Nice example of specious reasoning and faulty generalization; unsupported by FACTS. FBI stats place Chicago in 17th place for crimes per 100,000 people. And exactly where you are in Chicago or other urban would certainly be a factor as far as crime. Most likely you'd be in areas that like to attend "peaceful' protests/riots/looting and violence where bldm......figure it out MadMan ;-/
Also animals are fauna. Did he mean to say unique flora? So many questionable things in thia video especially how he keeps calling perfectly natural things ‘supernatural’. I don’t think he knows what some of the words he’s using actually mean!
Fraser Island really???! They literally give tourists keys to a 4x4 and send them off on their way with some rudimentary instructions. One of the best places I've ever visited!
Surely they are talking about another Fraser Island. The Queensland Fraser Island that I swear they are showing is my holiday spot biggest danger I have had there is running out of beer.
Fraser Island is not dangerous like you say. I’m a local aboriginal woman who has grew up in this area. Yes the Dingoes are dangerous & clear signs saying stay away don’t feed the dingoes. And the jellyfish don’t live in these waters they come with the current which is usually around Christmas time. And we have beautiful lakes you can swim in yes you can’t swim in the ocean. It’s a nature at it’s finest. A lot of people come and visit the island.
I've visited Fraser Island and, I never considered it to be dangerous! The irikanji are not present on the beach all year round only in certain seasons. There are two beautiful freshwater lakes in the interior with the whitest sand. One can travel through part of the interior with beautiful tall trees! Dingoes are usually confined to the northern part of the island. Fraser Island is the world's largest sand island.
Fraser Island is far from deadly. It is one of Queensland's most popular islands for tourists. Estimates of the number of visitors to the island each year range from 350,000 to 500,000.
@@rpbajb Fellow Aussie here - yeah, like where did they get their information from? Methinks a tad melodrama and like someone else said just imagination. Everyone knows dingoes are some of the shyest animals in Australia. Interestingly, because they are an island population, they have a restricted gene pool, which makes them an invaluable source of data for scientists studying dingo populations.
I've been to the Kawah Ijen Volcano and it has been one of the most memorable experiences of my entire life. My gf and I also sat down with some people in the volcano and wanted to listen to some of their stories and we left heartbroken. The workers and our guide as well know that at some point they'll die due to the toxic gas but they need to provide food for their family. Some working completely naked or with barely any clothing in that environment, it made us literally cry. If someone here has the opportunity to go there, do it! Do not visit Mount Bromo as it is much more touristic and less authentic!
I still remember stories from the Lake Nyos incident told to me by my teachers in secondary school. It was a truly horrific event . More that 3 whole villages were whipped out, and some who managed to survive the night, died not long after from the gas. Seeing this here brought back so many lessons and made me happy that at least my country isn’t completely invisible.
@@corieslade9112 well the way the list goes is 15 is most dangerous and 1 is least, and they aren't talking abt the whole island! just v specific parts of it
There's another documentary filmed as a follow-up to the scientists' original journey into Naica Caverns. The humidity and temperatures are really high there which is why it is almost unbearable to stay there for very long. The main crystal cave is also not the only crystal cave in the system; there are a couple other smaller caves with smaller crystals growing in the area. All of these caves will eventually be flooded again in its natural cycle, since mining operations, which originally pumped out a lot of hot water from the caves, ceased so these caves will flood again with time and allow the crystals to grow even bigger.
Also the Rocks that move in Death Valley actually make a lot of sense, as crazy as it sounds. At night it can get to -50 Fahrenheit, which means any wettness in the desert or just the sand it's self freezes, causing the rocks to move and by sunrise it's extremely hot already so it melts before anyone can see this
@@paid6822 He's just jealous someone beat him in posting the explanation. Either that or he's incredibly stupid, the mouthbreathing sort, and he's just jealous of everyone knowing more than he does. Or both.
As a person who posted amazing things found worldwide, I expected u to actually know that Eritrea and Ethiopia are 2 different countries and the Danakil desert and the volcano called Ertale are found in Afar, Ethiopia not Eritrea.
@@mokabere2506 the danakil depression is located in northern ethiopian region afar. In eriterea it is the part of dessert of afar not danakil depression
Fraser Island is one of the most beautiful places I have ever seen: lakes of the most incredible colours, gorgeous vegetation and animals...even multiple butterfly species. Dingos are amazing wild dogs, they are not your friends, but they are not your enemies. Fraser island is only dangerous for those who don't respect nature. Just follow the safety rules and you'll be able to enjoy the experience. I'll love to go again.
Yes, I've never been there but it's fairly obvious the narrator is really exaggerating the dangers. 'No part is bearable for humans'? Really? And, 'ice-cold waters'? I doubt it.
@@cr-yi7ep might see a few dingos but the water is definitely not cold the naratoer need to go there and then apologize to the world for being an ignorant and knowing nothing about Australia lol
Honestly, once I heard that, it became impossible for me to take the video seriously. I spent a holiday there once. While it is true you cannot swim in the ocean, there are plenty of inland lakes and natural pools to swim in. The water's a bit chilly, granted, but you are at no risk of getting hypothermia or anything of the sort. Not unless you spent a whole day out there. It knida sucks too, because now I have no idea how many of the other items on this list are legitimate either. I'm sure some of them are real, but knowing that he would lie for clicks, it casts doubt across the entire list.
A few decades ago, mid-1980s, my dad and I visited Death Valley. In summer. Due to freak weather, it was a chilly 95F (or 35C). Really amazing even a highly protected little pond with fish in it. Usually, people die because of a lack of water - in that they think they can blithely hike the valley without realizing that do do so they also need to take along 3 to 5 gallons of water.
To anybody who's reading this, I pray that whatever is hurting you or whatever you are constantly stressing about gets better. May the dark thoughts, the overthinking, and the doubt exit your mind. May clarity replace confusion. May peace and calmness fill your life.
Fraser Island is still incredibly dangerous. Just because you were fortunate enough to get out scathe free, doesn't mean others will be. You shouldn't of even went there if you're telling the truth, nor should you spread positive information about camping on the beach. Dingoes are very dangerous, and shouldn't be disturbed. Fraser island is very popular for camping or just visiting in general, but just because it's beautiful doesn't mean it's safe.
Lol @Mozzy Fraser is perfectly safe have camped on the beach there and stayed at Eurong in a beach house plenty of times. Sure don’t fuck with the wildlife but that’s standard in Australia haha, the dingoes are so used to humans now they barely warrant a second thought other than keep your food locked up.
@@mozzy646 I've been there too and saw lizards, snakes, spiders, dingos and all of that stuff and the only thing you have to do is just to keep your distance and respekt the animals and you will be completely safe and have nothing to worry about. I was there for 3 or 4 days and the worst thing that happend to me was that i slipped on a rock and got a bruise. So I would say that the only kind of people who Fraser could be dangerous too is the reckles type.
