- Видео 186
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Kiersti Ford
Добавлен 16 мар 2020
Видео
Welcome to Summer ☀️ 2024!
Просмотров 977 месяцев назад
Welcome to Summer 2024! This class moves really fast, so be prepared to work hard!
Dr. John Wakabayashi talks with Fresno City College Students
Просмотров 3910 месяцев назад
Dr. John Wakabayashi talks with Fresno City College Students
NSCI 115 Course Project Description
Просмотров 15910 месяцев назад
NSCI 115 Course Project Description
Seismogram Interpretation - Magnitudes Part 2
Просмотров 9211 месяцев назад
Seismogram Interpretation - Magnitudes Part 2
Welcome to California Geology Spring 2024
Просмотров 56Год назад
Welcome to California Geology Spring 2024
Earth's Geosphere: Glaciers & Climate Change
Просмотров 107Год назад
Earth's Geosphere: Glaciers & Climate Change
Earth's Geosphere: Glaciers & Climate Change Introduction
Просмотров 42Год назад
Earth's Geosphere: Glaciers & Climate Change Introduction
Awesome
This is great! I’m going to Yosemite next year, now I understand how it came to be.
“Desert area kind of” looks like. Verbal flab. Delete three words.
“Abandoned” and “basically abandoned” have the same meaning. Shorter is better than longer.
“Continuous erosion” can replace ‘continual erosion processes.” Less wordy, more direct.
Nasal, unpleasant voice. And some vocal crackle. Stopped listening. Read the captions.
I found this video absolutely useful and informative! Being a Geog teacher, I am empowered to teach the simpler way to navigate topographic maps. Thank you so much!
Frost wedging
Why u say jacinto like that? 😂
Pronunciations: CarrpenterEEah Doheenie (meenie my knee moh.) Eeerock. NOT Eye-rack.
Good video. Not sure when this was made but the Hayward and Rogers Creek faults have been shown to be a single fault with some suggesting the name Rogers Creek Fault be retired. There are also signs that the Hayward and Calaveras Faults are merged and that the Southern Calaveras be renamed the southern Hayward Fault. if this is all true then the implications for a large quake on the Hayward Fault which is generally considered to be the most dangerous are significant.
Mount San Gorgonio 11,503 feet Mount San Jacinto 10,834 ft Mount San Antonio 10,064 ft Pretty sure they haven't changed since I took Geology 101.
The San Andreas cuts east of Wrightwood, separating San Gorgonios, which certainly ARe R transverse. San Jacinto[s ] Santa Rosas, Lagunas, and Palpmars trend NW -SE Population sprawl has radically, significantly covered natural landscapes. Coastal cliffs significantly erode on the entire coast. Sierra Nevada still goes up. Expect change, nothing in the universe is static.
Change is the stuff of reality, the moment of NOW!, already gone. Everything put together falls apart. Entropy. It's inevitable.
wow ❤so amazing
Crystal cave is in seq np
Are the Sierra Pelonas part of any of these ranges? Is it a separate range and if so, shouldn't they also be included in this list of transverse ranges?
Hey. Just randomly came across your video. Do you have a link to those pages for helping to identify the rocks and minerals. It’s a nicely laid out flowchart.
Thanks for the video! Helpful tip: "jacinto" is pronounced "HAH SEEN TOE." If it were spelled "jUacinto", then you'd pronounce it "HWAH SEEN TOE"
a year ago Tulare flooded and cities went underwater in california, as you said it is clay soil so it gathers water. would be nice to have lakes again in california, as farmers stole all the water from the largest lakes by digging water canals to go onto their property to get free water for farming. of course humans always destroy the beauty and usefulness of nature, when more econmic value could be obtained long-term from simply keeping it beautiful and working with the land
Not "discovered" by settlers, it was taken over by settlers for mining specifically Sonora, 1849.
Can you try 1000000 degree knife?
I can't believe you got the part about discovery so wrong. Obviously these mountains were first discovered by Colombus, lol
Very interesting lecture, could have done without your opinion on Los Angelinos being greedy regarding Owens Lake. Please focus on the subject because you are very interesting and you capture people’s attention, they’ll come up with their own conclusions.
Thanks for the video
Geography, geology, and oil refining all in one video. Well done. My last job was writing training manuals for oil refinery operators.
