Whole Mountain of VOLCANIC GLASS! Explore the geology of Glass Mountain, California

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025

Комментарии • 266

  • @shawnwillsey
    @shawnwillsey  Год назад +4

    You can support my field videos by clicking on the "Thanks" button just above (right of Like button) or by going here: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EWUSLG3GBS5W8

    • @charliefite5143
      @charliefite5143 6 месяцев назад

      @@shawnwillsey I live 50 miles south of Mount Shasta. I’ve been up to medicine Lake glass Mountain when I was younger with my dad he used to deer hunt that area when I was a kid. I’m 71 now too far back in there for me to travel or I would go take a look.

  • @vernowen2083
    @vernowen2083 Год назад +59

    Three years ago, I was exploring with my metal detector, around my Arizona campsite, along a wash, when I came across a bunch of obsidian flakes. Obviously, someone had been knapping at this site and recent flash flooding had exposed the shards of obsidian. What surprised me the most was that much of the obsidian was obviously not native to Arizona and after reporting the area to local authorities, who excavated the site, it was reported the obsidian was from New Berry crater, in Oregon.

    • @williamchamberlain2263
      @williamchamberlain2263 Год назад +7

      Long distance trade can take quality materials a long way. _If_ i remember right, the neolithic trade across Europe and Asia Minor moved amber and lapis a long way

    • @muzikhed
      @muzikhed Год назад +9

      And mountain people used to interchange obsidian and chert etc for shells and the like from coastal tribes.

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 Год назад

      I`ve found arrowheads here in Louisiana made of stone that we don`t have in the state. I wish I could have studied geology but mental problems basically crippled me in my teens and I never received treatment. But there are no treatments...just dangerous, sedating medications that make things worse and damage the brain and body. I saw an open box deal on a Minelab Vanquish 340 metal detector for only 170 and immediately ordered it. I found about 30 coins in my very trashy yard in about two hours with it. What amazed me about it is how it can accurately identify a quarter right beside a 6 inch rusty nail.

  • @gwynnfarrell1856
    @gwynnfarrell1856 Год назад +33

    The layers of obsidian and pumice are fascinating! I didn't know that the two could be found together like that. Amazing!

    • @YewtBoot
      @YewtBoot Год назад +8

      Agree. A good example to illustrate the connectedness.

    • @coachhannah2403
      @coachhannah2403 Год назад +5

      Yup! In the SAME ROCK!
      A creek runs nearby. I knocked a bit of shore into the water by stepping too close to an undercut, and the gravel floated away downstream... 😁
      That was at Obsidian Dome near Yosemite.

    • @williamchamberlain2263
      @williamchamberlain2263 Год назад

      ​@@coachhannah2403pumice is weird as heck

  • @garypasko5314
    @garypasko5314 Год назад +18

    So in the summer of 1990, I worked for the NPS in Lava Beds NM looking for Bald Eagle barf. The bald eagle was being delisted from the endangered species list and they were creating a management plan. Anyway, on a sunny day, you could look to the south and see Glass Mountain glittering in the sunlight. Really cool!

    • @dave9351
      @dave9351 Год назад +1

      Different Glass Mountain... California is a long way from New Mexico
      Bald Eagle Barf ????

    • @tomchambers1961
      @tomchambers1961 Год назад

      I took that as National Monument Dave.....all fascinating!@@dave9351

    • @jamessmelcer616
      @jamessmelcer616 Год назад +3

      The N M is, National Monument not New Mexico. 🙂

    • @garypasko5314
      @garypasko5314 Год назад +3

      @@dave9351 NM is National Monument. They're actually called castings. Many birds of prey cannot digest certain parts of the things they eat. So they regurgitate, or cast it to the ground. However, nobody ever knew what castings were, but everybody knows what barf is. So just called it barf.

  • @levibranch7318
    @levibranch7318 Год назад +38

    What are the odds? I am from Utah and have been watching all of your videos enjoying all of them for the last two months. Trying to teach my kids about rocks and where and how they were made while driving Utah and Idaho. (Failing) Funny enough last night we drove to Sacramento though Nevada and up over Reno and Lake Tahoe. While on that drive my 9 year old asked what type all the rockets were we were seeing. My reply was oh man I haven’t watched one of Shawn’s videos of California yet too bad he isn’t in California with us. What are the odds? My 9 yr old daughter struggles with school but Volcanos and Mountains excite her and open a flood gate of hundreds of questions my wife and I try to google or learn from Shawn. Keep it up. Great content.

