Geologists of Jackson Hole
Geologists of Jackson Hole
  • Видео 206
  • Просмотров 556 211
Teton Pass Collapse
On June 8th 2024 highway 22 suffered a "catastrophic failure closing Teton Pass between Idaho and Wyoming shutting down traffic in both directions. This left 3,000 plus commuters driving two hours each way to work in Jackson Hole. WYDOT, along with numerous others built a detour around the slide in a record three weeks. This is a special presentation to address the Geology of Teton Pass (John Hebberger Jr.), why we think the road collapsed, plus the current- and longer-term Engineering solutions (WYDOT Engineering Department).
Просмотров: 782

Видео

Understanding Yellowstone
Просмотров 453Месяц назад
Understanding Yellowstone's Shaking and Baking. A geologic park with an active volcanic system containing numerous rhyolite flows. A talk by Dr. Bob Smith, University of Utah.
Mass extinction and the rise of Mammals and Reptiles in southern Pangea
Просмотров 1 тыс.Месяц назад
"Mass Extinction and the Rise of Mammals & Reptiles in southern Pangea” by Dr. Brandon R Peecook Idaho State University and Idaho Museum of Natural History Field work in Zambia and Tanzania from 2009 to 2019 has uncovered exciting new fossils of reptiles that were the ancestors of both crocodiles and birds. These fossils are Mesozoic (Permian and Triassic) in age and are important to our unders...
Secrets of the Jurassic in the Big Horn Basin
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.2 месяца назад
Secrets of the Jurassic in the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming presented by Dr. Erik Kvale Big Horn Basin Dinosaur & Geoscience Museum This is a talk about the ancient habitats occupied by Jurassic dinosaurs in north central Wyoming and their adaptations to environments as extreme as the modern Persian Gulf sabkha, the Namibian Desert, and the African savannah. It will further explore the question as to...
8 Weeks on Foot Through the Grand Canyon by James Mauch
Просмотров 3,5 тыс.3 месяца назад
This talk will weave together the story of a 57-day below-the-rim hike through the Grand Canyon completed in the fall of 2023, with documentation and vignettes of noteworthy geology encountered along the way. Emphasis will be placed on features and sites that, while lesser known, are fundamental to both the geologic history and aesthetic grandeur of this landscape.
What Is Happening with our Teton Glaciers
Просмотров 4054 месяца назад
The Tetons are a mountain range in northwest Wyoming, USA. Glaciers are responsible for some of the Teton Range’s most iconic features and remain integral to the alpine ecosystem and the recreational visitor experience. Like other alpine glaciers, ice area and volume in the Tetons peaked during the Little Ice Age (LIA). Much work remains to be done to document glacial change in the Teton Range ...
Jouney to the Sun
Просмотров 4046 месяцев назад
by Dr. Michael Adler The Sun brings us light, heat and we would not be here without it. What do you know about our Star? Do you have any idea of how it produces its light and heat, will it get hotter or cooler, how did it begin and how long it will last, why eclipses and aurora happen, and where did all the elements (O, C, Fe, etc.) in the universe come from? Special note that there will be a t...
Returning to the Moon-The Adventure Begins Again-on Earth
Просмотров 3338 месяцев назад
Presented by Dr. Shannon Kobs Nawotniak, ISU Humans last set foot on the Moon more than 50 years ago during the Apollo 17 mission. NASA's new Artemis mission program is set to bring us back in the next few years, putting people on the south pole of the Moon and expanding on our current robotic missions searching for water and other volatiles that could be used as in situ resources. Technology h...
Tales from the Soup Bowl ie the Snake River Aquifer
Просмотров 3668 месяцев назад
Presented by Dr. Dave Adam PhD in Geology/Geophysics from the University of Oregon There have been numerous investigations into the alluvial aquifer which provides drinking water for southern Jackson Hole. Among the earlier studies was the USGS geophysical effort to determine the depth to bedrock in the area, i.e. the size and shape of what Dave Love called “the soup bowl”. Analysis of samples ...
Hawaiian Eruptions Since 2018: Kilauea and Mauna Loa Volcanoes
Просмотров 2309 месяцев назад
Presented by Dr. Robert I.Tilling USGS / Geologists of Jackson Hole Hawaiian volcanoes are among the most active in the world. Their eruptions and dynamics have been closely studied by staff of the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) and other volcanologists for many decades. In his public lecture, Bob Tilling will present some highlights-complemented by video clips-of the post-2018 Hawaiia...
