Random Roadcuts #6: Central Nevada on US-6

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  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2025

Комментарии • 117

  • @shawnwillsey
    @shawnwillsey  Год назад +5

    You can support my educational 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

  • @sharonseal9150
    @sharonseal9150 Год назад +34

    Your Random Roadcuts series is awesome and so relatable for the average amateur or armchair geology enthusiast like me - thank you!

  • @davidroberts5577
    @davidroberts5577 Год назад +15

    Gotta say: you'd be fun on a road trip Shawn. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us all.

  • @juli2477
    @juli2477 Год назад +8

    This reminds me so much of my youth. My Dad was a geologist working for the mines in South Africa during the 60/70's - every road trip / holiday turned into a side excursion looking at 'something interesting'. Thank you for the nice memories :)

  • @1607rosie
    @1607rosie Год назад +1

    I'm digging these random road cuts . It's like going on a field trip with you and trying to figure out the rocks. I'm 69 but really finding thus stuff interesting. I'm so baffled on how these road cuts are formed . The bending of the rocks blows me away.

  • @stevewhalen6973
    @stevewhalen6973 Год назад +16

    It is amazing to imagine that landscape once hosting an aquatic undersea scape.

  • @RockhoundTreasurehunt
    @RockhoundTreasurehunt Год назад +5

    The more I know when going out, Rockhounding, the better a Rockhound I am. This is great! I appreciate the knowledge you share. Thank you and RockOn!!!

  • @OccamsSledgehammer
    @OccamsSledgehammer Год назад +4

    Heyyyyyyy…. It’s the volcano guy! My dad and I love you ❤️. Thank you for everything you do.

  • @StereoSpace
    @StereoSpace Год назад +10

    Another very cool video. I really enjoy these. Thee's a sense of exploration, but also the basic observation and then interpreting what those observations may be telling us. Great fun.

  • @markg3025
    @markg3025 6 месяцев назад

    Professor Shawn you are the most educated and wise person I know in all of Idaho. I do enjoy your channel.

  • @dennisdye7270
    @dennisdye7270 Год назад +8

    Thanks for putting these together. Random Roadcuts is a great series.

  • @peterholmes2089
    @peterholmes2089 Год назад +4

    I'm loving this series. I like how the road cut just looks like a meh piece of rock when you first show it, but then has incredible detail when you start to look at it closely.

  • @Hklbrries
    @Hklbrries Год назад +1

    Was fortunate to go on extended family vacations in the American West. Had I my life to do over again I might very well have chosen Geology. Your interesting and informative videos allow me to enjoy some of these areas again - thank you.
    BTW, I believe both the singular and plural are ‘Sierra.’ High SIERRA, not high Sierras. FWIW. ✌🏼

  • @LisaBelleBC
    @LisaBelleBC Год назад +6

    I love these random roadcuts! So much fun and interesting! Thank you again for your expertise and sharing!

  • @brushbum7508
    @brushbum7508 Год назад +3

    Nice stop. I've rolled thru there, dozens of times. Now I have an explanation of what's going on there. Thank You. TAKE CARE..

  • @jackprier7727
    @jackprier7727 Год назад +4

    Nice one, the fractures/breccia atop the reddish sharp contact is dramatic and intriguing-

  • @baTonkaTruck
    @baTonkaTruck Год назад +5

    Definitely another banger. Love the distinction between observation and interpretation. Something we can all apply, and more broadly than just geology.

  • @veryberry5138
    @veryberry5138 Год назад +5

    Hi 😍 we are in Henderson, NV ! Nice to see other parts , being explored !

  • @petepete66
    @petepete66 Год назад +1

    Cool man thx …greetings from Austria 🇦🇹 🍀🍀🍀✌️😜✌️🍀🍀🍀🌎🔥🔥🔥

  • @dianespears6057
    @dianespears6057 Год назад +4

    Love road cuts. Thank you.