Correction! Danakil Depression is located in Afar (North Eastern) of Ethiopia, Historical Landscape of Ethiopia. (Not a bigotry - just correcting). Thanks for sharing! 🙏🏾
The Danakil Desert is a desert in northeast Ethiopia, southern Eritrea, and northwestern Djibouti. Situated in the Afar Triangle, it stretches across 136,956 square kilometres (52,879 sq mi) .From Wiki. Well,that's the most accurate and concrete non-one-sided-ultra-nationalistic/non-bigot answer of its exactly vast stretching location,yeah🙃😌😉✌🌈💎🌈
@@emilatik8581 I believe the narrator was referring to a specific location "Dalol" which is located in north east Ethiopia. The whole geographic region of the Afar/Danakil depression covers all three counties mentioned. So your argument is like saying Paris is in Europe not in France, a twisted logic really
@@fetsumm-wassie3970 Oh,well I didn't know that in that particular way in the first place (and,he or she should have been more specific and concrete so I as a usully pretty much "geography"-knowleagable person that's not 100 % familiar with the specifically Ethiopian nooks and crannies that aren't that internationally well known and globally popular would know it better) so, therefore that twisted logic you "you as a user should have instead thought "aha,it's that why he might said what he just said towards that main comment""-assumed me for is not valid from my side either as I understood what I understood from the written main comment with a non-LOCALLY-Ethiopian/East-African-geography-familar mentality..I'm just saying..Good that that has been settled down and clarified once for all, I suppose 😅🙂👍🤘💎🌈
#10 You talked about Denakil Desert is in Eritrea, but most part of the Denakil Desert and depression is situated in Ethiopia. The active volacano and other picture you showed are from the Afar region of Ethiopia. Please don't mislead people.
3:25 The Danakil is in Ethiopia. The desert extends to coastal Red Sea in Eritrea, but all the places shown in the video are in Ethiopia's Danakil Depression. But then it states that Eritrea is in Ethiopia.
The Denakil Depression, the colorful acid lakes, Erta'ale Volcano are found in Ethiopia. 🇪🇹 Eritrea is some 50 Km north of these sites, and it is no more part of Ethiopia since it seceded back in 1991.
@EtroNa Eritrea What do u mean by "you stole it"? What did I(we) stole? What does red sea got to do with this? //Reminder: Eritrea doesn't own the red sea.
Bro E͜͡r͜͡i͜͡t͜͡r͜͡e͜͡a͜͡ 🇪🇷 is NOT a state in Ethiopia 🇪🇹. Our Eritrea 🇪🇷 is a country. That doesn't make any sense . You guys Ethiopians in this generation don't make the same mistake as your grandfathers were doing. ⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️ ⚠️
Its funny because I met a person who took his boat all through the triangle. Took pics and all kinds of stuff. Did this at night. Kinda stupid. Nothing.
Considering how I hate to even watch videos 10 minutes long, this video really held my interest and I watched the whole thing in one sitting. It went quickly and that is how much I enjoyed it. Keep these really interesting videos coming. Thanks.
I’m from Vermont and me and my friends hiked Mount Washington without really preparing at all. It was the middle of July still had snow on the ground and it was very windy, our small friend almost blew over. The hike was worth it and the view was amazing tho.
Or, you could always catch the train :) Like his #2, Fraser Island, it strikes me that he's over-hyping the dangers. Any place can be dangerous if you don't exercise a due level of caution.
Calling something mysterious supernatural is “stooping”. Are you implying anything you see claimed “supernatural” or spiritual is suddenly “stooping lower”? Let me guess, you’re one of those triggered atheists.
@@dontask6863 Calling those places supernatural is simply inaccurate. There is nothing supernatural going on in these places, every single phenomenon that he called "supernatural" is in fact an understood natural phenomena. Also, yes, i'd say calling something you don't understand "supernatural" is indeed "stooping lower". And that is because you aren't actually giving an anwser, you are avoiding giving an anwser. If you don't know something the honest and correct anwser is "I don't know" not "It's supernatural".
KingQwertzlbrmpf I see where you’re coming from, but for some of these places it really is ‘I don’t know’ as people are still uncertain about Death Valley’s moving rocks. Don’t forget the locals in some of these places may have legends and superstitions attaches to these places, so for some people it is indeed ‘supernatural’
Supernatural literally means an event or manifestation that is caused by a force beyond scientific understanding OR the laws of nature. Just literally means science hasn’t explained it yet and for some of these yeah they weren’t unknown and have been explained but others haven’t. Just chill and eat a snickers.
@@KingQwertzlbrmpf how can you be so sure the supernatural does not exist? Are you privy to some definitive information that the rest of the world doesn't know about? You seem to look down on supernatural beliefs from your self imposed throne of knowledge utterly convinced in the scientific explanation but that very same conviction prevents open mindedness, a staple in the scientific method! There are many examples of unexplained phenomena that can be explained from a supernatural perspective. Telepathy for example. That isn't to say that is the correct explanation, to say that would be dogmatic. No one knows. There is a whole universe to be explained. We know so little in the grand scheme of things, it really is arrogant to state an explanation is stooping if it uses unknown entities in its discourse. Dogmatism on either side can blind one to potential answers that need to be considered if one really wants to discover and explore. Seriously, no-one knows, all we can do is create hypothesis with an aim to disprove. That is how mankind gains knowledge, dogmatism prevents progress. Something worth thinking about!
"Poisonous snakes? Must be supernatural." "Hot desert? Must be supernatural." "Tectonic plates? Must be supernatural." "Boats sink in hurricanes? Must be supernatural." This video has 3.1 million views. Must be supernatural.
Fraser Island is an amazingly beautiful place and people go on 4x4 adventures there all the time. Yes there are dangers but if you follow the advice on signs you will be fine, I've been there upwards of 20 times and never have I or any friends been in accidents and we've always had a great time
I love how this narrator says "these supernatural locations" in the same breath as "science determined the cause to be..." One more time for everyone in the back: NATURE IS NOT SUPERNATURAL. IT IS NATURAL. THAT IS WHY IT IS CALLED NATURE.
This channel does not in any way represent anything like accurate information. I don't know what this channel is trying to be but they're not at all reliable--repeat anything you hear at your own risk because it may well be incorrect. You're just as well to research and produce your own videos as to allow this to inform you at all. It's gotten to the point where I roll my eyes just from hearing the narrator... but sometimes I learn about interesting potential topics of research. This channel could be reduced to an index of research headings with no loss to me.
Icey cold waters off Queensland? That gave me a good chuckle. 22c in winter is hardly icey. Schools take kids holidaying to Fraser Island. Blue bottles can be found on most beaches in northern Australia if the conditions are right. Not bearable to humans? Check a map of Fraser and you can see 2 small towns easily.
