One of the things i loved about scuba diving is that you can see and feel the thermocline even to the point of being able to dip your fingers into the colder water or reach your arm up into the warm water
The first time I saw one was trippy. When I got close everything got this weird wavyness. I was confused as to why everything got blurry the I hit the thermocline and as soon as my face crossed it everything cleared up.
Can it happen in freshwater, or a hot spring? Is it the same thing going on? Ive been to a hot spring where I could feel a clear separation with hot and cold water!
I was a sonar tech in the Navy on submarines. We use these layers in the ocean to hide the sub in from bring detected. Sound travels differently in warm water than it does cold water.
thank you for the comment, I have great appreciation and fascination for military jobs/careers. My family is all Navy and Air Force on both sides of the Atlantic!
The temperature gradient is what matters for sound propagation, not the temperature itself. Sometimes it helps submarines hide, sometimes it helps them to be found. I’m your Russian colleague 😉
@@cheesebusiness @landrar is correct: Speed travels differently, just like light travels differently in glass and air, and on the border between two mediums sound/light gets bent or reflected. Afaik, best in hiding their subs in this are Swedes and Germans in the Baltic.
The world's largest (known) waterfall/cascade is a cold water layer flowing like this, moving south along the floor of the north Atlantic, and falling over the edge of a continental shelf.
I love simple high school level science experiments. They are usually basic enough to help people understand the simplest things in the world that people take for granted.
All my teachers: open the book, read the chapter, take the test. I can’t remember a single teacher actually teaching us. One class had over 100 students, I don’t think the teacher knew our names.
This seems like a great teacher. The kids seem very engaged (at least for the video). I had a few science teachers like this and learned so much from them.
And this is how you do science. A practical demonstration, visually distinct features, audience participation. Thank you for being an engaging teacher. I know it takes more effort, but it's excellent!
I imagine that he's done the same demonstration many times and he's seen it work better than it did this time (not that I'd be able to identify what the criteria of "better" is in this)
@@christianjonahzapanta6954flat earthers understand density, they're about the most dense people you can find. What they don't understand is that it's gravity that makes density work the way it does.
These are the best teachers. the ones who teach you and then SHOW you. I loved my chemistry teacher in high school because we did some of the coolest experiments
I still remember my first day of chemistry many years ago. My teacher was just casually talking to us about expectations for the class as he sprayed a mysterious clear liquid all over his desk. In the middle of talking about homework, he strikes a match he had in his pocket and lit the entire desk on fire. Only class I ever paid attention to after that!
If you're diving in the cenotes of the Yucatan peninsula, a fresh water cave system, you will sometimes be crossing the barrier between the fresh water and the heavier and colder salty ground water and in some places, you can swim with your eyes just in line with this barrier. Then you will actually see those waves on the surface of the lower layer, illuminated by the blue light of your torch. That is a magical experience.
Teachers can make or break you. You sir, seem like an awesome teacher. I love when they are engaged with the students and let them be involved. It makes the world of a difference!
It is a good demo. But the reduction of rust by igniting aluminium dust with a magnesium fire is the most out there demo that I have seen. Classic redox reaction. The second most impressive demo I have seen is magnesium burning so hot inside a hollowed out block of CO2 ice that it breaks down the CO2 to combine with the oxygen and keeps burning in an atmosphere that snuffs out regular fires. Having said that, the separation of the two densities of water due to the different salinities is quite cool.
I had one science teacher like this in my whole school career. Still remember Ms. Sullivan! She was so cool, made me feel excited for class, and did fun experiments like this! Love it!
@@ericwtfsky ummmm maybe watch it again, there was a minor colour change, but other than that an the water levelling out as is expected, nothing has happened to warrant that reaction. Going to take a wild stab that you were that guy? 🤷
@@blankshadow2050it's HIS OWN POINT - we're replying under his own comment. How you gonna tell him what his own point was? 😂 The point is that when the "whoa!" guy's mind was blown, nothing noticeable had even happened yet, other than the water leveling out.
If you want to know how , read the Holy Qur’an, Surat Al-Rahman, verses 19,20,21. This is the Lord of the Worlds. And this is not the only miracle found in the Holy Qur’an.❤❤
Superb teaching method. I wish had teachers like him during my high school years. You're clearly invested in your students. Hopefully the school admin staff and the parents of these kids appreciate it. 👍
The best thing is when you dive though that; it gets "misty" and really hard to focus, then when you're though the top layer, it very clear! We have this around the cost of Sweden, and it's most noticeable at the spring, but at deeper places, you find it in the summer too!
