For anybody wondering what a bloop is, a while ago scientists heard strange noises that sounded like they came from a HUGE animal under the ocean. It turned out to just be the movement of ice and glaciers, but prior to the correct discovery, they called it “bloop”.
@@imreallysottus Yes, the audio that was shared to the public was sped up and made it sound like a giant sea creature roaring. But it was just huge chunks of ice breaking and moving.
Actually this is proven false. A study was ran on it with modern technology and found out it wasn't the sound of ice crashing into each other. Scientist today are still spelled by the sound in trying to figure it out others came up with synopsis being that something else other still believe is a creature that has been undiscovered to this day
I always think it's nuts how, with all of the various huge creatures that we all missed by millions of years. We co-exist with the Blue Whale, which is THE biggest animal the world has yet known.
@@cardhutt If there were things as big as the Megalodon or way bigger, we’d already know. Most of the ocean is literally just void, which is why we’ve mapped so little by person.
@Zachary It’s not physically possible for a creature at that size to maintain its HUGE diet, let alone a species. Even if there was such a creature that, say, fed on krill like the blue whale, it would have to be close to the surface to reach enough to barely sustain its diet, which we all know wouldn’t be the case because we would have discovered it already. One of the reasons why the megalodon and other large prehistoric creatures went extinct was because of the lack of food that came with climate change. The Bloop was one singular noise that happened, and we have not heard a similar noise since. There’s no other explanation than a collapsing iceberg.
I looked up the Steller’s sea cow since I saw the dates at the bottom for it’s extinction and apparently 27 years after it was discovered by scientists it was hunted to extinction. That’s so ridiculous that it suffered that fate since it would have been cool to see a manatee that massive in real life. What a shame.
It should be noted that Stellar's Sea Cows were already critically endangered before their official discovery, their habitat having been restricted due to the warmer waters of our interglacial period as well as millennia of hunting by the native Inuit tribes.
@@serdusrex7274you’re speaking of the Leviathan, an ancient whale species we only found fossile fragments off. But according to estimates they were around double the size of a blue whale. But it’s still hypothetical, as we only got parts of its jawbone and some spine bones
At least the biggest with bones. We won't find out if there were bigger sea animals in the past because bones are mostly that what's left to us. I wonder if there were bigger molluscs.
One of the greatest video ever made. The cinemiatgraphy is amazing and just amazing how the diver and cameraman survived this ordeal. Should be nominated for oscar
@@keeflover4205 that’s an interesting topic, because we discovered that a variation of a single element could drastically change the size of creatures, insects for example have a “passive” breathing system so if the concentration of oxygen increases they increase the size !
@@onemanhorrorband7732 i dont know about that but they have decreased in size due to hunting, a century or more ago blue whales and others used to be larger. The largest ones were usually targeted
Huge props to the cameraman and the diver who swam through different time periods to bring us this video! Edit: those who dislike this comment, please just hit the dislike button or ignore it and continue on with your day! 👍
In centuries? Humans have be around for many thousands of years, and we weren't solely responsible for their demise. How many new animal and plant discoveries have been made since then?
I've watched the video a couple times now. I find it really amazing. It shows you how some of the animals living in our oceans were bigger than the extinct ones we imagine to be so massive. It's also interesting to see that most of the really large extinct animals are the ones that ate large flesh. The sperm whale is the largest to survive that. The smartest thing the blue whale did was eat the krill.
Let's all hope krill never get a liking for flesh, otherwise the oceans and us would've had the hardest times earth had ever seen. There's practically no such huge danger, as a swarm of millions of little mouthes needing to be fed at the same time. We already know what locusts or army ants can do - try to imagine a few more millions or billions of tiny crustaceans feeding on higher developed swiming or diving animals... #shudder
@@katrinapaton5283 Lol, you have a point there. I'm hoping they will survive for a while though. They probably eat schools of small fish too. I'm more surprised the sperm whale is still alive. We hunted them so much that only juveniles survived when we legally stopped. They are growing back, but they will never be the number we once had.
@@desertbatstudios well, let's just say that we tried to give a hand to the killer whales, since if I remember correctly they were/are at war killing each other and killer whales would make noise for the fisherman to hunt whales
imagine the bloop was created by accident by the scientist then tell the government on what they did and then they were covering it and saying the sound is an broken ice but actually the bloop
I've read several articles explaining the physical possibility of a sea creature the size of the Bloop, theoretically it's not entirely impossible, but such an animal would mostly be a deep, deep Ocean dweller, laying motionless most of the time awaiting prey to pass by, like what the anglerfish does. We have to remember that more than 90% of our oceans are still unknown to us.
@@rodaz7274 I don't know, Whales, Large Sharks, Giant Squids, Orcas, Dolphins... or probably it will feed on very small organisms like Whales do, filtering out the water and getting its nourishment.
