowledge is more than acceptable. you are one of the best commentators in any field on youtube, your clarity, precision and not talking like you are speaking to idiots is what makes you so good.
Geology hub you continue to amaze and educate me each time you upload. Thank you for covering volcanic zones and impact craters in Canada. I could listen to your videos all day!
You geologist are freaking amazing. So freaking underrated. You're like one of the only kind of scientist that will be in high demand throughout all of the human future no matter what planet we're on.
AGAIN: sitting pretty Smug in CANADA and NOT thinking about Volcanoes at all, until another Geology Hub Video! LOL Thankfully they all are multiple times zones away from ME and in BC, and with Climate Change of Heat Domes and Massive Floods still in progress, BC is now a vacation destination at best.
I don't blame you for such a thought. Many of these remote volcanoes give me a warm and fuzzy feeling as they are currently quite peaceful, surrounded by wildlife, and covered in snow/glaciers.
I love all the volcano and weird/interesting geology stuff. Too bad I live in Florida where we have about zilch in terms of geology. After all it's just an up lifted sand bar made of sand stone, lime stone and coquina with deep deposits of gypsum, phosphorus, and Sulphur. Used to be a lot of gold, copper and uranium mining that was all striped out decades ago, and where I live is near a former copper mine that is now a super fund site. Mining destroyed this state's interior but very few people outside the state know about it. As a long time player of World of Warships, I can confirm that it is a nice little package they are offering. The USS Texas while slow in the game has better turrets than the USS New York of the same class as it's rear turrets are a bit further back allowing them to aim more forward around the super structure.
I'm Canadian, I live on the Prairies. We in Manitoba get lots of floods, I have a canoe, I'm good. Can't outrun a volcano, can paddle through a prairie flood.
I'm not sure where you got the eruption data at 5:28 but the Global Volcanism Program lists the 1904 eruption as uncertain rather than confirmed. The Edziza complex has erupted more than 13 times within the last 10,000 years, even though the GVP lists only four eruptions. Edziza has a lot of undated Holocene volcanic deposits, some of which may be as young as a few hundred years old. The Bridge River Cones north of Meager have produced at least one undated Holocene eruption and the Silverthrone Caldera northwest of Meager produced basaltic andesite lava flows down river valleys possibly in the last 1,000 years. I'm pretty sure there have been more than 42 eruptions in Canada within the last 10,000 years due to the fact that so many volcanic deposits remain undated and possibly unstudied or undiscovered due to remoteness. A lot of work is still required to get a good idea of how active Canada's volcanoes really are.
Interesting, the point about undiscovered things in Canada ; a rare or new moss or something was discovered in Wells Gray park, I believe, a few years ago , in a huge sinkhole garden thingie; it's location is being guarded . With increasing encroachment on privacy ( a drone can watch you from.5 miles up.) , It's cool to know Canada still has a few things hidden . All I ever discover are old stolen, stripped, burnt cars & trucks when out biking in the boonies !
@@richardkey4289yes more volcanic rocks have been discovered over the years. Something to consider is that a lot may be hidden under the glaciers and icefields of BC's mountains. For example, the retreat of Lillooet Glacier near Meager has exposed volcanic rocks that were erupted under ice. This was published in the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences in 2017.
Oh look, a World of Warships ad! Grats on the sponsorship. Wargaming has a talent for spotting rising channels. WoWS is one of my 2 favorite games. I've played it for 6 years and have completed 17,000 battles. It's a great game for people who can anticipate an opponent's actions and recall detailed information under pressure. Success doesn't depend on your reflexes although aiming is equal parts art and science. The pace of play is much slower than World of Tanks or Warthunder (and way, way slower than fast shooters), with a 20-minute battle clock. Scale is immense, with some maps reaching 2,500 square kilometers. For these reasons, it's known as "the game for grownups". Hardly any kids play it, at least not on PC. If you're one of those people who still think computer games are for kids WoWS will change your life.
We need to build a wall so Canada can't send us their unwanted lava, lol. Joking aside, what actually causes the earthquakes from intruding magma? Is it the pressure literally splitting rock at weak points and pushing the rock apart?
Great video, Im from Canada and not many people living here even know that we have active volcanoes in Canada. Im from the east coast though. Mount Meager's eruption produced a lateral blast much like St Helens right?
