Plant Fossils in the Pacific Northwest

CWU's Nick Zentner presents 'Plant Fossils in the Pacific Northwest' - the 25th talk in his ongoing Downtown Geology Lecture Series. Recorded at Morgan Auditorium on April 10, 2019 in Ellensburg, Washington, USA. www.nickzentner.com

Пікірлер: 259

  • @befuddled2010
    @befuddled20105 жыл бұрын

    Nick NEVER disappoints! These lectures, in my opinion, are pure gold. I can't praise his ability to educate us all enough. As I have said before, this man is a force of nature in and of himself.

  • @oldladywhocares3223
    @oldladywhocares32235 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful lecture. Unbelievable find of the Beck journals and ledgers. What a gift to knowledge of Washington State.

  • @TaylorSmith-fz7qn
    @TaylorSmith-fz7qn5 жыл бұрын

    Nick deserves an award for procuring those journals. That is outstanding! George deserves to have something named for him as well for donating those.

  • @martineastburn3679
    @martineastburn36795 жыл бұрын

    I like it because it expands my knowledge from the Gulf Coast strata to the west coast and Pacific North West development. I'm 72 and still learning.

  • @mbvoelker8448

    @mbvoelker8448

    5 жыл бұрын

    It's critical to keep learning. When we stop learning our brains rust.

  • @scottyV1000

    @scottyV1000

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'm retired at 61 and Prof. Nick's lectures have been a great use of my time while staying isolated. I just wish there was someone doing something similar on the east coast since I live in PA but we don't have nearly as interesting "active" geology over here.

  • @raynorman5751
    @raynorman57515 жыл бұрын

    I was so very impressed with the story of Professor Beck and his contributions to the science of Geology. That he was also a Professor of Music at the same time makes him a true renaissance man. BTW: NickZ rocks too!

  • @jinxymac1406

    @jinxymac1406

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ray Norman I concur. I'm a bit unsure of why that beautiful mural is hanging there in a spot where it could be spoiled if people rest their heads again it.

  • @lilcrooky
    @lilcrooky5 жыл бұрын

    OMG OMG OMG!! Its here!! ..2nd Lecture!

  • @priscillaross-fox9407
    @priscillaross-fox94075 жыл бұрын

    One amazing video after another. These really help me keep my brain ignore the pain. Thank you.

  • @julieleigh1650

    @julieleigh1650

    5 жыл бұрын

    The same for me!,

  • @FossilHntr1

    @FossilHntr1

    5 жыл бұрын

    Priscilla Ross-Fox same here!

  • @deborahferguson1163

    @deborahferguson1163

    5 жыл бұрын

    Agreed !!!!!!

  • @joshw3667
    @joshw36675 жыл бұрын

    The quality of your lectures, compared to the first lectures to now, Nick are just fantastic. It's so much easier to see the blackboards, audio is much better, overall just outstanding. The content of your lectures is always fascinating. I'm studying B.Geoscience in Australia, I hope to come to Washington one day. Keep up the fantastic work Nick.

  • @philbox4566

    @philbox4566

    5 жыл бұрын

    How surprising was that link between Oz and the US in that other lecture. Tickled my geology fancy that eh. Have been fascinated by some of the geology in the Helidon Hills just west of Brisbane so was quite intrigued at this link between our two continents. Would love to find out more.

  • @cacogenicist

    @cacogenicist

    5 жыл бұрын

    The Pacific Northwest of the USA is very young and dynamic compared to much of Australia, eh?

  • @rockyraccoon8270
    @rockyraccoon82704 жыл бұрын

    I am sure that George Beck would be pleased with his grand son passing the journals on where they can be preserved and appreciated. Thanks for telling the story and Thanks to George Mitchell for not trying to monetize his inheritance.

  • @CT-qx8nl
    @CT-qx8nl2 жыл бұрын

    He's a great teacher. I have trouble paying attention and he keeps me engaged all the time!

  • @snuugumz
    @snuugumz Жыл бұрын

    Hey, Teach: Muffler Boy can’t hold a candle to…BOW TIE MAN! Only took me maybe 6 complete viewings to coin that bit of silliness. Love ya, and thanks a million for all of the knowledge from all of talks and classes you have so generously shared with all of us in KZread Land. Ciao, bella!

