Canadiana - when I was growing up in Sudbury, Falconbridge was one of the areas where they first started their reforestation efforts. Just before you drive into town, the road splits. One goes into the north part of the town (on higher land) and sort of south to the south part of the town - the road that goes directly into the mine property. All those Poplars that you see there in that triangular piece of land was that first reforestation project. The road split because that was where the railroad once ran. The road that goes north was the original road into Falconbridge. The southern road ran just south and parallel to that rail line and was nicknamed the “New Road”. That road was built in 1962 (I think). It was built because the mine had to have a second more direct route for all the new employees coming from Garson, Sudbury and other towns in the area. With the Vietnam war, Falconbridge won the US Army contract to supply “Strategic Material” - all the Nickel to be used in the steel or whatever other metals for the American military during that period. There is a bit of info for another history video lesson.
My grandparents still live in Sudbury, and constantly remind me that the section they live in is really Falconbridge. My grandfather was an engineer for Falconbridge last I remember and in the last decade or so has planted trees in Bell park on his own. By his count 300 trees about. He is in his 80's but loves to go out on a walk and check in on them. Great respect for the land and I always love travelling up there
This channel has made me learn more about Canada than all my history classes in school. It's a shame that schools don't present the information in interesting ways. I'm sure I was taught stuff about Canada, but not in a way that was easy to remember or interesting. Love these videos, keep up the great work.
All my family is from Sudbury, they all worked for Inco. My Nona used to tell me that during the construction of the super stack, a tornado struck Sudbury and a worker was stuck at the top of the stack; he clung on to it the whole time and survived. The stack is huge, You can see it from roughly 40-50 KMs away on a clear day. Thanks for the video.
My roof blew off and most windows blew in - The story at the time was that one of the workers thought is was thw end of the world and the other workers kept him from jumping
As a person who has an interest in Geology and History, and a past resident of Sudbury, I found your video very interesting and I was familiar with all the information listed in the film. From my geology courses I took at Laurentian, I visited many of those sites where the impact “fossils” can be located with great ease. Some of them are actually very close to the centre of the city, just south of the CP freight yards. Thank you for going a little further with the Edison commentary. I’m from Falconbridge and in our last year of high school, myself and five others prepared a history called “Nickel Centre Yesterdays”. This was to chronicle the history of the new community of Nickel Centre when the Region of Sudbury was created. NC melded the towns of Garson, Coniston and the townsite of Falconbridge into one community - Nickel Centre (and now that’s gone as everything is called “Greater Sudbury”! I say the Townsite because when the Sudbury Regional govt was created, Falconbridge was a true company town. The town was still owned and ran, lock stock and Community Centre, Rink, school, etc by Falconbridge Nickel Mines. Falconbridge had to divest all the homes and services it provided to them to the Region (which they probably didn’t mind - early days of downloading I guess). The original survey for the town, done back in 1928, had to be confirmed and guess what, lots went thru people’s homes, gardens, garages etc. Our house lost a porch, the driveway/garage and a third of our front/back yard. We got it back though - but then my Dad decided he didn’t want to stay at that home and bought another one in the town. I found the newspaper article that outlined what was required of Falconbridge to divest itself of the homes in Falconbridge and their other town site, Onaping which is located at the northwest corner of the Sudbury Basin. To follow up on Edison, he let his survey claim lapse because quick sand kept filling in his shaft. The Longyear Co. then came along and picked the land. They started a shaft 100' away from the one that Edison started but they never encountered the quick sand that he had. After a short time the Longyear Company became Falconbridge. Unfortunately, the Swiss company you referenced in the video has since sold Falconbridge to I believe, a Brazilian mining company. Nothing ever stays the same. 😭 Anyways, again a very interesting video - thanks!
@@ruckuschica Yes - Xtrada bought out Falconbridge back in the mid 2000's but either they were bought out or sold off Falconbridge. Xtrada's name is no longer there but there is some other company which I've never heard of.
Sudbury is a hidden gem - figuratively and literally. Its a small city that has all of the amenities you would ever need, but its not chaotic or busy like a major city. Theres unlimited outdoors stuff to do just outside (and within) the city. And if your looking for some big excitement - its close enough to southern ontario that you can be there by the early afternoon after a morning drive. Its the best of both worlds imo, and I hope it stays under-rated for as long as it can.... Great videro but it would have been nice for them to show how much effort the city did to re green itself after the uhh, mess that we made. Its a major success story all things considered.
got to spend a month in sudbury and was realy amazed, probably one of the nicest waterfront trails in ontario, tones of trails and so close to being in the middle of no where. lots of jobs and bustling streets, nice to see a northern ontario town thriving
@@stevesmodelbuilds5473 whole country is getting that way, government and corporations filling their pockets while tent cities get bigger everywhere and overpriced media waste our time with distractions
@@gatergates8813 Yup. And let's not forget the reapeted political corruption of Trudeau and his gang awarding untendered contracts to their friends -- who then kick it back to the 'family' with 'speaking' fees.
