Views : 7,579,277
Genre: Entertainment
Date of upload: Mar 31, 2021 ^^
Rating : 4.938 (2,491/158,360 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-09T21:48:08.698807Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
If I was a kid watching this dude explaining this stuff I might have been inspired to find out become a meteorologist. He's well spoken, explains things well and makes weather sound more interesting to me than it ever has been. Wish most educators were this knowledgeable and adept at teaching their subjects.
1.9K |
My family survived the 2017 Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico, and they witnessed the eye of the hurricane and everything you described was how they experienced it. In fact it was so calm they thought the storm was over and then they could hear the wind rushing like a train and people scrambled back inside after they tried to investigate the damage.
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I need to add that Jake Gyllenhaal was playing Scott Fisher in the Everest movie and it is actually correct that his face wasn't covered, even though that was not something you would normally do. Fisher knew he was dying and took his oxygen mask off and sat down on the side of the mountain. His body remained there for a few years, but his face was completely blasted away by the ice and wind.
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For anyone who wants to see two tornados simultaneously just look up the Pilger Twins. That's a well documented double EF4 event where a single supercell developed into 2 mesocyclones which dropped two tornadoes at the same time that leveled Pilger. Also another way to see two tornadoes at the same time would be a rare event called an Anti Cyclonic tornado which would mirror the main cyclonic tornado, but spins in the opposite direction. The reason tornados are called cyclones are because they spin in the same motion as the earth spins. So anti cyclonic tornado spins opposite the direction the earth spins. A large tornado, if you want to see just how big one can get. Look up the El Reno tornado. It wasn't the most powerful, but it was absolutely massive in size. The largest and one of the fastest moving tornadoes in history.
192 |
@FerventLotus
3 years ago
"Tornadoes are very sensitive to their environment." Never thought I'd have so much in common with a tornado.
14K |