@@bttawfiq More importantly how would something that big reproduce if it theoretically did every 500 years or so of whatever? Could it lift its massive mountain of body to reach the female bloop?🤣🤣🤣
I played chicken with hammerhead sharks once as a kid. They weren't as big as this one, maybe 5 feet long. It was when my family lived in Hawaii. It was shortly after Xmas. I'd gotten a bike that year (7 years old), and I was riding around, exploring. I heard some other kids yelling from behind a house at the end of a street and decided to check it out. All the houses had steeply sloped side yards, the backyards much lower than the front. The street didn't end past the last house like I'd thought. It turned left and went down the slope to a deep creek that ran behind the houses. The road ended at a bridge, but off-center from the bridge - the left half of the road allowed passage onto the bridge, but the right half stopped at the creek. The kids I'd heard were lining up at the top of the slope and then riding their bikes down. The idea was to get onto the bridge or be forced to brake because you didn't want to go into the creek. And you didn't want to do that because there were several hammerhead sharks in the creek! Being a stupid kid, I couldn't resist the challenge the game presented, so I joined in. I got in a couple of races - making it onto the bridge once, having to brake the other time - before I stopped playing. I stopped when one kid almost went into the creek. His brakes gave out, and he was too close to the creek to turn in time, so he jumped off his bike. The bike went into the creek, to be attacked by the sharks. He tried to pull it out; one part of the handlebars jutted up from the surface of the water. But the bank of the creek was steep and covered in grass, and one of his feet kept slipping into the water just as his fingertips barely touched the handle. A couple of sharks would zip toward his foot, and he had to pull away. He finally went home (all of the kids lived along the street) and got a rope. He managed to loop the rope around the handle, and we all helped him pull it out of the creek. The sharks had done a number on it. They chewed off the tires, seat, and the handle that was below the water. I heard later that he had to tell his parents what happened to the bike, including the fact that he and his friends had been playing chicken with the sharks. Those parents called the other kids' parents, and everyone was grounded. Except for me. I didn't live on that street, and those parents didn't know my parents, so I didn't get in any trouble. I only learned about what happened to the other kids when I rode back there again 2 weeks later to see what had happened. One of the kids from that day told me, and I never returned to that street, and I never told my parents about the sharks.
Thanks for actually putting in ..The Bloop? Most sea creature videos have that monstrosity in the Video Cover Picture; (for more views i guess), but its never actually in the video!
It's crazy to think that one of the largest or if not, the largest sea creature is still with us today. I always thought that there's a more massive creature than the blue whale during the prehistoric times.
Unlikely, whales are the only family of animals that appear to have developed lunge feeding. Almost every other sea creature either has to physically chase down and catch its food or has to sit and wait to ambush them, the former is energy intensive and the latter is left up to chance. Whales though are able use their uniquely gigantic mouths and expanding throats to straight up vacuum everything in the local area into their mouths while lunging at their prey, its quite literally the most efficient form of predation that has ever existed in Earth's history and the one thing that allows them to grow so huge, nothing else we've ever found comes close.
the bloop sea monster was a sound recorded in like 1997, a sound so strong it emanated across the pacific ocean, thought to be so big due to no other creature could possibly accomplish this task, but they found out what it was and it was just an iceberg cracking? something with an iceberg idk look it up
Think about it. An iceberg is many times larger than an ice cube and takes that much longer to drop into water and bob just like an ice cube does. Speed up the motion and it creates a bloop sound. At normal speed it will be lower and longer and of course louder.
Tbh Even though that is the most likely cause of the noice, it is still exciting to believe upon such a magnificent yet terrifying creature such as The Bloop. At the same time it’s not entirely impossible that such a creature exists, since there is still 90% of the ocean left to discover.
@@scottb9669 Right??? I used to love stories of people who claim to have seen giant squid over 100 feet in length, but the sad fact of the matter is that their maximum length is "merely" 42 feet.
I caught a Bloop once, real biggun too. Had him on the line 45 minutes, fighting him tooth and fin, and finally wore him down and landed the beast. Got a picture of him, but I didn't bring it with me. He was a monster though, trust me. Bout 2000-3000 tons, give or take...
I caught one, too, but I had to throw it back. It was too small. Unfortunately, when I threw it back, it created a humongous splash that fell back to the Earth as days of rain, as well as a tsunami that flooded the world. I remember that because there are reports about a crazy guy who built a big boat at about the same time.
It’s already hard enough to find living animals at the bottom of the ocean. Think about how hard it must be to find skeletons of extinct animals, if they weren’t living above areas that are now dry
Whale falls become completely chewed up in 60 years and don't leave fossils. Modern mechanisms do not create the conditions for fossilization. Only Catastrophic sudden rapid deposition can
It would be amazing (and crazy scary) if the bloop really was some giant ancient sea monster ripping apart a piece of Antarctica 😂 sadly something that big would have a hard time evading multibeam sonars so it will probably remain in our imagination. Still, it's very impressive how big sea creatures can grow! We are so incredibly tiny in comparison.
"The Bloop" is the given name of a mysterious underwater sound recorded in the 90s. Years later, NOAA scientists discovered that this sound emanated from an iceberg cracking and breaking away from an Antarctic glacier. I loved the science and the visuals behind the video until the end.
