![GNS Science](/img/default-banner.jpg)
- 309
- 7 735 795
GNS Science
New Zealand
Приєднався 26 лис 2008
GNS Science is New Zealand's geoscience research CRI, exploring and monitoring our resources, geological hazards and environment. We do intrepid science in the land and ocean crust of New Zealand!
Whakaari / White Island gas flight
Footage taken of Whakaari Island caldera lake on 27 May 2024. Read more on the May eruptions here www.geonet.org.nz/news/29lN5GlBlqG5jYEvAH2vwY
Переглядів: 3 209
Відео
Minor eruption at Whakaari/White island on 24 May 2024
Переглядів 6 тис.Місяць тому
Timelapse (at 16xspeed) from our Whakatane camera showing the minor eruption at Whakaari/White island on 24 May 2024.
GNS lead international voyage to study cause of Hunga volcano 2022 eruption
Переглядів 467Місяць тому
The GNS-led voyage to the Hunga volcano has launched onboard the R/V Tangaroa. A crew of international scientists will undertake the most comprehensive post-2022 eruption surveys of the submarine volcano to date to better understand what caused the powerful eruption and what this can tell us about Aotearoa New Zealand's own submarine volcanoes. Research Geologist and voyage leader Cornel de Ron...
Subduction in New Zealand
Переглядів 2,4 тис.2 місяці тому
New Zealand is at the boundary between two tectonic plates, the Australian Plate, and the Pacific Plate. In the North Island, the Pacific Plate is being pushed under the Australian Plate in a process called subduction.
Natural Hazards and Risks in Aotearoa New Zealand
Переглядів 7272 місяці тому
GNS Science is busy monitoring and researching the causes, risks and consequences of Aotearoa New Zealand’s geological hazards. The important scientific knowledge and tools GNS Science builds are used to keep people safe and help communities and economies thrive on our changing planet. Find out more: www.gns.cri.nz/our-science/natural-hazards-and-risks/
How do faults cause earthquakes?
Переглядів 9193 місяці тому
Here in Aotearoa New Zealand, we have faults everywhere, but what exactly are they? And why do they mean we have earthquakes? Read our full story Shaking ground, exploring earthquake faults: www.geonet.org.nz/news/wQZtPXAhKfRwNbtmL5jly
An introduction to the GNS Landslides Planning Guidance
Переглядів 3773 місяці тому
Watch a short introduction on the GNS Landslides Planning Guidance - why it is needed, how it was developed and how it helps planners to consider the risks of landslides early in the planning process.
Landslide Planning Guidance webinar
Переглядів 4283 місяці тому
The new Landslide Planning Guidance released by GNS Science in January updates previous guidance published more than 15 years ago and emphasises the need to consider climate-change scenarios that are likely to exacerbate landslide hazards due to changing weather patterns. GNS co-authors Saskia de Vilder (Engineering Geologist) and Scott Kelly (Senior Natural Hazards Planner) walk through the gu...
Earthquakes in Aotearoa New Zealand
Переглядів 42 тис.4 місяці тому
On average, we locate over 20,000 earthquakes a year in and around Aotearoa New Zealand. So why do we get so many earthquakes? Discover the cause, and what is happening beneath our feet.
Return of the 3rd Beneath the Waves voyage to Tūhua/Mayor & Whakaari/White island volcanoes
Переглядів 1656 місяців тому
🚢 The RV Tangaroa has returned from a successful voyage to learn more about the Tūhua/Mayor and Whakaari/White island volcanoes. A team of scientists from GNS Science, Victoria University of Wellington and Scripps Institute of Oceanography (USA) deployed electromagnetic receivers on the sea floor to locate magma and took seabed sediment samples to learn about the volcanoes’ eruption histories. ...
Strong winds causing dust storms in front of Mt Ruapehu
Переглядів 5169 місяців тому
Strong winds causing dust storms in front of Mt Ruapehu
Introducing Shaking Layers on GeoNet
Переглядів 3,3 тис.9 місяців тому
Introducing Shaking Layers on GeoNet
Volcano Monitoring in Aotearoa New Zealand
Переглядів 2,7 тис.Рік тому
Volcano Monitoring in Aotearoa New Zealand
Moutohorā (Whale Island) - a protected geothermal sanctuary
Переглядів 1,3 тис.Рік тому
Moutohorā (Whale Island) - a protected geothermal sanctuary
Lowering the Volcanic Alert Level at Taupō Volcano - May 2023
Переглядів 2 тис.Рік тому
Lowering the Volcanic Alert Level at Taupō Volcano - May 2023
Animation of the 19 May 2023 Loyalty Islands Tsunami
Переглядів 1,6 тис.Рік тому
Animation of the 19 May 2023 Loyalty Islands Tsunami
Tūhura Papatūānuku Geo Noho - supporting the next generation of scientists
Переглядів 278Рік тому
Tūhura Papatūānuku Geo Noho - supporting the next generation of scientists
Taupō M5.7 Earthquake and Aftershocks Animation 13 Dec 2022
Переглядів 3,4 тис.Рік тому
Taupō M5.7 Earthquake and Aftershocks Animation 13 Dec 2022
Kids Ask An Expert - How many earthquakes do we get in New Zealand?
Переглядів 1,3 тис.Рік тому
Kids Ask An Expert - How many earthquakes do we get in New Zealand?
Kids Ask An Expert - Why do we have earthquakes?
Переглядів 828Рік тому
Kids Ask An Expert - Why do we have earthquakes?
Kids Ask An Expert - What causes the Alpine fault to rupture every 300 years?
Переглядів 1,1 тис.Рік тому
Kids Ask An Expert - What causes the Alpine fault to rupture every 300 years?