Thoughts on the Displacement and Inception of the Teton Fault, Wyoming*
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.9 месяцев назад
Presented byJohn O.D. Byrd of ByrdGEO Ph.D., Geophysics, University of Utah A Laramide age interpretation for the Gros Ventre Range (GVR) has also settled into the literature as a "given". As a result, deformation of Miocene and younger deposits on the east side of the range has been attributed to displacement on the Teton fault. However, the magnitude, orientation, and variation in deformation...
The Age of Dinosaurs in Idaho: Inland Seas and Upland Dinosaurs
Просмотров 73911 месяцев назад
Presented by Dr. L.J. Krumenacker Distinguished Professor Idaho State University Dr. Krumenacker will discuss the organisms that inhabited the tropical seas of Idaho in the Triassic and the bizarre transitional Cretaceous dinosaurs of Idaho that lived upland from an ancient seaway that covered central North America (and Wyoming).
The Spectacular Yet Somewhat Forgotten Bonneville Flood
Просмотров 2,6 тыс.11 месяцев назад
Presented by Shawn Willsey Distinguished Geology Professor College of Southern Idaho Largely overshadowed and understudied compared to the more popular Missoula Floods of the Pacific Northwest, the Bonneville Flood boldly inscribed record of its dramatic passage on the stark landscapes of southern and western Idaho. The flood’s story begins with immense Lake Bonneville during the cooler and we...
Adventures at a High Altitude Lead-Zinc Mine Ganesh Himal-Nepal
Просмотров 33911 месяцев назад
Presented by Dr. Liz King Westhills Community College Ganesh Himal is in north central Nepal in the higher Himalaya near the border with Tibet. In 1992, during a semester abroad as an undergraduate Geology student, the author was fortunate to be able to visit the Ganesh Himal mine for an independent study project. The mine entrance is located at 4,115 meters (13,500 feet). At the time, the Gane...
Colorado River Science & Management in an Epic Drought
Просмотров 27011 месяцев назад
The Colorado River system is in the midst of a prolonged drought that threatens water, energy, and food supplies in the American West. Winter snow in 2023, has provided some relief to the system, but the cumulative impact of 20-plus years of water deficit means strategies to balance supply and demand pressures on the system are as critical today as they were yesterday. Dam management of the Col...
A River Out of Time, The Colorado River 150 years after John Wesley Powell
Просмотров 370Год назад
A River Out of Time, The Colorado River 150 years after John Wesley Powell
Bazarre Secrets of Fractures in the Flathead Sandstone and Why They Matter for Geothermal Everywhere
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.Год назад
Bazarre Secrets of Fractures in the Flathead Sandstone and Why They Matter for Geothermal Everywhere
A Complete Weather History for Jackson Hole
Просмотров 804Год назад
A Complete Weather History for Jackson Hole
The Webb Telescope and Beyond
Просмотров 335Год назад
The Webb Telescope and Beyond
Chert! Extensive Preservation of Glass Meadows
Просмотров 2,7 тыс.Год назад
Chert! Extensive Preservation of Glass Meadows
Removal of the N. paleoTeton Range along the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: New Research and Insights
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.Год назад
Removal of the N. paleoTeton Range along the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: New Research and Insights
Greater Yellowstone Climate Assessment
Просмотров 449Год назад
Greater Yellowstone Climate Assessment
Insights from Surfical Geologic Mapping in NW Wyoming
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.Год назад
Insights from Surfical Geologic Mapping in NW Wyoming
Predicting the Future of the Greenland Ice-sheet
Просмотров 552Год назад
Predicting the Future of the Greenland Ice-sheet
Critical Minerals Research in Southern Wyoming
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.Год назад
Critical Minerals Research in Southern Wyoming
The Green River Formation A Paleontological Overview
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.Год назад
The Green River Formation A Paleontological Overview
Yellowstone Explained
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 года назад
Yellowstone Explained
In The Footsteps of the Early Bone Diggers in Southwest Wyoming and Badlands National Park
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.2 года назад
In The Footsteps of the Early Bone Diggers in Southwest Wyoming and Badlands National Park
Wyoming The Nucleus of North America
Просмотров 28 тыс.2 года назад
Wyoming The Nucleus of North America
Wyoming Tapirs
Просмотров 5852 года назад
Wyoming Tapirs