    • @Anne5440_
      @Anne5440_ Год назад +5

      Get her a children's book on Volcanos. Try the library in your area. Have the librarian help find books in the children's section. Then when she picks her favorite volcano books you will want to buy those. She will want her own copies. In future she may want to get books that are at older reading levels. Of course keep taking her to mountains and watching Shawn's videos. I discovered volcanos at age 5. I'm 75 now and am as passionate about volcanos today as I was at 5 years old. You're doing the right thing to encourage her. Oh also rock and mineral guides might help answering questions.

    • @nanasloves
      @nanasloves Год назад +5

      Go to craters of the moon! Later in the year when it’s not so dang hot. I loved walking in the lava tunnels.

    • @Anne5440_
      @Anne5440_ Год назад +1

      @garyb6219 that you. I agree Craters of the Moon, could be a nice vacation.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +9

      I agree with all the replies here. Best advice is to foster her interests and love of learning as best you can while you have this precious window. Once they turn 12, 13, etc. they change and lose or "bury" these interests through the adolescent years. Books, videos, museums, field trips. If you are in southern Idaho sometime, have her stop by and I'll chat with her and show her some fun rock samples. Keep encouraging her to observe the natural world, verbalize or record those observations, and ask questions. Science starts there.

    • @daphnewilson7966
      @daphnewilson7966 Год назад +1

      Sacramento to Reno: main answer: Granite! The great formations in Yosemite: granite, cut by glaciers. Over Donner Pass and down along the Truckee River, a mountain of volcanic cinders apparently being mined (?) and the dramatic rhyolite canyon down to Verdi. God Bless curiosity!

  • @mindysdad3110
    @mindysdad3110 Год назад +6

    Thanks to your classroom videos I was able to ID both rocks!

  • @GuitarPrepper
    @GuitarPrepper Год назад +12

    Newberry volcano is an amazing place to see obsidian. Thanks for another great video.

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 Год назад

      Before he even mentioned it I was seeing the similarities to Newberry.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +2

      Look for the Newberry video in coming weeks.

    • @GuitarPrepper
      @GuitarPrepper Год назад

      @shawnwillsey Thanks for your reply, can't wait to see it.

  • @jackprier7727
    @jackprier7727 Год назад +6

    Thanks for showing all these igneous relationships basalt, scoria, then gas-glass and ooze-glass. Also, the footsteps sound extra-crunchy.

  • @IndridCool54
    @IndridCool54 Год назад +4

    Very cool! And so young. I wonder about indigenous peoples recollections of this. There must be stories. 👍🏼

    • @DMLand
      @DMLand Год назад +2

      The whole time prof. Willsey as walking around on that mountain of broken glass, I couldn't help but remember Jaime de Angulo's "Indian Tales" (1953) and the "Flint people," described as living "at the foot of Black Glass Mountain … made entirely of black obsidian." Indian Tales tells ancient origin stories of the peoples of the Pacific coast. Although I can't find it in my copy of the book, I seem to remember that the Flint People were described as making the sound we hear throughout this video as they moved and talked.

  • @markrothenbuhler6232
    @markrothenbuhler6232 Год назад +6

    No kidding Glass Mountain! It sounds like you are walking on broken glass the whole time. Great video!

  • @kimburke3189
    @kimburke3189 Год назад +4

    I grew up camping at Medicine Lake. It was so cool exploring the glass mountain. we found arrowheads and the imprints of animals caught in the glass flow! we carried some obsidian rocks home to San Jose for my parent's rock garden. That was back in the 1960s. Thanks for reminding me of good times!

  • @hanspeterplanzer1837
    @hanspeterplanzer1837 Год назад +2

    Thank you. From switzerland. 🙂

  • @skyedog24
    @skyedog24 Год назад +3

    Well I got one out of two I know obsidian well my grandparents were RockHounds you would think I would have guessed pumice as well .
    The folds were the most amazing part of this video.

    • @briane173
      @briane173 Год назад +4

      Indeed. I'm blown away by the layering of two such different rock types that _form_ so differently. The pasty nature of the flow promotes all the folding, but what's amazing to me is that the two layers are able to hold their composition even while in contact with each other.

