Hydrothermal swarm activity is misunderstood by many folks ... immediately thought as "imminent eruption." Never considered to be caused by other geologic dynamics of a volcano. I would even venture to say Campi Flegrei is the same situation. Once again, thanks for the context!
one of my favorite parks to explore and camp in....trout fishing, steam vents and the climb to the top is awesome.....also the area is gorgeous........the summit is not hard to hike to....if you go there, explore Bumpass Hell....
Mt Shasta had earthquakes like these right before St Helens blew. They expected Shasta to go up. Evacuation plans were made for Mt Shasta city, Weed & McCloud.
It's a great drive/hike. You can drive right up to a couple of the mud pots. Then there is a short hike to the ones at bumpass hell. 10/10 would recommend.
Also recommend, pretty underrated compared to other California NPs. Fun scenic drive, also recommend Burney Falls and Subway Cave nearby as a short stop!
In 2017 I camped at Deerlick springs and the property owner took me to a bluff where I could see Lassen across the valley. I love that area and hope to visit again one day.
My dad worked testing soil and water for radiation levels.he often had to put evacuate orders on the town of weed. He worked for the fed gov bureau of reclamation central valley water project/calif.... I seen some awesome places up around Shasta that not too many knew about. Waterfalls in different brilliant colors. The rock and dirt color is different all Ng the way so the waterfalls are all different. Most peesdont know about them. Or if they do then they don't know or can't access them. Hint fly fisherman will try to venture back there ......❤
Thank you for your swift posting of events around the world that have concerned people or piqued interest in the World. I really enjoyed the last video about Stromboli, I am amazed that so many humans live there, since Stromboli is so active, but I assume the activity is not threatening the town, so... I want to visit there one day!
They talked about it on the news here. Some geologist was saying it was in an area where 3 plates or faults converge, but it did not sound like an area where they expected a hug subduction quake to come from.
From what I've heard similar swarms in that area of the Cascadia fault are common, happening about once a year. So probably no need to be more concerned than before.
@@b.a.erlebacher1139 I grew up near the Cascadia subduction zone. You may have heard that the swarms is common you have been mis-informed. They do not occur yearly. I suggest you do a history search on the USGS site for that area to become more informed.
@@Skidderoperator The Sierra's are a plutonic batholith and have no active volcanic properties. 20-30MA, they were a part of a Southern Cascade Range before the Farallon plate was subducted. Since Mt. Lassen's magma chamber is fed by the Southern Gorda subduction and the Gorda is a subplate of the Juan De Fuca plate system, Mt. Lassen is indeed the Southern volcano of the Cascade Range, not the Sierras.
@@johnnash5118 Yeah there are no volcanoes in the Sierras proper. Though to my knowledge the magmatic intrusions responsible for the Sierra Nevada batholith were predominantly Cretaceous in age with Pluton formation ending 70 Ma. Traditionally it has been explained as Farallon Subduction but based on the newer research discussed in Nick Zentner's A to Z Baja BC series it appears to have been part of an oceanic subduction arc where the North American passive margin was being subducted until the oceanic crust transitioned to increasingly buoyant continental crust which was too buoyant to subduct leading to a process called slab failure which involved a huge influx of magma filling in the position of where the subducting slab broke off and fell into the mantle ultimately leading to the former volcanic arc becoming welded to the North American continental shelf as has happened or is happening in New Guinea and Indonesia with the Australian continental Shelf or Taiwan with the Eurasian continental shelf. Eventually you would have had slab polarity reversal such that the Farallon plate as it is known would be the subducting plate rather than the overlying plate the bulk of Pluton formation is slab failure melts which are chemically distinct from subduction melts much richer in several elements including Strontium and Yttrium?, if I remember correctly. I'm not 100% sure on the 2nd element but Strontium abundance is one of the hallmark characteristics of slab failure melts. Regular subduction melts don't lead to enough siliceous melt intrusions to build a proper cratonic crust composition batholith only the subduction of a continental margin and subsequent slab failure as the subducting slab detaches due to the density differences can do that. I.e. typical subduction batholiths have too large of a fraction of intrusive mafic melt components to truly have a continental like buoyancy and they also occur at different depths and distances from the trench. These conventionally have been explained as a change in subduction angle but this fails to explain the chemical differences in magma composition as well as the more shallow, but still quite deep, depths of the intrusions and the orientation of parts of the Franciscan formations. The uplift and unroofing of the Sierras was indeed centered between 15 to 30 Ma as part of the Basin and Range uplift with the batholith having been deeply buried prior to that time long after subduction ceased in the early Cenozoic.
