Bruh... As a La Palma native I felt the need to address this. All good footage and the first two minutes were quite nice, up until the point of the "traces of last eruption" (2:21). At that point the video becomes a bit sensationalist. Those "traces" are from a much older volcano, NOT the 1971 eruption (Teneguía) which happened far to the south of the island. The "mega-tsunami" is not coming for at least a few thousand years (if it even happens at all ;DD). And to answer the title of the video... "what the volcano looked like before the eruption" - it did not. There was no volcano. It was a normal "hill" where anyone could go for a walk up until lava started coming out of the ground and piling up to create the "volcanic cone" you can see now. I understand that the drama of natural disasters attracts views but at least add some accurate explanations. Thank you for reading.
@@jestekrytykie2155 On La Palma there are a lot of old volcanic craters to be seen, what is usually called "volcano". The new eruption did not come from such a crater, but the eruption took place on a completely normal slope. During the week-long eruption and the ash rain, a mountain with one or more craters has formed. Before there was no mountain, the landscape has now completely changed. Strictly speaking, the whole island is a volcano / volcanic.
In fact, there WAS a volcano ! A lesser cone ! Cabeza di Vaca is the name in the Cumbre Vieja general area ! Now, why they named it Cumbre Vieja and no Cabeza di Vaca.....go ask them !!
Also from a native. The video is very good. Except the teneguia mistake. It would be the San Juan in 1949 that formed those coladas that are seen on the empalme road between Las Manchas and Todoque. The video doesn't deserve as much criticism. It's great and thank you very much for sharing it.
I was in Volcano Village, Hawaii, when Mauna Kea erupted on the other side of the world a couple years ago, and it was very similar to this. These islands on both oceans are absolutely beautiful, but one forgets about the fierce forces that created them and are still at work beneath one’s feet.
Yes, thats how islands form. But obviously scientists worry for a reason. For one thing, its unique geology. For another, it has a very steep drop not far from its shorelines. Its the combo thats deadly, and La Palma has been cited as one of the biggest potential threats.
@das das Because Humans are not the smartest animal. Let's build homes in flood plains, under hydro dams, under volcanic range, base/top of cliffs, major faults,.... I understand having agricultural and disposable/mobile infrastructure, but the fools build expensive homes and pay big bucks to be sitting ducks. Oh how they cry " Woe is me " when the obvious happens. Then they expect everybody to pay for their stupidity and high risk taking.
God is much closer than you think!! 1. We have all sinned - Romans 3:23 2. The wages of sin is death - Romans 6:23 3. Must be perfect to go to Heaven - Revelation 21:27 4. Man cannot earn his salvation - Ephesians 2:8-9 5. Christ died for our sins - 2 Corinthians 5:21 6. Only believe - John 3:16, John 6:47 7. You can know you have eternal life - 1 John 5:13 The 'GOOD NEWS' is eternal security!! Romans 1:16 1 Corinthians 15:1-4, saves lost souls. Please get saved in the Lord Jesus Christ, time is running out!!
It is a BS Video and tries to scare people. There is no Indication that the flank will collapse at least the next 10000 Years. Everything else is a lie.
An ex mil on a chan said he dived/ surveyed there sfter 71 eruption only SE tip on bedrock, est trillion tonnes on unstable lava balls now quaking. Elite satanists always tell us, storm Ida ( german for labor), tsunami waters breaking next????
"The eruption of this volcano can cause megatsunami with waves up to 300 m." No it will not, that would require a landslide where half the island goes under the waves - and a VEI 2 eruption is simply not powerful enough to cause anything close to that...
That massive landslide has occurred in the past on La Palma twice before. Taburiente Volcano and Cumbre Nueva Volcanic Ridge. But yes, an event like that has a very low probability.
Dmitry, thank goodness for your comment. There are so many "The Sky Is Falling" alarmists that it makes me want to pull my hair out. Can't stand them! 🤪
@@jordit4379 That massive landslide has occured twice before ? Half the island sliding into the ocean.....twice. Can you give a rough idea of when this happened in the past ?
Exactly, while anything is possible this is just a bunch of alarmists and scaremongers commenting. The base of the island as seen from satellites is extremely wide under the water so its not going to break in half and slide into the ocean. Now if it had the explosive capability of some other places then there is a valid point to be had
@@jamesdean7286 Christian arrogance. That is why I hate religious people, they steps on the opinions of others thinking that they know the truth without thinking that the stupid things they believe were forced to believe even before use the reasoning and logic. Your God condemn the arrogance. 😉
Great job putting this all together! I wondered what the area looked like before. I didn't know that La Palma had pine trees that are fairly tall. Thanks
Pine trees are very common in the Canary Islands, they are special in the way that whenever they get burnt, only the outer layer gets damaged, so that even tho we have fires almost every summer, our forests usually never die out
The video is very good, but the claims of some scientists about the possibility of a megastunami have since been discredited. Volcano Discovery and IGME both have very good scientific data and updates about the state of this eruption. It is considered a small, effussive, and midly explosive Strobolian type with a VEI (volcano explosivity index) of only 2 on a scale of 8. Still, very spectacular at close range, and disastrous for those who have lost homes and livelihoods.