Great job helping us visualize a thermocline ( separation between different layers of water). I used to go skiing at the lake and I loved diving down and feeling the cooler water after a hot day in the summer water skiing.
Oh wow so this is why the ocean feels warmer when you first get in, because the top layer is heated from the sun, then it gets colder the deeper you swim out because the warmer water only sits on top 🤯✨
Downside is I feel like this demo has more to do with the cold water being the only one mentioned to be "salt water", which would be more dense than fresh water, and would help explain the clear separation between warm and cold water.
Thermoclines can happen in all salt water. I have dove off of OC Maryland and above the thermocline is 80 degree water, below was usually 45 degrees. Going through division was like getting hit by a truck, even wearing a drysuit it was a brutal experience.
i was reading about thermoclines the other day! really cool to know what it’s like to experience the shift between one in real life (even if it’s brutal). fascinating stuff!
I lived in Ocean City most of my life and I swear that water never got above 72 it never ever felt warm besides assateague Bayside in that shallow ass water 😂
@@impaler331 upwelling causes the water temps to really get frigid. I remember one time at Assateague in August, fog rolling in and the water was 58 degrees and chocolate brown. Usually when a strong south wind and swell was occurring.
I love science. Doing experiments and demonstrations were the best in bio, physics, and chemistry. If scientist as a career was explained to me as a kid, I probably would have chose that path
idk why they were shocked by the water levelling out... also the dude lifting the gates slowed down AFTER the water had stopped flowing. i know theyre kids but like... how many brain cells?
Same thing happens in the air. Different air masses can have just as sharp boundaries. Im a glider pilot, flew one day when there was a temperature inversion, so cold dense air sitting on top of hot air (it happens occasionally when the air is still) I was climbing in a thermal of rising air in the low warm layer, it was hot and visibility was aweful, could only see a mile or so in the murk. The cold layer normal acts like a lid and the thermals stop dead when they reach it. I was in a particularly strong thermal that punched into the cold layer. Suddenly I could see to the horizon in crystal clear air, felt like a flying fish that just jumped out of the ocean. Below me the top of the warm layer looked solid, and vis down to the ground was minimal. Then I slowly sank back down, the murk surrounded me again. Physics in nature is awesome !
If you spend enough time in the ocean you can experience this in sensations of touch. When it rains hard you can feel the difference of the layer of fresh rain water sitting on top of the salt water. I am in the tropics so the fresh water feels colder than the salt water.
Science teachers are always the ones with the best personalities. Probably makes sense since we'd want to inspire more students to go into these types of fields upon graduation.
Great teaching. It is always fascinating to see physics in action. I used to do little experiments like that when I was 10 yrs old. Drove my parents crazy…
The very first whoa!, so funny.. the guy thought that the water all becoming 1 equal height after the barrier was removed was the interesting part. Never seen water before, huh. I'm glad everyone else waited to be amazed until you could see the clear separation, after it settled.
@@narrativeless404 There's a beach in Bikini Bottom called the Goo Lagoon. It was always considered unrealistic because they're already in water, so there couldn't be a beach. This shows how you can have a 'water body' in an underwater setting
@@pranavghantasala6808 Except it doesn't work like that irl, and it doesn't stay like that for long Eventually it would reach temperature equilibrium and mix up
@@narrativeless404 but there are places like this where it looks like a lake underwater you can find pictures online they look pretty cool and trippy I think it’s just like denser saltier water accumulated over time that’s not like that because of temperature but because of saltiness and/or the denseness of the water but I’m not sure that’s just my guess I never really looked to deep into it other than seeing the pictures
Students learning what a thermocline is. When lakes are calm for long enough they have warm water sitting on cool water just like this. If you can find the depth of it you can use it to help catch fish
@earthscienceclassroom going on research cruises to collect samples was the best. I did get a master's degree in biological oceanography at San Francisco State University's marine lab and worked there for a few years after. Unfortunately, it didn't pay very well, so now I'm doing data analysis for a logistics company. I miss the lab and fieldwork, but it was very busy with me managing the lab and doing the work of 2.5 people, lol.
