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Wild Showdown

Wild Showdown

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  • @jiashanuhai3222
    @jiashanuhai3222Күн бұрын

    I actually know Shanna Burchwell she was my 7th grade teacher in mt i really loved her class i womder what shes up to today

  • @Lxllie_love47392
    @Lxllie_love47392Ай бұрын

    Tomorrow I am going to a field trip here!! ❤ This made me WAYY less nervous. Thank you🌸

  • @serenitty6550
    @serenitty65503 ай бұрын

    Why are most of these comments rude? Can't you find ANYTHING nice to say? This video is honestly pretty cool!

  • @giorgiogambino8333
    @giorgiogambino83336 ай бұрын

    🌎👏

  • @giorgiogambino8333
    @giorgiogambino83336 ай бұрын

    ❤😮

  • @BluesHand
    @BluesHand7 ай бұрын

    Can't understand why you don't allow comments on your Missoula lake video. Do you understand the 12,000 year disaster cycle your planet goes through? I'm not disagreeing but you failed to tell the viewers how it happens. Perhaps research Micronova? I realize that the video is three years old, but the viewers deserve an update.... The cause of these events are very important for the critical thinkers to understand. We are at the end of the cycle and we need all hands on deck. Perhaps review my words for the sake of Humanity?

  • @priscillaross-fox9407
    @priscillaross-fox94079 ай бұрын

    The music is too loud for me to hear what is being said.

  • @Petermax99
    @Petermax9910 ай бұрын

    18000 yrs ago you haven't done your home work have you

  • @hymiemary9204
    @hymiemary920410 ай бұрын

    *Promosm* 💯

  • @brettbarce8563
    @brettbarce856311 ай бұрын

    Great video! Grew up in that neck of the woods, kinda debunks the human caused climate change, unless you believe in the Flintstones

  • @elliott177
    @elliott177 Жыл бұрын

    *Promosm*

  • @richardservatius5405
    @richardservatius5405 Жыл бұрын

    With all that water, the weight would be enormous. So how much weight would it take to push down the earth crust below it? I'm wondering if the weight was enough to let water flow over places like Thompson pass...where you can find rounded glacial till at near the top of the pass. there might also be other spots that water might have flowed over.

  • @richardservatius5405
    @richardservatius5405 Жыл бұрын

    then when the water of the lake went away, the earth crust might have rebounded, making it higher in elevation.

  • @jennifreak63
    @jennifreak63 Жыл бұрын

    who narrated this video?

  • @knocksensor3203
    @knocksensor3203 Жыл бұрын

    Is it possible to make a huge man made dam where the glacial ice lobe was, and make a modern day lake Missoula reservoir..🧐

  • @celicalostandfound
    @celicalostandfound Жыл бұрын

    I think the Younger Dryas Impact theory could help understand this massive melting. I find it very ironic that across the globe that there are these crazy geological and archeological events that seem to have occurred 12800 years ago. Doesn't a global cosmic event make sense?

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Жыл бұрын

    The timing is all wrong for such as the last of the of the floods predate the Younger Dryas.

  • @meanerkat4339
    @meanerkat4339 Жыл бұрын

    Also This was a great video. Very well done.

  • @meanerkat4339
    @meanerkat4339 Жыл бұрын

    Is it possible that some of the water from lake Missoula made it's way down to fill lake Lahontan in western Nevada and eastern California? North of the Black Rock desert in Nevada almost to the Idaho border there is those circles scoured out of the rock in the landscape that look like rushing water could have formed them. I don't think all the water in Lake Lahontan could come from the Sierra Nevada Mountains by Lake Tahoe. Lake Lahontan was a very large lake also a thousand feet deep or so. The only part of it left is Pyramid Lake in Nevada.

  • @multankasultaan
    @multankasultaan Жыл бұрын

    Damn you save my job thank you so much

  • @garyalgier4811
    @garyalgier4811 Жыл бұрын

    Walker lake Nevada on hwy 95 .going south at the high ridge 100's of feet above the hwy 95 to the right is water lines on the mountain perhaps a thousand feet above the lake. I stood there realizing that the other side south of this lake was not there I mean hudres of miles? I would love to here the history here?

