Dos & Don'ts Of Earthquake Survival | DEBUNKED

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  • Опубліковано 7 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 193

  • @DebunkedOfficial
    @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому +15

    Offset your carbon footprint on Wren: www.wren.co/start/debunked The first 100 people who sign up will have 10 extra trees planted in their name!

  • @keishirogane9838
    @keishirogane9838 Рік тому +108

    it pains me of how underrated this channel is

    • @DebunkedOfficial
      @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому +33

      Thank you for your comment. Really hoping the views start to pick up again 😕

    • @TheTuxedoCreeper
      @TheTuxedoCreeper Рік тому +2

      Seriously bro

    • @max-abobea
      @max-abobea Рік тому +3

      ​@@DebunkedOfficialany good channel will eventually get attention, you just need to wait until the algorithm gives the channel a chance
      Good videos btw, they're really good

    • @nod_jawk
      @nod_jawk Рік тому

      And what frustrates me is that we will never know how many lives this video will save (directly with people doing the great advice here, or with the information being transmitted to other people, cancelling the previous popular misinformation)

    • @Friendship1nmillion
      @Friendship1nmillion 8 місяців тому

      ​@@DebunkedOfficialI know it's dependent upon what damage is done to the roads . However I am disappointed that you didn't include how we could ( if we're uninjured ) go to give blood at the nearest blood bank after an earthquake we've experienced has occurred . ♑️✍️🇳🇴🇦🇺

  • @Austenite75
    @Austenite75 Рік тому +39

    It is scary sometimes to think that you might actually die from following something that you believe will keep you alive.

  • @luckypegasusvol7700
    @luckypegasusvol7700 Рік тому +87

    As a person who witnessed 3 major earthquakes in Turkey, it just depends on the building. Thus if the building ever collapses you wouldn't know the spots which could create "triangle of life" (as we call) because you can't predict the collapsing style.

    • @ssa6227
      @ssa6227 Рік тому +7

      I live there too. There is no guarantee. Just chances. I found people have made survival bags in Turkey in case.
      Rescue also comes days after as we saw in Turkey recently. So there are no guarantees.
      It's all up to Allah

    • @altair-tf8fp
      @altair-tf8fp Рік тому

      bro the turkey goverment thinks giving 500 dolars will fix your life

  • @DeconvertedMan
    @DeconvertedMan Рік тому +113

    Stand on springs.

    • @MawDaws
      @MawDaws Рік тому +18

      boingboingboing

    • @Wormweed
      @Wormweed Рік тому +16

      Or be in a plane or helicopter. Just need to predict the future first, so you can plan it.

    • @DeconvertedMan
      @DeconvertedMan Рік тому +2

      @@Wormweed springs are easier. :D

    • @allentan2312
      @allentan2312 Рік тому +1

      Go to the nasa bunker

    • @Admrial-Veshkov-Yuri
      @Admrial-Veshkov-Yuri Рік тому +2

      Be in space just have to predict it

  • @shovanabajracharya
    @shovanabajracharya Рік тому +19

    After experiencing an earthquake, I think the fact is that when the earthquake starts, if it's a big earthquake, it's actually impossible for you to run. Earthquakes come unannounced without any prior warning or symptoms. Due to the sudden shaking, you can't even stand. So you'll basically just fall and sit on the floor. Don't try to stand or walk again until the shaking stops. Also the door basically just shut itself close due to the shaking. If there's anything nearby to hold on to then you could hold, but if there isn't any, you really have no time to go and find a triangle of life or under the table etc.

    • @giuseppestuflesser2136
      @giuseppestuflesser2136 9 місяців тому +5

      I agree with what you're saying, but remember that there are cities equipped with earthquake alarm systems that activate between 30 seconds and 2 minutes before a earthquake. In such cases, it's crucial to react quickly and leave the building as organized and fast as possible. On the other hand, it's possible to understand the architecture of your building to identify which walls provide the most stability to the structure. These are the least likely to collapse and offer a good chance for creating a "triangle of life.

