(Not my comment, just pasted from the original comment section because I found it helpful) Tier 1: Dry Land 0:47 Atlantis 1:29 Mermaids 2:20 Kraken 2:54 Bermuda Triangle 4:21 Megalodon 5:11 Thalassophobia 5:43 Mariana Trench [unused] More than 80% of the Ocean is Unexplored Tier 2: Surface 6:23 Milkey Sea Phenomenon 6:44 Baltic Sea Anomoly 7:34 Purple Orb 7:55 Submechanophobia 8:37 Underwater Water 9:10 Yonaguni Monument 9:53 The Bloop Tier 3: Epipelagic Zone 11:06 Julia 11:54 Ningen 12:35 Mary Celeste 14:15 Kaz II Ship 15:15 Magnapinna/Bigfin Squid 15:45 Devil's Sea 17:05 HMS Dredalus Sea Serpent 17:30 Immortal Jellyfish 18:12 1968 Submarine Disappearances 18:48 Flannan Isles Lighthouse Tier 4: Mesopelagic Zone 19:51 Phantom Islands 20:19 Beebe's Bathysphere/Untouchable Fish 21:56 Point Nemo 22:37 Stronsay Beast 23:25 60ft Crocodile Attacking German U-boat Tier 5: Bathypelagic Zone 24:26 4chan Sea Carpet 25:47 Black Demon Bonus: Rare Sea Creatures 26:38 Schaefer's Anglerfish 26:59 Unidentified Four Tentacled Jellyfish 27:26 Casper Octopus 27:47 Contorted Squid 28:37 Soya "Antarctic Godzilla" Tier 6: Abyssopelagic Zone 29:22 Ocean at Night Theory 30:39 Coconut Crabs Ate Amelia Earhart Tier 7: Abyssopelagic Zone (2?) 31:46 Giant Cannibal Shark 32:20 1997 Whistle Sound 32:52 Unidentified Sagami Bay Creature Tier 8: Hadalpelagic Zone 33:44 Upsweep *Tier 9: Hadalpelagic Zone (2?): 34:42 Bimini Road 35:14 Sea People Invasion Tier 10: Challenger Deep 35:46 Vertical Migration 36:42 Call of the Deep 38:18 God is Over All
"unused" probably because people can't understand the difference between explored via diving or transportation and explored via mapping the whole ocean floor. The problem is the ocean is basically a vast wasteland. There's nothing to explore except going in a straight line and hoping we bump into a new sea creature.
My favorite theory about krakens is they are just sterile octopus. The thing is some octopus never stop growing throughout life but they all die after mating. So a sterile octopus wouldn't trigger that biological kill switch. Letting them grow to giant sizes. However because of over fishing the sterile octopus just end up getting fished before they can grow big.
I also feel like over fishing for human fish/sea food consumption also play a part in certain species no longer growing to the max of their estimated sizes.
I appreciated your skepticism in this video. I love mysterious things, but too many TH-cam channels on the subject will end up coming to outlandish or paranormal conclusions.
Hi, Bermudian here. 🇧🇲 I cannot begin to tell you how many times I’ve met people here in the states who get confused when I bring up the word “Bermuda” as my place of birth, because the first thing that they immediately think of and then ask me is “are you from the triangle?” Yes Timothy; the Bermuda Triangle. I am totally from an area in the ocean that has made numerous people, ocean vessels, and aircraft disappear without a trace. I’m impressed by your geographical knowledge. You deserve a gold star.
How persuasive... Or is that exactly what a secretly-a-sea-monster from "area-in-the-ocean-that-has-made-numerous-people,-ocean-vessels,-and-aircraft-disappear-without-a-trace" would say to distract us from the TRUTH!? I'm on to you! (Joking) Joking aside, I can't imagine how annoying that would be. My condolences to your patience, and my apologies for poking it further.
Why wouldn't the Bermuda Triangle simply be a place where governments just kind of "let" or "helped" pirates, human traffickers, or intelligence agencies get vessels or the people/cargo on them?
Okay, the upsweep sound is possibly the scariest sound imo. To me, it aounds like a long forgotten ww2 submarine that had sunk, and its alarm of oncoming doom still rings out to its ghostly passengers. Slowly, the alarm dies out for having to ring so long.
The Saturn sounds sound like the screams the Damned, and the upsweep sounds like a alarm placed by some supernatural figure to warn us of those screams… but HEY, THATS JUST A THEORY!
As someone who used to go fishing a bunch, water is fcking terrifying. It does not need a storm or high winds to kill you, there doesn't need to be a deep sea leviathan. The ocean by itself is enough. There was an incident, we had parked our boat in calm waters, the sky was completely clear. Come night time, and the boat was nearly tipping over, rocking violently back and forth, no storm, no rain, no heavy winds. The water was just in a mood that day, and we happened to be in it. So yeah, if you're ever in any body of water you better damn well respect its power. Its not something you can beat or confront, it is a literal force of nature that can and will catch you off guard if you don't take it seriously.
I also enjoyed this video, and also as a person who once was in Italy and i swam like 30 meters away from the shore, i can tell you that seeing only darkness below me and then getting told there was a sting ray below me scared the living shit out of me.
An entry I think should’ve at least been mentioned is the vague mysterious case of leptocephalus giganteus, a larvae eel estimated to grow into the longest animal ever but has only been recorded twice in history
The larvae already recognized. It actually larvae of snub nosed spiny eel which ridiculously rarely grow longer than 30 cm. Yet somehow during peak of larvae growth, it become ridiculously gigantic then slowly shrunk into adult size
@@prasetyodwikuncorojati2434There is zero actual evidence of it being a notacanth. In fact, the one picture we have doesn’t fit the description of a notacanth. No research has come to any conclusion as to the identity of the leptocephalus giganteus.
That was debunked back in the 70's. The eel they caught was 5m long, and it was determined that since it was a larvea eel, it's adult size must be massive. But it was actually a deep sea spiny eel, in which the larvea stage is a larger than the adult stage - debunking it.
@@HomoLegalMedicyes GPT5 but as other commenters with real meat brains have pointed out, the only picture of the animal looks nothing like notacanthus So basically you’re suspending your own rational because there’s a textbook answer to default too. Thankfully people aren’t falling into these thought patterns as much anymore
21:08 The fish spotted was most likely an Oarfish nicknamed "ryugu no tsukai" translating to "messenger from the sea god's palace". They are known to appear before natural calamities like tsunamis. The description given by Bibi fits perfectly as oarfish's can grow upto 30ft and have long, wiry dorsal fins protruding from their head.
