I absolutely love the idea of geologists eagerly emailing back and forth, with facts and theories, cross checking information and building up scenarios for geologic events.
Driven those roads without giving the geology much thought. Now in my 60’s I’m fascinated by all this. Can’t wait for my next road trip to look at things with a different perspective.
So awhile back i wanted to learn to flint knap, which lead to learning about clovis people, which lead to videos about their possible origins, which lead to videos about the ice free corridor, which lead to videos about ice age floods and now I'm on lecture number two of yours, it's the deepest youtube wormhole I've fallen into to date, I'm glad I'm here. Thanks for all the history.
It lead me all the way to "Symbols of an Alien Sky" Documentary, and the realization that there was no Clovis people , and History ain't what we thought , at all. then to Immanuel Velikovsky , and then off Planet to the very formation of the solar system , or the car wreck of a solar system we inhabit. And that's where I am now after three yrs.
I am watching your lectures in Austria. Our Geology is so different from that of the Pacific Northwest. But after your lectures various things happened: I start feeling connected to a part of the world I have never been to. I start seeing our own Geology in a different way (and the Alps have some pretty awesome geology). I start asking myself questions in a scientific way when I am dealing with the unknown: What do I know? What do others know? Where is the evidence? What is theory, what are the facts? I try to see the story that connects all those dots of knowledge.
And I was Born in Ireland, but grew up in North Germany, Ireland had mountains and cliffs to spare, some of which I still go and glide of off. North Germany is kinda flat, with some hills, lots of swamps, and rivers.
Was there yesterday. Well worth the trip. Eastern WA is pretty much all desert, scablands and rolling hills. Good people too. There's nothing to see in Seattle.
An hour with Nick Zentner makes most Nova episodes look shallow. Thank you. If only there were somebody doing the same for Michigan geology (where I live).
Kenneth- you could always contact the universities up that way- I would be very interested in that area, as it seems to be the focal point for the Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis
We should give Nick the graduatud and appreciation he deserves. There are very few people with the passion for teaching that he has. He has made the most complicated subjects understandable while keeping your attention and not just quoting what is written in a book but combining that with factual info that paints the picture that creates in our minds. That picture is differant for every one and if everyone were to put that picture on canvas and from one to another you would see the same thing and thats hard to accomplish.. The world needs more teachers with his passion .
Thanks Joseph. I appreciate you taking the time to write. There a many, many good teachers out there, but most don't record themselves and post online.
What a WONDERFUL presentation. I became interested in the Bridge of the Gods back in 1971 after reading the book "The High Adventure of Eric Ryback". He detailed (as best a 18 year old can) the geology leading to and from the "current bridge" on his trek of the Pacific Crest Trail. That got the attention of this "then young" California backpacker. I had always wondered how the trail could be so steep on one side of the bridge, but much gentler on the other, and why the geology appeared to be so different. Thank you for making this video available. I am only sorry that it took me so long to find it.
I have been enjoying these lectures from my place in SE Australis, on what passes for 'geologiclly active' down here. It was once of course and you can walk along the beach and find 'frozen' pools of boiling lave, and the hills about were all active volcanoes between 130 and 18 mill. years ago. Mr Zentner is quite rivetting in his presentations and has sent me off on another course entirely in my 77th year. Thank you very much Jeff Cole.
I thought that I would doz off but he is too energetic and he keeps me on the edge of my seat. I end up running something he says back and listening to him again. Sometimes 3 or 4 times until I fully understand it. Is there going to be a test on this? I feel like there is! Lol
I don't know if Nick reads this or not but I would like to thank him for his wonderful videos as the information and the way he provides it is a boon to the student and teacher alike. My students love the content and the way you present it. Most all of my students want to know what and when I will be screening the next video by you and which one. Now get this.... they always watch your video a couple of times before I show it in class so they can ask questions. I've never had students pushing the boundaries of their own curriculum before your videos. I've also started doing my own version of roadside Geology in the form of weekend field trips, their parents love it too !!!. Because they are High school students these field studies have to take place on weekends and with their parent(s) present. As I said the parents love it and so do my students. I have also received letters from 3 of the parents saying how participating in their children's educations has resulted in them becoming more involved in their child's lives once more and let's face it Geology is just cool. Please keep the awesome content coming, you make my job easier and help me define my curriculum each quarter ..... cheers!