I worked there in 1971 at Freud Stobie #7 shaft. Had the worst safety record of all INCO mines. I was there 4 months and there were 7 deaths down below. That stack was built to spread that toxic smoke out further so it polluted the area for miles. In Sudbury that sulfer and smoke killed all the vegetation for a twenty mile radius. It settled on new cars and ate into the finish. Wrecked it. I couldn't drink the water, had to be made into 'Freshy.' When the tornado went through there, men working off the scaffolding, inside that stack, laid down while planks were sucked up and out of chimney. Crazy but luckily there was only one death. It was 68 year old women living in a trailer that was tossed and toppled. As a point of interest, NASA actually practiced maneuvering vehicles for the moon landing because it resembled the conditions that were foreseen to be like the moon surface. On the Canadian nickle the beaver is the symbol you'll find there. That industrious critter that can take a dry flat scrub bush, make a dam home and before long, it becomes a productive, life filled watery wet land filled with new life. Did I mention it is a Canadian beaver ? Only in Canada, eh ?
People seem bent on doing things that mess up themselves and others. Do we really need all this industry? Arguably not. Though I do enjoy my laptop and my vehicle.
@@donnavorce8856 I don't. Not really. If home computers of all kinds didn't exist, so that we had to be more choosy about our time usage, and where we go online, and for how long, the world would be so much better off! I also take great issue to the fact that small, cheap, well made cars do exist, but the car companies won't sell them in N America! Of course the kind of person who would want 1, like me, can't afford the extra 1000s of $ to import one, so we're stuck paying more for a bigger fancier car that we don't even want! I'm 63, and I am fed right fucking up with being bullied by the Americans into living in ways I detest!
Sudbury should be better marketed as a tourist destination. It's contrasting beauty is just stunning and I have always maintained that Laurentian University is arguably one of the most underrated and most beautiful Universities in Canada which is why I sent my childern there. The French river, on the outskirts of Greater Sudbury is one of my favorite places in the world.
A friend of mine, Rolly Portelance, worked in one of the nickel mines as an underground miner for decades. For fun, he would travel to places throughout Canada and the USA with his family to run 100-mile trail races. He would be in his 80s now and long retired, and I've lost rack of him, and been trying to find him on the Internet
I worked in a foundry a few years ago in New Zealand, and we used nickel in one of the brews, I was the maintenance engineer and they kept a metal barrel of nickel in my stores. The damn thing was always in the way. I tried to get the boss to move it, but he said it was worth a packet and it had been mined from a meteor. Sounded like a tall story to me. But now I believe.
I lived in the Sudbury area,as a kid, before the super stack! When the winds were blowing the wrong way (rarely) sulphur dioxide would be so thick, I couldn’t see across the road to our neighbours! School would be canceled, and we were told to stay inside. My mom hated those days!
I work at Creighton mine and walk past the entrance to the Snolab everyday, proud to be working there😊 its truly amazing and interesting stuff that goes on underground
I went to the snolab 2 km underground Best experience I’ve ever had!! We were the first mikmaq youth that got to experience that, a lot of walking but it was fun! Also I have went to that hiking trail all the way to the bridge I love Sudbury
I know this comment is 4y old, but that's so cool! I have the opportunity to be working there this summer and am quite excited. Sounds surreal going so deep
Fellow Sudburian here. :) Awesome summary, thanks for this. Wish there were some mention of our re-greening though, all of the aftermath from that "blackening" of the earth and rock from SO2 emmisions and old mining practices.
This type of rock around sudbury makes for really awesome mountain bike trails. So many great trails to hike and ride around laurentian university. Thankyou for making this video.
Mountain bikes tear up the terrain in a way only a fleet of bulldozers could, wrecking it forever for everyone else. Maybe less so where it's very rocky, but the vegetation on every side of the path for 20 feet or so will be ground up completely. All of Edmonton's many miles of trails are totally wrecked.
I came to Lively, ON (right by the Creighton Mine) when I was 1 year old and my father worked as a mining engineer for INCO (now VALE). I love that you took the time to explore my home area! It was a nice refresher into the history of the area. Keep up the great work!!!!
I live less than an hour from Sudbury, I knew about the mines but never once had heard of the underground lab before now, amazing that I can still learn more about a place I've been to so often throughout my entire life. Thank you for the video and information.
