I went to look it up, wondering where it was and what it would be like to go through such a tunnel, only to realize I've actually taken the train through it twice in the past. It's just a few dozen KM away from where I currently live. Cost over $7 billion to make over 20 years ago. Quite the project.
The USS Johnston (DD-557) was a Destroyer that basically sacrificed itself to the Japanese to protect a landing force by charging into a massive line of Japanese warships at the Battle off Samar and fought so hard and bravely before being sunk, that while sinking, survivors of the Johnston said they saw the Captain of the Japanese destroyer, Yukikaze, saluting the ship and its hands as it sunk in respect for how it fought to the end.
@@NoProtocol That's a very understated version of events, USS Johnston at around 2,500tons was the largest destroyer in the task group Taffy 3, the other four destroyer/destroyer escorts were about 1,000 tons lighter. The Japanese fleet they took on included the largest battleship ever built, IJN Yamato weighed almost 73,000 tons. There were three smaller battleships of 30 to 40,000 tons, six heavy cruisers of around 18,000 tons, two light cruisers, around 10,000 tons and eleven destroyers of around 2,500 tons. If the destroyers of Taffy 3 hadn't inflicted such a bloody nose to the Japanese fleet, instead of retreating, they would've sunk the small escort carriers of Taffy 3 and had free rein among the undefended US invasion fleet. When the USS Johnston was discovered in 2021, it was the deepest shipwreck ever found. 15 months later they found the USS Samuel B Roberts, another ship from Taffy 3 over 1,000ft deeper. Btw, the Captain of USS Johnston, Ernest E Evans, was the first Native American awarded the Medal of Honor. (I left the U out of honour as a mark of respect to our US friends.
Working as a Ocean Engineer for the Naval Sea Systems Command in RDT&E I've spent a lot of time thinking a working with the ocean environment, I have learned a few things. When a team of scientists (having only seen lakes) show up from a lab in the middle of the country with their latest and greatest military device to test in the operational environment. The look on their faces when I tell them don't bring it on the boat unless they are willing to lose it and for sure don't put it in the water until they fully understand it's likely to never come back. The ocean is big and dynamic and if an object has mass they ocean can and will eat it. I've put big things on the seafloor and taken careful measurements to know the location. Only to return in a week to realize 10 of tons of equipment has vanished.
One important detail about Cameron's dive is that the diving bell could not be reused. The diving unit used going to the Titanic was poorly built and even a well built sub should not have dived to that depth more than three times. The USS Johnstown was a destroyer in WWII that saw much action, but was sunk by the Japanese 140 people (survived) were rescued by the US ships, 186 died.
yeah, the bit with Rose with the Titanic annoys me......even if there wasn't enough room for them to lay side by side.....they already had sex, have him lay on top of you........plus, the two together, full body contact, as opposed to just arms if side by side.....full body contact can help to keep the warm longer
It is always a pleasure to watch videos like this WITH YOUUUUU, My Ladyyy!!! Aaaand I will always love your voice... Trillion kisses from Peter from Hungaryyy!! I hope You are well!!!! ;)
Love the no-frills reaction and discussion stuff you do, and your personality comes across so positively. Thought I'd drop an ocean-related music recommendation that occurred to me when you asked for them - an album called Ocean Songs by Dirty Three. They're an Australian instrumental band featuring Warren Ellis, also the violinist for Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds. Thanks!
Music with books, curiosity and a beautiful smile. Hell you even watch MMA. You and your channel are amazing. Thanks for showing me there is a kindred soul out here. I always say we should let curiosity lead us around like a massive dog on a leash. You seem to practice that here, its awesome. I wonder what the next video will be about haha
You are obviously highly intelligent. As a quinquagenerian i have to say that you are the image of how people used to envision the Internet would be used to gain knowledge. A platform for higher learning that would uplift mankind to be better. Society would be better off if people were more like you. You are a rare gem.
Probably blind fish in the depths, roundish to withstand the pressure. Giant squid too maybe ancient shark survivors. It's truly a place we don't know much about, a dark pit filled with our imagination. Oh and of course that shoddy submersible from last year. I wouldn't even set foot into a really well made device. I did a shallow swim in the carribean and first thing I noticed was the pressure hurting me just below the water surface as I didn't equalize properly, then looking there you float in space and the ground is down there. Magnificent and terrible.
Your last video made me think of the film with Elijah Wood and Charlie Hunnam called Green Street Hooligans (2005). I've recommended it before but just wanted to follow up because I think you'd really enjoy it.
A really good movie. I had zero interest in soccer aside from some trace childhood recollections of playing and didn't expect much but this movie had me right into it and was much more than I'd thought it would be.
