Thanks for stopping by and watching a video that’s out of the norm. As I continue to grow as a filmmaker and test the boundaries of my abilities, I want to thank you all for dealing with the sporadic content. We will continue to weed out the noise and hate by producing shorts like these and building that loyal community. I really do remember majority of the names in the comment section and I appreciate every one of you. So as the video states... THANK YOU.
Swhiskey I find that if you make stuff about things you are interested in, people will love it because of your passion. Your videos seem to tick a a lot of boxes for me. You might like Nick Zenter from Central Washington University? He makes videos all about the Geology of Washington. You guys may have a lot to talk about. th-cam.com/video/oSSxdogrv1s/w-d-xo.html here is a link to his channel.
It was diff from the norm yes, but intresting. As you build a reputation we trust you won't waste our time. Even if it's not something we may like afterwards, theres a still a degree of trust that it was worthy subject. I did it enjoy it and would watch more along similar subject lines. Thanks again. p.s. lol , u hearted my dumb sarcastic comment where I wooted for being second post ;p I was making fun of people who post getting all excited over being first =)
Really fantastic with your use of the drone. You did very well, i do appreciate your work and look forward to more of the scablands and other areas that were affected by the impact and water distribution over Washington and Canada. I wonder what type of video you could produce together with Randall Carlson. Your view and his words would be a powerful presentation, that could capture many interest. Thank you for your work.
For the latest updates on the YDB impact events I'd recommend anyone to look at Antonio Zamora's work on his TH-cam channel. The Greenland impact at Hiawatha crater was probably a smaller outlier to the main impact directly into the Great Lakes at Saginaw Bay, the ice ejecta curtain spread out to South Carolina and Nebraska, millions of baseball stadium sized ice boulders in a saturation bombardment that created every Carolina Bay in a ten minute period... Epic prehistory. 12895 BP was a very very bad day
Huh, I just spent a month working up in Spokompton. It's amazing watching the geography change in the east once you get over Stevens Pass, it really changes once you get near Vantage. That flood is hard to even comprehend, it's impossible to imagine a 600 foot tall wave of water washing over the land...
Agreed- I believe the singular superflood from a comet being responsible for the entire gorge and scablands has been disproven. (Not saying it didn't happen, it's just not responsible for the creation of the gorge). The impact of a comet causing the dryas and floods is a hypothesis, the missoula megafloods are a theory. This even may have occurred but it is without dispute that dozens, if not hundreds of ice dam breaks occurred over thousands of years between 17,000 and 12,000 years ago.
Jimmy, this information is JUST now being taken seriously. It has been around for decades and was scoffed at until about 5 years ago. Great job getting this important information out. We must reeducate the world about our planets true history. Thank you!
YEAH, ALSO ABOUT HUMAN HISTORY BEING MILLIONS OF YEARS OLD...WE JUST FORGOT TO TAKE NOTES BUT WE DID LEAVE HUNDREDS OF MEGALITHIC SITES AROUND THE PLANET TO SHOW THAT THERE WAS A 'GLOBAL' CIVILIZATION THAT ALL USED 'THE PYRAMID' FOR SOMETHING MIND BLOWING...
I know this post is old, but the greenland impact crater has recently been dated back to 58 million years ago. The impact hypothesis has even less credibility than it previously did.
What info you talking about was scoffed at? the floods have been studied and documented for ages, the impact craters are discovered recently, but as far as i know have nothing to do with that flood. It feels like there is a lot of inaccurate information in this video, things stuck together that dont belong together etc.
Also, this didnt just flood Oregon, this flood emptied into both the East Coast, the West Coast, and into the Gulf of Mexico. This flood was MASSIVE. Meltwater Pulse B was even larger, and likely impacted the ice sheet in Siberia. This is why there are stories of The Great Flood/Noah's Flood from EVERY single culture and people around the entire world.
Thanks to the geologists, we think that all living things on our planet have the most to fear from an asteroid impact. But when we look at the many horizontal layers that we find everywhere on our planet, we clearly see the effect of a repeating cataclysm. These disasters create a terrible natural cataclysm with much flooding.These disasters are mentioned in ancient books like the Mahabharata from India and the Popol Vuh from the Maya and in the bible. They tell us about a cycle of seven disasters. Certainly, a cycle of regularly recurring global disasters cannot be caused by asteroid impacts. The only possible cause is another celestial body, a planet, orbiting our sun in an eccentric orbit. Then it is close to the sun for a short period and after the crossing at a very high speed it disappears into the universe for a long time. Planet 9 exists, but it seems invisible. To learn much more about the recurring flood cycle, the re-creation of civilizations and its timeline and ancient high technology, read the e-book: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". It can be read on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: invisible nibiru 9
If only humans hadn't have found the red flower those dams never would've busted. Darn it. This also explains what happened to the clovis people and their anthropogenic warming of the climate. Luckily those who came approximately 50,000 years ago made it to South America before the dam busted.
@@21LAZgoo Well, imagine an (ice)wall holding back that much water suddenly caving in. I can imqgine the force might have felt like earthquakes depending on where you'd be.
You will never see a video like this in school. High school college or any school. That’s because this information is not being taught. What’s being taught is the old academic line “one grain of sand and one drop of water at a time.“ that archaic type of geologic thought is still the norm in academia. But anybody with eyes to see and a brain to think can see that is bull. We owe a debt of gratitude to the courageous men and women who are standing up to this archaic line of thinking
Love the Channeled Scablands. It's dry but so many pretty native plants and animals. Most of us have made little dams in the driveway as kids and watched the water make mini channeled scablands when the little dams fail. You would love "Nick on the Rocks" (Nick Zentner) He's a geologist at Central Wa U. He gives amazing lectures on geology. Thank you for the cool video, really enjoying your channel.