This is very true. I lived in Queensland for 2 years and visited Fraser island twice not even identical areas. I did not feel so endangered in that place because it's well kept. It's true that there are sharks and dingos, actually we were alerted during my first visit to step out of the water because sharks were spotted by choppers but, we were allowed to go back after a few hours. Just after that, a few dolphins visited the beach. You can do campfire or grill barbie in permitted areas. There are easily accessible buses and ferries going to this island and very much open to tourists.
Fraser Island isn't as bad as they say it is, Blue Bottle Jellyfish is rarely deadly they are mostly just very very painful. Dingoes are little danger to humans if you stay away from them they won't attack you. Fraser Island is a great holiday location.
11:42...oh yeah. Having hiked Mt Wash many times including 5 times in one year...I can attest to the wide variety of weather. Feb 3rd, 2001 was a window of opportunity for us. From Hermit Lake Shelters it still took 5 hours to the summit...normally less than a 2 hour hike from 3800 to 6288 Feet. In any season make sure you gear up.
11:47 Mauna Kea in Hawaii is the tallest mountain in the world. Mount Everest is the highest. 12:16 Tropical Cyclone Olivia wind speed at Barrow Island, Australia was recorded at 254 mph in 1996.
Mt Washington is hiked by THOUSANDS of people every year. It's actually no big deal. You definitely want to be careful in snowy conditions, but for the most part, Washington is doable for even inexperienced hikers. I've hiked it a few times. Next time I plan on sleeping on the mountains, beneath the tree-line.
Doable for paraplegics, if they buy a ticket on the train :) (NOT suggesting that it isn't a serious hike, I'd feel a sense of achievement if I hiked up it on foot) I just think the narrator exaggerated somewhat.
Um... I climbed Mt. Washington when I was eight. With my grandparents. Yeah, you do want to check the weather first, and no casual hiker in their right mind should climb that mountain when there is any chance of storm, but on a fine summer's day, it's no more dangerous than any other mountain. It's mostly the winter hikers that run into trouble, especially when they are inexperienced and improperly prepared.
I lived for 40 years in NH and every year there were parties of lost hikers who perished because they took the mountain for granted. It could be 80 degrees at the base, by the time you got to the top it could be well below zero with high winds and no visibility. That’s why most of us drove to the top, plus you got to put the “This car climbed Mt Washington “ bumper sticker on your car. :)
I’ve been to Mount Washington NH... many people in New England have. It wasn’t windy at all when I went there... and it was regular temperature because it was September. The scariest part is driving up the mountain... I couldn’t look down when my boyfriend was driving up it.
Lol, I have hiked up Mount Washington multiple times. I also took a train up it with my mom and 81 year old dad :) We survived and had lunch at the top. It was loud though, too many kids.
Yep. As an Australian I was very surprised to see Fraser Island on the list. Yes dingos are wild, but like any other wild animal you have to respect it and not encroach on it’s space and other common sense things. As for the beaches and water. Well the most dangerous thing to happen (in my knowledge) was a couple of 4wd being swallowed up VERY slowly when left parked on the sand. I would love to know where these people got their ‘facts’ from. Lol!
When you stop to look at how many dangerous creatures and environments are on Fraser island I can kind of see why it may be on this list. Lets face it any camping trip in Australia can be dangerous without being prepared for it properly
Have to be careful in Death Valley. Families and individuals have been found dead in their vehicles because it's believed that their GPS systems have shown roads that do not exist, and these folks have ventured across the area because they thought they had a direct route to Los Angeles or other California destinations. These unfortunate folks ran out of fuel and water after crossing the point of no return.
I've been there and stepped out of my car, and guess what? Didn't even spend 5 mins outside before getting back in, my sun block didn't even do its job, I got back in the car and suggested that we GTFO ASAP.
I went to Fraser Island the other year , it’s a massive tourist attraction, not as dangerous as it’s made out, just don’t go swimming as it’s a tiger shark feeding ground and stay away from dingos. And zip tents up, basic knowledge really. Some of the best few days I had in oz was when i was there. We went on a 2 day/night tour with a company with like 40 people, still in touch with some of them now
BOLIVIA: "from exotic animals, to unique fauna" animals and fauna are the same thing...... i literally learned that in the 4th grade...... i dont know if i can take anymore misuse of words...
The 'moving/sliding' rocks in Death Valley is no longer a mystery. At night, when very cold, a layer of ice forms on the surface, the high winds blow, and the rocks slide on this thin layer of ice, which also carves into the sand. Leaving a trail that looks like a moving rock ... because it is. Videos like this that dont research, and perpetuate known fallacies, help no one.
well I live in INDONESIA AND one time there was a Volcano pop and me and my family are in panic we look at the new's but thank good were save no one die
lol i was looking for this comment. weird mistake .. confusion between tropical rainforest and northern coniferous woods , wtf not very serious documentary.
A lot of these places aren't really that dangerous, and some are just owing to plain superstition. Even got some of the locations wrong, like danakil actually being in Ethiopia. Should've figured it's nonsense with how often the narrator uses the word "supernatural."
I am from Eritrea and yes the Danakil depression(Denkel) is not only found in Ethiopia but in both countries, in northern Ethiopia (the Afar region) & in the province southern Red Sea zone(old name Denkel) of Eritrea. I am from that region and yes not all but a small area is in deed dangerous it smells like a rotten egg and very hot.
Fraser island is fine. Huge tourist attraction and 4wd destination. My friend was born and raised there and I went to her wedding there. It's a lovely place. Dingoes aren't that bad, jellyfish is all down the coast of Queensland. Fraser island is a great place.
Agreed, I stay at Kingfisher and 4x4 regularly. Been doing it for 30 years and I've yet to have a single injury or feeling of danger. Scaring people off isn't such a bad thing though, less RAV4's and Tuscon's getting dragged out of the sand that way!
You are right but you are also wrong. The Danikil Depression is in Ethiopia, but he never did state that it was in Eritrea. He stated that the Danikil Desert is in Eritrea, which he is correct.
0:22 93 miles away from Sao Paulo lies a land that is considered to be the most dangerous on Earth.. Comes in at number 15 on the list of most dangerous places on Earth
I've been to Fraser Island, on a guided tour. It was magnificent! Such a beautiful place. The shipwreck that you show is the wreck of the Maheno and it's pretty cool to see it up close, if you're into that kinda thing. :) I guess if you weren't aware of the dangers you could get yourself into trouble there but that applies to anywhere really.
Yeah in primary school we were allowed to camp there. Looking back at it we didn’t really go through a lot of safety 😂 we were allowed to jump straight in the water we even got let a shallow river carry us for a while. We had like one guide and two teachers among maybe 30-40 students. So much fun and so beautiful I never knew it was seen as so dangerous but that’s Australia I guess haha. I’m guessing we were probably in really well known and visited areas.
