The Most Powerful Natural Disasters of Countryballs | Part 2 | Countryballs Animation

preview_player
Показать описание
❗️❗️❗️❗️❗️
We created all the countryballs images used in our videos ourselves!
❗️❗️❗️❗️❗️

The most powerful natural disasters of countryballs Part 2 !

ℹ️ Welcome to the fun animation of countryballs!

Natural disasters are natural phenomena such as tsunamis, earthquakes and hurricanes that bring terrible destruction.In our video today you will learn about the most destructive cataclysms in the history of countries!

👍I hope you enjoy this video. Have fun with flags and country balls :)

❓Do you want more countryballs animation? Write in the comments what themes for the video you would like us to implement. Don't forget to like and subscribe to the channel, it's very important for us!
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

0:05 🇧🇷
0:36 🇷🇺
1:15 🇿🇦
1:43 🇵🇭
2:14 🇨🇱

fatubailey
Автор

Thank you for finally showing Philippines thank you so much because I'm a Filipino.

mildredhuarde
Автор

The eruptions of volcanoes in philipines:
Mount pinatubo:june 15 1991
Mount mayon:January 13 2018
Mount taal:march 26 2022
By the way these volcanoes are the only active on Philippines


But i can tell you more Philippine volcanoes
Mount canlaon:(2. 435m) Located at the northern end of bataan peninsula, S of
Mount hibokhibok:1.322 Meters
Mount bulasan:1.565 Meters
Mount matumtum:2.286 Meters
Mount banahaw:2.170 Meters
Mount biliran:1.301 Meters
Babuyan Claro volcano:1.080 Meters
Mount ragang:2.815 Meters
Didicas volcano:228 Meters
Mount cugua:1.133 Meters
Musuan peak:646 Meters
Mount iraya:1.009 Meters
Camiguin de Babuyanes:712 meters
Mount cabulian:945Meters
Mount isarog:2.000 Meters
Mount iriga:1.196 Meters
Mount makaturing:1.940
Meters
Leonard Kniaseff:1.190 Meters
Bud Dajo:620 Meters
Mount melibengoy:1.824 Meters
Mount apo:2.954 Meters
Smith volcano:688 Meters
Mandalagan:1.885 meters
Silay:1.535 Meters
Balut island:862 meters 💀
Mount arayat:1.026 meters
Mount binuluan:2.329 meters
Mount Natib:1.253 Meters
Mahagnao volcano:860 Meters
Mount malindig:1.157meters
Mount kalatungan:2.880 meters
Mount balatukan:2.450 meters
Mount amorong:376 meters
Mount latukan:2.338 meters
Laguna caldera:743 meters
Mount labo:1.544 Meters
Santo tomas:2.260 Meters
Mount mariveles:1.388 meters
Mount malinao:1.548 meters
Mount panay:501 meters
Patoc:1.865 meters
Paco:524 meters
Mount masaraga:1.328 meters
Mount makiling:1.090 meters
Dakut:474 Meters
Mount alu:95 meters (WTF ITS SO SMALL💀.)

dragon_alex
Автор

Salamat po for putting youn philipinas from Canada and Zaragoza 🇨🇦🤝🇵🇭

Captainmelom
Автор

Thank you very much for putting Brazil first :) from Brazil❤🇧🇷

cesarecamilanascimento
Автор

2:03 BRUH 💀
Btw thank you for putting phillipphines here.

rly
Автор

Winter of the century - a term used in relation to the most severe winter in a given century (occurring once every hundred years). Colloquially, however, it is commonly used to refer to a very severe winter, during which the air temperature shows a significant deviation below the long-term standard for a given area, the sum of snowfall and its intensity as well as the thickness of the snow cover significantly exceed the long-term standard, and these anomalies persist much longer than this takes place during an average winter and covers a large part of the territory in question.

The name of the winter of the century is also used when it meets only one of the above criteria: it can, for example, refer to a winter with almost no snow, but extremely cold, and a winter with an average temperature, but with extremely high amounts of snowfall . In addition, the subjective feeling of the degree of anomaly annoyance for everyday life, the functioning of the economy and transport is also important.