I grew up in the valley right near Shasta and Lassen, always preferred going to Lassen when it got hot in summer. Lassen national park is gorgeous, and I've got lots of fond memories of spending time at Hat Creek and checking out the lava tubes.
I live up here in Redding about 30 miles or so from Lassen. My thoughts have been that with all the hotpots, femurals, etc release whatever is building up underneath.
I remember the prelude to St. Helens, but in that case they could see the ground bulging up too. If the geologists also saw their tilt-meters indicating something like a big magma bulge rising under Lassen, I guess they would be more concerned. People know a lot more now than they did back then.
When you mention earthquake magnitude are you using the Richter Scale vs Moment Magnitude Scale? Perhaps you could do a bit explaining how they differ and which you use and why, etc? Thanks for your work. Cheers! More on the Cascadia area swarms too please.
Perhaps you might be able to answer a question I have regarding the measurable quakes that seem to happen almost every day in west Texas. Why? Is there an active fault in that area or is it a missle test site?🤔
I've been curious about the cause of the earthquake swarm east of Clearlake California. It's seems as though the earthquake swarms in that area never end and I haven't been able to find much information about it.
None. Rock is a great insulator, so heat from any subsurface magma doesn't make it to the surface -- those magma chambers are way too deep. You would need an actual eruption during the summer for any chance of a forest fire to start due to a volcano.
It's usually counted as the most southerly peak of the cascade range, as the geology better matches that of the Cascades than of the Sierra Nevadas (which are mostly uplift mountains). The gap that CA-44 travels through does give the impression that the gap is the end of the Cascade range, but that's not really the case.
That drive up to MT lassen and further old station theirs cave campground rushing creek waters hiking fishing then up to Burney falls theirs a lake with waterfront camping swimming.the most beautiful drive the beautiful trees all of it.spring and summer the best.winter great if your into snow.wanna go back.
We just had a very large DEEP quake off So Philippines, followed fairly swiftly with a large quake off Vancouver Is with larger 4s and 5s aftershocks... So the energy wave continuing down through or western volcano chain makes sense- and releasing in small quake swarms vs bigger fault shifts is a Good Thing imo
Not necessarily magma rising, but rather the presence of a magmatic system at depth. To have geothermal activity you need a source of heat, lots of water, and geological conditions that allow for the water to circulate. Places like Lassen and Yellowstone and The Geysers have all those elements. If magma were rising, it would be driving off all that water, and there would be clear changes in thermal/gas emissions and gas chemistry.
@@TheDanEdwards and all of the x class solar flairs and the CMEs, charging the Æther causing all of the motion from the quantum to the planetary to the celestial to the galactic. Nested fractal harmonic iterations of itself isn’t not irrelevant. Wireless induction of power aka the photo electric effect of light is not irrelevant. It’s the only game in town😂
Welcome to the party.. I've been trying to get people to look east. From fresno ca. For the last 13 hrs. It started with three small sitting clouds. Now look to our east. And west. ..
@@b.a.erlebacher1139 I’ll try it on you friend: lassen is not a threat, Mt Shasta is the one to be concerned about if one worries about eruptions, the failure of the Shasta Dam would destroy the Central Valley. We witnessed the destruction caused by St Hellen’s due too melting ice and snow, the snow pack on Shasta is much greater.
You almost lost me when you started talking about Yellowstone, but nothing you said about it was wrong. Most people who talk about the Yellowstone Supervolcano are repeating inaccurate or outdated information they heard elsewhere, and need to do their homework and find the latest information before making a video on the subject. I congratulate you for doing that. However, and I hate to say this because it sounds rude and that is not my intention at all... You need to work on your "video voice." Your data is accurate, but your delivery sounds like you're reading the minutes of a board meeting or something.
