Man, that lake in Djibouti must be REALLY salty. I've swam in the Great Salt Lake, and then upped that by floating around in the Dead Sea. I can't imagine what it is like to float in anything saltier than that. Edit: I looked up the percent of salt in Ocean water (3.5 percent), Great Salt Lake (varies widely depending on inflows and where in the lake you measure, but from 5 to 30 percent), Dead Sea (33.7 percent), and Lake Assal in Djibouti (35 percent). I've been to St. Lucia, and never realized that it was the singular country that was named after a woman.
Another fun fact about the John From movement is that the soldier's name most likely wasn't John From. It was most likely "John, from California" or some other place name and then shortened to "John From."
Oooooh, I haven't gotten to that one yet, but my interest is piqued. Edit: Well, I'm stumped. Firstly, define "doc like this." Secondly, is calling England England acceptable, m'lord?
@MikeP2055 Calling Britain England is just a bit ignorant in a documentary as well put together as this. England is simply part of Britain. It's like American documentaries talking about the 'English" landing on Gold and Sword beaches in 1944 or "England" joining the Gulf War in 1991. It was the British Army in both cases and the troops were Scottish, Welsh, English and Northern Irish.
@@plopcoen6222 it was England not Britain. I doubled checked that one because it didn’t sound right. Britain didn’t formally exist yet. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Andrés_(island)
@@GeographyGeek The article contains sloppy Wikiness... "After the failed Spanish invasion of the islands, they were controlled by England until 1787". After 1707, it was Great Britain and not "England". Prior to that the island was controlled by a Welsh privateer called Henry Morgan. Welsh people are from Wales, not England.
Tracking link - play.tacticusgame.com/GeographyGeekNov
This title feels very personal lol
Perfect timing man, the melatonin is just kickin in
The fact that the church classifies Capybaras (a warm-blooded, placental quadruped) as fish tells you all you need to know about their sanity.
As it just so happens, I cannot sleep tonight. Thank you for helping me through the night, Geography Geek
I fell to sleep from the other video just to wake up for this one, simply nice
What a long sleep.
Man, that lake in Djibouti must be REALLY salty. I've swam in the Great Salt Lake, and then upped that by floating around in the Dead Sea. I can't imagine what it is like to float in anything saltier than that. Edit: I looked up the percent of salt in Ocean water (3.5 percent), Great Salt Lake (varies widely depending on inflows and where in the lake you measure, but from 5 to 30 percent), Dead Sea (33.7 percent), and Lake Assal in Djibouti (35 percent). I've been to St. Lucia, and never realized that it was the singular country that was named after a woman.
I was really pleased when a woman from Saint Lucia won a gold medal at the recent Olympics.
Its also mandatory to vote in Peru! I once got a fine😂
9:25 It's also mandatory in Luxembourg. Every Luxembourgish citizen over the age of 18 has to vote every national, european and regional election
thank you, i indeed cant sleep
Another fun fact about the John From movement is that the soldier's name most likely wasn't John From. It was most likely "John, from California" or some other place name and then shortened to "John From."
that makes a lot of sense cuz i'be never heard of that last name before lol, it doesn't rly sound like a last name
fromme, frommer maybe?
I couldn’t sleep the whole night. Hopefully I do not fall asleep right now, because I got a things to do. Yay! A new video!
Tristan de Cuna isn't the most remote island, it's the most remote populated island.
Well im up wide awake at 3:57 AM. I guess this was meant for me.
I don't know. Realizing Denmark is in Minecraft may keep me up at night.
That appearing-disappearing island reminds me of the one in Terry Pratchett's"Jingo," including the international reaction.
Error in the algorithm: video showed up at 11am
How are you ? Your Uploaded videos are Very Nice & Helpful.🎉🎉🎉
4:20 LOL....MURICA 🦅🦅
It's 2:51 am, think I'm early
If you ever run out of facts, just start making shit up that sounds believable, because I guarantee I will still watch it
@@stevenlee3278 who said I didn’t make these up?
Thank you.
Its 3am... wow
thank you
I liked.
Why should I sleep at 11 AM?
Australia?
@@MikeP2055 Thailand
There's no mandatory voting in Malta. Turnout is quite high, but it's not mandatory.
I live for these videos they’re so fire
🥱🥱🥱🥱
Please don't refer to Britain as "England" in documentaries like this.
Oooooh, I haven't gotten to that one yet, but my interest is piqued.
Edit: Well, I'm stumped.
Firstly, define "doc like this."
Secondly, is calling England England acceptable, m'lord?
@MikeP2055 Calling Britain England is just a bit ignorant in a documentary as well put together as this. England is simply part of Britain. It's like American documentaries talking about the 'English" landing on Gold and Sword beaches in 1944 or "England" joining the Gulf War in 1991. It was the British Army in both cases and the troops were Scottish, Welsh, English and Northern Irish.
@@plopcoen6222 it was England not Britain. I doubled checked that one because it didn’t sound right. Britain didn’t formally exist yet.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Andrés_(island)
@@GeographyGeek The article contains sloppy Wikiness... "After the failed Spanish invasion of the islands, they were controlled by England until 1787". After 1707, it was Great Britain and not "England". Prior to that the island was controlled by a Welsh privateer called Henry Morgan. Welsh people are from Wales, not England.
@@GeographyGeek A nicely crafted documentary, by the way. Well done. I have subsctibed.