It’s always sad to hear that certain scientific careers/disciplines sound amazing but do not pay enough to support yourself. Especially in an expensive state such as California. At least you will always have the background and degree to get back into it if you wanted
Excellent explanation on how warm and cold water don't easily mix! It's fascinating to consider that this isn’t the first time our planet has seen massive influxes of warm freshwater into colder oceans. At the end of the Ice Age, as glaciers rapidly melted, similar events occurred and had significant impacts on marine life and ocean currents. These changes were so dramatic that they likely contributed to major shifts in climate and ecosystems, which are echoed in many of the myths and legends passed down through generations. This historical perspective not only highlights the power of natural climate events but also serves as a reminder of the potential scale and impact of current climate changes. It's a sobering thought that what we're observing now could have equally profound effects on our planet's future. I truly hope people get away from religion in time to stop fighting reastional thought, and we vecome a more scunce and logic based society, at least in america. Im tired of feeling like a immoral christian nation that cares more about colonization than science. 😅
What was the point of the first part of your comment? The reason why they said that was because they did see something happening but the camera was panned closer toward the top, but even if that wasn't the case what are you trying to achieve by implying they're over reacting? People aren't allowed to get excited?
@@QuinnGIn1080p a classic debbie downer. not a great trait to have in life. someone probably did that several times to them in life and monkey see monkey do
@@blastfiendsunite420 Not making much sense there, that's why they're in a class and not at the lake. Feeling something doesn't put it into context like a demonstration does. Just because it gets colder when you go deeper under water doesn't mean that you immediately grasp the concept. That's what school is for.
I remember taking oceanography in 10th grade (currently in 11th) and I have to say that the professor makes it all the better. Without a fun and enthusiastic professor, oceanography would be very boring!
﴾He has set free the two seas meeting together. There is a barrier between them. They do not transgress.﴿ - Qur’an, 55:19-20 ﴾He is the one who has set free the two kinds of water, one sweet and palatable, and the other salty and bitter. And He has made between them a barrier and a forbidding partition.﴿ - Qur’an, 25:53
Love how when they barely pull the last board up, and before anything happens, the water just levels out, as you would expect, and all the kids are like “whooaaaaa” lol professor was like guys nothing happened yet
﴾He has set free the two seas meeting together. There is a barrier between them. They do not transgress.﴿ - Qur’an, 55:19-20 ﴾He is the one who has set free the two kinds of water, one sweet and palatable, and the other salty and bitter. And He has made between them a barrier and a forbidding partition.﴿ - Qur’an, 25:53
﴾He has set free the two seas meeting together. There is a barrier between them. They do not transgress.﴿ - Qur’an, 55:19-20 ﴾He is the one who has set free the two kinds of water, one sweet and palatable, and the other salty and bitter. And He has made between them a barrier and a forbidding partition.﴿ - Qur’an, 25:53
British narrator: "While most aquatic species thrive in the red Gatoraid, the deep sea creatures survive in the crushing pressures of the blue Gatoraid."
That's exactly what happens in Milford sound in New Zealand. Its were i grew up a a kid. A glacier carved out a deep fiord. The trees grow on the side of the mountain as the rain water goes down the mountain side were i sits on top of the saltwater. There's a big mound of rocks at the mouth of it. Which breaks the oceans undercurrent so the fresh water sits on top of the salt water. The fresh water picks up dies and tannes and creates a dark layer of fresh water. Tricking the fish and sea life to think its deeper it is. There's a very rare deep sea coral that grows there near the surface. Its called black coral and only grows like cm every year.
Students: *losing their minds*
Prof: “yeah not the best demonstration”
I think it’s supposed to show more interaction between the layers
@@thewonderfulwizardoftheweb1053He was dissapointed there wasn't a lot of current. The water itself did exactly what it was supposed to do
😂😂😂😂😂
Why is my first thought always top comment? Is anyone else picking up on this?
@@patientzero5685you know too much, they will find you soon.
One of the things i loved about scuba diving is that you can see and feel the thermocline even to the point of being able to dip your fingers into the colder water or reach your arm up into the warm water
yes! i love the sensation of making the descent and feeling the water get colder and colder..
The first time I saw one was trippy. When I got close everything got this weird wavyness. I was confused as to why everything got blurry the I hit the thermocline and as soon as my face crossed it everything cleared up.
