CLAIM: "Mongolia experienced moving of the earth's crust due to high differences in pressure and temperature under the earth. "
RATING: False
FACT: The two videos in the viral post are old and unrelated. The first video shows the thawing of permafrost in southwest China in 2017 while the second video is of a landslide that took place in Italy in 2010. Two unrelated videos showing separate geological phenomena that took place in different countries in different years are being shared with a message that claims it shows the earth's crust moving in Mongolia. The videos have gone viral over WhatsApp and Facebook with a message that claims, "
At 10.19 A M Yesterday Mongolia experienced the moving earth crush due to high difference in pressure and temperature under the earth."
The first video shows surreal visuals of darkened soil and patches of grass flow as a river through a hillside. BOOM was able to find a September 2017 article by the
National Geographic through a
reverse image search.
Full View The video was viral in September 2017 on Chinese social media sites Weibo and WeChat and was identified as the Dimye village on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in Southwest China. (Source
link) Since the video went viral many have guessed that rising temperatures in the region led to thawing of permafrost or the layer of soil that is usually frozen year-round, according to the article. Permafrost plays an important role in cold regions as it keeps the overlying layer of soil in place and serves as foundation for trees and plants. "When underlying permafrost begins to warm, it thaws and can no longer support the soil above it. Depending how much permafrost sits beneath a region, the ground can become highly unstable."
LANDSLIDE IN SOUTHERN ITALY IN 2010 https://youtu.be/-nx-gYYRu5I The second video shows a massive landslide recorded on video as rescue workers seen in the video appear dumbstruck with the horrific visuals unfolding before them. BOOM was able to trace the video through a
reverse image search to a massive landslide that took place in 2010 in the Maierato municipality in the Province of Vibo Valentia in Calabria, southern Italy.
According to an article in Britain's Telegraph , 200 residents in Maierato had to evacuate their homes as a landslide descended on the town destroying buildings in its path. (Source link)