All my backyard. Born & grew up in SoCal. So much has been learned about these areas since I last studied geology in 72.
The spring scale isn't in enough focus for the numbers on it to be really legible.
❤very informative😊thanks
5:20 - 5:32 I agree the State Rock oughta be granite just because there's more _of_ it in CA than any other rock; but this is a prime example of how CA's coastal culture (including viticulture) often enjoys an advantage over other areas of the state that are more diverse in geology, geography, climate, etc. than along coastal areas that are influenced by its proximity to the ocean in several ways. There's no question that you go inboard of the Coast Range/Franciscan Complex and you'll find fewer large settlements of people and less diversity in economics, i.e., tourism, defense industry, aerospace, entertainment, etc. etc. There's a palpable bias in favor of the coastal megalopolis in CA, and I'm sure that has an oversized influence on what CA has chosen to select as their "State Rock."
Thats cool how they all align parralell
Nice presentation Watching from Darwin Ca.
8:15 The Sierra Nevada wasn’t discovered by settlers it was home to many native people well before then.
6:02 It's pronounced Y.....reka. Not Eureka. Eureka is on the coast.
What school is offering this course?
What school is offering this course?
It's the Santa ClarITA Valley and Simi is pronounced like see-me.
Thank you!
a most excellent video thank you
This is awesome. I've been trying to learn more about the geology of the Klamaths and you made it make sense. Thank you!
I'm not sure I can take you seriously if you're making an error 40 seconds into the video. The image is of the Ojai region, with the Oxnard plain in the lower right, and Cuyama Valley in the upper left. Interstate 5 is not in the picture. San Antonio is not the tallest peak in the transverse range. San Gorgonio is ~ 1500ft higher. No mention of San Emidgio Mountains.
That is something that has happened around North East Ohio and land owners sell and builders build then buyers have had the horrible experience of seeing their house start shifting and it becomes a total loss. I think in one case the land owner/builder sued a township because they would not issue a building permit for one of his lots, too bad he got his way.
can you share the notes plz
I've never heard it called the "Industrial-Medical Revolution". Generally, the slow build of scientific development led to the 17th century precursor sparks of the scientific revolution, and this pushed the beginning of the industrial revolution to formation, than the industrial revolution played back onto the scientific revolution that birthed it in a sort of recursive manner. Capitalism was developing from the remnants of feudalism and closures but wasn't quite a major mode of production until the 18th century. It was not capitalisms industrial revolution that birthed the scientific revolution, it was the scientific revolution that assisted the rise of the industrial revolution which then in turn further bolstered the scientific revolution. Because of the timing of the parallel development people wrongly thing that the scientific revolution only happened because of capitalism but that is not true, the development was leading that way anyway. I can only assume that any "medical revolution" would be a subset of the larger scientific revolution of the late 18th and 19th century which gave birth to the fields of geology, meteorology, biology, paleontology, post Linnaeus systematics and taxonomy, etc.
I enjoyed this presentation. Thank you!
Thx for the lesson
John Muir discovered evidence of Yosemite Valley glaciation. Mountains of California and My First Year in the Sierra are must reads
@8:15, it's ok, this is a grown-up forum. The Donner party event is a historical event, well documented. They got stuck in a bad location during a bad winter but, they ran out of food. They had to eat the bodies of their dead because they couldn't hunt in those conditions. Awkward but straightforward. P.S. "they don't have a lot of vegetation up there, so...". People back then we not so concerned with salads or, getting their daily fruits and vegetables. I don't see them holding off on eating just because they don't have arugula hearts. Hell, I bet they never even heard of ranch dressing.
Appreciate the overview of the Klamath!
Recedence isn’t a word 😂😂 did u mean “recession?”😅
Glaysheee ayshun? Contijjjuwuss? I can’t watch this. Failed 7th grade? 🪨 😂
I really love my clear crystals, and purple amethyst crystals, and I don't think I will ever stop wearing them, but I heard, and I don't know if it is true, that you have to reach a #8 on the MOHS Hardness scale to consider (any specific mineral) a gemstone itself, and while I won't stop wearing my amethyst and clear quartz crystals, do they measure up to a 8? I don't know conclusively myself. Lightworker-At-Large, and Energy Healer, and I am Empress Mary of The Late Lost Temple of Lemuria!!!
I built a tv tower above kings canyon