The Noise of Thaw
"Noise of Thaw" project is a new way of monitoring the changes occurring in Greenland due to climate change. Researchers from GEUS deploy sensors to capture vibrations and temperatures inside rocks, to predict the stability of the landscapes. With Michele Citero and Daniel Binder Field recordings: Michele Citero and Daniel Binder Greenland footage: Anguteq Larsen Seismic amplification: Stefan Mertl Production Underground Channel

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Eclogites at Cignana - a walk into a subducted ocean

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Loch Monar - the Highland fold factory

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I Tested Quicksand Myths...The Truth Is Worse Than You Think!

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Why Scientists Are Terrified About What They're Finding Beneath Antarctica

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Trashing continental drift. 1: Mobilists vs fixists

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I taught an octopus piano (It took 6 months)

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I Hiked World's Scariest Trail

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Why German Aces Escorted a British Spitfire Home

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Electricity Does Not "Split" H₂O. And That's VERY Useful.

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Firing the Lorentz Plasma Cannon

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Norway is Building The World's Deepest Mega-Tunnel

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Geological Activity Explained 4 Why are most earthquakes small and only a few ones large?

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How 3 Million Trees Are Reversing Iceland's 1,000 Year Deforestation Disaster

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What if sailing had no rules?

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The Wilson Cycle - Episode 1 - Rifting

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Sucked up to 24,333 ft in a thunderstorm!

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Trees DO NOT Grow From The Ground (It's not what you think) | Feynman's Explains why

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The Lost Supervolcano: The Biggest Eruption in Human History - Full Documentary

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The Deadliest Weapon of the Ancient World

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