Комментарии

  • @danlowe8684
    @danlowe8684 9 часов назад

    Ames Construction is top notch, so this is a plus. Nice to hear the truth about the '20-year drought' and the fact that the past 5 years have, in fact, seen excess moisture. I imagine that plowing the snow onto the slope also contributes to more moisture intrusion. I wonder when the powerlines and maintenance road located 600' north of the slide were installed and if the vibration associated with the foundation construction (pile driving) may have contributed to the slide? Or even the change in water runoff from said construction? Just a thought. Thank you for the presentation!

  • @deannekwon6822
    @deannekwon6822 2 дня назад

    I love that answer! Great sense of humor!

  • @monster0_0
    @monster0_0 4 дня назад

    The Green New Deal is a scam. We need hybrid/nuclear with efficiency and to limit waste.

  • @ChrisM541
    @ChrisM541 5 дней назад

    What an incredibly fascinating, well produced and presented video. I knew a little about the importance of James Hutton in this field and of his ground breaking insight into Siccar Point but I didn't appreciate that so much of Scotland was/is ideally positioned to reveal so many secrets of how the continents were formed. Huge thanks for sharing this and educating us.

  • @johnnash5118
    @johnnash5118 13 дней назад

    Before viewing Dr. Fougle’s presentation, I’ve suspected (despite populist teachings) that there is indeed a Hawaiian mantle plume; however, strong convective mantle upwelling from deep mantle (not a mantle plume, but via spreading centers) is the source of the other Large Igneous Provinces identified as “hot spots.” As enhancement of a relatively small section of a spreading ridge acquires more asthenospheric mantle decompression and heat than the adjacent spreading ridge; MOREOVER, it creates a feedback loop with crustal extension, mounding up faster than it can be conveyed, thus resulting in the 40 km thick crust. Yellowstone is not a mantle plume, it’s an enhanced Spreading/Decompression Center directly related to the adjacent Basin & Range extension, via the continental over-ridden mantle convection upwelling. Yellowstone and the B & R are proof that mantle convective upwelling hasn’t died out over the 50MA since it was over-ridden. @58:00, there is another hypothesis to why the latest Hawaiian super-shield volcanoes have increased in volume by an order of magnitude over the early volcanoes. Instead of increasing the rate of upwelling, the same can be done with decreased rate of plate movement.

  • @rosiealaniz3205
    @rosiealaniz3205 20 дней назад

    Fantastic presentation! Just finished my geology 101 and your presentation solidified most concepts i just learned. Thank you so much!!

  • @bingyoung3228
    @bingyoung3228 Месяц назад

    Very interesting as I watch this a year later. I always sort of wondered why the Tetons were such a short range, as far as N-S distance goes, yet so high and dramatic. And why they seem to so abruptly end just before Yellowstone. That 30 or 40% of the range got devoured by the YHS seems to make intuitive sense in light of these data and this study. Someone asked where all the material from the old northern end of the Tetons went--did it go to the Snake River Plain, for example? I have always figured that it was melted into the Yellowstone cauldron down in or near the mantle and didn't go anywhere. Is that what most folks think? It was mentioned that because the basement rocks of the Tetons and rhyolites of Yellowstone have essentially the same chemistry, it would be hard to tell one from the other--if I understood the answer. Question: Didn't the YHS also destroy the southern ends of the Lemhi and Lost River Ranges--and probably others--as it buzzsawed its way through Southern Idaho. Some think that those ranges, among others, ran south all the way to existing ranges in Nevada and Utah in the Basin and Range, pre Yellowstone hot spot. Anyway, if so, I don't believe the Southern Lemhis or Lost Rivers are made of the same rock as the Tetons, or at least not all of them--there's a lot of limestones in parts of the Lemhis and Lost Rivers for example, along with slates and preCambiran Belt quartzites--a variety of stuff--but I never hear "granite" mentioned among them. So, if there was anything to find of those southern ranges now missing, would we be able to find evidence anywhere? Difficult I know, as much of the Snake River plain is now covered with much newer basalts from the much more recent rifting fizzures such as Craters of the Moon. But still, I have always wondered whether you could find chuncks of those old mountain ranges embedded in the rhyolites of the older YSP exposures in Idaho. The fact that I have never heard of such a thing, at least yet, suggests to me that the YHS must melt and swallow everything that passes over it into its deep hot cauldron, never to be seen again, at lest in prior form. Another question, or point I am always confused about. What is the relationship, if any, between the "migrating" YHS and Basin and Range extension? Did the B & R extension start before the arrival of the YHS? Or has the eastern boundary of the Basin and Range (i.e. the Tetons and the Wasatch today) always been just south of the YHS? Or is it a mere coincidence that the eastern edge of the Basin and Range and its fault systems going to Southern Utah happen to lie at the same longitude today as the YHS, but haven't in the past and won't in the future? I have assumed that the movement of the YHS is the same speed as that which the North American plate slides west, and that the Great basin expansion is driven by the rifting of the Baja Peninsula away from North American continent, continuing into California and Nevada, whatever speed that is, which means the processes are independent of each other. But are they? I am not a geologist but have read what I can, and what I can digest, for many years now, and this question keeps coming up in my head. Thank you for making these excellent presentations available to us thousands of miles away. I live in Puerto Vallarta Mexico now, at the base of the Sierra Madre del Sur batholith (which I wish I could find any videos or books about, geologically). But I spent part of my youth in the western shadow of the Tetons, on a farm I now learn was part of the Heise caldera of Old Yellowstone. Not many places on earth more breathtaking than the Tetons. Too bad if we lost half of them to Yellowstone's passing!