This guy does not get enough recognition for the quality of his videos. Just an FYI you have an impersonator living in WI. Fooled me, he had me rubber necking in the parking lot.
@@swirvinbirds1971 I'm talking about his videography. I'm not exactly sure what your talking about, kind of a blanket statement you made. I'm willing to bet you have made some false statements in your life as well, i know i have. No one is perfect and no one knows everything, that's what growing is all about.
You will prosper in your career. You just get it. While most think they're just watching some random video , there are others who will be amazed and even astonished with your understanding of perception. Legend in the making. Thanks for taking me on an amazing journey throughout history whilst sitting in my living room.
Very very cool filming work. Im an archaeologist by achooling and there are 2 huge- up to 13 floods in eastern Washington, however the atmospheric air blast hypothesis is very new and has a ton of problems in with it. The largest Flood occured after this region was populated for at least 2k years- be it the inside passage or coastal route- the Clovis era was in effect during the massive Missoula Floods. Currently we know that a massive ice damn broke and refroze...or clogged and then created the areas you showed somewhat. However the deep carving was likely due to retreating ice shelves and not thenflood (in fact it is postulated that the flood created the even more barren scab lands near pot holes state park, ritzville and Sprauge... 500 to 800 foot tall waves crashed to the ocean and definently moved rock and scoured the soil- however some believe that this was glacial till- pushed aside up into the parallel valleys and even Wenatchee. I would love to give you some resources that are geologically correct and leave the conjecture or "history channel" effect of a huge minority believing in Hiawatha impacting the Pacific northwest...look no farther than then Tunguska event of 1919(ish?) To see why we would be finding blast micro diamonds, carboniferous traces of debris like the KP boundary after the Dinos. Seriously, if you wanna see epic destruction, you need to go farther east. Then dry falls, potholes, and scablands along with the ancient path of the Columbia river. Not to say your theory is 100% incorrect - but 97% of surveyed scientists believe in what im explaining ....still huuuge and likley one of the largest- non celestial caused floods. This is a very uncertain event. filming and editing. The cataracts also flooded before the Grand Coulee damn was installed. So look at GIS mapping of 1920s Washington and draw your own conclusions- that's all I would ask of you . Cheers and if you want confirmed geological info and history, im more than happy too share my knowledge and any resources i can point you towards
glacial till and scraping would not account for a ton of the hydrodynamic features that are present . you were schooled by an old wave of educators set in their ways. science has never been about consensus . as more people dive in, using personal drones with high def imagery , more data will emerge and theories developed. i suspect the old theories will eventually die off. time will tell.
I’m missing the connection from the meteor impact in Greenland and the flooding in Montana. Those are really far away from each other. I get the ice dam theory but don’t think you need an impact to create the lake. Dam up any water source and you’ll eventually get a huge lake.
I love it! Keep more of these coming! Your skills as a filmmaker are outgrowing your usual topic. I have watched countless documentaries on such subjects, but your talent as filmographer really pulled me into the subject. I applaud you for this. Keep up the great work.
Omg this was so good. Keep up the great work sir, really enjoy myself everytime I'm on your channel, be it fishes, digging for clams, unboxings,etc. Totally cool!😁
Dude. DUDE! Your production level is through the roof on this one. You just keep getting better by leaps and bounds. I'm so glad I got to meet you in Dallas and shake your hand. Love your videos and look forward to watching your work on National Geographic and the BBC some day. For real.
I thought I knew but now I know for sure. In only 8 minutes( well done Jimmy) very nice film,I think you reach more people with this one in stead of all the docs that last for hours. Thanks Jimmy,I like it a Lott.
If you really want to know the real story about this, read Glacial Lake Missoula and its Humongous Floods. This book is the most comprehensive account of these floods.
The supposed link between an impact crater in Greenland and glacial Lake Missoula is sketchy at best. There were at least 40 flood events (documented) that flooded the channeled scablands in eastern Washington during the Pleistocene. Nice drone shots though.
Swhiskey- This is amazing. Thanks for taking the time to put this together. I enjoyed it and learned something interesting. If some documentary or nature series production company doesn't snatch you up, they're missing out!
Thank you so much Kaimuki! Always love doing different things and bringing you guys great quality. I’m very happy you watched this one though and glad you enjoyed.
Thank you as a resident of WA I appreciate you taking the time to make this content. This topic has been a fascination of mine for the past couple years and when I found out such important history occurred so close to home my intrest has only grown and I hope to visit these places myself someday
After watching this, I heard a voice in the background saying "LEVEL UP!" I thoroughly enjoyed this vid since I love anything ancient history. Good job Jimmy and thanks for sharing.
Two of my favorite fellas make a wonderful video! Joel is possibly my favorite human being outside my family, you chose the perfect person to collab with. Next time get him in video PLEASE, the fans crave it.
At 2:46 in, sorry, Glacial Lake Missoula and its' many floods has no connection to the Greenland impact crater. I happen to live in MIssoula and the numerous lake shorelines show the repeated filling and draining of many floods. Here's an extract from Wikipedia on the Hiawatha impact crater (note the last sentence): "A 2022 study using argon-argon dating combined with uranium-lead dating of shocked zircon crystals in impact melt rocks found in outwash less than 10 km downstream of the glacier yielded an age of 57.99 ± 0.54 million years ago, during the late Paleocene.[8][7] This put an end to speculation by advocates of the controversial Younger Dryas impact hypothesis.[6][9][10] that it was formed by an impact as recently as ~12,800 years ago." It would be lovely to find more support for a the comet caused Younger Dryas event, perhaps a "smoking gun" crater IS under Greenland's remaining ice cap - but even if it was found that would be difficult to link that one time event to the many Missoula Floods (regardless of exactly how many floods).
