@@trespire simple life is still life and the ocean is not our dumpster ... we just throw trash wherever we want and say "well it's okay to leave our trash here because as far as we can tell with current technology it can't hurt us soon enough that I'll still be around" ... when will we ever learn
Ok so this is fucking stupid I'll explain ,Kinda hard to take a bunch of tourist to the bottom of the ocean in the literal most remote place on the planet lul Plus there's probably not much left of what ever crashed , its not like there's just a bunch of perfectly preserved space craft down there , they burned up and then smashed into the ocean so if you actually stop to think about it you'd realize there's probably nothing even down there but a couple of titanium screws buried by sand And even if there is big chunks that survived the fall in 100 years they will be rusted rotted or covered up
I don’t think so in 100 years we will most likely be using reusable space ships and I doubt there’s going to be much down there after 100 years in salt water
It’s not actually polluting the ocean by the times it’s burnt through the atmosphere any bad chemicals or material have been destroyed, so when it’s in the ocean it’s actually very beneficial to the wildlife, point nemo has very little life but these structures are changing that
Finding Nemo was actually a story about a group of wreckage divers looking for the millions of dollars worth of gold and silver wire used In satellites. Like literally launching a jewelry store into the atmosphere…
Well the average depth around Point nemo is close to 2.5 miles so No divers are going there and the cost to find and bring items back up for salvage would be more then what ever they were to bring back up.
Think you meant 17,500 MILES per hour, not KILOMETERS per hour. At 17,500kph an object won't stay in orbit much past 1 revolution of the earth. At 17,500mph it will stay up more a long time, depending on altitude and other factors.
This channel and its sister channels frequently get small but important details like this wrong. The focus ssems to be pretty high level for an audience that doesn't have much understanding of aviation or aerospace technologies and science. 🤷🏼♂️
yeah, 17000 kilomiters per hour is only, like, 200 mph right? .... I can never get the conversion right unless I look at the speedometer on my motorcycle....
@@lukewarmwater6412 Wrong! 17,000 Kilometres per hour is 10,625 mph. It's easy - divide by 8 and multiply by 5 (kph to mph) or divide by 5 and multiply by 8 (mph to kph).
So they can get the shuttle to push a satellite just enough at just the right time that when its orbit decays it hits point nemo exactly? That's pretty amazing! Those spaces lads and lasses know their sums alright!
That's 20,000 objects _big enough to be picked up by radar._ There's probably hundreds of thousands of small objects that are only a few millimeters in size (paint flecks, washers, etc).
@@i-_-am-_-g1467 Do a search and find out how much info supposedly travels through "satellites", as opposed to underwater cables and towers. 99% utilizes other methods.
5:42 My family was living in British Columbia when MIR fell. The news said it would come in from over the mountains and go out to sea. The old man was out for a walk that night. He said it came in from the ocean and went out into the mountains... He also mentioned it was wider than if you stretched both arms - it filled the entire sky... And that it looked like the surface of the death star. YES, this sounds like a 30 year old Ruski space-station deorbiting....
@@trespire I was a journalist for The Province when Mir fell. The media did not get it wrong, for it never once reported that it would fall anywhere near BC. But idiots posing as legitimate media on Facebook did.
Thank You for another fantastic video! I'm pleasantly surprised to discover this place actually has a name. I'm slightly disappointed by the fact although MIR's re-entry was covered, nothing was mentioned about Taco Bell's Publicity Stunt of creating a gigantic target for the remains of MIR to hit, only to deploy said target in the wrong ocean, thousands of kilometres away. It's nice to see the scientific community sticking to the Bloop's explanation being decaying icebergs to this day. But mythological or not, if something is there, or one of the future spacecraft brings something back that's capable of surviving re-entry and subsequent immersion into the depths, which also happens to thrive on whatever toxic substances remain within the wreckage... Is there some sort of protocol in place if that does happen? It may be the furthest place in any direction of mankind, but the planet is still a finite place in terms of area. Thousands of kilometres away and thousands of metres down could only mean more time to reach civilization eventually.