  • @tinkmarshino
    @tinkmarshino5 жыл бұрын

    Amazing! everytime I listen to you I am just enthralled.. If I had had you as a teacher when I was a lad I probably would have ended up a geologist.. I live in vancouver washington and hope that soon I can make a trip back to your area and at least catch one of your lectures.. I am not is such good shape these days but I might even try to go to some of these wonderful spots you have mentioned just to see the geology of it all.. To look again at the surrounding land and to know it's history, to envision what it must have been like.. How thrilling it seems to me.. even now I remember so many of the places I have ventured to, here in the pacific northwest.. and with the eye of understanding (which you have brought to volition in me) I see it all anew.. It is a good thing, when at older age you find new things.. The world kind of becomes old and familiar the older you get.. not as in the days of youth when all things are new and out there to be discovered..Thanks Nick you have a talent that is amazing and I am glad to see you using it to benefit so many others.. May God bless you in ways that thrill you!

  • @marbleman52
    @marbleman525 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating. I learn so much from each lecture...Wow..!!

  • @pnwmotocross

    @pnwmotocross

    5 жыл бұрын

    marbleman52 that’s what I’m saying!!! Being born and raised in the NW spending much of my time outdoors I’ve learned so much from Nick through all these series videos. Would love to see one in person!!

  • @hwh1946
    @hwh19465 жыл бұрын

    This series is reason enough to watch youtube incessantly. Late comer to geology here in Prescott but this guy is great.I may becoming obsessed!:-)

  • @tinymetaltrees

    @tinymetaltrees

    5 жыл бұрын

    Harry Haff I’m addicted. I can’t stop watching them.

  • @honthirty_

    @honthirty_

    4 жыл бұрын

    Prescott like in BISCUT? Go north to Johnson canyon between Williams and Ash Fork, on west side.

  • @pnwmotocross
    @pnwmotocross5 жыл бұрын

    I love all these videos. Literally geek out on them every night. I’ve watch all the videos in the whole playlist now. Can’t wait to see what is next!

  • @RICDirector

    @RICDirector

    2 жыл бұрын

    Second time through for me....lol

  • @russellmooneyham3334
    @russellmooneyham33345 жыл бұрын

    Yay!!!! New Nick video!!!! Life is good. Thank you sir!

  • @lynnmitzy1643
    @lynnmitzy16435 жыл бұрын

    I found a crinoid fossil by cracking open a slab of sandstone, here in Pennsylvania 👍🏼Rocks are awesome ♥️♥️so are you Prof. Nick 👏🏼👍🏼👍🏼♥️

  • @scottyV1000

    @scottyV1000

    3 жыл бұрын

    I found some fantastic complete vertical tree trunk fossils in the bottom of a coal mine in Ashland, PA along with an autograph of Scott Carpenter.

  • @shanejones578

    @shanejones578

    3 жыл бұрын

    I was out gold hunting in Lancaster county and a man I ran into told me he’d found 2 ounces of gold in peters creek, conowingo cliffs area

  • @FarlandHowe
    @FarlandHowe5 жыл бұрын

    The brilliant Professor Zentner strikes again!

  • @anitamitchell3452
    @anitamitchell34525 жыл бұрын

    I got head to toe goose bumps when he visited the grandson of George Beck. I think I would have passed out seeing all those journals. What a find. Thank you Nick for your research skills and perseverance to find what you share with us.

  • @estarnan
    @estarnan5 жыл бұрын

    Nick, the word WIZARD comes to mind as I finish your second lecture of this series. I am ready to move to Washington for my rock hound fix, and I am a Wisconsin lifer at 70 yo. You enliven me in so many ways as you dance across the stage full of information, geology at its BEST. Thank you ever so for being yourself in public.You Brave Wizard You

  • @PaulMcCannWebBuilder
    @PaulMcCannWebBuilder5 жыл бұрын

    I come not only to learn about geology, but to learn how to lecture.

  • @Raydensheraj

    @Raydensheraj

    4 жыл бұрын

    No kidding...i study Astrophysics and lol...our lectures aren't as " active " most of the time.