  • @ruthiemay423
    @ruthiemay423 Год назад +1

    Instead of toothpaste, it reminds me of watching a taffy machine. What a fascinating place. I would be inclined to have a desire to take home a truckload... ❤❤❤

  • @juliesiff1
    @juliesiff1 Год назад

    Thanks! That was AWESOME 😮❤

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Thanks for your kind donation. Glad you enjoyed this amazing place.

  • @oscarmedina1303
    @oscarmedina1303 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks Shawn! Very enjoyable video. Now on my list of places to visit.

  • @jamessmelcer616
    @jamessmelcer616 Год назад +3

    Glad to see you in my neck of the woods Shawn! I am fourth generation Siskiyou and Modoc county native.( not Indian) In the summer of 1970 I worked on a fire crew at Lava Beds National Monument. In my free time I explored the area extensively, plus I hunted mule deer in this area. It is truly fascinating and beautiful,lots of lava tubes etc. Great post Shawn keep em coming!👍👏❤️😁

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Lots more from your area coming soon. I did several videos at lava beds.

  • @bottomup12
    @bottomup12 Год назад +2

    Nailed the quiz thanks to your rock identification videos. 🤓 What a cool place that was once very hot.

  • @jjensen551
    @jjensen551 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @rudyrod100
    @rudyrod100 Год назад +1

    Your videos are bad ass! Thanks.

  • @hestheMaster
    @hestheMaster Год назад +3

    Coolest looking rocks ever. So much differences in the types making up the layers. Weather changes have played havoc in
    the cooled rock , cracking everything up, which actually came out of the Earth surface slowly about 950 years ago. Nice
    to actually see this on video Shawn. There are many small volcanoes that make up the area to the north and yet to see
    those. Plus the shield volcano that is Medicine Lake. Recommend very sturdy footwear here!

  • @lornaperryman489
    @lornaperryman489 Год назад +1

    What a great lesson. First time I ran into your channel, won't be the last.😊

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Welcome aboard! Enjoy the existing videos. Lots of choices.

  • @celticmugwump
    @celticmugwump Год назад

    Thanks

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Thank you for your kind support. Very much appreciated.

  • @GrandmasterBBC
    @GrandmasterBBC Год назад +2

    You're in the field video tours are amazing. What an incredible geologic playground.

  • @ricksanderson4640
    @ricksanderson4640 Год назад +2

    Really interesting location, had no idea about the relationship between obsidian and pumice. Thanks for the work you do, really enjoy it

  • @surendersingal2192
    @surendersingal2192 Год назад +1

    Thank you sir for showing this glass mountain.
    Looked rock for Fence building but there seems more to it glass n floatabioity.
    Good day jussojuan

  • @jerrywills
    @jerrywills Год назад

    Fantastic! Really enjoy all you do! This one was, for me, terrific!

  • @craigruth8124
    @craigruth8124 2 месяца назад

    I visited Glass Mountain about two years ago. Nice to learn more about the geology of it. Thanks

  • @Rachel.4644
    @Rachel.4644 Год назад

    The folds are just crazy....so clearly defined by the obsidian and pumice! Spectacular, Shawn. It looks sharp and tricky.

  • @davidk7324
    @davidk7324 Год назад +2

    Remarkable is right. Google videos of taffy pulling machines. I remember seeing them at the Idaho State Fair when I was a kid in the 60s. That's the metaphor that immediately sprung to my mind.

  • @meredithfrench5258
    @meredithfrench5258 Год назад

    What a great location to illustrate both. Wish I was still teaching. Thanks

  • @mickie7873
    @mickie7873 Год назад

    Fassninating to see the folds of lava that had been flowing......and the inserts of Obsidian ot lava that had cooled and was exposed during the flow episode. Thank you for sharing on film this site!!

  • @pattilemonhouse7911
    @pattilemonhouse7911 8 месяцев назад

    I was looking at that very steep incline, which can be challenging enough, but you're talking at the same time. Geology keeps you fit! 👍

  • @SkepticalRaptor
    @SkepticalRaptor Год назад +2

    I thought you were close to me, since I’m not far from Glass Mountain, but my Glass Mountain is in Mono County and is part of the Long Valley Caldera. I didn’t know there was another Glass Mountain in California. Anyway, very interesting volcano.

  • @muzikhed
    @muzikhed Год назад

    Truely fantastic. I'd never seen such close contact with Pumise and Obsidian. Amazing folding of those layers of Obsidian. Fascinating. Nice find Shawn !

  • @cynthialeadavidson8847
    @cynthialeadavidson8847 4 месяца назад

    FANTASTIC!!!!!!

