Martin I've actually fainted from dehydration by fasting and walking a long distance in the judean hills in summer, i went into shock and was repeating my testAmony of faith as i was convinced i was going to die. Horrific experience
yeshua sage you have to train your body to handle the heat. I can hike for 12 hours and don’t to drink water. I have camp and went a week without eating. It’s important to learn to survive without resources if anything ever happens if you live in Los Angeles is a must. Never know there might be a shortage.
MrJackben32, the scary thing is that they found him after 6 days as a mummy but he probably dried out even sooner. So if he lasted a day (max) that cuts it to 5 days, and if he was dried out the day before they found him that cuts it to 4 days to be a dried mummy!
@@xTOILETMASTERx to think this guy FUCKING DIED ( kind of an idiot, darwinism) but now hes a fucking god damn joke to people on a video partailly about him. You guys are really sick..
Alexander figueroa lol he's not really from there, he's from somewhere in Texas I read somewhere. It's just for his character... a character like his can't have the announcer say Ex: "and from San Diego California) and then expect us to take his character seriously... so they gave his character Death Valley.
I visited Death Valley in July of 1992, it was 126 Degrees at the time, now I know what Hell feels like..NEVER visit during the summertime, you could perish! No Joke! It's an awesome trek, but, NEVER go during the summer months! I plan on going there again, fascinating!!
+Andy Curdo I think you are correct on that, all I know is, it was 126 degrees when I was there, no shit. My friend dropped me off for a few minutes and I stood outside for awhile, it was awesome!!
+Andy Curdo It was 134 degrees the dude said on the video, world record heat, not when he was there. I need to visit Death Valley again, but NOT in July!!!
I think people have a misunderstanding of what hot means. I've lived in Southeast USA all my life and sometimes the humidity is so much its unbearable. I'm sure most places like Congo/Vietnam are even worse. However, when I went to Iraq, I had no problem and it was constantly 120 degrees or higher. I loved the dry heat. The difference is, humidity, while unbearable is not that life threating. Dry heat on the other hand, can kill you and you wouldnt even know it.
I last visited Death Valley in November 1993 and it actually properly rained for about an hour. During the winter yes, but it's still quite a rare event.
IceRex lel go to the netherlands. they reclaimed land that used to be the English Channel, now its property of the Netherlands with an altitude of -3m.
Until those places in those deserts you mention can come up with certified, recorded reliable records with those rediculous temperatures (70.7c) you are mentioning, the hottest place on earth is DEATH VALLEY. Unofficial temperatues do not count! That's why Libya's 136 was thrown out.
I remember experiencing true dehydration. it was the worse experience of my life. I felt weak, nimble, confused, and dazed and much more I cannot describe. I cannot imagine having to die that way.
I was raised not too far from there, and the lasting effects can be felt for miles and miles. It’s so awful, it’s feels like the air in your lungs dries and evaporates before you inhale and exhale.
We visited here during Easter a few years back. I've never been anywhere as hot as that. It felt even hotter than the Grand Canyon and Vegas. Beautiful national park. We went on to Yosemite and Lake Tahoe. Fabulous part of the world
Death Valley's hottest temperature was 56.7 Celsius (134 Farenheit). Where I live, in Dubai, it reached 55 Celsius (131 Farenheit) and it was literally torture.
The moisture had been sucked away, the bones that were all connected were literally rattling together as they tumbled into each other as they picked the body up.
I understand the science, but you have to admit that it's an intense picture to paint...right? By the way, where are you that I'm, "over there". I was just trying to say that it's a version of reality that is pretty extreme. I understand the science.
I have hiked/ backcountry the entire Death Valley through! It was in January 2016, one of the most beautiful and mesmerizing places on earth I have ever been. Always in my mind to go and visit again!!
savagedragon79 Have you ever experienced 125 degrees? Dry or otherwise? Your body instantly starts to heat up, and you can get heat stroke within an hour. Humidity doesn't mean shit at those temperatures.
Even in the south the heat index rarely goes above 115. At this temperature it doesn’t matter. Humid places never usually go above 105. Although I will admit the highest heat index (humidity combined with heat) ever recorded in the U.S. is about 10 degrees higher than Death Valley’s record.
