Hey Nick, here is a rundown of the Cascade Crest Peaks you asked for in this episode. Peaks are listed from left to right: Hibox Mountain(small bump); Chikamin Peak; Lemah Mountain(multiple, serrated summits); Chimney Rock(West and East, separated by deep gash and with large glacier on flanks); Summit Chief Mountain and Little Big Chief Mountain(snow patches on flanks); a large space with no major peaks(Dutch Miller Gap); Bear's Breast Mountain(dark, no snow); and finally Mt. Hinman(flat top with snow patches...light colored granite). Mt. Daniel is hidden by a branch of the fir tree in far right of video. So there you have it! Thank you for another fun episode!
You are an awesome treasure! My living room window faces out to a portion of the Stuart Range (mostly South of Leavenworth) and I hope to meet someone from my area to identify the peaks. Rock on!
I think it is amazing, that this fella decided to jump out of his specialty and expertise, to learn more about aspects of geology he is not as well read up on, while taking us on the ride of discovery with him. HE could have stuck to his expertise and left it at that, but he is branching out to better his own understanding, and he is taking us along , so we can learn what he is learning at the same time. Well, almost the same time. Who else by THE NICK ZENTNER would even consider doing such a thing? That is why this guy is far and away my favorite teacher and geologist.
Wow. From finding your older videos of roadside geology and the lectures you have given to all these new ones during the lockdown; you are a dream come true for a arm chair geologist. Thank you so much for what you are doing. Having driven through and hiked some small areas out west and wondered what the rocks were, how they got there and why are they shaped the way they are; you are the man with the answers. From Elkhorn Wisconsin a great big hug and a thank you again.
Thanks for the maps at the start. It helps give me context of where you are exploring and I can follow along on my maps. $5 - now I see how you are funding your research.
More great instruction sir! When the world makes me wanna throw my hands up and be done with the whole kit and kabutle of um... Nick always gets me thinking about what's really important Our world and all the hidden beauty so easy to overlook when I get carried away with the lunatics trying to control my existence... Much Love Sir! Stay Well! Thank you ! ✌️😁🤙
Just a quick thank you for all your contributions these past months, Nick. We're stuck in California for now, but it's great to experience parts of the PNW vicariously, while enjoying your presentation style and sense of humor. And learning, to boot!
“...stuck in California for now”... That is exactly how I feel. I want out of here so badly. Lived here for 40 years. Even with all of it’s natural beauty and exciting geological features, I’m just tired of dealing with being able to afford to live here. Also, that’s not the only reason...
Hello Dr Z-love your channel. I've learned so much from you. When you pointed at the foliage & said "plant"-I burst out laughing. I have a t-shirt with a bird on it & arrows pointing to various parts. "Biology to physicists"- every arrow ended with "Bird". The same kind of t-shirt could be made with a plant with arrows-"Botany to Geologists"😆 Thanks again & stay safe.
My mother's ashes are in one of those meadows on Peaches ridge. ♥ When we came back from that day, the whole meadow out there on the end of Quartz had 10+ mountain goats in it - not exactly what I expected to see there but goats gonna go wherever they feel like, lol. The big rocky mtn you were seeing down from the ridge is prob Clifty... Lookout is a little less dramatic. The "jaggedy guys" out to the west are Lemah peaks, Summit Cheif, Three Queens, etc.
Fore give me Nick I’m severely disabled from injuries. At age 75. I have to take 60 mags of morphine just to get out of bed and walk. But my life was great!🤗🇺🇸
You know, you mentioned one of my 'rock star' rocks, Tonalite. This rock was first introduced to me at Devils Tower and I was told by Dr. Sanderson as it got its name from the peculiar ring it makes when getting hammered on with a rock hammer. It makes a special ringing type of sound. Pretty cool, eh?
Thoroughly enjoyed it!! Love your field trip videos. I "almost" feel like I'm right out there with ya. Love the discovery aspect. Thank you again, and again, and again.