Unable to compute how a meteor strike in Greenland would great a water flow that would not find release from under the glacial ice for many thousands of kilometers until it made its way to northern Idaho. If you are implying that the meteor strike would cause enough warming to melt the glaciers that does not compute either, since significant impacts would throw huge amounts of dust and such into the atmosphere, which causes the suns energy to be reflected away and result in cooling. Geologists have come to believe the Scablands of Washington and northern Idaho were flooded a number of times over thousands of years by sudden releases of melting glacial ice waters. Your report does not seem to add up.
yes, repeated floods with ice dams and sudden releases. The meteor strike documented at 12.9 kya has unknown location, but it coincides with the change in Lake Agassiz draining to the South to draining to the East. Idk if there's a scabland flood dating to 12.9 +/- 0.1 kya
The connection between the Hiawatha crater water pulse and water entering Lake Missoula sounds rather sketchy. Do you have any documentation or links that talk about this?
Comet striking Greenland creates flood waters in central Washington from Glacial Lake Missoula? Please make the connection I if there is one. Thank you!
I love thissss, prehistoric stuff is also a massive interest of mine and im glad to see I'm not the only one in the fish community to love this history
The asteroid probably didn't have anything to do with this flooding. For one, dating is now putting it much too old for what occured in WA. Snip: Fragments of charcoal up to about 2 cm (0.79 in) in size that were recovered directly from the ice at the tip of the Hiawatha Glacier, where the glacial outwash containing sand interpreted to be either impact melt or shocked metamorphite was collected, yielded an age greater than 43,500 BP. This result was interpreted as an effect of "thermal degradation"; the true age is estimated to be 3-2.4 Ma.[9]". You're correct that the ice dam in Idaho did, however it failed over 40 times not just once. The reason we know this is because there are over 40 different rythemite deposits of soil found in this area from the many floods and many have volcanic ash deposited between them meaning the asteroid theory for the flooding has almost zero chance of being true. Very nice presentation however. .It's explained nicely in this video: th-cam.com/video/TgevbfaQLBE/w-d-xo.html
You are missing one important part of known science, there were dozens of floods from Lake Missoula and one major flood from Lake Bonneville. The impact hypothisis does not fit the story of the known science of the Scablands Floodplain.
You were born to be behind a camera and to create images that most people would never experience. But we get to with your amazing talent. I never knew I wanted to know more about the Earth's biggest flood until I watched this video. Keep expanding our minds Jimmy!
Problem with your impact crater hypothesis is that the geological evidence shows that theses floods in eastern Washington occurred more than once . Evidence for different flood episodes is noticeable by the layering of erosion levels on the cliff edges. The reason the soil is still good at the upper elevations is because the floods didn't scour the top soil away . I would suggest consulting a local geologist instead of someone in New Zealand who has never physically researched the area being questioned .
You need to check in with Nick Zentner at Central Washington University. According to geologic rock dating methods and the geologic evidence on the ground, between 25,000 years ago and 13,000 years ago, there were at least 60 catastrophic floods in that area, the Columbia Basin, and none of them were triggered by an Impact. Glacial Lake Columbia and Glacial Lake Missoula were both involved, as well as several floods coming down the valleys from the north. Read up on J. Harlan Bretts' work. Also look at Bruce Babcock's drone footage. Yes, there were many huge floods in the Pacific Northwest, but they were not caused by, or accentuated by Randall Carlson's popular Younger Dryas Greenland asteroid impact.
Agree. The YD impact is associated with St. Lawrence river flows, not Washington State to my knowledge. Around 12.9 kya there was: an impact, global fires, and a change in Lake Agassiz drainage from south to east -- which submerged the northern Gulf Stream, chilling the climate for 1200 years.
This was absolutely amazing in every aspect. I just felt like I was watching something on like Discovery channel or National Geographic ot something. You know... I used to play in a sand box in my yard as a kid, and I loved running the water hose and watching the water carve its path through the sand. Those same marks are what I can just make out with the birds eye view... that is a massive and certainly unfathomable scale. It is truly awe-inspiring to know something of that scale had happened and the evidence still remains as proof. Spectacular.
🥰🥰 There will be a part 2 next month. Thank you for the wonderful comment and scaling things to a perspective. Remember building sand tunnels on the beach side and letting the water run through them.. :)
OK, here’s the bad news. This may have been caused by planet nine, which probably orbits earth every 14,000 years, Disturbing orbits of objects in the solar system, causeing orbital bombardment of earth. This may be the global reset button.
Do you just make this stuff up? I have a degree in Geology, I've studied several papers about the Missoula flood. A flood caused by a meteor impact in Greenland filling Lake Missoula is a stretch of the imagination.
Nova, in their video 'Mystery of the Megaflood', never mentioned any meteor impact. They explained how did the ice dam break. They also told that this incident took place time and again.
Correct. Glacial Lake Missoula was caused when the Purcell Trench Lobe of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet came down into northern Idaho and blocked the Clark Fork River. The estimate is that the ice dam broke between 40-80 times over thousands of years.
That's the point. That meteor impact took place millions of years earlier and hence couldn't have any influence on this episode of series of megafloods that were caused by ice dam breaks only.
This winegrower says this is a load of inaccuracy. My farm soil was deposited by dozens of floods. My base soil is granitic and basaltic. Brought by floods not wind. Unless there was wind strong enough to move multi ton granite boulders from British Columbia.
I theorize the entire great lakes, and Hudson's Bay itself were formed during the Younger Dryas ever. The amount of water in those lakes has to be from Glacial melt, and the amount of water that was said to sweep the world couldn't have just come from the Greenland ice sheet, it also came from the Laurentide ice sheet. Imagine the amount of glacial melt if Hudson's Bay and the Great lakes were also formed from this impact. I tried looking back into Inuit history and it seems like it starts 5000-6000~ years ago. Is it possible there have been multiple impacts from the same "meteoric system"?