FYI; Death Valley was named by the 49ers who were "trapped" in there during Dec '49-Jan 1850. In fact, only 1 died in what is now Death Valley. Death Valley does have high enough mountains for snow; I've hiked in it.Telescope pk. is 11,049ft elevation
I worked there one year for fred harvey at furnace creek, 1993-4. July 4th weekend 1994 it was 128 for 4 days. It was toasty. 6 degrees off the world record
storytime: my family and i thought it would be a fun idea to camp in the middle of death valley. so we're driving to the desert (in a toyota corolla), the sun is scorching hot and we're passing by what looks like a ghost town. the area around death valley is straight out of mad max! anyway, we reach the desert and we decide to set up camp. there's not a soul around us, probably for miles; silence envelopes us other than the occasional rustle from unknown creatures from the desert. it was eerie but also peaceful. i'm gathering our belongings while my brother is setting up the tent. due to this, we're moving back and forth from the car. as i'm heading to the car to grab some last minute things, i hear a rattling noise. alarmed, i look at the ground. IT'S A HUGE RATTLE SNAKE. not just any rattle snake-- it's tongue is buzzing and it's in a position to strike. the thing starts chasing me (no joke) so i scream and run into the car. in a panic, my family follows me to the car. still panicking, my mom turned the car in reverse. when she does this, we hear a huge scraping sound and the car stops moving-- WE DROVE OVER A HUGE ROCK and now we were stuck in a car in the middle of death valley. we're also in a position where we're blocking the dirt road. we didn't have much gas in the tank and our phones on low battery with no connection. night time was quickly approaching, making the situation more spooky. we manage to call 911 and they tell us they will come in four hours. while we were anxiously waiting in the car (we were too afraid to get out since the snake could have still been there), some weird people started to come by. by the way, we didn't see A SINGLE SOUL on the way to death valley. so when a car approached us, we were pretty scared and defenseless. so imagine: it's pitch black and absolutely silent when a car stops before us. remember, we're blocking the road. i was scared shitless when a HUGE guy emerges from the car. he knocks on our window and we explain the situation. this guy had a weird look in his eye. he had a big Scandinavian accent and he had long, greasy hair. we explain that we can't get out of the car because there was a rattle snake so he said "OH, RATTLE SNAKE? MMMM, SEXY NIGHT, HUH!". we laughed along nervously. he actually turned out to be a pretty nice dude-- he checked out the damage to the car and said "WELP, NOTHING TO DO! I GO." without saying another word, he drove around us in his huge truck. after 3 more hours the tow truck finally came. we explain the situation and he says "oh, i hunt rattle snakes for fun". AND YOU KNOW WHAT HE HAD TO DO TO GET US OUT? he swiftly moved the tires in a position to get off the rock. he gave us some gas and told us good luck. 10/10 would mojave again
Death Valley uses proper meteorological methods to achieve a temp of 134 F. Marble Bar holds the record for most 100 degree days in a row. They achieve this by separating the hot and cold temps of the day. The hottest peaks of every day are averaged. Using this method, they achieved 160 days of 100. As for us who live in Death Valley, 100 is considered a nice day. who knows, maybe I'll rummage through our records and see what I can come up with. ,
0:54 "The sun beats down and is reflected off the valley floor, heating the air over and over". Good to have somebody who failed 8th grade science narrate this. The sun beats down and is absorbed by the ground and re-radiated as infrared, which heats the air. Sunlight doesn't heat the air, air is transparent to visible light. Upwelling IR does as air absorbs IR.
Sunlight is all spectra, not just the visible daylight. It is possible for UV and Infra Red to strike objects, such as people, and to give an impression of a heat that is conducted by 'the light' being radiated from the sun itself. Why is it erroneously described as heat striking the air, or baking ground, before we directly feel it?
America - "NASA constantly measures Iran's Desert at 150 degrees... " Also America - "America's Death Valley at 136 degree is the hottest place in the world."
@@sobhanshane7010 the thing is, the temperature of deserts near the equator is really hard to record due to harsh climates there. So I don't think it's fair calling death valley the hottest place
Am I the only one curious why he isn't sweating? This year it reached 39 degrees in The Netherlands one day and I sweat by sitting still. And I'm not fat at all, skinny actually.
I know what you mean. My wife and I had our Keen shoes melt while on a hiking trip in Canyonlands, the rocks were so hot. The company replaced them, that was cool.