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek Месяц назад

    I'm pretty certain the "Bonneville flood" neither started from, nor was caused by Lake Bonneville, a puddle left by the "flood" you see signs of, that came from the east, not the south or the west.

  • @antony5430
    @antony5430 Месяц назад

    you showed a map of the landmass of that time. Did they had a north and south pool and snow. Was the weather climate different?

  • @zach2980
    @zach2980 Месяц назад

    With the vast diversity of life over the past hundreds of millions of years on Earth and the difficulty they encountered, I would bet anything that we are indeed aliens ourselves. Or rather that life almost certainly exists elsewhere in the universe.

  • @zach2980
    @zach2980 Месяц назад

    This is tragically underviewed.

  • @NullHand
    @NullHand Месяц назад

    Sedimentary rocks mostly form underwater. Many of them incorporate naked eye visible sea creatures as they form (limestone). The retrospective landmass arrangements the geologists display (like Pangea here) are predominantly put together based on rocks formed in the coastal and Continental shelf seas, and the fossilized sea creatures left in them.

  • @leechild4655
    @leechild4655 Месяц назад

    I thought everyone knew by now the Permian extinction was primarily from volcanism but the big driver were the buried coal beds being ignited provding fuel to last for so many years. It took about 5 million years to begin a recovery and it was the largest explosion of life since the carboniforius

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek Месяц назад

    I doubt you would even recognize Earth of ONE million years ago, much less the planet almost 250 times older! You guys always start out with "maps" that show the Earth of today (screwed around, but still in the modern shapes). I suspect Earth was flatter, with far less water (less than ten percent as much).

    • @rogeriopenna9014
      @rogeriopenna9014 Месяц назад

      Talk for yourself, short lived mortal. I remember it as if yesterday

    • @TheAnarchitek
      @TheAnarchitek Месяц назад

      @@rogeriopenna9014 It was yesterday, in terms of planet Earth's life (the last 5%), on a planet continuing to evolve in its middle age. The Boxer "carries the reminders, Of ev'ry glove that laid him down, Or cut him till he cried out, In his anger and his shame, 'I am leaving, I am leaving'"

  • @JustSumRandomGuy-ex6rw
    @JustSumRandomGuy-ex6rw Месяц назад

    Not trying to be rude but the speaker sounds "shitfaced".

  • @ocko8011
    @ocko8011 Месяц назад

    A real passion for history and sophistication to explain it eloquently!

  • @dancooper8551
    @dancooper8551 Месяц назад

    Excellent presentation!