100% an oar, or viperfish idk how it isnt extremely obviously one of those 2. I hated how mystical he made it all sound but....dude....its just a fucking viperfish it's not that crazy
@@cancerouscorndog6425 the last thing we should ever do is say "its just a _____" about any sea creature because imagine seeing 90% of them for the first time
35:30 Correction; we broadly know who the Sea Peoples are, the people who composed their numbers are well documented. The only mystery (which has many decent theories as of now) is what pressure caused them to start attacking, and what held them together (which again, many theories work to explain).
@@Incognito_Blazer I don’t remember the names, but in part they were groups of people that (at least) the Egyptians already knew and were familiar with (and had names for). Prevailing theories suggest most of them were mostly comprised of people who migrated south, because a climate crisis was causing their crop yields to fail (perhaps a volcanic winter). Their success in defeating Bronze Age armies was owed due to the failing economy and (as I’ve seen somewhere) their style of combat. It’s probably best to consult a more elaborate source, but this is what I can verify from memory.
@@Incognito_Blazerlike other poster, i forget their egyptian names, i only remember like “Ekelesh” and also “Peleset”but theyre thought to be a coalition of sardinians, sicillians, the lybians, the name for the greeks they composed of is “peleset”. The egyptian king offered them service and land because they were great fighters. These “peleset” as language changes became the biblical “philistines” and that is where the regional name “palestine” came from One of the last peoples i believe were celtic tribes from souther spain as well
There were 2 reported instances of anyone disappearing in the Bermuda triangle since the 60s, both were in 2015, one was a 19" fishing ship being sailed by two 14 year old boys, and the other was crewed by 33 and sailed into a pretty violent hurricane. Notice how after the major technological boom we had in the 60s and 70s in regards to electric and digital equipment fielded by aircraft and naval vessels, people stopped disappearing out there.
About the marianas trench and the people who went down to see it, the first was Don Walsh. He passed away last year due to old age, but i got the chance to meet him a few weeks before his passing and ask him a few questions, as im pursuing a career in marine biology atm. He started out the call with an apology, telling us that he had been in the artic the past month and the only mammals he had seen were polar bears and his coworkers. He was 91 or 92 (he passed 10 days after his birthday and i met him very shortly before he passed) when i met him and was incredibly wise and charming. I’m glad i got to meet him before he passed, as he had been my hero from a young age.
we left out something about the big bigfin squid, even though we know absolutely nothing about them and assume they catch their prey by dragging their long tentacles across the ground, we believe they can grow up to 50 feet because every single one found was a JUVENILE.
For call of the deep, I've heard of a lot of divers speculating that the people wanted/needed to rush to the surface, but somehow mixed up where was up and where was down
nope. it's a state similar to drunkenness caused by the gas you breathe in being affected by the pressure. seeing an empty abyss below you in that state causes an "ooh shiny!" reaction.
This is my new "falling asleep video" it's been 4 days and I haven't finished it yet. I'm resisting the urge to watch it in the day because it's genuinely a good video but it works so well to fall asleep because you have a really soothing voice.
the cannibal shark could have been an orca. Though that depth is around 2 thirds of their normal max diving depth and would be an incredible feat of strength as well
Seeing how deep it was before the tag floated up it seams likely that it would have been an attack from a much larger predator. Possibly an Orca, giant squid, or a cannibal shark.
Fun fact about the Mary Celeste; They might have actually figured out the mystery after all this time. Tests of the kind of alchohol they were carrying showed that if it were to ignite in the cargo hold, it would cause a flash fire to sweep across the ship, injuring the crew but moving too fast to leave burn marks on the wet wood of the ship.
As someone obsessed with the ocean, this iceberg vid feels like it was made for me. It was fun seeing how many of these things I already knew about (over half!) And it was cool learning about the things I didn't! In regards to the "call of the deep" phenomenon, perhaps it's tied to nitrogen narcosis? I remember hearing a story about a woman who experienced it and swam deeper like the boy in the story. Thankfully she was pulled back but she later recounted that she 100% believed at the moment that she was a mermaid, and always had been. Scary stuff, the ocean!
I really appreciate and admire that you put on screen what song is currently playing. So many times I've heard a cool song in the background of a video but I have no idea what song they've even used. Respect +
the "untouchable fish" description at 21:16 really reminds me of the giant oarfish/Regalecus glesne! they're commonly measured to be around the 2.5 to 3 metre (8.2 to 9.8 ft) length range and the first reliable footage of one was only recorded in 2010! it would have been cool to hear what you thought of "52 Blue" (world's loneliest whale), but this was a really engaging and interesting video! thanks for sharing!
i mean this is a no-brainer but all "monsters" are just average animals, show somebody who has never seen or heard a large predator and their roar and their imagination will probably go wild
The "call of the deep" entry reminds me of the diver Yuri Lipski, that Russian diver who ended up recording his own death in Egypt's Blue Hole dive site.
You forgot to mention with the coconut crab ate Amelia H. The reason this theory even existed was because (not sure the date think it's recent) some sailors found a female skeleton of european origin on a tiny island in the area that she was flying in, navigation gear was found and the leg was broken but the limbs were ripped off hence the theory coconut crabs ate her. It's highly likely it was her and she died from her injuries and the crabs ate her body
"A bit of a stretch" he says, about a creature that could disguise itself as a rock. Look up cuttlefish some time. Even some of the bigger ones can disguise themselves damn near perfectly.
The deep is alluring. Mysteries and unexplainable sightings / creatures are fascinating. Your assembly of information and presentation was great and I enjoyed it. Thank you for putting it together.
I have submechanaphobia and thallassaphobia. I never had thallassaphobia until one year I went to Florida for a vacation and I went a little too far into the waves and it felt like I was being sucked into the ocean. I always wanted to be a marine biologist, since I love swimming and seeing all the beautiful creatures. But not being able to see where I am or where the ground is is terrifying to me. It sends a fight or flight response and sometimes I feel like my breath has been taken away from viewing it
I feel like humans are instinctively horrified of deep water, because ultimately it means death to your brain if you cannot swim. Anything underwater just triggers that pattern recognition in your brain, causing you to be wayyy more terrified of unknown things in the water than you'd be of unknown things near you on land.
the call of the deep reminds me of this thing i heard of where when a person reaches a certain water depth they’ll enter this unresponsive, trance-like state. i don’t remember what its called but its supposed to be well-known among divers and has a scientific explanation also, the untouchable fish reminds me of fishes from the stomiidae family, especially those from the idiacanthus genus. im not sure how well the vision would be in an old sub like that, but i wonder if maybe he was mistaken about the size? or maybe it was some form of gigantism or smth (edit, its called nitrogen narcosis)
I thought nitrogen narcosis happens when a diver comes up too fast and the nitrogen bubbles in their bloodstream pop. The further down u go, the more nitrogen builds in your blood from the type of air you need to use. Then when you come up, the bubbles are supposed to pop slowly. But if you come up to quickly, they all pop at once in your body like a middle school volcano science project.
the thing about the Bermuda triangle is that its actually one of the most traveled through ocean areas which Which is why there's more ships that go missing there because there are more ship to go missing in the first place
Very cool, creepy, and calm video. I've always thought a killer whale, sperm whale, or giant squid was responsible for eating that great white shark. An animal would need to be able to dive really deep to get the tracker that far down.