Edison also had a mine near Latchford, Ontario for cobalt. Also, there is a theory that the comet impact had a part to play with the minerals in Cobalt, Ontario. My basic understanding is the hit didn't just create the Sudbury crater, but pushed things up in Cobalt where there were major mines for silver, nickel arsenic and cobalt.
In a book from Oiva Saarinen about Sudburys meteor(s) it talks about the distance the fall out fell from the meteor and there's pieces of Sudburys meteor even in Minnesota.
I’ve had the good fortune of seeing the Neutrino Observatory and worked in Falconbrige in the 90’s. I guess not many people can claim to have been everywhere you showed! SNO was such a treat to see. Great great video!
My family Joseph and Beatrice Boulay, founded the City of Sudbury. Joseph worked on the railway and built the very first residence to found the region. His brother and family moved in with him, and then he started a lumber business to build the other family’s residences that decided to live aside of them. His own residence became the first ‘inn’ that railway workers paid to sleep within that founded the City now known as Sudbury.
These are amazing videos-thank you. As a teenager my family lived in Copper Cliff near mines, refineries and the Superstack. One day working as student gardeners (one of INCO's ways of making things look better), we had a heat inversion. The air was sulfurous; we had to run until we could breath again. We also went a mile down to an abandoned tunnel where experiments were performed on growing tomatoes underground. They were bright red, but empty.
Excellent! I too examine seemingly unrelated subjects in my work and I always learn something I hadn't predicted. All things, it seems to me, have naturally poetic relationships if you really look.
This was wonderful. I will be sharing this on Shoutout Sudbury later today; I hope it brings a spike in views, as Sudburians should all watch this. There's so much to learn. Thank you for doing this.
Very interesting!!! you earned my subscription. I hope you continue to bring interesting historical videos like this. This touched me as I am from sudbury. Keep it up!!!
Your videos are so well made and make me love Canada even more. We have such an interesting country but there is so much people dont know about it. Thank you for your great videos and helping to share more about our countries. Your videos are honestly so well made, I dont understand why you dont have 100x more subscribers
The only quibble I have with this excellent video involves the depiction of the comet strike which put the nickel in Sudbury. Stock footage must have been used, but it does not reflect what actually happened. The Sudbury Crater is the most highly elongated major crater on earth. This is because the comet did not hit the Earth head on; rather it came in at an oblique angle. It caused the nickel core to end up closer to the surface so as to be easily mined. That was certainly fortunate for the WW II victory effort.
I am so happy that I found this channel. I enjoy the stories and will be sharing them with as many friends and family as I can. I have become a patreon supporter. This is the first channel I have done this for. :)
@@sajithvs4761 getting a part time job is pretty easy. Lots of fast food places that hire all year round. Of course there are many other jobs but hard to tell if there will be some in January. Message me when it gets closer to your move, and I can try to help you find a part time job.
@@sajithvs4761 sounds good to me. I know a lot of resources to help someone find a job so I don't mind helping someone out. You can go to my youtube channel for my contact info if you want, also.
Super cool video!! Was born and raised in this town, still living in it to this day. For most of my childhood, High Falls was a minute-drive down the road!!
I loved growing up in Sudbury. My dad told me in the 60s and 70s when he a kid it looked almost exactly like the moon. One questionable memory was at Copper Cliff arena, at the end of the parking lot was a little creek run off from the direction of the smoke stacks, I'm certain to this day it was toxic waste in green and pink sludge form. I'll never forget that stuff.
Me too. Born and raised there my whole life. I have been living in Windsor, ON for almost 7 years now. lovely city and but I sure do miss winter time up north or going camping and fishing!
Very impressed by the quality of writing, research, and production of this video! Only found you recently but you have a new fan! Thanks for bringing Canadian History into the spotlight!
I was born in Sudbury on Regent street in April of 1950. My uncle Bud was above ground plant foreman for many years and we visited my uncles cabin on Long Lake for many years every summer for a couple of weeks. Nice to know a bit more of the special history of my birthplace. Thank you.
I always loved going on mine, smelter, and refinery tours when I was in high-school in Sudbury. They let us into a part of the SNOLab (where we didn't need to shower), and seeing the whole process really makes you develop an appreciation into the science and operations going on. All of our neighbours and the majority of our neighbourhood worked in the Creighton Mine, and I lived just down the street he was filming the smokestack on. Mind you, as many pollutants are safely expelled out of the mine, there is an amount of sulphur that falls just out the top of the smokestack and Sudburians are likely to have a 10% higher chance of developing cancer, that's at least what my teachers told us. Still cool though haha
You can still go explore that first mine that opened back in about 1914, it's an amazing place to explore. Although it's still on Vale property, it's worth the adventure :)
I’ve been down to the snolab. It was the most amazing place I have ever visited. It’s incredibly large and cleaner than an operating room even though you have to go down 6700ft and walk through a regular dirty mine to get there.