Nick, thanks for your work. I watched the program with me heels on the desk. I made a meatloaf and ate while enjoying your fine work. My meatloaf on the the other hand tasted like diorite. I should just have ordered a pizza.
I am enjoying how you show us how a Geologist thinks and explores and brings his scientific papers with him. good job on finding money, one would say your search is on the money
I have done the 4x4 trail that comes in from the naches river side, I believe it is forest road 676, it’s the continuation of the main road going up to quartz mountain. Beautiful drive, high clearance vehicles only.
I have climbed those and they are north of Lake Wenachee, so can not be seen from there and north, not west as these are, the Mt. Daniel area is right, Chimney rock really stands out.
Just north of McCall, Idaho, is the Idaho batholith and Granite Mountain. If you head toward Burgdorf Hot Springs (which is an excellent idea...) you will find the hot spring is right next to Crystal Mountain. It is literally a mountain of quartz. Not crystals, but snowy white quartz. I know the rocks are trying to tell me a story, I have never quite figured out what that story is. I was hoping maybe that was the story you were going to tell me in this video, but no luck. So let me put a bug in your ear and see if maybe you might get curious and do a video on it? You can't get there until about June, but I assure you, you would love it. Nook a cabin at the spring, spend a couple days, it is a great get-away. And I could toss in one more enticement... Ruby Mountain is also right there. I know, I know, you are a Washington guy now but Idaho still loves you...Come play with our rocks some more lol!
I live the central high pains of Mexico and have often thought of taking a hammer and wandering around the desert close to my house. How would I go about finding geology maps similar to what you have that feature my area? Oh BTW, I love you back.
Hello, Nick from NSW Australia. I'd safely assume that the earlier field Geologists would have identified most of the rocks and minerals mentioned by Thin Slide mounted samples. In the case of the Granitic rocks, thinned sliced twice (90 deg) It's really the only way to accurately identify rocks, especially the fine-grained types.
Nick remember the oil/ mining geology has proven 7/10 of the earths water is in the bedrock and mantle it’s the lube of platonic’s. It doesn’t have to be the surface water. California could find and tapped all its water needs in the bedrock or below and bring fresh hot water to the surface without fear of reducing volume because its size is so immense. An ocean underground.🤗🇺🇸
Some ideas to talk about: Crack in the Ground, OR (near Christmas Valley), Dry lakes in the Oregon Chicago Valley, Steens Mountain (large fault-block mountain) next to the Alvord Desert (OR).
I got cought in a fast moving mid summer thunder and lighting storm on top of look out mountain a few years back . It was intense and scared the crap out of me . I made a record decent back down to my campsite.
The Dry Meadow and Hereford meadow legends caught my eye and brought to mind the dwarfed botany in the Siskiyou serpentine zone. Could the soils of these meadows be derived from the lookout mountain schists?
In geology, a cupola is an upward protrusion from the roof of a large igneous intrusion, such as a batholith. It may also refer to small outlying igneous bodies which may connect at depth with larger igneous masses. Cupola-type magma chambers might form above larger basaltic magma bodies and differentiate to create intermediate or felsic magmas, which in turn may reach the surface to produce small eruptions of intermediate or felsic lava.
Page 1285 tun = n 1 a large beer cask. 2 a measure of capacity, usually equal to 252 wine gallons. ▪ vb tuns, tunning, tunned. 3 (tr) to put into or keep in tuns. [OE tunne]
tungsten = n a hard malleable ductile greyish-white element. It is used in lamp filaments, electrical contact points, X-ray targets, and, alloyed with steel, in high-speed cutting tools. Symbol: W; atomic number.: 74; atomic wt.: 183.85. Also called: wolfram [C18: from Swedish tung heavy + sten stone]
Okanogan County Geologic Society is a group of "amateur" rock chasers with a collectively huge knowledge base. Some of them even have their own rock hammers.