This is science. Science don't care about meaningless things like that. Watch the news if you are that shallow as he can't help his voice due to disability
@@b.a.erlebacher1139 it's perfectly respectable feedback, and sometimes that's how people grow and develop 👍 and if he wants to keep the voiceover the same that's completely fine
@@earthlymatters888 he's explained this several times. He scripts his videos to keep them short and speaking like that when reading is fairly normal for someone with autism. Expand your narrow mind to other possibilities.
You insult the creator of the videos and demand he change to suit your tastes. Do you know how to get along with people? Entitled much? Btw, ALL-CAPS is considered rude.
GH makes these videos and narrates them and provides them to you for free, but you feel entitled to insult him for his voice. He's a geologist, not a voice actor. If his voice bothers you, mute the sound and read the subtitles.
He's a real human with feelings and maybe on the autism spectrum. He's a nice guy and I like his channel, and I like his voice. Go away if you can't be nice.
GH puts a lot of effort into providing these videos to you for free, and all you can do is complain and insult him for his voice. Entitled much? If the voice bothers you, mute it and read the subtitles.
I was there at Lassen in '76. absolutely beautiful!! want to go back sometime.
Thanks for all the hard work on these videos!
Hydrothermal swarm activity is misunderstood by many folks ... immediately thought as "imminent eruption." Never considered to be caused by other geologic dynamics of a volcano. I would even venture to say Campi Flegrei is the same situation. Once again, thanks for the context!
Campi Flegri, while hydrothermal fluids likely are causing some of the quakes, is being caused by uplift from a deep magmatic intrusion.
Far too much uplift in CF
Thank you for this video. This is my favorite volcano. I have hiked to the summit twice.
one of my favorite parks to explore and camp in....trout fishing, steam vents and the climb to the top is awesome.....also the area is gorgeous........the summit is not hard to hike to....if you go there, explore Bumpass Hell....
Fire burned part of the park in 2021. Dixie fire.
We have a 2nd home (cabin) 15 minutes from the entrance to Lessen park.. 4, 000 feet elevation on the mountain. It is beautiful.
For now.
Mt Shasta had earthquakes like these right before St Helens blew. They expected Shasta to go up. Evacuation plans were made for Mt Shasta city, Weed & McCloud.
That's crazy, I was just too young to remember that. Shasta going would be intense.
@@lh3540 Eathquake swarms on Mt Shastas N flank had geologists real worried in 1980.
Thanks for the update, grew up in California and had no idea Lassen had so much geothermal activity. New vacation destination?
It's a great drive/hike. You can drive right up to a couple of the mud pots. Then there is a short hike to the ones at bumpass hell. 10/10 would recommend.
I second the recommendation to visit! It’s worth seeing!!
I've climbed that peak twice, worth the 12hr drive from socal lol!
Also recommend, pretty underrated compared to other California NPs. Fun scenic drive, also recommend Burney Falls and Subway Cave nearby as a short stop!
I love your videos. Always informative and easy to inderstand
I live in a nearby valley and it's weird when the ground isn't shaking🌋
Thank you for making and posting this video
meant to watch much earlier, but the events of today distracted me.
thanks for the video!
I lived in the redding area for a long time, i miss seeing beautiful mt Lassen on the horizon, and hiking to the top in the summer.
In 2017 I camped at Deerlick springs and the property owner took me to a bluff where I could see Lassen across the valley. I love that area and hope to visit again one day.
100° in Redding now. 110 ° tomorrow. 🔥
@@Skidderoperator that's mostly why I left despite deep family associations in the Igo/Ono area. It's just too hot in the summer.
@@grayaj23 Olive trees give no shade 😆
My dad worked testing soil and water for radiation levels.he often had to put evacuate orders on the town of weed. He worked for the fed gov bureau of reclamation central valley water project/calif....
I seen some awesome places up around Shasta that not too many knew about.
Waterfalls in different brilliant colors. The rock and dirt color is different all Ng the way so the waterfalls are all different.
Most peesdont know about them. Or if they do then they don't know or can't access them.
Hint fly fisherman will try to venture back there ......❤
Thank you for your swift posting of events around the world that have concerned people or piqued interest in the World.