  • @NarmadeyEbeamedPolymerProducts
    @NarmadeyEbeamedPolymerProducts Жыл бұрын

    Polycom HDX 6000 Video Conferencing System Kit support Google meet or Zoom meeting . please reply . its urgent .

  • @Sphynx93rkn
    @Sphynx93rkn Жыл бұрын

    Great video, very informative.

  • @inspiredclassroom
    @inspiredclassroom Жыл бұрын

    Glad it was helpful!

  • @willwagner2252
    @willwagner2252 Жыл бұрын

    All guesses on what happened are right because no one really knows what happened.

  • @kenweis7913
    @kenweis7913 Жыл бұрын

    That's a big animal

  • @willwagner2252
    @willwagner2252 Жыл бұрын

    The so called high water lines could not have been made by multiple floods. The lines are carved into the rock in an almost measured sequence going down. This is impossible for multiple floods to be this exacting. They are grooves carved from the receding of a single flood.

  • @nicki___1808
    @nicki___1808 Жыл бұрын

    I watched a series called ancient apocalypse on Netflix very interesting it also states 1 catastrophic event is responsible for this.

  • @VirginiaPrepper
    @VirginiaPrepper Жыл бұрын

    Yes it’s called the great flood spoken of in Genesis chapter 6. It was a world wide flood and 20 feet above the highest mountain.

  • @NOT_SURE..
    @NOT_SURE.. Жыл бұрын

    i was just thinking that , its too uniform for random floods...perhaps there was a blockage further down near the ocean, which froze every winter leaving water in place to make a mark , then following year it would go down another 20ft, and stop

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Жыл бұрын

    Nope. The strand lines are a result of gentile wave action on a long lived lake shore.

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Жыл бұрын

    ​@@VirginiaPrepperno. That was the breaching of the Black Sea and has nothing to do with Glacial Lake Missoula.

  • @DrAmandaEller
    @DrAmandaEller Жыл бұрын

    This is great! I can't find one for Domain 4... Please tell me there is one? And please provide the link. Thanks!

  • @insolator1775
    @insolator1775 Жыл бұрын

    So couldn't larger examples of this be responsible for what Noah's flood really was? Maybe not ice blockage but land and destroyed by earthquakes?

  • @NOT_SURE..
    @NOT_SURE.. Жыл бұрын

    i think in this time in history the whole world experiened waters rising and flooding for instance the gibraltar straight was once connected and britain was connected to europe . once the water breeched the gibraltar straight it flooded in and would have flooded many towns around the med.

  • @mrose4132
    @mrose4132 Жыл бұрын

    It took 200,000 years to form, as stated in the video, but the climate data/temperatures don’t support this waxing and waning effect in 200,000 year increments…

  • @petergaworecki2824
    @petergaworecki2824 Жыл бұрын

    Draining, filling and rebuilding an ice dam, HUNDREDS of times !?!? Sorry, no. Once. One time the lake let loose, 12,800 years ago. explain how this ice dam, in the middle of an ice age, could do this? no natural processes can explain it. Or the black mat....

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Жыл бұрын

    For Missoula itself it is dozens, not hundreds of floods and NONE of the floods are from 12,800 years ago but in fact is even older. The last of the floods were long before the Younger Dryas. Just FYI sea level rise SLOWED during the Younger Dryas. The black mats are organic materials. They are wetland deposits.

  • @petergaworecki2824
    @petergaworecki2824 Жыл бұрын

    @@swirvinbirds1971 🤦‍♂

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Жыл бұрын

    @@petergaworecki2824 wow, what convincing evidence...🤔

  • @JerseyJimFish
    @JerseyJimFish Жыл бұрын

    This is one of the most comprehensive and coherent explanations on this topic I've seen. Jolly good show!