Song wise id recommend Perfume of the timeless by Nightwish its just released and the video fits with this subject very well. Book wise the Abyss that was turned into a film by James Cameron it deals with what could be down there. Also 20000 leagues under the sea a childhood favourite of mine.
The Trieste Batyscaphe was actually launched before James Cameron was :P He was born in 1954, the Trieste was launch a year before. It reached Challenger Deep in 1960, when Cameron was still building sand castles and splashing in inflatable pools...
James Cameron went down there in the Deepsea Challenger, there was a cool documentary on it. I don’t know much about Trieste Batyscaphe, it is now out of commission?
USS Johnston is a US destroyer that acquited itself with something way, waaaay beyond the call of duty in the Pacific War during WW2. Books: I am about to read "Thunder Below" by Admiral Eugene Fluckey (his memoires of being captain of he USS Barb during WW2) Music: Handel's Water Music, what else?
With every discovery of a new living species, we see just how amazingly diverse life forms on Earth are. Life on Earth adapts and survives in places we dare not go. There may be ten million different species at the bottoms of the oceans, and we may never get to know them.
I wonder if that's like how I look when dealing with heights after less than great sleep, haha. You kept your composure well though! As for music, dare I suggest Six Months in a Leaky Boat, by Split Enz. They had some catchy, quirky songs into the mid 80s, then Neil Finn went on to form Crowded House, who are still beloved here in Australia and beyond.
I love your content. I love it when I'm not busy and you drop, like just now. Did you know that the Earth is so big, that if you were to shrink it down to the size of a pool ball, it would be smoother than the pool ball, and that includes the depths of the Mariana trench and height of Mount Everest.
Oh perfect timing! Lol I always get stuck on the “shrinking earth down” examples. I was just reading one about it being shrunk down to the size of a quarter
The saddest thing about our oceans is about 7yrs ago , shrimp like creatures were bought up from the Marianna Trench ( the deepest part of the ocean ) and 100% of them had plastic in their gut ... Food for thought
Meanwhile conservatives complaining that Klaus Schwab wants us to eat bugs. We eat the equivalent of a credit card every year. This is much more serious than eating crickets.
On the theme of deep sea exploration, a book you might like is Sphere by Michael Crichton, who wrote the book Jurrasic Park. Starts out as sci-fi with a team of scientists sent to the bottom of the ocean to investigate a crashed spacecraft, turns into quite a claustrophobic psychological piece. Highly enjoyable
Sea spiders, colossal squids, tube worms, and cookie-cutter sharks are some of the creatures that live at the bottom of the ocean. Tripod fish Rattail fish Sea cucumbers Octopuses Snailfish Zombie worms Dragonfish Goblin shark Pelican eel Anglerfish Hatchetfish Frilled shark Squid Sponges Comb jellies Pink see-through fantasia Fangtooth fish.
Film: Le Grand Bleu (1988) with the original ending, not the american. There's a beautiful poem of sorts in it but I'd rather not spoil anything for whoever is interested. It's a beautiful film over all. Not always light though, but I guess the deeper you go the heavier it gets.
I recommend the "hard" science fiction book "Project Hail Mary" by Andy Weir. Space is it's own kind of abyssal horror. Also, it is being adapted into a film soon, so if you hurry and buy it now you will not have to deal with what I am sure will be a very stupid movie version of the book cover.
青函 せいかん seikan (blue mailbox, also sounds like "interval of life 生間"). Japan, named by two city between it. 青森 - aomori (green forest), 函館 - hakodate (mailbox building).
The USS Johnston and USS Samuel B. Roberts are the two deepest known shipwrecks in the world. Both as a result of the Battle of Samar against the Japanese. These two small American destroyers fought against Japan's largest battleships until they were both sunk. The Japanese battleship Yamato has the largest gun turrets ever fitted to a ship, at roughly the same weight as the entire USS Johnston. There was no way that it would end well for the destroyers but they didn't back down.
I enjoyed the book “Das Boot” by Lothar-Gunther Buchheim. An autobiography of his experiences serving on a German U-Boat during the Second World War. The movie produced in 1981 was loosely based on the novel.
I'm totally with you ❤😢 That made me physically uncomfortable, however I am a suckered for punishment, so I'm still here, but I got more and more sketched out by 50-75 meters.... There are some very good "space" equivalents on TH-cam 😊
I gave you a like for facing your phobia. For a song, I recommend Weird Fishes by Radiohead. The only book i can think of is 10,000 leagues under the sea, i don't remember much about it from school
We like to talk about space and how much there is to discover, but it's remarkable how much there's still left to discover on Earth, especially in the sea, but yeah, space is so vast, we'll probably never discover it all.