  • @nathanmarchant2175
    @nathanmarchant2175 Год назад

    Great footage & comentary! Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I'm from Utah & have some nice pieces of obsidian in my front yard My mother used to take us to Glass Mountain when we would go to Medicine Lake

  • @sharonseal9150
    @sharonseal9150 Год назад +6

    Thanks as always for an entertaining and informative geology video - love that you take us to so many places! One question I had on the obsidian - does each flow have a distinct enough chemical signature that it can be used to associate artifacts made from it?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +3

      Yes, trace elements in obsidian can often be traced back to their original source.

  • @EloiseBarker-py9fh
    @EloiseBarker-py9fh Год назад

    WOW Damn that is so cool. Thanks for showing all the beauty of geology.

  • @kristinh9140
    @kristinh9140 Год назад

    Very cool! Thank you for sharing.

  • @aubreyleonae4108
    @aubreyleonae4108 Год назад

    I was privileged to study three years under a Dartmouth trained geologist in high school, at Henley HS in Klamath . He had a pregnant wife as he began his doctoral dissertation and took a job with USGS, never getting back to his PhD. I majored in geology at OSU, but paused to get married and never made it back. Oye vey. Love your channel so far. Thanks for your work.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Cool story. Thanks for watching. Glad you can get back to your geo roots.

    • @Eyebagdude
      @Eyebagdude Год назад

      I am a Henley graduate

  • @lawrencet83
    @lawrencet83 Год назад +3

    Are you going to visit Mt. Lassen? I used to camp there and climbed to the peak. It's amazing to hike on a potentially active volcano in California. I live in Houston now where there is no volcanoes, and no earthquakes. Just hot temperatures and hurricanes.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +2

      Yes, I visited Lassen on the same trip but unfortunately, was there the day the remnants of Hurricane Hilary hit the area so it was socked in and rainy. I did do two videos though that I will likely post in the coming weeks.

  • @rosemaryalexeev5319
    @rosemaryalexeev5319 Год назад

    This is so, so cool - to see the obsidian and pumice together in this formation! Thank you for this information and video. Now I'm going to watch your other videos...

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Awesome. Welcome aboard and enjoy the other videos.

  • @quantumcat7673
    @quantumcat7673 Год назад +1

    The little test was easy. I'm ready for the final exam.

  • @michaelnancyamsden7410
    @michaelnancyamsden7410 Год назад

    It is amazing to see the pumice so closely intertwined with obsidian. Never would have thunk it. Thanks for svrambling for me.

  • @Gizathecat2
    @Gizathecat2 Год назад

    Beautiful way the lava flowe and folded on itself! I’ve been to Newberry in Oregon and the San Francisco Volcanic region in Arizona. Now I want to see the folded pumice and obsidian flows in California! Volcanic landscapes are beautiful! Thank you for the tour!

  • @briane173
    @briane173 Год назад +6

    Wow, Glass Mountain looks even more awesome than Big Obsidian Flow at Newberry! That's worth taking a drive.
    BTW, Shawn, sorry I couldn't make it last week. One of the questions I was going to ask if we'd been able to meet up at Newberry was about Big Obsidian Flow and Glass Mountain and just about anywhere that forms this amazing obsidian: Since it requires RAPID cooling in order for obsidian to form without mineralizing, can some of that rapid cooling be attributed to the environmental or climate factors in place at the time it erupts? I've noticed that these obsidian flows occur at pretty high elevation, where at times it can get bitter cold or even glaciers are present; do you see any evidence of these pasty flows taking place either under snow or glaciers? Or such low air temps that it impacts rapid cooling of these flows? I can see no evidence of these flows forming as tuyas, but I can see where a cold enough climatic environment might be enough to cool these flows almost like a fast-paced freeze-dry process. Your thoughts?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +4

      No worries Brian. The air or ambient temperature plays little to no role in cooling of lava. For instance, the colder temps of the mountains or a glacier. For example, if you have felsic magma that is 1,500 F, then it doesn't really matter if its a balmy 80 F at the surface or 20 F and snowing. This 60 degree difference is miniscule compared to the temp of the magma. Volcanoes belch out lava and other stuff and gradually build up a higher topographic structure so it makes sense that many of these flows are at higher elevations.

  • @gregindavis
    @gregindavis 4 месяца назад

    Nice explanation Shawn! somewhere up there we used to find what we called "Rainbow Obsidian" and "Mahogany Obsidian" with the brown streaks in it. Really fun country to explore!!