  • @Sphynx93rkn
    @Sphynx93rkn Жыл бұрын

    100%

  • @kayt4798
    @kayt4798 Жыл бұрын

    Just keep moving forward

  • @nicholasbeck1558
    @nicholasbeck15582 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful presentation. Excellent photos and explanations. 9 years ago, I explored the Missoula Flood lands. I'll try to post my photos on your app. Thank you

  • @trebornoslo1951
    @trebornoslo19512 жыл бұрын

    I have a problem with a glacier flowing from the Kootenai Valley which is the southern end of the Purcell trench. The mountains of the Cabinets and the Selkirks only leave a gap of 5 miles at the 3100 foot level. I would think any glacier moving thru that gap would be shattered up much like you see in modern photos of glaciers. Another problem would be the fact that the elevation at Bonners Ferry is some 300 feet lower than the elevation just north of Lake Pend d Oreille which is over 2100 feet while Bonners is 1760 or so. I would think this would hamper the "sliding" of the glacier out of the Purcell trench somewhat. Also as you go north into British Columbia the valley floor gets lower still with low water levels at Kootenay Lake being 1738 feet and the lake being as deep as 400 feet. Seems like a glacier would have more or less been trapped by the lower ground it was sitting on.

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Жыл бұрын

    Sliding? Glaciers push in like bulldozers. Trapped in the low points? Not with an entire continent of ice pushing behind it.

  • @trebornoslo1951
    @trebornoslo1951 Жыл бұрын

    @@swirvinbirds1971 I realize that glaciers do "push like a bulldozer" but there is no evidence of moraines left behind as the glacier would have melted back north on the flat ground just north of the Sandpoint area. Seems like there would have been moraines left in that area. There are none in the Kootenai Valley as well and no dropped boulders on the valley floor that might have been trapped in floating icebergs while there was a sizeable ancient glacial lake.

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Жыл бұрын

    @@trebornoslo1951 absolutely false. The terminal moraine from the ice dam can still be found in the Clark Fork Valley today.

  • @rickmarosi4546
    @rickmarosi45462 жыл бұрын

    This map here of the glacier that dammed up the Clarkfork (2:40) is the largest I've seen presented, and they are never the same size. Obviously ice 2000 ft thick would pile up some large moraines, right? Please show me some, even one. If the ice that came out of Glacier Park, Hungry Horse, & the Swan Valley produced one over 440 ft tall above shoreline of Flathead Lake, why are they missing here in Idaho with your many different spreading lobes?

  • @livewire2k4
    @livewire2k42 жыл бұрын

    I've been to Montana several times , can you stop calling those hills mountains please?

  • @Sphynx93rkn
    @Sphynx93rkn Жыл бұрын

    What's the problem? Is it a big deal? Like the way you put it seems like it's the end of the world issue.

  • @georgejarry3964
    @georgejarry39642 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely amazing, thank you, all the Best

  • @inspiredclassroom
    @inspiredclassroom2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, George! Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @johnheigis83
    @johnheigis832 жыл бұрын

    How would you like to study a pre Ice Age forest, under water. I found it, while doing scuba for a search and Rescue, in northern Idaho. The wood is still very useable! Billions of $$$ of it! Please respond!

  • @SeattlePioneer
    @SeattlePioneer2 жыл бұрын

    So what kinds of trees did you find, and what unusual qualities did they have? Spotted Owl nests, perhaps?

  • @johnheigis83
    @johnheigis832 жыл бұрын

    @@SeattlePioneer Wow! Great question! I can't say. I was 30 ft down in low-vis Spring runoff... Like walking through a fast flowing, thick fog, with patches of it getting a bit clearer to see into, and farther... And, the current slowed, and it was a bit more clear, on the bottom.... One patch had a bunch of them tipped over, and tangled.... With all of them being extremely straight, and useable, and valuable! I couldn't see the tops from way down there; but, I'm sure, they were Eagles... Not "Owls.". Get your birds right, son. Lol. (Some people's children! Damn!). I was just blown away, that I was basically strolling along, through a - standing - very thick Spruce forest... Like it were a fresh mowed Park. I even took my Doubles off, so I could swim under one that had fallen, long ago, that was 6 ft thick, at about 20 ft from the root-ball... And, the hole the roots left behind... Bark still on them all, too... And, they all had the same, slight lean. Incredible to witness! I want it studied! While I can still help. That was back in 1981... Looking for two dead fishermen, with Search and Rescue. And, I have a plan! And, it needs a good dive team... Preferable Saturation Divers... I want the first one. And, there are thousands and thousands of them! Any more good questions...?...