As soon as I watched this video, my feed updated with a simulation of what the Titanic submarine accident looked like, specifically what happed to the people inside. It's safe to say they didn't suffer (or at least feel much) based off of how fast the implosion occured, their brains wouldn't have had time to process any pain.
Every time someone talks about animal intelligence I remember when I first heard about Jane Goodall and how she was astonished at how human chimps can be. I was astonished at how it wasn't obvious. Of course they have all the same feelings we do. If course they think and process and learn.
Bruh imagine being stranded in the middle of the ocean without a raft or boat. Just a life vest on in pitch black darkness with zero moonlight. The nanosecond something glides across my leg is the second I just find something sharp and jab my carotid. Or I die from a heart attack, whichever comes first.
Blobfish and similar fish that may or may not rely on the remnants of untimely cetacean falls and other fish falls gulper eel falls, one species of bobbit worm or other polychaetes you know bottom feeders.
As the world's number one exporter of yeah naw. I can see that you subscribe to my philosophy about the ocean of Yeah naw. Also you have pretty eyes. That's beside the point keep up the good work of telling people the ocean isn't for us.
The crazy thing about the Persian Gulf trough is that most -- if not all -- of it was above water before the last Ice Age ended. Underwater archaeologists have found remnants of ancient settlements beneath the waters. Which is why some scholars have theorized that the story of the Garden of Eden might have been a part of these lost lands, which were most likely fertile at the time -- seeing how this period was roughly the same time when the Sahara and the Arabian desert had a savannah-like climate. Edit: If you thought this video was something, Metalballstudio's "Time" video was notorious for giving almost everyone existential dread.
Only just discovered your channel and dont know if it's helpful but if you want tips for some water-themed songs, I know Sarah Brightmann made a whole water-themed album called "Dive", a little more pop than the two you had, but I think they're really good songs. As for some specific songs to start out with from her album, I'd recommend "Captain Nemo", "The second Element" or "Siren".
Oh yeah, and if the water doesnt have to be in reference to bodies of water, ie. lakes or oceans, theres "Nothing like the Rain" from "2 Unlimited"...fantastic song!
When they went down in the Trieste , they claimed to have seen a flatfish. There was some controversy around if they saw it or not but hey life finds a way.
Explorations by Robert D Ballard. Most people associate him with his discovery of the Titanic, and he always asks “what about the other eighty expeditions?!?” Such an interesting career.
To what degree does your thalassophobia affect you? Do you like to snorkel? Dive down ten or fifteen feet to visit the kelp, coral, and fishes? Or, do you simply float and swim on the surface?
I want to suggest you a video titled "How This One Man Changed An Entire Sport ( Valentino Rossi Documentary)" you might need to do it in 2 parts or more if you react to it because it's quite long... but I'm only suggesting it since you like to watch professional athletes doing their thing on their prime.
Another interesting fact is the deepest part of the ocean still only covers 0.17% of the distance from the surface to the centre of the earth. That means if the earth was the size a bowling ball, its deepest ocean would only be about the depth of a thinnish coat of paint.
For music you should check out Deathlok - Go Into the Water. It's about the human race going bavk to where our distant ancestors first spawned. It's also one of the most metal intros ever!
I live in Ohio and the science museum COSI in Columbus is currently hosting a Titanic Exhibit. Amazing seeing the things that were preserved for all those years (and how impressive it is that they were even able to recover some of the items from the wreckage)
The Johnston was a WW2 destroyer that was sunk during the battle of Samar after going against overwhelming odds to protect a carrier group. Pretty awesome story th-cam.com/video/8DlFfBNjz8A/w-d-xo.htmlsi=MJeHzqiCE2g0pXYL
Didn't know there were so many sunken Eiffel Towers under the sea 🤔 To me, I lose the sense of depth/size after a while, it just becomes numbers and pictures. My brain is just big enough to comprehend that I cannot comprehend anymore 🤕
95% unexplored visually. 20% of the seafloor have been scanned for topographical map. so yeah pretty good chance of something unknown in the deeps. good part is that if they live all way down there they should not be able to reach surface and mess with us.
Dont feel bad for those who died on the Titan submersible.They literally never felt a thing as the implosion happened faster than their nerve endings could send a signal to their brains. Now the last 15 minutes or so leading up to the implosion as they heard the crackling sound of the carbon fibre delaminating and heralding their impending doom, THAT would have been the shitty part, KNOWING that it was coming.
Over 20 yrs in the GoM as a commercial diver. Even dove on the Perdido, only to about 147fsw. Taking CP readings & retro half a dozen new anodes. Not as big on the surface as you would think.
I once watched a video from a sailing channel. They stopped some good distance from the coast with completely calm seas and went swimming. Somebody joked that they were swimming in a 3000 m deep swimming pool.