  • @henrywelch7900
    @henrywelch7900 Год назад +3

    Wife and I went to Newberry earlier this summer, when she sees this video we may be loading the car for another road trip

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Look for a Newberry video in the coming weeks.

  • @johnschulte347
    @johnschulte347 Год назад

    Appreciate your work.

  • @genier7829
    @genier7829 Год назад

    This was great- I visited this place more than 50 years ago as a young girl and have wanted to return some day.

  • @AhJodie
    @AhJodie Год назад

    Fantastic video, thank you!

  • @patriciaroysdon9540
    @patriciaroysdon9540 Год назад

    Absolutely fascinating!

  • @JAllenIsaac
    @JAllenIsaac Год назад

    Fascinating area and great content!

  • @dontask8979
    @dontask8979 Год назад

    The folded layers are awesome

  • @petacarney9848
    @petacarney9848 Год назад

    Thank you Shawn - love your videos 😀

  • @LanceHall
    @LanceHall Год назад +1

    Cool place.

  • @lowellpearson8782
    @lowellpearson8782 5 месяцев назад

    Wow so cool .

  • @lauram9478
    @lauram9478 Год назад +2

  • @valoriel4464
    @valoriel4464 Год назад

    Grt geo-adventure.
    Thx Prof ✌🏻

  • @genevryfreeland2054
    @genevryfreeland2054 Год назад

    Great job teach!!!

  • @gi_nattak
    @gi_nattak Год назад

    When I was very young, back in the early 90s, my family and I stopped by there, as we were on our way to some property we owned or maybe still own out in Modoc. We and a bunch of other people took a bunch of large pieces, even though that was not permitted. We still have them in our front yard to this day!

  • @craighoover1495
    @craighoover1495 Год назад +2

    I will always know pumice when I see it for I used to have to scrub a big flat grill in a commercial kitchen with it at the end of every day. It was remarkably consistent in texture and it would wear away with use. I had never thought until this moment how that it could be that that texture could be so consistent but perhaps in nature there are locations where it is uniform like that and it is mined. Perhaps it is artificially produced?

  • @patrickkillilea5225
    @patrickkillilea5225 Год назад +1

    Awesome! Melted rock is the best. I was out exploring an area with similar geology... Pumice like stuff. All folded up, lots of Migmatite. No Obsidian though.

  • @cw7429
    @cw7429 Год назад

    Great Video!

  • @noel3422
    @noel3422 10 месяцев назад

    Hello Shawn, been there a few times back in the 90's, back then there was a road where you could drive up to the top in your car, giant chunks of obsidian on top.

  • @cwj9202
    @cwj9202 Год назад +1

    Driving along CA Hwy 139 east of Glass Mountain during the winter, many motorists refer to Glass Mtn. as the "Modoc glacier", because all the snow on the thick obsidian mass resembles a glacier.

  • @hotrodmoma1
    @hotrodmoma1 Год назад

    When I was growing up my Dad told a story of a Mountain in California where you could pick lava rock of the side of the mountain. He brought back a good piece of the black lava rock. When he passed on I got it. It is flat on one side and kind of wavy on the other side and black and shinny.

  • @dudeonbike800
    @dudeonbike800 Год назад

    1) Obsidian
    2) Pumice
    I honestly didn't cheat. I suck at naming rocks. "Rocks for Jocks" class was hard!
    Wow, wonderful video and geology lesson on the area. Spent early childhood summers at Lassen. So cool to learn more about the area. Thank you.

  • @carolcamp4828
    @carolcamp4828 Год назад

    Such a cool vid👍🏼

  • @astromanian_UK
    @astromanian_UK Год назад

    Shawn, what an amazing trek... Your video quality is super. I wish we had such a range of volcanic deposits here in the UK. I'm so envious!

  • @gerrycoleman7290
    @gerrycoleman7290 Год назад +1

    There are areas toward the eastern side of Mt. Shasta that have pure obsidian flows. In those flows you can see tree trunk casts.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Wow, I'd love to know where those area.

    • @gerrycoleman7290
      @gerrycoleman7290 Год назад

      @@shawnwillsey If you have an opportunity sometime take Hwy 97 out of Weed, California there is a large caldera shaped structure immediately east of Chemult, Oregon. It has been nearly entirely filled in. Further north you will experience the truly incredible Crooked River caldera, site of a massive super volcanic eruption. The caldera is 30 miles across if I am remembering correctly. If you stop at Smith Rocks and take the trail you will see limestone fragments in the rhyolitic cliffs. Bring your 1N Hcl to test it.