Can it happen in freshwater, or a hot spring?
Is it the same thing going on?
Ive been to a hot spring where I could feel a clear separation with hot and cold water!
@@Janes_Lane yep it happens in all water; its from the natural separation of hot-cold water, its kind of like layers of a cake
That is amazing, really awesome that you got to experience that 🤙🏻
The fact that this demonstration was good enough to make someone unironically use the term "awesome-sauce" speaks to how well done this was.
Or maybe how easily amused they are.
Air works the same way. That's why a two story house is usually warmer on the second floor than the first.
Fucking redditors
He definitely wasn't unironically saying that.
@@RuminatingWizardZzzz
I was a sonar tech in the Navy on submarines. We use these layers in the ocean to hide the sub in from bring detected. Sound travels differently in warm water than it does cold water.
thank you for the comment, I have great appreciation and fascination for military jobs/careers. My family is all Navy and Air Force on both sides of the Atlantic!
Merci pour cette info je me coucherai moin bête se soir ^^
@@nellstay18 tu es le bienvenu
The temperature gradient is what matters for sound propagation, not the temperature itself. Sometimes it helps submarines hide, sometimes it helps them to be found. I’m your Russian colleague 😉
@@cheesebusiness @landrar is correct: Speed travels differently, just like light travels differently in glass and air, and on the border between two mediums sound/light gets bent or reflected.
Afaik, best in hiding their subs in this are Swedes and Germans in the Baltic.
"yo, why is this awesomesauce?"
Dude knew he was cringe before he even finished, you can hear it in his voice
Not you guys bullying literal children 🥴
@@GuyWithAPS5my fault original gangster
@@GuyWithAPS5 not you guys mistaking a quote for bullying 😂
@@GuyWithAPS5 not you guys with a ps5😂😂
The world's largest (known) waterfall/cascade is a cold water layer flowing like this, moving south along the floor of the north Atlantic, and falling over the edge of a continental shelf.
world largest waterfall being under water is kinda cool
@@snowjix and somewhat horrifying. No idea how strong the current would be.
@@snowjix I know, right?
@@scw55 Oh, yeah. I used to have nightmares about being pulled into deep, powerful currents, in the dark. It's a truly terrifying prospect...
@@alden1132am I the only one who can sorta kinda slowly still breathe under water right before waking up?
I love simple high school level science experiments. They are usually basic enough to help people understand the simplest things in the world that people take for granted.
Yeah, theres water under water
Having a teacher who makes learning fun is the absolute best
El Nino simulator
All my teachers: open the book, read the chapter, take the test.
I can’t remember a single teacher actually teaching us. One class had over 100 students, I don’t think the teacher knew our names.
@@jool7793 not great : /
This seems like a great teacher. The kids seem very engaged (at least for the video). I had a few science teachers like this and learned so much from them.
Thank you so much, I do love my job and these lessons are always fun to teach
@@earthscienceclassroomdone subscribing sir 👍
@@earthscienceclassroom how about some Heisenberg lessons?
@jjjrjjjr1 probably be my last lesson teaching hehe
Fr had a math teacher like this was actually the first to teach me sumthin
That girl was hyping this up and the prof somehow sounded like he was trying to downplay how cool it was 😂
Prof wanted less vocals on his video lol
“Not the best ever”
It’s called sucking up for that gradw
@MohammedAli-fd7kt He said "Not the best demo." As in not the best demonstration but it was proving his lesson.
@@kittylove9389 truuu
This is one of the best ways to teach students that are visual learners. Props to this teacher.
And this is how you do science. A practical demonstration, visually distinct features, audience participation.
Thank you for being an engaging teacher. I know it takes more effort, but it's excellent!
Thank you for the kind feedback!
Don't sell it short. It's a great demo.
Flat Earthers will say this demo is CGI
I imagine that he's done the same demonstration many times and he's seen it work better than it did this time (not that I'd be able to identify what the criteria of "better" is in this)
@@christianjonahzapanta6954flat earthers understand density, they're about the most dense people you can find.
What they don't understand is that it's gravity that makes density work the way it does.
Lies
@@robertleamon1419 Wat is er met Lies?