“. . . 3000 m deep swimming pool.” Haha I paused the video to scroll comments and lower blood pressure (definite fear of deep water) was just calm enough to restart video and read your comment - nope gonna need another minute LOL
There are creatures that live in the marina trench. It is completely dark as there is no sunlight and withstand water pressure the same as putting the eiffel tower on your big toe. They have soft muscles to adapt.
If you really are looking for a one of a kind music video, you will find it here, it is in relation to the story about the Polish Winged Hussars making their way to Vienna in September of 1683, heavily outnumbered, yet they didn’t shy away from the battle in front of them, here is their story in epic proportions m.th-cam.com/video/cuJk6MDUZFM/w-d-xo.html&pp=ygUWc2FiYXRvbiB3aW5nZWQgaHVzc2Fycw%3D%3D
Just imagine….. Make the entire rocky surface of the Earth perfectly smooth and cover it with 11,000 meters of ocean. Shrink the planet to the size of a basketball. The planet would look like a spherical rock with a molecule-thin layer of water covering it. [a rough estimate, of course] 😮😮😮
For music, I don't suppose "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" by Gordon Lightfoot would apply here? I have thalassophobia myself, along with aquaphobia to a lesser degree; not afraid of water itself (I do drink it after all), but there's a point at which the thalassophobia kicks in. I don't like going over bridges and will feel some tension when doing so. It's been more of a thing as I've gotten older. Unlike you did here, I don't hold myself, but I prefer not to look at the water. And those bigger numbers in meters get even wilder when converted to feet. Awesome. As for what's at the bottom of the ocean light certainly isn't, making it even more unnerving. I'd not be surprised to hear there are creatures down there, but I'm less confident there are any at the absolute extreme depths. The video does remind me of the old TV series "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea;" also "Sea Hunt" an even older one; Lloyd Bridges starred in that one.
@@NoProtocol We're even. I hadn't heard of thalassophobia, either. It's more specific than aquaphobia and I can be more precise with my words now, thanks to you.
I love how intellectually invested you get with some videos
I’m glad you’re liking them! Thanks for coming back (:
@@NoProtocol you make reasonable, critical thinking, logical ..... intelligent video insights into what , we the inquiring minds ask questions about!
1:05 The Seikan Tunnel is a 53.85 km (33.49 mile) long railway tunnel in Japan that connects Aomori Prefecture on Honshu Island to Hokkaido Island.
Thank you!
In an area prone to earthquakes - nope, no thank you.
I went to look it up, wondering where it was and what it would be like to go through such a tunnel, only to realize I've actually taken the train through it twice in the past. It's just a few dozen KM away from where I currently live. Cost over $7 billion to make over 20 years ago. Quite the project.
Wow 100k subs! Amazing achievement. Your super quick straight into the video intros are always appreciated 🙏
Thanks!
Hi, thank you! Hope you like this one
@NoProtocol You're Welcome. I always like your videos.
The USS Johnston (DD-557) was a Destroyer that basically sacrificed itself to the Japanese to protect a landing force by charging into a massive line of Japanese warships at the Battle off Samar and fought so hard and bravely before being sunk, that while sinking, survivors of the Johnston said they saw the Captain of the Japanese destroyer, Yukikaze, saluting the ship and its hands as it sunk in respect for how it fought to the end.
Thanks for this explanation! I hadn’t looked it up yet
@@NoProtocol That's a very understated version of events, USS Johnston at around 2,500tons was the largest destroyer in the task group Taffy 3, the other four destroyer/destroyer escorts were about 1,000 tons lighter. The Japanese fleet they took on included the largest battleship ever built, IJN Yamato weighed almost 73,000 tons. There were three smaller battleships of 30 to 40,000 tons, six heavy cruisers of around 18,000 tons, two light cruisers, around 10,000 tons and eleven destroyers of around 2,500 tons. If the destroyers of Taffy 3 hadn't inflicted such a bloody nose to the Japanese fleet, instead of retreating, they would've sunk the small escort carriers of Taffy 3 and had free rein among the undefended US invasion fleet. When the USS Johnston was discovered in 2021, it was the deepest shipwreck ever found. 15 months later they found the USS Samuel B Roberts, another ship from Taffy 3 over 1,000ft deeper. Btw, the Captain of USS Johnston, Ernest E Evans, was the first Native American awarded the Medal of Honor. (I left the U out of honour as a mark of respect to our US friends.
To help pull you out of your "anxious" state a quick blast of Yellow Submarine from the Beatles should help!
Ahh, nice wholesome music
The Beatles have loads. There is the octopus’ garden too!