    • @jamessmelcer616
      @jamessmelcer616 Год назад +1

      Yeah,me too!👍😁

    • @gerrycoleman7290
      @gerrycoleman7290 Год назад

      @@shawnwillseyI just stumbled on them years ago when exploring. Couldn't say exactly now.

  • @markwalker3499
    @markwalker3499 Год назад

    I am from northern California and when I was about 14 (1972)we were over at Lassen deer hunting and stopped at Glass Mountain. Back then there was no restriction on picking up a hunk or two of the obsidian. But, the last time I was there in 2010 there was not a whole lot of the glass left and warning signs to leave it alone. It is still an impressive deposit but nothing like it used to be.

  • @MrStillracin
    @MrStillracin Год назад

    Awesome

  • @toughenupfluffy7294
    @toughenupfluffy7294 Год назад

    The geologic formation of Big Rock Candy Mountain near Sevier would make a fascinating video.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Yes indeed. I'll add that to the list.

  • @jayski9410
    @jayski9410 Год назад

    I found the sounds of your footsteps hauntingly familiar. I used to live near an old slate quarry in upstate New York and whenever I used to explore there, my footsteps sounded like yours. Very different rocks, I know but the sound is the same. However when it comes to your obsidian and pumice, I wish I could see the grain structure under a microscope. I'll bet some dramatic differences show up at that level just like in metallurgy. You can tell a lot about the quality of steel and the sharpness of edges under magnification.

  • @tgchism
    @tgchism Год назад

    Thanks for the video! Really fascinating the geology involved in a lava flow. I've heard of glass mountain but have never made the drive up that way to see it for myself. I may have to venture up that way!

  • @annettefilt
    @annettefilt Год назад

    thanks for a great lecture :) Living in Denmark we dont have volcanoes or mountins, so find it very interesting and realy love geology :)))))

  • @GasketManzrevenge
    @GasketManzrevenge Год назад

    A suggestion to those who decide to go.. boots, thicker jeans/shirt, and gloves are a must have when hiking over that pile of glass. It's an awesome place to visit with lots to see. In retrospect, it's time to go back.. been a while. Plenty of lava tubes to explore at the park north of Glass Mtn. Go get your hike on!! (pack a lunch)

  • @angusmorrison9433
    @angusmorrison9433 Год назад

    I'd love to have that initial piece of obsidian for my coffee table, and a few good pieces of pumice in my bath!

  • @absolute___zero
    @absolute___zero Месяц назад

    this is amazing!!!

  • @bettyhouk8727
    @bettyhouk8727 Год назад +1

    A few years ago my husband our daughter an I went up to “GLASS MOUNTAIN “ there are/were chunks of OBSIDIAN AS BIG AS A SMALL HOUSE AND BIGGER GLOBS OF GLASS ! It was amazing! Not just a small amount either ! Very interesting and is a mountain of BLACK GLASS !

    • @jamessmelcer616
      @jamessmelcer616 Год назад

      From certain angles and distances the flow sparkles in the sun like a flow of diamonds .I grew up in Modoc county seen it thousands of times and I still think it’s one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen.👍😁

  • @baumgartnerwm
    @baumgartnerwm Год назад

    I've camped there before. Wearing gloves and old shoes is a good idea if you are hiking around in those lava flows. In some places there are larger blocks of obsidian. There is dispersed camping just south of Lava Beds and reserved camping at Medicine lake. A great place to visit, but remote.

  • @3xHermes
    @3xHermes 10 месяцев назад

    Surreal landscape, sounds like you were walking on Glass.

  • @outdoorfrenzy
    @outdoorfrenzy Год назад +1

    Has anyone been able to get into the pumice and see what kinds of gasses are trapped in there? The folds were absolutely stunning. I loved collecting obsidian as a kid.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +2

      Gases are released as the lava rises to surface so no gas trapped in the rocks at the surface (maybe at depth).

    • @outdoorfrenzy
      @outdoorfrenzy Год назад

      @@shawnwillsey I would have never guessed that. Thank you for the little lesson. Now I wish I’d taken more than one semester of geology in college.