  • @samtasticlatte
    @samtasticlatte Год назад +3

    I look forward to the random road cuts on here. Makes my evening.

  • @joannehart9624
    @joannehart9624 Год назад +4

    I love the geology of southern Nevada and eastern California. With the lack of foliage, it's easy to see the amazing structures that have formed. Not too long ago we came across a large obsidian dyke just outside of Shoshone, CA. Yep, at a roadside cut. I'm lucky that one of my good friends is a geologist and I've been able to learn so much from him. 🙂

  • @flintridgedesigninc.1351
    @flintridgedesigninc.1351 Год назад +4

    Thank goodness for the informative random road cut conversation while we wait for the Icelandic volcano 😅👏🏻👏🏻.
    Actually, I find it more interesting regardless

  • @llanitedave
    @llanitedave Год назад +5

    I know that site! I did contracting work out of Ely for several years, and I'd make a weekly trip back and forth on U.S. 6. I always enjoyed that little winding canyon stretch of Currant Creek at the south end of the White Pines. A very short distance to your southwest, if I remember right, a nice pattern of what looks like cavern filling sediments is exposed high up on the cliff. I always wanted to spend more time scrabbling around that area -- I'm so glad you're finally doing it for me!

  • @Laserblade
    @Laserblade Год назад

    'Roadside style' is awesome! On the fly. Thank you Professor.

  • @suelynpeters9661
    @suelynpeters9661 11 месяцев назад

    Love the section of faulting showing one thrusting under the other. Perfect picture of a subduction on today’s coast.

  • @skyepilotte11
    @skyepilotte11 28 дней назад

    Thx Shawn...rocks tell a story and you are the interpretor...
    Always interesting.

  • @tomesplin4130
    @tomesplin4130 Год назад

    Hiking has definitely become more interesting since watching your channel! Rocks have a story to tell!!

  • @kenmunozatmmrrailroad6853
    @kenmunozatmmrrailroad6853 Год назад

    Thanks for this "Road Cut" Shawn. As a commercial driver I frequent this area and sleep occasionally just 1000 yards or so north. I'll rockhound when time permits bringing the occasional sample home. 'Always wondered how those incredibly small veins formed. To the trained eye, Nevada is a wonderland of geologic activity for the casual observer and in my humble opinion, an overlooked treasure trove of activity.

  • @GrandmaBev64
    @GrandmaBev64 Год назад +6

    Speaking of Ely Nevada. My last video was about the charcoal oven ruins that are there and the deforestation that took place from 1877-1879. It only took 2 years to strip the "Elderberry Canyon" and surrounding mountains. Love your videos. Thank You

  • @NanaMoe2023
    @NanaMoe2023 Год назад +3

    Thank you for your updates, my husband and I enjoy them, very realistic and informative. Watching from Vancouver Island, BC, Canada 🇨🇦

  • @hestheMaster
    @hestheMaster Год назад +1

    A busy Random Roadcut with 130 million years plus of activity over that time. This was the bottom of an inland sea at
    first and ebbed away and came back time and time again. Eventually the land won out and moved upwards ( since it
    is the basin and range of Nevada) and with weathering cracked, moved from being split by a fault or two. Wow what
    a nice place to interpret all that is going on here professor.

  • @emanuellandeholm5657
    @emanuellandeholm5657 Год назад +3

    That low angle contact was interesting. Just imagine the forces involved when sliding those big units... Of course it's mostly happening in slow motion, but stil

  • @chuckhursch5374
    @chuckhursch5374 Год назад +1

    Your roadcuts videos remind me of trips some twenty years ago with a professor out of College of Marin (Bay Area). We did a lot of stops all the way out to Utah over several field trips, lots of camping in remote areas, and adventures. Will never forget those, and your videos take me back. I might actually have to go do some roadcuts myself with acid bottle and hammer in hand…

  • @equanimityforever7324
    @equanimityforever7324 5 месяцев назад

    Great stuff, Shawn. Carry on with this type of analysis. That's the way we all do it, don't we?