People misunderstand that surface temperature is not the same as ambient (air) temperature. In fact, can be double. The ambient temperature may have been 134F, but the surface temperature was close to 289F (i.e. the camcorder was 143C = 289F). Chris Hadfield, x-commander of the International Space Station, stated that while working outside the space station the shaded part of his suit was -140C (-220F) but the sun lit part of his other shoulder was +150C (+302F). The space station would be about the same distance to the sun as the earth, so this would explain why direct sunlight is about the same, and can have devastating effects if you are not prepared on earth. Wearing a hat would help. And don't forget that ambient relative humidity is likely near "0%" in Death Valley. Wear a good space suit for the walk, so your body holds onto its own moisture as much as possible and you don't have to carry so much water to perform the hike: 32L (8.5 gallons = about 71 lbs).
I did a 24 hour surviving day there.. I was toasted the next day.. the thermostats there say 134.00 but I've been there during the summer and I tell you what my thermostat said 152.00 yeah.. tecopa was the only town near there.. what a venture that was.
Scott, first off the guy told you why. It's a combination of factors, low elevation, SURROUNDED BY MOUNTAINS, and low humidity= really hot temps. Warm air gets trapped in the area.
The temperature in Lybia in 1922 has been found to be false. They now believe it was about 7 degrees cooler than what was recorded. No readings close to that station match such high temps on that day. So they concluded that guy misread the temp. This was determined last year, and all official records have been changed. Now the record holder is death valley.
Crater Lake in Oregon is the deepest in the USA. Nearly 600 meters deep. But it is estimated that when there was water in Death Valley it reached an estimated maximum depth of 270m, still a really deep lake.
Undertaker: how much time can you stay in this hit place ? Me : seriously ??? Not a second Undertaker : I tried to live in here Me : *kick in the face*
i regularly camp there, its amazing if you go in march or april, not to hot in the day but its pretty damn cold at night :) we're taking my son there for the first time this year
I've been here, and it was 127F. I had planned on going a small hike/walk, but after getting out of my car for a couple of minutes it was UNBEARABLE so cancelled that idea. No wind, but the outside just feel like you're in a fan oven. Luckily my rental car handled it great and aircon that lasted the whole time was a true gift
The Hottest place on earth is the Lut Desert in Iran, measuring a temperature of 70.7 degrees Celcius (159.29 degrees fahrenheit). Source: earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/HottestSpot/page2.php
The hiker was nicknamed "Jerkyman" by the search and rescue teams that found him. (You know why, right?) He had walked all the way across the bottom of the valley and had made it back to within sight of his car on the Badwater road before he collapsed. The search parties had a hard time finding him because he was down between the salt spires. Hi Charlie!
Wow, i'm interested to know how that place got so hot, I mean if a big lake used to be there then in cant have been that hot ages ago. Also imagine mining gold at 130 degrees F!
I was at the Badwater Basin in April 2018 standing on the salt flats and no joke a hat like an explorer's hat went blowing by in the thirty mile an hour constant winds... never saw who owned it.
2:50 "After 6 days, they found the hiker... but it was too late"
Totally wasn't expecting that :D
Martin I've actually fainted from dehydration by fasting and walking a long distance in the judean hills in summer, i went into shock and was repeating my testAmony of faith as i was convinced i was going to die.
Horrific experience
yeshua sage you have to train your body to handle the heat. I can hike for 12 hours and don’t to drink water. I have camp and went a week without eating. It’s important to learn to survive without resources if anything ever happens if you live in Los Angeles is a must. Never know there might be a shortage.
@@horaciogonzalez5749 u r not a human
@@horaciogonzalez5749
Man you could survive anywhere
I thought the lowest point in the US was Detroit
EvilDorito lmfao
EvilDorito lmao !!!
The funniest thing I've read today
😂😂😂
Lmao
6 days and he's a mummy wow that was quick
MrJackben32, the scary thing is that they found him after 6 days as a mummy but he probably dried out even sooner. So if he lasted a day (max) that cuts it to 5 days, and if he was dried out the day before they found him that cuts it to 4 days to be a dried mummy!
think it would be like a jerky of sorts. . .have them chug some teriyaki next time should be tasty. ..lol.
Jimmy russ lol
haha lol so funny
@@xTOILETMASTERx to think this guy FUCKING DIED ( kind of an idiot, darwinism) but now hes a fucking god damn joke to people on a video partailly about him. You guys are really sick..
Chuck Norris gets cold there...