A shame he didn't include Shonisaurus or Shastasaurus, two gigantic whale like animals from the middle/late Triassic period that could grow to about 60 feet! I do appreciate how the video was made though, loved the comparison.
Thanks for a great video. The bloop this video is referring to. Is a noise that was recorded in the ocean and for years scientists couldn’t figure out what it was. However, about a year ago scientists discovered it was a giant piece of ice cracking. I wish it wouldn’t have been solved. It was cool daydreaming about what could have made that sound. Perhaps an undiscovered species. Also, the video left out the giant squid. It’s about the same size as the colossal squid but nowhere near as deadly.
@@NICRIMATT If that were the case, a creature of that size would never be able to find enough food to sustain it. I feel iceberg isn't the only possibility though, it could also have been caused by some sort of seismic anomaly.
@@NICRIMATT so they specifically did that for this one creature in particular huh? let’s forget about the hundreds of thousands of other creatures that have been discovered in the last number of years. also, don’t act like anything that someone says, even if they proclaim to be qualified, is true. do whatever research you can from as credible or sources as you can, and especially crosscheck those sources. you’ll see that after a while, the possibility of such a creature just isn’t realistic.
@@NICRIMATT believe as much as you want, just don’t try and constantly argue that it’s real when science and physics clearly state otherwise. lemme also add that we don’t know if we’re alone in the universe, we haven’t seen really anything outside of our own galaxy and cannot see the surface of other potentially inhabited planets that are far away, so we don’t know for sure.
Thats only what we currently know though. The possibility to find remains of something bigger is still there since we dont even know 1% of what has existed.
@@Crucial_End well, maybe. Blue whales are pushing the limit of what is even physically possible (or necessary) in terms of size. Someone might find something bigger, but it wont be by by much i reckon
Just for anyone wondering, the Bloop was never a sea creature. It was an icequake. Most of the professionals involved also never thought it was a creature, that came almost exclusively from outside sources.
A few things that ran through my mind while watching: - Dang, I forgot how big tunas are. - Oh no, we're going deeper? - Wait, Stellar's sea cow was almost 30 feet long? What?! - Hehe the little guy has to swim faster now. - Aw, no giant squid to go with the colossal? Or an honorable mention to giant siphonophores? - Aaaaaaaaand that bloop showing up is just nightmare fuel. XD From what I understand, the bloop was eventually discovered to just be the sound of ice bergs scraping against the sea floor, but I do like to imagine that perhaps there might still be something so huge living down there. The ocean's a big place, and we've seen so little of it, after all.
I think I heard once that they found an earthlike planet with vast oceans and landmasses the size of earth itself, the planet being round-about the size of our very own sun let your imaginations and nightmares run wild with the possibilities there
the bloop is unknown but it came from a noise the scientists studied it it was one of the loudest noises recorded in the ocean they some people think it was the ocean sheets or sum like that or “the bloop”
I can't even imagine how scary it was for this guy to swim up there near all those monsters just to make this video for us. Mad respect.
Using a cutting-edge camera from a long distance😅😅
A true legend
A true mad lad indeed
Is diver Chuck Norris?
Its a mash-up from different cameramen. Not of of them made it past the fish.
Even though it isn't the biggest, the idea of seeing an 8ft long sea scorpion is absolutely terrifying .
😅
Facts bro. The little ones we have now even scare u.
Yes ,lol , damn
Octopi are essentially sentient. I think seeing an 11' one of those who wants to play with me as waaaaaaaaaaaaaay more terrifying.
@@bryanadam4578 they are smart. Arguably maybe smarter than a dog.
I appreciate how they were able to train these fish to swim in such an organized line.
😆😆
my gf says lol
Is someone gonna tell him?
@@legionman2441 Is someone gonna tell you...
@@JerBuster77 what? that the fish arn't real and you guys are acting like children?
For anybody wondering what a bloop is, a while ago scientists heard strange noises that sounded like they came from a HUGE animal under the ocean. It turned out to just be the movement of ice and glaciers, but prior to the correct discovery, they called it “bloop”.
Thanks for your info🤝
They found out what it was?
@@imreallysottus Yes, the audio that was shared to the public was sped up and made it sound like a giant sea creature roaring. But it was just huge chunks of ice breaking and moving.
Actually this is proven false. A study was ran on it with modern technology and found out it wasn't the sound of ice crashing into each other. Scientist today are still spelled by the sound in trying to figure it out others came up with synopsis being that something else other still believe is a creature that has been undiscovered to this day
Sound was sped up 16x for the public, but after years it was just cracking ice
I always think it's nuts how, with all of the various huge creatures that we all missed by millions of years. We co-exist with the Blue Whale, which is THE biggest animal the world has yet known.
🤝
co exist for now. We are doing our best to destroy their habitat along with many over sea creatures habitats.
Is amazing
Except for Bloop.
and sadly once the whales die, the ocean will die, and then soon after all of us
"There's always a bigger fish"
- Qui-Gon Jinn
Qui-Gon probably didn't stay until the end of the video.
I'm the bigger fish fr fr 😏💯
😆
At least until Megalodon!
Unless you're Bloop!
The way the music cuts out as the Bloop appears was genuinely chilling.