  • @crusindc5282

    @crusindc5282

    3 жыл бұрын

    Variety is important--vary media, vary focus on people and types of stuff, vary between hard and ready, vary between serious and funny--but keep your focus by including language that provides explicit transitions, connections, and time relationships.

  • @RockHudrock

    @RockHudrock

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@crusindc5282 and have an awesome voice. 👍🏼

  • @tonybezanson9625
    @tonybezanson96255 жыл бұрын

    I can listen to you talk all day. Learning so much from your lectures

  • @oldladywhocares3223
    @oldladywhocares32235 жыл бұрын

    Over the years, I have visited many of these fascinating places. I really want to revisit them now with "new eyes" thanks to these lecture series over these past years.

  • @nataliadie
    @nataliadie5 жыл бұрын

    If I were a geologist or biologist, this would be most certainly a lecture I would not want to miss. If I were a theist I would be most certainly disturbed by many of facts learned here. As I am none of these I can just lay back (while knitting a sweater) and marvel at the unimaginably long string of violent as well as microscopic events that took place on our living and kicking planet. If any of them had not happened or happened differently most certainly we would not be here to be fascinated by this. This lecture is a jewel.

  • @vladsnape6408
    @vladsnape64085 жыл бұрын

    "..a bunch more moisture.." - Nick certainly has a way with words

  • @marcoblanco3434
    @marcoblanco34345 жыл бұрын

    Great job Nick. I'm slowly getting through all of your video's. I would love to see any info you have about the shifting around of the African plates and the tearing away of the northeast area. Thank you brother. Always a fantastic job you and your whole crew do.

  • @myersred8
    @myersred85 жыл бұрын

    I cannot get enough of these lectures!

  • @_c_y_p_3
    @_c_y_p_3 Жыл бұрын

    As a child growing up in the PNW this info would have been so precious. It makes me happy future generations have equal access as the rich folks who can take courses and such. I hope this remains free.

  • @francoisehembert3243
    @francoisehembert32435 жыл бұрын

    I can’t get enough of your lectures. You are such an incredible teacher. Greetings from Belgium 💕

  • @SaltyPirate71

    @SaltyPirate71

    3 жыл бұрын

    If you enjoy Nick's lectures, I hope you have followed his "Nick At Home" and "Nick on the Fly" and "Exotic Terranes" series this year.

  • @macnutz4206
    @macnutz42065 жыл бұрын

    This is a great series of lectures from which I am learning many new things. I was aware of the "56 High" and thought that was the thing that made palm trees thrive that far north, but did not know when it happened or how long it took to build up, or that it is called PETM Now I have an improved understanding of some of the forces involved. It is great to live in a time and place where almost everyone, regardless of class or social distinction, can have access to such educational material.

  • @jeffaxel181
    @jeffaxel1815 жыл бұрын

    Another great lecture Dr. Nick! One thing I had heard at John Day Fossil Beds in reference to those warmer times (not just the PETM) during the Paleocene/Eocene was due to a warm ocean current running up the eastern Pacific from the south (like the Gulf Stream brings warmth to the east coast and the UK). That current eventually petered out or moved, where now a cold current runs down from Alaska to Washington and Oregon. That change in climate is reflected in the fossils as they transition from semi-tropical to cooler climates from 51Ma to about 5Ma. But is that the new thinking about the transition from warm to cool?

  • @rossconran2333
    @rossconran23333 жыл бұрын

    I dont live in the Northwest or even America or the Northern Hemisphere for that matter but have watched probably 50 of these lectures and am familiar enough with the material to follow and sometimes predict what the next reveal might be. Watching these has now made me watch a number of Documentaries on the geology and ancient history of my own corner of the globe Eastern Australia. I have never been interested in Geology or related fields beyond the excitement of Volcanoes and now I am. My point is it takes a special ingredient to state someone not interested in a subject and get them to be so and that special ingredient is a rare thing, A good teacher! Well done Nick

  • @RICDirector

    @RICDirector

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yep, he's something very, very special.

  • @klubstompers
    @klubstompers Жыл бұрын

    I know where you can get those huge palm fronds, like the ones hanging in the museum today. I ran across a couple dozen of them deep in the woods, along with hundreds of fossils around the 1s.f. size. They are "near" the 2009 land slide at race horse creek, but they are not from that slide event.