I really enjoyed the last video about Stromboli, I am amazed that so many humans live there, since Stromboli is so active, but I assume the activity is not threatening the town, so...
I want to visit there one day!
I visited Lassen Peak almost exactly a year ago. Much of the park was still inaccessible due to snow cover in June. NEat area for sure.
Don't eat that area!
I look forward to watching this channel everyday 👍🤘💯
Any information on the series off Earthquakes of Vancouver in the last week or so? Some pretty sizeable shakes going on out there .
They talked about it on the news here. Some geologist was saying it was in an area where 3 plates or faults converge, but it did not sound like an area where they expected a hug subduction quake to come from.
The way the smile dropped off my face when I read the thumbnail, probably bc of the swarms on the Cascadia fault near B.C.
From what I've heard similar swarms in that area of the Cascadia fault are common, happening about once a year. So probably no need to be more concerned than before.
@@dawnpalmby5100 Lassen is not in the Cascade chain. Its Sierras.
@@b.a.erlebacher1139 I grew up near the Cascadia subduction zone. You may have heard that the swarms is common you have been mis-informed. They do not occur yearly. I suggest you do a history search on the USGS site for that area to become more informed.
@@Skidderoperator The Sierra's are a plutonic batholith and have no active volcanic properties. 20-30MA, they were a part of a Southern Cascade Range before the Farallon plate was subducted. Since Mt. Lassen's magma chamber is fed by the Southern Gorda subduction and the Gorda is a subplate of the Juan De Fuca plate system, Mt. Lassen is indeed the Southern volcano of the Cascade Range, not the Sierras.
@@johnnash5118 Yeah there are no volcanoes in the Sierras proper. Though to my knowledge the magmatic intrusions responsible for the Sierra Nevada batholith were predominantly Cretaceous in age with Pluton formation ending 70 Ma. Traditionally it has been explained as Farallon Subduction but based on the newer research discussed in Nick Zentner's A to Z Baja BC series it appears to have been part of an oceanic subduction arc where the North American passive margin was being subducted until the oceanic crust transitioned to increasingly buoyant continental crust which was too buoyant to subduct leading to a process called slab failure which involved a huge influx of magma filling in the position of where the subducting slab broke off and fell into the mantle ultimately leading to the former volcanic arc becoming welded to the North American continental shelf as has happened or is happening in New Guinea and Indonesia with the Australian continental Shelf or Taiwan with the Eurasian continental shelf. Eventually you would have had slab polarity reversal such that the Farallon plate as it is known would be the subducting plate rather than the overlying plate the bulk of Pluton formation is slab failure melts which are chemically distinct from subduction melts much richer in several elements including Strontium and Yttrium?, if I remember correctly. I'm not 100% sure on the 2nd element but Strontium abundance is one of the hallmark characteristics of slab failure melts. Regular subduction melts don't lead to enough siliceous melt intrusions to build a proper cratonic crust composition batholith only the subduction of a continental margin and subsequent slab failure as the subducting slab detaches due to the density differences can do that. I.e. typical subduction batholiths have too large of a fraction of intrusive mafic melt components to truly have a continental like buoyancy and they also occur at different depths and distances from the trench. These conventionally have been explained as a change in subduction angle but this fails to explain the chemical differences in magma composition as well as the more shallow, but still quite deep, depths of the intrusions and the orientation of parts of the Franciscan formations.
The uplift and unroofing of the Sierras was indeed centered between 15 to 30 Ma as part of the Basin and Range uplift with the batholith having been deeply buried prior to that time long after subduction ceased in the early Cenozoic.
I grew up in the valley right near Shasta and Lassen, always preferred going to Lassen when it got hot in summer. Lassen national park is gorgeous, and I've got lots of fond memories of spending time at Hat Creek and checking out the lava tubes.
That big geothermal area is know as "Bumpass Hell."
Thank you
Whew! And I thought those earthquake swerms and shwerms might be pointing to an eruption.
Boiling Springs Lake is definitely would a visit - never made it to Terminal Geyser, but maybe I will try if I ever get my knee back up to snuff.