🫣😅
Often overlooked when we talk about Dinosaurs, but the ocean during these times must of been scary AF
🫣😅
it still is. we only have accurately mapped like five percent of it. So much down there is unknown
because they literally aren’t dinosaurs
Just close ur eyes and pretend they don’t exist D:
@@cardhutt If there were things as big as the Megalodon or way bigger, we’d already know. Most of the ocean is literally just void, which is why we’ve mapped so little by person.
Bloop straight giving off Alaskan bull worm vibes😂😂
😹😹 fr...
🤣🤣🤣
ikr! 😂
Ahhh sweet memories 🤣❤
The REAL bloop was actually a football field sized ice sheet scraping against the ocean floor
Never thought an animated sea video could give me anxiety. Well done.
Thanks for your comement😅 and apologize I overlooked it
That divers brave as hell for swimming past them all, props to the cameraman too
Yeah🥹😅
I genuinely felt my blood run cold as soon as I saw “The Bloop” 💀
😁😅
The bloop was no animal though...
the bloop was glacial activity
@@B_bang22 prove it
@Zachary
It’s not physically possible for a creature at that size to maintain its HUGE diet, let alone a species. Even if there was such a creature that, say, fed on krill like the blue whale, it would have to be close to the surface to reach enough to barely sustain its diet, which we all know wouldn’t be the case because we would have discovered it already. One of the reasons why the megalodon and other large prehistoric creatures went extinct was because of the lack of food that came with climate change.
The Bloop was one singular noise that happened, and we have not heard a similar noise since. There’s no other explanation than a collapsing iceberg.
This is a GREAT comparison of how large these creatures are compared too a human diver. Very well done.
Thanks for your kind words🥹🥹🤝
I looked up the Steller’s sea cow since I saw the dates at the bottom for it’s extinction and apparently 27 years after it was discovered by scientists it was hunted to extinction. That’s so ridiculous that it suffered that fate since it would have been cool to see a manatee that massive in real life. What a shame.
And suddenly it makes sense why it's illegal to tough dugongs 😳
Yes, I googled it too. So sad.
Totally agree with you! and apologize I overlooked your comment
It should be noted that Stellar's Sea Cows were already critically endangered before their official discovery, their habitat having been restricted due to the warmer waters of our interglacial period as well as millennia of hunting by the native Inuit tribes.
@@fludblud In short, the Europeans speedran their extinction
It's crazy to think out of 3.8 billion years of life on this planet we are currently living with the largest creature in history
Yeah🥹
That we know of...
@@JingleJangle256there was one who could be bigger (another whale) but thats still need to be confirmed
@@serdusrex7274Perecetus? It's fat but in meters is not big as the blue whale.
@@serdusrex7274you’re speaking of the Leviathan, an ancient whale species we only found fossile fragments off. But according to estimates they were around double the size of a blue whale. But it’s still hypothetical, as we only got parts of its jawbone and some spine bones
it still blows my mind that despite the size of creatures in the past the blue whale is the biggest thing to ever exist
Exactly😃
Sizes compared to human is not correct, they are just too big
bloop*
@@davehart7943the sounds “the bloop” made, turned out to be an iceberg
Blue whale is largest in weight not length tho :)
And now I understand the entire concept of thalassophobia.
Fr
What is thalassophobia
@@GorbBABI Fear of the ocean
We all have that
Fear of something coming to get you from the black bottom
That man Is the bravest diver I've ever seen.
Edit: Thank ya'll for the likes! This is my first comment with that many. It makes the diver braver;)
😄👍
So it would seem…
No he just wants to die
Must be related to Chuck Norris or something!
@@yorkieelliot2487 Or maybe to Jason Statham, at this point xd
The Blue Whale still the biggest animal that ever existed. thats impressive
Definitely🥹
*that we know of
@@MyFriendOfMisery13 yes.
Nah b its not impressive
At least the biggest with bones. We won't find out if there were bigger sea animals in the past because bones are mostly that what's left to us. I wonder if there were bigger molluscs.
One of the greatest video ever made. The cinemiatgraphy is amazing and just amazing how the diver and cameraman survived this ordeal. Should be nominated for oscar
Thanks for your kind words🥰🥹
Crazy to think that we exist along with the largest creature of the world ever
you never know they could get bigger after we’re dead making the ones we know no longer the biggest
@@keeflover4205 that’s an interesting topic, because we discovered that a variation of a single element could drastically change the size of creatures, insects for example have a “passive” breathing system so if the concentration of oxygen increases they increase the size !
Yeah, Bloop's pretty big.
@@wastoolbro what
@@onemanhorrorband7732 i dont know about that but they have decreased in size due to hunting, a century or more ago blue whales and others used to be larger. The largest ones were usually targeted
credit to the diver who swam so close to all of them. What a brave guy
must be👍😃
Huge props to the cameraman and the diver who swam through different time periods to bring us this video!
Edit: those who dislike this comment, please just hit the dislike button or ignore it and continue on with your day!