  • @CricketsMa
    @CricketsMa Год назад

    Fascinating! Every one of these road-cut! videos you do, I want to rush there and see it for myself. 😄

  • @LanceHall
    @LanceHall Год назад +3

    Production tip. If you have lots of background noise (vehicles, wind) you can take your MP4 file and drop into a spectral demix website and you can separate voice from noise. The output is an audio WAV. The separation algorithms are meant for music and vocals but it works well on speech.

  • @irenafarm
    @irenafarm Год назад

    This was so awesome! I feel like I’m on The Team. 🤓 I’m a complete noob at geology, and this was extremely accessible and easy to follow. I’m feeling inspired to go look at the road up to Crowders Mountain, now!

  • @leslie3832
    @leslie3832 Год назад

    Learn a lot every time, Shawn. Those calcite veins! Amazing. The thin red break between rock types with crumbly rocks above and below: could that have been something really hot 🥵 like ash falling and scorching? I guess it couldn’t get between the rocks. You know, this is simpler than I realized. Rather than being overwhelmed just look at and figure out each rock type by itself first. Then look at contacts which might give more overall information. Pondering. Thanks again.

  • @carnakthemagnificent336
    @carnakthemagnificent336 Год назад

    Thanks again for another great roadcut. Looking forward to driving 6 soon. Love Nevada.

  • @dorisotte-janssen3461
    @dorisotte-janssen3461 Год назад

    A great lesson for me today thank for sharing.

  • @stevewhalen6973
    @stevewhalen6973 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @3xHermes
    @3xHermes 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks Detective Willsey!

  • @Tamrio-vy5ou
    @Tamrio-vy5ou Год назад +2

    Love these videos 😊 i live in the canary islands and your videos have taught me loads

  • @owenkittredge3433
    @owenkittredge3433 Год назад

    Thanks for another nice lunch field trip!

  • @YOICHIHAGIWARA
    @YOICHIHAGIWARA 4 месяца назад

    ありがとうございます!

  • @Anne5440_
    @Anne5440_ Год назад

    Your information makes a long road more interesting. I knew nothing the one round trip I spent riding on that highway. We did a round trip through that road from Denver to Colfax CA. I knew nothing about the geology or even the history of that hwy. I knew some Donner Pass history and a tiny bit about the great salt lake. I learned lots of genealogy about the Colfax area when we got there. We were on trip to meet my mother in law so she could show my husband where he was born. And to introduce him to what family was left in the area. Otherwise I had no way to learn about the area. It would have been nice to have a geologist along!

  • @maihulz
    @maihulz Год назад

    haha!! just had a lecture about this outcrop earlier today in my structure class. awesome!

  • @toddrodgers5108
    @toddrodgers5108 Год назад

    I enjoy learning. Thank you

  • @cgh1117
    @cgh1117 3 месяца назад

    Thanks!😁

  • @kathleenriveraspencer4136
    @kathleenriveraspencer4136 Год назад

    love your introductory graphics 😀

  • @bobbyesamdahl
    @bobbyesamdahl Год назад

    fun field trip
    my first one with you!
    thank you

  • @NanaMoe2023
    @NanaMoe2023 Год назад +1

    We pay attention to earthquakes and tsunami on the BC Canada, Pacific Ocean side. Thank you!

  • @TheDevice9
    @TheDevice9 Год назад +2

    Wow. Pretty faulty episode. Nice.

  • @John-ir2zf
    @John-ir2zf Год назад +2

    Look again at that shale piece split open around 9:40
    The first half had a visible leaf fossil on the left hand side near the edge !

  • @paulreynolds3883
    @paulreynolds3883 8 месяцев назад

    Nice drag folding along that reverse fault @7:15

  • @milt6208
    @milt6208 Год назад

    Thank you sir.