    • @JaneNewAuthor
      @JaneNewAuthor 5 місяців тому +1

      I've been in a level 6 earthquake inland from Newcastle, NSW, Australia. The most terrifying part was the noise, like a freight train. We were a long way inland, we had no idea what it was.
      Then it hit. The house was built on a cement slab, it was as though the whole house was picked up and shaken.
      The only damage was three tiles fell off the splashback in the kitchen.

  • @JoelReid
    @JoelReid Рік тому +31

    In 2019 i was in a dangerous earthquake and moved the family outside because I was well aware the house had no potentially falling parts. Airconditioning units were ground level, and the roof was rated for tropical storms. This meant that outside was actually safer, even next to the building. inside was more dangerous due to the potential for internal panels, like the ceiling panels, falling.
    This is important, knowing your building structure is essential to survival.

  • @thomasewing2656
    @thomasewing2656 Місяць тому +3

    Indoors or out, DO NOT RUN! Stay put and shelter your head. Running in an earthquake is a guaranteed broken leg. It is similar to trying to run on the deck of a rocking ship.

  • @isayavas2500
    @isayavas2500 Рік тому +21

    Very important video with a ton of information (as usual). The recent events in Turkey and Syria showed how important educational videos like this one are. Unfortunately debunked has no subtitles in other languages. The vast majority of people in Turkey and anywhere else in the world are less likely to keep up with such a high level of english. It might be also increase the reach of this channel, which could help to sustain this incredibly entertaining format of videos. Please keep up making those videos. I appreciate them a lot and hopefully more people can benefit from them.

  • @esteemedmortal5917
    @esteemedmortal5917 Рік тому +21

    Wish I had this video back in 2011.
    I don’t mock Southerners anymore for freaking out about an inch of snowfall; when we had a rare earthquake here near the nation’s Capitol, everyone was pretty clueless about what to do.
    What was funny was that my brother and his supervisor were on a call with a client across the country and they suddenly had to say ‘we’re going to have to call you back, we’re having an earthquake’. I can only imagine the client thinking ‘that excuse isn’t even believable!’

    • @mega9178
      @mega9178 Рік тому +1

      Wish I had this video back in 2001

  • @Janellemorreale
    @Janellemorreale Рік тому +15

    This is a somewhat small channel that NEEDS more recognition it’s a amazing channel keep up the good work

  • @DebunkedOfficial
    @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому +12

    Welcome! Are you new to Debunked?

    • @philipspigelmeyer959
      @philipspigelmeyer959 Рік тому +2

      Nope been here for a while. Much love to the vids

    • @alexander77364
      @alexander77364 Рік тому +1

      Nope I’ve watched it for a while. I love this content though.

    • @tendingsbrother7057
      @tendingsbrother7057 Рік тому +1

      No

    • @msemilyli
      @msemilyli 8 місяців тому

      Yup. And the animation of the building collapse was reminiscent of 9/11, so yeah it does happen to non-rural, industrialized areas too unfortunately 😢

  • @bemani247
    @bemani247 Рік тому +8

    In Japan we have evacuation route signs and in major buildings and work places we have tsunami/flood risk area maps and best places for high ground. We also have drills every few months.

  • @jgkitarel
    @jgkitarel 11 місяців тому +6

    Been through a number of earthquakes. The most powerful, and most damaging was actually in a place where you wouldn't expect an earthquake and was one of those rare intra-fault earthquakes that happen a good distance from a fault line. And there isn't fracking or other such activities which could result in such. This was more due to the fact that a lot of the buildings there were old. I was outside and walking home in it. Heard it coming, and was beside the road, got to the side of the road and stayed still. Was interesting to feel the ground ripple under my feet. Once the shaking stopped, I continued on and actually ended up telling people I ran into that it was an earthquake when they asked me what it was.
    And no, that wasn't the first earthquake I experienced in the Eastern United States. You actually get a fair number in the Appalachian Mountains, though those are either too weak to feel, or are fairly small when you do feel them. It was just the first one I went through that was well away from that region. Central Virginia, to be precise. Considering that I've been on the West Coast and experienced a number of earthquakes there, I thought that the earthquake I went through in Virginia was fairly small, less than a 4 on the Richter Scale. Didn't expect it to be a 5.8, which is close to the limit for what an intraplate earthquake can do.
    Modern construction that is built to code (I am using American standards here) is decently robust, so most shy of a major quake won't do significant damage to modern houses. You will need to check your foundation and any brickwork, though, as that IS likely to have taken damage, but the wood frame is likely to have weathered it fairly well. Older buildings, such as any built before 1950 and especially older, on the other hand, are likely to take significant structural damage, even if it isn't obvious.