The FBI agents must be listening to me again because I was just talking about how I moved back home to Sudbury, then this video shows up! Enjoyed it tho :^))
In the early 70's we traveled through Sudbury and we stopped at the museum and they told us that the reason no trees grow around the area was because of the meteorite only latter did the storey change that pollution for the mine killed the trees
Be sure to check out the description for a bunch of addendums related to the science and astronomy we touch on in the episode!
Canadiana - when I was growing up in Sudbury, Falconbridge was one of the areas where they first started their reforestation efforts.
Just before you drive into town, the road splits. One goes into the north part of the town (on higher land) and sort of south to the south part of the town - the road that goes directly into the mine property. All those Poplars that you see there in that triangular piece of land was that first reforestation project. The road split because that was where the railroad once ran. The road that goes north was the original road into Falconbridge. The southern road ran just south and parallel to that rail line and was nicknamed the “New Road”. That road was built in 1962 (I think).
It was built because the mine had to have a second more direct route for all the new employees coming from Garson, Sudbury and other towns in the area. With the Vietnam war, Falconbridge won the US Army contract to supply “Strategic Material” - all the Nickel to be used in the steel or whatever other metals for the American military during that period. There is a bit of info for another history video lesson.
Space is fake. There is a firminant above us and we can't get through it.
This video is a fraud.
Wow. Learn something everyday. Check another box for Canada. Thanks keep it up?
@@barryrenouf3450 OK Berry..lol.
Where are all my sudburians at? 🇨🇦🙌
Ayeee
Born a raised in Sudbury. In Alberta now but Sudbury will always be home.
Skoden
Home town! In NB now.
4 more days till I come home. Sudbury better be waiting for me.
My grandparents still live in Sudbury, and constantly remind me that the section they live in is really Falconbridge. My grandfather was an engineer for Falconbridge last I remember and in the last decade or so has planted trees in Bell park on his own. By his count 300 trees about. He is in his 80's but loves to go out on a walk and check in on them. Great respect for the land and I always love travelling up there
Falconbridge is one of the only areas in Greater Sudbury that hasn't turned into a crime ridden shithole
I grew up in falconbridge, and my mother still currently lives there. Beautiful quaint town. I’m sure I know your grandfather 😂🥰
haha well if you know a Michael Park then congratulations!@@alishiahenry4679
Born and raised in sudbury and im a miner. Always great to learn new things about my city!
This channel has made me learn more about Canada than all my history classes in school. It's a shame that schools don't present the information in interesting ways. I'm sure I was taught stuff about Canada, but not in a way that was easy to remember or interesting. Love these videos, keep up the great work.
You have been taught bullshit.
Our owners wanted us dumbed down.
@@MFKR696 I learned alot of are Canadian history
@@MFKR696 what's so funny just because you're a moron don't laugh at your own jokes
@@MFKR696 Don't feel sorry for me I have no feelings for you.
So any other sudburians else get this recommended to them 2 years later
Legit lol wtf they wait so long for?
Yep
Yeeaah.. little odd and late, but alright. D:
I'm getting grade 3 Dynamic Earth flashbacks
@@kaitlyntrottier1376 yeah lmao
I live in Sudbury and this has taught me so much that I had no idea about. very informative and entertaining to watch. very good job.
Very good point I’m from around here and I’ve worked at the smelter and knew some of this shit but tons of shit no one knew about
All my family is from Sudbury, they all worked for Inco. My Nona used to tell me that during the construction of the super stack, a tornado struck Sudbury and a worker was stuck at the top of the stack; he clung on to it the whole time and survived. The stack is huge, You can see it from roughly 40-50 KMs away on a clear day. Thanks for the video.
We heard the same thing! We should do an extra mini video or blog post one it.
there were 6 workers up on the stack during the tornado, all survived with no injuries
I drive by it on my way to The Soo to see my Girl..its nice cuz I know Im halfway there!
My roof blew off and most windows blew in - The story at the time was that one of the workers thought is was thw end of the world and the other workers kept him from jumping
Damn I’ve worked at the stack for a couple years and heard of this tornado thing that’s pretty cool
This channel is incredible; thank you for the wonderful stories of the country we call home
As a person who has an interest in Geology and History, and a past resident of Sudbury, I found your video very interesting and I was familiar with all the information listed in the film. From my geology courses I took at Laurentian, I visited many of those sites where the impact “fossils” can be located with great ease. Some of them are actually very close to the centre of the city, just south of the CP freight yards.