There's a video on a new channel, named Deep Dive, about a series of earthquakes in the Eastern US. It's about how Eastern earthquakes are so dangerous. They're not necessarily big, but there's nothing holding them back as the ground conducts the shock waves very far and structures are not made to resist quakes. Apart from that, the Appalachian Mountains are so, so old. It's likely that any volcanic activity there, if there was any (big mountain chains are not synonymous with volcanoes), is hundreds of millions of years old. The plate boundary is in the middle of the Atlantic, not on the coast.
I spent three years in Pemberton BC so Mt. Meager is very familiar to me. Even visited the hot springs a couple times (this was before the major 2010 landslide destroyed the access roads to the area). There were many warnings regarding what to do if there was a sign of a landslide or other hazards due to the composition of the mountain. I certainly wouldn't be shocked if the volcano did come back to life in the coming years.
I was flying over Mt. Meager in a small airplane 2 years ago to see the fantastically large landslide that occurred off the side of it. I presume that was triggered by these earthquakes that you mentioned. Additionally, about 20 miles away off the back of Mount Joffre, there was also a huge landslide could that be related?
The landslide you are referring to was oddly enough not volcanic in origin but was partially due to hydrothermal alteration of the southern flank of the Meager Complex. Several unlucky people who were in the area made an "Indiana Jones style" (rolling boulder of doom) escape by driving as fast as they could on a dirt road to escape the fast incoming wall of rock. They all survived without a scratch. The landslide at Joffre peak was unrelated, but could have been caused by either receding glaciers or earthquakes.
Where do you think the next major eruption from the East African rift system will occur? It always seems to get left out even though there are numerous and powerful volcanoes in that area.
By major, the largest I see reasonably occurring in the next few thousand years are VEI 6 eruptions. These would only occur in Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia, or Eritrea. Overall frequency? About once every 2-3,000 years
Are there any ancient or known volcanoes in South Africa? I'm just north-east of Tzaneen (a small town in SA, next to the Wolkberge), in an area where the original farm was called Greystones - presumably beacause of all the dark/slate-gray rocks/boulders protruding from the farm lands here and there. Also, alot of them are egg/oval shaped and seem to be flaking/pealing off in layers like an onion 🤔. P.S. Awesome channel!! Keep up the excellent work - I'm learning a lot! I never realized before that I'm actually interested in geology. Update: Wikipedia says I'm in/on the Kaapvaal Craton - if that might help.
Could I get the research data or name of the Geologist you used for those details in regards to Wells Grey... or who drew the maps of those volcanic features? Thank you
I drew the overlays for that volcanic field. I simply used several different papers to confirm where the eruptions originated and when before finally drawing over them. Will edit this comment later to include research paper links: pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geosphere/article/2/1/11/31116/Cenozoic-to-Recent-plate-configurations-in-the www.researchgate.net/publication/237169334_Mechanisms_of_slope_failure_on_Pyramid_Mountain_a_subglacial_volcano_in_Wells_Gray_Provincial_Park_British_Columbia The following two sources no longer have links for but I do have their original file names: Southeretal.CJES1987.pdf EdwardsandRussell_2000.pdf
That 1904 eruption was actually witnessed by natives, i can't find picture online, but there is one of natives showing the camp site before and after it erupted. Pretty awesome stuff.
When you state that such and such a volcano erupted X number of hundreds (or thousands) of years ago and sent a lava flow towards a town … no it didn’t … the town did not exist that far back. IF a volcano does erupt and does take out a town it would be a tragic disaster but they built the town under a volcano to begin with.
Hello Geology Hub! I am wondering about the eastern earthquakes? New Jersey and New York are not in the ring of fire, so what is causing this phenomenon? I am curious about the quakes in the east?! 😮
Due to the nature of an underground fissure, it did partially occur in Canada. Just the above ground portion only occurred in Alaska. Regardless, it’s still an awesome volcanic system and I hope it erupt again in my lifetime.
I really enjoy all your videos but I mostly watch the ones in North America. They're very detailed and I've really thank you for that. Do you have an email address as I would like to show you something?
In this video? No. For that you’d need to check out the spectrum range volcano (active) in British Columbia. However, it is rightfully protected against mining. (Despite clearly containing gold and silver)
Phscophants are everywhere in your comments!!!! Dude you’re slick I will give you that. And I doubt they are smart enough to realize you’re a kid fresh out of college who doesn’t have enough experience to get your PG! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 People are easily swindled these days!