  • @n539rv
    @n539rv5 жыл бұрын

    Great to have your lectures back Nick!!

  • @nunyubiznezz
    @nunyubiznezz5 жыл бұрын

    I've got to get out of Apache Junction and get back to Ellensburg _...I've _*_GOT_*_ to !!!_

  • @honthirty_

    @honthirty_

    4 жыл бұрын

    AJ sucks, traffic to Renisaunce festival, Superstition treasure hunters, Gold Canyon old farts, where poppies once grew. Sad.

  • @mtnphot
    @mtnphot5 жыл бұрын

    I came across these lectures quite by accident. Extremely interesting, even for a person in British Columbia. Looking forward to more.

  • @davidwatson8118
    @davidwatson81185 жыл бұрын

    Another excellent presentation. Thanks from Australia 😀

  • @craighoover1495
    @craighoover14954 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for posting this. When a graduate student studying Anaplasmosis with the Agricultural Research Service I was tending rodent traps out in the Owyhee Mountains looking for baby ticks on the rodents, actually, when trying not to fall down on the uncertain footing found a leaf fossil sticking out of the ground. Looking around more I found two others which I collected and heretofore was unable to place in geologic time. Thank you!

  • @tinymetaltrees
    @tinymetaltrees5 жыл бұрын

    These lectures are thoroughly fascinating! They really make me want to go to Washington and explore it! Heck, I might need to move there long enough to take his entire class.

  • @michellepoirier4411
    @michellepoirier44115 жыл бұрын

    I just love these! Thank you so much for sharing, I've been learning so much.

  • @marcydobbs1653
    @marcydobbs16538 ай бұрын

    Amazing stuff. The hero is Nick Zentner for persisting in his pursuit of George Beck's journals and memorabilia.

  • @TurtleRc
    @TurtleRc2 жыл бұрын

    With all the knowledge from this video. This summer is going to be epic. Thank you sir.

  • @juanito3687
    @juanito3687 Жыл бұрын

    I salute you Nick for your fantastic lecturers!!! A+ 👍🏻😊👊🏻 I’ve been watching from Guadalajara Mexico the past few years where I have lived in my 50s (first comment) when I’m bored and have time...definitely some of the most interesting viewing on utube imo being from Washington and living between Seattle, Kennewick and Spokane due to parents divorce while graduating from UW in business 30 years ago. Sadly never visited the Burke Museum as a student in early 90s but our entire state has fascinating geology and you sir are a great lecturer! Great content and thanks to CWU too! I’m a huge fan of you and your work, as well as those that help you provide us viewers interesting lectures! Gracias John:)

  • @brandonfreer6348
    @brandonfreer63484 жыл бұрын

    Love this stuff, I know exactly where you are talking about. I have lived in WA all of my life and very much love the geological history of this state. Very busy.

  • @oldionus
    @oldionus3 жыл бұрын

    Nick Zentner could just as well teach the art of public lecturing... which for the most part is a lost art. Bravo.

  • @cowboygeologist7772
    @cowboygeologist77725 жыл бұрын

    Another great video. Thanks for posting.

  • @JC-lh1pj
    @JC-lh1pj3 жыл бұрын

    Keep them coming. You help me plan my off time and weekend trips.

  • @eternalsoundsolution
    @eternalsoundsolution5 жыл бұрын

    Nick, your lectures are awesome, i love them so much and I'm from Montreal, Qc, with no geologic background whatsoever, to give you context, nothing could be further from my everyday life than this, but you make it very interesting and always enjoy them, i know more about the pacific northwest geology than most Washingtonians do i bet :) ...anyhow, got into this over interest in the last ice age effects on our planet, and being that here in Qc, we have the oldest bedrock, our vallee was a flood plain from those days, it is evident on google maps, so all of this actually does have meaning to us in this part of the continent, with all that ice on it scraping away past geologies, glad i got into your series, watched every single one (lost hammer in the cracks was a highlight :)) you and Randall Carlson have a lot in common on this subject, maybe a little meet-up would be appropriate (if you don't know him already) anyhow take care buddy, and know you are a great teacher, wish i had geology with you when i was young ;)

  • @mikeleppan8635
    @mikeleppan86352 жыл бұрын

    Love the content. University in my phone. I’m an engineer but this content really broadens my knowledge. Thanks so much for ur dedication to sharing your life’s work

  • @brandonfreer6348
    @brandonfreer63484 жыл бұрын

    Holy crap. I have noticed several things like you have mentioned about the fissure. You have answered my questions. I grew up in the Columbia gorge and have always imagined the forces that caused these geological forms.