A possible explanation for why the strange phenomena of ‘the call of the deep’ exists might be nitrogen narcosis, which is essentially a reaction of gases in your body tissue go through at such high pressures while diving, (due to the increased solubility of your said gases) these making you almost high or feeling drunk, losing cognitive control and become mentally impaired. The carbon dioxide retention is what makes everything funky🤸🏻 when you breath air from your oxygen tank at certain depths, the pressure can make you hallucinate, lose control, judgement becomes impaired, you start to feel a state of euphoria. In that pressure you become less and less buoyant and find yourself swimming further and further down until the sea has sunk you to a point of inevitable death. I assume you won’t really feel your death, you drift off into sleep and at some point your lungs will collapse. Although it’s rare for nitrogen narcosis to become fatal since it’s easily fixed by being swimming back to the surface and being accompanied by fellow divers, being with less people and going a little further down will increase your chances of being called into the deep.
@@Noltiedat a certain depth, the pressure starts affecting the way the gas you breath in interacts with your body. skipping the long explanation of why and how this happens, it basically causes a state similar to being drunk, or inhaling laughing gas. you stop thinking clearly, and have the diver equivalent of an "ooh, shiny!" reaction when looking at the abyss below.
I have genuinely never gotten around to finish not even 1/4’s of an iceberg video, this is a first. Great coverage, presentation, and content! Got my sub good señor o7
Milky sea phenomenon is bioluminescent algae, it glows when disturbed for example when a small fish is consuming it, this attracts predators by basically putting a spotlight on the small fish and they get eaten, thus saving the algae from consumption.
thank god i could find it again, i love coming back to this video when doing things, and couldn't find it, to find out it got taken down and reuploaded.
I feel like this is a re-upload that I've seen before, but I can't get enough of this stuff, so it's all good. Oh, and props for including important details like of the Flannan Isles lighthouse incident, specifically the fact that there were no storms recorded around the time of the disappearance, and especially that the alleged logbook entries were later fictional embellishments. The incident is a popular topic on the site, and too many folks gloss over these facts if they even know them in the first place. It's tempting to omit this kinda thing in an attempt to make the content more exciting but is disingenuous. This stuff is fascinating enough as is. Anyway, thanks and keep up the good work.
Absolutely love how your tone when speaking on a portal in the ocean that opens to Saturn and a regular fish of sorts is EXACTLY the same. You are my favorite iceberg analyst. Keep on keeping on, homie.
Great video man. I served four years in the Marine Corps, with my first deployment being on a Navy ship for 7 months. I remember those nights, stepping out on the smoke deck late into the night, smoking a few cigarettes, watching the moon reflect off of the open ocean with no land in sight, and wondering to myself what was in those waters. I’m a believer that there is plenty of crazy creatures out there that we simply haven’t discovered yet. I was raised in Upstate New York and I still have an aunt that lives in the little town of Moriah, right on Lake Champlain, with New York on one side of it and Vermont on the other. There is supposedly a creature in the lake called Champ (first five letter of the name of the lake). It’s basically Americas equivalent to the Loch Ness Monster.
I have thallassophobia. It’s pretty extreme. I love water and all, I’ve lived next to it my entire life, I don’t have a problem with the fish ( I’ve fished for well over 10 years) but yeah just the emptiness and the unknown get to me.
Its too big and there could be really big things under me. I hate it. Its the bigness that freaks me out, thats why ship wrecks freak me out (I just about threw up watching Titanic) because its like, great that whole massive thing fits under the water with a couple empire state buildings worth of space to spare. _That's_ horrifying.
People specifically think the the Daedalus serpent was a whale skim-feeding (swimming forward with its mouth open and upper jaw out of the water), which actually does appear similar and is extremely strange looking (there are vids on youtube)
Putting down the bimini road while not mentioning that its a very common size and shape of rock formation in the bahamas seems a little silly but great list
I feel like the story of atlantis was just made to scare people not to attack athens, or to avoid unjustified wars. the fact that some people cant see this and think its real is odd. ofc alot of things could be true, but obviously by far the more likely solution is what i just said. warfare was common and since greece was made of multiple city states im not surprised they made such legend, expecially since back then no one could disprove it.
I think that aspects of the story are exactly as you stated, but I do think that Platos account isn't entirely fictional. The story goes that he supposedly learned of this from a documented ancestor of his named Solon. This person had visited Egypt, and in a temple the supposed account is relayed. It gets rather specific about how the city actually looked, and the geology of the area around it. Specifically he asked them when this happened, and the priests in charge told him this occurred 9,000 years prior to their own time. So roughly 11,000+ years from us. This time period closely aligns with massive flooding events that have been found in the geologic record, there's no way he could have guessed that. I think the whole thing with war with Athens bit is an allegory he made up though. I doubt Athens existed 11,000 years ago. At least in any way that is provable.
@@665Powerlifting You are right, Athens didn’t exist back then, not as a superpower or any known stronghold in the ancient world. 11,000 years ago was the early beginnings of rhe Pre-Sesklo civilisation in what is now Thessaly, where some of the first indications of settled agriculture in Europe is displayed as well as animal husbandry and pottery. This however was in the early Neolithic era, and the Pre-Sesklo civilisation is believed to have been the early stepping stones to the Danube civilisation and other larger Indo-European civilisations in the coming millennia. It is entirely possible that one of these early coastal Thessalian settlements, that survived for centuries in the early agricultural period was viewed as advanced and futuristic by the standards of the time, and as time carried on and civilisations advanced, the story of this advanced culture took on properties that made it advanced to the storyteller at the time, and its extinction by flooding in the late neolithic or even Bronze Age gives it an embellishable ending that would in time come to align well with the Athenian culture and their association with Poseidon
I've experience call of the deep before, or at least something similar to it, it was when I was a 5 year old, my first time swimming on the sea and it was only swimming on the shallow part of the beach, so you can't really call it a 'call of the deep' so to say, but I remember at that when me and my 2 older female siblings were having a hold your breath underwater contest, I'd look to the far edge of my vision, seeing nothing, but something gave me a feeling of longing, so as a kid, I swam there (wasn't swimming vertically down, but was swimming to my front), my 2 sisters realizing I was going too far and was worried I'd get pulled by the current, instantly pulled me back and brought me on land, when they asked me why I was going so far, I answered "it felt like home" so naturally that it was apparently creepy to them, they told our parents and I have never gone to swim on the ocean ever again, it's been 17 years ever since and I still haven't swam on the ocean ever since that incident.
