Unzen Jigoku, Japan, April 2015 HD
Unzen-Jigoku 雲仙地獄,
Unzen Jigoku (“Unzen Hell”) where hot spring water and gases emit out from blowholes. White steam and a smell of sulfur create a hive of volcanic activity. Lots of distribution pipe convey the hot water to the nearby hotels or onsens.
It is a strong acid spring containing sulfur, known for its excellent antiseptic qualities and good for making the skin smooth and soft.
ONSEN UNZEN ONSEN - Japans beautiful Hell!
Onsen : Japanese public bath.I have discovered that Japanese onsen is one of my favorite things to do in Japan. When ever I travel to Japan I try to go to the public baths and discover new ones - all over Japan!. But I think that the experience at this onsen was an unforgettable experience. Which is why I made this video. Unzen Onsen (雲仙温泉) is a hot spring resort town near the peak of Mount Unzen. Not too far from Nagasaki, the area originally developed as a temple town that in its prime was large enough to be compared to Koyasan. In the Meiji Period, the town became one of Japan's first tourist resorts popular among foreigners, and a hint of Western influenced architecture can still be seen about town. Unzen Onsen's location makes it a good base from which to explore Mount Unzen.
The resort is surrounded on several sides by hot spring fields. Also known as hells (jigoku), these barren rocky areas are littered with billowing steam vents and gushing hot springs from which milky, acidic and sulfurous water bubbles straight up out of the ground. The hells were once used to execute Christian rebels after the failed Shimabara Rebellion, but today its spring water has the more pleasant task of warming up holidaymakers in the ryokan baths around town.
I hope you enjoy this multi language video!
Tell me about your onsen experiences!
Music: EmJay - Remember
Kanaya Base - Salt
Spanish:
Onsen: baño público japonés.
He descubierto que onsen japonés es una de mis cosas favoritas para hacer en Japón. Cada vez que viajo a Japón trato de ir a los baños públicos y descubrir otras nuevas - por todo Japón!. Pero creo que la experiencia en este onsen fue una experiencia inolvidable. Es por eso que hice este video.
Unzen Onsen (雲仙 温泉) es un pueblo de aguas termales cerca de la cima del monte Unzen. No muy lejos de Nagasaki, el área desarrollada originalmente como un templo de ciudad que en su mejor momento era lo suficientemente grande como para ser comparado con Koyasan. En el periodo Meiji, la ciudad se convirtió en uno de los primeros complejos turísticos de Japón populares entre los extranjeros, y un toque de arquitectura occidental influenciado todavía se puede ver por la ciudad. La ubicación del unzen Onsen hace que sea un buen punto de partida para explorar el Monte Unzen.
El complejo está rodeado por varios lados por los campos de aguas termales. También conocido como infiernos (jigoku), estas zonas áridas y rocosas están llenas de ondulante respiraderos de vapor y aguas termales que brota de la que lechosas, las burbujas de agua y ácidos sulfurosos hacia arriba fuera de la tierra. Los infiernos vez se utiliza para ejecutar los rebeldes cristianos después de la fallida rebelión de Shimabara, pero hoy su agua de manantial tiene la más agradable tarea de calentar los turistas en los baños ryokan alrededor de la ciudad.
Espero que disfruten de este video multi idioma!
Háblame de tu experiencia onsen!
Unzen Hot Spring, Kyushu, Japan, Feb 2018 (Filmed on DJI Mavic Pro)
Our family trip to Unzen hot spring (Kyushu). The entire area in the mountain smell of sulphur.
Music:
Title: Galaxies (ft. Diandra Faye)
Author: Jens East
Unzen-Onsen Jigoku Meguri 雲仙温泉の見どころ雲仙地獄めぐり:Discover Japan
#02 地獄巡り後の極楽は雲仙の共同浴場にあり:九州麺の一人旅
九州への一人旅。
最初の目的地は雲仙温泉。
雲仙地獄が見どころです。
激しく湯気が噴き出る地獄をめぐってきました。
あたりには硫黄の匂いがします。
Kyushu solitary travel.
I went to Unzen hot spring.
There is Unzen jigoku there.
Water vapor and gas are squirting there.
There is a smell of sulfur.
It is like a landscape of hell.
ビデオカメラは SONY HDR-PJ790V を使って撮影しました。
60pでの撮影です。
編集はEDIUS 8です。
A video camera is SONY HDR-PJ790V.
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煙で仕上げた今夜の逸品 -燻製-
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みみさん
Mimi-san
Hell, Unzen Dake, Nagasaki
Hot springs in Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan
Onsen Trip with my Students - JET Programme - Hokkaido LIfe
How to Look Inside a Volcano - with Christopher Jackson
3D seismic imaging techniques can be used to illuminate the structure of volcanoes and the evolution of their underlying 'hot rocks'.
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Volcanoes are big, hot, loud, and scary; because of this, we know little of their internal structure or underlying 'plumbing system', despite them representing a global natural hazard.
Watch the Q&A:
Prof Christopher Jackson is a geologist at Imperial College, London, UK. Having completed his PhD at Manchester in 2002, and having worked in the oil industry in Bergen, Norway, he moved to Imperial College in 2004 to pursue an academic career. Chris’ research focuses on how the Earth’s crust deforms, and how this deformation influenced the types of environments and economic resources developed in deep time.