Thank you for going a little further with the Edison commentary. I’m from Falconbridge and in our last year of high school, myself and five others prepared a history called “Nickel Centre Yesterdays”. This was to chronicle the history of the new community of Nickel Centre when the Region of Sudbury was created. NC melded the towns of Garson, Coniston and the townsite of Falconbridge into one community - Nickel Centre (and now that’s gone as everything is called “Greater Sudbury”!
I say the Townsite because when the Sudbury Regional govt was created, Falconbridge was a true company town. The town was still owned and ran, lock stock and Community Centre, Rink, school, etc by Falconbridge Nickel Mines. Falconbridge had to divest all the homes and services it provided to them to the Region (which they probably didn’t mind - early days of downloading I guess). The original survey for the town, done back in 1928, had to be confirmed and guess what, lots went thru people’s homes, gardens, garages etc. Our house lost a porch, the driveway/garage and a third of our front/back yard. We got it back though - but then my Dad decided he didn’t want to stay at that home and bought another one in the town.
I found the newspaper article that outlined what was required of Falconbridge to divest itself of the homes in Falconbridge and their other town site, Onaping which is located at the northwest corner of the Sudbury Basin.
To follow up on Edison, he let his survey claim lapse because quick sand kept filling in his shaft. The Longyear Co. then came along and picked the land. They started a shaft 100' away from the one that Edison started but they never encountered the quick sand that he had. After a short time the Longyear Company became Falconbridge.
Unfortunately, the Swiss company you referenced in the video has since sold Falconbridge to I believe, a Brazilian mining company. Nothing ever stays the same. 😭
Anyways, again a very interesting video - thanks!
Thanks for the extra trivia, Bill! We loved our time in Sudbury. So much interesting history. Glad you enjoyed our video and thanks for watching!
Are you referring to Xstrata? They bought out (or absorbed) Falconbridge Mine.
@@ruckuschica Yes - Xtrada bought out Falconbridge back in the mid 2000's but either they were bought out or sold off Falconbridge. Xtrada's name is no longer there but there is some other company which I've never heard of.
@@Wild-Dad Yes, you're right. I don't go out that way very often. I had to ask my brother, but he said it's now Glencore.
@@ruckuschica yes. Glencore is the name of the company. The Brazilian company is called vale. They bought the old inco in the early 2000's
Sudbury is a hidden gem - figuratively and literally. Its a small city that has all of the amenities you would ever need, but its not chaotic or busy like a major city.
Theres unlimited outdoors stuff to do just outside (and within) the city. And if your looking for some big excitement - its close enough to southern ontario that you can be there by the early afternoon after a morning drive. Its the best of both worlds imo, and I hope it stays under-rated for as long as it can....
Great videro but it would have been nice for them to show how much effort the city did to re green itself after the uhh, mess that we made. Its a major success story all things considered.
Have you seen the lcbo downtown? Lol crawling with crackheads
And they have Deluxe Hamburger - Chicken on an bun dinner with fries and a milkshake any time I pass through.
Wow, the production quality of this is amazing, you tell they really cared.
I'm am born and raised from Sudbury. Amazing job on this video!! Shared to my friends and family! Keep up the good work 😊🙏👍
got to spend a month in sudbury and was realy amazed, probably one of the nicest waterfront trails in ontario, tones of trails and so close to being in the middle of no where. lots of jobs and bustling streets, nice to see a northern ontario town thriving
It's a dying dump.
@@stevesmodelbuilds5473 whole country is getting that way, government and corporations filling their pockets while tent cities get bigger everywhere and overpriced media waste our time with distractions
@@gatergates8813 Yup. And let's not forget the reapeted political corruption of Trudeau and his gang awarding untendered contracts to their friends -- who then kick it back to the 'family' with 'speaking' fees.
@@gatergates8813 Jeezuz fukin kryst the right wing just never shuts up! How fukin tiresome! 💩 😈 💩 😈 💩
I worked there in 1971 at Freud Stobie #7 shaft. Had the worst safety record of all INCO mines. I was there 4 months and there were 7 deaths down below. That stack was built to spread that toxic smoke out further so it polluted the area for miles. In Sudbury that sulfer and smoke killed all the vegetation for a twenty mile radius. It settled on new cars and ate into the finish. Wrecked it. I couldn't drink the water, had to be made into 'Freshy.' When the tornado went through there, men working off the scaffolding, inside that stack, laid down while planks were sucked up and out of chimney. Crazy but luckily there was only one death. It was 68 year old women living in a trailer that was tossed and toppled. As a point of interest, NASA actually practiced maneuvering vehicles for the moon landing because it resembled the conditions that were foreseen to be like the moon surface. On the Canadian nickle the beaver is the symbol you'll find there. That industrious critter that can take a dry flat scrub bush, make a dam home and before long, it becomes a productive, life filled watery wet land filled with new life. Did I mention it is a Canadian beaver ? Only in Canada, eh ?