    • @brianbrandt25
      @brianbrandt25 5 днів тому

      I was on the top floor of a modern skyscraper in Tacoms when a 5.2 hit. Everyone raced to the elevators. I told everyone they were in the safest place to be already, I was surprized how long it took for the building to stop gently swaying back and forth after.

  • @pandapounce
    @pandapounce 19 днів тому

    This is the first time I’ve ever heard emergency advice for disabled people. Thank you so much for including it.

  • @chill6789
    @chill6789 Рік тому +5

    the problem with that quake emergency kit is if the quake happens between 2-5am, the majority if not everyone is going to forget about the kit and try to get out of there house, a quake is unpredictable

  • @lamiaelkouchi899
    @lamiaelkouchi899 Рік тому +2

    I’m from Marrakesh nd I’m here after the earthquake that happened. We are not used to have them here so it is a very useful video thank you

  • @LunDruid
    @LunDruid Рік тому +11

    "Better to have it and not need it, than to need it and not have it."
    Nice to see the condom principle applies to so many things. :3

    • @EmpEcropEco
      @EmpEcropEco Рік тому +1

      lmao

    • @ken_cool
      @ken_cool 6 місяців тому

      what if you don’t need something and don’t have it or need something and have it or don’t want something and have it or want something and don’t have it or even need something but don’t want it

  • @BreadApologist
    @BreadApologist 11 місяців тому +2

    Just open developer console irl and turn on noclip. Any debris will pass right through you harmlessly. Can also turn on god mode for extra protection or in lieu of noclip. As for how to open irl developer console, you have to check “allow dev con access” during character creation. If you wait till after you are born it’s too late.

  • @tranmthu
    @tranmthu 8 місяців тому +1

    I've felt a few while studying in Japan for a year. The first earthquake I felt while doozing in bed and I was so confused. Luckily no major ones.

  • @JMan6271
    @JMan6271 Рік тому +2

    Been with this Chanel since 30,000 subscribers, congrats on your current success, more is on the way for sure

  • @alexwolfeboy
    @alexwolfeboy Рік тому +5

    My schools policy for tornados/earthquakes was to line everyone up in an (interior) brick hallway, and have everyone sit criss-cross with their heads between their legs, and hands over our head. Always terrified me the thought of being stuck like that if there was an earthquake. Mother nature is truly terrifying.

  • @MasterHandFinalDestination
    @MasterHandFinalDestination Рік тому +5

    sometimes i like youtube, youtube is sometimes i like

  • @uranium_chunk
    @uranium_chunk Рік тому +1

    when earthquake happens in tiawan ,people like "again? ya wanna some popcorn?" "time to post some crap to internet lol"

  • @nikanboostan6459
    @nikanboostan6459 Рік тому +1

    Thanks, it really helped😀

  • @Jaggerbush
    @Jaggerbush Рік тому +2

    OMG - what normal person is going to put together an earthquake emergency kit, move items down to their lower shelves, secure their fridge to the wall, designate a meeting plan????? I lived in LA for YEARS without anything like this and was in probably the largest one in decades somewhere around 2001. It was weird, loud, books fell, windows down the street broke- but we all survived.

    • @alam5055
      @alam5055 11 місяців тому +2

      Well, it's a pretty standard practice in Japan. There are even whole sections in stores dedicated to earthquake-proofing your home and emergency kit items. Sure, it's not like literally everybody's doing it, but many people do.