To be fair, that _would_ be an extremely creepy thing to hear from a 5 year old you just pulled out of the ocean. I probably wouldn't have taken you back, either 😂
Nothing scares me more than the ocean. I will not swim in lakes or rivers any more either. I can swim really good too, it just scares me now. I live next to a huge lake and dont swim in it, gives me anxiety to think about swimming there.
Youre right bur dont be afraid of water. Dont go in if u dknt wanna but its just water. Bunch of dumb fish can swim in it and live in it so ut cant be that bad. Skill issue ngl.
I watched Doctor who story the Chase. It says the daleks scared them off of the boat. That's the most likely. Daleks are basically alien Nazis in an invincible tank only beaten once by stairs but have later mastered the art of flying up stairs making them unstoppable. That was the episode that made me interested in ghost stories like the Mary celeste so I think its right for me to pay my respect to it.
I cant believe you mentioned the Bigfin Squid and the theory that it sifts food with it's long tentacles was proven false. We have video evidence of it actively hunting prey and it was nightmare fuel
Im watching this in the dark rn at midnight and when the saturn sounds came on i was like "damn thats kinda cool" and then my heart leaped when the scream showed up thanks a lot dude
Very good video and very good narrator. I like your voice and combination of informations and light humor. I'm subscribing and hope you will continue this great work. :)
(Not my comment, just pasted from the original comment section because I found it helpful)
Tier 1: Dry Land
0:47 Atlantis
1:29 Mermaids
2:20 Kraken
2:54 Bermuda Triangle
4:21 Megalodon
5:11 Thalassophobia
5:43 Mariana Trench
[unused] More than 80% of the Ocean is Unexplored
Tier 2: Surface
6:23 Milkey Sea Phenomenon
6:44 Baltic Sea Anomoly
7:34 Purple Orb
7:55 Submechanophobia
8:37 Underwater Water
9:10 Yonaguni Monument
9:53 The Bloop
Tier 3: Epipelagic Zone
11:06 Julia
11:54 Ningen
12:35 Mary Celeste
14:15 Kaz II Ship
15:15 Magnapinna/Bigfin Squid
15:45 Devil's Sea
17:05 HMS Dredalus Sea Serpent
17:30 Immortal Jellyfish
18:12 1968 Submarine Disappearances
18:48 Flannan Isles Lighthouse
Tier 4: Mesopelagic Zone
19:51 Phantom Islands
20:19 Beebe's Bathysphere/Untouchable Fish
21:56 Point Nemo
22:37 Stronsay Beast
23:25 60ft Crocodile Attacking German U-boat
Tier 5: Bathypelagic Zone
24:26 4chan Sea Carpet
25:47 Black Demon
Bonus: Rare Sea Creatures
26:38 Schaefer's Anglerfish
26:59 Unidentified Four Tentacled Jellyfish
27:26 Casper Octopus
27:47 Contorted Squid
28:37 Soya "Antarctic Godzilla"
Tier 6: Abyssopelagic Zone
29:22 Ocean at Night Theory
30:39 Coconut Crabs Ate Amelia Earhart
Tier 7: Abyssopelagic Zone (2?)
31:46 Giant Cannibal Shark
32:20 1997 Whistle Sound
32:52 Unidentified Sagami Bay Creature
Tier 8: Hadalpelagic Zone
33:44 Upsweep
*Tier 9: Hadalpelagic Zone (2?):
34:42 Bimini Road
35:14 Sea People Invasion
Tier 10: Challenger Deep
35:46 Vertical Migration
36:42 Call of the Deep
38:18 God is Over All
Based, ty.
"unused" probably because people can't understand the difference between explored via diving or transportation and explored via mapping the whole ocean floor.
The problem is the ocean is basically a vast wasteland. There's nothing to explore except going in a straight line and hoping we bump into a new sea creature.
9😊
Mom
Momo
My favorite theory about krakens is they are just sterile octopus. The thing is some octopus never stop growing throughout life but they all die after mating. So a sterile octopus wouldn't trigger that biological kill switch. Letting them grow to giant sizes. However because of over fishing the sterile octopus just end up getting fished before they can grow big.
I also feel like over fishing for human fish/sea food consumption also play a part in certain species no longer growing to the max of their estimated sizes.
Or starvation but yeah, makes sense
Even though the Kraken is usually portrayed as a squid
"Remember lads, virginity is cool"
Hmmmm...
I appreciated your skepticism in this video. I love mysterious things, but too many TH-cam channels on the subject will end up coming to outlandish or paranormal conclusions.
Real
Except for the saturn wormhole, perfectly reasonable
I want to believe, I really do. But I don't make faith or feelings based decisions.
I'm open to the possibilities, but am skeptical.
Agreed. I like the spooky type set up, but then getting the facts
Exept the part where he called Twitter X
Hi, Bermudian here. 🇧🇲
I cannot begin to tell you how many times I’ve met people here in the states who get confused when I bring up the word “Bermuda” as my place of birth, because the first thing that they immediately think of and then ask me is “are you from the triangle?”
Yes Timothy; the Bermuda Triangle. I am totally from an area in the ocean that has made numerous people, ocean vessels, and aircraft disappear without a trace. I’m impressed by your geographical knowledge. You deserve a gold star.
I mean, your country is so irrelevant that you can't blame them.
How persuasive... Or is that exactly what a secretly-a-sea-monster from "area-in-the-ocean-that-has-made-numerous-people,-ocean-vessels,-and-aircraft-disappear-without-a-trace" would say to distract us from the TRUTH!? I'm on to you! (Joking)
Joking aside, I can't imagine how annoying that would be. My condolences to your patience, and my apologies for poking it further.
To be fair i guess tsunamix sounds like the name of an ocean dwelling beast.
Well I’m actually a fish? I don’t what kind of Bermudians you are
Why wouldn't the Bermuda Triangle simply be a place where governments just kind of "let" or "helped" pirates, human traffickers, or intelligence agencies get vessels or the people/cargo on them?
