Etna volcano, summit activity from new Voragine cinder cone and intra-crater lavaflow observed between7.-9.Feb. 2020. Filmed in real time from S rim of Bocca Nuova, detail shots from direct W side of cone.
The melting point of granite, an intrusive igneous rock, is 1215-1260 °C. That is easily obtained in regions of the mantle. People shouldn't talk about things they know nothing about. It just makes them look ignorant. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-97jMsqJADpc.html
@@stevenvarner2495 Nobody went lower than 12 km. The outer layer of the mantle starts at 40 km. Granite can't be obtained there. I'm cooking at gas at home. I can't hold my hands so near the flame without an oven mitt. He does it with bare hands. Comments on that movie have been turned off, so that's science that can't be questioned???
The awesome, humbling spectacle of Mother Nature's raw power. I'm going to Sicily in September and planned to pay a visit to mount Etna. It looks I'm missing all the fun.
@@kennethperry5500 And who created Nature, and everything that's in it including us? Yes, right: it's the Amighty. He even gave us poor men enough intelligence to recognize an allegory when we see it. Obviously, it's not your case. "Mother Nature" is an allegory used since centuries to describe creation and its wonders. Read a book. Educate yourself.
One year later... today mamma Etna is VERY mad! It's been erupting for a few weeks now, but today it decided to take it to another level... lava fountains, very loud explosions, lava river, and little lava stones raining from the sky. Scary but beautiful! 🌋
Sono calabrese e anche se il vulcano dista da me kilometri di distanza, incute un certo terrore e fascino allo stesso tempo, ETNA LA FORZA DELLA NATURA!
Was at this volcano in 1985 & it was not active. Has been numerous times before and since. Pray all residents in surrounding areas will be safe . Beautiful countryside when it behaves ! This footage is magnificent ! Courageous camera work .
The filming and acoustic and cinematography are all the best of the best. My hearty congratulations to the person(s) responsible. You deserve an award too.
I know volcanoes are sometimes extremely dangerous but they are fantastic. This footage is phenomenal. Thank you so much for posting. Mount Etna is on my bucket list of to do’s. Greetings from Cumbria in the U.K. I have just subscribed.
It's like you hear the earth's breathing ........ thank you for posting this impressive footage of our beautiful and dangerous nature.! exceptional Audio and picture quality....really !
Cuando veo imágenes como estas siempre pienso lo importantes que nos creemos como especie, y lo insignificantes que somos para la Tierra en el fondo. Y nos estamos cargando este maravilloso planeta.....que pena.
Once me and my boyfriend went to Rifugio Sapienza, and from there we saw te eruption, God the sound was so strong, we were so scared but amazed at the same time 😍😍 our queen etna ❤
@@jpsholland That was not Puʻu ʻŌʻō erupting that you watched. That was fissures of the Lower East Rift Zone of Kilauea. These were what stopped Puʻu ʻŌʻō from erupting. On April 30, 2018, the crater floor of the cone of Puʻu ʻŌʻō collapsed. You also weren't watching fissure 8 on the first and bets of the live stream because it wasn't visible from the live camera's location. If I remember correctly, we could see fissures17 and 21, from John and David's house, where Honolulu Civil Beat and CNN's cameras were. After power went out and everyone had to evacuate from John's house they moved the live stream way away, at a guys hose on the ocean. It was many miles from fissure 8 and any of the lava flows. From that location you could only see the smoke from fissure 8 during the day, and a glow from 8 at night. During the day, when they zoomed the camera out you could see the smoke plume from the fissure and the steam from the ocean entry of the lava.
@Cat Jefferson wait, CNN actually showed up?!?!? Was it just for a documentary theyre making next year? They sure as hell didnt report on Kilauea with any significant effort. Enjoyed watching the Civil Beat stream tho. This really reminds me of it and i kind of miss the feed now.
@@gateauxq4604 CNN also had a live stream camera set up at John and David's house. It sat right next to HCB's camera. Someone took a photo of the two cameras. I can't remember if it was Anthony, Joseph or John who did. I may still have a copy of it somewhere. I was one of the many moderators on HCB's RU-vid stream. For almost 3 months I barely slept, and only was off the air when I was working or sleeping. CNN did not have mods on their stream, and it was full of filthy language and trolls all the time.