Correct. I'm from these islands and people complain about this but... what do you think volcanoes do? It's not a question of if but when for all of the 8 islands and the sea around.
Amazing to see the beauty of the nature. Praying for our brothers and sisters facing this devastating event of nature. May the Lord Bless all of you and give you strength .🙏 The strenght of all of you are more then the force of the 🌋 volcane. My love to all of you.
Thank you for those beautiful shots pre-eruption. Yes the area has suffered terribly in our terms, but volcanic ash is highly fertile. New life will appear, and will be beautiful again, but different. 😀😀😀
Hi, been there twice in the late 90's and hiked on her ridges, so on her cones. It was terribly difficult to hike because of the heat and drought, sometimes there were pine forests but above the trees nothing than black sand. But she is beautiful and it fills me with sadness that she destroyed so many Palmese people their houses and banana crops. But that is the risk of living on an island made by volcano's, you never know exactly when they wake up and come alive. I felt never unsafe on her ridges strangely but not. Both times I stayed in Los Llanos de Aridane near the big Caldera de Taburiente, on the westside of the island, very friendly people and delicious manchego cheeses and local wines. If airplanes will fly on less Co2 fluids then hopefully I will return because this island is in my heart after such an long time I visited her. For now I wish and pray that the people there are safe and Cumbre Vieja only released some manmade tension and pressure, I don't believe in those fearmonging predictions in this video. Greetings from the Netherlands👋🌞🇳🇱
So sad! I reckon people managed to escape before lava claimed their houses!! Thanks, Doreen, for sharing this most informative video. Your hard work (this video) deserves millions of hits. I've watched few more videos, related to this eruption & YT is recommending millions but this one seems the best, IMHO. Added to a playlist: Nature, environment, climate. Add your channel's name on screen/video. Some people steal & upload those to their channels. Once again, lots of thanks & love from Great Britain. You've got a fan! (Thu 07 Oct 2021 19h49)
@@brunosmith6925 True. I wonder if all these people realize that if there were a god, it would be the same one that caused all this in the first place... They want to have it both ways, because they're not smart enough to understand it...
@@lancer525 que causó todo esto?🤔 Osea me voy a vivir a una Isla volcánica y sobre aviso de q pueda hacer erupción en cualquier momento y como la tierra es tan fértil y me conviene, no importa, total la culpa la tiene Dios El los obligó, qué fácil no? todo Dios todo Dios, que ilógico y por eso Dios no existe porque a mí me conviene pensar así 🙄
@@brunosmith6925 pues tú tampoco existes solo estás en mi imaginación porque yo lo digo y así quiero q sea. No se puede negar lo inegable pero claro todo se crea solito 🍜🍿🍭☕🗼🏥🎠🚓🚦⚓🐕🐫🦏🐿️🐦🐊 a no perdón venimos del chango 🐒 como el chango hace computadoras, crea aviones, etc . Y como seguramente alguna vez en mi vida ví convertirse un insecto 🐝en perro🐕, una ave🐦 en reptil 🐊🤣
Loved this video. The beauty of the island before the eruption, the music and information about the island. I am sure there is still beauty there, but also pain for the people who have lost so much. Hopefully the eruptions and earthquakes will stop soon and people can start to assess their futures and get back to normal.
They will genuinely be okay when they leave there. It's the rest of us who will be impacted by that time. This is no 'drill'. Pray for you and yours to be ready for the water, and much more.
Thank you, Doreen, for this interesting and informative video. I've tracked volcanoes most of my life and remember reading about the 1971 eruption (I was 25 way back then). Sad to see the destruction of such beauty but even sadder to witness the loss of residents' homes and livelihoods. Once again, thank you for this video.
The road at 1:07 is NOT flooded with lava, it is still ok for another 2 kilometers! We were there, at the left side before the bend, when the volcano was one day old. This is Carretera San Nicolas (LP-212), it is blocked around two kilometers later to the south because of lava. :-)
How far is the area blocked now for the public? I don't want to be a disaster tourist, but I want to visit La Palma again as soon as it is safe and convenient for the people (also to add my little contribution to their economy, every bit helps) I hope I can go there in 2022
Great vid Doreen! Fascinating to see the area in it's natural state before hell broke loose and thee aftermath, being able to see remains from last eruption! I'm in the states and nowhere near any volcano so it's hard to even comprehend the emotions people have suffered. Sending big hugs and prayers!
Thank You for sharing. Very nice to see 'before' footage but very sad to see 'after' footage. Hopefully, your video will give the people of La Palma comfort, knowing that, with faith, the Island will return to its former glory. 🙏🌴💔😪🙏🌴
Sad to think that it would be painful memories left behind. That there were sleeping volcanoes situated in La Palma made me ask why was it turned into residential and industrial areas?
Last éruption was 1971, maybe some of these house were there even before the previous eruption. On my island Martinique there was a volcano that erupted over 100 years ago. The city since then has been rebuilt exactly where it happened. It's even worse cause we have an explosive volcano like the one that destroyed Pompei, not lava flow. It killed every single person in that city that used to be the capital.