  • @SeattlePioneer
    @SeattlePioneer2 жыл бұрын

    @@johnheigis83 << And, I have a plan! And, it needs a good dive team... Preferable Saturation Divers... I want the first one. And, there are thousands and thousands of them!>> Sounds like you need the television program "Swamp loggers" or perhaps "Axe men" which does segments on underwater logging sometimes.

  • @johnheigis83
    @johnheigis832 жыл бұрын

    @@SeattlePioneer I'm familiar with them. I used to fell timber. Trust me, they could learn from my experience. They ain't good enough for this. However, thanks, to you, for the suggestion. I do need to get that done. In late summer, when the waters clear and low. Forestry personnel, who know timber sciences. A professional camera crew. And, we need to lift one out, and to get it wet-stored... ... Cut, and dried very slow, so to not check, warp or split. Can you imagine, the mineral stains in that softer wood. Thirty feet of multiple soil levels to study and test. And, to determine, if they grew before the last Ice Age, or right after Lake Missoula drained. I suspect, it's from long before!

  • @johnheigis83
    @johnheigis832 жыл бұрын

    @@SeattlePioneer Oh, too. I couldn't hear the birds tweet, or Owls hoot, way down there, cause my ears were full of water. Lol. (You do know, you were kinda being a dick; but, you did make me realize, it needed more effort.)

  • @oddsman01
    @oddsman012 жыл бұрын

    It’s amazing a glacier is capable of blocking so much water. If ice melts under pressure, there was a river of water under that mountain sized block of ice. It seems like it wouldn’t take long for extreme pressure at the base of the lake to find that river and begin carving a passage for water to flow and eat away chunks of the glacier long before the lake could reach the levels it reached.

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Жыл бұрын

    Why do people seem to think glaciers are nothing but water ice? You have massive walls of earth being bulldozed by the glacier called glacial moraines.

  • @Dontrustmycamera
    @Dontrustmycamera10 ай бұрын

    It seems incapable because it is not possible in those real world conditions. Your interpretation is correct, the ice dammed lake theory is very lacking. Just look at what happened in Lybia with the engineered dam failing. Now multiply that up to scale and do it dozens of times, while the ice sheet is simultaneously retreating. It's a nonsense theory taught as fact.

  • @nibiruresearch
    @nibiruresearch2 жыл бұрын

    An Ice Age is the result of a recurring natural disaster that occurs every 25K+ years. This is the missing link in the education of geologists. They tell us that our planet Earth has the most to fear from an asteroid impact or volcano eruptions. But when we look at the many horizontal layers that we find everywhere on our planet, we clearly see the effect of a repeating cataclysm. These disasters are mentioned in ancient books like the Mahabharata from India and the Popol Vuh from the Mayans and others. They tell us about a cycle of seven disasters that separate the world eras. Certainly, a cycle of regularly recurring global disasters cannot be caused by asteroid impacts or volcanic eruptions. The only possible cause is another celestial body, a planet, orbiting our sun in an eccentric orbit. Then it is close to the sun for a short period and after the crossing at a very high speed it disappears into the universe for a long time. Planet 9 exists, but it seems invisible. These disasters cause a huge tidal wave of seawater that washes over land "above the highest mountains." At the end it covers the earth with a layer of wet mud, a mixture of sand, clay, lime, fossils of marine and terrestrial animals and small and larger meteorites. The Northern hemisphere is covered with a layer of ice that fell down "in blocks as great as mountains". These disasters also create a cycle of civilizations. To learn much more about the recurring flood cycle, the re-creation of civilizations and its chronology and ancient high technology, read the e-book: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". It can be read on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: invisible nibiru 9

  • @marthamryglod291
    @marthamryglod2912 жыл бұрын

    I love this! Thankful to have access to this, and for free.

  • @inspiredclassroom
    @inspiredclassroom2 жыл бұрын

    Glad you like it!

  • @eriksimpson7839
    @eriksimpson78392 жыл бұрын

    The constant interruptions, which act as commercials, ruin this video.