Top Fives, though this is a very interesting video, I need to point out since there are mountains in Death Valley (N.P.), that only 1 spot there got that low--Badwater Basin, which is the spot at -282ft. Also, Bikini Atoll is in the Marshall Islands (plural), which is a chain of 29 tiny atolls.
So amazing, this video, shows and learns all kind of dangerous things that can, and cannot do or touch for people's/humans safetys...God bless you, for sharing this to all viewers to pay attentions....and thank you.😇😇😇😇, 29th june 2022., L.W
I've been to kawah ijen, those miners have to carry sulfur with average weight of 70kg each trip. They have to walk up to the summit for 2 hrs, then still need to walk down to the crater. They did this 3 times a day, so about 200kg of sulfur per day.
what an incredible video! i really appreciate the effort put into showcasing these dangerous places. however, i can't help but wonder if the focus on danger detracts from the beauty and culture that exist in these locations. is it possible that by highlighting the peril, we overlook the stories and lives of the people who call these places home? just a thought!
Walking in the streets of Chicago during a holiday weekend should be in this list.
Shit just living in Chicago should be on this list
No one said anything about color your racist
@@marbleromandong 101 shootings 14 fatalities this fathers day just gone. Nice try.
Detroit should be on list 😆😆
Nice example of specious reasoning and faulty generalization; unsupported by FACTS. FBI stats place Chicago in 17th place for crimes per 100,000 people. And exactly where you are in Chicago or other urban would certainly be a factor as far as crime. Most likely you'd be in areas that like to attend "peaceful' protests/riots/looting and violence where bldm......figure it out MadMan ;-/
I think north Korea should be in the list-💀
😂😂😂😂
I think your residence should be on the list
It's north sea..not north Korea
most of american places should in the all 15 places here
People are so brave to be visiting all these places ...salute
"From exotic animals to unique fauna..."
Shows ants.
Army ants.
XD
😂😂😂
Also showed a bald eagle flying in a northern hemisphere forest.
Also animals are fauna. Did he mean to say unique flora? So many questionable things in thia video especially how he keeps calling perfectly natural things ‘supernatural’. I don’t think he knows what some of the words he’s using actually mean!
Fraser Island really???! They literally give tourists keys to a 4x4 and send them off on their way with some rudimentary instructions. One of the best places I've ever visited!
It’s not even a bad place I spent so much time there as a kid I loved it
Surely they are talking about another Fraser Island. The Queensland Fraser Island that I swear they are showing is my holiday spot biggest danger I have had there is running out of beer.
I lived in Cairns as a child, and for school excursions, we’d ferry over and be left to ourselves, to explore and swim. Oooo dangerous….lol.
I’m like … what? Fraser Island??? You have to be kidding.
Fraser Island is not dangerous like you say. I’m a local aboriginal woman who has grew up in this area. Yes the Dingoes are dangerous & clear signs saying stay away don’t feed the dingoes. And the jellyfish don’t live in these waters they come with the current which is usually around Christmas time. And we have beautiful lakes you can swim in yes you can’t swim in the ocean. It’s a nature at it’s finest. A lot of people come and visit the island.
EXACTLY just about to comment this
Lol im more concerned about the humans of the earth than the natural world.
I love the aboriginal cultures!!! Im not myself but they have have nature down 💖 and they are often very respectful of life and nature.
You can't swim in the ocean and it's not dangerous?
I've visited Fraser Island and, I never considered it to be dangerous! The irikanji are not present on the beach all year round only in certain seasons. There are two beautiful freshwater lakes in the interior with the whitest sand. One can travel through part of the interior with beautiful tall trees! Dingoes are usually confined to the northern part of the island. Fraser Island is the world's largest sand island.
L
wild dingos like the ones on fraser island avoid humans mostly
Fraser Island is far from deadly. It is one of Queensland's most popular islands for tourists. Estimates of the number of visitors to the island each year range from 350,000 to 500,000.
@@rpbajb Fellow Aussie here - yeah, like where did they get their information from? Methinks a tad melodrama and like someone else said just imagination. Everyone knows dingoes are some of the shyest animals in Australia. Interestingly, because they are an island population, they have a restricted gene pool, which makes them an invaluable source of data for scientists studying dingo populations.
Dingoes are NOT deadly. They lived with aborigines.
I've been to the Kawah Ijen Volcano and it has been one of the most memorable experiences of my entire life. My gf and I also sat down with some people in the volcano and wanted to listen to some of their stories and we left heartbroken. The workers and our guide as well know that at some point they'll die due to the toxic gas but they need to provide food for their family. Some working completely naked or with barely any clothing in that environment, it made us literally cry. If someone here has the opportunity to go there, do it! Do not visit Mount Bromo as it is much more touristic and less authentic!
Those workers must migrate to other place..
Yp
indonesian is a bad country
@@sakshisahu7325 unfortunately, life isnt that easy for a vast majority of the world
I was half expecting number 1 to be "Australia, just Australia, seriously have you seen those spiders?"
Jesus loves you and is with you
If it comes to spiders, there are plenty of them here in Colombia too, among all the species that are out to eat you.
@@AnnaLenaHall true, and Brazil!
I was expecting North Sentinel Island
The most dangerous place in the world is UA-cam’s comment section: Especially if the topic is about Religion. Trust me, I’ve seen enough slaughter.
Or in the mind of anti maskers and conspiracy theorists
That's a joke
@@wonappy1676 ofc :/
nd now covid vaccine
What about any Kardashian house?
I still remember stories from the Lake Nyos incident told to me by my teachers in secondary school. It was a truly horrific event . More that 3 whole villages were whipped out, and some who managed to survive the night, died not long after from the gas. Seeing this here brought back so many lessons and made me happy that at least my country isn’t completely invisible.
that is sad
Fraser Island was beautiful and the motel we stayed at there was very comfortable. This vid is slightly overblown, at least for Fraser.
I live in Brisbane and go to Fraser Island regularly for holidays. It's a lovely place for a holiday.
Kawah Ijen is also fine to visit, it's regular vacation spot but not for swimming in the crater ofc
Agreed - when I saw Fraser Island as no.2 the rest of the list lost all credibility! What rubbish!
@@corieslade9112 well the way the list goes is 15 is most dangerous and 1 is least, and they aren't talking abt the whole island! just v specific parts of it
There's another documentary filmed as a follow-up to the scientists' original journey into Naica Caverns. The humidity and temperatures are really high there which is why it is almost unbearable to stay there for very long. The main crystal cave is also not the only crystal cave in the system; there are a couple other smaller caves with smaller crystals growing in the area. All of these caves will eventually be flooded again in its natural cycle, since mining operations, which originally pumped out a lot of hot water from the caves, ceased so these caves will flood again with time and allow the crystals to grow even bigger.