I see one small problem with your theory of the cause of the melting of the ice sheets. The asteroid impacts in Greenland you call out as being the cause of climate shift 13,000 years ago are actually dated to 58 million years ago. Seems like quite a long time for cause and effect...
Randal & Graham brought me here Amazing work mate i often wonder about what the ocean also hides from us as in the evidence of scars that provide us with a glimpse into the true power of the universe . I mean it propels a rock through space at speeds our minds cant quite understand and when they crash into our planet they cause a level of destruction that leaves evidence for us to observe thousands of years later The whole where are the tools and why are there no pictures on cave walls of tools or machines used even in hyroglifics i dont see these so my mind wander off thinking where could they be i mean such great tools must of been viewed as things of wonder so where are they why cant we find evidence of them i think that most are destroyed by the mentioned impact strikes and disasters that follow them Thank you again love when passion for such subjects ignites my need and want for more information in those subjects Subbed !
how did water from greenland ever get to Missoula Montana? Woudnt it have to cross the Davis Strait (ocean water) and then cross half of North America and over the Rocky Mountains to the Columbia River basin? Impossible.
@@BlGGESTBROTHER If I was an earth science teacher I may have caught on to that. As a biology teacher, presenting hypotheses that have problems can be an excellent teaching tool. Cheers, Chris
@@Cgraseck Sorry, my comment was pretty snarky. I don't think there's anything wrong with presenting hypotheses so long as you explained that it was just an educated guess at this point without the necessary evidence to be widely accepted. Other competing hypothesis could be presented as well to give the students a more unbiased understanding of the subject.
@@BlGGESTBROTHER No worries. I teach in a religious school so I’m very careful to explain that science seeks to explain with the best evidence available, That it grows and changes with our measurement abilities and that it doesn’t give us ultimate truths.
Unfortunately not. This video was very polarizing to a lot of people. That was not my intent. I’ve been busy with other projects and unfortunately a series for this isn’t coming anytime soon. Sincerely appreciate your support and view. :)
Very nice film, I thought I knew but now I know for sure,in only 8 minutes, very well captured,very watchable. I bet this film could get everyone's attention in stead of the hours long documentary s. Well done Jimmy and thanks
Thanks for stopping by and watching a video that’s out of the norm. As I continue to grow as a filmmaker and test the boundaries of my abilities, I want to thank you all for dealing with the sporadic content. We will continue to weed out the noise and hate by producing shorts like these and building that loyal community. I really do remember majority of the names in the comment section and I appreciate every one of you. So as the video states... THANK YOU.
Swhiskey I find that if you make stuff about things you are interested in, people will love it because of your passion. Your videos seem to tick a a lot of boxes for me.
You might like Nick Zenter from Central Washington University? He makes videos all about the Geology of Washington. You guys may have a lot to talk about. th-cam.com/video/oSSxdogrv1s/w-d-xo.html here is a link to his channel.
It was diff from the norm yes, but intresting. As you build a reputation we trust you won't waste our time. Even if it's not something we may like afterwards, theres a still a degree of trust that it was worthy subject.
I did it enjoy it and would watch more along similar subject lines.
Thanks again.
p.s. lol , u hearted my dumb sarcastic comment where I wooted for being second post ;p I was making fun of people who post getting all excited over being first =)
💯
Really fantastic with your use of the drone. You did very well, i do appreciate your work and look forward to more of the scablands and other areas that were affected by the impact and water distribution over Washington and Canada. I wonder what type of video you could produce together with Randall Carlson. Your view and his words would be a powerful presentation, that could capture many interest. Thank you for your work.
For the latest updates on the YDB impact events I'd recommend anyone to look at Antonio Zamora's work on his TH-cam channel. The Greenland impact at Hiawatha crater was probably a smaller outlier to the main impact directly into the Great Lakes at Saginaw Bay, the ice ejecta curtain spread out to South Carolina and Nebraska, millions of baseball stadium sized ice boulders in a saturation bombardment that created every Carolina Bay in a ten minute period... Epic prehistory. 12895 BP was a very very bad day
I live in Spokane. Whenever I travel, i always look for signs of the Missoula flood. So amazing to see the effects.
Huh, I just spent a month working up in Spokompton. It's amazing watching the geography change in the east once you get over Stevens Pass, it really changes once you get near Vantage. That flood is hard to even comprehend, it's impossible to imagine a 600 foot tall wave of water washing over the land...
I try to drive through Highway 2 from Wenatchee when I head East to Spokane, so much more scenic and less boring than I-90
Speechless. This is incredible quality. It looks like it should be on an IMAX screen.
❤️
Agreed .. I’d gladly fund it. Expand it .. tell the whole story .. noice
I have seen the multiple shorelines and sediment deposits from the Glacial Lake Missoula floods. There were many floods, not just one.
Agreed- I believe the singular superflood from a comet being responsible for the entire gorge and scablands has been disproven. (Not saying it didn't happen, it's just not responsible for the creation of the gorge). The impact of a comet causing the dryas and floods is a hypothesis, the missoula megafloods are a theory.
This even may have occurred but it is without dispute that dozens, if not hundreds of ice dam breaks occurred over thousands of years between 17,000 and 12,000 years ago.
Jimmy, this information is JUST now being taken seriously. It has been around for decades and was scoffed at until about 5 years ago. Great job getting this important information out. We must reeducate the world about our planets true history. Thank you!
