It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Upload description- Me and my dad where fishing off a doc in Kelowna BC and spotted something massive in the water. The thing looks like it is close in the video but it was a few hundred yards off shore and it was huge, I would say atleast 60 feet long you could visually see it rolling in the water. During this video there was a small group of people videoing off shore as well. Toward the end it goes into a small bay so me and my dad hopped in the truck and drove toward the area it was headed but when we got to the bay it was nowhere to be seen.
originally posted by: HalWesten
The first one looks like it could be a turtle stirring up the water. The second looks like a log or other debris, even expanded I couldn't see animal-like movement.
originally posted by: Riffrafter
originally posted by: HalWesten
The first one looks like it could be a turtle stirring up the water. The second looks like a log or other debris, even expanded I couldn't see animal-like movement.
A log or debris moving across the water and traveling under its own steam?
How does that work?
originally posted by: operation mindcrime
a reply to: HalWesten
Going by the water movement in the first video that must have been one hell of a turtle...
Is this open water? I remember this whale showing up in a harbor once and it reminds me more of that..
Peace
These underwater avalanches are technically known as “turbidity currents.” They are driven by density differences between their sediment and the surrounding fluid.
originally posted by: underwerks
originally posted by: Riffrafter
originally posted by: HalWesten
The first one looks like it could be a turtle stirring up the water. The second looks like a log or other debris, even expanded I couldn't see animal-like movement.
A log or debris moving across the water and traveling under its own steam?
How does that work?
Gas trapped inside a decomposing log follows the path of least resistance down a split in the wood, propelling it through the water.
No idea if that’s even possible, but it sounds like something someone trying to debunk it would say.