Also the Rocks that move in Death Valley actually make a lot of sense, as crazy as it sounds. At night it can get to -50 Fahrenheit, which means any wettness in the desert or just the sand it's self freezes, causing the rocks to move and by sunrise it's extremely hot already so it melts before anyone can see this
Nerd
@@frostdonkey3249 😂😂😭 like who tf asking him all that
But that was a good explanation 💯
@@paid6822 He's just jealous someone beat him in posting the explanation. Either that or he's incredibly stupid, the mouthbreathing sort, and he's just jealous of everyone knowing more than he does. Or both.
That makes a disturbing amount of sense !!??!! ..
most dangerous places on earth exist*
camera man: can i?
they use drones to capture the places
No one goes there
As a person who posted amazing things found worldwide, I expected u to actually know that Eritrea and Ethiopia are 2 different countries and the Danakil desert and the volcano called Ertale are found in Afar, Ethiopia not Eritrea.
yes you tell him the truth
danakil dessert is localed in ethiopia in afar region not in eriterea this is the world tuth in yesterday today tomorrow and every day
moka bere say something in information
@@mokabere2506 the danakil depression is located in northern ethiopian region afar. In eriterea it is the part of dessert of afar not danakil depression
@@mokabere2506 any how the place you displayed is in ethiopia not eritrea...moka...i know the place well. check it again
Fraser Island is one of the most beautiful places I have ever seen: lakes of the most incredible colours, gorgeous vegetation and animals...even multiple butterfly species. Dingos are amazing wild dogs, they are not your friends, but they are not your enemies. Fraser island is only dangerous for those who don't respect nature. Just follow the safety rules and you'll be able to enjoy the experience. I'll love to go again.
Yes, I've never been there but it's fairly obvious the narrator is really exaggerating the dangers. 'No part is bearable for humans'? Really? And, 'ice-cold waters'? I doubt it.
@@cr-yi7ep might see a few dingos but the water is definitely not cold the naratoer need to go there and then apologize to the world for being an ignorant and knowing nothing about Australia lol
Honestly, once I heard that, it became impossible for me to take the video seriously. I spent a holiday there once. While it is true you cannot swim in the ocean, there are plenty of inland lakes and natural pools to swim in. The water's a bit chilly, granted, but you are at no risk of getting hypothermia or anything of the sort. Not unless you spent a whole day out there.
It knida sucks too, because now I have no idea how many of the other items on this list are legitimate either. I'm sure some of them are real, but knowing that he would lie for clicks, it casts doubt across the entire list.
I’m not risking my life for nature 😉
@@avaroche3984 You can do whatever you want. I just commented that this video is a total lie.
A few decades ago, mid-1980s, my dad and I visited Death Valley. In summer. Due to freak weather, it was a chilly 95F (or 35C). Really amazing even a highly protected little pond with fish in it. Usually, people die because of a lack of water - in that they think they can blithely hike the valley without realizing that do do so they also need to take along 3 to 5 gallons of water.
There is pond
walking through Philadelphia wearing Dallas Cowboys or New York Giants clothing and paraphernalia should be on the list.
To anybody who's reading this, I pray that whatever is hurting you or whatever you are constantly stressing about gets better. May the dark thoughts, the overthinking, and the doubt exit your mind. May clarity replace confusion. May peace and calmness fill your life.
Fraser Island in a beautiful tourist destination! I have camped by the beach and seen the dingos. No problems
Fraser Island is still incredibly dangerous. Just because you were fortunate enough to get out scathe free, doesn't mean others will be. You shouldn't of even went there if you're telling the truth, nor should you spread positive information about camping on the beach. Dingoes are very dangerous, and shouldn't be disturbed. Fraser island is very popular for camping or just visiting in general, but just because it's beautiful doesn't mean it's safe.
Lol @Mozzy Fraser is perfectly safe have camped on the beach there and stayed at Eurong in a beach house plenty of times. Sure don’t fuck with the wildlife but that’s standard in Australia haha, the dingoes are so used to humans now they barely warrant a second thought other than keep your food locked up.
@@mozzy646 I've been there too and saw lizards, snakes, spiders, dingos and all of that stuff and the only thing you have to do is just to keep your distance and respekt the animals and you will be completely safe and have nothing to worry about. I was there for 3 or 4 days and the worst thing that happend to me was that i slipped on a rock and got a bruise. So I would say that the only kind of people who Fraser could be dangerous too is the reckles type.
Correction! Danakil Depression is located in Afar (North Eastern) of Ethiopia, Historical Landscape of Ethiopia. (Not a bigotry - just correcting). Thanks for sharing! 🙏🏾
The Danakil Desert is a desert in northeast Ethiopia, southern Eritrea, and northwestern Djibouti. Situated in the Afar Triangle, it stretches across 136,956 square kilometres (52,879 sq mi) .From Wiki.
Well,that's the most accurate and concrete non-one-sided-ultra-nationalistic/non-bigot answer of its exactly vast stretching location,yeah🙃😌😉✌🌈💎🌈
@@emilatik8581 I believe the narrator was referring to a specific location "Dalol" which is located in north east Ethiopia. The whole geographic region of the Afar/Danakil depression covers all three counties mentioned. So your argument is like saying Paris is in Europe not in France, a twisted logic really
@@fetsumm-wassie3970 Oh,well I didn't know that in that particular way in the first place (and,he or she should have been more specific and concrete so I as a usully pretty much "geography"-knowleagable person that's not 100 % familiar with the specifically Ethiopian nooks and crannies that aren't that internationally well known and globally popular would know it better) so, therefore that twisted logic you "you as a user should have instead thought "aha,it's that why he might said what he just said towards that main comment""-assumed me for is not valid from my side either as I understood what I understood from the written main comment with a non-LOCALLY-Ethiopian/East-African-geography-familar mentality..I'm just saying..Good that that has been settled down and clarified once for all, I suppose 😅🙂👍🤘💎🌈
Me what’s to travel the world . Nevermind I’ll stay in my bed
ʟᴏʟ xD
😂😂😂
xD
😂
Perfect pronunciation of Tanzania and Natron, Thank you❤🇹🇿
#10 You talked about Denakil Desert is in Eritrea, but most part of the Denakil Desert and depression is situated in Ethiopia. The active volacano and other picture you showed are from the Afar region of Ethiopia. Please don't mislead people.
I was shocked when I saw that because I was born in Asayta Afar. Westerners will do anything to mislead ppl about us 🇪🇹
I can't even imagine I'm allergic to sulfur badly, just being around it can put me in the hospital. Wow, some of these places would probably kill me.
RIGHT
3:25 The Danakil is in Ethiopia. The desert extends to coastal Red Sea in Eritrea, but all the places shown in the video are in Ethiopia's Danakil Depression. But then it states that Eritrea is in Ethiopia.
Eritrea is a beautiful country.!! But Eritrea and ethiopia shares the Danakil.
The Denakil Depression, the colorful acid lakes, Erta'ale Volcano are found in Ethiopia. 🇪🇹 Eritrea is some 50 Km north of these sites, and it is no more part of Ethiopia since it seceded back in 1991.