Props to Randall Carlson
YEAH, ALSO ABOUT HUMAN HISTORY BEING MILLIONS OF YEARS OLD...WE JUST FORGOT TO TAKE NOTES BUT WE DID LEAVE HUNDREDS OF MEGALITHIC SITES AROUND THE PLANET TO SHOW THAT THERE WAS A 'GLOBAL' CIVILIZATION THAT ALL USED 'THE PYRAMID' FOR SOMETHING MIND BLOWING...
I know this post is old, but the greenland impact crater has recently been dated back to 58 million years ago. The impact hypothesis has even less credibility than it previously did.
What info you talking about was scoffed at? the floods have been studied and documented for ages, the impact craters are discovered recently, but as far as i know have nothing to do with that flood. It feels like there is a lot of inaccurate information in this video, things stuck together that dont belong together etc.
Lake Missoula floods have been known since the 1950s. As for new information? That's science.
Also, this didnt just flood Oregon, this flood emptied into both the East Coast, the West Coast, and into the Gulf of Mexico. This flood was MASSIVE. Meltwater Pulse B was even larger, and likely impacted the ice sheet in Siberia. This is why there are stories of The Great Flood/Noah's Flood from EVERY single culture and people around the entire world.
Thanks to the geologists, we think that all living things on our planet have the most to fear from an asteroid impact. But when we look at the many horizontal layers that we find everywhere on our planet, we clearly see the effect of a repeating cataclysm. These disasters create a terrible natural cataclysm with much flooding.These disasters are mentioned in ancient books like the Mahabharata from India and the Popol Vuh from the Maya and in the bible. They tell us about a cycle of seven disasters. Certainly, a cycle of regularly recurring global disasters cannot be caused by asteroid impacts. The only possible cause is another celestial body, a planet, orbiting our sun in an eccentric orbit. Then it is close to the sun for a short period and after the crossing at a very high speed it disappears into the universe for a long time. Planet 9 exists, but it seems invisible. To learn much more about the recurring flood cycle, the re-creation of civilizations and its timeline and ancient high technology, read the e-book: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". It can be read on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: invisible nibiru 9
whats strange is atlantis is said to have been destroeyd by an earthquake right at meltwater pulse 1b 11600 years ago
If only humans hadn't have found the red flower those dams never would've busted. Darn it. This also explains what happened to the clovis people and their anthropogenic warming of the climate.
Luckily those who came approximately 50,000 years ago made it to South America before the dam busted.
@@Ericsaidful Lol what
@@21LAZgoo Well, imagine an (ice)wall holding back that much water suddenly caving in. I can imqgine the force might have felt like earthquakes depending on where you'd be.
What a STUNNING Documentary Jimmy. Kudos to You.
Netflix series coming up :)
This feels like the kind if video I’d watch in school in geology. Great work Jimmy
You will never see a video like this in school. High school college or any school. That’s because this information is not being taught. What’s being taught is the old academic line “one grain of sand and one drop of water at a time.“ that archaic type of geologic thought is still the norm in academia. But anybody with eyes to see and a brain to think can see that is bull. We owe a debt of gratitude to the courageous men and women who are standing up to this archaic line of thinking
Love the Channeled Scablands. It's dry but so many pretty native plants and animals. Most of us have made little dams in the driveway as kids and watched the water make mini channeled scablands when the little dams fail. You would love "Nick on the Rocks" (Nick Zentner) He's a geologist at Central Wa U. He gives amazing lectures on geology. Thank you for the cool video, really enjoying your channel.
Brooooo.... this is high key epic. If only I was watching content like this for school lol... Keep it up!
and Joel's narration!!!!! Loved that!
During the intro I kept expecting David Attenborough to start telling me about the least killifish or something LOL
You're KILLING it brother!
Amazing videography!
This guy does not get enough recognition for the quality of his videos. Just an FYI you have an impersonator living in WI. Fooled me, he had me rubber necking in the parking lot.
Seymour Fish Tanks LOL. You need to take a selfie with him to prove this.
@@swirvinbirds1971 I'm talking about his videography. I'm not exactly sure what your talking about, kind of a blanket statement you made. I'm willing to bet you have made some false statements in your life as well, i know i have. No one is perfect and no one knows everything, that's what growing is all about.
You will prosper in your career. You just get it. While most think they're just watching some random video , there are others who will be amazed and even astonished with your understanding of perception. Legend in the making. Thanks for taking me on an amazing journey throughout history whilst sitting in my living room.
Not only did I learn A LOT but the filmmaking is just amazing! Please test the boundaries any time you want, so special, Thank You
Very very cool filming work. Im an archaeologist by achooling and there are 2 huge- up to 13 floods in eastern Washington, however the atmospheric air blast hypothesis is very new and has a ton of problems in with it. The largest Flood occured after this region was populated for at least 2k years- be it the inside passage or coastal route- the Clovis era was in effect during the massive Missoula Floods. Currently we know that a massive ice damn broke and refroze...or clogged and then created the areas you showed somewhat. However the deep carving was likely due to retreating ice shelves and not thenflood (in fact it is postulated that the flood created the even more barren scab lands near pot holes state park, ritzville and Sprauge... 500 to 800 foot tall waves crashed to the ocean and definently moved rock and scoured the soil- however some believe that this was glacial till- pushed aside up into the parallel valleys and even Wenatchee.
I would love to give you some resources that are geologically correct and leave the conjecture or "history channel" effect of a huge minority believing in Hiawatha impacting the Pacific northwest...look no farther than then Tunguska event of 1919(ish?) To see why we would be finding blast micro diamonds, carboniferous traces of debris like the KP boundary after the Dinos.
Seriously, if you wanna see epic destruction, you need to go farther east. Then dry falls, potholes, and scablands along with the ancient path of the Columbia river. Not to say your theory is 100% incorrect - but 97% of surveyed scientists believe in what im explaining
....still huuuge and likley one of the largest- non celestial caused floods.