Working as a Ocean Engineer for the Naval Sea Systems Command in RDT&E I've spent a lot of time thinking a working with the ocean environment, I have learned a few things. When a team of scientists (having only seen lakes) show up from a lab in the middle of the country with their latest and greatest military device to test in the operational environment. The look on their faces when I tell them don't bring it on the boat unless they are willing to lose it and for sure don't put it in the water until they fully understand it's likely to never come back. The ocean is big and dynamic and if an object has mass they ocean can and will eat it. I've put big things on the seafloor and taken careful measurements to know the location. Only to return in a week to realize 10 of tons of equipment has vanished.
I think this is the earliest I've seen one of your videos. It made my day!
Today was good timing, thanks for getting here!
One important detail about Cameron's dive is that the diving bell could not be reused. The diving unit used going to the Titanic was poorly built and even a well built sub should not have dived to that depth more than three times. The USS Johnstown was a destroyer in WWII that saw much action, but was sunk by the Japanese 140 people (survived) were rescued by the US ships, 186 died.
This is real interesting love the video protocol stay motivated dream big 1 mill on the way
Thank you (:
yeah, the bit with Rose with the Titanic annoys me......even if there wasn't enough room for them to lay side by side.....they already had sex, have him lay on top of you........plus, the two together, full body contact, as opposed to just arms if side by side.....full body contact can help to keep the warm longer
I love everything about your channel
Speaking of visually appealing, your eyes keep me afloat. Just wow.
It is always a pleasure to watch videos like this WITH YOUUUUU, My Ladyyy!!! Aaaand I will always love your voice... Trillion kisses from Peter from Hungaryyy!! I hope You are well!!!! ;)
Getting into an argument with someone and they say. "It isn't that deep bro." Then just showing them on this list exactly how deep it is.
Love the no-frills reaction and discussion stuff you do, and your personality comes across so positively. Thought I'd drop an ocean-related music recommendation that occurred to me when you asked for them - an album called Ocean Songs by Dirty Three. They're an Australian instrumental band featuring Warren Ellis, also the violinist for Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds. Thanks!
WoW! I knew the oceans were deep, but this is a totally different perspective !!
We know more about the moon than the depths of our oceans.
Another banger. Thank you.
Thank you Philip!
Music with books, curiosity and a beautiful smile. Hell you even watch MMA. You and your channel are amazing. Thanks for showing me there is a kindred soul out here. I always say we should let curiosity lead us around like a massive dog on a leash. You seem to practice that here, its awesome. I wonder what the next video will be about haha
You are obviously highly intelligent. As a quinquagenerian i have to say that you are the image of how people used to envision the Internet would be used to gain knowledge. A platform for higher learning that would uplift mankind to be better.
Society would be better off if people were more like you.
You are a rare gem.
Probably blind fish in the depths, roundish to withstand the pressure. Giant squid too maybe ancient shark survivors. It's truly a place we don't know much about, a dark pit filled with our imagination. Oh and of course that shoddy submersible from last year. I wouldn't even set foot into a really well made device. I did a shallow swim in the carribean and first thing I noticed was the pressure hurting me just below the water surface as I didn't equalize properly, then looking there you float in space and the ground is down there. Magnificent and terrible.
Should definitely check out more of Metal Ball Studios videos. I've been watching them for years and have waited for people to make reaction vids.
Your last video made me think of the film with Elijah Wood and Charlie Hunnam called Green Street Hooligans (2005). I've recommended it before but just wanted to follow up because I think you'd really enjoy it.
I don’t watch films very often but I indeed have it written down! I do remember you recommending it after one of the football videos. Thank you (:
A really good movie. I had zero interest in soccer aside from some trace childhood recollections of playing and didn't expect much but this movie had me right into it and was much more than I'd thought it would be.
Song wise id recommend Perfume of the timeless by Nightwish its just released and the video fits with this subject very well. Book wise the Abyss that was turned into a film by James Cameron it deals with what could be down there. Also 20000 leagues under the sea a childhood favourite of mine.
The Trieste Batyscaphe was actually launched before James Cameron was :P He was born in 1954, the Trieste was launch a year before. It reached Challenger Deep in 1960, when Cameron was still building sand castles and splashing in inflatable pools...
James Cameron went down there in the Deepsea Challenger, there was a cool documentary on it. I don’t know much about Trieste Batyscaphe, it is now out of commission?
USS Johnston is a US destroyer that acquited itself with something way, waaaay beyond the call of duty in the Pacific War during WW2.
Books: I am about to read "Thunder Below" by Admiral Eugene Fluckey (his memoires of being captain of he USS Barb during WW2)
Music: Handel's Water Music, what else?
With every discovery of a new living species, we see just how amazingly diverse life forms on Earth are.