People seem bent on doing things that mess up themselves and others. Do we really need all this industry? Arguably not. Though I do enjoy my laptop and my vehicle.
@@donnavorce8856 I don't. Not really. If home computers of all kinds didn't exist, so that we had to be more choosy about our time usage, and where we go online, and for how long, the world would be so much better off!
I also take great issue to the fact that small, cheap, well made cars do exist, but the car companies won't sell them in N America! Of course the kind of person who would want 1, like me, can't afford the extra 1000s of $ to import one, so we're stuck paying more for a bigger fancier car that we don't even want!
I'm 63, and I am fed right fucking up with being bullied by the Americans into living in ways I detest!
Frood.. mine
This channel consistently gives me greater appreciation for Canadian history. Thank you!
I cannot believe this is 5 years old. The quality is incredible.
Great video! I was born and raised in Sudbury. Though I don't live there anymore, I do truly miss my home town!
as a Sudburian, I found this very informative, thank you
hey bro, nice seeing you here lol
Sudbury should be better marketed as a tourist destination. It's contrasting beauty is just stunning and I have always maintained that Laurentian University is arguably one of the most underrated and most beautiful Universities in Canada which is why I sent my childern there. The French river, on the outskirts of Greater Sudbury is one of my favorite places in the world.
garald tao my family cottage is near the french river and i agree with your statement. 👍🏻
I love the French river. We used to camp at Grundy lake provincial park every year. Was always a delight to visit the Hungry Bear!!
Every town in Northern Ontario says the same thing.
That ain't true I live here and it's bad right now
@@fnaf_is_cool50yearsago5 why's that?
I live in Sudbury, born and raised. I am an underground electrician and I did not know some of this. Cool video!
A friend of mine, Rolly Portelance, worked in one of the nickel mines as an underground miner for decades. For fun, he would travel to places throughout Canada and the USA with his family to run 100-mile trail races. He would be in his 80s now and long retired, and I've lost rack of him, and been trying to find him on the Internet
That said, tell me more about you,
I worked in a foundry a few years ago in New Zealand, and we used nickel in one of the brews, I was the maintenance engineer and they kept a metal barrel of nickel in my stores. The damn thing was always in the way. I tried to get the boss to move it, but he said it was worth a packet and it had been mined from a meteor. Sounded like a tall story to me. But now I believe.
I lived in the Sudbury area,as a kid, before the super stack! When the winds were blowing the wrong way (rarely) sulphur dioxide would be so thick, I couldn’t see across the road to our neighbours! School would be canceled, and we were told to stay inside. My mom hated those days!
I work at Creighton mine and walk past the entrance to the Snolab everyday, proud to be working there😊 its truly amazing and interesting stuff that goes on underground
I went to the snolab 2 km underground Best experience I’ve ever had!! We were the first mikmaq youth that got to experience that, a lot of walking but it was fun! Also I have went to that hiking trail all the way to the bridge I love Sudbury
I know this comment is 4y old, but that's so cool! I have the opportunity to be working there this summer and am quite excited. Sounds surreal going so deep
Fellow Sudburian here. :) Awesome summary, thanks for this.
Wish there were some mention of our re-greening though, all of the aftermath from that "blackening" of the earth and rock from SO2 emmisions and old mining practices.
I’m from Sudbury and I found this really interesting! Got yourself an subscriber
Amazing content, this channel deserves 10x the amount of subscribers it has (at least). A real hidden gem of a channel.
Born in Sudbury was surprised to see this in my feed great video guys!
Me too!!!
google - facebook -they all need to help a newer quantum computer anticipate human behaviour . i'm in Sudbury too.
@@sajithvs4761 From i know and have heard you should be good. I had no problems finding a part time job last year.
Definitely best channel to learn deep about Canada! Eager to see more episodes!
This type of rock around sudbury makes for really awesome mountain bike trails. So many great trails to hike and ride around laurentian university. Thankyou for making this video.
Mountain bikes tear up the terrain in a way only a fleet of bulldozers could, wrecking it forever for everyone else. Maybe less so where it's very rocky, but the vegetation on every side of the path for 20 feet or so will be ground up completely. All of Edmonton's many miles of trails are totally wrecked.
I came to Lively, ON (right by the Creighton Mine) when I was 1 year old and my father worked as a mining engineer for INCO (now VALE). I love that you took the time to explore my home area! It was a nice refresher into the history of the area. Keep up the great work!!!!