  • @phoenixarian8513
    @phoenixarian8513 9 місяців тому +1

    I am a civil engineer and I'd say door frames are NOT sturdy. They are in shape of rectangles and when pushed on the side they became parallelogram. Simple enough.
    Triangle of life is probably arguable cause there ARE a lot of total collapses in massive earthquakes in China. 1976 Tangshan and 2008 Wenchuan. Civil engineering technology improves in the recent years to design the structures to at least keep their columns intact (the floors may fracture or fall but columns can't or it's sandwich) so that the building will not collapse like 911. However not all buildings are built on basis of qualified engineering schemes. Stupid peasant builders!

  • @BrianHallmond
    @BrianHallmond 6 місяців тому +1

    I understand that staying in a car can protect you from falling objects.
    But I think I'd rather not be in a one ton vehicle if a sinkhole opens up...

  • @Jumanazar_UZB
    @Jumanazar_UZB Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much
    Perfect

  • @nafizahmmod2008
    @nafizahmmod2008 Рік тому

    New Subscriber . Very Underrated

  • @aharon2245
    @aharon2245 8 місяців тому +1

    thanks. this is good advice.
    should be a part of school curriculum

  • @weldabar
    @weldabar Рік тому +2

    How do you justify staying on your bed? It seems to me that getting under the bed would protect from falling debris better.
    I was glad to hear why the triangle of life is mostly not applicable - a theory that I had believed.

    • @Astrid-88
      @Astrid-88 10 днів тому

      Good luck rolling over and getting under the bed when the bed itself feels like a water bed - rocking and waving that lasts a few to 30 seconds. I get small earthquakes where I live quite often so they caught me in bed quite a few times. There is no time or possibility to move once an earthquake hits. My bed is actually in the potential triangle of life area against a sturdy wall and there is no furniture or heavy items hanging over my head. I also always take any pictures off the walls over a bed when I am staying in a hotel or something, because I am scared of them falling down on me due to an earthquake.

    • @weldabar
      @weldabar 9 днів тому

      @@Astrid-88 I was at home in bed a few years ago for a 5.7. I was ready to get under the bed if the ceiling started crumbling, but it did not. Would I have had time to? I think so, but admit it depends on many factors.

  • @bluey-next777
    @bluey-next777 10 місяців тому +2

    9:29
    Fun fact:
    *R U N*

  • @hamzach5198
    @hamzach5198 Рік тому +2

    Thank god i watched this fr

  • @accidentinstrument
    @accidentinstrument Рік тому +3

    I must admit, this subject matter makes life in the UK seem more appealing 👍

  • @josephbenjamin6426
    @josephbenjamin6426 Рік тому +3

    Soooo, basically just HOPE to not get injured

  • @deanwallace9238
    @deanwallace9238 Рік тому +8

    Video starts at 06:42.

  • @canis2020
    @canis2020 Рік тому +2

    As someone who has lived through many earthquakes this is far too complicated. Just buy moonshoes and always wear them. It also helps with lightning strikes

  • @CAT_SAYS_NO
    @CAT_SAYS_NO 8 місяців тому +1

    4:11 "fleshlight"💀

  • @burieddreamer
    @burieddreamer Рік тому

    I like this channel. There's a lot of cool stuff here...

    • @DebunkedOfficial
      @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому

      Thank you! Welcome if this your first time. Glad you like our videos 👍

  • @y_fam_goeglyd
    @y_fam_goeglyd Рік тому +2

    Two things I would like to point out in this terrific video (thanks for dispelling some real bugbears of mine!) #1 you misspelled the #howtosurvive hashtag ;) Sorry, but as a proofreader of sorts, that's the weird stuff I notice!
    Two - when you said stay put on the beach, one hazard that you didn't mention came to mind and that's liquefaction. (I don't live in an earthquake prone area - I'm in the UK - but I did study some geology and this came up in the course, as did Hubby [edit: he did the course, no earthquake was involved in us meeting. I shan't mention the earth shaking, either. I didn't really read through properly. Baaaaad proofreading DM!] I just ran my thoughts past him and he agrees, so if we're wrong, you can blame our uni!).
    Soft ground types, such as sand and loose soil - sometimes found under badly compacted foundations for buildings and roads/pavements, as well as in open ground - _can,_ under certain circumstances have a lot of water in them. Loose ground can act as if there's capillary action. Shake the ground with enough force, and even a fairly deep water table can get "sucked up" (for want of a better description) and turn the ground into essentially what becomes a very thin quicksand. There is film of a commercial building in Japan (from the 50s or thereabouts iirc - it's in black & white) sinking into the ground as water "pours up" to the surface outside it.
    You can replicate the start of liquefaction by stamping hard on wet sand (it only has to be wet just underneath the top layer, so don't assume that dry sand isn't wet, as it were) at the beach. Do it quickly, like running on the spot, and you should soon see water coming up and forming a puddle. That's a _very, _*_very_*_ basic illustration_ of how it will start. (You'll actually compact some of the sand if you do this, that doesn't happen in an earthquake, it's the opposite.)
    Obviously, follow the advice re tsunamis as a point of urgency. I'm also _not_ saying run up the beach _while_ the ground is shaking; that will be entirely dependent on your specific circumstances. Some sands are harder to run on than others without the ground shaking! But look for videos on liquefaction (there's bound to be one on UA-cam) so you can see how it looks. This will help prepare you to move quickly, even if the ground is still shaking, _if_ it starts to liquefy rapidly.
    As stated well in this excellent video, always be aware of your surroundings, even if you don't live in an earthquake-prone region. Intraplate earthquakes happen, as do any number of other natural and man-made disasters. DON'T PANIC! as the late, great Douglas Adams said. Just open your eyes, be aware of every door, stairwell, and other exits, as well as obvious potential hazards, and then go about your life. The more you do it, the quicker you'll get at doing it. You already do it to some extent on entering somewhere new, you're just not aware of it. Train yourself to be aware!

    • @DebunkedOfficial
      @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому +2

      Thank you for all that information! We’ll look into liquefaction if and when we make a Tsunami Survival video. And thanks for spotting the hashtag it was oddly the first suggestion that YT gave and I didn’t double check it 🤦‍♂️

    • @littleme3597
      @littleme3597 Рік тому

      I thought I heard him say, not to stay on beach because of TSUNAMI.

  • @viktorglibka2976
    @viktorglibka2976 Рік тому

    triangle of life is actually consciousness with the three components: thought, emotion and action

  • @nopenope4402
    @nopenope4402 Рік тому +3

    Skip to the 7 minute mark to hear the actual content on how to survive an Earthquake.

  • @xelibri21
    @xelibri21 Рік тому +2

    Just to be sure, does the "say inside, don't run out" method of survival take into consideration the survivorship bias? As in, it's pretty bloody difficult to account for all the people that ran out the building in the first place.

    • @shovanabajracharya
      @shovanabajracharya Рік тому +1

      If it's a big earthquake, it's literally impossible to run when it's shaking.

  • @rygull
    @rygull Рік тому

    Really enjoyed the part where using a pillow for protection.

  • @HouseOfMitchell
    @HouseOfMitchell Рік тому +1

    I'm fortunate to be from the UK, you get very little natural disasters

    • @DanDownunda8888
      @DanDownunda8888 Рік тому +1

      Never say never :)
      I live just outside Melbourne Australia and last year, for the first time in my 68 years of life, my house shook, a wall cracked and a window was broken.

  • @RunieDayeVT
    @RunieDayeVT 6 місяців тому +1

    ? Our school teachers tell us to stand in the middle of the door? Was school telling us lies?

  • @Forgotten_Soldier
    @Forgotten_Soldier Рік тому

    Instead of the tapping method, if you are entirely stuck unable to move, Whistle, it takes less breath then breathing and slightly louder depending, but I'm not the expert, so if I got anything wrong let me know.