Got a video idea for a video, its known by many names but in 1952 Washington DC was visited by UFOs on 2 separate occasions a week apart with aircraft scrambled to intercept them. I forgot what its called now but older people call it the Washington DC Merry-go-round.
H.P. Lovecraft came up with his coordinates for R'yleh more than 60 years before the location of Point Nemo was scientifically verified. So,...where did Lovecraft get his coordinates from?
@@Idahoguy10157In 1528, the Ottoman cartographer Piri Ries had a map that accurately depicted the coastline of Antarctica that is currently under 2 kilometres of permafrost and ice. The last time it wasn't under 2km of ice was circa 12,500 years ago. Modern civilisation didn't officially even 'discover' Antarctica's existence at all until 1820, and was eventually able to accurately map it under the ice in 1967, with the invention of Radar technology. The US Navy Topological Survey Team were consulted, and concluded that Ries's map was indeed a remarkable and inexplicably accurate representation of the subglacial topography of the Antarctic coastline. Is that a coincidence? Or did these people have access to esoteric information from a long forgotten episode in the human history of this planet?
Really enjoy all the channels. Your narration is excellent and it’s keeps a steady pace. Can you do a video on all the countries that also have space programs we don’t usually hear about. Thanks. Keep up the good work.
I'm not sure there exists much 'space junk' that is without inherent pollutant potential, even if, say...deep in the ocean. These things are cumulative and therefore add up over time...whether on earth, or beyond. We, as 'they say', are own own worst enemies.
I love this channel, that said, "4000 meters below the sea" would be 4000 meters below the sea bed. Surely it would we something like "4000 meters below the surface of the ocean."
@@geobloxmodels1186 I will agree there are a lot of "lay" words used on this channel and even some that have a different meanings like in your example above.
👍 enjoyed this with the weaponization of space & I know some countries r experimenting is it possible to clear some of the debris in orbit to clean up & make it safe !!
An intact hydrazine tank was found in the empty quarter with hydrazine still in it. No word on whose tank it was. Point being though, unless the fuel tanks themselves survive reentry, the fuels will not.
They just bumped the decomissioning of the International Space Station to some time in 2031. So it's not going to Point Nemo any time soon. And it's not the first time the decomissioning of it has been bumped back. Probably won't be the last time, either. I forget what the original date was, but I believe it's already passed. So if they had gone with the original plan, the ISS would already be 4km under water.
Think the footage is stupid. Says area is devoid of life and shows a scene with several sea birds flying. Then about how deep it is an picture of a old diver walking on the bottom.
I can't wait to see all the footage of the ISS entering the atmosphere at 17500mph and crashing into the ocean😭😭😭. We failed to film the assembly but this is a perfect opportunity to film the disassembly!!! Lets gooooo!!!
The moment at 3:12 is the worst because you were speaking some weird words i had to replay 3 times to understand it's some foreign name. It would be better to show a picture of this person and his name in print instead of an unrelated animation. btw many of the shots used are unrelated e.g. a diver walking on the bottom of the sea... 4km below surface.
In reality, the Space station is only about 230 miles above the earth. Overall, that's not really high up, considering. Think about a town that's 230 miles away from where you live, roughly about a 4 hour drive.
Great video thats left me with some questions. Like how deep is that area in the pacific? Would USA submarines or shipwreck crews be able to go there and verify/find its location, and then possibly visit it? And that time frame is familiar to spacex's starship going online and possibly being able to be replaced. Also makes me think the first pioneer astronauts will be garbage men/women to clear debri from orbit. Exciting times.
@@CH-pv2rz omg you owned me, professional insulter here! Look out everybody, the man's words are weapons. Maybe your creativity and word smithing for above primary grade insults are there as well, who knows