Looking back at this comment, The way it has aged XD
Lmao
Why are we commenting on a 5 year old post . Lol how you know this comment was meant to be framed
RocketTrends
But he’s a terrible actor.
chuck Norris is able to sleep on the scorching pavement
how did the undertaker even live here??
Alexander figueroa lol he's not really from there, he's from somewhere in Texas I read somewhere. It's just for his character... a character like his can't have the announcer say Ex: "and from San Diego California) and then expect us to take his character seriously... so they gave his character Death Valley.
The Truth Dude, I think that was the joke, haha.
downward spiral what?
Alexander Figueroa we'll he is the death man so yah
He didnt live here
Who else got thirsty watching this?
Now I am
I'm driving to get a gatorade right now haha
Man i'm fasting x) ramadan please
Honiahaka Me too i am also fastinf
😂😂😂😂😭😭😫😫🤣🤣
Hard to believe that people tried to live there.
Greg Simonson bro my grandparents live there
Greg Simonson I do live here lol
life, uh uh uh uh... finds a way.
Greg Simonson it was probably cooler back then and had a lake maybe even mines that were worth the heat
@@kristnovoselic9314 There hasn't been a lake there for 10,000 years or so. And it was still the hottest place on earth in the early 1900's.
It regularly gets 120 plus here in phoenix az. I saw it get to 124 last year.
I visited Death Valley in July of 1992, it was 126 Degrees at the time, now I know what Hell feels like..NEVER visit during the summertime, you could perish! No Joke! It's an awesome trek, but, NEVER go during the summer months! I plan on going there again, fascinating!!
+Apocyl Doomer I don't even like crossing the desert in April and October. And frankly, the desert is creepy ALL the time.
Sorry to say that the most hottest temperature ever recorded is only 58°c and that is at the Death valley mybe 90 or 80 years ago if I not wrong...
+Shizuka Kuchiki 126F
+Andy Curdo I think you are correct on that, all I know is, it was 126 degrees when I was there, no shit. My friend dropped me off for a few minutes and I stood outside for awhile, it was awesome!!
+Andy Curdo It was 134 degrees the dude said on the video, world record heat, not when he was there. I need to visit Death Valley again, but NOT in July!!!
I was hoping to see the Undertaker in here
😂
I think you should there dude😂that's would i hope
I always thought WWE pulled this place out of their ass
I think people have a misunderstanding of what hot means. I've lived in Southeast USA all my life and sometimes the humidity is so much its unbearable. I'm sure most places like Congo/Vietnam are even worse. However, when I went to Iraq, I had no problem and it was constantly 120 degrees or higher. I loved the dry heat. The difference is, humidity, while unbearable is not that life threating. Dry heat on the other hand, can kill you and you wouldnt even know it.
Yeah, but it's a dry heat! 🤠😄
UNDERTAKER home town
You think thats hot, try spend the night in my bedroom on a summers night
legend say that Chuck Norris was born in Death Valley
vadont 😂😂😂😂😂
He was born in a national park
vadont the undertaker was
it was known as "Paradise Sanctuary" before that
Chuck Norris was born in the crater of mount Doom. Only there he can die. But since the mountain is destroyed, he is immortal.
I love that this professional, almost news-reel worthy production ends with a metal riff
I last visited Death Valley in November 1993 and it actually properly rained for about an hour. During the winter yes, but it's still quite a rare event.
In Darwin Australia it is 35 degrees Celsius in winter during the day and 25-30 during the night. Thank goodness I live no where near there
Mindblowing that you can look around and see the sky and everything while still being over 200 feet below the ocean
IceRex lel go to the netherlands.
they reclaimed land that used to be the English Channel, now its property of the Netherlands with an altitude of -3m.
Death Valley is a really cool place, also nice for taking nice and interesting photos...
Best regards
Photograffity
Until those places in those deserts you mention can come up with certified, recorded reliable records with those rediculous temperatures (70.7c) you are mentioning, the hottest place on earth is DEATH VALLEY.
Unofficial temperatues do not count! That's why Libya's 136 was thrown out.
I remember experiencing true dehydration. it was the worse experience of my life. I felt weak, nimble, confused, and dazed and much more I cannot describe. I cannot imagine having to die that way.
Paul Gavrilin unfortunately too many people do, we all have to treat water as life
Death Valley hikers need to start bringing UV umbrellas to reflect the suns dangerous rays and keep you in the shade as you hike.