  • @janesholst
    @janesholst Год назад +1

    Could you make a video about campi flegrei in light of recent earthquakes? 🙏🏼

  • @Hklbrries
    @Hklbrries Год назад +1

    12:22 - Looks somewhat “snakey” to me. Do you often run across them in your ramblings?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Not very often.

    • @Hklbrries
      @Hklbrries Год назад +1

      @@shawnwillseyThat’s probably good! 😃

  • @Wolfietherrat
    @Wolfietherrat Год назад +3

    The man that I let get away was a Geologist. I wish that didn’t happen. He would have taught me so much.😥

  • @sunnybunny222
    @sunnybunny222 Год назад +2

    This is really cool that you go out and show this information. is the red layer iron that is oxidizing? and what type of acid are you using to get that reaction? is it like the baking soda and vinegar thing? acetic acid? or something like that?

    • @hestheMaster
      @hestheMaster Год назад

      Even stronger stuff, like a hydrochloric acid . Will get a reaction that makes calcium chloride and carbon dioxide
      gas bubbles.

    • @sunnybunny222
      @sunnybunny222 Год назад

      thank you.
      @@charlesrichter3854

  • @AKUSUXs
    @AKUSUXs Год назад +1

    The rocks with the veins remind my a lot what is on Mt. Borah.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Same rock type and similar age.

    • @AKUSUXs
      @AKUSUXs Год назад

      @@shawnwillsey That's uplifting information! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
    @Skank_and_Gutterboy 7 месяцев назад

    This is a great area. Make sure to swing on over to Great Basin National Park, that's one that few people know about.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  7 месяцев назад +1

      I did a video from top of wheeler peak in GBNP.

    • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
      @Skank_and_Gutterboy 7 месяцев назад

      @@shawnwillsey
      I'll have to check that out!

  • @robertfarrimond3369
    @robertfarrimond3369 Год назад +2

    I have an interesting cut in mind (in Nevada) White River narrows, where highway 318 cuts through. The features remind me of CRBG, but the color is not similar. Some of it looks like sandstone? Hardly random 😁

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Yes, I know that area. It's actually tuff (consolidated ash).

  • @amirfatholazade1840
    @amirfatholazade1840 Год назад

    great👍👍

  • @jforce91
    @jforce91 Год назад

    I would assume the high levels of oxidation and extensive stress fracturing, and brecciation, probably indicate high temperature fluid interactions as well, given lack of igneous rock :)

  • @LouinVB
    @LouinVB Год назад

    My bumper sticker reads, "I pull over for road cuts". Over the years I have found neat fossils and minerals at road cuts I have stopped to look at.

  • @bottomup12
    @bottomup12 Год назад +1

    Great random roadcut. Will the sea make a return someday?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Not for a very long time if it does.

  • @keithrosenberg5486
    @keithrosenberg5486 Год назад +1

    Have you ever visited the road cut between Shoshone CA and Chicago valley to the east? It has some faulting and a spectacular intrusion.

    • @llanitedave
      @llanitedave Год назад +1

      Keith, If you're referring to the road cut on Road 178 heading toward Pahrump, I agree that's a spectacular stop and well worth a video. I'm not sure about an intrusion there, but there is a wonderful pyroclastic flow sheet with a black vitrophere (volcanic glass) layer in the middle. It's one of my favorite roadside geology stops.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Send me GPS coordinates.

    • @llanitedave
      @llanitedave Год назад

      From Google Earth: 35d 59' 49" N, 116d 13' 10" W. It juxtaposes some nice normal faulting with an excellent cross section of welding zonation.

  • @ziggstah5307
    @ziggstah5307 Год назад +1

    Shawn we need a go-along book so we can reference later

  • @wardsdotnet
    @wardsdotnet Год назад +1

    So we hear about shale all the time as a place where oil can be found via fracking... Can you ever find oil in shale that's exposed like these? Or even if not, can you teach us how shale oil works using some outcrop of shale like this?