This is a very uncertain event. filming and editing. The cataracts also flooded before the Grand Coulee damn was installed. So look at GIS mapping of 1920s Washington and draw your own conclusions- that's all I would ask of you . Cheers and if you want confirmed geological info and history, im more than happy too share my knowledge and any resources i can point you towards
Been checking on Randall carson's podcast's? If not, I recommend this man and his deep knowledge.
glacial till and scraping would not account for a ton of the hydrodynamic features that are present . you were schooled by an old wave of educators set in their ways. science has never been about consensus . as more people dive in, using personal drones with high def imagery , more data will emerge and theories developed. i suspect the old theories will eventually die off. time will tell.
I’m missing the connection from the meteor impact in Greenland and the flooding in Montana. Those are really far away from each other. I get the ice dam theory but don’t think you need an impact to create the lake. Dam up any water source and you’ll eventually get a huge lake.
Nick Zentner. That is all.
This hasn’t aged very well.
You just keep getting better and better!!! Beautifully done!
I love it! Keep more of these coming! Your skills as a filmmaker are outgrowing your usual topic. I have watched countless documentaries on such subjects, but your talent as filmographer really pulled me into the subject. I applaud you for this. Keep up the great work.
I'm so glad TH-cam has the whole notification thing sorted out now so I won't be late to the party anymore. Beyond epic, keep it up, brother!
A man, his camera, great video, & a history lesson. Fantastic creation! Thank you!!!
Omg this was so good. Keep up the great work sir, really enjoy myself everytime I'm on your channel, be it fishes, digging for clams, unboxings,etc. Totally cool!😁
Cool vid Jimmy, loved the cinematography of the landscapes mate.🤘
Great vid bro! I totally get (and support) your pursuit of filmaking. Im taking a break to work on other types of content aswell. Never stop creating!
Dude. DUDE! Your production level is through the roof on this one. You just keep getting better by leaps and bounds. I'm so glad I got to meet you in Dallas and shake your hand. Love your videos and look forward to watching your work on National Geographic and the BBC some day. For real.
Thank you! Wish I could remember which one you were but I’m sure it was a pleasure meeting you as well.
I thought I knew but now I know for sure. In only 8 minutes( well done Jimmy) very nice film,I think you reach more people with this one in stead of all the docs that last for hours. Thanks Jimmy,I like it a Lott.
Recent research shows Hiawatha Crater is 58 million yrs old .
Beautiful cinematography attached to very interesting documentary. Keep it up. Looking forward to more from you.
Jimmy, this is amazing.
You have an innate talent. Never give up.
You could say it sounds...BIBLICAL
Awesome work, Jimmy.
Thank you
That was awesome... thanks for putting in the time to do this video.. Keep this coming..
Anytime :) I had fun.
How did the melt water from Greenland get to Missoula again??
If you really want to know the real story about this, read Glacial Lake Missoula and its Humongous Floods. This book is the most comprehensive account of these floods.
The supposed link between an impact crater in Greenland and glacial Lake Missoula is sketchy at best. There were at least 40 flood events (documented) that flooded the channeled scablands in eastern Washington during the Pleistocene. Nice drone shots though.
Swhiskey- This is amazing. Thanks for taking the time to put this together. I enjoyed it and learned something interesting. If some documentary or nature series production company doesn't snatch you up, they're missing out!
Thank you so much Kaimuki! Always love doing different things and bringing you guys great quality. I’m very happy you watched this one though and glad you enjoyed.
Great work Jimmy! Beautiful video
The craters in Greenland are 50 to 55 million years old, they had nothing to do with the ice dam floods.
Watching you grow as a cinematographer, is the best, love your work Jimmy. 😎👍
Thank you as a resident of WA I appreciate you taking the time to make this content. This topic has been a fascination of mine for the past couple years and when I found out such important history occurred so close to home my intrest has only grown and I hope to visit these places myself someday
After watching this, I heard a voice in the background saying "LEVEL UP!" I thoroughly enjoyed this vid since I love anything ancient history. Good job Jimmy and thanks for sharing.
Hahaha 🙏🏻
Jimmy ..... you’re headed for something big, really meaningful and important with your talent! I’m always amazed!
WOW! That was fantastic viewing and very informative too. Absolutely breathtaking.
That was so cool! Thanks for sharing the story dude !
Absolutely no proof of a meteorite striking the earth.
Two of my favorite fellas make a wonderful video! Joel is possibly my favorite human being outside my family, you chose the perfect person to collab with. Next time get him in video PLEASE, the fans crave it.
😍❤️
At 2:46 in, sorry, Glacial Lake Missoula and its' many floods has no connection to the Greenland impact crater.
I happen to live in MIssoula and the numerous lake shorelines show the repeated filling and draining of many floods.
Here's an extract from Wikipedia on the Hiawatha impact crater (note the last sentence): "A 2022 study using argon-argon dating combined with uranium-lead dating of shocked zircon crystals in impact melt rocks found in outwash less than 10 km downstream of the glacier yielded an age of 57.99 ± 0.54 million years ago, during the late Paleocene.[8][7] This put an end to speculation by advocates of the controversial Younger Dryas impact hypothesis.[6][9][10] that it was formed by an impact as recently as ~12,800 years ago."
It would be lovely to find more support for a the comet caused Younger Dryas event, perhaps a "smoking gun" crater IS under Greenland's remaining ice cap - but even if it was found that would be difficult to link that one time event to the many Missoula Floods (regardless of exactly how many floods).