@EtroNa Eritrea What do u mean by "you stole it"? What did I(we) stole? What does red sea got to do with this?
//Reminder: Eritrea doesn't own the red sea.
Bro E͜͡r͜͡i͜͡t͜͡r͜͡e͜͡a͜͡ 🇪🇷 is NOT a state in Ethiopia 🇪🇹. Our Eritrea 🇪🇷 is a country. That doesn't make any sense . You guys Ethiopians in this generation don't make the same mistake as your grandfathers were doing. ⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️ ⚠️
Chernobyl: Hold my radiation
😂😢😮😊
Actually, most vanishing happen well outside the area called The Devil's Triangle, so, it is not any more dangerous than any other ocean area.
Haunted houses are dangerous too -they see you, but you can’t see them…
My grandparents have been straight through the bemuda triangle on a cruise, they were absolutely fine, nothing happened
@@chloefarrah8598 those weren't your grandparents that returned from that cruise!
Inter Web comedy is very important. Fukface!
The Bermuda Triangle: the most debunked "mystery" still being farted about to this day!
and yes people still believe all that crap.
Its funny because I met a person who took his boat all through the triangle. Took pics and all kinds of stuff. Did this at night. Kinda stupid. Nothing.
@@eringursky3503 "all through the triangle" lmao yeah I'm sure he rode through all 20,000 square miles
Why don't you sail your catamaran through there during storm season and then get back to us?
I thought biden was the most debunked mystery still being farted around?
Considering how I hate to even watch videos 10 minutes long, this video really held my interest and I watched the whole thing in one sitting. It went quickly and that is how much I enjoyed it. Keep these really interesting videos coming. Thanks.
I’m from Vermont and me and my friends hiked Mount Washington without really preparing at all. It was the middle of July still had snow on the ground and it was very windy, our small friend almost blew over. The hike was worth it and the view was amazing tho.
Or, you could always catch the train :) Like his #2, Fraser Island, it strikes me that he's over-hyping the dangers. Any place can be dangerous if you don't exercise a due level of caution.
The facts about these places are interesting enough without stooping to calling them “supernatural”.
Calling something mysterious supernatural is “stooping”. Are you implying anything you see claimed “supernatural” or spiritual is suddenly “stooping lower”? Let me guess, you’re one of those triggered atheists.
@@dontask6863 Calling those places supernatural is simply inaccurate. There is nothing supernatural going on in these places, every single phenomenon that he called "supernatural" is in fact an understood natural phenomena.
Also, yes, i'd say calling something you don't understand "supernatural" is indeed "stooping lower". And that is because you aren't actually giving an anwser, you are avoiding giving an anwser. If you don't know something the honest and correct anwser is "I don't know" not "It's supernatural".
KingQwertzlbrmpf I see where you’re coming from, but for some of these places it really is ‘I don’t know’ as people are still uncertain about Death Valley’s moving rocks. Don’t forget the locals in some of these places may have legends and superstitions attaches to these places, so for some people it is indeed ‘supernatural’
Supernatural literally means an event or manifestation that is caused by a force beyond scientific understanding OR the laws of nature. Just literally means science hasn’t explained it yet and for some of these yeah they weren’t unknown and have been explained but others haven’t. Just chill and eat a snickers.
@@KingQwertzlbrmpf how can you be so sure the supernatural does not exist? Are you privy to some definitive information that the rest of the world doesn't know about? You seem to look down on supernatural beliefs from your self imposed throne of knowledge utterly convinced in the scientific explanation but that very same conviction prevents open mindedness, a staple in the scientific method! There are many examples of unexplained phenomena that can be explained from a supernatural perspective. Telepathy for example. That isn't to say that is the correct explanation, to say that would be dogmatic. No one knows. There is a whole universe to be explained. We know so little in the grand scheme of things, it really is arrogant to state an explanation is stooping if it uses unknown entities in its discourse. Dogmatism on either side can blind one to potential answers that need to be considered if one really wants to discover and explore. Seriously, no-one knows, all we can do is create hypothesis with an aim to disprove. That is how mankind gains knowledge, dogmatism prevents progress. Something worth thinking about!
Thank you for giving up your valuable time to research this, for people like me to view and learn from.
"Poisonous snakes? Must be supernatural."
"Hot desert? Must be supernatural."
"Tectonic plates? Must be supernatural."
"Boats sink in hurricanes? Must be supernatural."
This video has 3.1 million views. Must be supernatural.
*living in the Bermuda triangle*:
supernatural.
Can’t UNhear it
Thank you, i wanted to write the same. Nothing here is supernatural.
Must be Our all-powerful, all-knowing, always present Creator!!!
Lets tell the UNITED NATIONS
Considering I regularly go camping at Fraser Island beach and that it is listed at number 2, this video has made me think I’m Rambo now
🤣🤣
Have you been attacked by packs of Dingos?
😂😢😅😊
Day:40+, quarantine gots me watching random stuff
Fraser Island is an amazingly beautiful place and people go on 4x4 adventures there all the time. Yes there are dangers but if you follow the advice on signs you will be fine, I've been there upwards of 20 times and never have I or any friends been in accidents and we've always had a great time
I love how this narrator says "these supernatural locations" in the same breath as "science determined the cause to be..."
One more time for everyone in the back:
NATURE IS NOT SUPERNATURAL. IT IS NATURAL. THAT IS WHY IT IS CALLED NATURE.
The Bermuda Triangle? Really? Don’t ships sail through there all the time with no issues?
This channel does not in any way represent anything like accurate information. I don't know what this channel is trying to be but they're not at all reliable--repeat anything you hear at your own risk because it may well be incorrect. You're just as well to research and produce your own videos as to allow this to inform you at all. It's gotten to the point where I roll my eyes just from hearing the narrator... but sometimes I learn about interesting potential topics of research. This channel could be reduced to an index of research headings with no loss to me.
Yup. Been through there many times myself.
I'm more worried at how he was pronouncing it than anything.
And Danakil Desert is in Ethiopia, not in Eritrea. They don't even research a lil
Icey cold waters off Queensland? That gave me a good chuckle. 22c in winter is hardly icey. Schools take kids holidaying to Fraser Island. Blue bottles can be found on most beaches in northern Australia if the conditions are right. Not bearable to humans? Check a map of Fraser and you can see 2 small towns easily.
This is very true. I lived in Queensland for 2 years and visited Fraser island twice not even identical areas. I did not feel so endangered in that place because it's well kept. It's true that there are sharks and dingos, actually we were alerted during my first visit to step out of the water because sharks were spotted by choppers but, we were allowed to go back after a few hours. Just after that, a few dolphins visited the beach. You can do campfire or grill barbie in permitted areas. There are easily accessible buses and ferries going to this island and very much open to tourists.