Life on Earth adapts and survives in places we dare not go. There may be ten million different species at the bottoms of the oceans, and we may never get to know them.
This might be the wrong thing to say but when you said "I don't like it" the cuteness overwhelmed my heart 😂❤️🔥❤️🔥
I never realized the Caribbean sea was that deep.
You have a great reading voice
I wonder if that's like how I look when dealing with heights after less than great sleep, haha. You kept your composure well though!
As for music, dare I suggest Six Months in a Leaky Boat, by Split Enz. They had some catchy, quirky songs into the mid 80s, then Neil Finn went on to form Crowded House, who are still beloved here in Australia and beyond.
I love your content. I love it when I'm not busy and you drop, like just now. Did you know that the Earth is so big, that if you were to shrink it down to the size of a pool ball, it would be smoother than the pool ball, and that includes the depths of the Mariana trench and height of Mount Everest.
Oh perfect timing! Lol I always get stuck on the “shrinking earth down” examples. I was just reading one about it being shrunk down to the size of a quarter
0:15 "Something tells me that this one's going to escalate quickly...."
As long as the escalator is going down, your point is good. 😉😉
The saddest thing about our oceans is about 7yrs ago , shrimp like creatures were bought up from the Marianna Trench ( the deepest part of the ocean ) and 100% of them had plastic in their gut ... Food for thought
Source?
@@nopenottalib4366 Humans
Meanwhile conservatives complaining that Klaus Schwab wants us to eat bugs. We eat the equivalent of a credit card every year. This is much more serious than eating crickets.
100% of them. Lol 🤣
Yeah 😢
On the theme of deep sea exploration, a book you might like is Sphere by Michael Crichton, who wrote the book Jurrasic Park. Starts out as sci-fi with a team of scientists sent to the bottom of the ocean to investigate a crashed spacecraft, turns into quite a claustrophobic psychological piece. Highly enjoyable
Sea spiders, colossal squids, tube worms, and cookie-cutter sharks are some of the creatures that live at the bottom of the ocean.
Tripod fish
Rattail fish
Sea cucumbers
Octopuses
Snailfish
Zombie worms
Dragonfish
Goblin shark
Pelican eel
Anglerfish
Hatchetfish
Frilled shark
Squid
Sponges
Comb jellies
Pink see-through fantasia
Fangtooth fish.
Film: Le Grand Bleu (1988) with the original ending, not the american. There's a beautiful poem of sorts in it but I'd rather not spoil anything for whoever is interested. It's a beautiful film over all. Not always light though, but I guess the deeper you go the heavier it gets.
No Protocol Awesome Video Today!!🔥🐐🐐💎
Hey thanks (:
I recommend the "hard" science fiction book "Project Hail Mary" by Andy Weir. Space is it's own kind of abyssal horror. Also, it is being adapted into a film soon, so if you hurry and buy it now you will not have to deal with what I am sure will be a very stupid movie version of the book cover.
青函 せいかん seikan (blue mailbox, also sounds like "interval of life 生間"). Japan, named by two city between it. 青森 - aomori (green forest), 函館 - hakodate (mailbox building).
Interesting and thought provoking. George Carlin's bit about nature and the planet was accurate.
The USS Johnston and USS Samuel B. Roberts are the two deepest known shipwrecks in the world. Both as a result of the Battle of Samar against the Japanese. These two small American destroyers fought against Japan's largest battleships until they were both sunk. The Japanese battleship Yamato has the largest gun turrets ever fitted to a ship, at roughly the same weight as the entire USS Johnston. There was no way that it would end well for the destroyers but they didn't back down.
I enjoyed the book “Das Boot” by Lothar-Gunther Buchheim. An autobiography of his experiences serving on a German U-Boat during the Second World War. The movie produced in 1981 was loosely based on the novel.
I'm totally with you ❤😢
That made me physically uncomfortable, however I am a suckered for punishment, so I'm still here, but I got more and more sketched out by 50-75 meters....
There are some very good "space" equivalents on TH-cam 😊
Yes I'm a simp, but you got to admit she's literally perfect.😮
I gave you a like for facing your phobia. For a song, I recommend Weird Fishes by Radiohead. The only book i can think of is 10,000 leagues under the sea, i don't remember much about it from school
We like to talk about space and how much there is to discover, but it's remarkable how much there's still left to discover on Earth, especially in the sea, but yeah, space is so vast, we'll probably never discover it all.
You just have to imagine this habitat! We only live on a 2D land surface but in the oceans you live in a 3D space! And that at ⅔ the world surface!