I live 2 hours Southeast of Lassen. Would be crazy if she woke up again.
Or if lake Oroville busted out.
I live up here in Redding about 30 miles or so from Lassen. My thoughts have been that with all the hotpots, femurals, etc release whatever is building up underneath.
FUMAROLES
Thanks
Thanks as always!
The mud pits on Mt. Lassen (Bumpass Hell) are fascinating. It is a fairly easy hike to the top.
I remember the prelude to St. Helens, but in that case they could see the ground bulging up too. If the geologists also saw their tilt-meters indicating something like a big magma bulge rising under Lassen, I guess they would be more concerned. People know a lot more now than they did back then.
Mt Lassen eruption in 1915 was VERY similar to the St Helens eruption. But less of the mountain collapsed.
When you mention earthquake magnitude are you using the Richter Scale vs Moment Magnitude Scale? Perhaps you could do a bit explaining how they differ and which you use and why, etc? Thanks for your work. Cheers! More on the Cascadia area swarms too please.
Thanks.
Wow! Did you say 100 small earthquakes?
Thanks for sharing! 😊
The plates are in the move ..exciting and scary at the same time .
They are always in the move according to GPS 👍
They never stop
Can you please let me know if you have a UA-cam video about volcanoes in Alberta? I am curious to know why…
Thank you!
What are your thoughts on the ground sinking in Rancho Palos Verdes, California?
This isn’t the news I want to hear. I live between Lassen and Shasta! Lovely.
Burney?
Perhaps you might be able to answer a question I have regarding the measurable quakes that seem to happen almost every day in west Texas. Why? Is there an active fault in that area or is it a missle test site?🤔
There was a massive heat wave in the area over the past couple of weeks- unsurprising if this is related to the resulting snowmelt.
Possibility of tremor-swarm fracturing solidified magma causing ground water to penetrate hot magma?(thankx-professor)
I live near Old Station. We do feel tremors from time to time but to date nothing significant.
Is this linked to the quakes this week off the coast along the cascadia fault?
4.1 earthquake occurred near Lamont CA on the same date which I felt while sitting on my sofa!
I've been curious about the cause of the earthquake swarm east of Clearlake California. It's seems as though the earthquake swarms in that area never end and I haven't been able to find much information about it.
I believe those are that's geothermal energy. The injection sites create tremors.
Clear lake magmatic system is not extinct, they say.
20 eq a day is the average at the Geysers at Cobb. The company is geothermal and injects sewage back into drill sites.😂🙂🙏💛
@@rebeccamajor3465 I didn't know that but thank you for explaining. I always see lots of small earthquakes in the area and I didn't understand why.
Any geological comments on Rancho Palos Verde ?
I enjoy the mechanics.
Recharge of the hydro thermal systems, with all that extra water added to the water table around Lassen's Peak?
I heard they had a lot of snow the last 2 years so this is probably the case.
@@GamerChick5567 Good to know, Thanks!~
Earthquake swarms, I HATE it when that happens!
I knew ive been feeling quakes.
Lassen just cleared its throat, reminding us it is a sleeping giant.
Whatever.
Lassen, Baker, Shasta, Hood all waking up.
its aa sign of something scarier is about to happen underneath those who live there i bet
Nope, he says this is normal. Be worried of magmatic, not hydrothermal earthquakes.
We have angered the Lava People 🥵 🌋😬
@@xaviersavedra711 im thinking bigger than one silly mountain of rock ;) the jaun de fuca is what im worried about
@@YoLo-bb2vcThe Juan de fuca plate nor the american or pacific plates are worried about you though.😂
Dang it.. so CA is not going to slide into the ocean?
Unfortunately not yet......
It is beautiful there but very dangerous
Curious to know how many forest fires in the northwest and California have been started by volcanic activity.
None. Rock is a great insulator, so heat from any subsurface magma doesn't make it to the surface -- those magma chambers are way too deep. You would need an actual eruption during the summer for any chance of a forest fire to start due to a volcano.
Thanks!
Not quite as active as what we saw over in the Ridgecrest area not too long ago.🤔
I have read that Mount Lassen is NOT part of the cascade range. That starts North of there (Mount Shasta).