The variety of criteria makes it difficult to indicate the most severe winter in a given century, hence the literature usually mentions several winters aspiring to be called the winter of the century. In Poland, the weather phenomena from the years 1928/29, 1939/40, 1962/63, 1978/79 and 1986/87 are particularly remembered [1] .

20th century

1928/1929


A man pulling a sledge with coal in Kraków (February 1929)
February 1929 was the coldest in the history of meteorology in Poland: it brought temperatures as low as 40 degrees Celsius, and the average temperatures that month oscillated between -13 °C and -16 °C. Many unofficial cold records have been broken, including −45 °C in Rabka, −42 °C in Czarny Dunajec [2] [3], Dubie and Czechowice-Dziedzice . Krakow's " Ilustrowany Kurier Codzienny " also reported on February 23 of the same year about −44 °C in Kolbuszowa and even −48 °C in Kąclowa near Grybów [4] . The official lowest temperatures were recorded on February 10: −40.6 °C in Żywiec, −40.4 °C in Olkusz, −40.1 °C in Sianki [5] . The severe frost caused major disruptions in rail transport due to cracking of the rails, which resulted in, among others, serious problem with coal supplies [6] . Many buildings in the cities did not receive water due to bursting water pipes [7] . The seaport of Gdańsk froze, and two ships were trapped in the ice in the waters of the Gulf of Gdańsk [8] . From February 13, classes were suspended in all schools in Krakow, even lectures at the Jagiellonian University [9] .

In addition, on February 9 in Olecko, the lowest temperature in the present Polish lands was recorded. The thermometer at the then German weather station showed −42.0 °C [10] [11] . In addition, this month brought many other local cold records, such as −33.1 °C in Krakow (February 10). The deviation of the average February temperature for the entire territory of Poland (within its current borders) was as much as 11.4 °C below the average from 1961–1990, ranging from about 7 °C in the Karkonosze Mountains to over 12.5 °C in the north-west . parts of the Lublin Upland and in the vicinity of Krakow [12] . The average temperature in the winter of 1928/29 in Warsaw was −7.8 °C [5] .

The winter of 1928/29 was not only extremely cold, but also snowy. The first snowfall in foothill areas occurred already in the first half of October, and in most of Poland at the turn of November and December. The permanent snow cover lasted continuously from the beginning of December to mid-April, and its thickness in the period from January to March ranged from 20–60 cm in the lowlands to 100 cm and more in the foothills. The greatest thickness (267 cm) was measured on April 9 in the area of Morskie Oko [5] .

1939/1940

The Coldest Winter of World War II . It started in mid-December. There were severe frosts in January. On January 11, 1940, the lowest official temperature in the history of Polish meteorology was recorded in Siedlce -41.0 °C. However, this value raises doubts [13] . This winter lasted until the first days of March. The deviation of the average winter temperature for the entire territory of Poland (within its current borders) was almost 6.6 °C below the average for the years 1961–1990, ranging from approx. 4 °C in the Karkonosze Mountains to over 7.5 °C in the north. parts of Kujawy [14] .

1962/1963

The hard winter lasted for two months - January and February. In Poland, most schools, cinemas, theaters and museums have been closed. Production in factories was suspended or limited, both because of the lack of electricity, fuels and heat, and because of the lack of employees, many of whom could not commute to work. There was a strong frost, heavy snowfall, and the electricity was turned off for many hours every day. The supplies of the shops, which were very poor in those days even in good weather, became even more limited, so that there was a shortage of basic items. Fuel depots were besieged by crowds of people wanting to buy anything suitable for heating their homes, even coal dust that was difficult to use in a household. In the railway areas along the tracks, groups of the poorest collected coal, steam locomotives from tenders during the descent to the locomotive depot [15] .

The waves of snowstorms that occurred in early January and early February almost completely paralyzed road and rail transport, especially in the southern part of the country. At the end of February, severe frosts occurred: on February 28, −28 °C was recorded in Kraków, −35 °C in Nowy Targ, −38 °C in Jabłonka [16], and −35.8 °C in Rzeszów . The deviation of the average winter temperature for the whole of Poland was 5.9 °C below the average for the years 1961–1990, ranging from about 4 °C in the Puck Bay to over 6.5 °C in Wielkopolska and Lower Silesia [17] .