Okay, the upsweep sound is possibly the scariest sound imo. To me, it aounds like a long forgotten ww2 submarine that had sunk, and its alarm of oncoming doom still rings out to its ghostly passengers. Slowly, the alarm dies out for having to ring so long.
ok 👍
Edit: I wasn’t being rude, like it comes across as. I just thought it would be funny to give an answer that basically makes no sense
A for effort. F- for effect.
I think the consensus is that it was ice breaking up.
The Saturn sounds sound like the screams the Damned, and the upsweep sounds like a alarm placed by some supernatural figure to warn us of those screams… but HEY, THATS JUST A THEORY!
It sounds like a fire alarm to me, personally! I do like your idea though!
As someone who used to go fishing a bunch, water is fcking terrifying. It does not need a storm or high winds to kill you, there doesn't need to be a deep sea leviathan. The ocean by itself is enough. There was an incident, we had parked our boat in calm waters, the sky was completely clear. Come night time, and the boat was nearly tipping over, rocking violently back and forth, no storm, no rain, no heavy winds. The water was just in a mood that day, and we happened to be in it.
So yeah, if you're ever in any body of water you better damn well respect its power. Its not something you can beat or confront, it is a literal force of nature that can and will catch you off guard if you don't take it seriously.
You've obviously never heard of something called a snorkel. Having one of those babies will get you out of any issues while out to sea.
I have thalassophobia and I watched this video before bed so you could say I'm into hardcore horror
Relatable
Tbh every person with thalassophobia i know also has a strange morbid interest in the sea so i guess that's just the way it goes
I also enjoyed this video, and also as a person who once was in Italy and i swam like 30 meters away from the shore, i can tell you that seeing only darkness below me and then getting told there was a sting ray below me scared the living shit out of me.
You’re so edgy pretending to have a phobia
@@Jimmy_The_Kid "pretending to have a phobia"
Do you have any proof that they don't have thalassophobia?
An entry I think should’ve at least been mentioned is the vague mysterious case of leptocephalus giganteus, a larvae eel estimated to grow into the longest animal ever but has only been recorded twice in history
The larvae already recognized. It actually larvae of snub nosed spiny eel which ridiculously rarely grow longer than 30 cm. Yet somehow during peak of larvae growth, it become ridiculously gigantic then slowly shrunk into adult size
@@prasetyodwikuncorojati2434There is zero actual evidence of it being a notacanth. In fact, the one picture we have doesn’t fit the description of a notacanth. No research has come to any conclusion as to the identity of the leptocephalus giganteus.
That was debunked back in the 70's. The eel they caught was 5m long, and it was determined that since it was a larvea eel, it's adult size must be massive. But it was actually a deep sea spiny eel, in which the larvea stage is a larger than the adult stage - debunking it.
@@HomoLegalMedicyes GPT5 but as other commenters with real meat brains have pointed out, the only picture of the animal looks nothing like notacanthus
So basically you’re suspending your own rational because there’s a textbook answer to default too. Thankfully people aren’t falling into these thought patterns as much anymore
21:08 The fish spotted was most likely an Oarfish nicknamed "ryugu no tsukai" translating to "messenger from the sea god's palace". They are known to appear before natural calamities like tsunamis. The description given by Bibi fits perfectly as oarfish's can grow upto 30ft and have long, wiry dorsal fins protruding from their head.
It was a dragon fish
the moon fish
was going to say this! im a big fan of oarfish lol
100% an oar, or viperfish idk how it isnt extremely obviously one of those 2. I hated how mystical he made it all sound but....dude....its just a fucking viperfish it's not that crazy
@@cancerouscorndog6425 the last thing we should ever do is say "its just a _____" about any sea creature because imagine seeing 90% of them for the first time
35:30 Correction; we broadly know who the Sea Peoples are, the people who composed their numbers are well documented. The only mystery (which has many decent theories as of now) is what pressure caused them to start attacking, and what held them together (which again, many theories work to explain).
@leviathanr53 🧠
Who were they?
@@Incognito_Blazer I don’t remember the names, but in part they were groups of people that (at least) the Egyptians already knew and were familiar with (and had names for). Prevailing theories suggest most of them were mostly comprised of people who migrated south, because a climate crisis was causing their crop yields to fail (perhaps a volcanic winter). Their success in defeating Bronze Age armies was owed due to the failing economy and (as I’ve seen somewhere) their style of combat.
It’s probably best to consult a more elaborate source, but this is what I can verify from memory.
@@Incognito_Blazerlike other poster, i forget their egyptian names, i only remember like “Ekelesh” and also “Peleset”but theyre thought to be a coalition of sardinians, sicillians, the lybians, the name for the greeks they composed of is “peleset”. The egyptian king offered them service and land because they were great fighters. These “peleset” as language changes became the biblical “philistines” and that is where the regional name “palestine” came from
One of the last peoples i believe were celtic tribes from souther spain as well
They were the Philistines from the bible and a few other pre pirates
There were 2 reported instances of anyone disappearing in the Bermuda triangle since the 60s, both were in 2015, one was a 19" fishing ship being sailed by two 14 year old boys, and the other was crewed by 33 and sailed into a pretty violent hurricane. Notice how after the major technological boom we had in the 60s and 70s in regards to electric and digital equipment fielded by aircraft and naval vessels, people stopped disappearing out there.
About the marianas trench and the people who went down to see it, the first was Don Walsh. He passed away last year due to old age, but i got the chance to meet him a few weeks before his passing and ask him a few questions, as im pursuing a career in marine biology atm. He started out the call with an apology, telling us that he had been in the artic the past month and the only mammals he had seen were polar bears and his coworkers. He was 91 or 92 (he passed 10 days after his birthday and i met him very shortly before he passed) when i met him and was incredibly wise and charming. I’m glad i got to meet him before he passed, as he had been my hero from a young age.
we left out something about the big bigfin squid,
even though we know absolutely nothing about them and assume they catch their prey by dragging their long tentacles across the ground, we believe they can grow up to 50 feet because every single one found was a JUVENILE.
For call of the deep, I've heard of a lot of divers speculating that the people wanted/needed to rush to the surface, but somehow mixed up where was up and where was down
nope. it's a state similar to drunkenness caused by the gas you breathe in being affected by the pressure. seeing an empty abyss below you in that state causes an "ooh shiny!" reaction.
@@nat-coffeebat sooo basically what they said
Godzilla is probably chilling somewhere in the Dragons Triangle
Aight that Ningen joke earned you a subscriber. Well done.
Came back just to watch these again, we’ll always be here no matter what happens, we love your content.
did something happen?
th-cam.com/video/IXM04payq80/w-d-xo.html
Implying something is happening?
It's a reupload I think.
@@HomoLegalMedicAny idea why?