Fraser Island isn't as bad as they say it is, Blue Bottle Jellyfish is rarely deadly they are mostly just very very painful. Dingoes are little danger to humans if you stay away from them they won't attack you. Fraser Island is a great holiday location.
The Fraser Island addition is ridiculous. Never heard so much bull in my life haha
The way you explain these unsolved mysteries is truly unique. I always look forward to your new uploads-so informative and intriguing!
11:42...oh yeah. Having hiked Mt Wash many times including 5 times in one year...I can attest to the wide variety of weather. Feb 3rd, 2001 was a window of opportunity for us. From Hermit Lake Shelters it still took 5 hours to the summit...normally less than a 2 hour hike from 3800 to 6288 Feet. In any season make sure you gear up.
11:47 Mauna Kea in Hawaii is the tallest mountain in the world. Mount Everest is the highest.
12:16 Tropical Cyclone Olivia wind speed at Barrow Island, Australia was recorded at 254 mph in 1996.
Woot woot!!
Mt Washington is hiked by THOUSANDS of people every year. It's actually no big deal. You definitely want to be careful in snowy conditions, but for the most part, Washington is doable for even inexperienced hikers.
I've hiked it a few times. Next time I plan on sleeping on the mountains, beneath the tree-line.
Doable for paraplegics, if they buy a ticket on the train :)
(NOT suggesting that it isn't a serious hike, I'd feel a sense of achievement if I hiked up it on foot)
I just think the narrator exaggerated somewhat.
Um... I climbed Mt. Washington when I was eight. With my grandparents. Yeah, you do want to check the weather first, and no casual hiker in their right mind should climb that mountain when there is any chance of storm, but on a fine summer's day, it's no more dangerous than any other mountain. It's mostly the winter hikers that run into trouble, especially when they are inexperienced and improperly prepared.
I lived for 40 years in NH and every year there were parties of lost hikers who perished because they took the mountain for granted. It could be 80 degrees at the base, by the time you got to the top it could be well below zero with high winds and no visibility. That’s why most of us drove to the top, plus you got to put the “This car climbed Mt Washington “ bumper sticker on your car. :)
I’ve been to Mount Washington NH... many people in New England have. It wasn’t windy at all when I went there... and it was regular temperature because it was September. The scariest part is driving up the mountain... I couldn’t look down when my boyfriend was driving up it.
I like this video😃👍🌋🌋🌋
Lol, I have hiked up Mount Washington multiple times. I also took a train up it with my mom and 81 year old dad :) We survived and had lunch at the top. It was loud though, too many kids.
Fraser Island being one of the most dangerous places on earth, is that meant to be a joke? Tens of thousands go there every year in perfect safely.
Yep. As an Australian I was very surprised to see Fraser Island on the list. Yes dingos are wild, but like any other wild animal you have to respect it and not encroach on it’s space and other common sense things.
As for the beaches and water. Well the most dangerous thing to happen (in my knowledge) was a couple of 4wd being swallowed up VERY slowly when left parked on the sand.
I would love to know where these people got their ‘facts’ from. Lol!
I know! That made me laugh. They're being a bit dramatic about the island! lol
@@edwinakemp8554 Good ol' Murican T.V., that's where lol. Most watch far too much and are too gullible.
When you stop to look at how many dangerous creatures and environments are on Fraser island I can kind of see why it may be on this list. Lets face it any camping trip in Australia can be dangerous without being prepared for it properly
Have to be careful in Death Valley. Families and individuals have been found dead in their vehicles because it's believed that their GPS systems have shown roads that do not exist, and these folks have ventured across the area because they thought they had a direct route to Los Angeles or other California destinations. These unfortunate folks ran out of fuel and water after crossing the point of no return.
Really 🤔🤔🤔🙊🙊🙊
Desert life... learn to live without water.
I live quite close to death valley, and I can confirm this is true! Death Valley has crazy stories and I wouldn't recommend visiting there.
I've been there and stepped out of my car, and guess what?
Didn't even spend 5 mins outside before getting back in, my sun block didn't even do its job, I got back in the car and suggested that we GTFO ASAP.
That sounds like natural selection to me. Idiots.
Lol, Fraser Island. We used to go there on school camping trips.
drop 10 mongoose and 10 honey badgers on snake island. it will be clean in 2 years
The honey badgers and mongoose would be killed by the Brazillian Wandering Spiders that also inhabit the island.
😂
You forgot your dads house when he catches you skipping school
You very fanny,
BUT NO ONE PRANTS KILL OWN CHILD
I went to Fraser Island the other year , it’s a massive tourist attraction, not as dangerous as it’s made out, just don’t go swimming as it’s a tiger shark feeding ground and stay away from dingos. And zip tents up, basic knowledge really. Some of the best few days I had in oz was when i was there. We went on a 2 day/night tour with a company with like 40 people, still in touch with some of them now
before it is too late life is a test to know more read about Islam
BOLIVIA: "from exotic animals, to unique fauna" animals and fauna are the same thing...... i literally learned that in the 4th grade...... i dont know if i can take anymore misuse of words...
don't*
Akil
@@happyhaziq7690 Now that's funny, I don't care who you are...
Flora and fauna.
The 'moving/sliding' rocks in Death Valley is no longer a mystery.
At night, when very cold, a layer of ice forms on the surface, the high winds blow,
and the rocks slide on this thin layer of ice, which also carves into the sand.
Leaving a trail that looks like a moving rock ... because it is.
Videos like this that dont research, and perpetuate known fallacies, help no one.
Narrator: no other great summit can come close to the in Incredible Height and perplexity of Mount Everest
K2: BICH WHAT
well I live in INDONESIA AND one time there was a Volcano pop and me and my family are in panic we look at the new's but thank good were save no one die
Indo bang
"Giant rogue waves are responsible..."
Proceeds to show a whirlpool. LMAO!!
And 100ft high waves. How low are these planes flying lol
Huge, fake whirlpool at that.
Kindly supply him footage of rogue waves
6:49 randomly showing a Bald Eagle with a pine forest background somewhere in North-America while talking about Madidi national park in Bolivia.
lol i was looking for this comment. weird mistake .. confusion between tropical rainforest and northern coniferous woods , wtf not very serious documentary.
I’m glad someone pointed this out before I did 😝
As somebody from NH i had no idea Mount Washington was that dangerous with that many recorded deaths, definitely didn't expect to see that at #4
Oh my god all of this places look like a star wars planet
Like
Or like hardison's of the galaxy s
Sorry but the denakil depression is found in Ethiopia not Eritrea
Afar
@ለበጎ ነው it's also found in Eritrea and Djibouti but many of the part is here in Ethiopia afar
Kkkkkkkk shame on you
@who cares! amara neh leka የኛ ብቻ ነው ሚታውቁት ጠንቋይ የሆነ ህዝብ
@who cares! ዝም በል ኣህያ ኢትዮፒያ ፈርሳለች ብትንትን ትላለች እንደ ጥሬ ስጋ እንስሳ
A lot of these places aren't really that dangerous, and some are just owing to plain superstition. Even got some of the locations wrong, like danakil actually being in Ethiopia. Should've figured it's nonsense with how often the narrator uses the word "supernatural."