  • @davidemmons7154
    @davidemmons7154 Год назад

    Tucker Hill is a rhyolite flow dome in Oregon north of Lakeview. The outer shell is perlite then obsidian and then glassy rhyolite. There was an open pit perlite in early 2000s.

  • @mt.sylvania9218
    @mt.sylvania9218 Год назад

    Great video and great area, thanks! Medicine Lake and Newbrrry are so different being shield volcanoes, unlike the Cascade stratovolcanoes.
    Have you read Vic Camps paper
    “The Case for a Long-Lived and Robust Yellowstone Hotspot” that says seismic tomography shows ‘fingers’ of magma 75km deep reach out from YHS to Newberry and Medicine lake?

  • @billrey8221
    @billrey8221 Год назад +1

    Love this one Shawn. Just thinking about how many uses and how important these volcanic out-crops were to Aboriginals. Fire was great and the wheel worked out well. Thanks for posting!
    What other types of rock could be flint knapped Chert? Flint?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Chert, flint, chalcedony, some basalt.

  • @johndefalque5061
    @johndefalque5061 11 месяцев назад

    I travelled through all of CA except for San Diego, 42 yrs ago. I miss it. Didn't get to see La Brea. Lived in BC for 30 yrs. Now live in Quebec. Want to get a motorcyle and take up camping.

  • @auflubenn
    @auflubenn Год назад

    I spent some time at MLV looking at geothermal power development (couldn't get a permit). Check out the ice caves, extensional fissures, and phreatic craters in the area. So cool!

  • @pierreproudhon9008
    @pierreproudhon9008 Год назад

    Over here we had a fieldtrip to a little cone in the Mojave desert, there's a ton of cyan colored obsidian (though my classmates think they're more like grey),I did not believe those were obsidian at first!Looks like they can be several different colors.

  • @toad139
    @toad139 Год назад

    We have a cabin at medicine lake and have seen glass mountain many times

  • @aubreyleonae4108
    @aubreyleonae4108 Год назад

    At the entrance of the current pumice mine there used to be a small cabin where an old man lived in summer as he cut pumice bricks, sold for restaurants use on grills. Incidentally there was a brothel in Tionesta. My dad had to turn his head when they were driving by in his dads Model A Ford.. His dad was a pentacostal preacher from Westfir, OR. I can only imagine that scenario. Lol Nothing remains today of the milltown but Tionesta still has a store as far as I know, with many pictures of that day.

    • @Eyebagdude
      @Eyebagdude Год назад

      My dad was born in West fir

  • @chucklearnslithics3751
    @chucklearnslithics3751 Год назад +3

    Boggles the mind. So the lava must have been "dry" to form obsidian, if I recall previous lessons correctly. Is it correct to assume the pumice gas is from materials in the granite, or whatever the source rock is made of, and not water? And how can the banding happen in the same material? Are the obsidian layers "fizzing" away their gas before they roll along?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Gases in pumice are mainly those trapped in magma/lava. As lava rolls over ground, water vapor can be added from soil or surface water. Gases move through lava although the viscous nature of these flows, inhibit much movement. Layers are mainly from gas-rich (pumice) vs gas-poor (obsidian) segregation as gases coalesce prior to (and a bit after) eruption.

  • @NickatLateNite
    @NickatLateNite Год назад

    Hey Prof... Would enjoy a Roadside-Roadcut series... Could you do it in different states in the west & mountain west?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Done! Check out the random roadcut series.

  • @belindaeileen
    @belindaeileen 7 месяцев назад

    I spent more time there than i meant to one time, maybe 25 years ago. Locked my keys in the car while I was there alone. After 3 hours or so , a ranger or forestry or sheriff type came by and helped me break in, thankfully. I remember he picked up a piece of obsidian and warned me to be careful as he proceeded to accidentally cut himself.

  • @kisheacox8147
    @kisheacox8147 Год назад

    Obsidian. Pumice. Aced it! Woohoo!

  • @daphnewilson7966
    @daphnewilson7966 Год назад

    Back in the day when nobody thought grabbing a souvenir was a problem, my family took a big chunk away from Glass Mountain. I still regret leaving it behind in my parents' yard: wonder if new owners have a clue....

  • @gerrycoleman7290
    @gerrycoleman7290 Год назад

    You are not too far from some incredible supervolcano caldera features.

  • @johndefalque5061
    @johndefalque5061 11 месяцев назад

    Ajusco in Mexico City, is very volcanic. Vallee de Tezontle-one cliff is red and the other is black pumice.