👍
🤝😄
@@GsDL bro the bloop was made by an iceberg
@@taesp2484 bro no one cares
@@yetcutrhett5062 ur mom cares
@@yetcutrhett5062 bro, I care for you
Crazy to think that some of these giant creatures still exist today, like the colossal squid 😮
Exactly😳🥹
I've had nightmares of sea monsters, but I don't think that any of those were as big as the bloop.
there aren't. the bloop sound has been established being made by a giant slab of ice.
@@ObscureJester reality is often disappointing.
@@ObscureJester does that sounds like sliding ice ?
Jameson E youtuber), Aha hey big guy
@@MMeltingButter I prefer this over a giant creature able to make noises from further away than blue whales
Thank god that the blue whale is a gentle giant.
😄😄
Wouldn't you love to see a blue whale in the wild?
Well... The blue whale could eat you just by mistake 😂
Sea scorpion was more than enough for me. Props to the diver and camera man.
@ISPY4ever The diver and camera man?
@ISPY4ever @umissedthejoke
@@MM-ts9jy so did you xD
@@hoanglongnguyen6684 seems like you missed mine, brother
@ISPY4ever
It is crazy to think that the largest animal in history occurred simultaneously with humans
Yeah😃
And fortunately they dont consider us as food hahah
Or just that it's a lot easier to find living animals than fossils, and the actual largest in history hasn't been found yet.
Relaxing and terrifying at the same time. Great vid!
Thanks for your genius description of this vid🤝😄
Kudos to that diver guy for having the bravery to face all those sea monsters.
really sad to see the sea cow lived for so many milenia and we ended it existence in a century.
Totally agree with you🤝
In centuries? Humans have be around for many thousands of years, and we weren't solely responsible for their demise. How many new animal and plant discoveries have been made since then?
How tf are we the cause of their extinction....
@@ColeBeeRyan we WERE solely responsible for their demise, just like whales we used their fat for lighting
@@mkultraveectum6732 overhunting by natives and then by hunters who sold their fat to light lamps
4:29 “Detecting multiple leviathan class lifeforms in the region. Are you sure whatever you’re doing is worth it?”
I've watched the video a couple times now. I find it really amazing. It shows you how some of the animals living in our oceans were bigger than the extinct ones we imagine to be so massive. It's also interesting to see that most of the really large extinct animals are the ones that ate large flesh. The sperm whale is the largest to survive that. The smartest thing the blue whale did was eat the krill.
Let's all hope krill never get a liking for flesh, otherwise the oceans and us would've had the hardest times earth had ever seen.
There's practically no such huge danger, as a swarm of millions of little mouthes needing to be fed at the same time.
We already know what locusts or army ants can do - try to imagine a few more millions or billions of tiny crustaceans feeding on higher developed swiming or diving animals... #shudder
And of course we humans have now decided krill is yummy. Nice knowing you blue whale.
@@katrinapaton5283 Lol, you have a point there. I'm hoping they will survive for a while though. They probably eat schools of small fish too. I'm more surprised the sperm whale is still alive. We hunted them so much that only juveniles survived when we legally stopped. They are growing back, but they will never be the number we once had.
@@desertbatstudios well, let's just say that we tried to give a hand to the killer whales, since if I remember correctly they were/are at war killing each other and killer whales would make noise for the fisherman to hunt whales
@@desertbatstudios now the war will start again
imagine the bloop was created by accident by the scientist then tell the government on what they did and then they were covering it and saying the sound is an broken ice but actually the bloop
Honestly I wouldn't be surprised at this point
Thats a nice story' for a sea horror movie
Heavily mutated blob fish
If the bloop is a creature it’s probably been around for millions of years something that big isn’t an apex predator it’s the be all and ends all
How can you create a monster like bloop? 😯
Just shows how big our oceans truly are to have had those fish and mammals living in and lived in.
Nah b it shows how small our oceans truly are to have fish and mammals this small
i will forever be in awe of how lucky we are to exist at the same time as the biggest thing that has ever graced the planet (blue whale)
Exactly🤝🥹
And the longest thing to have ever existed is the String Siphonophore
This colonial organism is longer than any living being on the planet
I've read several articles explaining the physical possibility of a sea creature the size of the Bloop, theoretically it's not entirely impossible, but such an animal would mostly be a deep, deep Ocean dweller, laying motionless most of the time awaiting prey to pass by, like what the anglerfish does.
We have to remember that more than 90% of our oceans are still unknown to us.
🤝😄
What prey would such beast feast on?
@@rodaz7274 I don't know, Whales, Large Sharks, Giant Squids, Orcas, Dolphins...
or probably it will feed on very small organisms like Whales do, filtering out the water and getting its nourishment.
@@bttawfiq More importantly how would something that big reproduce if it theoretically did every 500 years or so of whatever? Could it lift its massive mountain of body to reach the female bloop?🤣🤣🤣
@@bttawfiq we've explored 20% now btw not 10
That was an excellent video! It was educational while being entertaining, and the background music was soothing. I appreciated the funny ending too.
🤝😄😄
@@GsDL where was the music from?
@@somerandomperson8282 I purchased it from Artlist, but don't remember its name😅
I think it's amazing that the cameraman was able to capture this footage underwater with very stable hands!