As a visual learner, mad respect to teachers who go out of the way to teach like this ❤
There's no such thing. You're just a slow learner
I think visual learning/ type of learner isn't a thing. you're just a learner they are bad at teaching
Kak
thats why science classes were the best especially for an ADHD student like myself science teachers know how to make it interesting
Another proof Blueberry Gatorade and Raspberry Gatorade CANNOT MIX! It’s science people! You juss got learnt 😂
Most productive thing I’ve seen on social media today.
This is hands-down the BEST way to demonstrate the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics to anyone, ever.
Thank you so much for the nice comment
These are the best teachers. the ones who teach you and then SHOW you. I loved my chemistry teacher in high school because we did some of the coolest experiments
Thank you so much, I’m lucky to work with many teachers like this at my school
the best teachers are those that trust the science enough to make demonstrations.
I still remember my first day of chemistry many years ago. My teacher was just casually talking to us about expectations for the class as he sprayed a mysterious clear liquid all over his desk. In the middle of talking about homework, he strikes a match he had in his pocket and lit the entire desk on fire.
Only class I ever paid attention to after that!
My high school 60 years ago - I hated it because from day one, I had no idea what he was talking about. The boys did, and he just ran with them!!
If you're diving in the cenotes of the Yucatan peninsula, a fresh water cave system, you will sometimes be crossing the barrier between the fresh water and the heavier and colder salty ground water and in some places, you can swim with your eyes just in line with this barrier. Then you will actually see those waves on the surface of the lower layer, illuminated by the blue light of your torch. That is a magical experience.
This is some next level experience !!
😢😢you will also see dead marine life not fast enough to escape the salty brine.
I was just gonna ask if this is how a cenote works
A single demonstration like this would have changed my entire attitude towards school
I appreciate you kind comment, many thanks
Dude that one guy that said "this is awesome sauce" proves that we are prospering in science and education.
Reminds me of my chem teacher he loved demonstrations like this, every Friday was Fire Friday and it was an absolute blast
Absolute blast - I see what you did there 😂
Some teachers just know how to capture students attention. Then there was my junior year science teacher. lol!
Pun intended
Cooblestone generator in real life???? 🥶🥶🥶🥶
Water and Water = Rock..
@@NasusGamerThe red is lava, duh... Least brain-dead Nasus main.
🤦♂️
@@GustavRex yeah, he isn't leaving top at this point
Grow up
A young person looking at science that occurs in their world and saying "wait this is actually awesome" ❤️❤️❤️ love! So pure and cute!
This is why I love science! It's always fascinating, and teachers like him make a difference in the world.
I really appreciate the kind words!
Teachers can make or break you. You sir, seem like an awesome teacher. I love when they are engaged with the students and let them be involved. It makes the world of a difference!
"Not the best demo"
Literally the best demo you've ever seen
no
Yes
It is a good demo. But the reduction of rust by igniting aluminium dust with a magnesium fire is the most out there demo that I have seen.
Classic redox reaction.
The second most impressive demo I have seen is magnesium burning so hot inside a hollowed out block of CO2 ice that it breaks down the CO2 to combine with the oxygen and keeps burning in an atmosphere that snuffs out regular fires.
Having said that, the separation of the two densities of water due to the different salinities is quite cool.
Props to the teacher for finding an engaging way to learn them there stoodents.
Get This Man A Raise! For real, pay the teachers better, please.
The person who made that “woahhhh” sound was 100% moistcritical
I had one science teacher like this in my whole school career. Still remember Ms. Sullivan! She was so cool, made me feel excited for class, and did fun experiments like this! Love it!
The guys initial reaction... Like nothing had happened other than the water levelling out and he loses his mind, lol
😂😂
umm the blue was all rushing to the red and blue was sinking very fast, that's why he react
@@ericwtfsky ummmm maybe watch it again, there was a minor colour change, but other than that an the water levelling out as is expected, nothing has happened to warrant that reaction.
Going to take a wild stab that you were that guy? 🤷
@@KOTR2003you missed the point but go off
@@blankshadow2050it's HIS OWN POINT - we're replying under his own comment. How you gonna tell him what his own point was? 😂
The point is that when the "whoa!" guy's mind was blown, nothing noticeable had even happened yet, other than the water leveling out.
If students at school were this interested, teaching would be so much actual fun
The best demonstration I have ever seen. Who loves earth sciences ?