Unable to compute how a meteor strike in Greenland would great a water flow that would not find release from under the glacial ice for many thousands of kilometers until it made its way to northern Idaho. If you are implying that the meteor strike would cause enough warming to melt the glaciers that does not compute either, since significant impacts would throw huge amounts of dust and such into the atmosphere, which causes the suns energy to be reflected away and result in cooling. Geologists have come to believe the Scablands of Washington and northern Idaho were flooded a number of times over thousands of years by sudden releases of melting glacial ice waters. Your report does not seem to add up.
yes, repeated floods with ice dams and sudden releases.
The meteor strike documented at 12.9 kya has unknown location, but it coincides with the change in Lake Agassiz draining to the South to draining to the East. Idk if there's a scabland flood dating to 12.9 +/- 0.1 kya
Have you listened to the Joe Rogan Podcast with Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson??!? Edit I see your sources use Randall 🙂
Hehe yes. Randals lectures by himself are just as amazing.
Hello, very nice video. Thx
I was going to say the same. Randall Carlson is really awesome
The connection between the Hiawatha crater water pulse and water entering Lake Missoula sounds rather sketchy. Do you have any documentation or links that talk about this?
It was a theory, but according to newer studies the crater is much older, something like 58 million years.
Comet striking Greenland creates flood waters in central Washington from Glacial Lake Missoula? Please make the connection I if there is one. Thank you!
I love thissss, prehistoric stuff is also a massive interest of mine and im glad to see I'm not the only one in the fish community to love this history
The asteroid probably didn't have anything to do with this flooding. For one, dating is now putting it much too old for what occured in WA. Snip: Fragments of charcoal up to about 2 cm (0.79 in) in size that were recovered directly from the ice at the tip of the Hiawatha Glacier, where the glacial outwash containing sand interpreted to be either impact melt or shocked metamorphite was collected, yielded an age greater than 43,500 BP. This result was interpreted as an effect of "thermal degradation"; the true age is estimated to be 3-2.4 Ma.[9]". You're correct that the ice dam in Idaho did, however it failed over 40 times not just once. The reason we know this is because there are over 40 different rythemite deposits of soil found in this area from the many floods and many have volcanic ash deposited between them meaning the asteroid theory for the flooding has almost zero chance of being true. Very nice presentation however. .It's explained nicely in this video: th-cam.com/video/TgevbfaQLBE/w-d-xo.html
Wow that place is breathtaking! Great job of capturing the beauty. Wasnt expecting this kind of video when I subscribed, but I LOVE it.
You’re the type of subscriber I’m looking for. I never promised all fish but a lot of ppl hate it that it isn’t. Thanks for sticking around.
Awesome Video and photos as always. Well done. Great Presentation. Some Network needs your skills Jimmy. All the best. Cheers
You nailed it son
You are definitely going places, Jimmy!
You are missing one important part of known science, there were dozens of floods from Lake Missoula and one major flood from Lake Bonneville. The impact hypothisis does not fit the story of the known science of the Scablands Floodplain.
You were born to be behind a camera and to create images that most people would never experience. But we get to with your amazing talent. I never knew I wanted to know more about the Earth's biggest flood until I watched this video. Keep expanding our minds Jimmy!
Very nice video Jimmy, thought I was watching the Discovery channel for a little bit there
What a cool looking place. And thank you Joel for your input. Thanks Jimmy for another great day in your life.
Problem with your impact crater hypothesis is that the geological evidence shows that theses floods in eastern Washington occurred more than once . Evidence for different flood episodes is noticeable by the layering of erosion levels on the cliff edges. The reason the soil is still good at the upper elevations is because the floods didn't scour the top soil away . I would suggest consulting a local geologist instead of someone in New Zealand who has never physically researched the area being questioned .
You need to check in with Nick Zentner at Central Washington University. According to geologic rock dating methods and the geologic evidence on the ground, between 25,000 years ago and 13,000 years ago, there were at least 60 catastrophic floods in that area, the Columbia Basin, and none of them were triggered by an Impact. Glacial Lake Columbia and Glacial Lake Missoula were both involved, as well as several floods coming down the valleys from the north. Read up on J. Harlan Bretts' work. Also look at Bruce Babcock's drone footage. Yes, there were many huge floods in the Pacific Northwest, but they were not caused by, or accentuated by Randall Carlson's popular Younger Dryas Greenland asteroid impact.
Agree. The YD impact is associated with St. Lawrence river flows, not Washington State to my knowledge.
Around 12.9 kya there was: an impact, global fires, and a change in Lake Agassiz drainage from south to east -- which submerged the northern Gulf Stream, chilling the climate for 1200 years.
Interesting history, with amazing cinematography, why didn't I watch this when it was uploaded 😭 another killer video @Swhiskey
This was absolutely amazing in every aspect. I just felt like I was watching something on like Discovery channel or National Geographic ot something. You know... I used to play in a sand box in my yard as a kid, and I loved running the water hose and watching the water carve its path through the sand. Those same marks are what I can just make out with the birds eye view... that is a massive and certainly unfathomable scale. It is truly awe-inspiring to know something of that scale had happened and the evidence still remains as proof. Spectacular.
🥰🥰 There will be a part 2 next month. Thank you for the wonderful comment and scaling things to a perspective. Remember building sand tunnels on the beach side and letting the water run through them.. :)
Excellent video Jimmy! I really enjoyed it 🤗
OK, here’s the bad news. This may have been caused by planet nine, which probably orbits earth every 14,000 years, Disturbing orbits of objects in the solar system, causeing orbital bombardment of earth. This may be the global reset button.
Do you just make this stuff up? I have a degree in Geology, I've studied several papers about the Missoula flood. A flood caused by a meteor impact in Greenland filling Lake Missoula is a stretch of the imagination.