Cameraman is the GOAT
@Tommy Cartoons | Official Channel It’s a JOKE
@Tommy Cartoons | Official Channel It's just a silly little joke, please laugh a little :(
@Tommy Cartoons | Official Channel better seeing a lot of unfunny jokes than bitterness imo
@@s_mai8970 Shots fired, man down, man down!
So cool! I love learning about different prehistoric animals along with present animals! Very interesting video, thank you! 👍🏻😊
Thanks so much😃🤝
Props to the guy who went back in time to see these prehistoric animals and swam next to them
The Dunkleosteus would be the most terrifying fish in the sea if it were still around. I wonder what it would've been like to reel in one of those.
🤝😁
You thought you were catching dinner, but instead, the fish had YOU for dinner. 😂
It would have snapped your line 😅
5:04
Yea,he is big daddy
Hammerhead sharks are so cool! I love them!
I played chicken with hammerhead sharks once as a kid. They weren't as big as this one, maybe 5 feet long. It was when my family lived in Hawaii.
It was shortly after Xmas. I'd gotten a bike that year (7 years old), and I was riding around, exploring. I heard some other kids yelling from behind a house at the end of a street and decided to check it out.
All the houses had steeply sloped side yards, the backyards much lower than the front. The street didn't end past the last house like I'd thought. It turned left and went down the slope to a deep creek that ran behind the houses.
The road ended at a bridge, but off-center from the bridge - the left half of the road allowed passage onto the bridge, but the right half stopped at the creek.
The kids I'd heard were lining up at the top of the slope and then riding their bikes down. The idea was to get onto the bridge or be forced to brake because you didn't want to go into the creek.
And you didn't want to do that because there were several hammerhead sharks in the creek!
Being a stupid kid, I couldn't resist the challenge the game presented, so I joined in.
I got in a couple of races - making it onto the bridge once, having to brake the other time - before I stopped playing. I stopped when one kid almost went into the creek.
His brakes gave out, and he was too close to the creek to turn in time, so he jumped off his bike. The bike went into the creek, to be attacked by the sharks.
He tried to pull it out; one part of the handlebars jutted up from the surface of the water. But the bank of the creek was steep and covered in grass, and one of his feet kept slipping into the water just as his fingertips barely touched the handle. A couple of sharks would zip toward his foot, and he had to pull away.
He finally went home (all of the kids lived along the street) and got a rope. He managed to loop the rope around the handle, and we all helped him pull it out of the creek.
The sharks had done a number on it. They chewed off the tires, seat, and the handle that was below the water.
I heard later that he had to tell his parents what happened to the bike, including the fact that he and his friends had been playing chicken with the sharks. Those parents called the other kids' parents, and everyone was grounded.
Except for me.
I didn't live on that street, and those parents didn't know my parents, so I didn't get in any trouble. I only learned about what happened to the other kids when I rode back there again 2 weeks later to see what had happened. One of the kids from that day told me, and I never returned to that street, and I never told my parents about the sharks.
Thanks for actually putting in ..The Bloop? Most sea creature videos have that monstrosity in the Video Cover Picture; (for more views i guess), but its never actually in the video!
Appreciate🤝 I am glad to hear that🥹😃
It's crazy to think that one of the largest or if not, the largest sea creature is still with us today. I always thought that there's a more massive creature than the blue whale during the prehistoric times.
Eaxctly😃
Indeed.
What is that creature ?
@@krishwanthkishore8299 blue whales🙂
Unlikely, whales are the only family of animals that appear to have developed lunge feeding. Almost every other sea creature either has to physically chase down and catch its food or has to sit and wait to ambush them, the former is energy intensive and the latter is left up to chance.
Whales though are able use their uniquely gigantic mouths and expanding throats to straight up vacuum everything in the local area into their mouths while lunging at their prey, its quite literally the most efficient form of predation that has ever existed in Earth's history and the one thing that allows them to grow so huge, nothing else we've ever found comes close.
All I can say is "Damn Nature, You're Scary! "
Imagine a 30 ft manatee just chillin eating lettuce
Bro that’s what I’m sayinggg
Lol
the bloop sea monster was a sound recorded in like 1997, a sound so strong it emanated across the pacific ocean, thought to be so big due to no other creature could possibly accomplish this task, but they found out what it was and it was just an iceberg cracking? something with an iceberg idk look it up
Think about it. An iceberg is many times larger than an ice cube and takes that much longer to drop into water and bob just like an ice cube does. Speed up the motion and it creates a bloop sound. At normal speed it will be lower and longer and of course louder.
The "bloop" sound was identified and it wasn't a creature.
It was basically the sound of glaciers fracturing.
That’s our best bet, not a solid conclusion
Tbh Even though that is the most likely cause of the noice, it is still exciting to believe upon such a magnificent yet terrifying creature such as The Bloop. At the same time it’s not entirely impossible that such a creature exists, since there is still 90% of the ocean left to discover.
@@shosc16 Reality isn't always that interesting. Sorry.
