
Scientists have been left in shock after witnessing some never-before-seen security footage taken during the huge earthquake that hit Myanmar earlier this year.
The massive 7.7 magnitude earthquake hit the Asian country on 28 March of this year, resulting in a tragically high death toll of over 3,000, according to the latest reports.
Such was the impact of the huge natural disaster, it even brought down buildings in neighbouring Thailand, but it still doesn't even crack the top 10 when it comes to measuring the magnitudes of other earthquakes throughout history.
NASA recently found that a 9.1 magnitude earthquake that hit Sumatra in 2004 was so powerful that it shifted the Earth's axis and changed the length of a day, which highlights just how much damage natural disasters can do.
In the aftermath of the catastrophe in Myanmar, scientists have now been reacting to some 'mind-blowing' footage, which literally shows the ground slide between two tectonic plates located in the Earth's outer layer.
The security footage, taken from a surveillance camera just south of Mandalay in the south of Myanmar, initially seems unremarkable until you notice the ground moving frankly all over the place in the background of the clip.
Keep an eye on the right-hand-side of the short clip, which can be seen here:
Wendy Bohon, an earthquake geologist and science communicator in California, said her 'jaw hit the floor' when she saw the footage from along the fault line.
"We have computer models of it, we have laboratory models of it, but all of those are far less complex than the actual natural system", she told CBC News.
"So to see it actually happening was mind-blowing."

An account called 2025 Sagaing Earthquake Archive, who found the video on Facebook before uploading it to their YouTube, suggest that it is the first ever example of a fault line motion being captured on camera.
Geologist Judith Hubbard, an assistant professor at Cornell University's department of Earth and atmospheric sciences, added: "I keep going back and watching it.
"It's really kind of staggering to see a fault slide in real time, especially for someone like me, who has spent years studying these things, but always from more remote kinds of data, like offsets after the fact or data recorded by sensors."
Myanmar sits directly on top of the Sagaing Fault, a highly active earthquake zone stretching 745 miles (1,200 km) through the heart of the country and in January of this year, geologists in China had warned about the possibility of significant earthquakes in the near future, due to the plates being 'locked' in the same position for too long, which allowed more energy to build up, which sadly led to the deadly disaster.