No it hasn't. It was downplayed. I agree that the chances are tiny but it has happened before in the geological history of the island and will again. Probably in thousands of years
Never under estimate the power of nature just when you least expect it , it happens . We as humans are not smarter than mother nature , always be prepared for every scenario
@@lindadelorme5117 it's more that the chances of that happening are extremely slim so it's a bad idea to keep pushing that message on social media because people are stupid and don't know the science and might think that a tsunami probably will occur any moment now. While in reality it might be a once in the next 30,000 years chance.... Just look at the amounts of religious nutters that flood all these volcano videos with their 'the end is nigh' doomsaying. edit: The recurrence rate of similar collapses is extremely low, about one every 100,000 years or less in the case of the Canary Islands
Excellent video and overview, and history of the isle. It's quite obvious why this devastating event is happening. People should evacuate the isle... of course not easy to leave. So sad..
Cuando leo la opinión de que deberían evacuar la isla creo que los que dicen eso se piensan que La Palma es un islote pequeño y que el volcán esta arrasando con la isla entera. No es así, en La Palma pueden vivir 90000 habitantes y por ahora el volcán esta afectando a unos 7000. Y para los que lean mi comentario y opinen que los palmeros construyeron al lado de un volcán que estudien un poco y vean que cada isla que componen el archipiélago canario son de orígenes volcánicos y puede emerger un volcán en cualquier lugar. La Palma es propensa a volcanes al igual que Japón a los terremotos.
Hay 69 volcanes activos en Estados Unidos de América, y el Parque Nacional de Yelowstone es el cráter de un megavolcån , me pregunto por qué no abandonan su país ante tales riesgos.
Mama's birthing pains. She gives birth to new land, and the gasses into the upper atmosphere revitalize our skies, heal our ozone layer. It's one big circle of life, so beautiful. You created something truly special here. My heartfelt gratitude. 💜🌈🌎🍁🍂
And there will be earthquakes in diverse places. There have been 4,000+ temblors in La Palma since September. These are the beginning of sorrows. Matthew 24:7
@@emmawickman1196 Your statement is very narrow and incomplete. When concentrations of chlorine from human-produced CFCs are high, ozone depletion will result following a volcanic eruption. When levels of chlorine from CFCs are low, volcanic eruptions can actually increase the thickness of the ozone layer. But exactly when this transition happens - from eruptions that deplete ozone to eruptions that increase ozone layer thickness - has long been uncertain. Previous research has put the window of the transition anywhere between 2015 to 2040. Harvard researchers found that volcanic eruptions could result in ozone depletion until 2070 or beyond, despite declining concentrations of human-made CFCs.
Thanks for the excellent video, Doreen. It's heart-rending to see what people have lost. Thankfully, nobody has lost their life yet. The mega tsunami idea has been debunked, as far as scientists can tell. The presenter and producer of one of the original TV programmes about it admitted that the shows were only proposing an idea, to gain ratings, and that it was not a scientifically proven fact. Yes there can be tsunamis from those islands, but even the huge 'Boxing Day' earthquake (Magnitude 9.3, IIRC) in the Indian Ocean, where around 1,300 km of ocean floor shifted by up to 50 metres vertically, produced a much smaller tsunami than the one proposed in the entertainment shows. The biggest tsunami ever recorded had a confirmed wave height of less than 100 metres or so. A change of Magnitude of 1 digit represents a factor of 10 in total power. It's a logarithmic scale, with Magnitude 10 reckoned to be impossible, because the planet would be torn apart completely. So a Magnitude 9.3 earthquake has 2,000 times as much power as a Magnitude 6.0 earthquake. Mag. 6 is the biggest that scientists expect from the La Palma eruption, and most have been less than M 4.0; or about 0.0005% of the power of the Indian Ocean event. Let's hope that this eruption stops soon. There is cause for optimism: Average duration for all 7 properly verified events over the past 700 years on La Palma is about 55 days, ant the last two, in 1949 and 1971, ended after around 4 to 5 weeks.
Thanks We we’re just wondering if there was any videos of the “before”.
3 ปีที่แล้ว +2
The black lava traces at 02:24 are not of the 1979 eruption, which was at the most southern point of La Palma. They are from 1949 eruption, I think El Charco crater.
Dziekuje za prosty informacij i szkoda czowierk nie jest wstan czesznij rozum i ewakulowacz naj szipszi bo dom ratowacz nie jest moszliwe ale swoije ziecze tak! Thanks for sharing this informative film with the world. Just a pitty that some inhabitants still couldnt believe the forcasts or just couldn't leave and evavuate as their haert and souls were left in their properties! Very sad but nothing could hold up natures power and natural event occuring. I hope for all Islanders that they stick together and give every person who's lost all at least some sort of accomodation for as long as the need be. Also the government helps adequately to recompensate the people in need directly and immediately! Now is the real test for all involved to come out and stand together, rich and poor, young and old, the healthy and the sick. May God bless you all!
Just one thing: The place you said ''Traces of the last eruption in 1971'', actually that place is in the eruption in 1949. The eruption in 1971 was at the south, in the Teneguía volcano, close to San Antonio volcano. The video is showing the 1949 lava. Anyways good video !