My favorite, especially meteorology
If you want to know how , read the Holy Qur’an, Surat Al-Rahman, verses 19,20,21. This is the Lord of the Worlds. And this is not the only miracle found in the Holy Qur’an.❤❤
Therefore, the ocean (salt water) does not mix with the fresh water
Superb teaching method. I wish had teachers like him during my high school years. You're clearly invested in your students. Hopefully the school admin staff and the parents of these kids appreciate it. 👍
The best thing is when you dive though that; it gets "misty" and really hard to focus, then when you're though the top layer, it very clear!
We have this around the cost of Sweden, and it's most noticeable at the spring, but at deeper places, you find it in the summer too!
That might be a layer of hydrogen sulfide.
Diving in Sweden...😂😂😂😂
Great job helping us visualize a thermocline ( separation between different layers of water). I used to go skiing at the lake and I loved diving down and feeling the cooler water after a hot day in the summer water skiing.
I love that Hannah is doing the outros as well now. She is a fantastic co-host. Intelligent, well-spoken, and a critical thinker.
Thermo and halocline demonstration! Sometimes you can see and feel the layers when you're scuba diving! ❤😊
Oh wow so this is why the ocean feels warmer when you first get in, because the top layer is heated from the sun, then it gets colder the deeper you swim out because the warmer water only sits on top 🤯✨
Downside is I feel like this demo has more to do with the cold water being the only one mentioned to be "salt water", which would be more dense than fresh water, and would help explain the clear separation between warm and cold water.
I love the student hyping up the experiment before they even see the result
If the ocen was split by a window, itd probably be a television show that brought new content for eternity.
Thermoclines can happen in all salt water. I have dove off of OC Maryland and above the thermocline is 80 degree water, below was usually 45 degrees. Going through division was like getting hit by a truck, even wearing a drysuit it was a brutal experience.
i was reading about thermoclines the other day! really cool to know what it’s like to experience the shift between one in real life (even if it’s brutal). fascinating stuff!
And it's a very distinct line. I never would have guessed until I dove. At least where I was at you could see it as well as feel it
I lived in Ocean City most of my life and I swear that water never got above 72 it never ever felt warm besides assateague Bayside in that shallow ass water 😂
And you get that heat shimmer/mirage effect informing you you're about to freeze your external genitals off!
@@impaler331 upwelling causes the water temps to really get frigid. I remember one time at Assateague in August, fog rolling in and the water was 58 degrees and chocolate brown. Usually when a strong south wind and swell was occurring.
I love science. Doing experiments and demonstrations were the best in bio, physics, and chemistry. If scientist as a career was explained to me as a kid, I probably would have chose that path
The student reactions are too cute 😆 love to hear them enjoying themselves. I’m sure it makes teaching an even more fun experience too
Why was I today years old? I feel I should have been taught this. This could save a life in the ocean.
Such a chill teacher from the sounds of it, seems like a good class to be in
Lmao the "woah!" before the important bit has even happened yet
idk why they were shocked by the water levelling out... also the dude lifting the gates slowed down AFTER the water had stopped flowing. i know theyre kids but like... how many brain cells?
Same thing happens in the air. Different air masses can have just as sharp boundaries. Im a glider pilot, flew one day when there was a temperature inversion, so cold dense air sitting on top of hot air (it happens occasionally when the air is still) I was climbing in a thermal of rising air in the low warm layer, it was hot and visibility was aweful, could only see a mile or so in the murk. The cold layer normal acts like a lid and the thermals stop dead when they reach it. I was in a particularly strong thermal that punched into the cold layer. Suddenly I could see to the horizon in crystal clear air, felt like a flying fish that just jumped out of the ocean. Below me the top of the warm layer looked solid, and vis down to the ground was minimal. Then I slowly sank back down, the murk surrounded me again. Physics in nature is awesome !
If you spend enough time in the ocean you can experience this in sensations of touch. When it rains hard you can feel the difference of the layer of fresh rain water sitting on top of the salt water. I am in the tropics so the fresh water feels colder than the salt water.
This is a really great way of explaining brine pools!
Science teachers are always the ones with the best personalities.
Probably makes sense since we'd want to inspire more students to go into these types of fields upon graduation.
Seeing it with your own eyes so completely changes gow you understand things. A very good way of teaching.
Thank you so much
Good teacher. Making intrigue in understanding.