I'm very happy that I found your channel.. Thank you
Nova, in their video 'Mystery of the Megaflood', never mentioned any meteor impact. They explained how did the ice dam break. They also told that this incident took place time and again.
Correct. Glacial Lake Missoula was caused when the Purcell Trench Lobe of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet came down into northern Idaho and blocked the Clark Fork River. The estimate is that the ice dam broke between 40-80 times over thousands of years.
There was no mention of impacts because the impacts he is talking about happened about 50 millions before these ice dam events.
That's the point. That meteor impact took place millions of years earlier and hence couldn't have any influence on this episode of series of megafloods that were caused by ice dam breaks only.
Superb cinematography, photography, editing, and soundtrack. I thought I was in a movie theatre with dolby surround sound!
Haha. Thank you so much.
Keep up the great work you do.....Great video
I wanted more!!! Beautiful!! Educational and you made me want to learn more. Great video
Beautifully done! You're going to miss our scenic wonders. We're going to miss you.
Awsome work really enjoyed watching that would like go see more keep them coming
How do people gives this video a thumbs down?! Seriously, this video was absolutely amazing! Very well done Jimmy!😎
Probably but hurt that Jimmy stepped out of their preconceived notion of what Jimmy should be making.
Nailed it.
This winegrower says this is a load of inaccuracy. My farm soil was deposited by dozens of floods. My base soil is granitic and basaltic. Brought by floods not wind. Unless there was wind strong enough to move multi ton granite boulders from British Columbia.
Fascinating. Total geology buff nerd here. Amazing photography. Bravo Jimmy 💖
Nicely done documentary Jimmy. Very interesting information
I theorize the entire great lakes, and Hudson's Bay itself were formed during the Younger Dryas ever.
The amount of water in those lakes has to be from Glacial melt, and the amount of water that was said to sweep the world couldn't have just come from the Greenland ice sheet, it also came from the Laurentide ice sheet. Imagine the amount of glacial melt if Hudson's Bay and the Great lakes were also formed from this impact.
I tried looking back into Inuit history and it seems like it starts 5000-6000~ years ago.
Is it possible there have been multiple impacts from the same "meteoric system"?
I see one small problem with your theory of the cause of the melting of the ice sheets. The asteroid impacts in Greenland you call out as being the cause of climate shift 13,000 years ago are actually dated to 58 million years ago. Seems like quite a long time for cause and effect...
You ever watch a video and go “what the fudge” out of amazement? That happened. You’re awesome Jimmy.
I love this style of video! Do more
Randal & Graham brought me here
Amazing work mate i often wonder about what the ocean also hides from us as in the evidence of scars that provide us with a glimpse into the true power of the universe .
I mean it propels a rock through space at speeds our minds cant quite understand and when they crash into our planet they cause a level of destruction that leaves evidence for us to observe thousands of years later
The whole where are the tools and why are there no pictures on cave walls of tools or machines used even in hyroglifics i dont see these so my mind wander off thinking where could they be i mean such great tools must of been viewed as things of wonder so where are they why cant we find evidence of them i think that most are destroyed by the mentioned impact strikes and disasters that follow them
Thank you again love when passion for such subjects ignites my need and want for more information in those subjects
Subbed !
how did water from greenland ever get to Missoula Montana? Woudnt it have to cross the Davis Strait (ocean water) and then cross half of North America and over the Rocky Mountains to the Columbia River basin? Impossible.
Excellent! If I taught earth science I would definitely use that in my class!
Cheers,
Chris
That would be so cool!
You'd be a bad teacher then because this is just a hypothesis with many glaring problems.
@@BlGGESTBROTHER If I was an earth science teacher I may have caught on to that. As a biology teacher, presenting hypotheses that have problems can be an excellent teaching tool.
Cheers,
Chris
@@Cgraseck Sorry, my comment was pretty snarky. I don't think there's anything wrong with presenting hypotheses so long as you explained that it was just an educated guess at this point without the necessary evidence to be widely accepted. Other competing hypothesis could be presented as well to give the students a more unbiased understanding of the subject.
@@BlGGESTBROTHER No worries. I teach in a religious school so I’m very careful to explain that science seeks to explain with the best evidence available, That it grows and changes with our measurement abilities and that it doesn’t give us ultimate truths.
I read a book on this, says ancient civilizations warned this comet returns on it's orbit and that humanity had been struck twice already.
What book?
@@devonrusinek5807work by Graham Hancock
@@GreatOutDoorWorldofMines Ok thanks
It didn't just melt it, it shattered it and huge chunks of ice miles wide were in that flood.
Stunning video, love the subject matter!
Great job bro! Your going to do big things..
Really enjoyed watching this not only content but production is superb Well done 👏
You are so talented. Keep it up and people will be using terms like the Swhiskey effect like they do the Ken Burns effect.
I love it!
Stunning, i love to learn about this kind of thing. You have a great future ahead of you and thank you for this, very well put together.
Thank you for producing such an informative video about the Missoula Floods. It was shot wonderfully and was entertaining to watch.
Great work, Jimmy. 😊 👏
Fascinating! Thank you for sharing this.
HAPPY Father's Day weekend boss from Houston TX USA 😎😎😎
This was absolutely amazing!! Are there any more instalments of this documentary series planned?
Unfortunately not. This video was very polarizing to a lot of people. That was not my intent. I’ve been busy with other projects and unfortunately a series for this isn’t coming anytime soon. Sincerely appreciate your support and view. :)
Those drone shots were sick my guy :D
Love the new video, would love to walk in this area
Very nice film, I thought I knew but now I know for sure,in only 8 minutes, very well captured,very watchable. I bet this film could get everyone's attention in stead of the hours long documentary s. Well done Jimmy and thanks
great documentary. Lots of go information
Very well done. Best doc ever!