I grew up on Cove Rd, we used to make loops up Taneum or Menastesh Canyon on old Irrigation motor bikes, one of the rides took us down Peaches Ridge, hell of a ride on motorbikes, probably want to be dropped off on Quartz and then wander down Taneum Creek to your other car.
"Cupola" implies some sort of dome structure or a small dome inside or on top of a larger dome; in geologic terms I don't know if "cupola" is that much different from "outcrop," depending on its origins.
For the exotic terranes discussions, do you think the land from Mexico came up as one big sliver with some uplifted sea bed attached, or did the land move up as islands, capturing the seabed as it moved. The colored terrane maps show islands of exotic terranes pushed and spread out against the Stuart Range like mud that might encounter a non moving object and flow around. That is where my thought came from. Not descriptive enough for a title, but Slip Slide and Away.
left most peak with snow- 3 Queens, double dark towers with prominent snow below- Chimney rocks, next right of fir tree- Summit Chief, and yes I think you were right, Mt. Danial on the north end. Viewing at 10 min.
The Quartz MTN. I know is at the far end of Manastash ridge as far out from town as the road will take you. Past Buck Meadows, past frost mountain which has a lot of Quartz( what they digging up their for anyway?) Keep on going past Hereford and Wells meadows and boom there you are.🤗🚙🚙🚙🚙
On the margins of quarts viens you find metals , copper silver an gold...1850s they would test mine every vein they could find..they test paned every stream . They inspected every sand bar. And they were pretty smart..
From Google, more specifically wikipedia: "In geology, a cupola is an upward protrusion from the roof of a large igneous intrusion, such as a batholith. It may also refer to small outlying igneous bodies which may connect at depth with larger igneous masses."
Money! Always good! Loved this excursion, but how in the world do you make sense of the bits of fruit cake? Watch, listen, read, observe and learn I guess!
NICK, MIGHT THERE BE A CHANCE TO GET THE USERS ACROSS THE VARIOUS AREAS INVOLVED IN SUPPLYING VIDEO CLIPS, ANY DETAILS AND LOCAL SAMPLES OF THE EXOTIC TERRANES IN QUESTION, AND SPECIFICALLY ONES YOU DONT HAVE AND ARE INTERESTED IN FOR THE FALL SERIES? PUT US TO WORK ON THE TASK, I AM SURE THERE ARE PLENTY PEOPLE HERE THAT WOULD LOVE TO HELP IN ANY WAYS THEY CAN! MAYBE YOU COULD COLLECT AND FILTER ENOUGH DATA TO MAKE A SIGNIFICANT ADVANCEMENT.
Great idea! Since watching Nick's "On the Fly" videos on exotic terranes, I have been researching them here in SC, as well. Found out that a big chunk of our state, the so-called "Carolina Slate Belt", is an exotic terrane, although NOT made of slate. It's actually mostly gneiss and other metamorphosed igneous rock and was originally part of South America.
Nick you miss a big opportunity. Why is Quartz Mountain not forested like surrounding mountains? I don't see evidence of burned trunks or even reproduction of young forest trees. So fire is not the reason. What is happening here? Could it be that the soil cannot support the forest species that the surrounding mountains do? Are th soil minerals different on Quartz Mountain? I believe there is a chemical reason that Quartz Mountain is not forested. My first introduction to Continental Drift was in a 1973 Graduate Seminar at Central Washington State College. Before that I took "Rocks 101" from then State Senator Charnley at Shoreline Community College. "You mean continents move?" what a surprise. I had absolutely no Paleontology courses available as part of my University of Washington Zoology degree. Fortunately Central had both Paleobotany K-burg and Paleo-mammal courses available. But I was trained to identify the plant fauna and then ask the question, is this the plant community that you would expect, given the moisture (rain or snow, temperatures (which often means elevation) or is something missing? Is there a limiting factor, like soil minerals, that is shaping the plant community (forest in this case)?