  • @user-jl6wc1jz3s
    @user-jl6wc1jz3s Месяц назад

    Go Badgers

  • @mikezimmermann2908
    @mikezimmermann2908 Месяц назад

    James, you are a total badass! What a great trip! 8 years of prep, wow! I am impressed and happy for you. Great presentation, very informative. Awesome! 🙂

  • @jersey63
    @jersey63 Месяц назад

    Mr. Mauch, Thank you for this excellent lecture about your adventure through the Grand Canyon. I so enjoyed your hiking experience and the geology lesson! The hiking is something I’ll never do but loved the chance to see your trip and all of the historical geology. Well done Sir!

  • @fully_retractable
    @fully_retractable Месяц назад

    Lip smacking lecture

  • @carytodd7211
    @carytodd7211 Месяц назад

    What a wonderful presentation of such a tantalizing and intriguing landscape and geologic history. You mention, almost in passing, that you felt the urge to climb up tothe top of Vulcan's Throne. That's hard to do even from the bottom of the cone--at the RIM of the canyon. To climb the infamous Lava Falls route, and then to ascend to the top of Vulcan's Throne requires a level of physical fitness and perspicacity that is unbelievable. I would imagine you're one of a VERY small number of people who have climbed the Lava Falls Route and then descended it--in that order, as most people likely start from the top.

  • @kurtanderson1463
    @kurtanderson1463 Месяц назад

    Interesting. I "boated" off the coast of NF in the 80s drilling on a semi submersible a couple hundred Km east. Loved the country, but not an igneous/metamorphic fan. Still, I was interested in that geology (I'm a geologist). Not much of that in your talk but impressive pics.

  • @harold.one.feather
    @harold.one.feather Месяц назад

    Smack smack lips smacking is atrocious just completely detracts from the video….

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek 2 месяца назад

    I'd like to ask one question: Why do you (geologists) assume Earth was always the way it is today? Continents, oceans, mountains, rivers, and other details show signs of radical change, in widely separated locations, and often, repeatedly. Assuming facts not in evidence is not science. Earth of only 10,000 years ago looked very different, and Earth of one million years ago would be unrecognizable to humans of today! "Heraclitus, I believe, says that all things pass and nothing stays, and comparing existing things to the flow of a river. He says you could not step twice into the same river.” - Plato" Earth, it's environment and topography, are part of the River of Time, the ever-changing instant of "Now!" that carries us all along. It is illogical to believe the planet, with its undeniable scars, would be immune to the vicissitudes of change over time. It's been cruising around a violent galaxy for four-point-five-billion years. There is no way it escaped untouched, and the landscape testifies to that.

  • @stevewhalen6973
    @stevewhalen6973 2 месяца назад

    Brilliant man , fascinating presentation . There is so much happening , with so much unfathomable time involved. Our lives are only a quick little snapshot.

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek 2 месяца назад

    As an early visitor to Jackson Hole (circa 1957), I've seen enough changes around the American West, to know there is a lot of misinformation in this video. The Tetons were NOT pushed up "millions of years ago", geologists' favorite dating term, but far more recently. The soils distribution was caused by a massive "flood" that swept across the West, from the "river" that flowed from the Arctic to the mid-Atlantic. It rebounded, as water does (pick up a claw-foot bathtub, some time, to see this in action), and carried the same sediments back and forth, scattering them far and wide.

  • @neebeeshaabookwayg6027
    @neebeeshaabookwayg6027 2 месяца назад

    Thank you!!!!!❤❤❤🎉🪨🪨🪨☁️⛅️☁️☀️

  • @neebeeshaabookwayg6027
    @neebeeshaabookwayg6027 2 месяца назад

    Thank you ❤❤❤🎉

  • @bryancurry1898
    @bryancurry1898 2 месяца назад

    I would recommend “The Man Who Walked Through Time,” by Colín Fletcher. Your hike was more ambitious than his, but you might find it entertaining. As he was preparing for his hike, he talked to many people, many of whom said that he should talk to Dr. Harvey Butchart. I actually took a class in Real Analysis from him, but never hiked with him. The longest hike I have taken was Bass to Tanner on the Tonto.

  • @karenabel6218
    @karenabel6218 3 месяца назад

    How did you carry enough food for 8 weeks in a backpack???

