GNS - always cool. Low tide today and i'll be down there for the first time. Wish i'd thought to get a jam roll sponge to celebrate!
@paton573 күн бұрын
I was 8yrs old and lived in Ahaura and will never ever forget that morning, I thought the roar before the shaking started was the train going over the Ahaura rail bridge
@fbiagentmiyakohoshino82235 күн бұрын
magnitude 8 earthquakes are *not* megathrust earthquakes. this only applies to magnitude 9 and higher
@nillehessy10 күн бұрын
- seismic waves - going 2300 meters per second through hard dens stone so hey nou from a lets say 1000 kg big bag of sand idk sound ridiculously fast sounds too fast
@jand408015 күн бұрын
What part of Taihape? If you can name streets as we have a few streets on hillsides. Hope to hear from you ASAP! Thanks
@GNSscience13 күн бұрын
Thank you for your question. You may like to look at our landslide database at data.gns.cri.nz/landslides/wms.html If you zoom in on Taihape, you can see the streets that are in the affected area.
@Seawithinyou15 күн бұрын
Good to take note especially being aware now As there’s been quite a regular increase of earth tremors of 3+mag along this coastline
@scottnineteen17 күн бұрын
Is the shuffled look of the inclined sedimentary slabs ....like what's the overall ...an/the accretionary wedge did it?
@minecraft.pack_png19 күн бұрын
Free
@RickB50SS21 күн бұрын
We are but visitors passing thru.
@barneymaurirere959223 күн бұрын
Very very good. Thank you.
@SopwithTheCamel29 күн бұрын
The council? The council is worse than useless. In Japan the Tsunami climbed 122 feet in one area. 37 Meters vertical.
@maurasmith-mitsky762Ай бұрын
Wonderful video. I had never heard of the slap down effect.
@Kiwigeo833924 күн бұрын
In this article there's a photo that was taken of the CBD during the quake which shows rising dust plumes due to the "slapdown effect"...also called a "trampoline effect". nzhistory.govt.nz/culture/february-2011-christchurch-earthquake
@lizhilliar5479Ай бұрын
Any update videos on the science of the potential quake? Will look on the GNS CHANNEL Great job on explaining the complex science 1:32
@LayaTetaiАй бұрын
New zealand bear rocks amazing!❤
@rawiri9802Ай бұрын
Looks like walking tracks to me , and the shells tell me the cuzzies had a feed man . The scientists need to speak to the bro's instead of telling there bullshit aye
@cherylm2C6671Ай бұрын
You could make a kind of quake table for the hillside. Using the imagery you have taken, a 3d print using relatively small particles of either ceramic mud or 'spice-mix' greensand could be made to demonstrate where failures were likely to happen. May I direct your attention to The GeoModels KZfaq channel? The Appalachians aren't moving quite as fast, but the New Madrid will burp sooner or later. Timely information can lend a lot of leverage.
@barneymaurirere9592Ай бұрын
COOLEST THING ON YOU TUBE . HOMETOWN STUFF NEW ZEALAND STYLES .
@osmariobrito7776Ай бұрын
Esse vulcão tem características muito semelhantes as do taal e do hunga-tonga.
@AussieDepressoАй бұрын
Hmm, i wonder if the water is intruding into the ground deeply and being heated then shot upwards. Kinda like what happened at Hungatunga
@williammonaghan3724Ай бұрын
Has that crater got bigger due to the 2019 eruption? looks bigger..
@HUMBLE-EYESАй бұрын
Jesus is king
@user-oh4yd5uh4eАй бұрын
Avocados are so expensive in New Zealand.
@Kiwigeo833924 күн бұрын
@@user-oh4yd5uh4e that's Jesus's fault.
@user-oh4yd5uh4e24 күн бұрын
@@Kiwigeo8339 Don´t forget Jesus could not only walk on water but one time he managed to walk over a whole lot of avocados without squashing a single one of them.
@patrick247twoАй бұрын
Thank you.
@CJFerg81Ай бұрын
It's a real shame that the team can't reinstate the seismic monitors and cameras on the island. After everything that's happened I consider myself really lucky to have been there twice during my time with GNS.
@stevie-ray2020Ай бұрын
The greater shame was allowing the island to remain in private-hands when it wasn't the original vendors' property to sell!
@THEchiQАй бұрын
I agree with both of you, wholeheartedly.
@JackieBrightАй бұрын
I wonder if anyone has ever caught this type of movement on camera
@melissafortuin9500Ай бұрын
Where was the sound or voice over explaining how bad the situation is
@stevie-ray2020Ай бұрын
Doubling the speed in settings, making it 32x, results in a more dramatic video!
@stevie-ray2020Ай бұрын
Thankfully, no tourists this time!
@patrick247twoАй бұрын
Thank you.
@robinbinder8658Ай бұрын
20 metre runup is nothing short of a biblical apocalypse. and wave dynamics will probably manage to produce 25m-30m outliers. sweet baby jesus
@robinbinder8658Ай бұрын
8.9 mag. this figure scares the hiiby jeebies outa me and i live on the other side of earth. 25% in 50 years is just fucking insane at this point just abbandon the island
@ronjeremy6128Ай бұрын
Thanks, but we've all seen how science models work with covid. Absolute rubbish designed to instill fear. Unfortunately scientists are nothing more than lobbyists and tend to manipulate the facts to suit the narrative of the people with the cheque books. Shills. So sad....
@Oamaru175924 күн бұрын
Tell that to all the millions of people all around the world who have lost people to earthquakes and tsunamis. Ignorant comments like this say more about the person who wrote them than anything else 😮
@user-lm1re1sw2eАй бұрын
Posted in 2010, so I am guessing the 8.1between Samoa & American Samoa in 2009.
@user-lm1re1sw2eАй бұрын
Where was this? Samoa, Tonga, Fiji?
@brianwilson4592Ай бұрын
It’s hard to imagine how Auckland would be affected much as the Tsunami would have to wrap right around the Coromandel peninsula and head back in the direction it came from.
@ashutoshkumar-is7dj2 ай бұрын
w
@neilmarshall50872 ай бұрын
Have a good / useful trip people.... Looking forward to the videos starting a month or two after you get back.
@JohnnyAngel82 ай бұрын
It sounds like you have a lot to accomplish. Good luck!
@marklong9302 ай бұрын
Looking forward to some detailed follow up videos from this expedition! I have a feeling there will be some pretty fascinating discoveries. Nice work GNS!
@DW_Kiwi2 ай бұрын
One model is not good enough!! Need to have multiple scenario's to better evaluate the worst effects
@patrick247two2 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@stuarth432 ай бұрын
nice Maori pronounciation
@sarajaidritzema92852 ай бұрын
I'm glad the Government is putting money into Earthquakes past and what can happen today, because we just need to look at Bali and Japan and what happened to those Countries.😢
@harryskelsey91782 ай бұрын
Thank you. that was cool.
@DW_Kiwi2 ай бұрын
Heading. Speak English. Then maybe we will be interested.
@Linnochi2 ай бұрын
Wow!!! Just looking at the machine needed for this process makes my head hurt with the intelligence behind the engineering of it. Chemistry I don't even try to understand anymore 😅
@julesc2962 ай бұрын
9yrs counting
@rossr1002 ай бұрын
Now i'll lie awake at night wondering if that wall is all that's holding back the 'big one'
@carlplymsole39582 ай бұрын
I walk on Te Waipounamu .. its the "science" ika Te Māui - erupted up from the ocean and looks like a stingray 🤷🏼♂️ obviously the first names given we know of ... The name you use depends on the whakapapa you draw from .. like myself and many on this whenua the name can be multiple.