In geology, a cupola is an upward protrusion from the roof of a large igneous intrusion, such as a batholith. It may also refer to small outlying igneous bodies which may connect at depth with larger igneous masses. Cupola (geology) - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cupola_(geology)
Good idea...your gonna need a pile of rocks, examples ready to be " tested ". Into dust...50 are easy to find 50 are gonna be hard/ expensive or both...not an easy class ,with out hands on..... times...also maps ..a scale and graduated cylinder..to configure specific graviety.
Hey Nick, here is a rundown of the Cascade Crest Peaks you asked for in this episode. Peaks are listed from left to right: Hibox Mountain(small bump); Chikamin Peak; Lemah Mountain(multiple, serrated summits); Chimney Rock(West and East, separated by deep gash and with large glacier on flanks); Summit Chief Mountain and Little Big Chief Mountain(snow patches on flanks); a large space with no major peaks(Dutch Miller Gap); Bear's Breast Mountain(dark, no snow); and finally Mt. Hinman(flat top with snow patches...light colored granite). Mt. Daniel is hidden by a branch of the fir tree in far right of video. So there you have it! Thank you for another fun episode!
You are an awesome treasure! My living room window faces out to a portion of the Stuart Range (mostly South of Leavenworth) and I hope to meet someone from my area to identify the peaks.
Rock on!
Think Overcoat Peak is in there too
I think it is amazing, that this fella decided to jump out of his specialty and expertise, to learn more about aspects of geology he is not as well read up on, while taking us on the ride of discovery with him. HE could have stuck to his expertise and left it at that, but he is branching out to better his own understanding, and he is taking us along , so we can learn what he is learning at the same time. Well, almost the same time.
Who else by THE NICK ZENTNER would even consider doing such a thing? That is why this guy is far and away my favorite teacher and geologist.
Appreciate your comment. Thank you.
April 4, 2022; still wonderful travels by Nick, adding to my collection of mineralogy thanks Nick and we love you too.
Wow. From finding your older videos of roadside geology and the lectures you have given to all these new ones during the lockdown; you are a dream come true for a arm chair geologist. Thank you so much for what you are doing. Having driven through and hiked some small areas out west and wondered what the rocks were, how they got there and why are they shaped the way they are; you are the man with the answers. From Elkhorn Wisconsin a great big hug and a thank you again.
So many rocks, so little time! Thank you Nick Zentner, you are the best!
Thanks for all the field time spent for your videos. All very interesting!
Kevin in Alaska
Thanks for the maps at the start. It helps give me context of where you are exploring and I can follow along on my maps. $5 - now I see how you are funding your research.
More great instruction sir!
When the world makes me wanna throw my hands up and be done with the whole kit and kabutle of um...
Nick always gets me thinking about what's really important Our world and all the hidden beauty so easy to overlook when I get carried away with the lunatics trying to control my existence...
Much Love Sir!
Stay Well!
Thank you ! ✌️😁🤙
Just a quick thank you for all your contributions these past months, Nick. We're stuck in California for now, but it's great to experience parts of the PNW vicariously, while enjoying your presentation style and sense of humor. And learning, to boot!
“...stuck in California for now”... That is exactly how I feel. I want out of here so badly. Lived here for 40 years. Even with all of it’s natural beauty and exciting geological features, I’m just tired of dealing with being able to afford to live here. Also, that’s not the only reason...
Hello Dr Z-love your channel. I've learned so much from you.
When you pointed at the foliage & said "plant"-I burst out laughing. I have a t-shirt
with a bird on it & arrows pointing to various parts. "Biology to physicists"- every arrow ended with
"Bird". The same kind of t-shirt could be made with a plant with arrows-"Botany to Geologists"😆
Thanks again & stay safe.
These trips with you are fun, thanks!!!
Another wonderful field trip. Loved the maps and papers - and that you share your "voyages of discovery" with all of us. Thank you!
So good to be out in the 'field' with you, reading and looking and banging on the rocks.