Excelente vídeo el recorrido la toma completa del volcán y El mapa completo de la isla el volcán y la explicación de las ubicaciones felicitaciones gracias
Hard to believe hubby and I walked in and around those craters,the Taburiente in particular,several years ago,we holidayed there for 8 years,and were due to visit this week. I recognized all the places on the video as I know the island very well. So sad to see the destruction now that has been caused by the volcan.
Isn't it and extraordinary Ireland... I'm so grateful for having stayed there for a month walking in the Caldera and along the ridge to the south... in time the volcano will stop again and Roads pushed through and calm restored.... that's life under a volcano
Just beautiful!! Mother nature has her evil ways of making something so dangerous yet so breathtaking. My heart and sympathy goes out to all the Palmeros who lost everything with the eruption.
I will be happy to retire on La Palma, I would love it there. Lovely climate all year round, nice food. I trust the scientist to warn me in time and am willing to risk losing some earthly possessions in return for the quality of life. Sign me up any day.
The place is beautiful and peaceful..unfortunately nobody can predict when a sleeping volcano will once again wakes up and creates destruction to a once beautiful place..
Amazing to see the clip of LA PALMA island. The popular tourist destination from Scandinavia. I have a swedish freind who love to fly to Canary Island Group and every year. Hope that the Vocano Eruption will end in this month. Take care, everyone. Best wishes from Stockholm - Sweden
It’s so beautiful there-so sad what’s happening…the music selected for this video is wonderful! Thanks for bringing this to us-it feels like a gift, as I’ve been following laPalma every day and night!! Blessing and favor be upon you from Jesus Christ our King.
Bruh... As a La Palma native I felt the need to address this. All good footage and the first two minutes were quite nice, up until the point of the "traces of last eruption" (2:21). At that point the video becomes a bit sensationalist. Those "traces" are from a much older volcano, NOT the 1971 eruption (Teneguía) which happened far to the south of the island. The "mega-tsunami" is not coming for at least a few thousand years (if it even happens at all ;DD). And to answer the title of the video... "what the volcano looked like before the eruption" - it did not. There was no volcano. It was a normal "hill" where anyone could go for a walk up until lava started coming out of the ground and piling up to create the "volcanic cone" you can see now. I understand that the drama of natural disasters attracts views but at least add some accurate explanations. Thank you for reading.
Ok, but explain to me one thing: how can you say in one sentence about volcano and then, in the next sentence, that there was no volcano?
@@jestekrytykie2155 it came out of the ground the whole island is a volcano
@@jestekrytykie2155 On La Palma there are a lot of old volcanic craters to be seen, what is usually called "volcano". The new eruption did not come from such a crater, but the eruption took place on a completely normal slope. During the week-long eruption and the ash rain, a mountain with one or more craters has formed. Before there was no mountain, the landscape has now completely changed. Strictly speaking, the whole island is a volcano / volcanic.
In fact, there WAS a volcano ! A lesser cone ! Cabeza di Vaca is the name in the Cumbre Vieja general area ! Now, why they named it Cumbre Vieja and no Cabeza di Vaca.....go ask them !!
Also from a native. The video is very good. Except the teneguia mistake. It would be the San Juan in 1949 that formed those coladas that are seen on the empalme road between Las Manchas and Todoque.
The video doesn't deserve as much criticism. It's great and thank you very much for sharing it.
I was in Volcano Village, Hawaii, when Mauna Kea erupted on the other side of the world a couple years ago, and it was very similar to this. These islands on both oceans are absolutely beautiful, but one forgets about the fierce forces that created them and are still at work beneath one’s feet.
What a beautiful island, sad to see all them beautiful homes destroyed 😢 nature reclaims what is hers.
when she gets tired of humankind she will roll over on the other side and dream up something else
Lets not forget that the whole island was formed like this, eruption after eruption after eruption.
Yes, thats how islands form. But obviously scientists worry for a reason. For one thing, its unique geology. For another, it has a very steep drop not far from its shorelines. Its the combo thats deadly, and La Palma has been cited as one of the biggest potential threats.
@das das Because Humans are not the smartest animal. Let's build homes in flood plains, under hydro dams, under volcanic range, base/top of cliffs, major faults,.... I understand having agricultural and disposable/mobile infrastructure, but the fools build expensive homes and pay big bucks to be sitting ducks. Oh how they cry " Woe is me " when the obvious happens. Then they expect everybody to pay for their stupidity and high risk taking.
@@redstone1999 thank you that's very well put ! can't feel sorry for these people.
The writing was on the wall ! It has been for some time.
Good video. Thank you. God bless all the people live in La palma
This is the overview I've been looking for.
Thank you!
This is easily the clearest and most informative video about this eruption that I have seen.
Agreed thank you for posting and tasteful music.
God is much closer than you think!!
1. We have all sinned - Romans 3:23
2. The wages of sin is death - Romans 6:23
3. Must be perfect to go to Heaven - Revelation 21:27
4. Man cannot earn his salvation - Ephesians 2:8-9
5. Christ died for our sins - 2 Corinthians 5:21
6. Only believe - John 3:16, John 6:47
7. You can know you have eternal life - 1 John 5:13
The 'GOOD NEWS' is eternal security!! Romans 1:16
1 Corinthians 15:1-4, saves lost souls. Please get saved in the Lord Jesus Christ, time is running out!!
It is a BS Video and tries to scare people. There is no Indication that the flank will collapse at least the next 10000 Years. Everything else is a lie.