  • @fatherjamiedennis1270
    @fatherjamiedennis12705 жыл бұрын

    Amazing, this turned out to be something other than I expected. I really enjoyed this lecture. Thank you.

  • @RICDirector

    @RICDirector

    2 жыл бұрын

    ANYTHING from Nick, regardless of subject, is well worth watching!

  • @joshsater4044
    @joshsater40445 жыл бұрын

    These lectures are fantastic!

  • @playbagpipes
    @playbagpipes5 жыл бұрын

    For me, Nick Zentner is right up there with public educators like Carl Sagan and Neil Degrass Tyson. An educated public is our future. Wonderful!

  • @NextWorldVR

    @NextWorldVR

    5 жыл бұрын

    Neil D Tyson? A corporate/Government shill. A liar.

  • @charlesbuchan2826
    @charlesbuchan28265 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this engaging lecture!

  • @deMontfort1
    @deMontfort13 жыл бұрын

    There are no logs in the vantage sediment because they float! The pumice, too. So after each lahar a graded sediment layer falls to the bottom of the lake but the logs remain on the top. Your petrified logs are therefore, probably, from all the lahars....maybe mostly the later ones if the earlier ones rotted away.

  • @ExoticTerrain
    @ExoticTerrain5 жыл бұрын

    OMG I'm geeking out! You got Hank Green in your video! That's huge!

  • @adriennegormley9358

    @adriennegormley9358

    5 жыл бұрын

    OH yah; good to see Hank showing up here. I recognized the voice before the face LOL. Nick's gotta know him; Hank teaches at U of MOntana in Missoula IIRC.

  • @JenniferLupine
    @JenniferLupine4 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful!! Thank you so much- love your lectures!

  • @Banryu95
    @Banryu955 жыл бұрын

    The moment I heard Hank Green's voice in the video from PBS Eons, it made my day. KZread is an amazing educational tool. DFTBA.

  • @fossilhuntress
    @fossilhuntress2 жыл бұрын

    Truly value your talks, Nick. Well done!

  • @RICDirector

    @RICDirector

    2 жыл бұрын

    Seen the stuff he's been doing since COVID? Awesome!

  • @McLovin143627
    @McLovin1436275 жыл бұрын

    I love watching these videos please keep them coming!!

  • @BlessedFigTree
    @BlessedFigTree5 жыл бұрын

    Inspiring, thank you Nick!

  • @rowanhard
    @rowanhard Жыл бұрын

    A great lecture. Thank you.

  • @jansirkia3809
    @jansirkia38095 жыл бұрын

    What a great lecturer on an interesting subject!

  • @Brandon.Nichols
    @Brandon.Nichols2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent lecture, comprehensive and interesting as always! Apologies this comments is a few years late, but is there a link anywhere online to that amazing animation starting at 40:18 showing continental drift throughout the Epochs? Noting that there is a CWU logo in the lower right corner, so presumably it was developed in-house? Here's an idea if you haven't thought of it already: Develop a 'sequel episode' overlaying ice sheet advances and retreats along with rising and falling sea levels, in particular showing how little land area is left un-submerged during the PETM, i.e. when both polar ice caps were melted, with perhaps a sidebar graphic showing estimated atmospheric CO2 concentration. Now that would be BOTH a real mind-boggler AND a valuable climate-policy public service!

  • @6061lucky
    @6061lucky2 жыл бұрын

    The thing of it is I see mostly all people in there , but my goodness this is interesting . We need to learn about the past so we can better understand the future .