Corporate Agent AND BRING WATER!!!!
I was raised not too far from there, and the lasting effects can be felt for miles and miles. It’s so awful, it’s feels like the air in your lungs dries and evaporates before you inhale and exhale.
Well, there goes the answer why people from Cali are salty af.
the other aaron they also grow lots of nuts and are nuts, surely it isn’t a coincedence
the other aaron sounds like someone hates how successful Cali is
We're salty because we're tired of seeing people from other states flock into Cali
Death valley is in Nevada too. The places he just showed you were in Nevada
David Alvarez ikr its causing housing issues which were already bad, like frs a house that is medium and in a average community costs 400k
If anyone can find the footage of the guy walking across the sale flats, could you link it please
wtf, just some random rock that someone painted to look like E.T or some shit.. lol
?
@@drew2183 1:28
Resiax ohhh wtf 😂
We visited here during Easter a few years back. I've never been anywhere as hot as that. It felt even hotter than the Grand Canyon and Vegas. Beautiful national park. We went on to Yosemite and Lake Tahoe. Fabulous part of the world
Death Valley's hottest temperature was 56.7 Celsius (134 Farenheit). Where I live, in Dubai, it reached 55 Celsius (131 Farenheit) and it was literally torture.
His bones were rattling in his f---ing body?!?!
+sinister lollypop Yeah, I'm wondering about that, too. RATTLING?
The moisture had been sucked away, the bones that were all connected were literally rattling together as they tumbled into each other as they picked the body up.
Take away all the moisture in your body, what are you left with? Do they teach you anything over there? At all?
I understand the science, but you have to admit that it's an intense picture to paint...right? By the way, where are you that I'm, "over there". I was just trying to say that it's a version of reality that is pretty extreme. I understand the science.
Yazole No they don't. Please teach us professor.
hey look, its holes.
blodyraven3 or the hills have eyes
iMRM.1472 the film
I actually came here because I needed to write some paragraph about this because it is close to holes and we are reading holes.
The hottest air temperature ever recorded in Death Valley was 134 °F (56.7 °C).
It's my dream to go there :3
Lut desert in iran is hottest plac with 80 c
I have hiked/ backcountry the entire Death Valley through! It was in January 2016, one of the most beautiful and mesmerizing places on earth I have ever been. Always in my mind to go and visit again!!
ABCDEFG so proud of you
Good video, that place is brutal. Silent, calm but brutal.
I was in Death Valley when it was 120 degrees. I now know what pizzas feel like. Can't believe there's actually residents who live there year round.
It's a dry heat, LOL
It does make a difference though.
savagedragon79 not at 125 degrees.
savagedragon79 Have you ever experienced 125 degrees? Dry or otherwise? Your body instantly starts to heat up, and you can get heat stroke within an hour. Humidity doesn't mean shit at those temperatures.
Even in the south the heat index rarely goes above 115. At this temperature it doesn’t matter. Humid places never usually go above 105. Although I will admit the highest heat index (humidity combined with heat) ever recorded in the U.S. is about 10 degrees higher than Death Valley’s record.
Damon Day it actually accelerates heat stroke massively.
FYI; Death Valley was named by the 49ers who were "trapped" in there during Dec '49-Jan 1850. In fact, only 1 died in what is now Death Valley. Death Valley does have high enough mountains for snow; I've hiked in it.Telescope pk. is 11,049ft elevation
So the weather is like far northern cali? lol summer sucks here.
Austin Unknown ITS COLD AS HELL IN NORTHEAST CALIFORNIA )(I live in Fort Bidwell
you all have it luxury im living in denmark its fucking cold here every single day.. just sitting inside dreaming about hot places.. :(
Jonas A Try living in Southern Ontario, Canada. -40°C in the winter, 40°C in the summer with humidity. One of the worst climates on the planet
Austin Unknown try living in Vegas for a summer🔥☀️
Gurkaran Sahota haha I'm sure you have a lot of clothes. I just have to worry about 30-45 weather in the summer, and 0-15 in the winter
I worked there one year for fred harvey at furnace creek, 1993-4. July 4th weekend 1994 it was 128 for 4 days. It was toasty. 6 degrees off the world record
storytime: my family and i thought it would be a fun idea to camp in the middle of death valley. so we're driving to the desert (in a toyota corolla), the sun is scorching hot and we're passing by what looks like a ghost town. the area around death valley is straight out of mad max!