'" @ Notim " / This man is an ' Unbeliever ' !!
Thank you ... Should have made more research
Thank you. They have the Bermuda Triangle listed on here, and I'm not sure I feel like finishing the video now.
*tips fedora*
I am from Eritrea and yes the Danakil depression(Denkel) is not only found in Ethiopia but in both countries, in northern Ethiopia (the Afar region) & in the province southern Red Sea zone(old name Denkel) of Eritrea. I am from that region and yes not all but a small area is in deed dangerous it smells like a rotten egg and very hot.
I’m so glad I live in the UK. The most dangerous place we have here is probably like, Scunthorpe.
@Adam 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Scary scenery but it’s amazing phenomenon
14:04 Dinekal desert in Ethiopia not Ertirea
There is a reason to visit Fraser Island, it’s damn beautiful, I’ve been there 4 times.
This blokes an idiot.
@@AA-tl2hk uno reverse card
A content creator on twitch named therealshookon3 stayed on Fraser Island alone and live streamed it for 30 consecutive days.
Know his name I wanna see this
@@ZappBrannigan69420 he literally said it in the comment
People( including some of my family) holiday on this island regularly.
@@ZappBrannigan69420 asm.lm
How did he have service or internet access to to stream
I always wanna see the bermuda triangle but first i need to fly to florida and buy a submarine its so expensive
You need to include tornado valley cus I think it has A LOT OF TORNADOES
2:05 I didn't know in my country there was a dangerous place 😳
Your fan from Tanzania 🇹🇿🇹🇿🇹🇿
Am I the only one who was disappointed by number 1?
i was expecting #1 to be the strid on the river wharfe
Fraser island is fine. Huge tourist attraction and 4wd destination. My friend was born and raised there and I went to her wedding there. It's a lovely place. Dingoes aren't that bad, jellyfish is all down the coast of Queensland. Fraser island is a great place.
amen bro. keep preaching
those guys were lucky they made it out of the Valley of Death in Russia when they felt dizzy
I hope "Street of Johannesburg is on the list
😂😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣
Why? What happens there?
@@annesamaison380 Robbery broad daylight.
😂😂 rissik street
my geology teacher, Evgene naymenko was stuck near Danakil desert. he was going to a geological sight when quarantine hit, and he got stuck
Elephants foot Chernobyl: Rookies
Hahaha as an Australian I laughed so hard at the Fraser Island! It's absolutely beautiful!
Agreed, I stay at Kingfisher and 4x4 regularly. Been doing it for 30 years and I've yet to have a single injury or feeling of danger. Scaring people off isn't such a bad thing though, less RAV4's and Tuscon's getting dragged out of the sand that way!
i have seen lots of new dangerous places , thanks uploader
Top Fives.......... 15 of the most dangerous places ....lol ...... very interesting video, amazing !
Great video but for when you mentioned the Danakil depression, you said it is located in Eritiria but it's in Ethiopia, Afar region.
You’re junta 🇪🇷
The sulphur springs and volcano, Erta Ale, in the Danikil Depression are in Ethiopia, not Eritrea. It's an incredible place.
You are right but you are also wrong. The Danikil Depression is in Ethiopia, but he never did state that it was in Eritrea. He stated that the Danikil Desert is in Eritrea, which he is correct.
0:22
93 miles away from Sao Paulo lies a land that is considered to be the most dangerous on Earth..
Comes in at number 15 on the list of most dangerous places on Earth
He says that about almost every place.
If you watch any of his other videos, this is his M. O. 🙄
Omg
I dare to argue that my room becomes the most dangerous place on earth if i don't go to bed when my mom tells me to.
I can hear her here from New Zealand. Wow. Dangerous.😜😜😁😁
i watch your channel so faithfully! thanks for all your content!
Most Dangerous Place: My gfs house
lol, funny.
lol, not funny
lol, nvm xD
So funny...
Thats my favorite place...
I've been to Fraser Island, on a guided tour. It was magnificent! Such a beautiful place. The shipwreck that you show is the wreck of the Maheno and it's pretty cool to see it up close, if you're into that kinda thing. :) I guess if you weren't aware of the dangers you could get yourself into trouble there but that applies to anywhere really.
Yeah in primary school we were allowed to camp there. Looking back at it we didn’t really go through a lot of safety 😂 we were allowed to jump straight in the water we even got let a shallow river carry us for a while. We had like one guide and two teachers among maybe 30-40 students. So much fun and so beautiful I never knew it was seen as so dangerous but that’s Australia I guess haha. I’m guessing we were probably in really well known and visited areas.
@@jessemay2901 ua-cam.com/video/xrk8nyTyEZc/v-deo.html
Top Fives, though this is a very interesting video, I need to point out since there are mountains in Death Valley (N.P.), that only 1 spot there got that low--Badwater Basin, which is the spot at -282ft. Also, Bikini Atoll is in the Marshall Islands (plural), which is a chain of 29 tiny atolls.
So amazing, this video, shows and learns all kind of dangerous things that can, and cannot do or touch for people's/humans safetys...God bless you, for sharing this to all viewers to pay attentions....and thank you.😇😇😇😇, 29th june 2022., L.W
New drinking game: take a shot every time he says "supernatural"
take a tab of acid each time instead
The crystal cave in Mexico is so amazing and beautiful like a fairy tale 😍😱❤️
Imagine being called top 5 but only doing top 15s
They realised the universe is 3 x more interesting after naming the channel...just unfortunate timing
Imagine imagining saying imagine
@@codyking8013 imagine I didnt know the word imagine and therefore could never imagine imagining anything? Science.
@@codyking8013 you my friend are a big friend
Lmmfao
I've been to kawah ijen, those miners have to carry sulfur with average weight of 70kg each trip. They have to walk up to the summit for 2 hrs, then still need to walk down to the crater. They did this 3 times a day, so about 200kg of sulfur per day.
Absolutely heartbreaking that people have to do that kind of work. Makes my problems seem microscopic.
U had been there?!
These poor people should get work protection. Someone should donate gasmasks to them, and protective clouding. Verry sad.
Wow I've been on Mount Washington when I was younger. I'm from NH though. Didn't know it holds a world record that's awesome 😎👍🏽
what an incredible video! i really appreciate the effort put into showcasing these dangerous places. however, i can't help but wonder if the focus on danger detracts from the beauty and culture that exist in these locations. is it possible that by highlighting the peril, we overlook the stories and lives of the people who call these places home? just a thought!
*Dear stranger whoever reads this:*
.
.
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👇
*Hope you and your family are safe and well* 💙💙💙
You too
Thank you 😀you too!