This talk and Q&A were filmed at the Ri on 26 April 2019.
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Kawayu Onsen in Winter
Kawayu Onsen in Teshikaga Town is a hot spring district that flows with a small river of hot spring water. The hot spring originates from the nearby Iozan (sulfur mountain), and the smell of sulfur permeates the air here. On very cold winter days, water vapor from the river freezes as rime on the shrubs and trees, creating beautiful white winter scenery that is visible only in the morning.
Japan trip Nagasaki Onsen Jigoku Hell / 長崎雲仙地獄に行ってきました / Giappone Viaggio
My trip in Nagasaki, Japan. The place called
Unzen Jigoku. High-temperature hot springs and gasses erupt violently from everywhere, and with the strong smell of sulfur, the steamy scenery evokes a vision of hell.
Around this place, you can also enjoy Onsen! Awesome experience!
長崎県の雲仙市に温泉旅行に行ってきました。雲仙地獄というらしく至る所から高温の温泉と噴気が激しく噴出し、強い硫黄臭が漂っていました。温泉も非常に気持ちよかったです。
Japanese Mayo Pudding at Kewpie Cafe | Tokyo, Japan
The promise of Mayonnaise Pudding got us on a train over to Roppongi to check out Kewpie's 100 years, start! CAFE!
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Megadisasters: Natural vs. Stealth
Dr. Susan Kieffer, Center for Advanced Studies, Professor of Geology and Physics
September Evening Public Lecture — Remembering Mount Pinatubo 25 Years Ago
Remembering Mount Pinatubo 25 Years Ago: A look back at one of the largest volcanic eruptions of the 20th century. There was a special showing of the NOVA film In the Path of a Killer Volcano at this event which is not present in this video due to copyright issues. Following the viewing, however, USGS Geologist John Ewert (was who featured in the film) answered questions.
NICARAGUA: CERRO NEGRO VOLCANO ERUPTS
Natural Sound
A newly active volcano in western Nicaragua has forced thousands of people to flee their homes.
A red alert has been declared as the authorities warn that towns and villages in the area risk being engulfed by sand and mud displaced because of the volcanic activity.
The Nicaragua Earth Studies Institute has said that the number of explosions are continuous and increasingly violent, as fresh lava flows from the open crater.
Spurts of lava from the rumbling Cerro Negro rose more than one thousand metres, and could be seen from several miles away.
The volcano began belching sand and ashes earlier this month after a three-year lull, spitting out glowing rocks weighing up to 23 kilograms as far as 150 metres and smaller stones as far as 250 metres.
On Tuesday night molten lava reached 1,470 degrees (800 degrees Celsius) which experts say formed a new volcanic cone higher than the mountain.
The eruptions forced thousands of people to escape by bus, on foot, even in ox-drawn carts as thick volcanic mud, sand and ash rained on their communities.
SOUNDBITE in Spanish, (rough translation for guidance only)
The volcano was so dangerous, we were forced to leave.
SUPERCAPTION: Peasant woman fleeing volcano.
SOUNDBITE in Spanish, (no translation available)
SOUNDBITE in Spanish, (rough translation for guidance only)
The ash and smoke were so bad we had to leave our home, because we could not breathe.
SUPERCAPTION: Peasant woman forced flee her home
SOUNDBITE in Spanish, (rough translation for guidance only)
I am so scared because of the volcano. Nobody can tell me what is happening to all of us.
SUPERCAPTION: Peasant boy forced to flee home
The 670-metre-high Cerro Negro is about 15 miles (24 kilometers) from the city of Leon, which has 150,000 inhabitants, and 75 miles (120 kilometers) from the capital, Managua.
Livestock owners have begun to move their animals out of the area because volcanic ash is covering much of the pasture and the animals won't eat what remains because of its sulphur-like smell and taste.
Civil defence workers used machetes and their bare hands to clear roads for the fleeing inhabitants as the rumbling volcano began toppling trees and spewing ash and other debris onto the roadways.
Peasants who for days had refused to leave their homes in Leon and nearby villages on Wednesday began loading up household belongings, chickens and other animals onto crude carts.
Those who stayed behind worked long after nightfall, clearing sand and ashes off the roofs of their homes and other buildings to prevent the structures from collapsing.
The cloud of ash and sand limited visibility, forcing the local population to cover their heads with hats or other clothing to keep the dust out of their eyes, noses and mouths.
Civil defense committees had evacuated about 1,400 people by Wednesday afternoon, and were preparing more emergency shelters. Thousands more began fleeing their homes by the evening.
SOUNDBITE in Spanish, for guidance only:
We were in the ruins of our farm and did not know what to do, because our animals could not breathe due to the ash in the air. We thought our only hope would be to leave our homes as soon as possible.
SUPERCAPTION: Fleeing peasant farmer
President Violeta Chamorro called a Cabinet meeting Wednesday to plan emergency measures, and the National Emergency Committee has already called for international help, said presidential Chief of Staff Julio Cardenas.
Health officials were recommending that residents wear hats and eye coverings to avoid skin, respiratory and eye problems caused by ash and sand.
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