PM will not allow it it might mess up his I'm God personality issue and he'll eliminate all people that could be the next PM you can guess I'm not a fan of PM Castro 😳😜( Treadu)
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Disclosure: And yes, I WAS paid to include the ad in my video and this comment with the above message by Wargaming, the company behind world of warships. Now for the non sponsored part of this comment. For those of you who have followed my Canadian volcano series, it should come as no surprise that the Iskut Unuk River Cones rank in at #1 on this list. They have produced more than a dozen recent eruptions, perhaps even more if you consider its northeastern-most vent. The only negative regarding this volcano is its incredibly remote and must be hiked to. So, did any volcanoes surprise you on this list? If so, let me know!
So glad you are getting sponsored. Love your work
It's very doubtful that this is the demographic for video games. Most adults don't play them.
@@BigBirdy100 Not to be 'that guy' but most adults do indeed play video games, curious what you are basing your comment on. Anyone in their 20's or older is an adult, you know that right?
@@BigBirdy100 I’m in my late 40’s and I love playing this game and battle tanks
World of Warships is one of my fav games.
I'm Canadian. And I know for a fact that most Canadians don't even know we have any. I didn't know. I'm old. I only found out we had volcanoes after I started studying them. We get almost no earthquakes and other than rocks, lakes and trees, there's little active geology happening. However, those in British Columbia know they are in danger of a big gone. Quebec has an old fault which can occasionally cause big ones. I felt one. It's source was Quebec around 1988, and I was near Toronto. Earthquakes on the east coast of North America are felt over great distances. I was on the 23rd floor of a building and I knew it was an earthquake because I had many hanging plants and they were all swaying to the waves. My girlfriend was napping beside me and woke up to tell me to stop shaking the couch. I told here it was an earthquake. I told about running outside, but since I knew they only lasted around 30 seconds, I knew I should just sit and ride it out. Since I was on the top floor, I was hoping I could ride the building down since I wouldn't be crushed by the other floors. I remember it distinctly.
I live close to Tseax!
I was in Quebec city for the 1988 one but I was very young. I was also here for the 1997 one!
Sorry
@@kimberlyk3928 Currently working rather close to Mount Edziza. I thought the volcano was further away from my worksite but this video prompted me to look a little closer. It is one mountain over. Neat.
@@simonlemerveilleuxdelisle3779 I'm also from Québec City. I recall the 1997 one as well. I recall the 1988 one, but it's a smear in my memory (I was 4). My dad had initially blamed my sister and I for running too hard in the hallway; as we were running, we did not feel it as well and, being young and hearing the accusation, were just bewildered.
The 1997 (I thought it was 1996) pretty well, though for some reason there is no entry in Wikipedia for it. It happened so fast, I first though there had been a bomb. It was just a loud BOOM, some shaking, and it was finished. I realized it was an earthquake only after it ended. I was in the basement at my parent's house, on concrete, so I felt it all.
opinion based on clear knowledge is more than acceptable. you are one of the best commentators in any field on youtube, your clarity, precision and not talking like you are speaking to idiots is what makes you so good.
Geology hub you continue to amaze and educate me each time you upload.
Thank you for covering volcanic zones and impact craters in Canada. I could listen to your videos all day!
You geologist are freaking amazing. So freaking underrated. You're like one of the only kind of scientist that will be in high demand throughout all of the human future no matter what planet we're on.
Cannot stress enough how much I appreciate the work and effort you put into these videos.
What's Your Favourite Canadian Volcano, I'm a Fan of the Tseax Cone, 1700 Due to the 9.0 Earthquake Moving the Juan de Fuca P,ate
I have to say Hoodoo Mountain, or possibly the Spectrum Range.
I live close to Tseax and I have lava from it!
AGAIN: sitting pretty Smug in CANADA and NOT thinking about Volcanoes at all, until another Geology Hub Video! LOL
Thankfully they all are multiple times zones away from ME and in BC, and with Climate Change of Heat Domes and Massive Floods still in progress, BC is now a vacation destination at best.
Well done on your first sponsorship!
Second*
He had a skillshare sponser
@@KaiserStormTracking shush, delete reply
@@pixeldubsofficial No.
I live in BC where I can point to active volcanos at all the compass points, some south of the border.
In my mind I imagined this top five volcano video auto-tuned to the 12 Days of Christmas. It might snag a copyright troll but it would be awesome.
I don't blame you for such a thought. Many of these remote volcanoes give me a warm and fuzzy feeling as they are currently quite peaceful, surrounded by wildlife, and covered in snow/glaciers.
The eruption of Mount Meager was not meager, that’s for sure.