anyway, we reach the desert and we decide to set up camp. there's not a soul around us, probably for miles; silence envelopes us other than the occasional rustle from unknown creatures from the desert. it was eerie but also peaceful. i'm gathering our belongings while my brother is setting up the tent. due to this, we're moving back and forth from the car.
as i'm heading to the car to grab some last minute things, i hear a rattling noise. alarmed, i look at the ground. IT'S A HUGE RATTLE SNAKE. not just any rattle snake-- it's tongue is buzzing and it's in a position to strike. the thing starts chasing me (no joke) so i scream and run into the car. in a panic, my family follows me to the car. still panicking, my mom turned the car in reverse. when she does this, we hear a huge scraping sound and the car stops moving-- WE DROVE OVER A HUGE ROCK and now we were stuck in a car in the middle of death valley. we're also in a position where we're blocking the dirt road. we didn't have much gas in the tank and our phones on low battery with no connection. night time was quickly approaching, making the situation more spooky.
we manage to call 911 and they tell us they will come in four hours. while we were anxiously waiting in the car (we were too afraid to get out since the snake could have still been there), some weird people started to come by. by the way, we didn't see A SINGLE SOUL on the way to death valley. so when a car approached us, we were pretty scared and defenseless. so imagine: it's pitch black and absolutely silent when a car stops before us. remember, we're blocking the road. i was scared shitless when a HUGE guy emerges from the car. he knocks on our window and we explain the situation. this guy had a weird look in his eye. he had a big Scandinavian accent and he had long, greasy hair. we explain that we can't get out of the car because there was a rattle snake so he said "OH, RATTLE SNAKE? MMMM, SEXY NIGHT, HUH!". we laughed along nervously. he actually turned out to be a pretty nice dude-- he checked out the damage to the car and said "WELP, NOTHING TO DO! I GO." without saying another word, he drove around us in his huge truck.
after 3 more hours the tow truck finally came. we explain the situation and he says "oh, i hunt rattle snakes for fun". AND YOU KNOW WHAT HE HAD TO DO TO GET US OUT? he swiftly moved the tires in a position to get off the rock. he gave us some gas and told us good luck.
10/10 would mojave again
i'd like to know what the music in the backround is.
Omg,Death Valley is The Undertaker home (WWE fans will understand) lol
No wonder undertaker is so awesome
I was 'bout to say that
Everyone understands kid
But the man behind the character is actually from Houston Texas!
Exactly
Death Valley uses proper meteorological methods to achieve a temp of 134 F. Marble Bar holds the record for most 100 degree days in a row. They achieve this by separating the hot and cold temps of the day. The hottest peaks of every day are averaged. Using this method, they achieved 160 days of 100. As for us who live in Death Valley, 100 is considered a nice day. who knows, maybe I'll rummage through our records and see what I can come up with.
,
This is how the planet of Venus looked millions years ago
Wdym
0:54 "The sun beats down and is reflected off the valley floor, heating the air over and over".
Good to have somebody who failed 8th grade science narrate this. The sun beats down and is absorbed by the ground and re-radiated as infrared, which heats the air. Sunlight doesn't heat the air, air is transparent to visible light. Upwelling IR does as air absorbs IR.
Abcde 😂😂😂 gg
Sunlight is all spectra, not just the visible daylight. It is possible for UV and Infra Red to strike objects, such as people, and to give an impression of a heat that is conducted by 'the light' being radiated from the sun itself. Why is it erroneously described as heat striking the air, or baking ground, before we directly feel it?
Not to be pedantic, but the hottest place in the world would be inside of a volcano. Where the lava hits 2200 degrees.
Or in forest fires, or during lightning strikes.
you are an idiot. There is a difference between on earth and inside earth
Or on the inner core of the world
Wow , the idiot count on this post is high
Inside a volcano isn't even a place you idiot.
Is it expanding? How far will this go?
Beto G doesnt really expand..
most of the heat is just due to low altitude and consistent sunlight.
I can't stand people who pronounce "what" as "hhwhat"
Thumbnail Finder Makes me think of the Family Guy "cool hwip" scene.🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Guess
I think that was the way it used to be pronounced originally.
Steve harvey
June 2017 palm springs CA was 126°... this weekend is going to be 120°
0:56 does that remind anyone of a battlefield 3 desert map?