  • @maxr.mamint8580
    @maxr.mamint8580 Жыл бұрын

    Yep. I love being constantly reminded that I dont live where there is ANY interesting geology. Like, literally nothing. (upstate South Carolina). OMG I would LOVE to see this stuff just once with my own eyes. So it is a bit annoying af to keep being reminded I can't just take a cool selfie and post it. I'm with you, Erik - leave the commercials out of it and just tell me the story.

  • @garyjaensch7143
    @garyjaensch71432 жыл бұрын

    Love the way geology denied the lake Missoula flood for 40 years, now they say they know everything about it!!! Anyone interested in truth should watch Michael J Oards flood geology series,and study his work , as well as Kurt wise, Steve Austin and Andrew Snellings, Geologists can never be wrong, because they keep changing theory’s, but direct everyone away from what’s obvious, that all the thousands of water Gaps in mountains all over the world, and planations,prove there was a worldwide flood. All the theory’s are changing again as they find what they call “ whale bones” in the Sahara desert, that were previously classified as millions of years old , but all the massive amount of vegetation that mysteriously disappeared from the Sahara 4500 years ago is perfectly explained the biblical paradigm of a worldwide flood, as real sciences like genetics show there was a large movement of hunter gatherers at the same time the vegetation disappeared 4500 years ago, and indo european languages went from 1 to 400 at the same time around the area the ark landed, and Cambridge University studies show that Australian Aborigines languages are only 4000 years old, and they say it’s “ mysterious “, no mystery in the biblical paradigm, they were some of the Hunter gathers after the flood, genetics show we go back to three as the Bible says, and the dating methods taught are absurd, 1000 year old rocks get dated up to 40 million years old, and carbon 14 is found in dinosaur bones.well worth studying and looking at the opinions of the scientists I mentioned, after all you’ve probably spent up to 18 years being taught things like Big Bang, which has this thing we know nothing about called dark energy making up most of the theory, I have an athiest friend who has 2 statues of aliens, to ask the aliens where does dark energy come from, he told me the next day that the statues told him from a certain planet starting with U, I could only agree!!!!

  • @kylehowell4560
    @kylehowell45602 жыл бұрын

    I think the ripple lines are from the lake filling from slow melting glaicers. Not from it getting empty and refilling. Just seems like way more common sense to me.

  • @jadefinchscene5644
    @jadefinchscene56442 жыл бұрын

    video would be a lot better if the subtitles were not baked in, but able to turn off like normal YT cc....

  • @inspiredclassroom
    @inspiredclassroom2 жыл бұрын

    You are in luck! We have both a closed caption version and a non-closed caption version. Here is a link kzread.info/dash/bejne/fJp2xpmAn9fFhKg.html

  • @RCSNIPER34
    @RCSNIPER342 жыл бұрын

    It could have just as easily happened in a few hundred years, but evolutionists have to put their, "once upon a time, hundreds of thousands of years ago" lol

  • @TshaajThomas
    @TshaajThomas2 жыл бұрын

    Neither a few hundred years nor hundreds of thousand of years but a few thousand years.

  • @dongillihan3329
    @dongillihan33292 жыл бұрын

    I agree 👍

  • @randallrun
    @randallrun2 жыл бұрын

    Yup, we’ll just change keep changing the story and retelling it until it fits your “angle”, where ever that comes from. Religious?

  • @swirvinbirds1971
    @swirvinbirds1971 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely not. 😂 We would have a written record of such and the scarring would still be fresh.

  • @inspiredclassroom
    @inspiredclassroom2 жыл бұрын

    Great discussion! Thanks Greg. Good ideas to get started connecting your classrooms to the world.

  • @inspiredclassroom
    @inspiredclassroom2 жыл бұрын

    Join us every week!

  • @chrisjohn1284
    @chrisjohn12842 жыл бұрын

    👍

  • @Yyyyygu6555
    @Yyyyygu65553 жыл бұрын

    How can I get a certificate from zooniverse?

  • @tomd5069
    @tomd50693 жыл бұрын

    Does it not know how to roll or step on stuff?

  • @terenceanderson1580
    @terenceanderson15803 жыл бұрын

    i see why wolves hate cougars. They are better hunters than a whole pack of wolves