Explaining the National Seismic Hazard Model 2022
Переглядів 2,9 тис.Рік тому
Explaining the National Seismic Hazard Model 2022
Alert level raised at Taupō Volcano 20 September 2022
Переглядів 56 тис.Рік тому
Alert level raised at Taupō Volcano 20 September 2022
Animation of the 5 March 2021 tsunami triplet
Переглядів 1 тис.Рік тому
Animation of the 5 March 2021 tsunami triplet
Ruapehu Volcanic Unrest Update #4 - 06 July 2022
Переглядів 5 тис.Рік тому
Ruapehu Volcanic Unrest Update #4 - 06 July 2022
Ruapehu Volcanic Unrest Update #3 - 10 June 2022
Переглядів 10 тис.2 роки тому
Ruapehu Volcanic Unrest Update #3 - 10 June 2022
Very very good. Thank you.
The council? The council is worse than useless. In Japan the Tsunami climbed 122 feet in one area. 37 Meters vertical.
Wonderful video. I had never heard of the slap down effect.
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
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
New zealand bear rocks amazing!❤
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
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 UA-cam 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.
COOLEST THING ON YOU TUBE . HOMETOWN STUFF NEW ZEALAND STYLES .
Esse vulcão tem características muito semelhantes as do taal e do hunga-tonga.
Hmm, i wonder if the water is intruding into the ground deeply and being heated then shot upwards. Kinda like what happened at Hungatunga
Has that crater got bigger due to the 2019 eruption? looks bigger..
Jesus is king
Avocados are so expensive in New Zealand.
@@user-oh4yd5uh4e that's Jesus's fault.
@@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.
Thank you.
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.
The greater shame was allowing the island to remain in private-hands when it wasn't the original vendors' property to sell!
I agree with both of you, wholeheartedly.
I wonder if anyone has ever caught this type of movement on camera
Where was the sound or voice over explaining how bad the situation is
Doubling the speed in settings, making it 32x, results in a more dramatic video!
Thankfully, no tourists this time!
Thank you.
20 metre runup is nothing short of a biblical apocalypse. and wave dynamics will probably manage to produce 25m-30m outliers. sweet baby jesus
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
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....
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 😮
Posted in 2010, so I am guessing the 8.1between Samoa & American Samoa in 2009.
Where was this? Samoa, Tonga, Fiji?
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.
w
Have a good / useful trip people.... Looking forward to the videos starting a month or two after you get back.
It sounds like you have a lot to accomplish. Good luck!
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!
One model is not good enough!! Need to have multiple scenario's to better evaluate the worst effects
Thank you.
nice Maori pronounciation
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.😢
Thank you. that was cool.
Heading. Speak English. Then maybe we will be interested.
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 😅
9yrs counting
Now i'll lie awake at night wondering if that wall is all that's holding back the 'big one'
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.
You have no idea what you are talking about. Everything from Moeraki Boulders, to the Koutu boulders are more than just rocks and ridgelines as you call the. They are sedimentary lines or interstitium. The Moeraki Boulders are not what you think. and for that matter the entire geology of new zealands origins are completely wrong. New Zealand both North and South Island are what is left of one of the largest most well know creatures in ancient history. The Moeraki Boulders and Koutu Boulders are misidentified remnants of something biological. Why do I mention this? because you have no idea that new zealand is the remains of one of the largest cephalopods known by cultures all over the world. Most famously is of course the Kraken. The Boulders on the South Island are not spherical concretions formed around a nucleus blah blah blah millions of years. The correct identification of the boulders are the acetabulum. Musculature found in the tentacle of a cephalopod. Which we live on. The koutu boulders show evidence of both the Infundibulum and acetabulum again evidence of cephalopod. The oldest one in the world. The sedimentary layers you see around the central parts of the country are run off from said organism and due to the animals size and lack of bones is why new zealand is not the place to be mining. And where you are, those lines are the layers of skin worn down by coastal erosion. The tentacle of this fossilised cephalopod is a stunning length of 14,000 kilometers each. All anatomically correct the closer you look right down tot he tips of the tentacle, which belong the the Giant Pacific octopus. I know its crazy but it is only one of the worlds most recognised creatures most unknown evidence. see for yourself, the moeraki boulders are located in the tentacle of the cephalopod and the anatomical identification is undeniable. The crazy part is by comparison to the Krakens size with a head over 6000 kilometers across in its fossilised state alone, is that a human can stand on or beside a piece of undiscovered history in the form of anatomy you could only otherwise see through a microscope. And this whole time the explanation of how these things formed does not stack up. what wwas given as an explanation was what oone would answer if asked " what is a fossil?" Mudstone sandstone, but no one explains how concentrations of calcite and quarts fit into the geology so they call it an anomaly. Im not pullling your chain. Im onto something with this.
Don't forget to mention Wilard Libby's credit.
Wellington real estate doesn't look like a great long term investment!
Really the most excellent video showing the real lab equipment too. In text books and almost every tutorial (text or video), you are told that carbon 12 to 14 ratio is calculated, but not told how. The whole process is theoretically very simple indeed, but it's so subtle and precise in real design. Thank you.
Papatoetoe is the nicest suburb
May be there are some submarines/earoplanes throwing explosives or sandbags to seabed. that makes vibration and seismographs record it and we think it is an earthquake in the sea. but indeed submarine warfare. would it be possible?
🫘🛠🗝🎮
such a beautiful video. Does llyod still capture such beauty? I am writing an assignment on him
Hi Jeff, Lloyd Homer is retired and no longer takes photographs. If you'd like to know more about his journey taking photographs, read 'Flying High: The Photography of Lloyd Homer'. Hope that helps :)
Why can I not subscribe to your channel? Clicking subscribe defaults to 'none'. I'd like to be subscribed!