I'm just impressed. It seems in every episode of Nick on the fly I get to learn about a rock or rocks I never heard of.
Than you Nick keep it up
Love you Nick!! It's bc of people like you that I'm excited to begin my academic journey towards a degree in geology!
lots of thumbs up for Nick. he is so good at which he does. and enjoyable to listen to. thank you.
That scene at 5:05 and the palette of color is spectacular
My mother's ashes are in one of those meadows on Peaches ridge. ♥ When we came back from that day, the whole meadow out there on the end of Quartz had 10+ mountain goats in it - not exactly what I expected to see there but goats gonna go wherever they feel like, lol.
The big rocky mtn you were seeing down from the ridge is prob Clifty... Lookout is a little less dramatic.
The "jaggedy guys" out to the west are Lemah peaks, Summit Cheif, Three Queens, etc.
Oh, and big shout out to fire crew burning out Jungle Cr fire, smoke visible in first few minutes.
Fore give me Nick I’m severely disabled from injuries. At age 75. I have to take 60 mags of morphine just to get out of bed and walk. But my life was great!🤗🇺🇸
You know, you mentioned one of my 'rock star' rocks, Tonalite. This rock was first introduced to me at Devils Tower and I was told by Dr. Sanderson as it got its name from the peculiar ring it makes when getting hammered on with a rock hammer. It makes a special ringing type of sound. Pretty cool, eh?
Thoroughly enjoyed it!! Love your field trip videos. I "almost" feel like I'm right out there with ya. Love the discovery aspect. Thank you again, and again, and again.
Prof Nick. Thank you again for your travels, and lessons about RockETerranes.
Nick, thanks for your work. I watched the program with me heels on the desk. I made a meatloaf and ate while enjoying your fine work. My meatloaf on the the other hand tasted like diorite. I should just have ordered a pizza.
Yesssss. Thank you again, Nick. Perfect for views and info. Cheers from Hereford (NOT Meadow, and mainly Old Red Sandstone) in England, and Jane.
I am enjoying how you show us how a Geologist thinks and explores and brings his scientific papers with him. good job on finding money, one would say your search is on the money
I have done the 4x4 trail that comes in from the naches river side, I believe it is forest road 676, it’s the continuation of the main road going up to quartz mountain. Beautiful drive, high clearance vehicles only.
Nick,
The mystery mountains are the Entiat Range, with Seven Fingered Jack to the left, Mt. Fernow, and Mt. Maude to the right.
I think 7 finger jack used to be 3 finger Joe. ( Shake hands with danger)
I have climbed those and they are north of Lake Wenachee, so can not be seen from there and north, not west as these are, the Mt. Daniel area is right, Chimney rock really stands out.
Another beautiful location and beautiful rocks! Thanks!
Just north of McCall, Idaho, is the Idaho batholith and Granite Mountain. If you head toward Burgdorf Hot Springs (which is an excellent idea...) you will find the hot spring is right next to Crystal Mountain. It is literally a mountain of quartz. Not crystals, but snowy white quartz. I know the rocks are trying to tell me a story, I have never quite figured out what that story is. I was hoping maybe that was the story you were going to tell me in this video, but no luck. So let me put a bug in your ear and see if maybe you might get curious and do a video on it? You can't get there until about June, but I assure you, you would love it. Nook a cabin at the spring, spend a couple days, it is a great get-away. And I could toss in one more enticement... Ruby Mountain is also right there.
I know, I know, you are a Washington guy now but Idaho still loves you...Come play with our rocks some more lol!
I live the central high pains of Mexico and have often thought of taking a hammer and wandering around the desert close to my house. How would I go about finding geology maps similar to what you have that feature my area? Oh BTW, I love you back.
Hello, Nick from NSW Australia. I'd safely assume that the earlier field Geologists would have identified most of the rocks and minerals mentioned by Thin Slide mounted samples. In the case of the Granitic rocks, thinned sliced twice (90 deg) It's really the only way to accurately identify rocks, especially the fine-grained types.