Raised in Sudbury in the 1950's. I remember the Sulphur well. This is a great informative video.
Loved this video. I was born in Sudbury but the family moved in the early 60’s. I still go back every 10 years or so just to see how it’s changed
Thanks for watching! We're glad you enjoyed it.
Isnt it crazy how much has changed since the regreening project?
I live less than an hour from Sudbury, I knew about the mines but never once had heard of the underground lab before now, amazing that I can still learn more about a place I've been to so often throughout my entire life.
Thank you for the video and information.
Edison also had a mine near Latchford, Ontario for cobalt. Also, there is a theory that the comet impact had a part to play with the minerals in Cobalt, Ontario. My basic understanding is the hit didn't just create the Sudbury crater, but pushed things up in Cobalt where there were major mines for silver, nickel arsenic and cobalt.
In a book from Oiva Saarinen about Sudburys meteor(s) it talks about the distance the fall out fell from the meteor and there's pieces of Sudburys meteor even in Minnesota.
Excellent video, connecting our mining heritage to cutting edge science!
I’ve had the good fortune of seeing the Neutrino Observatory and worked in Falconbrige in the 90’s. I guess not many people can claim to have been everywhere you showed! SNO was such a treat to see. Great great video!
Really interesting. Thanks for all the effort and great production value. 👍🏼
Love from a fellow Canadian UA-camr. Cheers.
Thanks for checking us out!
From Sudbury and I'm glad this came onto my home page +1 sub
I’ve been upto Sudbury a few times for work and always like staying up there! I enjoyed the video!
I've been here with a school field trip back in elementary school, it was great!
This was posted on my birthday! And I live in Sudbury!
My family Joseph and Beatrice Boulay, founded the City of Sudbury. Joseph worked on the railway and built the very first residence to found the region. His brother and family moved in with him, and then he started a lumber business to build the other family’s residences that decided to live aside of them. His own residence became the first ‘inn’ that railway workers paid to sleep within that founded the City now known as Sudbury.
No, the village was there before the CPR came that way.
I would have liked to see a lengthier but polite conversation regarding the beginning of Sudbury. The name is French.
Wow , very impressed with the quality of this Doc! This should be aired on the CBC
These are amazing videos-thank you. As a teenager my family lived in Copper Cliff near mines, refineries and the Superstack. One day working as student gardeners (one of INCO's ways of making things look better), we had a heat inversion. The air was sulfurous; we had to run until we could breath again. We also went a mile down to an abandoned tunnel where experiments were performed on growing tomatoes underground. They were bright red, but empty.
Awesome documentaries!! Very well made, extemely well researched, very entertaining, merci!!!
Excellent! I too examine seemingly unrelated subjects in my work and I always learn something I hadn't predicted. All things, it seems to me, have naturally poetic relationships if you really look.
This was wonderful. I will be sharing this on Shoutout Sudbury later today; I hope it brings a spike in views, as Sudburians should all watch this. There's so much to learn. Thank you for doing this.
I grew up in Sudbury it was great to learn this.
Very interesting!!! you earned my subscription. I hope you continue to bring interesting historical videos like this. This touched me as I am from sudbury. Keep it up!!!
Wow the production quality is crazy. This was a great watch
Beautiful ! Thanks.
Your videos are so well made and make me love Canada even more. We have such an interesting country but there is so much people dont know about it. Thank you for your great videos and helping to share more about our countries. Your videos are honestly so well made, I dont understand why you dont have 100x more subscribers
The only quibble I have with this excellent video involves the depiction of the comet strike which put the nickel in Sudbury. Stock footage must have been used, but it does not reflect what actually happened. The Sudbury Crater is the most highly elongated major crater on earth. This is because the comet did not hit the Earth head on; rather it came in at an oblique angle. It caused the nickel core to end up closer to the surface so as to be easily mined. That was certainly fortunate for the WW II victory effort.
Man.. I miss my Sudbury.
What an incredible video. Captivating story telling and a proud bit of Canadian history. Good on the Swiss for donating the building to the city.
Wow, great video. I just stumbled onto your channel, and I'm so glad I did. Keep up the good work.
I'm pretty sure either Dynamic Earth or Science North would play this video if they haven't already.
I am so happy that I found this channel. I enjoy the stories and will be sharing them with as many friends and family as I can.
I have become a patreon supporter. This is the first channel I have done this for. :)
This is such a phenomenal video. I can’t believe it. Really well done. What a story. All around quality is just first class
This is so cool. I was born here in Sudbury and learned some new things about our city and area! Thankyou .
These just keep getting better and better. Good job!
Thank you!
Fascinating!
I live in Sudbury. It's pretty awesome.