Fascinating thing is there is life even 11 km bellow surface in extreme pressure
As soon as I watched this video, my feed updated with a simulation of what the Titanic submarine accident looked like, specifically what happed to the people inside. It's safe to say they didn't suffer (or at least feel much) based off of how fast the implosion occured, their brains wouldn't have had time to process any pain.
dat waz interesting!
Every time someone talks about animal intelligence I remember when I first heard about Jane Goodall and how she was astonished at how human chimps can be. I was astonished at how it wasn't obvious. Of course they have all the same feelings we do. If course they think and process and learn.
Bruh imagine being stranded in the middle of the ocean without a raft or boat. Just a life vest on in pitch black darkness with zero moonlight. The nanosecond something glides across my leg is the second I just find something sharp and jab my carotid. Or I die from a heart attack, whichever comes first.
Blobfish and similar fish that may or may not rely on the remnants of untimely cetacean falls and other fish falls gulper eel falls, one species of bobbit worm or other polychaetes you know bottom feeders.
Book wise, try, in the heart of the sea by Nathaniel Philbrick, the true story of the Essex, that inspired Moby Dick.
In the Heart of the Sea is an excellent read.
Metaball does some good videos.
As the world's number one exporter of yeah naw. I can see that you subscribe to my philosophy about the ocean of Yeah naw. Also you have pretty eyes. That's beside the point keep up the good work of telling people the ocean isn't for us.
Music recommendation: Vangelis - Oceanic (1996)
Movie recommendation: Luc Besson - The Big Blue (1988)
The crazy thing about the Persian Gulf trough is that most -- if not all -- of it was above water before the last Ice Age ended. Underwater archaeologists have found remnants of ancient settlements beneath the waters.
Which is why some scholars have theorized that the story of the Garden of Eden might have been a part of these lost lands, which were most likely fertile at the time -- seeing how this period was roughly the same time when the Sahara and the Arabian desert had a savannah-like climate.
Edit: If you thought this video was something, Metalballstudio's "Time" video was notorious for giving almost everyone existential dread.
3:20 When was the last time you watched the film The Abyss (1989)? lol.
I don’t think I have!
Shes so beautiful
Only just discovered your channel and dont know if it's helpful but if you want tips for some water-themed songs, I know Sarah Brightmann made a whole water-themed album called "Dive", a little more pop than the two you had, but I think they're really good songs.
As for some specific songs to start out with from her album, I'd recommend "Captain Nemo", "The second Element" or "Siren".
Oh yeah, and if the water doesnt have to be in reference to bodies of water, ie. lakes or oceans, theres "Nothing like the Rain" from "2 Unlimited"...fantastic song!
I do always appreciate the music recommendations! Thank you
I’m taking a moment to thank the firm ground beneath me
When they went down in the Trieste , they claimed to have seen a flatfish. There was some controversy around if they saw it or not but hey life finds a way.
Music wise, check out this is the sea (2004 remastered) by the Waterboys, an Irish band.
The scary part is that we have only explored five percent of our world ocean.... who's knows what's down there... the ocean is my biggest fear...
Really deep underwater (when it gets dark) terrifies me! That and Victorian children!
Same on the Victorian children
Explorations by Robert D Ballard. Most people associate him with his discovery of the Titanic, and he always asks “what about the other eighty expeditions?!?” Such an interesting career.
To what degree does your thalassophobia affect you? Do you like to snorkel? Dive down ten or fifteen feet to visit the kelp, coral, and fishes? Or, do you simply float and swim on the surface?
USS Johnston is an amazing story that is part of the Battle of Leyte Gulf (WW2), the biggest naval battle in the history of the world. So yeah.
For another literary suggestion, perhaps "Sphere" by Michael Crichton
I want to suggest you a video titled "How This One Man Changed An Entire Sport ( Valentino Rossi Documentary)" you might need to do it in 2 parts or more if you react to it because it's quite long... but I'm only suggesting it since you like to watch professional athletes doing their thing on their prime.
❤
Let's go to Europa and go x3 deeper than this..And there maybe life even there!!!
Another interesting fact is the deepest part of the ocean still only covers 0.17% of the distance from the surface to the centre of the earth. That means if the earth was the size a bowling ball, its deepest ocean would only be about the depth of a thinnish coat of paint.
For music you should check out Deathlok - Go Into the Water. It's about the human race going bavk to where our distant ancestors first spawned. It's also one of the most metal intros ever!
Book:The Face of the Waters Robert Silverberg
Hello 😁
Most people must have a little thalassophobia i think. The ocean is just equal parts cool and scary.
Smart and beautiful.
Musically I suggest you look into the "shoegazer" or Madchester genre. Try "Loveless" album.