An ex mil on a chan said he dived/ surveyed there sfter 71 eruption only SE tip on bedrock, est trillion tonnes on unstable lava balls now quaking. Elite satanists always tell us, storm Ida ( german for labor), tsunami waters breaking next????
"The eruption of this volcano can cause megatsunami with waves up to 300 m."
No it will not, that would require a landslide where half the island goes under the waves - and a VEI 2 eruption is simply not powerful enough to cause anything close to that...
That massive landslide has occurred in the past on La Palma twice before. Taburiente Volcano and Cumbre Nueva Volcanic Ridge. But yes, an event like that has a very low probability.
Dmitry, thank goodness for your comment. There are so many "The Sky Is Falling" alarmists that it makes me want to pull my hair out. Can't stand them! 🤪
@@jordit4379 That massive landslide has occured twice before ? Half the island sliding into the ocean.....twice. Can you give a rough idea of when this happened in the past ?
Exactly, while anything is possible this is just a bunch of alarmists and scaremongers commenting. The base of the island as seen from satellites is extremely wide under the water so its not going to break in half and slide into the ocean. Now if it had the explosive capability of some other places then there is a valid point to be had
With the American goverment anything can happen and not naturally. Lets pray it doesnt happen.
La Palma is a beautiful island, we have been there several times and love it. The most beautiful island of the Canaries
It’s true that island it is a paradise
It's called "la isla bonita", the beautiful island.
@@leonardosanchez5442 all islands of Canarias are a paradise
@@Faytadoramas ese no es cierto del todo, hay unas mucho más bonitas que otras.
My favorite is Gomera, but yes it is beautiful indeed
So sad for those living there. 😢 Mother Earth is so powerful.
Father God created earth..... He is Almighty.
@@hughenadasilva5055 Amen! And this is all part of the end times scenario. JESUS is coming back soon - be ready for HIM, people!
Holy Carbonara is powerful
Im sure god was thinking about the peoples homes he destroyed right?!
@@jamesdean7286 Christian arrogance. That is why I hate religious people, they steps on the opinions of others thinking that they know the truth without thinking that the stupid things they believe were forced to believe even before use the reasoning and logic. Your God condemn the arrogance. 😉
Great job putting this all together! I wondered what the area looked like before. I didn't know that La Palma had pine trees that are fairly tall. Thanks
Pine trees are very common in the Canary Islands, they are special in the way that whenever they get burnt, only the outer layer gets damaged, so that even tho we have fires almost every summer, our forests usually never die out
@@pablo8286 was about to say it lol
If I knew the eruption was going to happen I’d embrace all wild life and had taken them to a safe area. May God bless and protect them all.
@@davidscottblacksmith Yep. Why don't you look it up in the Bible?
The video is very good, but the claims of some scientists about the possibility of a megastunami have since been discredited. Volcano Discovery and IGME both have very good scientific data and updates about the state of this eruption. It is considered a small, effussive, and midly explosive Strobolian type with a VEI (volcano explosivity index) of only 2 on a scale of 8. Still, very spectacular at close range, and disastrous for those who have lost homes and livelihoods.
Best video around showing the scale of what is happening
Thank you for sharing this....La Palma is a beautiful island. 😀🌲⛰🌹
Was.
Living on a active volcano has it's own set of risks. Apparently this time the mountain took what it wanted. Hope it don't take anything else.
Correct. I'm from these islands and people complain about this but... what do you think volcanoes do?
It's not a question of if but when for all of the 8 islands and the sea around.
@@historion same goes with one town in Italyyyy
Amazing to see the beauty of the nature. Praying for our brothers and sisters facing this devastating event of nature. May the Lord Bless all of you and give you strength .🙏
The strenght of all of you are more then the force of the 🌋 volcane. My love to all of you.
Amazing that you recorded this video. 👍.
Thank you for those beautiful shots pre-eruption. Yes the area has suffered terribly in our terms, but volcanic ash is highly fertile. New life will appear, and will be beautiful again, but different. 😀😀😀
Didn't see much growing on the lava and ash from 1971.
Breathtaking!! I can't imagine what it was like when all those volcanoes were going off!!🌞🌞🙏🇺🇸
Hi, been there twice in the late 90's and hiked on her ridges, so on her cones. It was terribly difficult to hike because of the heat and drought, sometimes there were pine forests but above the trees nothing than black sand. But she is beautiful and it fills me with sadness that she destroyed so many Palmese people their houses and banana crops. But that is the risk of living on an island made by volcano's, you never know exactly when they wake up and come alive. I felt never unsafe on her ridges strangely but not. Both times I stayed in Los Llanos de Aridane near the big Caldera de Taburiente, on the westside of the island, very friendly people and delicious manchego cheeses and local wines. If airplanes will fly on less Co2 fluids then hopefully I will return because this island is in my heart after such an long time I visited her. For now I wish and pray that the people there are safe and Cumbre Vieja only released some manmade tension and pressure, I don't believe in those fearmonging predictions in this video. Greetings from the Netherlands👋🌞🇳🇱
Thanks for putting this together so we get a broader perspective.