@@scottb9669 Right??? I used to love stories of people who claim to have seen giant squid over 100 feet in length, but the sad fact of the matter is that their maximum length is "merely" 42 feet.
9:23 that's no bloop.
It's the Alaskan Bull Worm
thats just henry hes a gentle giant
And to think, 90% of the ocean still undiscovered.
2:45 ooh so your Chelon from Fossil Fighters. Every ancient fish i know from Fossil Fighters Shortening the name
I caught a Bloop once, real biggun too. Had him on the line 45 minutes, fighting him tooth and fin, and finally wore him down and landed the beast. Got a picture of him, but I didn't bring it with me. He was a monster though, trust me. Bout 2000-3000 tons, give or take...
It's hard to believe you did that without any picture as evidence
I caught one, too, but I had to throw it back.
It was too small.
Unfortunately, when I threw it back, it created a humongous splash that fell back to the Earth as days of rain, as well as a tsunami that flooded the world. I remember that because there are reports about a crazy guy who built a big boat at about the same time.
Wht
It’s already hard enough to find living animals at the bottom of the ocean. Think about how hard it must be to find skeletons of extinct animals, if they weren’t living above areas that are now dry
The oceans have been much much larger in the past when the planet was warmer so it's fully possible to find traces quite far inland actually
Whale falls become completely chewed up in 60 years and don't leave fossils. Modern mechanisms do not create the conditions for fossilization. Only Catastrophic sudden rapid deposition can
Those fishes are just a snack for the bloop
🫣😁
This was extremely well done and informative. Thanks!
Thanks so much😃
The Bloop, that would be a great movie.
👍😄
It would be amazing (and crazy scary) if the bloop really was some giant ancient sea monster ripping apart a piece of Antarctica 😂 sadly something that big would have a hard time evading multibeam sonars so it will probably remain in our imagination.
Still, it's very impressive how big sea creatures can grow! We are so incredibly tiny in comparison.
Our size doesn’t mean we are weak, heh think again.
This is work of art all people who complain scale leave alone please
😃😃🤝
@@GsDL hello friend where you hire the scuba diver? How much you pay him?
@@CaveManOogaBooga 100 dollars for hour😃
@@GsDL very good he did did dangerous work!
"The Bloop" is the given name of a mysterious underwater sound recorded in the 90s. Years later, NOAA scientists discovered that this sound emanated from an iceberg cracking and breaking away from an Antarctic glacier.
I loved the science and the visuals behind the video until the end.
Thanks for your comment😀 and apologize I overlooked it😔
A shame he didn't include Shonisaurus or Shastasaurus, two gigantic whale like animals from the middle/late Triassic period that could grow to about 60 feet! I do appreciate how the video was made though, loved the comparison.
both reached 75ft high estimates...
Imagine taking a swim in the ocean looking down and finding out you're above a huge bloop
🤔🫣
Love these scale videos, great job, keep it up!
Thanks so much😃🤝
You know what, props to the scuba diver and cameraman for swimming past modern and ancient sea creatures as they got progressively bigger and bigger
🤝🙂😁
Mad respect for the guy who went back in time to get premium animated footage of all the things he swam beside
I thought for sure we’d be seeing double bubbles at the very end 😜 Excellent video!
All these sea monsters are really generous to this diver. Except for the Bloop. Lol
The bloop looks like something straight out of Subnautica.
Great video you deserve a sub!
🤝🥰
I've never heard of some of the living animals, let alone some of the extinct ones. It's definitely an education.
Thanks for a great video. The bloop this video is referring to. Is a noise that was recorded in the ocean and for years scientists couldn’t figure out what it was. However, about a year ago scientists discovered it was a giant piece of ice cracking. I wish it wouldn’t have been solved. It was cool daydreaming about what could have made that sound. Perhaps an undiscovered species. Also, the video left out the giant squid. It’s about the same size as the colossal squid but nowhere near as deadly.
@@NICRIMATT If that were the case, a creature of that size would never be able to find enough food to sustain it. I feel iceberg isn't the only possibility though, it could also have been caused by some sort of seismic anomaly.
@@NICRIMATT Man, you want your fantasy creature to be real so badly don't you?
@@NICRIMATT so they specifically did that for this one creature in particular huh? let’s forget about the hundreds of thousands of other creatures that have been discovered in the last number of years. also, don’t act like anything that someone says, even if they proclaim to be qualified, is true. do whatever research you can from as credible or sources as you can, and especially crosscheck those sources. you’ll see that after a while, the possibility of such a creature just isn’t realistic.
@@NICRIMATT believe as much as you want, just don’t try and constantly argue that it’s real when science and physics clearly state otherwise.
lemme also add that we don’t know if we’re alone in the universe, we haven’t seen really anything outside of our own galaxy and cannot see the surface of other potentially inhabited planets that are far away, so we don’t know for sure.
Thank you your info🤝 and apologize I overlooked your comment
It’s incredible that we have in our times still the biggest animal, sad there isn’t that no much footage
🤝
Thats only what we currently know though. The possibility to find remains of something bigger is still there since we dont even know 1% of what has existed.