David Garethson yeah, the expansion
ant a exactly
David Garethson exactly
ant a exactly
+David Garethson Do you mean the expension ´China Rise` with the map ´Silk Road` ? :D
America - "NASA constantly measures Iran's Desert at 150 degrees... "
Also America - "America's Death Valley at 136 degree is the hottest place in the world."
you idiot 136 is in shade in Death Valley, the 150 in Iran is the ground temperature, Death Valley also holds the record for the ground which is 201
@@Deira854 It was satellite, not ground.
@@sobhanshane7010 the thing is, the temperature of deserts near the equator is really hard to record due to harsh climates there. So I don't think it's fair calling death valley the hottest place
Am I the only one curious why he isn't sweating? This year it reached 39 degrees in The Netherlands one day and I sweat by sitting still. And I'm not fat at all, skinny actually.
Hahah exactly my point also is the same (y)
maybe he went during winter, i just came back from their and the weathe was pretty nice
it'll be a very dry heat. your weather in Holland would have been more humid
it'll be a very dry heat. your weather in Holland would have been more humid
+Robin Soo Ha It's so hot and dry, his sweat is evaporating as fast as it comes out of his pores.
134 Fahrenheit is how much in Celsius ?
pulakification 56.667 (the 6 probably goes in forever). Used a converter
I tried to cook eggs on my car there
did it work?
Did it cook?
Sorry guys he passed away on this place while trying cook his egg because of dehydration, he was my best friend... rip my friend
There is a BBC guy who tried to do that with only mild success. Search for "BBC News Death Valley Hot enough to fry an egg"
Here in northern california it gets 111 F in summer time, and the car windows and asphault are definitly hot enough to cook an egg on
It's 27c in the UK today and we're frying. I can't imagine temperatures that are been spoke about in Death Valley, it must be like been in a oven
I know what you mean. My wife and I had our Keen shoes melt while on a hiking trip in Canyonlands, the rocks were so hot. The company replaced them, that was cool.
Brett Houston Tube do you drive a Subaru or a Volkswagen tdi?
canyonlands are relatively cold
People misunderstand that surface temperature is not the same as ambient (air) temperature. In fact, can be double. The ambient temperature may have been 134F, but the surface temperature was close to 289F (i.e. the camcorder was 143C = 289F). Chris Hadfield, x-commander of the International Space Station, stated that while working outside the space station the shaded part of his suit was -140C (-220F) but the sun lit part of his other shoulder was +150C (+302F). The space station would be about the same distance to the sun as the earth, so this would explain why direct sunlight is about the same, and can have devastating effects if you are not prepared on earth. Wearing a hat would help. And don't forget that ambient relative humidity is likely near "0%" in Death Valley. Wear a good space suit for the walk, so your body holds onto its own moisture as much as possible and you don't have to carry so much water to perform the hike: 32L (8.5 gallons = about 71 lbs).
Chuck norris goes to death valley to cool down
I did a 24 hour surviving day there.. I was toasted the next day.. the thermostats there say 134.00 but I've been there during the summer and I tell you what my thermostat said 152.00 yeah.. tecopa was the only town near there.. what a venture that was.
JD leon false
lmao
i prefer cold weather to hot weather
Marco Mark Productions Fuck that!
Oymyakon Russia
I prefer warm weather
Me too...like the cold better but would love to visit Death Valley
what was the hikers name?
archie977 Google is your friend
His name was Stupid Idiot
undertaker?
they just broke the record today 130 degrees F
Yep !
Who just saw this in 2020 🤦🏾♂️?
Did he die or the camera just melted cause in the video said he couldn't survive that much
Great place to get a tan!!
Are there mobile network signals?
I hate youtube . For 1 video there are 20 other than contradict it. I will go to the library to find out. The truth 👽
Kuwait today 54 Celsius on the shadow 72 on the sun
this is where the Undertaker is from.
Scott, first off the guy told you why. It's a combination of factors, low elevation, SURROUNDED BY MOUNTAINS, and low humidity= really hot temps. Warm air gets trapped in the area.
Lol remembered taking a trip in Death Valley and I was drinking coffee...
xGodspeedz 💀💀💀💀
Am i tripping that rock looks like face 1:27 at top right.