1978/1979

January 30, 1979. winter of the century in Wierzbno in Warsaw
This winter has been exceptionally snowy. From the night hours of December 29 to 30, an influx of frosty air mass from the north began, which caused that the rainfall that occurred at that time began to gradually turn into snowfall with rain and snow and intensify. They were accompanied by a strong wind, causing the rapid formation of snowdrifts. The cold weather front was gradually moving south, and snowstorms and a rapid drop in temperature from positive values to several degrees below zero covered, respectively, northern Poland (December 28-29) and central Poland (December 29-30). The latest to reach Lower and Upper Silesia (December 30) [18] and Podkarpacie (December 30–31). A record high snow cover was recorded in Suwałki(84 cm, February 16), Łódź (78 cm, February 2), Warsaw (70 cm, January 31), Chojnice (60 cm, February 19), Szczecin (53 cm, February 19), Koło (46 cm, 26 February), Kielce (39 cm, February 2) and Poznań (29 cm, February 20) [19] .

From January 1, 1979, the whole country was paralyzed by snowdrifts and a temperature of several degrees. On January 1, the governor of Gdańsk introduced a state of natural disaster in the province [20] . In the following days, due to disruptions in transport, energy resources began to run out . Frozen railway switches and rails cracked as a result of frost caused that coal transports to the CHP plant were exceptionally rare, and thawing those that were delivered was very difficult. The army equipped with heavy equipment was sent to clear the tracks and roads (including tanks, which with their caterpillars tore a thick layer of frozen and compacted snow from the roads) [15] . In most citiespublic transport did not function or operated to a very limited extent. Intercity transport was also very bad. Buses in some areas ran in "tunnels" dug in the snow . [21] The winter paralysis subsided only with the arrival of positive temperatures in March. Among the critics of the local government, the saying "We don't need the Bundeswehr is enough, minus four is enough for us" [22] has become very popular .

The then Minister of Education and Upbringing, Jerzy Kuberski, decided to suspend the return of children and youth from winter camps [16] . Heavy frost and frozen ground were also indirect causes of a gas explosion in Rotunda PKO in Warsaw on February 15, 1979 [23] .

1986/1987
Mainly remembered for January 1987, one of the coldest months in the history of Polish meteorology. In many places in Poland this month had an average temperature below −10 °C (eg in Białystok −15.1 °C [24] ).

30 - degree frost occurred in many places, e.g. Lublin ( airport station, January 8) [26], −31.0 °C in Rzeszów ( airport station, January 14) [27], −31.0 °C in Warsaw ( airport station, January 8) [28] . −30.3 °C in Łódź (January 30) [29], −30.0 °C in Olsztyn (January 7) [30], −30.0 °C in Szczecin (January 14) [31] . There was also a record high level of snow cover: 87 cm wBielsko-Biała (January 8) [19] .

benedyktziokowski
Автор

2:16 as a chilean i can say the most powerful natural disaster of chile was in 1960

ChileRoblox
Автор

FINALLY!!! thank you for showing chile!

LunallenaOSC
Автор

In the next episode, can you include Macedonia's powerful disaster, which is the 1963 Skopje earthquake?

Kokomilenkoski
Автор

Philippines then: HOT HOT HOT
Philippines now: EY🤟FREE MILO

wendycabog
Автор

as a brazilian who haven't even visited rio yet, i can confirm i climbed over the cristo redentor when that happened

yourlocalidiot
Автор

Bro, I like the one when you show the Philippines. Volcano irruption I love it so much because I’m a Filipino.😊😊😊😊😊

playwithkyrie
Автор

Thanks for putting Philippines my country on your video

KuyaSed
Автор

I feel bad for South Africa who haven’t water

STK_Maxime
Автор

the mountain of Philippines is so shy and hiding in the clouds

Bounded_LUCK
Автор

2:14 Correction: The Earthquake Was In Metropolitan Reigion, Valparaíso, O'Higgins And Maule (Central Area). Not In Aysén And Magallanes (Austral South Area).

KaylomiaBall
Автор

Philppine: What The Heck Is That Also Him: Yeeted*

Malasia
Автор

I think you missed something in chile,

Chile once had an earthquake with a magnitude of 9.0+. It was the 1960 Valdivia Earthquake.

Justxxnot
Автор

I know that pilipino music because im a filipino❤❤❤❤🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🥰🥰🥰

lowmoguy