Except the potholes... fucken potholes...
Yep. Took my Versa to Northern Nissan 2 years in a row for an alignment. An annual service.
@@sajithvs4761 getting a part time job is pretty easy. Lots of fast food places that hire all year round. Of course there are many other jobs but hard to tell if there will be some in January. Message me when it gets closer to your move, and I can try to help you find a part time job.
@@sajithvs4761 sounds good to me. I know a lot of resources to help someone find a job so I don't mind helping someone out. You can go to my youtube channel for my contact info if you want, also.
Super cool video!! Was born and raised in this town, still living in it to this day. For most of my childhood, High Falls was a minute-drive down the road!!
Im trying to find a place to rent . You know any bachelor pad.
I loved growing up in Sudbury. My dad told me in the 60s and 70s when he a kid it looked almost exactly like the moon. One questionable memory was at Copper Cliff arena, at the end of the parking lot was a little creek run off from the direction of the smoke stacks, I'm certain to this day it was toxic waste in green and pink sludge form. I'll never forget that stuff.
Hey, I live in Sudbury this is actually pretty cool and my dad works in the mines.
I’m so proud to be a Sudburian. I love my city.
Thanks for watching! We love Sudbury too!
Amanda Loves All also loves her city. Who'd have guessed?
Thank you, this was extremely informative. I was born here and spent most of my life here. Great job.
Sudbury is where I grew up. I miss my home city.
Me too. Born and raised there my whole life. I have been living in Windsor, ON for almost 7 years now. lovely city and but I sure do miss winter time up north or going camping and fishing!
Wow, this was awesome! I live here and there's stuff in this ep even I didn't know!!
Wow this is great! The video is underrated. Subbed!
great show, glad I found it : } Born & live in Sudbury : }
the creativity and production value of these videos is first class
Very impressed by the quality of writing, research, and production of this video! Only found you recently but you have a new fan! Thanks for bringing Canadian History into the spotlight!
Glad I clicked! Very professional and entertaining.
Great content! I studied in Cambrian College in Sudbury. Truly amazing to learn all this.. as above so below
Greetings from sudbury, but in the UK....
Nerd On Parade gang gang
Nunca disfrute un vídeo informativo tanto como ese , un gran saludo desde Colombia .......felicitaciones sigue adelante !
Love this channel-so special!
I was born in Sudbury on Regent street in April of 1950. My uncle Bud was above ground plant foreman for many years and we visited my uncles cabin on Long Lake for many years every summer for a couple of weeks. Nice to know a bit more of the special history of my birthplace. Thank you.
This Was a great episode! I subscribed!
Great video! Very engaging and exciting to watch - I loved it!
Holy molly your channel is under rated!
I always loved going on mine, smelter, and refinery tours when I was in high-school in Sudbury. They let us into a part of the SNOLab (where we didn't need to shower), and seeing the whole process really makes you develop an appreciation into the science and operations going on. All of our neighbours and the majority of our neighbourhood worked in the Creighton Mine, and I lived just down the street he was filming the smokestack on. Mind you, as many pollutants are safely expelled out of the mine, there is an amount of sulphur that falls just out the top of the smokestack and Sudburians are likely to have a 10% higher chance of developing cancer, that's at least what my teachers told us. Still cool though haha
This Anglo-American just loves Canadians, and Canadiana's take on Sudbury is another great reason to expand my love!
This was very informative and interesting video. Loved the visual effects that was binded in the video.
My home town. Proud of it
Incredible & beautifully filmed
So interesting. You have a new subscriber from Cape Town, SA
I have a cousin in sudbury that married a girl from south africa :)
amazing content, I've been watching mining videos all week, so cool to learn about sudbury/mineral deposits, loved the audio
You can still go explore that first mine that opened back in about 1914, it's an amazing place to explore. Although it's still on Vale property, it's worth the adventure :)
Sorry. Closed around 1914 !!
Man these videos are SO well made, you need more subs!
We sure do! haha thanks for watching!
This video is bullshit.
I’ve been down to the snolab. It was the most amazing place I have ever visited. It’s incredibly large and cleaner than an operating room even though you have to go down 6700ft and walk through a regular dirty mine to get there.
The FBI agents must be listening to me again because I was just talking about how I moved back home to Sudbury, then this video shows up! Enjoyed it tho :^))
I went there for 3 days between July 11-13 at an air B and B and lived near Ramsey lake it was great 5 stars also went to the mine
In the early 70's we traveled through Sudbury and we stopped at the museum and they told us that the reason no trees grow around the area was because of the meteorite only latter did the storey change that pollution for the mine killed the trees
Many kudos on the phenomenal production value!
Such a great episode, love Sudbury.