Love that you go for hard copies of journal articles! I much prefer reading printed copies to trying to read electronic ones.
I was thinking about the new title maybe Nick of the north or Nick on the ET's. Anywhozle can't wait for class!
Nick remember the oil/ mining geology has proven 7/10 of the earths water is in the bedrock and mantle it’s the lube of platonic’s. It doesn’t have to be the surface water. California could find and tapped all its water needs in the bedrock or below and bring fresh hot water to the surface without fear of reducing volume because its size is so immense. An ocean underground.🤗🇺🇸
I think a cupola is a dome. That was fun seeing the Exotic Terranes. Thanks Nick!
31:03 Of all the places to find a $5 bill. I can hear Bob Miller now calling you up saying "Fork it over bruh."
Some ideas to talk about: Crack in the Ground, OR (near Christmas Valley), Dry lakes in the Oregon Chicago Valley, Steens Mountain (large fault-block mountain) next to the Alvord Desert (OR).
Steens
Sitting in a folding chair in the woods. A person after my own heart.
Everyone will want to move to Washington it is so beautiful!
Good work Thats Elk Country. Some large quartz out croppings down the hill on the north side of the road. Have a 50 Lb. specimen in the flower bed.
Thanks Jay!
I got cought in a fast moving mid summer thunder and lighting storm on top of look out mountain a few years back . It was intense and scared the crap out of me . I made a record decent back down to my campsite.
Came in late.Watching again.
The Dry Meadow and Hereford meadow legends caught my eye and brought to mind the dwarfed botany in the Siskiyou serpentine zone. Could the soils of these meadows be derived from the lookout mountain schists?
The three dislikes I see are probably cruise ship workers, because this was a good video.
They were probably a Trump supporter because most of them are not interested in science. 💁🏻♂️
My first year college geology instructor would have said thzt landscape was "as pretty as a picture," especially with that terrane underneath.
In geology, a cupola is an upward protrusion from the roof of a large igneous intrusion, such as a batholith. It may also refer to small outlying igneous bodies which may connect at depth with larger igneous masses. Cupola-type magma chambers might form above larger basaltic magma bodies and differentiate to create intermediate or felsic magmas, which in turn may reach the surface to produce small eruptions of intermediate or felsic lava.
I was just gonna post that but I see you already did
Thanks! Watching from Robin Lakes as the sun sets over Mount Daniel. :-)
Woah!
I was on Rainier about two weeks ago, nice to see its still there!
10:03/39.23 Mountain Range, I think its Chimney Rock & surrounding peaks, west of Mt. Stuart. Mt. Daniels is in the area.
Yup. Cascade Crest, north of Snoqualmie Pass: Lemah > Chimney > Overcoat > Summit Chief > Bears Breast > Daniel
@@MrForo40 I love Google Earth Pro.
Page 1285
tun = n 1 a large beer cask. 2 a measure of capacity, usually equal to
252 wine gallons. ▪ vb tuns, tunning, tunned. 3 (tr) to put into or keep in
tuns. [OE tunne]
tungsten = n a hard malleable ductile greyish-white element. It is used in lamp filaments, electrical contact points, X-ray targets, and, alloyed with steel, in high-speed cutting tools. Symbol: W; atomic number.: 74; atomic wt.: 183.85. Also called: wolfram [C18: from Swedish tung heavy + sten stone]
Okanogan County Geologic Society is a group of "amateur" rock chasers with a collectively huge knowledge base. Some of them even have their own rock hammers.
If they follow Nick around Washington, they might find a 🔨. 🤣
I grew up on Cove Rd, we used to make loops up Taneum or Menastesh Canyon on old Irrigation motor bikes, one of the rides took us down Peaches Ridge, hell of a ride on motorbikes, probably want to be dropped off on Quartz and then wander down Taneum Creek to your other car.