    • @SenorTucano
      @SenorTucano Месяц назад

      He ate his companions one by one

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek 3 месяца назад

    If you would look out the window, at those sharp peaks that made Jackson Hole famous, if you would say those mountains are "millions of years old" (much less "billions"), I'd say you don't know much about Planet Earth. Starting with its famous "reducing atmosphere". Plate tectonics do NOT explain the mega-ranges, the Andes, Himalayas, Rockies/Sierra Madres, Sierra Nevadas, et al. Those ranges were pushed up by other means, and in doing so, the Grand Canyon came to be. The "Great Unconformity" was probably a mystery to Charlie Brown but a few looks around, and one notices great upheaval, twisted rocks, and more than enough signs of something driving a very large chunk of old crust (ONAC), into the fractured craton holding the Colorado Plateau, pinned against the "accretionary plate" running from Siberia to Guatemala. An inland sea lay on top of much of the region, and a waterway traveled from the Arctic Ocean, to the mid-Atlantic region, where the Gulf of Mexico now sits (it had been on the other side of the ocean, off Africa). Something MORE than mere plate tectonics was at work, and not that long ago, because NONE of the great ranges of Earth SHOW "millions of years" of weathering, much less "billions"! There is a very different story that explains all of this, without the caveats, oopsi-doodles, and the "Great Unconformity" to poke a plot hole big enough for a semi truck to drive through! The ROCKS are old, made back when Earth was in the rock production phase. Their current location, appearance, and conditions, are far more modern than these OLD theories allow for. I bet there isn't a geologist alive who would recognize Earth of only ONE million years ago, instead of the plural version they insist on.

  • @lundysden6781
    @lundysden6781 3 месяца назад

    trip of your life!

  • @kimklinzman2919
    @kimklinzman2919 3 месяца назад

    WOW!!!!!!!!!!👍💙

  • @harold.one.feather
    @harold.one.feather 3 месяца назад

    Gravel terrace gold hahahahahaha thank you for your journey and illuminating us about the gold in the gravel haahahahahahahahaha

  • @angelmordant7868
    @angelmordant7868 3 месяца назад

    really nice and accessible talk ! thank you James !!!

  • @ivycantu5006
    @ivycantu5006 3 месяца назад

    Wow!!!!,,It so amazing the depth science goes to prove ( only thing ) is that they refuse to believe in GOD- As Supreme creator of life itself. No big words nor math can explain it!!! Its really sad to listen to this,,,I cant imagine any human with a brain would actually believe this nonsense. I just watched this to here it from your point of view. This is very sad,,My imagination could come up with a more convention,,,other than God,,why you all came up with this just proves God as Supreme creater.sad science spends wasted money,peoples life dedicated to these [ theories ] no facts,not one???👀👀🤔😢😢😢😢. I gave you my full attention to hear you out.😢 ok I give you this,,,Beer gets warm,coffee gets cold. I agree.😂

  • @pauldaystar
    @pauldaystar 3 месяца назад

    This is False info. Please Consider "The Electric Universe / The Thunderbolt Project,

  • @johnwren6138
    @johnwren6138 3 месяца назад

    Could have been rehearsed.

  • @micheleploeser7720
    @micheleploeser7720 3 месяца назад

    Just one kind of video I’m glad I found this one great work guys and gals thank you bye-bye

  • @ScienceWars
    @ScienceWars 4 месяца назад

    Superb presentation. Diolch yn fawr iawn, James!

  • @Findammir
    @Findammir 4 месяца назад

    🎉🎉🎉 ❤

  • @whitby910
    @whitby910 4 месяца назад

    Excellent and fascinating. A lot of work. Thank you (all).

  • @whitby910
    @whitby910 4 месяца назад

    Excellent, thank you.

  • @tifacola
    @tifacola 4 месяца назад

    I just want to know what my house was built on.

  • @harold.one.feather
    @harold.one.feather 4 месяца назад

    the world gets struck by meteorites more frequently than folks want to admit hahahahahaha and these time scales are meaningless at the geologic scale, we are not even a going concern

  • @harold.one.feather
    @harold.one.feather 4 месяца назад

    layers and layers of melted rocks, some very recent says lots about the reality of catastrophic meteorite impacts

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 4 месяца назад

    Great talk. It's why the western US is so interesting. We should also thank the dry climate, which makes the landforms visible.

  • @dancooper8551
    @dancooper8551 5 месяцев назад

    Excellent presentation but I watched this same presentation somewhere else. Can someone enlighten me where it was previously posted.

  • @billhollinshead7843
    @billhollinshead7843 5 месяцев назад

    Beartooths had (and may still have) some telephone pole sized beryls