It's usually counted as the most southerly peak of the cascade range, as the geology better matches that of the Cascades than of the Sierra Nevadas (which are mostly uplift mountains). The gap that CA-44 travels through does give the impression that the gap is the end of the Cascade range, but that's not really the case.
I had a big fast creature do a pit manouver on my car on hwy 44. 55 mph-0 mph instantly.💥 After it caught up to me.
Lassen is Sierras. Shasta is the end of the Cascades.
Lake almanor or formerly big meadows is the dividing line of the cascade/sierra transition zone.
@@danielevans3932 They say its Fredonyer Pass.
That drive up to MT lassen and further old station theirs cave campground rushing creek waters hiking fishing then up to Burney falls theirs a lake with waterfront camping swimming.the most beautiful drive the beautiful trees all of it.spring and summer the best.winter great if your into snow.wanna go back.
Dormant not dead….
We just had a very large DEEP quake off So Philippines, followed fairly swiftly with a large quake off Vancouver Is with larger 4s and 5s aftershocks...
So the energy wave continuing down through or western volcano chain makes sense- and releasing in small quake swarms vs bigger fault shifts is a Good Thing imo
That’s not how tectonic plates work. Those events are not related.
What's a swerm?
Basically the West coast is Growing, active volcano system. Earth is affected by the Sun,we just started a Solar cycle. P.S. ask the Myans
They are wakening all over the place........
A friend and I got eyeshined 12' above us in the bushes on a midnight summit hike on Lassen. It was either a very large cougar or a sasquatch.
It's not suspicious until it is. I like how we humans think we have a clue.
We have many many clues...
We do@@ElLocoMonkey2012
1906 was the last time Lassen went same year San Fran quake
Lassen went about ten years after the SF quake...I thought closer to 1916
@@robstrange93 1914-1915
Screw nuclear power. Go geothermal!
The earthquakes are swarming. Next they are going to do a drive-by...
Letter Rip !
Agreed. Not soon enough!
Bellys burp, butts fart, and volcanos rumble; not every time is vomit, poop, or an eruption.
The geothermal activity still is a indicator of magma rising.
💯
Not necessarily magma rising, but rather the presence of a magmatic system at depth. To have geothermal activity you need a source of heat, lots of water, and geological conditions that allow for the water to circulate. Places like Lassen and Yellowstone and The Geysers have all those elements. If magma were rising, it would be driving off all that water, and there would be clear changes in thermal/gas emissions and gas chemistry.
Notice the timing, within the week of summer solstice during a solar maximum
"within the week of summer solstice during a solar maximum"
I passed wind earlier, within the week of summer solstice during a solar maximum and at midday with the sun at the peak of the sky journey this day.
@@TheDanEdwards and all of the x class solar flairs and the CMEs, charging the Æther causing all of the motion from the quantum to the planetary to the celestial to the galactic. Nested fractal harmonic iterations of itself isn’t not irrelevant. Wireless induction of power aka the photo electric effect of light is not irrelevant. It’s the only game in town😂
they are called volcanic tremor, not earthquakes
Empty trembles. 😊
😎
the yellowstun
Welcome to the party.. I've been trying to get people to look east. From fresno ca. For the last 13 hrs. It started with three small sitting clouds. Now look to our east. And west. ..
Is it just me or is there no audio?
Just you
It's your audio. I'm hearing it fine
There is Audio, maybe you accidentally muted the video?
Hope you restore the video's sound!
Try using headphones or speaker accessories, they don't cost much, if internal audio system failed
Reload the vid possible.
Kind-of like STROMBOLI (and elsewhere): NOT TO WORRY!
🌋
Isn't that a pasta dish?
@@boblatkey7160 He's my nextdoor neighbor. Geppetto's brother-in-law and Pinocchio's Uncle.
When California goes Yellowstone goes so we mine the fault lines at the salt n sea for lithium and subsidize electric cars 😂
What could go wrong😂😅
LOL, made a comment about Shasta and it was censored SMH
Probably not censored. UA-cam has been randomly dropping comments a lot the past few months. I wish they'd fix the bug.