I listen to iceberg videos to fall asleep, I played this and closed my eyes. Then 0:15 comes out of nowhere and now I'm wide awake again 🥲
😂😂😂
Your sleep quality must be absolute shit lmao
Same happened here
nah cus it was fr so unnecessary 💀
it didnt replay for me luckily😭
This is my new "falling asleep video" it's been 4 days and I haven't finished it yet. I'm resisting the urge to watch it in the day because it's genuinely a good video but it works so well to fall asleep because you have a really soothing voice.
Funny. I was thinking of how the ocean's mysteries disproved the"born too late to explore the world" thing seconds before you brought it up.
the cannibal shark could have been an orca. Though that depth is around 2 thirds of their normal max diving depth and would be an incredible feat of strength as well
that was my theory as well.
Yeah those fkers are deadly and smart.
Seeing how deep it was before the tag floated up it seams likely that it would have been an attack from a much larger predator. Possibly an Orca, giant squid, or a cannibal shark.
Fun fact about the Mary Celeste; They might have actually figured out the mystery after all this time. Tests of the kind of alchohol they were carrying showed that if it were to ignite in the cargo hold, it would cause a flash fire to sweep across the ship, injuring the crew but moving too fast to leave burn marks on the wet wood of the ship.
So where did the bodies go?
@@laurenlilith1467 abandoned ship and probably died at sea during the storm
As someone obsessed with the ocean, this iceberg vid feels like it was made for me. It was fun seeing how many of these things I already knew about (over half!) And it was cool learning about the things I didn't!
In regards to the "call of the deep" phenomenon, perhaps it's tied to nitrogen narcosis? I remember hearing a story about a woman who experienced it and swam deeper like the boy in the story. Thankfully she was pulled back but she later recounted that she 100% believed at the moment that she was a mermaid, and always had been. Scary stuff, the ocean!
woah, ocean-diving delusions?
I really appreciate and admire that you put on screen what song is currently playing. So many times I've heard a cool song in the background of a video but I have no idea what song they've even used. Respect +
the "untouchable fish" description at 21:16 really reminds me of the giant oarfish/Regalecus glesne! they're commonly measured to be around the 2.5 to 3 metre (8.2 to 9.8 ft) length range and the first reliable footage of one was only recorded in 2010! it would have been cool to hear what you thought of "52 Blue" (world's loneliest whale), but this was a really engaging and interesting video! thanks for sharing!
One thing I heard is that if you listen to "sea monster sounds" at normal speed... They sound more animal its kinda freaky
i mean this is a no-brainer but all "monsters" are just average animals, show somebody who has never seen or heard a large predator and their roar and their imagination will probably go wild
@@dopaminedihe thinks fish don’t make sounds 😭
The "call of the deep" entry reminds me of the diver Yuri Lipski, that Russian diver who ended up recording his own death in Egypt's Blue Hole dive site.
You forgot to mention with the coconut crab ate Amelia H. The reason this theory even existed was because (not sure the date think it's recent) some sailors found a female skeleton of european origin on a tiny island in the area that she was flying in, navigation gear was found and the leg was broken but the limbs were ripped off hence the theory coconut crabs ate her. It's highly likely it was her and she died from her injuries and the crabs ate her body
"A bit of a stretch" he says, about a creature that could disguise itself as a rock. Look up cuttlefish some time. Even some of the bigger ones can disguise themselves damn near perfectly.
The deep is alluring. Mysteries and unexplainable sightings / creatures are fascinating. Your assembly of information and presentation was great and I enjoyed it. Thank you for putting it together.
Underwater water is awesome, it always makes me think of Subnautica’s Lost River biome.
Is water not usually underwater...? Fuck you've given me a new crisis-
@@Aldi-Offical I mean actual underwater water segments, shit. You’ve made me realize how hard this is to describe.
I have submechanaphobia and thallassaphobia. I never had thallassaphobia until one year I went to Florida for a vacation and I went a little too far into the waves and it felt like I was being sucked into the ocean. I always wanted to be a marine biologist, since I love swimming and seeing all the beautiful creatures. But not being able to see where I am or where the ground is is terrifying to me. It sends a fight or flight response and sometimes I feel like my breath has been taken away from viewing it
I feel like humans are instinctively horrified of deep water, because ultimately it means death to your brain if you cannot swim. Anything underwater just triggers that pattern recognition in your brain, causing you to be wayyy more terrified of unknown things in the water than you'd be of unknown things near you on land.
submecanthophobia? stop making shit up
@@A-Random_Pakistani stop being an asshole on the internet over words, how about that
cringe
@@meatgothball chronically online enough to make fun of someone sharing their experiences
the call of the deep reminds me of this thing i heard of where when a person reaches a certain water depth they’ll enter this unresponsive, trance-like state. i don’t remember what its called but its supposed to be well-known among divers and has a scientific explanation
also, the untouchable fish reminds me of fishes from the stomiidae family, especially those from the idiacanthus genus. im not sure how well the vision would be in an old sub like that, but i wonder if maybe he was mistaken about the size? or maybe it was some form of gigantism or smth
(edit, its called nitrogen narcosis)
Nitrogen narcosis or oxygen toxicity.
@@DrBright5558 yes!! it was nitrogen narcosis thank you
its called call of the void it happens to people in really high places too like skyscrapers
I thought nitrogen narcosis happens when a diver comes up too fast and the nitrogen bubbles in their bloodstream pop. The further down u go, the more nitrogen builds in your blood from the type of air you need to use. Then when you come up, the bubbles are supposed to pop slowly. But if you come up to quickly, they all pop at once in your body like a middle school volcano science project.
the thing about the Bermuda triangle is that its actually one of the most traveled through ocean areas which Which is why there's more ships that go missing there because there are more ship to go missing in the first place
Very cool, creepy, and calm video. I've always thought a killer whale, sperm whale, or giant squid was responsible for eating that great white shark. An animal would need to be able to dive really deep to get the tracker that far down.
14:01 was really funny for no reason
A possible explanation for why the strange phenomena of ‘the call of the deep’ exists might be nitrogen narcosis, which is essentially a reaction of gases in your body tissue go through at such high pressures while diving, (due to the increased solubility of your said gases) these making you almost high or feeling drunk, losing cognitive control and become mentally impaired. The carbon dioxide retention is what makes everything funky🤸🏻 when you breath air from your oxygen tank at certain depths, the pressure can make you hallucinate, lose control, judgement becomes impaired, you start to feel a state of euphoria. In that pressure you become less and less buoyant and find yourself swimming further and further down until the sea has sunk you to a point of inevitable death. I assume you won’t really feel your death, you drift off into sleep and at some point your lungs will collapse. Although it’s rare for nitrogen narcosis to become fatal since it’s easily fixed by being swimming back to the surface and being accompanied by fellow divers, being with less people and going a little further down will increase your chances of being called into the deep.