    • @davidk7324
      @davidk7324 Год назад +1

      I've seen oily shale road cuts in western Wyoming and NE Utah.

  • @WelpNopeYep
    @WelpNopeYep Год назад +1

    I've always wanted to bring a geologist with me off-roading in southern Nevada to explain exactly this type of stuff to me when I see it. Do you know if the people at the geology department at UNLV will accept beer in payment for them to go off-roading and teach me rocks?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Maybe. Or take a class that has field trips.

  • @Sinderbad
    @Sinderbad 20 дней назад

    Nothing more exciting than a nice, healthy pegmatitic granite! 🥇

  • @oilfinder
    @oilfinder Год назад

    Hey bud ! My question is up on the roadcut after looking at the faulted area, some of the loose shale had a blue color, looked sort of like a cobalt blue color ? Was this a color or just the light making the color change ? And the unit with the rubble base could it be an unconformity rubble zone ? Thanks for your efforts.

  • @VirginiaBronson
    @VirginiaBronson Год назад

    This was great! Thank you. Reminds me to bring a hammer next time i go hiking in the woods behind my house. Lots of limestone jutting out between the trees with cool ocean-y fossils right where i am in north Texas.

  • @marcialoofboro306
    @marcialoofboro306 2 месяца назад

    Interesting

  • @Er-sv5tn
    @Er-sv5tn Год назад

    I was thinking the thin red layer might be K-T boundary

  • @s.nelsonpayne208
    @s.nelsonpayne208 Год назад +1

    I will NEVER look at a road cut the same, thanks.

  • @jonerlandson1956
    @jonerlandson1956 Год назад +1

    on route... 6 till 6...

  • @tovepetersen6746
    @tovepetersen6746 Год назад +1

    Could you pls explain why the earth drops as the magma rises to the surface ,,, if you see this tks

  • @AJShiningThreads
    @AJShiningThreads Год назад

    Where can I get some rock testing acid?

  • @stephenhudson8739
    @stephenhudson8739 Месяц назад

    That thin layer of a reddish material appears to me to be fault gouge

  • @Riverguide33
    @Riverguide33 Год назад +1

    👍

  • @kennethanderson1685
    @kennethanderson1685 Год назад +1

  • @warrenmackeydiscdragons
    @warrenmackeydiscdragons Год назад +1

    Just wanna clarify I spell now as knaw like meow but with a n - neow ok thank you

  • @davidkaplan2745
    @davidkaplan2745 Год назад

    *SO* Nevada :)

  • @davidk7324
    @davidk7324 Год назад +1

    A "real banger" 😆

  • @marknovak2413
    @marknovak2413 Год назад

    Find a roadcut in the bedded cherts on the upper plate of the Roberts Mts. Thrust. Not even you will be able to figure out what's going on!

  • @rayroripaugh3222
    @rayroripaugh3222 Год назад

    you were a couple klicks from a gold prospect, with VG. Too bad you did not visit.

  • @terrahmama
    @terrahmama Год назад

    geology field camp😊

  • @Jack-ne8vm
    @Jack-ne8vm Год назад +1

    With the number of geologists filming faults & the worldwide distribution of earthquakes, calculate the probability Shawn will become famous catching rocks shearing on film?

  • @warrenmackeydiscdragons
    @warrenmackeydiscdragons Год назад +1

    Yeah blood all right knaw I’m very pleased to see that your heading out my a way my neck of da woods so to speaks. Anywho I’m originally from da Oak Yeah Oakland smoking and wanna thank yea for da shows you provide providence yes indeed oh that word just a came up figuring how da spell provide and shit. Yes sir dismissed

  • @gymcoachdon
    @gymcoachdon Год назад

    Geology professor Shawn Willsey is at fault here...

  • @rodbhar6522
    @rodbhar6522 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @leslie3832
    @leslie3832 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @kenmunozatmmrrailroad6853
    @kenmunozatmmrrailroad6853 Год назад +1

    Thanks!