Trucks, Trains, Terns & Tractors; An Ordinary Rock & Its Amazing Value

A special thanks to Dave Berry;
Source of Gangplank drawing; Structural geology of the Laramie Mountains, southeastern Wyoming and northeastern Colorado DLR Blackstone - 1996 - Wyoming State Geological Survey
United States History, Texas Aquifer, Kansas Aquifer, Nebraska Sandhills, Nebraska Sand Dunes, Transcontinental Railroad, Lincoln Highway, Interstate 80, Anorthosite, Ogallala Aquifer, Ogallala Formation, Geologic History,

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  • @myroncook
    @myroncook

    Viewer stevenstart8728 has made me aware of the the Great Artesian Basin of Australia which has a much larger aquifer than the Ogallala! One of the benefits of doing these videos is learning from my viewers. Thank you, Steven.

  • @LeoDomitrix
    @LeoDomitrix

    Granite is the "forever stone" for a reason. We use it to build! We don't need it for the gold. It's amazing for itself. IMHO. Our continental crusts have granite, so we're not sunk! And it holds my favorite mineral: Quartz! (Please talk about quartz. Everyone says it's boring but it isn't! I promise!)

  • @georgefurniss6574
    @georgefurniss6574

    There is gold here. The gold is the guy with the hat and the whiteboard 😊. These videos absolutely sparkle. Thanks Myron!

  • @KevinFournier-xd3ub
    @KevinFournier-xd3ub

    It’s not a complete episode without the famous whiteboard! Thank you Myron.

  • @johnlord8337
    @johnlord8337

    Myron is a great story teller and shower - and fisherman. He brings in all separate and seemingly disparate items all together, puts the bait on the hook, throws it out, and then hooks and reels in the viewer to the reality of what is the amazing geology of the Wyoming, Rockies, and western Midwest areas.

  • @inyobill
    @inyobill

    Well, Dr. Cook, we're pleased you're kind enough to be with us.

  • @alanclark639
    @alanclark639

    Again Myron, for someone used to seeing about ten miles max from the ground here in England ( and most of it covered in plants) it's absolutely amazing to view your magnificent country and even more amazing how far little bits of the Rockies will travel left to their own devices for a few million years.

  • @favoriteblueshirt
    @favoriteblueshirt

    Great video, the first time I drove into the Majove desert from Baker, I stopped and stared for an hour at the black tops of mountains poking out of the ancient alluvial deposits. My first geology trip to the USA, and I have to say a sight which bettered the Grand Canyon, I like to be different. Thanks for a great trip down geology memory lane.

  • @xAoDxNoiseComplaint
    @xAoDxNoiseComplaint

    I am from far west Nebraska and have been watching your videos for a while now. I was hoping you were going to do something here. There are so many wonderful geological things to see around western Nebraska and eastern Wyoming. I would love to show you some interesting things around here some day!

  • @felipericketts
    @felipericketts

    That is an awesome story you have told! You know how to get people's interest and open their minds and eyes to what is out there. The story is much grander than any one of us know, or will ever know. Thanks! 🙂

  • @gregjones2217
    @gregjones2217

    Oh why could I not have heard this lecture when I lived in Laramie? My grandfather was born in a sod house in the sand hills. I always wondered why they were so named. As always, I am deeply grateful for your imparted knowledge. Very well done.

  • @nitahill6951
    @nitahill6951

    Myron, you make my day every time you put up a new video! Thank you so much! I wish i had been fortunate enough to have a grandfather or uncle like you when I was a kid.

  • @texaswunderkind
    @texaswunderkind

    Thanks for appreciating the subtle beauty and amazing landscape of the Plains. I learned more about my home state of Nebraska than I could have imagined. So many people shoot through on Interstate 80, and all they remember is that it was flat and boring. The state has a quiet beauty, and its soil and water resources must be protected.

  • @littledabwilldoya9717
    @littledabwilldoya9717

    I’m a Michigan gal, born and bred, and have always had a fascination for our Great Lakes and the rocks and fossils they’ve produced. We have a lot of granite here in the NW lower peninsula, and a lot of dolomite and limestone on the northern side of Lake Michigan on the eastern side, as well as the ‘top of the mitt’ . The last 10 years, I’ve become enamored with the fossils Lakes Michigan and Huron have produced. It blows my mind, to think that millions (billions?) of years ago, these were salt waters, teaming with ocean life!😂

  • @leecarlson9713
    @leecarlson9713

    I have been rock climbing on these rocks! We lived in Laramie for three years in 1968-1971, and rock climbing was a cheap, and fun activity for my husband and me, while he was in grad school.

  • @maxenielsen
    @maxenielsen

    Back in the 70s, when I first started college at Colorado School of Mines. We took field trips nearby, and similar units of clasts are present at the surface there. The older (deeper) you looked, the bigger the clasts. For me it was an exciting discovery - the bigger chunks came from the earlier uplifts. Gradually the chunks get smaller until they’re essentially sands. I love geology even though I ultimately chose electrical engineering as a career. Thanks for this delightful video!

  • @oscarmedina1303
    @oscarmedina1303

    Another wonderful and informative video. Thank you Byron, for sharing your knowledge and helping us take a geological journey.

  • @Chris-ut6eq
    @Chris-ut6eq

    The more of your videos I watch, the more I enjoy them. Love to learn new things and you explain them very well. Thank you for posting this and look forward to your next one!

  • @Billytomtom18
    @Billytomtom18

    Hello Myron , watching your video has took me back to my childhood. Around the early 1960’s my Mom and I would travel by train, from Penn Station in NYC to Union Station in CA.

  • @mikelong9638
    @mikelong9638

    Just another great video Myron! Not only did you bring in the wonderful story that the earth has to tell, but you managed to tie it seamlessly to our lives in the modern era. (My only regret is that I will probably never have the opportunity for fly an airplane over that country.) Thanks much!