    • @Noicer_wastaken
      @Noicer_wastaken Рік тому +1

      Just stick with the tapping method if you don't have a whistle and you also don't know how to whistle.

  • @neko_code
    @neko_code Рік тому +1

    00:28 Earthquake is a pizza slice😂

  • @Angrymask
    @Angrymask Рік тому

    *Turkey and Syria* :- we hope 2023 will be year of good and luck
    *Earthquake* :- _And i took that personally_

  • @biblomatic
    @biblomatic Рік тому

    An eye opener

  • @xaviording615
    @xaviording615 9 місяців тому

    Here in Singapore our metro stations are bunkers. Should I go there in an earthquake?

  • @scottmarquardt3575
    @scottmarquardt3575 Рік тому +2

    I almost had a large mirror hung by mom with a small nail kill me in Seattle by one. I liked how my death and kind of dumb boss in San Jose showed me what to do, he did a hula dance and pointed outside.

  • @MladenDragovicMusic
    @MladenDragovicMusic Рік тому +2

    The only thing I would object is staying in bed. Although it is in theory a part of "triangle", I would prefer to lay on the ground right beside the bed. If the ceiling should fall on you, at least you have some chance of survival. I cannot see a downside to this.

    • @yeetandskeet
      @yeetandskeet Рік тому

      Yes, but for the vast majority of buildings they will not collapse, so just getting up puts you at risk of simply falling or being hit by falling objects.

    • @angieemm
      @angieemm Рік тому +1

      I think they were referring to a disabled person, since that's what they were talking about just before that.

    • @fizruk7644
      @fizruk7644 Рік тому

      @@yeetandskeet turkish building did collapse tho

    • @luckypegasusvol7700
      @luckypegasusvol7700 Рік тому

      @@fizruk7644 corruption mate

    • @luckypegasusvol7700
      @luckypegasusvol7700 Рік тому

      @@fizruk7644 they were not built the way that they should

  • @malcolmthompson7769
    @malcolmthompson7769 9 місяців тому +2

    NYC

  • @Brendawallingbear
    @Brendawallingbear 5 місяців тому

    Stay tuned? So radios, tv and/ or Internet should still be working?

    • @sophianicholsonkeener8235
      @sophianicholsonkeener8235 2 місяці тому

      Hey! I'm from Seattle and what our emergency planners say is that radios definitely will be online ( so keep a noaa radio in your kit ), but *local* cell service will likely be disrupted if there's enough damage. Text messages are more likely to go through, and oddly enough we're told to have a friend or family member out of state to be our check-in person since calls to out of state numbers will be easier to make.

  • @johnnyandersonsallsev6964
    @johnnyandersonsallsev6964 Рік тому +1

    Make a video about how to survive a volcanic eruption? Suggestion for video?

    • @DebunkedOfficial
      @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому +2

      Sounds exciting! Scarily I visited the volcano in New Zealand the year before it’s eruption. It was a bit of a wake up call with some of my more risky travels 😬

  • @annasigala4
    @annasigala4 11 місяців тому +1

    Okay so I watched this vid yesterday and today we had an earthquake wtf 😂

  • @uncommonsimon5775
    @uncommonsimon5775 Рік тому +3

    You sir can't seem to able to have a bad haircut. 😁

  • @mrhelmut22
    @mrhelmut22 Рік тому +1

    Is Jay marks son I love your videos 😊😊😊

    • @DebunkedOfficial
      @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому

      Hi Jay! Thanks for watching and commenting! Really happy you enjoy our videos 👍

  • @tanostrelok2323
    @tanostrelok2323 Рік тому

    Man I sure love living in one of the white areas of the map so this is just fun to watch

  • @Pugsley_elPug
    @Pugsley_elPug 7 місяців тому

    This advise would be useful if I wasn’t in southern Wisconsin

  • @СергійСавелов
    @СергійСавелов 11 місяців тому

    11:46 whose school also taught that this is the right thing to do?