  • @lamron2565
    @lamron25654 жыл бұрын

    As a kid, living in Selah in the '60s, I was in the Boy Scouts. I don't recall exactly where we were, but my Troop was camping in the mountains west of my area. I was always interested in geology and had an extensive rock collection, and always had my eye out for new specimens. I picked up a strange rounded rock about two inches in diameter from some gravel near the small river at the site, but had no idea what it was. Back home, I took it to a teacher, who could also not identify it, who then sent it to a friend of his in the profession. It was determined to be petrified camel dung. I donated it to that teacher. Now, I live in south central Idaho. Four years back I found petrified cactus of the genus Cereus. I presented that to my father as a gift. He lives in Moses Lake and had someone at WSU examine it for confirmation. They were amazed, as was I. Thank you very much for your informative teachings. I am a fan.

  • @jkgardner1933
    @jkgardner19335 жыл бұрын

    What a "ROCK SLUTH". This is a great story and a Geo Mystery. Great Job and another great production. Working your way up to Nat Geo,

  • @joebainter
    @joebainter5 жыл бұрын

    Yay Mr Nick is back!!!

  • @brandonfreer6348
    @brandonfreer63484 жыл бұрын

    Sure am glad I found this channel. I went to college just for the very in depth geology that you can't find in a public library. Don't need to join college now!!!

  • @jpd777
    @jpd7775 жыл бұрын

    always interesting from Nick; looking forward to a global climate lecture

  • @Perfectionseeker1967
    @Perfectionseeker19675 жыл бұрын

    As always, I'm impressed with the amount of detail and evidence presented by Professor Nick Zentner! Thank you for yet another brilliant and informative video! Unfortunately, I can't find many plant fossils around south-central Wisconsin. But on April 20th 2019, I did find my 3rd and largest "Honeycomb Coral" fossil fragment, weighing 120.1 grams! Contact me, and I'll send you photos of this specimen, and some details to where and how it was found. Thanks again, and be safe! I'm looking forward to your next video/s!

  • @xenocampanoli815
    @xenocampanoli8155 жыл бұрын

    Good job Nick. I put it out on my FB.

  • @johnlord8337
    @johnlord83375 жыл бұрын

    All those exotic terranes were part of those earlier Central and South American islands that were in those equatorial locations, and fossilized down there, and moved northward in later times.

  • @NextWorldVR
    @NextWorldVR5 жыл бұрын

    This was outstanding...

  • @Bsquared1972
    @Bsquared19722 жыл бұрын

    Great lecture, thanks!

  • @MountainJohn
    @MountainJohn4 жыл бұрын

    This was beautiful. For someone who loves studying the PETM in WA. I forgot my profile picture is of me by Canada studying the Palms at Chuckanut.

  • @kenmarapese9085
    @kenmarapese90855 жыл бұрын

    Love this stuff!

  • @odisy64
    @odisy645 жыл бұрын

    YES, another video

  • @petermarsh4993
    @petermarsh49932 жыл бұрын

    Dear Nick, yet another fine presentation, thoroughly enjoyable. Somewhere about 2/3rds through you were using an animation that had the history of the continents on a time-line which you can slide to show the state of the globe at any time in history. Is that animation in the public domain? I would love to add it to my collection of interesting files. Cheers.

  • @georgegrader9038
    @georgegrader90384 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant teaching Nick Z

  • @ShakespeareCafe
    @ShakespeareCafe5 жыл бұрын

    It would be wonderful if you uploaded those records on KZread...sounds intensely interesting

  • @marianrooth9514
    @marianrooth95145 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing. You bring the past to the present.

  • @PeteSty
    @PeteSty2 ай бұрын

    Nick is GREAT!

  • @paulmicks7097
    @paulmicks70977 ай бұрын

    Always great to catch your lectures ... Do you have ice core sea sediment lecture ?

  • @Hugllls1971
    @Hugllls19716 ай бұрын

    Doesn't the genko tree feature make sense if there at the bottom of a lake when the flow covered them?

  • @keiththomas6601
    @keiththomas66014 жыл бұрын

    Just curious.... have you ( Nick) heard of the expanding earth hypothesis? Wind could have blown Australia, china and Siberian sand into west coast. I know its hard to explain where the extra volume is coming from..... besides that. Can u make an un biased video on the pros and cons of the theory? It is important to hear opposing theories as well as the accepted theories. Btw. Love your enthusiasm and geological expertise. I listen to your lectures all day while i work!!!! Thanks and keep em coming!!!