I've just discovered this series, and as a teacher myself, I am really impressed, though not surprised, to hear of this response in your students, and I appreciate what a remarkable phenomenon that is! How wonderful to find a tool that provokes so much self-driven learning and enthusiasm, even if the "tool" is the recorded work of someone else. (But isn't that really what a textbook is?) I'm an (early) retired neuroscientist, I have taught at the university level and now part-time at a middle school, and I confess, I watch Nick's videos more out of interest in becoming a better teacher. The geology is fascinating, but his technique is unmatched, and I'm taking notes! But now I am certainly engaged in many of the mysteries he presents. Correlation is not causation, but the Bridge of the Gods landslide and the 1456 quake as a putative cause seems to be a fantastic (if not blatantly obvious) hypothesis, at least worthy of a hypothesis paper (including, I'd hope, the "amateur" with the email that got it all rolling as a co-author).
Thats great to hear as im over 50 l didn't have that luxury in school. It's now that im taking advantage of the amazing amount of information at ones finger tips. Its good to hear kids are using this important resource.
I think it's great that your education of your students is so through, as a senior now I wish my teachers had taught the way you Gentlemen do, I had to slug it out until I got to University, to cross paths with such a prof. he was the one that posed the question can you see yourself in a classroom for another 6 years, I was going for a History Ph.D. I decided to take a high paying but a mindless job, as a shipyard labourer it paid well and I did retire at 50, know I dig for any information to expand my knowledge
This is one of several videos by Mr. Zentner that I've watched. I am not from the Pacific North West but these are fascinating lectures and extremely well presented. Thank sir.
I'm so grateful to learn from these presentations. I live right near the bridge and have been fascinated since 1988 with its geological history. THANK YOU GUYS!
Prof. Zentner: Your passion for geology and your skill as a presenter have infected this Canadian computer guy. My life has been considerably enriched. Thank you.
I lived in Seattle for 11 years then moving to Yakima for 5 years. Your lecture really opened up my understanding about what I was seeing all those years ago. Thanks
This is a truly wonderful presentation! Conducted very professionally, unbelievably thorough for the amount of time used and explained in a manner that someone like me can comprehend!
I ordered Roadside Geology of Washington and Oregon yesterday from Amazon, both arrived today. I am SO excited. I haven't seen one of these since around 2000. Thanks for the recommendation. They look excellent.
So wonderful to learn from a lecturer who's so animated and passionate about his topic and so knowledgeable! Fascinating information! Thank you for sharing this on RUclips!
I love the way he draws your attention, then rewards it : never boring , never patronizing.🦉☺️. The more you see, the more you want to learn! The best kind of teaching ! Look how many older folk are there : it's never too late to be inspired ! I'm best part of 75 , and these lectures are a revelation, a lovely development at a ripe age ! ☺️. I had a chuckle when a cliff had unusual strata / dark stripes : I muttered," They're Basalt Feeder Dykes". Then, " Oh, hark at me !!"😊 Greatly looking forward to learning much more. I love the field trips : it feels as if you're really there : you get the parelax, as the little video camera moves along, with the amiable Professor's narration.🦉⛏️🌿 Many, many thanks from England.☺️🌿⛏️🦉☺️ 🇬🇧💕🇺🇲🦉⛏️🌿😊🇬🇧
I wish I could find someone who does talks like this on our Tennessee/ Mississippi River/ Smokey mountain geology. I’ve watched a few of these, and I really enjoy them.
We are so lucky to be educated by such a wonderful enthusiastic professor. I feel spoiled. Thank you for taking the time to share with those of us way beyond our college years.
Natural speaker and probably an amazing teacher...I'm a right-ponder, had barely even heard of this river, and was immediately hooked, and stayed...which makes him just a tiny bit special...
This guy is great. I've watched several hours of his lectures. I'm from Oregon and studied a fair amount of PNW geology years ago. So I'm pretty familiar with most of these places and topics and really enjoy hearing these great stories. And some I didn't really know and love to learn about. Now I live in the Sierra Nevadas and the rocks and geology are all pretty different. No volcanoes or exotic terranes around here. Figure I am sitting on a giant granite batholith. And I'm actually surprised how many earthquakes we get.
the first time I heard about the Ice Age Floods in the Pacific Northwest was reading about the geologic detective work that went into analysis of the English Channel and it was formed when Doggerland was submerged by the big tsunami caused by the subsurface Norweigan slide - the geologists were familiar with the geologic features the Ice Age Floods caused by breaching the glacier/ice dam of Lake Missoula and how they found similar features in the bottom of the Channel - as well as matching up the sediments along the English and French coastlines - I guess once you begin you just can't stop learning about geology and history!