Thanks for the fun fact and possible explanation, loved it.
The “call of the deep” might also just be suicidal tendencies breaking out suddenly as a person impulsively takes their chance to end it.
I consider myself to be one of the most laziest people that I know, so is there any way you could dumb it down for me?
@@Noltiedat a certain depth, the pressure starts affecting the way the gas you breath in interacts with your body. skipping the long explanation of why and how this happens, it basically causes a state similar to being drunk, or inhaling laughing gas. you stop thinking clearly, and have the diver equivalent of an "ooh, shiny!" reaction when looking at the abyss below.
@@nat-coffeebat thank you but I’m so stupid to the point where, “ooh shiny!” Is my average mentality lol
Can you imagine what the people who found the colossal squid thought when they first saw it?
"Oh."
I have genuinely never gotten around to finish not even 1/4’s of an iceberg video, this is a first. Great coverage, presentation, and content! Got my sub good señor o7
You woke up a 7th grade memory where I proudly shared to my class that mermaids would definitely be discovered after watching the documentary.
Milky sea phenomenon is bioluminescent algae, it glows when disturbed for example when a small fish is consuming it, this attracts predators by basically putting a spotlight on the small fish and they get eaten, thus saving the algae from consumption.
It’s amazing how many years that footage of a sleeper shark has been circulating the internet as MEGALODON FOOTAGE
thank god i could find it again, i love coming back to this video when doing things, and couldn't find it, to find out it got taken down and reuploaded.
the use of what sounds like an instrumental of weird fishes/arpeggi by radiohead in the background of the 'rare sea creatures' segment was so clever
The world's first predator was a literal shrimp
It appears to look like a shrimp, but it obviously isnt
Don’t you talk bad about anomalocaris
@@Panchyishere anomalocaris is not a shrimp but anomalocaris is cool
🦐
@@ActuallyAShrimp may god help us all
I feel like this is a re-upload that I've seen before, but I can't get enough of this stuff, so it's all good.
Oh, and props for including important details like of the Flannan Isles lighthouse incident, specifically the fact that there were no storms recorded around the time of the disappearance, and especially that the alleged logbook entries were later fictional embellishments.
The incident is a popular topic on the site, and too many folks gloss over these facts if they even know them in the first place. It's tempting to omit this kinda thing in an attempt to make the content more exciting but is disingenuous. This stuff is fascinating enough as is.
Anyway, thanks and keep up the good work.
Your choice of video game soundtracks is greatly appreciated. Iron lung and SpongeBob music literally gave me chills lol
Absolutely love how your tone when speaking on a portal in the ocean that opens to Saturn and a regular fish of sorts is EXACTLY the same. You are my favorite iceberg analyst. Keep on keeping on, homie.
Great video man. I served four years in the Marine Corps, with my first deployment being on a Navy ship for 7 months. I remember those nights, stepping out on the smoke deck late into the night, smoking a few cigarettes, watching the moon reflect off of the open ocean with no land in sight, and wondering to myself what was in those waters. I’m a believer that there is plenty of crazy creatures out there that we simply haven’t discovered yet. I was raised in Upstate New York and I still have an aunt that lives in the little town of Moriah, right on Lake Champlain, with New York on one side of it and Vermont on the other. There is supposedly a creature in the lake called Champ (first five letter of the name of the lake). It’s basically Americas equivalent to the Loch Ness Monster.
30:04 WHY YOU GOTTA SCARE ME LIKE THAT?!😭
ikr startled me like crazy
Oml that video scarred me when I was young now I think its funny tho😂
That Ningen bit made me crack up way more than it should've, thanks for that 😂
I love the Aquatic Ambience in the background too, well played sir.
I have thallassophobia. It’s pretty extreme. I love water and all, I’ve lived next to it my entire life, I don’t have a problem with the fish ( I’ve fished for well over 10 years) but yeah just the emptiness and the unknown get to me.
Its too big and there could be really big things under me. I hate it. Its the bigness that freaks me out, thats why ship wrecks freak me out (I just about threw up watching Titanic) because its like, great that whole massive thing fits under the water with a couple empire state buildings worth of space to spare. _That's_ horrifying.
@@bloodyneptune it really is
@@bloodyneptunesounds like megalophobia and submechanophobia 😬
Having Weird Fishes by Radiohead play in the background while talking about strange sea life was a based choice
This is my favourite iceberg video, keep up the good work :)
Also the 0:55 - 1:04 bit always makes me laugh uncontrollably
I think it would be an interesting scientific experiment if we put a body(not necessarily human) in coconut crab territory and film what happens to it
We do decomposition experiments with donated human remains all the time, I see no issue with it
there is one with pigs
The “untouchable fish” at 21:11 was most likely the Gulper Eel, with their large mouths and bioluminescence.
No, gulper eels have very large mouths and a whip thin body. I figure it looks like a giant dragonfish.
I was thinking that this fish might be a Oarfish, the description fits really well
@@sgtcreampuff828are oarfish bigger or smaller than gulper eels
I can’t pin the name of it but the description and even the sketch’s has me sure it’s been found and documented since if not verrry similar
The last bit of the video is exactly what I decided to subscribe for. I like the way you think.
Great video! I'm going to watch the other two. You did an excellant job, fair play.
Respect the effort you put in to this video. Great work
People specifically think the the Daedalus serpent was a whale skim-feeding (swimming forward with its mouth open and upper jaw out of the water), which actually does appear similar and is extremely strange looking (there are vids on youtube)
0:17 man I was dozing off when that fucking scream came in 💀
Thanks for the sense of humor to keep me from going insane I appreciate it
Seeing the Baltic Sea anomaly again reminds me of all the times I’ve said “That’s clearly the Millennium Falcon”
The Star Wars Expanded universe actually has a ship that resembles the Baltic Sea Anomaly even more, called the Ebon Hawk.
Putting down the bimini road while not mentioning that its a very common size and shape of rock formation in the bahamas seems a little silly but great list
Great video with a great pace. This topic and speculation always fascinate me. I appreciate the sprinkling of dry humor throughout. :D
I feel like the story of atlantis was just made to scare people not to attack athens, or to avoid unjustified wars. the fact that some people cant see this and think its real is odd. ofc alot of things could be true, but obviously by far the more likely solution is what i just said. warfare was common and since greece was made of multiple city states im not surprised they made such legend, expecially since back then no one could disprove it.