  • @nancyorozco5417
    @nancyorozco5417 Рік тому +1

    Under The table and covers your head hold on be clam

  • @BoqnIvanov-hk4ge
    @BoqnIvanov-hk4ge Рік тому

    9:52 Jumpscare warning

  • @WinVisten
    @WinVisten 4 місяці тому

    What about fissures in the ground? Those could still kill you if you're on a flat plain.

  • @ParanoeX
    @ParanoeX Рік тому +1

    huh! i learned something new! i never thought... uuh... wait... what was it?

  • @Woosh-c5u
    @Woosh-c5u Рік тому

    What application did you use to make the video? (Like the people, buildings, animations, etc.) Thx!!! :D

    • @DebunkedOfficial
      @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому

      Thanks for asking. We design the graphics in Adobe Illustrator, animate them in After Effects and then edit it all together in Premiere.

    • @Woosh-c5u
      @Woosh-c5u Рік тому

      @@DebunkedOfficial Thx! Ill use it for my projects :) lol

  • @mohammadmostajab5981
    @mohammadmostajab5981 Рік тому

    What what is the yellow?

  • @Gdhebdhgd123
    @Gdhebdhgd123 9 місяців тому

    I’ve seen tsunamis that is 40 m tall, or as tall as a 10 story building

  • @hzomzamzami1798
    @hzomzamzami1798 10 місяців тому

    Safety.

  • @Quickened1
    @Quickened1 Рік тому +3

    Obviously, the safest place to be during an earthquake, is flying in an airplane!

    • @DebunkedOfficial
      @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому +2

      But what if there’s nowhere to land and you’re low on fuel? 🤔

    • @Quickened1
      @Quickened1 Рік тому +2

      @@DebunkedOfficial haha, I did think of that, but odds are still in your favor because it's highly unlikely all of the runways are going to be disrupted. I mean unless you're very low on fuel, you wouldn't likely have to land immediately, and even if they are destroyed, there's usually other airports within landing distance, not to mention the possibility of landing in a field, or roadway. There's always the chance of that perfect storm where everything goes wrong, in that case, you might be toast!

    • @esteemedmortal5917
      @esteemedmortal5917 Рік тому +1

      Unless that earthquake is from a volcanic eruption that’s spewing ash at the plane!

    • @Quickened1
      @Quickened1 Рік тому +2

      @@esteemedmortal5917 well, I'd call that the perfect storm, see comment above...lol

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 9 місяців тому

      @@DebunkedOfficial You're Doorway in your home is SAFE.

  • @ersintek1820
    @ersintek1820 7 місяців тому +1

    Important correction @debunkedOfficial . The life of triangle is sort of tested in 1999 Istanbul earthquake. The collapsed buildings mostly in pancake shape due to high concrete buildings without proper engineering and regulations. Even though today most buildings after 2010 is considered earthquake ready in terms of a 7 magnitude impact, it is still a vital way for survival in Istanbul.

  • @armanlagi
    @armanlagi Рік тому

    Just stop, drop, and roll

  • @nito8066
    @nito8066 3 місяці тому

    ok but what do i do during an earthslow

  • @randomgamerkid8172
    @randomgamerkid8172 Місяць тому +1

    Hi

  • @Jesus...Christ
    @Jesus...Christ 11 місяців тому

    i'm slowly getting attached to the silly guy in your videos (the black stick figure)

  • @camilosurinach2599
    @camilosurinach2599 2 місяці тому +1

    Si corro a donde no haya terremoto.

  • @AlienSnowflake
    @AlienSnowflake 8 місяців тому +1

    Haha that was odd he didn't mention new zealand when it was selected. We don't exist hehe

  • @butlazgazempropan-butan11k87

    Best solution is to be is something that can fly

  • @astora8768
    @astora8768 Рік тому

    This has 16K views ???
    Just 16K ???
    Mate this is literally proof of how unfair YT's algorithm is omg

  • @peachyTO
    @peachyTO 9 місяців тому

    Who else is here to prepare for the great solar eclipse earthquake of April 2024?

