I appreciated the Strauss music at the beginning. Very clever how the image of a wheelbarrow popped up when that single, wooden track appeared. I think you are absolutely correct about that. I have never seen something like that in an abandoned mine before. When you said, “I thought it was hard to breathe,“ that’s when I noticed that you did seem to be having some trouble breathing. Scary stuff when those O2 meters go off! That’s interesting that Todd‘s meter had to be turned on in order to test the air. I would’ve thought it would be continually monitoring the air quality without having to be turned on. That WAS a steep erosion pile at 10:30! Always cool seeing the topside of an ore chute like you show at 12:56. We usually don’t see the tops of those underground chutes for obvious reasons. Awesome finding that 9 inch spike. Some cool colors there near the end at 19:05. The Jerusalem Cricket looked strange. Never saw one of those before. You mentioned about mineral collectors obviously being in there. Do you think collectors are still going in there currently or was what you found just a one-time thing from long ago?
Hey Frank! I hope all is well! I've been messing around with classical music lately (kind of finding pieces that fit, but don't feel like they fit, but do if that makes any sense). That's what I did with Blue Danube in this one where it adds some context of silliness. Todd has a 4-gas meter now that can be powered on or off. That confined space just felt off, like the air was heavy, and it was! I've experienced that before and knew that staying calm was the key. The wheelbarrow theory makes sense since it appears to get wet in there. We've been searching for these mines for a while, and we're glad to have found them! The Nevada mine we've all explored together keeps revealing more secrets every time we visit! That's another conversation, though! Thanks for commenting, Frank! I hope you are getting out and enjoying the great underground!
You're right about the chalcopyrite! The main flavors of minerals in this area are lead, zinc, copper, silver, and trace amounts of gold. I actually found my first piece of bornite in this area and was like, "whoooaa, duuuude!" Lol! Thanks for watching!
I appreciated the Strauss music at the beginning. Very clever how the image of a wheelbarrow popped up when that single, wooden track appeared. I think you are absolutely correct about that. I have never seen something like that in an abandoned mine before. When you said, “I thought it was hard to breathe,“ that’s when I noticed that you did seem to be having some trouble breathing. Scary stuff when those O2 meters go off! That’s interesting that Todd‘s meter had to be turned on in order to test the air. I would’ve thought it would be continually monitoring the air quality without having to be turned on. That WAS a steep erosion pile at 10:30! Always cool seeing the topside of an ore chute like you show at 12:56. We usually don’t see the tops of those underground chutes for obvious reasons. Awesome finding that 9 inch spike. Some cool colors there near the end at 19:05. The Jerusalem Cricket looked strange. Never saw one of those before. You mentioned about mineral collectors obviously being in there. Do you think collectors are still going in there currently or was what you found just a one-time thing from long ago?
Hey Frank! I hope all is well! I've been messing around with classical music lately (kind of finding pieces that fit, but don't feel like they fit, but do if that makes any sense). That's what I did with Blue Danube in this one where it adds some context of silliness. Todd has a 4-gas meter now that can be powered on or off. That confined space just felt off, like the air was heavy, and it was! I've experienced that before and knew that staying calm was the key. The wheelbarrow theory makes sense since it appears to get wet in there. We've been searching for these mines for a while, and we're glad to have found them! The Nevada mine we've all explored together keeps revealing more secrets every time we visit! That's another conversation, though! Thanks for commenting, Frank! I hope you are getting out and enjoying the great underground!
I see yall upload, I click.
Thank you very much!
Love from a miner from Pakistan! We do work hard, we do have love to the inner world beyond the lame eyes!
Thank you very much! The underground is an intriguing place! Are there a lot of underground mines in Pakistan?
@@ABANDONED_UNDERGROUND Thank u, yes there are a number of them, am myself trying to explore them, but not enough brave like you people lol
Exploring these places isn't for everyone. Many have a fear of being trapped!
Probably is chalcopyrite. You should have taken a small sample and had it analyzed! Great explore! That’s was “rad”!👍👌
You're right about the chalcopyrite! The main flavors of minerals in this area are lead, zinc, copper, silver, and trace amounts of gold. I actually found my first piece of bornite in this area and was like, "whoooaa, duuuude!" Lol! Thanks for watching!