I dropped my mixtape there once and now look what happened
The temperature in Lybia in 1922 has been found to be false. They now believe it was about 7 degrees cooler than what was recorded. No readings close to that station match such high temps on that day. So they concluded that guy misread the temp. This was determined last year, and all official records have been changed. Now the record holder is death valley.
this place used to be a lake? _81meters below the sea level, maybe the deepest lake in the us
Crater Lake in Oregon is the deepest in the USA. Nearly 600 meters deep. But it is estimated that when there was water in Death Valley it reached an estimated maximum depth of 270m, still a really deep lake.
Many years ago it hited 93 degree Celsius
Undertaker: how much time can you stay in this hit place ?
Me : seriously ??? Not a second
Undertaker : I tried to live in here
Me : *kick in the face*
i regularly camp there, its amazing if you go in march or april, not to hot in the day but its pretty damn cold at night :) we're taking my son there for the first time this year
this isn't the hottest place on earth by a long shot ... some place had temperatures up to 159,8 degrees fahrenheit in Iran.
Except isn't that ground temperature not air temp? Either way death valley is insanely hot year round nonstop
That would be surface temperature, and it was recorded in the Lut desert.
Fake News ..lol
That’s ground temperature. Death Valley actually also holds the record for the highest natural surface temperature ever recorded at 201 °F (93.9 °C).
Brendon Halverson proof?
I've been here, and it was 127F. I had planned on going a small hike/walk, but after getting out of my car for a couple of minutes it was UNBEARABLE so cancelled that idea. No wind, but the outside just feel like you're in a fan oven. Luckily my rental car handled it great and aircon that lasted the whole time was a true gift
The Undertaker's original home. 👍👍 😈
can solar panels allowed in that place?
Looks like Saudi Arabia
Robert Rodriguez
confirmed
In texas we get 170 degrees in the winter
IzDaBait I agree!
i bet you do lol
I hate when an American uses the metric system, these mountains are 3200 meters high, really? Don't use meters
Lol
We probably just need to switch to the metric system tho tbh.
The US did back in the 70s I believe. It was a disaster.
you use the metric system don't you? why are you complaining bitch?
WHY?
where is this place located in United states ?
But Death Valley isn't the hottest place on earth. :/
Then what is?
The Hottest place on earth is the Lut Desert in Iran, measuring a temperature of 70.7 degrees Celcius (159.29 degrees fahrenheit).
Source: earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/HottestSpot/page2.php
It wasn't a reliable measurement.
The measurement was done by NASA. I would say it is quite reliable.
Death Valley does have the current hottest air temperature on Earth.
What would you find in the old salt lake if you dug deep?
I went to India and it was so hotter than this. 46C°
I checked it on weather death valley is under 40 C° and there is a chance that it reaches above 40 C°
well since death valley has the hottest recorded tempature ever I would say you are lying
Landon Massey wrong! look it up,death valley has the highest recorded tempature ever after that place in Libya was deemed inaccurate
And now in india it's 50°+
Robloxspeed haxor And alittle over a week ago death valley was 125 degrees(51.7 Celsius).
Must have been to texas in the middle of July or beginning of Texas it's may not be that hot but with humidity it sucks..
I feel like DV isn’t as consistently hot as the southeastern US, especially when you factor in the humidity. Omg the humidity is the worst thing.
The hiker was nicknamed "Jerkyman" by the search and rescue teams that found him. (You know why, right?) He had walked all the way across the bottom of the valley and had made it back to within sight of his car on the Badwater road before he collapsed. The search parties had a hard time finding him because he was down between the salt spires.
Hi Charlie!
Is the mummified hiker displayed in a museum somewhere?
2:19 You're trying to tell me this guys camera reached close to 300 degrees fahrenheit? I'm gonna go ahead and say no.
please come to visit us in Northern state, Dongola. we recorded 74°C
Lion of Islam Africa Arabs. 4Life it's very rare. called a heat burst. I call it a heat storm. therefore, the measurement is false.
Anyone else here for the new heat record for Death Valley?
Wow, i'm interested to know how that place got so hot, I mean if a big lake used to be there then in cant have been that hot ages ago. Also imagine mining gold at 130 degrees F!
Drinking a nice cold drink while listening to the story of the man that died hiking across that heat and he was all dried up when they found him.
What caused this cold snap?!?
I was at the Badwater Basin in April 2018 standing on the salt flats and no joke a hat like an explorer's hat went blowing by in the thirty mile an hour constant winds... never saw who owned it.