    • @Austin_Playz27
      @Austin_Playz27 7 місяців тому

      there is genuinely something wrong with you seek therapy

  • @prabhapoudel2816
    @prabhapoudel2816 Рік тому

    Is anyone going to talk about Nepals earthquake 🫨🫨😢😢

  • @nathanc6443
    @nathanc6443 Рік тому

    lucky enough you mean unlucky enough right, right?

  • @chenterr103
    @chenterr103 9 місяців тому

    0:27 nah that's a watermelon

  • @lito11111940
    @lito11111940 Рік тому

    You forgot a big one "chimneys" ?

    • @Quickened1
      @Quickened1 Рік тому

      And yet chimneys we're specifically mentioned at 4:02 🤦

    • @lito11111940
      @lito11111940 Рік тому

      @@Quickened1 well excuuuuse me !

    • @lito11111940
      @lito11111940 Рік тому

      @@Quickened1 Actually, i should have said "Inside a fireplace" my mistake.

  • @khumokwezimashapa2245
    @khumokwezimashapa2245 Рік тому +1

    Just shake wit the Earth as well so the energy is dispersed evenly through your body. COME ON MAN!!! THAT'S TOO EASY!!

    • @DebunkedOfficial
      @DebunkedOfficial  Рік тому +2

      😆 Brilliant. That could be a thought experiment 🤔

  • @tracykaebisch993
    @tracykaebisch993 Рік тому

    Wouldn't it be safer under the bed if you follow the logic of being under a table or desk?

    • @JillC2
      @JillC2 Рік тому

      Maybe - but it's probably more likely you'll have a table or desk where you are than a bed.

  • @robertmanella528
    @robertmanella528 6 місяців тому

    Hot air balloon is the only way to get away from earthquakes!!

  • @babberification
    @babberification Рік тому +1

    You’ve never been in an earthquake. I can tell.

    • @dongameleone2489
      @dongameleone2489 6 місяців тому

      stupid comment. every person I know has experienced an earthquake, most of them several, and I live in a pretty "stable" country.

  • @heathermichael3987
    @heathermichael3987 9 місяців тому

    🤯

  • @littleme3597
    @littleme3597 Рік тому +1

    No place is safe.

  • @Sami.Mohammad754
    @Sami.Mohammad754 Рік тому +3

    If u wanna make sure “is it an earthquake occurring right now “ u can just turn your fan off for few minutes and then carefully look at it if it moves or swings without any source so it’s definitely an Earthquake

  • @joshuaridgway3230
    @joshuaridgway3230 4 місяці тому

    Stand square in the middle of an otherwise empty field. At most, you lose your balance and suffer an embarrassing pratfall. But the field is empty, so nobody saw you fall besides the CIA

  • @theshadowking3198
    @theshadowking3198 Рік тому

    Just jump to dodge the earthquake tremors easy

  • @KryzysX
    @KryzysX Рік тому

    Well... tell me a out this when it's actually happening

  • @giuseppestuflesser2136
    @giuseppestuflesser2136 9 місяців тому

    Some other important things to consider as well: remember that there are cities equipped with earthquake alarm systems that activate between 30 seconds and 2 minutes before a earthquake. In such cases, it's crucial to react quickly and leave the building as organized and fast as possible, or know which place is the closest and safest to be in case your building collapses or there are falling objects. . On the other hand, it's possible to understand the architecture of your building to identify which walls provide the most stability to the structure. These are the least likely to collapse and offer a good chance for creating a "triangle of life. And if you are in a high-rise apartment during an earthquake, it is often recommended to ascend to the top rather than descend, to avoid the risk of other floors collapsing on you in the event of a collapse.

  • @SafaiaFureia
    @SafaiaFureia 7 днів тому

    Bathtub?

  • @Krintasman_ball
    @Krintasman_ball Рік тому

    South east asean be like: well we fuc up

  • @pyeitme508
    @pyeitme508 Рік тому

    ok