Thank you taking time,put great clip together.makes it clearer how the island looked before lastest eruption.🌋
I was really looking for a video like this. Thanks a lot. Amazing work.
Great video thanks for sharing. It's nice to see the before pictures.
Wow . This is a history Video Now . You have a gold mine there ! ❣️⭐️🙏💫🙌💛
Thankyou for Sharing 🙏❣️
Julix 🇬🇧
So sad! I reckon people managed to escape before lava claimed their houses!! Thanks, Doreen, for sharing this most informative video. Your hard work (this video) deserves millions of hits. I've watched few more videos, related to this eruption & YT is recommending millions but this one seems the best, IMHO. Added to a playlist: Nature, environment, climate. Add your channel's name on screen/video. Some people steal & upload those to their channels. Once again, lots of thanks & love from Great Britain. You've got a fan!
(Thu 07 Oct 2021 19h49)
What a nice island! May God sprinkle his divine water and helps to recover the beauty of island.
Interesting idea - one small error:
There is no god - never was - never will be.
Otherwise - quite interesting.
Gran Canaria is nicer or La Gomera
@@brunosmith6925 True. I wonder if all these people realize that if there were a god, it would be the same one that caused all this in the first place... They want to have it both ways, because they're not smart enough to understand it...
@@lancer525 que causó todo esto?🤔 Osea me voy a vivir a una Isla volcánica y sobre aviso de q pueda hacer erupción en cualquier momento y como la tierra es tan fértil y me conviene, no importa, total la culpa la tiene Dios El los obligó, qué fácil no? todo Dios todo Dios, que ilógico y por eso Dios no existe porque a mí me conviene pensar así 🙄
@@brunosmith6925 pues tú tampoco existes solo estás en mi imaginación porque yo lo digo y así quiero q sea. No se puede negar lo inegable pero claro todo se crea solito 🍜🍿🍭☕🗼🏥🎠🚓🚦⚓🐕🐫🦏🐿️🐦🐊 a no perdón venimos del chango 🐒 como el chango hace computadoras, crea aviones, etc . Y como seguramente alguna vez en mi vida ví convertirse un insecto 🐝en perro🐕, una ave🐦 en reptil 🐊🤣
Thank you🙏🌹 for the great nice foto
Loved this video. The beauty of the island before the eruption, the music and information about the island. I am sure there is still beauty there, but also pain for the people who have lost so much. Hopefully the eruptions and earthquakes will stop soon and people can start to assess their futures and get back to normal.
Hi you're 💯right but you missed something.. It's also pain for animals too😢
Thank you. Sydney, Australia
I'm thinking that if you can see a volcano from your house, your too close
Great footage. Thank you for sharing it with us. I'm so sorry this had to happen this generation.
This generation?
Heel veel STERKE Doreen, misschien groeit er ooit weer zoiets moois.
Also, my sympathy to those who lost their homes in this natural disaster. I pray and hope you all are okay there.
From you
They will genuinely be okay when they leave there. It's the rest of us who will be impacted by that time. This is no 'drill'. Pray for you and yours to be ready for the water, and much more.
The humans are fine, but their animals are not.......
I really enjoyed this, thank you for sharing with the world, great video!
Thanks for sharing 🙏❤️
So beautifully made, and wonderfully fitting music. Thank you!
Thank you for this video explaining the ins and outs about this volcano and its eruption.
Thank you, Doreen, for this interesting and informative video. I've tracked volcanoes most of my life and remember reading about the 1971 eruption (I was 25 way back then). Sad to see the destruction of such beauty but even sadder to witness the loss of residents' homes and livelihoods. Once again, thank you for this video.
The road at 1:07 is NOT flooded with lava, it is still ok for another 2 kilometers! We were there, at the left side before the bend, when the volcano was one day old. This is Carretera San Nicolas (LP-212), it is blocked around two kilometers later to the south because of lava. :-)
How far is the area blocked now for the public? I don't want to be a disaster tourist, but I want to visit La Palma again as soon as it is safe and convenient for the people (also to add my little contribution to their economy, every bit helps) I hope I can go there in 2022
We watched the Orange building at 1:15 get surrounded by lava this weekend. It's in multiple clips online.
Great vid Doreen! Fascinating to see the area in it's natural state before hell broke loose and thee aftermath, being able to see remains from last eruption! I'm in the states and nowhere near any volcano so it's hard to even comprehend the emotions people have suffered. Sending big hugs and prayers!
У Вас есть йелоустоун))) Чем не 🌋?
Did you forget our (USA) own Mt. St. Helen's?
Wow 😔🙏❤️ amazing video🙌
Well done on this post! Very informative. :)
Thank You for sharing. Very nice to see 'before' footage but very sad to see 'after' footage. Hopefully, your video will give the people of La Palma comfort, knowing that, with faith, the Island will return to its former glory. 🙏🌴💔😪🙏🌴
Sad to think that it would be painful memories left behind. That there were sleeping volcanoes situated in La Palma made me ask why was it turned into residential and industrial areas?
Last éruption was 1971, maybe some of these house were there even before the previous eruption.