"Cupola" implies some sort of dome structure or a small dome inside or on top of a larger dome; in geologic terms I don't know if "cupola" is that much different from "outcrop," depending on its origins.
For the exotic terranes discussions, do you think the land from Mexico came up as one big sliver with some uplifted sea bed attached, or did the land move up as islands, capturing the seabed as it moved. The colored terrane maps show islands of exotic terranes pushed and spread out against the Stuart Range like mud that might encounter a non moving object and flow around. That is where my thought came from. Not descriptive enough for a title, but Slip Slide and Away.
The picture is amazing...
that piece of paper with abe lincoln on it looks like Zentnerite!
left most peak with snow- 3 Queens, double dark towers with prominent snow below- Chimney rocks, next right of fir tree- Summit Chief, and yes I think you were right, Mt. Danial on the north end. Viewing at 10 min.
Thank you!
The Quartz MTN. I know is at the far end of Manastash ridge as far out from town as the road will take you. Past Buck Meadows, past frost mountain which has a lot of Quartz( what they digging up their for anyway?) Keep on going past Hereford and Wells meadows and boom there you are.🤗🚙🚙🚙🚙
On the margins of quarts viens you find metals , copper silver an gold...1850s they would test mine every vein they could find..they test paned every stream . They inspected every sand bar. And they were pretty smart..
Enjoyed a lot!!
Yup. That's a latte right there, and a good use for it too.
HIT THE THUMBS UP FOR NICK!
From Google, more specifically wikipedia: "In geology, a cupola is an upward protrusion from the roof of a large igneous intrusion, such as a batholith. It may also refer to small outlying igneous bodies which may connect at depth with larger igneous masses."
Money! Always good! Loved this excursion, but how in the world do you make sense of the bits of fruit cake? Watch, listen, read, observe and learn I guess!
Ready with popcorn 🍿
so if we want to contribute to Nick's expenses we now know we can leave $5 notes across the Pacific Northwest
NICK, MIGHT THERE BE A CHANCE TO GET THE USERS ACROSS THE VARIOUS AREAS INVOLVED IN SUPPLYING VIDEO CLIPS, ANY DETAILS AND LOCAL SAMPLES OF THE EXOTIC TERRANES IN QUESTION, AND SPECIFICALLY ONES YOU DONT HAVE AND ARE INTERESTED IN FOR THE FALL SERIES? PUT US TO WORK ON THE TASK, I AM SURE THERE ARE PLENTY PEOPLE HERE THAT WOULD LOVE TO HELP IN ANY WAYS THEY CAN! MAYBE YOU COULD COLLECT AND FILTER ENOUGH DATA TO MAKE A SIGNIFICANT ADVANCEMENT.
Great idea! Since watching Nick's "On the Fly" videos on exotic terranes, I have been researching them here in SC, as well. Found out that a big chunk of our state, the so-called "Carolina Slate Belt", is an exotic terrane, although NOT made of slate. It's actually mostly gneiss and other metamorphosed igneous rock and was originally part of South America.
101rotarypower
Good idea. I would help.
Sharon McKenzie
This is very interesting. I lived in Fayetteville NC while I was in the Army.
@@alanmadden771 That is near another ancient exotic terrane, the Uhwarrie Mountains.
@@ThePitbulllady1 www.clemson.edu/public/geomuseum/sc_geology.html
Just saw vid of Nick doing Green River. You know by CCR. Different kind of rock.
10:46 this looks like a forest fire to me near Mt. Rainier.
Yes. It's been burning for several days.
@@micahkipple9906 Looks like the Jungle Creek fire off of the 19 road
Hey, that fin payed for your Egg McMuffin and coffee. Cheers, Mark
Ok, question... why did the map say Hereford Meadow and the sign pointing it out said Hepeford Meadow?
the map is not the terrain
When talking to Gizmo, or any camera for that matter, it is important to compose yourself.
Nice plume of smoke under Rainier. Better than coming out of the top anyway!