@Cat Jefferson ah that might explain it. I didnt find it when i was doing my near-daily searches for Kilauea but sounds like i didnt miss anything. HCB’s was pretty chill so i wont complain. Still doesnt explain their poor and condescending coverage tho.
Lived in Sicily and Mt. Etna view was outside my bedroom window from 1966-1968...just look at her now. Never will I forget white lava, pumice rock, floating in the Med where we swam....
Not sure which I LOVE more, the natural sound that you capture or the incredible visuals! I can't choose, keep doing what you do until I pick one.....Fantastic stuff!
Wild & beautiful just as a volcano should be. Thankfully I was able to see your video of it. Mt Etna, a spectacular eruption. Keep filming & sharing! Moon power meets earth power! ✨💪💗👍
She is hissing and puffing like a steam loc, she is absolutely stunning but very dangerous when she is mad. Really beautiful camerawork. Are you an observer or just someone who's filming them? :-)
@@stevenvarner2495 Not with the video links you gave in a different comment section. You recommended a video about melting granite. A science video where no comments are allowed. You wrote granite is obtained in the mantle. The mantle supposedly is starting at 40 km, but nobody went deeper than 12 km. The guy was melting granite with gas at 1500 °C with a bare hand. Wow would be great to cook at my gas stove at home like that.
@@stevenvarner2495 Your second link showed a video about someone supposedly melting lava. Where did it came from, was it tested and is lava really rock? I never saw a mountain catch fire, burn or melt.
@@tamarahagenbeek madame i gotta tell you. Go to Iceland or to another vulcanic area and you will see as much lava as you want. It's easy and undeniable. That said I just hope you're another troll (even if I don't get at all being one)
Fantastic! Powerful! Has anyone else noticed the amount of volcanic activity around the world the past 2-3 months? Makes you wonder what is happening below.
People even give a tumbs down to a little girl doing a gymnastic act and got first. Maybe they can't appreciate the CGI in this video, because rocks can't melt?
We need to learn more about this BECAUSE - our tectonic plates threaten to shift and cause both eruptions and breakdowns of our coastlines and the followup tsunamis. I was told on both coasts of America, under the right conditions we'd lose eight miles inland. This molten rock may hold the answer to the problem of how to fix faults and make our land more secure. Builders of large projects know that one can simply drill down to bedrock and stabilize the crust, BUT SO FAR NO ONE IS DOING ANYTHING OF THE SORT, so we'll probably just dumb out and lose millions of lives and THEN fix the issue, like closing the barn door AFTER the horses get out. Nevermind....this is still a SPECTACULAR VIDEO!
Super moons in March April & may this year. Please shoot more Stunning Images! Those were like the Iceland(?) eruption & Aurora shots. Great Stuff!! Keep Safe too
The island of Sicily is getting bigger... I wonder if after a while it will join the tip of the boot of Italy as it expands (???) Beautiful scenery to watch ...especially with the moon nearby. . . Gives an 'eery' feeling ...like 'cold' meeting 'hot'. . .
Right on the full moon's perigee also. I said there would be some volcanic eruptions perhaps on one of the perigee's this year but I wasn't quite thinking of Etna :D Fabulous video. If only I was there to bare witness to it live. :)
This is just absolutely the best. You can hear the bubbling and the crackling of the rocks with the lava. The lava is like an underground ocean of huge waves once it hits the small opening it shoots out. But I do have a question. What makes Mt. Etna not spew out so much gas or toxic sulfur and plums of ash I've noticed this with a lot of more fluid hot lava flows and all.
For example Mount St Helen and Krakatoa push out tons of ash and all While Mount Etna and kilawaya have shooting lava and lava flows with very little of the other out and around the cinder cones.
It's the gravitational pull of the moon which pulls out the lava ... Same fundamental of high tides in sea shore applies.. it's not blasted yet ... Still active as I can guess