On my island Martinique there was a volcano that erupted over 100 years ago. The city since then has been rebuilt exactly where it happened.
It's even worse cause we have an explosive volcano like the one that destroyed Pompei, not lava flow. It killed every single person in that city that used to be the capital.
Knowing that why do we build in areas that are dangerous ? Not just volcanoes but flood areas and the like . It's like we never learn from the past.
Exactly how I remember it so beautiful walking around those cones towards the south of the island.... thank you for sharing
People really need to stop with the mega tsunami stuff. It’s been thoroughly debunked.
Yes, it has!
No it hasn't. It was downplayed. I agree that the chances are tiny but it has happened before in the geological history of the island and will again. Probably in thousands of years
Never under estimate the power of nature just when you least expect it , it happens . We as humans are not smarter than mother nature , always be prepared for every scenario
Nice video, but could've done without the BS mega tsunami fallacy. Stand Strong La Palma!
Thank you.
Why is it a fallacy? Is there NOT a 9 mile crack running along the Western flank that could collapse into the ocean? Were we misinformed?
@@lindadelorme5117 it's more that the chances of that happening are extremely slim so it's a bad idea to keep pushing that message on social media because people are stupid and don't know the science and might think that a tsunami probably will occur any moment now. While in reality it might be a once in the next 30,000 years chance.... Just look at the amounts of religious nutters that flood all these volcano videos with their 'the end is nigh' doomsaying.
edit: The recurrence rate of similar collapses is extremely low, about one every 100,000 years or less in the case of the Canary Islands
Thank you for this video.
Thanks for the video
This is just so heartbreaking to see disrupted so many lives etc.
There just seems no let up at all
That was really interesting thank you for that! 👍👍🇬🇧
Excellent video and overview, and history of the isle. It's quite obvious why this devastating event is happening. People should evacuate the isle... of course not easy to leave. So sad..
I guess they should evacuate Hawaii as well and bring the people to other states, they also have some eruption going on
Cuando leo la opinión de que deberían evacuar la isla creo que los que dicen eso se piensan que La Palma es un islote pequeño y que el volcán esta arrasando con la isla entera. No es así, en La Palma pueden vivir 90000 habitantes y por ahora el volcán esta afectando a unos 7000.
Y para los que lean mi comentario y opinen que los palmeros construyeron al lado de un volcán que estudien un poco y vean que cada isla que componen el archipiélago canario son de orígenes volcánicos y puede emerger un volcán en cualquier lugar. La Palma es propensa a volcanes al igual que Japón a los terremotos.
Oh get a grip. Nobody has died. The people know what they're up against. It will settle down and life will get back to normal.
Hay 69 volcanes activos en Estados Unidos de América, y el Parque Nacional de Yelowstone es el cráter de un megavolcån , me pregunto por qué no abandonan su país ante tales riesgos.
Cool Video!
but a small correction:
2:22 those are the traces of the 1949 erution, the 1971 one can be seen at 3:28
wow, I never knew the area stays black for so long, I thought weeds and then bushes would populate the area within a decade or two
Thanks for this!
Mama's birthing pains. She gives birth to new land, and the gasses into the upper atmosphere revitalize our skies, heal our ozone layer. It's one big circle of life, so beautiful. You created something truly special here. My heartfelt gratitude. 💜🌈🌎🍁🍂
And there will be earthquakes in diverse places. There have been 4,000+ temblors in La Palma since September. These are the beginning of sorrows. Matthew 24:7
Maybe I misunderstood your comment but you do know that volcanic eruptions is bad for the ozone layer?
@@emmawickman1196 Your statement is very narrow and incomplete. When concentrations of chlorine from human-produced CFCs are high, ozone depletion will result following a volcanic eruption. When levels of chlorine from CFCs are low, volcanic eruptions can actually increase the thickness of the ozone layer. But exactly when this transition happens - from eruptions that deplete ozone to eruptions that increase ozone layer thickness - has long been uncertain. Previous research has put the window of the transition anywhere between 2015 to 2040.
Harvard researchers found that volcanic eruptions could result in ozone depletion until 2070 or beyond, despite declining concentrations of human-made CFCs.
Excellent report. Thanks Doreen.
Thanks for the excellent video, Doreen. It's heart-rending to see what people have lost. Thankfully, nobody has lost their life yet.
The mega tsunami idea has been debunked, as far as scientists can tell. The presenter and producer of one of the original TV programmes about it admitted that the shows were only proposing an idea, to gain ratings, and that it was not a scientifically proven fact.
Yes there can be tsunamis from those islands, but even the huge 'Boxing Day' earthquake (Magnitude 9.3, IIRC) in the Indian Ocean, where around 1,300 km of ocean floor shifted by up to 50 metres vertically, produced a much smaller tsunami than the one proposed in the entertainment shows.
The biggest tsunami ever recorded had a confirmed wave height of less than 100 metres or so.
A change of Magnitude of 1 digit represents a factor of 10 in total power. It's a logarithmic scale, with Magnitude 10 reckoned to be impossible, because the planet would be torn apart completely.