I live in Ohio and the science museum COSI in Columbus is currently hosting a Titanic Exhibit. Amazing seeing the things that were preserved for all those years (and how impressive it is that they were even able to recover some of the items from the wreckage)
Yet non of the plates and cups had the Titanic Name / Logo on them, I wonder why?
The Johnston was a WW2 destroyer that was sunk during the battle of Samar after going against overwhelming odds to protect a carrier group. Pretty awesome story th-cam.com/video/8DlFfBNjz8A/w-d-xo.htmlsi=MJeHzqiCE2g0pXYL
Thanks for adding a link!
@@NoProtocolsorry I sent the wrong link. th-cam.com/video/8DlFfBNjz8A/w-d-xo.htmlsi=MJeHzqiCE2g0pXYL
@@NoProtocolI edited and put the correct link. The Operations Room 👌
Haha yet here I am, now interested in the Battle off Samar so thank you for that
Didn't know there were so many sunken Eiffel Towers under the sea 🤔
To me, I lose the sense of depth/size after a while, it just becomes numbers and pictures. My brain is just big enough to comprehend that I cannot comprehend anymore 🤕
Song recommendation! Pacific Ocean Blues by Dennis Wilson.
95% unexplored visually.
20% of the seafloor have been scanned for topographical map.
so yeah pretty good chance of something unknown in the deeps.
good part is that if they live all way down there they should not be able to reach surface and mess with us.
Dont feel bad for those who died on the Titan submersible.They literally never felt a thing as the implosion happened faster than their nerve endings could send a signal to their brains.
Now the last 15 minutes or so leading up to the implosion as they heard the crackling sound of the carbon fibre delaminating and heralding their impending doom, THAT would have been the shitty part, KNOWING that it was coming.
I think I have that thiing you have about deep water with creatures in it . Getting quesy watching this , but its still so interesting
JEFF was HERE ♓
Hello Jeff, thanks for being here
Are you still here now?
@@earthwormandruwI always finish my No Protocol vids
@@JEFFwasHERE... Oof I don't always, I must admit 😅
Over 20 yrs in the GoM as a commercial diver. Even dove on the Perdido, only to about 147fsw. Taking CP readings & retro half a dozen new anodes. Not as big on the surface as you would think.
Deep water is both fascinating and terrifying to me.
I found myself holding my breath....Not a deep water person...js
I once watched a video from a sailing channel. They stopped some good distance from the coast with completely calm seas and went swimming. Somebody joked that they were swimming in a 3000 m deep swimming pool.
“. . . 3000 m deep swimming pool.” Haha I paused the video to scroll comments and lower blood pressure (definite fear of deep water) was just calm enough to restart video and read your comment - nope gonna need another minute LOL
There are creatures that live in the marina trench. It is completely dark as there is no sunlight and withstand water pressure the same as putting the eiffel tower on your big toe. They have soft muscles to adapt.
Music recommendation:
Isis - Oceanic (album)
and Mastodon - Leviathan :)
If you really are looking for a one of a kind music video, you will find it here, it is in relation to the story about the Polish Winged Hussars making their way to Vienna in September of 1683, heavily outnumbered, yet they didn’t shy away from the battle in front of them, here is their story in epic proportions m.th-cam.com/video/cuJk6MDUZFM/w-d-xo.html&pp=ygUWc2FiYXRvbiB3aW5nZWQgaHVzc2Fycw%3D%3D
This made me think of the song Wave of mutilation by Pixies.
Just imagine…..
Make the entire rocky surface of the Earth perfectly smooth and cover it with 11,000 meters of ocean.
Shrink the planet to the size of a basketball.
The planet would look like a spherical rock with a molecule-thin layer of water covering it.
[a rough estimate, of course]
😮😮😮
For music, I don't suppose "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" by Gordon Lightfoot would apply here? I have thalassophobia myself, along with aquaphobia to a lesser degree; not afraid of water itself (I do drink it after all), but there's a point at which the thalassophobia kicks in. I don't like going over bridges and will feel some tension when doing so. It's been more of a thing as I've gotten older. Unlike you did here, I don't hold myself, but I prefer not to look at the water. And those bigger numbers in meters get even wilder when converted to feet. Awesome. As for what's at the bottom of the ocean light certainly isn't, making it even more unnerving. I'd not be surprised to hear there are creatures down there, but I'm less confident there are any at the absolute extreme depths.
The video does remind me of the old TV series "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea;" also "Sea Hunt" an even older one; Lloyd Bridges starred in that one.
I’d not heard of aquaphobia until just now!
@@NoProtocol We're even. I hadn't heard of thalassophobia, either. It's more specific than aquaphobia and I can be more precise with my words now, thanks to you.
Fun fact for all you wonderful people watching this video. Did you know that the pool on the deck of the Titanic still has water in it?