I think that aspects of the story are exactly as you stated, but I do think that Platos account isn't entirely fictional.
The story goes that he supposedly learned of this from a documented ancestor of his named Solon. This person had visited Egypt, and in a temple the supposed account is relayed. It gets rather specific about how the city actually looked, and the geology of the area around it. Specifically he asked them when this happened, and the priests in charge told him this occurred 9,000 years prior to their own time. So roughly 11,000+ years from us. This time period closely aligns with massive flooding events that have been found in the geologic record, there's no way he could have guessed that.
I think the whole thing with war with Athens bit is an allegory he made up though. I doubt Athens existed 11,000 years ago. At least in any way that is provable.
@@665Powerlifting You are right, Athens didn’t exist back then, not as a superpower or any known stronghold in the ancient world. 11,000 years ago was the early beginnings of rhe Pre-Sesklo civilisation in what is now Thessaly, where some of the first indications of settled agriculture in Europe is displayed as well as animal husbandry and pottery. This however was in the early Neolithic era, and the Pre-Sesklo civilisation is believed to have been the early stepping stones to the Danube civilisation and other larger Indo-European civilisations in the coming millennia. It is entirely possible that one of these early coastal Thessalian settlements, that survived for centuries in the early agricultural period was viewed as advanced and futuristic by the standards of the time, and as time carried on and civilisations advanced, the story of this advanced culture took on properties that made it advanced to the storyteller at the time, and its extinction by flooding in the late neolithic or even Bronze Age gives it an embellishable ending that would in time come to align well with the Athenian culture and their association with Poseidon
This is the excact reason why 90% of my nightmares contain deep water.
I've experience call of the deep before, or at least something similar to it, it was when I was a 5 year old, my first time swimming on the sea and it was only swimming on the shallow part of the beach, so you can't really call it a 'call of the deep' so to say, but I remember at that when me and my 2 older female siblings were having a hold your breath underwater contest, I'd look to the far edge of my vision, seeing nothing, but something gave me a feeling of longing, so as a kid, I swam there (wasn't swimming vertically down, but was swimming to my front), my 2 sisters realizing I was going too far and was worried I'd get pulled by the current, instantly pulled me back and brought me on land, when they asked me why I was going so far, I answered "it felt like home" so naturally that it was apparently creepy to them, they told our parents and I have never gone to swim on the ocean ever again, it's been 17 years ever since and I still haven't swam on the ocean ever since that incident.
To be fair, that _would_ be an extremely creepy thing to hear from a 5 year old you just pulled out of the ocean. I probably wouldn't have taken you back, either 😂
I love that you don’t overdo the video with filler facts there’s no necessary. Just get to the point and you do that very well thank you.
I love the deadpan tone of this guy and then saying stuff like "the Limbo of the Lost really happened"
23:34 "this U boat is already dead, it just doesn’t know it yet" 🎅🏻🎅🏻🐱
goddamn this video is fantastic 🙏 the soundtrack you cultivated for this is s tier
The untouchable fish seems a lot like the dragonfish
Or the Gulper Eel
Thats what i thought! It's just a dragonfish experiencing deep sea gigantic.
Nothing scares me more than the ocean. I will not swim in lakes or rivers any more either. I can swim really good too, it just scares me now. I live next to a huge lake and dont swim in it, gives me anxiety to think about swimming there.
Youre right bur dont be afraid of water. Dont go in if u dknt wanna but its just water. Bunch of dumb fish can swim in it and live in it so ut cant be that bad. Skill issue ngl.
Water is my biggest fear but I still swim in the black murky depths. I'm little too, lots of fish around here can swallow me whole.
Wasn't expecting Limbo of the Lost mention, insta sub for that.
Bro this video is hilarious and informative, hope you get the love you deserve soon
I watched Doctor who story the Chase. It says the daleks scared them off of the boat. That's the most likely. Daleks are basically alien Nazis in an invincible tank only beaten once by stairs but have later mastered the art of flying up stairs making them unstoppable.
That was the episode that made me interested in ghost stories like the Mary celeste so I think its right for me to pay my respect to it.
I subscribed to you because of this video!! Keep them coming!! It gives me something to listen to while driving and playing games.
Good video really liked.👍👍👌
This is the most perfect video to watch in a cold morning having breakfast home alone…everyone loves the vids bro
When you look out at the sea it looks so mysterious and vast. It's the ultimate backdrop for an unbelievable story.
I cant believe you mentioned the Bigfin Squid and the theory that it sifts food with it's long tentacles was proven false. We have video evidence of it actively hunting prey and it was nightmare fuel
where?
It's not a footage of hunting, we just know it can move rather fast. Still little is known about it's feeding habits.
@@MargoTheNerd Pretty convincing footage of it grabbing a lill swimmy down there but I will agree perhaps not common to the species
weird fishes was so perfectly used in this video
Awesome video extremely underrated
21:42 Hi! I know I’m late to the party but the fish seen by Beebe is most likely a species of barbeled dragonfish! Very cool dudes! Great video :)
The ningen intro killed me 11:51
spiderman meme withing 20 seconds of the video? you've EARNED that new sub
I have played Metroid Dread so much that I instantly recognized the music at 4:20 as the Burenia theme
Was looking for this comment lol
Im watching this in the dark rn at midnight and when the saturn sounds came on i was like "damn thats kinda cool"
and then my heart leaped when the scream showed up
thanks a lot dude
Very good video and very good narrator. I like your voice and combination of informations and light humor. I'm subscribing and hope you will continue this great work. :)
22:37 “this fish is already dead, it just doesn’t know it” ahh sound 😭
This fish is already dead it just doesn't know it yet 🎅🎅🥕🐡
well done! you just earned a sub
30:07 NOT THE DOLPHIN MAN 😭
8:12 does anyone know what animatronic that is??? It's freaky AF but I wanna know what it is!
If you look up "Dragon sculpture lake Neuchâtel Switzerland" it will show up. There's also a creepy shark statue in that lake!
My dude is breaking out the underwater level music from Donkey Kong Country right out of the gate. That alone is worth a sub.
If the Ningen were real, what if it’s a hairless descendent of aquatic giant sloths (like Thallasocnus) that convergeantly evolved whale-like feaures?
That’s a cool theory. But If aquatic giant sloths were still around I’d be taller than one. So much for “giant”
@@FroggyHopScotch30 whales got HUGE when exposed to the abundance of food and openness of the sea, maybe the ningen did the same
30:07 freaked me out, every time I see it I get freaked out and having it appear out of nowhere doesn’t help
23:42 idk sterling song lol
The donkeys Kong underwater theme?!? I LOVE IT!