So a Magnitude 9.3 earthquake has 2,000 times as much power as a Magnitude 6.0 earthquake. Mag. 6 is the biggest that scientists expect from the La Palma eruption, and most have been less than M 4.0; or about 0.0005% of the power of the Indian Ocean event.
Let's hope that this eruption stops soon. There is cause for optimism: Average duration for all 7 properly verified events over the past 700 years on La Palma is about 55 days, ant the last two, in 1949 and 1971, ended after around 4 to 5 weeks.
Thanks We we’re just wondering if there was any videos of the “before”.
The black lava traces at 02:24 are not of the 1979 eruption, which was at the most southern point of La Palma. They are from 1949 eruption, I think El Charco crater.
Dziekuje za prosty informacij i szkoda czowierk nie jest wstan czesznij rozum i ewakulowacz naj szipszi bo dom ratowacz nie jest moszliwe ale swoije ziecze tak!
Thanks for sharing this informative film with the world. Just a pitty that some inhabitants still couldnt believe the forcasts or just couldn't leave and evavuate as their haert and souls were left in their properties! Very sad but nothing could hold up natures power and natural event occuring. I hope for all Islanders that they stick together and give every person who's lost all at least some sort of accomodation for as long as the need be. Also the government helps adequately to recompensate the people in need directly and immediately!
Now is the real test for all involved to come out and stand together, rich and poor, young and old, the healthy and the sick.
May God bless you all!
A wonderful overview of the eruption. Thanks!
Gracias por compartir estas imágenes . Bendiciones y protección divina para la isla de la Palma y los palmeros.
Very good video. Thanks.
Just one thing: The place you said ''Traces of the last eruption in 1971'', actually that place is in the eruption in 1949. The eruption in 1971 was at the south, in the Teneguía volcano, close to San Antonio volcano. The video is showing the 1949 lava. Anyways good video !
Thanks. Beautiful😍
It a besutiful panoramic views, Doreen👍
Wow, those gorgeous pines…🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲
Excelente vídeo el recorrido la toma completa del volcán y El mapa completo de la isla el volcán y la explicación de las ubicaciones felicitaciones gracias
perdona espania
Hard to believe hubby and I walked in and around those craters,the Taburiente in particular,several years ago,we holidayed there for 8 years,and were due to visit this week. I recognized all the places on the video as I know the island very well. So sad to see the destruction now that has been caused by the volcan.
Isn't it and extraordinary Ireland... I'm so grateful for having stayed there for a month walking in the Caldera and along the ridge to the south... in time the volcano will stop again and Roads pushed through and calm restored.... that's life under a volcano
Everything there was caused by the volcano. If it wasnt for the volcano,there wouldnt even be a "there"
Wow... thanks for sharing
Muchas gracias por el vídeo.
De parte de un palmero.
La isla te espera si quieres volcer a visitarla y si no tienes miedo. 😁
Very good video congratulation!
Nice Video from Before the Volcanic Eruption
Amazing video
Thxs Doreen❤
Just beautiful!! Mother nature has her evil ways of making something so dangerous yet so breathtaking. My heart and sympathy goes out to all the Palmeros who lost everything with the eruption.
2:22 shows the warning signs.. but greed always wins over common sense
Prayers for those people who live there. thank you for posting this.
It's a blessing to have a larger island and secure what you have as well in the long term .
Excelente cronología. Gracias.
They knew this would happen one day....sad to see the loss of homes though
Nice video.
Informative. Great video. Then very sad to see.
Thank you
Por que sera que septiembre siempre pasan tragedias que raro 19 de setiembre ase erupción. 19 de setiembre.1985 Terremoto en México
when you see it from above the idea of the "landslide megatsunami" actually seems extremely implausible.
Very helpful! 🤩
Note to self: Don't live next to a volcano.
When Almighty God chooses to destroy, it matters not where you have built. The Bible says it will be worse than in the days of Sodom and Gomorrah.
I will be happy to retire on La Palma, I would love it there. Lovely climate all year round, nice food. I trust the scientist to warn me in time and am willing to risk losing some earthly possessions in return for the quality of life. Sign me up any day.
Thank you for this.
The place is beautiful and peaceful..unfortunately nobody can predict when a sleeping volcano will once again wakes up and creates destruction to a once beautiful place..
Except it wasn't a sleeping volcano, it was an active one. Just like Teide and other Canary island volcanoes.
@Cpt BEARDless right?! People forget nature was here before them and will be long after they've gone
New subscriber. Have a great weekend
Amazing to see the clip of LA PALMA island. The popular tourist destination from Scandinavia. I have a swedish freind who love to fly to Canary Island Group and every year. Hope that the Vocano Eruption will end in this month. Take care, everyone.
Best wishes from Stockholm - Sweden
Very good! 73 from Brasil!!!
Dziękujemy :)
Thxs...I'll subscribe to your channel 👋😊🎩
2:22 These are traces from the eruption of Volcán San Juan on 1949, not from Teneguía on 1971.
How many year since the last eruption?
Me encanta este video el poder ver el antes y el despues
It’s so beautiful there-so sad what’s happening…the music selected for this video is wonderful! Thanks for bringing this to us-it feels like a gift, as I’ve been following laPalma every day and night!! Blessing and favor be upon you from Jesus Christ our King.