@@b.a.erlebacher1139 I’ll try it on you friend: lassen is not a threat, Mt Shasta is the one to be concerned about if one worries about eruptions, the failure of the Shasta Dam would destroy the Central Valley. We witnessed the destruction caused by St Hellen’s due too melting ice and snow, the snow pack on Shasta is much greater.
@@NBZW Well, your message got through this time, evidence that the first one was lost due to bugs, not censorship.
@@b.a.erlebacher1139 👍🇺🇸
I must be extra lucky this week....two first comments!
This happened last month and you are just now putting out a video?
What do you feel entitled to? Lots more has been happening in the world of geology than a little swarm of imperceptible earthquakes this past month.
"Swarm" seems like the wrong word to me. Cluster maybe?
SECOND!
You almost lost me when you started talking about Yellowstone, but nothing you said about it was wrong. Most people who talk about the Yellowstone Supervolcano are repeating inaccurate or outdated information they heard elsewhere, and need to do their homework and find the latest information before making a video on the subject. I congratulate you for doing that.
However, and I hate to say this because it sounds rude and that is not my intention at all... You need to work on your "video voice." Your data is accurate, but your delivery sounds like you're reading the minutes of a board meeting or something.
This is science. Science don't care about meaningless things like that. Watch the news if you are that shallow as he can't help his voice due to disability
mount lassen
LassenbPeak
Property values are sinking now .....
ouch! Co0mment bot seen....I am UNSUCRIBING....I am not needed here!
thanks for great video but I found the voice over really distracting and unappealing..
That's GH's natural voice. If it bothers you, mute the sound and read the subtitles.
@@b.a.erlebacher1139 it's perfectly respectable feedback, and sometimes that's how people grow and develop 👍 and if he wants to keep the voiceover the same that's completely fine
@@Darkly-He can't change his own voice. This is not respectable feedback. Disabilities is a thing.
@b.a.erlebacher1139 its not natural he changes it for the videos. He sounds really normal on livestream.
@@earthlymatters888 he's explained this several times. He scripts his videos to keep them short and speaking like that when reading is fairly normal for someone with autism. Expand your narrow mind to other possibilities.
Click clictety.
Is that an alien talking ?
He's autistic so please stop commenting about his voice.
Clearly an alien typing that comment. Atleast not human
@@xwiick Oh my god ,someone has a bad day.
HORRIBLE SOUNDING NARRATOR.... FIND A REPLACEMENT IMMEDIATELY!!!
You insult the creator of the videos and demand he change to suit your tastes. Do you know how to get along with people? Entitled much? Btw, ALL-CAPS is considered rude.
Maybe it's the viewer who is the problem.
Only problem here is entitled "beings" like you.
I love his channel. There's other stuff to watch on the internet if you don't like it. A lot of stuff, too much one might say
Terrible AI voice
This is not AI. Stop talking about AI when you clearly are clueless about the topic
The narration is terrible. You need to speak up and annunciate better.
Good grief, can you possibly find a narrator that sounds any less interested in the subject matter? This guy sounds like he's near death!
This is his channel. Good grief.
GH makes these videos and narrates them and provides them to you for free, but you feel entitled to insult him for his voice. He's a geologist, not a voice actor. If his voice bothers you, mute the sound and read the subtitles.
Maybe you're just an ingrate.
Are all the idiots out in force tonight?
He's a real human with feelings and maybe on the autism spectrum. He's a nice guy and I like his channel, and I like his voice. Go away if you can't be nice.
Terrible voice
Computer or not
Certainly computer-ish
GH puts a lot of effort into providing these videos to you for free, and all you can do is complain and insult him for his voice. Entitled much? If the voice bothers you, mute it and read the subtitles.
Maybe you're just an ingrate.
You clearly don't know anything about generates voices so never speak of it again.
@@xwiick blahblahblah maybe youre a bot too
@@xwiick you aren't even speaking coherently!
this volcano is dead and will not erupt again
Lol tell that to the eruption just over 100 years ago, silly goose. Far from extinct.
It still boils and stinks. Go up there & see for yourself.
Lassen Peak is a mere 27,000 years old. Its FAR from "dead."
@@kennyjones559 Still stinks & rattles