Thank you so much
Great teaching. It is always fascinating to see physics in action. I used to do little experiments like that when I was 10 yrs old. Drove my parents crazy…
The very first whoa!, so funny.. the guy thought that the water all becoming 1 equal height after the barrier was removed was the interesting part. Never seen water before, huh. I'm glad everyone else waited to be amazed until you could see the clear separation, after it settled.
🙌🏻 SUPER COOL to see the cool water go to the bottom!! Wow. Loved this!! 🎉
I miss oceanography, was my favorite class ever in senior year.
I always knew spongebob was a scientifically accurate show
What's the SpongeBob has to do with all this, huh?
@@narrativeless404 There's a beach in Bikini Bottom called the Goo Lagoon. It was always considered unrealistic because they're already in water, so there couldn't be a beach. This shows how you can have a 'water body' in an underwater setting
@@pranavghantasala6808 Except it doesn't work like that irl, and it doesn't stay like that for long
Eventually it would reach temperature equilibrium and mix up
@@narrativeless404 but there are places like this where it looks like a lake underwater you can find pictures online they look pretty cool and trippy I think it’s just like denser saltier water accumulated over time that’s not like that because of temperature but because of saltiness and/or the denseness of the water but I’m not sure that’s just my guess I never really looked to deep into it other than seeing the pictures
@@isaiahthemack8892 Well yeah, that's maybe possible
But fish don't give a shit about that though.
"Don't all just get excited at once." He tried to control their reaction lol.
So that's the reason why the shore is sometimes cold at the bottom, gives me chills when I feel it 🥶
I love underwater lakes
Aww man, makes me think of my science teacher, he was the best. Wonder what hes doing now, thanks Mr.Turner, your lessons were some of the best
I liked the part where people said "WOAH!" before anything happened yet. Bright minded students. Clearly excited about being excited.
I’ve never seen a demonstration like this, this is cool
Professor visually showing students a thermocline. Nicely done
Everyone i know always asks me how i can remember so much stuff from high school and its because of teachers like this.
Thank you for the kind words
Students learning what a thermocline is. When lakes are calm for long enough they have warm water sitting on cool water just like this. If you can find the depth of it you can use it to help catch fish
I love how excited the students are :')
If you walk deep enough into the ocean in some places you can actually feel the shelf and the current between the layers. it's really cool!
Thank You,❤🎉 interesting 😮🤗😸🩷💞🌹☮️🇺🇲🌍🫶🏻
Fun additional fact: water is most dense at 4C. As it approaches freezing point, it starts to become less dense.
I had a teachers like this hands on, interactive and they always moved me to the boring teachers where nothing was explained or demoed.
I love this experiment
That’s awesome, what was your favorite part of your oceanography degree? Are you now an oceanographer?
@earthscienceclassroom going on research cruises to collect samples was the best. I did get a master's degree in biological oceanography at San Francisco State University's marine lab and worked there for a few years after. Unfortunately, it didn't pay very well, so now I'm doing data analysis for a logistics company. I miss the lab and fieldwork, but it was very busy with me managing the lab and doing the work of 2.5 people, lol.
It’s always sad to hear that certain scientific careers/disciplines sound amazing but do not pay enough to support yourself. Especially in an expensive state such as California. At least you will always have the background and degree to get back into it if you wanted
Excellent explanation on how warm and cold water don't easily mix! It's fascinating to consider that this isn’t the first time our planet has seen massive influxes of warm freshwater into colder oceans. At the end of the Ice Age, as glaciers rapidly melted, similar events occurred and had significant impacts on marine life and ocean currents. These changes were so dramatic that they likely contributed to major shifts in climate and ecosystems, which are echoed in many of the myths and legends passed down through generations. This historical perspective not only highlights the power of natural climate events but also serves as a reminder of the potential scale and impact of current climate changes. It's a sobering thought that what we're observing now could have equally profound effects on our planet's future. I truly hope people get away from religion in time to stop fighting reastional thought, and we vecome a more scunce and logic based society, at least in america. Im tired of feeling like a immoral christian nation that cares more about colonization than science. 😅
"yo that's awesome sauce"
-that one kid
Bruh, the fact that the students got “amazed” at the simple concept of gravity is insane lol
It's not really gravity? It's thermodynamics and density I would say
I used to absolutely love these experiments
"WOAH! OH MY GOSH!" before anything even happened...
You can learn this easily, yourself, by diving deep into a lake during the summer.