I love all the volcano and weird/interesting geology stuff. Too bad I live in Florida where we have about zilch in terms of geology. After all it's just an up lifted sand bar made of sand stone, lime stone and coquina with deep deposits of gypsum, phosphorus, and Sulphur. Used to be a lot of gold, copper and uranium mining that was all striped out decades ago, and where I live is near a former copper mine that is now a super fund site. Mining destroyed this state's interior but very few people outside the state know about it. As a long time player of World of Warships, I can confirm that it is a nice little package they are offering. The USS Texas while slow in the game has better turrets than the USS New York of the same class as it's rear turrets are a bit further back allowing them to aim more forward around the super structure.
You live in the sinkhole capital of North America. Worth a mention but equally scary too.
I'm Canadian, I live on the Prairies. We in Manitoba get lots of floods, I have a canoe, I'm good. Can't outrun a volcano, can paddle through a prairie flood.
Lol that's a... an upbeat way of looking at it %
Colorado has a number of interesting volcanic features, including the Devil's Spine or Backbone.
Could you discuss Colorado's volcanic history?
He has done a video on the Dotsero Volcano in Colorado (ua-cam.com/video/4eTUErxeL68/v-deo.html ). It is Colorado's only known Holocene volcano.
I'm not sure where you got the eruption data at 5:28 but the Global Volcanism Program lists the 1904 eruption as uncertain rather than confirmed. The Edziza complex has erupted more than 13 times within the last 10,000 years, even though the GVP lists only four eruptions. Edziza has a lot of undated Holocene volcanic deposits, some of which may be as young as a few hundred years old. The Bridge River Cones north of Meager have produced at least one undated Holocene eruption and the Silverthrone Caldera northwest of Meager produced basaltic andesite lava flows down river valleys possibly in the last 1,000 years.
I'm pretty sure there have been more than 42 eruptions in Canada within the last 10,000 years due to the fact that so many volcanic deposits remain undated and possibly unstudied or undiscovered due to remoteness. A lot of work is still required to get a good idea of how active Canada's volcanoes really are.
Interesting, the point about undiscovered things in Canada ; a rare or new moss or something was discovered in Wells Gray park, I believe, a few years ago , in a huge sinkhole garden thingie; it's location is being guarded . With increasing encroachment on privacy ( a drone can watch you from.5 miles up.) , It's cool to know Canada still has a few things hidden . All I ever discover are old stolen, stripped, burnt cars & trucks when out biking in the boonies !
@@richardkey4289yes more volcanic rocks have been discovered over the years. Something to consider is that a lot may be hidden under the glaciers and icefields of BC's mountains. For example, the retreat of Lillooet Glacier near Meager has exposed volcanic rocks that were erupted under ice. This was published in the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences in 2017.
Oh look, a World of Warships ad! Grats on the sponsorship. Wargaming has a talent for spotting rising channels. WoWS is one of my 2 favorite games. I've played it for 6 years and have completed 17,000 battles. It's a great game for people who can anticipate an opponent's actions and recall detailed information under pressure. Success doesn't depend on your reflexes although aiming is equal parts art and science. The pace of play is much slower than World of Tanks or Warthunder (and way, way slower than fast shooters), with a 20-minute battle clock. Scale is immense, with some maps reaching 2,500 square kilometers. For these reasons, it's known as "the game for grownups". Hardly any kids play it, at least not on PC. If you're one of those people who still think computer games are for kids WoWS will change your life.
Top notch information and no fluffy nonsense. Thanks
This is exactly the type of content i would love to keep seeing from you! Thanks so much!
With so many volcanoes going off right now I'm shocked BC Canada doesn't have one waking up!
We need to build a wall so Canada can't send us their unwanted lava, lol. Joking aside, what actually causes the earthquakes from intruding magma? Is it the pressure literally splitting rock at weak points and pushing the rock apart?
Great video, Im from Canada and not many people living here even know that we have active volcanoes in Canada. Im from the east coast though. Mount Meager's eruption produced a lateral blast much like St Helens right?
I like your style and content, you've got the perfect voice for a science wonk, in a good way.
YAY!! You got another sponsor!! Good for you!! Congratulations on your ever growing channel
Could be cool to do a history of volcanic/earthquake activity on the east coast of the US! Love the content
There's a video on a new channel, named Deep Dive, about a series of earthquakes in the Eastern US. It's about how Eastern earthquakes are so dangerous. They're not necessarily big, but there's nothing holding them back as the ground conducts the shock waves very far and structures are not made to resist quakes.