@@Crucial_End well, maybe. Blue whales are pushing the limit of what is even physically possible (or necessary) in terms of size. Someone might find something bigger, but it wont be by by much i reckon
@@Crucial_End right, this was my first thought. I'm sure there was something larger.
@@Crucial_End the 1% story is bullshit, we have already mapped/scanned like 40% ALL Sea floor.
What a brave diver swimming in the middle of all those beasts in 10 minutes.
Just for anyone wondering, the Bloop was never a sea creature. It was an icequake. Most of the professionals involved also never thought it was a creature, that came almost exclusively from outside sources.
They still don't know if it was an ice quake. That's just the most likely explanation
Bloop isn't a creature, it's the sound made by Ice Fracturing underwater
Was that proven or just a theory? If so I'd like to know the source as the bloop has terrified me for years 😂
@@razzprince2877 lol yes, it was just ice, you can sleep easy now. 😁
@@razzprince2877Technically a theory but one that's significantly (like 99.9%) more plausible than any other theory.
Nice video but I missed Liopleurodon, Kronosaurus..
Thanks🤝 I should have added them😅
The bloop doesn’t exist it was an iceberg scratching on the ocean floor
Thanks, that’s so great because it makes the proportions so clear!
Appreciate🤝😃😃
Pretty certain they discovered the "bloop" was indeed an ice sheet breaking like they theorised
No huge sea monster can match the horror of seeing how big waves can get in the ocean.
big waves IN the ocean?
The thing I was most scared about is the way he was swimming with flippers on... Now that’s terrifying
My mistake😅
Спасибо большое! Очень интересное видео! Шикарный видеоряд и замечательная музыка! Всем добра! ❤
Thank you for the compliment🤝😃 I am glad to hear that🥹
The Bloop creature instills a primal fear into me to the point where I have to shield my eyes from it at all times.
Bro is scared of icebergs 😳
@@DrBaconIsCool bro is scared of big ice cubes
good thing that it doesn't exist then
Icebergs intimidate me. When you look at the lower portion. Scary stuff and when a piece is broken, it can cause a small tsunami kind. Scary stuff.
@ 0:28 Wait, what? A freaking SEA SCORPION? Eight feet long? I'll stay on dry land, thank you.
😅
Well that's a big ass crayfish i tell ya!
You know it’s going to be scary when the 3rd smallest is already 2 meters..
The one at the end genuinely scared me well done!!
🤝😃
A few things that ran through my mind while watching:
- Dang, I forgot how big tunas are.
- Oh no, we're going deeper?
- Wait, Stellar's sea cow was almost 30 feet long? What?!
- Hehe the little guy has to swim faster now.
- Aw, no giant squid to go with the colossal? Or an honorable mention to giant siphonophores?
- Aaaaaaaaand that bloop showing up is just nightmare fuel. XD
From what I understand, the bloop was eventually discovered to just be the sound of ice bergs scraping against the sea floor, but I do like to imagine that perhaps there might still be something so huge living down there. The ocean's a big place, and we've seen so little of it, after all.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts😃🤝
I've seen the Bloop. It was like an island with an eye, rising up out of the water just to wink at me, then back into the abyss it receded...
I’m so jealous🥹😁
Thats a friendship to be jealous of.
I thought it was a serious video until seeing the bloop 💀
The ending where the Bloop started consuming the diver and the rest gave me the chills. Lol
If this is what has been found in earth's oceans, the life that will be found in other planets especially water planets will be mind-blowing.
I think I heard once that they found an earthlike planet with vast oceans and landmasses the size of earth itself, the planet being round-about the size of our very own sun
let your imaginations and nightmares run wild with the possibilities there
Gravity too high? Probably lifeless or bug like or microsxopic critters at best lol
I didn't know what the bloop was until I researched it. If I showed that picture to a child it would start crying.
😅
It’s just a Pog fish
Props to the cameraman for recording the diver and all the predators of the sea with no scuba gear
The cameraman is always the true MVP.
I'm so glad we don't have to battle the sea scorpions anymore.
😁
That last one ain’t no bloop, that’s the Alaskan bull worm
the bloop is unknown but it came from a noise the scientists studied it it was one of the loudest noises recorded in the ocean they some people think it was the ocean sheets or sum like that or “the bloop”
It’s not real
@@TheMax_47 Is real XD(The sound,of course)
It was a sound of a clashing iceberg in Antarctica.
Acabó de morir de miedo al ver al Bloop 😳
🫣😅
El bloop ni existe
@@raulesc863 El bloop existe,solo es el apodo al sonido que se escucho en las profundidades,las causas aún no son claras
@@jemini9293 there is no proof of its existence. It was proven to just be glaciers moving along the sea floor.
@@jemini9293 lo más probable es que haya sido un iceberg, la existencia de un animal tan grande es físicamente imposible.
The lions mane jellyfish doesn’t just have a relatively large bell diameter of 1-2 meters, but it’s also extremely long. About 36 meters in length.
Yeah, you are correct🙂
That diver was the bravest human being I have ever seen
😄😄
The Bloop has been attributed to an iceberg calving off a glacier.