  • @TaylorSmith-fz7qn
    @TaylorSmith-fz7qn5 жыл бұрын

    Stoked!

  • @Reziac

    @Reziac

    5 жыл бұрын

    Shouldn't that be... Stoned! ;)

  • @MrArdytube
    @MrArdytube2 жыл бұрын

    For those of us who have never taken a geology course…. This is like opening a Pandora’s box of unfamiliar, strange and wonderful information. I think we all suspected that someone, somewhere had been studying such things…. And now, here it is. And even within this tsunami of information… the fact remains that this is all just the last 100 million years of a 4 billion year old planet!

  • @rbaconator
    @rbaconator3 жыл бұрын

    If a lahar brought the logs to Lake Vantage, would the volcanic particles settle out of the water before the logs became so waterlogged to sink? Would this explain the graded bed in the Vantage sediments and the logs above?

  • @dickdewit8433
    @dickdewit84335 жыл бұрын

    Is it the information or the teacher that keeps you hooked to the ipad for more than one hour? Even it concerns an area thousands of kilometers away from where you live. For the moment I go for the second in the first place, but the information is also a good second. Thank you for this lecture on a Easter afternoon from The Netherlands. See you next week.

  • @martineastburn3679
    @martineastburn36795 жыл бұрын

    I noticed something in the black palm (your office area) has blunt tips - I suspect chewed off as it is the softest part. Not by a Dino, but by a muncher with a long nose to breath while it ate under and in swamps. Martin ps The magnetic north pole wondered all over the 'pacific' before returning to the north. It depends on the ice load and land load and distribution on the globe of the land masses. The Earth is a magnetic 3-D bar magnet something shaped like a pumpkin with ribs and dives into the poles (the magnetic lines). BUT the great ocean into the Montana from Texas might be effective. I have to look up some of my notes (50+ years to college days) and find those dates. You know, Reef structures (coral) at the top of the mountains in Colorado.....

  • @kspfan001
    @kspfan0015 жыл бұрын

    Nick should do a crossover episode/lecture with Hank Green in Montana. I think that's out where Hank lives.

  • @thomasbiel7741
    @thomasbiel77415 жыл бұрын

    Great video

  • @TheGodsEye82
    @TheGodsEye825 жыл бұрын

    There is a massive plant fossil deposit not far from me in Clinton BC Located right on the side of the road. The fossils are encased in a very white brittle stone.. Love to hear Nick's take on it...

  • @TheGodsEye82

    @TheGodsEye82

    5 жыл бұрын

    51* 04'51"N 121*37'45"W

  • @RICDirector

    @RICDirector

    2 жыл бұрын

    Pumice maybe?

  • @crazycarl00
    @crazycarl004 жыл бұрын

    The warming of the polar region would go along with the pole flip/crustal displacement/axial shift theories that are becoming more common.

  • @NNtrancer1
    @NNtrancer14 жыл бұрын

    There's a spot right inside the town of Republic where you can dig for plant fossils.

  • @mikekaup5252
    @mikekaup52525 ай бұрын

    I'm curious, if some lava flows have pillow lavas and some don't has anyone done any temperature testing to see if temperature is the cause of the difference? I can't see any other cause for the difference.

  • @mephista55
    @mephista554 жыл бұрын

    This man is amazing!

  • @plaxtolport470
    @plaxtolport4705 жыл бұрын

    As the PETM was quite short the expansion of palms to extreme lattitudes was very rapid, sea currents and colonizing costal margins I can understand but was the expansion overland as well a I cannot easily see a mechanism for dispersing nuts at the required speed? eg Even a 1000 km advance of the forest margin in 100k years is 10m per year , and if a tree take 10 years to mature the the steps are less frequent but need to be greater ie 100m per generation. Nuts in my mind are not associated with wind dispersal . I remain curious. Great lecture thanks.

  • @Gorteenminogue

    @Gorteenminogue

    5 жыл бұрын

    Animal dispersion?

  • @deanmagnuson2993
    @deanmagnuson29935 жыл бұрын

    What are your opinion on pole reversal