Apart from that, the Appalachian Mountains are so, so old. It's likely that any volcanic activity there, if there was any (big mountain chains are not synonymous with volcanoes), is hundreds of millions of years old. The plate boundary is in the middle of the Atlantic, not on the coast.
wldfires this summer, rains this fall...a volcano sort of makes a twisted kind of sense, methinks
I spent three years in Pemberton BC so Mt. Meager is very familiar to me. Even visited the hot springs a couple times (this was before the major 2010 landslide destroyed the access roads to the area). There were many warnings regarding what to do if there was a sign of a landslide or other hazards due to the composition of the mountain. I certainly wouldn't be shocked if the volcano did come back to life in the coming years.
Great video as usual keep'em coming
I was flying over Mt. Meager in a small airplane 2 years ago to see the fantastically large landslide that occurred off the side of it. I presume that was triggered by these earthquakes that you mentioned. Additionally, about 20 miles away off the back of Mount Joffre, there was also a huge landslide could that be related?
No earthquake was involved in that landslide. It was attributed to structurally weak volcanic rocks and groundwater.
The landslide you are referring to was oddly enough not volcanic in origin but was partially due to hydrothermal alteration of the southern flank of the Meager Complex. Several unlucky people who were in the area made an "Indiana Jones style" (rolling boulder of doom) escape by driving as fast as they could on a dirt road to escape the fast incoming wall of rock. They all survived without a scratch. The landslide at Joffre peak was unrelated, but could have been caused by either receding glaciers or earthquakes.
Where do you think the next major eruption from the East African rift system will occur? It always seems to get left out even though there are numerous and powerful volcanoes in that area.
By major, the largest I see reasonably occurring in the next few thousand years are VEI 6 eruptions. These would only occur in Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia, or Eritrea. Overall frequency? About once every 2-3,000 years
Can you update the vulcano Semeru the vulcano 2 day ago is highly eruption
Now the dangerous pyroclastic flow
How about a video on Bowens Reaction Series and its potential effects on radiometric dating?
What are the chances of two volcanoes erupting at the same time?
Congratulations on getting a sponsor!
love it, can you do mineral deposits from volcanos?
aquamarine, gold, gleena.
do you mean galena?
@@fraserhenderson7839 that one.
Out of all of that, you hone in on spell check.
Good job on critical thinking.
Research crustal transmutation
@@dr.floridaman4805 honest question, diva response. get your ego in check doc.
Wow cool that you got a sponsor! This channel is getting big
Thanks for the post! I live in Western Canada very nice to know what is in my backyard!
Are there any ancient or known volcanoes in South Africa? I'm just north-east of Tzaneen (a small town in SA, next to the Wolkberge), in an area where the original farm was called Greystones - presumably beacause of all the dark/slate-gray rocks/boulders protruding from the farm lands here and there. Also, alot of them are egg/oval shaped and seem to be flaking/pealing off in layers like an onion 🤔.
P.S. Awesome channel!! Keep up the excellent work - I'm learning a lot! I never realized before that I'm actually interested in geology.
Update: Wikipedia says I'm in/on the Kaapvaal Craton - if that might help.
Ancient vulcanism occurred along the Lebombo mountains to your east during the Triassic. The Karoo (Stormberg Sequence).
Can you do a video on the ancient volcanoes in the Appalachians?
I'm really happy to see you taking sponsors, these videos are really great.
Listening to your voiceover commercials like: "yessss baby you better get them coins"😅😂
my mans got the sponsorship lets gooooo
Could I get the research data or name of the Geologist you used for those details in regards to Wells Grey... or who drew the maps of those volcanic features? Thank you
I drew the overlays for that volcanic field. I simply used several different papers to confirm where the eruptions originated and when before finally drawing over them. Will edit this comment later to include research paper links:
pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geosphere/article/2/1/11/31116/Cenozoic-to-Recent-plate-configurations-in-the
www.researchgate.net/publication/237169334_Mechanisms_of_slope_failure_on_Pyramid_Mountain_a_subglacial_volcano_in_Wells_Gray_Provincial_Park_British_Columbia
The following two sources no longer have links for but I do have their original file names:
Southeretal.CJES1987.pdf
EdwardsandRussell_2000.pdf
Edit: added links
@@GeologyHub Thanks bro
@@Cliffwalkerrockhounding are you planning an eventual visit there? Visiting the Kostal cone is a must due to how young it is.
@@GeologyHub I have been to Wells Grey and Nisga'a, those are both very recent.