Oh my gosh, when I was 14 I did that for the first time. It's shocking!
. . . I haven't done it since. 😔
What was the point of the first part of your comment? The reason why they said that was because they did see something happening but the camera was panned closer toward the top, but even if that wasn't the case what are you trying to achieve by implying they're over reacting? People aren't allowed to get excited?
@@QuinnGIn1080p a classic debbie downer. not a great trait to have in life. someone probably did that several times to them in life and monkey see monkey do
@@QuinnGIn1080p yeah, and you could easily learn this by swimming to the bottom of lake. Simple 🥴
@@blastfiendsunite420 Not making much sense there, that's why they're in a class and not at the lake. Feeling something doesn't put it into context like a demonstration does. Just because it gets colder when you go deeper under water doesn't mean that you immediately grasp the concept. That's what school is for.
I see informative content, I like & sub.
We did this in 2nd year oceanography during my marine and Antarctic science bachelor degree! Such a useful, clear demonstration of how water behaves!
I remember taking oceanography in 10th grade (currently in 11th) and I have to say that the professor makes it all the better. Without a fun and enthusiastic professor, oceanography would be very boring!
This is the stuff that I lived for as a kid! Hands-on experiments were so much fun. Unlike boring old regular school paperwork.
40 years as a limnologist, great demo.
Thank you so much, really kind
@@DM-ur8vcno a chauffeur is someone that heats things. This guy strictly drives limo’s.
What a cool demonstration!! Wow! Great teacher!
Ab tk ka sabse genuine aur realistic video
did you make or order this?
I ordered the container from a scientific supplier
Good job, teach!
Thank you
Beautiful feature of ocean. Thank you very much for sharing your wonderful video.
Demo was perfect, clearly showed the reaction between the two
teachers actually teaching useful knowledge at it's finest. hear the students mental engagement? that's how it's supposed to be done. 👏
How did you use this knowledge personally?
Nature is cool 😊
﴾He has set free the two seas meeting together. There is a barrier between them. They do not transgress.﴿ - Qur’an, 55:19-20
﴾He is the one who has set free the two kinds of water, one sweet and palatable, and the other salty and bitter. And He has made between them a barrier and a forbidding partition.﴿ - Qur’an, 25:53
This explains why it feels warmer in some areas and colder in others while swimming in the lake!
Love how when they barely pull the last board up, and before anything happens, the water just levels out, as you would expect, and all the kids are like “whooaaaaa” lol professor was like guys nothing happened yet
This should be an exercise every science class shows the students
Thank you so much
﴾He has set free the two seas meeting together. There is a barrier between them. They do not transgress.﴿ - Qur’an, 55:19-20
﴾He is the one who has set free the two kinds of water, one sweet and palatable, and the other salty and bitter. And He has made between them a barrier and a forbidding partition.﴿ - Qur’an, 25:53
Now you gotta put the dividers back so we can part the Red Sea 😂
Fr tho, cool demo :D
﴾He has set free the two seas meeting together. There is a barrier between them. They do not transgress.﴿ - Qur’an, 55:19-20
﴾He is the one who has set free the two kinds of water, one sweet and palatable, and the other salty and bitter. And He has made between them a barrier and a forbidding partition.﴿ - Qur’an, 25:53
British narrator: "While most aquatic species thrive in the red Gatoraid, the deep sea creatures survive in the crushing pressures of the blue Gatoraid."
"not the best demo" I'm 30 years old and I was watching like a damn kid again 😂😂😂
Great example, and great teacher. Your kids seem to be really engaged.
Thank you so much
“And this warm… (should say fresh water) …water that’s red!” 🤣
Very cool, it's these kinds of demos that will inspire future scientists. Great illustration of what's happening to our oceans right now.
That's exactly what happens in Milford sound in New Zealand. Its were i grew up a a kid. A glacier carved out a deep fiord. The trees grow on the side of the mountain as the rain water goes down the mountain side were i sits on top of the saltwater. There's a big mound of rocks at the mouth of it. Which breaks the oceans undercurrent so the fresh water sits on top of the salt water. The fresh water picks up dies and tannes and creates a dark layer of fresh water. Tricking the fish and sea life to think its deeper it is. There's a very rare deep sea coral that grows there near the surface. Its called black coral and only grows like cm every year.
Bro Gatorade can do that? 😂
Because Gatorade has water in it, yes.