When is it acceptable to get out a shovel and dig until you get to bedrock?
Forrest fire at 39:10 ???
Was wondering about that too😳
At the beginning too...
Nick is trolling us and not mentioning it😄
Is the yellow rock next to the weird intrusion Rhyolite? I can really see why they are called Exotic Terranes! All that twisting and intrusions.
Make a lot of arrowheads and scrapers!
What are the areas.on your map that say private? Can you still drive thru? Or no?
Nick you miss a big opportunity. Why is Quartz Mountain not forested like surrounding mountains? I don't see evidence of burned trunks or even reproduction of young forest trees. So fire is not the reason. What is happening here? Could it be that the soil cannot support the forest species that the surrounding mountains do? Are th soil minerals different on Quartz Mountain? I believe there is a chemical reason that Quartz Mountain is not forested.
My first introduction to Continental Drift was in a 1973 Graduate Seminar at Central Washington State College. Before that I took "Rocks 101" from then State Senator Charnley at Shoreline Community College. "You mean continents move?" what a surprise. I had absolutely no Paleontology courses available as part of my University of Washington Zoology degree. Fortunately Central had both Paleobotany K-burg and Paleo-mammal courses available. But I was trained to identify the plant fauna and then ask the question, is this the plant community that you would expect, given the moisture (rain or snow, temperatures (which often means elevation) or is something missing? Is there a limiting factor, like soil minerals, that is shaping the plant community (forest in this case)?
31:09 GAS money?! Double cheese with extra mcpickles, small fry and a large drink (if they’re still a buck) money, Mr Z!
Smashing that rock was interesting. Maybe I need to go to school .
That Rock looks really good and soft. It Breaks really easy.
In geology, a cupola is an upward protrusion from the roof of a large igneous intrusion, such as a batholith. It may also refer to small outlying igneous bodies which may connect at depth with larger igneous masses.
Cupola (geology) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cupola_(geology)
@ 16:33
@@samrotolo7303 Thanks for the location on video. I forgot to put it in. Sorry.
I love you talks, I have learned a lot about the PNW geology. That would of been perfect if that money was Pesos.
Menastesh Ridge road has way more outcrops on it! Get off the main road and hit the side roads.
DOES ANYBODY REMEMBER WHEN THE SKY WAS BLUE WITH NO WHITE HAZE . . . . . . ?
Or blue haze/smokey smoke that turns the sunlight orange? Tired of it, I am.
Purple Haze leads to purple rainz , it's a chewed up mixed melange : from the dark deep Fringe of quietly insane ; scuse me while I kiss de sky !
Nick,
Is there any way your online viewers could audit your freshman Geology 101 class through a Zoom connection?
Good idea...your gonna need a pile of rocks, examples ready to be " tested ". Into dust...50 are easy to find 50 are gonna be hard/ expensive or both...not an easy class ,with out hands on..... times...also maps ..a scale and graduated cylinder..to configure specific graviety.
geologists are nice people
My show name suggestion is: “Nick’s knack for rocks.”
How to move from master to PhD, by nick. The benefits of experience and extra time on hand....
You failed to mention the forest fire!!
Nick and one poster do name the fire it in the live chat but I can't scroll back that far and I don't remember the fire's name.
Terranes on the Brain 🧠
Nik your camera might be like the channel AvE, he gets his in focus with a phrase. Focus you *uck, it works every time!
Nick said it's "schist"! That's not gneiss!
Nice find on that $5 bill 😆
Chamber of commerce weather! Greg in TN
As always, "neato"!
Can't tell the players without a program.
🔥🔥🔥🔥
Nick - Ignoring the fire like a boss!😉
"In search of ET"
Please excuse Karen from class as her daughter has been hospitalized with a pulmonary embolism.
Our thoughts are with you and your daughter ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
@@KathyWilliamsDevries Thank you! ❤
Oh, Karen, so sorry!
Did you report that fire?
It's been burning for over a week. Forest Service is battling it.