Congrats on the sponsorship, love your videos!
That 1904 eruption was actually witnessed by natives, i can't find picture online, but there is one of natives showing the camp site before and after it erupted. Pretty awesome stuff.
Awesome video! I love it!
Me thinking : snow / Canada
Volcano/ Hawaii
Yet today , I hear , Canada/ volcano......snow in Hawaii......is this real life ?
You must have a good supply of psychedelics. 🤣
I’m a Canadian and I just found out about volcanoes 🌋 in Canada
Which year is the most geologically active where a lot of volcano erupted than average within a year
1980. That's of the last century though.
A Canadian lava flow invaded the USA? HOW DARE. :P
I like this new series
Unexpected ad for a video about volcanoes 😂 we sure they aren’t just shot at by ghost battleships LMFAOO
Indonesia couldn't wait for it's video
Can you make a Video about Calbuco?
Eventually, yes.
Probably the coolest looking plinian eruption..and didn't really bother anyone
What about the one off vancouver island coast under water volcano
When you state that such and such a volcano erupted X number of hundreds (or thousands) of years ago and sent a lava flow towards a town … no it didn’t … the town did not exist that far back. IF a volcano does erupt and does take out a town it would be a tragic disaster but they built the town under a volcano to begin with.
Hi, can you make a video about the volcanoes most likely to erupt in Turkey? Great content, by the way.
This is cool to know
The video was extended? Didnt seem longer once I skipped the ad
Most of my videos as of late have been 3m30s-4m30s. Without the ad this video was 5m34s
Hello Geology Hub! I am wondering about the eastern earthquakes? New Jersey and New York are not in the ring of fire, so what is causing this phenomenon? I am curious about the quakes in the east?! 😮
but the 1904 eruption wasnt in canada
Due to the nature of an underground fissure, it did partially occur in Canada. Just the above ground portion only occurred in Alaska. Regardless, it’s still an awesome volcanic system and I hope it erupt again in my lifetime.
Hey man can you do a vídeo about the ramones?
😂
I like that volcano that erupted all over the other country. Let's try to erupt on them again
I really enjoy all your videos but I mostly watch the ones in North America. They're very detailed and I've really thank you for that. Do you have an email address as I would like to show you something?
You can send any relevant photos or questions to my email which is tccatron@asu.edu
Please make a video on Lake Maninjau.
Do any of the volcanic lava flows contain metallurgy suitable for mining?
In this video? No. For that you’d need to check out the spectrum range volcano (active) in British Columbia. However, it is rightfully protected against mining. (Despite clearly containing gold and silver)
Can do some videos on Australia's volcano's
The report is great. The sponsorship, not so much!
Cross border Canadian lava needs a Destruction Visa for entry into the US. 🤣
You're now sponsored, nice.
Wow
Will you do Mt Ararat in Turkey?
Eventually, yes. Along with Bromo and Laguna Caldera, it has been one of my most requested volcanoes to cover.
Could you make a video on the laacher see volcano in Germany?
One admiral's fresh guys
Haha, I'm in danger.
I'm rooting for Clearwater to erupt in my lifetime, I'd love to see a La Palma style eruption nearby.
nearby being a relative term...
Fraser I live in Kamloops, so I'll second v1busters request. Well's Grey is less than 3 hours away.
@@pamelapilling6996 same! Having a La Palma style eruption right next door would be amazing.
Nice you gor world of warships sponser
Note for console and mobile users there are versions for you as well
Lol, I play World of Warships, I don’t play on pc but I play on Xbox, WoWs legends is on PS and Xbox
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Phscophants are everywhere in your comments!!!! Dude you’re slick I will give you that. And I doubt they are smart enough to realize you’re a kid fresh out of college who doesn’t have enough experience to get your PG!
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People are easily swindled these days!
I hope you'll upgrade from world of warships as a sponsor real quick. It's a pain to skip over.
'extended video', w/o 1 minute sponsor ad is a whole 30 seconds longer.
Awwww dude, sold out! Warship games eh; tbh not sure if many of your followers fit this demographic!? 😅😔
PM will not allow it it might mess up his I'm God personality issue and he'll eliminate all people that could be the next PM you can guess I'm not a fan of PM Castro 😳😜( Treadu)
WoW are NOT fun..
Toooo many ads.... Unsubscribed
Seriously?? You’re promoting violent video games? Doesn’t this world have enough violence as it is??? Unfollow
We live in a violent world and mother earth is also violent by nature like us humans.