So glad my son attended CWU. He now is teaching high school history classes and also enjoys your presentations. Your style of presenting information is very enjoyable and entertaining. You are so good I don't even realize that I'm learning! Keep up the great work!
These lectures are so interesting. Reminds me of Penn State geology Professor Lattman in the 60's; his lectures were so good that hundreds of students "audited" them every day.
Great video. I'm not even from WA., but can't stop watching these. If today's teachers had just half of your ability to teach a subject, we'd be a lot better off. Thanks for putting these out there!
I was born in the early '50s, and for 20 years lived downstream about a hundred miles from this location, and traveled there a few times to see Bonneville Dam and the locks. It seems laughable today that back then there was some people who still believed in the Stone Arch Story. I, as well as everyone, had no clue this stuff had occurred, but not as much time and money was spent on studying it then and so everything was just a theory without enough evidence to prove. This sort of "education" on YT is pretty cool. He's a true scientist bc he's willing to thoughtfully consider the possibility a theory he doesn't like could be real. He doesn't rely on preconceived notions or "feelings"; only evidence.
Nick, thank you sir, these are great videos. I now find myself slowing down a little more as I drive up 410 and other areas to notice exactly what you are speaking about.
Thoroughly enjoying all these outreach lectures. You are an amazing communicator and the lecture was pitched perfectly to the audience. I came to you via Shawn Willsey and now spend a huge amount of my free time learning about the PNW … an area I only knew of from tv and books. I live in the uk and the geology of the PNW is amazingly complicated and diverse, absolutely fascinating. Thank you Nick…. Next it’s the A-Z of the Ice Age Floods…
Im 61, and I want to thank you for this series. Im on the East Coast and have wondered about the geological history of many places. From past events like Cumbre Vieja like events, like off the coast of Morocco, to the effects of the Puerto Rico trench, from earthquakes to landslides. Im getting a lot of education from you and trying to envision both past and future events. Thank you for this entire experience.
Brilliant. Especially as I've been there from the UK. I remember dry falls lake, there is a distinctive knotch in the cliff where the flood happened. I also went to East Washington desert, saw the petrified trees and the Colombia River which is huge. Love geography.
Thank you. You have made geology understanble to me. Whish you had been around 40 years before you were. May have wound up being geologists in stead if just a rock hound. God bless you.
Omg I’ve driven through this area so many times and never realized this was a landslide area. So cool. As a newbie rockhound I’ve been trying to learn about the geology of the area to know where to look. I came across your ancient rivers lecture and got hooked. I love learning from people that are excited and passionate about the subject they are teaching. I live near Mt Hood but if I lived in WA I would totally go to all of your in person lectures.
Some very beautiful country out there that I didn't even know existed in this country . Loved the lecture , Pat was very entertaining . He would keep you awake and focused..
Nick, after coming up here since I was a kid to see my uncle in Seattle, I was 6 at the World Fair in 1962, it's been my pleasure now to live up here since '06. You have a wonderful set of teachings here on RUclips that are such a great source of college level knowledge! Thanks so much for making it all available!
I absolutely love these lectures, although , almost literally or figuratively I live in Nick’s or CWU’s back yard . Native of western Wa transplanted in 1990’s to Yakima’s Lower Valley , now nearing my aperture of 60 yr I would never in a billion yrs ( geology speaking ) have guessed that I would be so struck by rocks and Nick’s video lecture series played huge part . I like to describe Nick as the Bob Ross of Geology 101 Great Work to all of CWU and contributors to the exploration and recognition world wide ( web anyway) of new information right under our feet or mine at least .. and this year I will get there for some long overdue seat time!
Thank you so much for a wonderful lecture series. I particularly like how you show the transparency of the scientific process as it evolves, comparing sources and possibilities at various levels of confidence. Your spontaneity/humor while addressing what could be "dry" topics is also much appreciated! I'm also interested in the effects of the drainage changes of Lake Agassiz (relating to Younger Dryas and extinction/climate events) and how this affected various regions and the whole world. Sources suggest that sometimes it switched to drain through the Columbia River Valley. While the final, most catastrophic drainage was into Hudson Bay, I would also love to hear your take on how earlier episodes affected your region and others. It's a good example of the distant yet deep interconnections of our world. May your good work continue, and the Norns smile upon your endeavors :)
Excellent lecture, I'm from another world on the east coast. Been watching your lectures on you tube for a few years. I always have google maps open in another tab since your speaking to locals that know your area. We have nothing that compares to the geology of the Pacific North West. I've never been to your area of the country other than you tube videos & content of your geology lectures. If I wasn't so old I'd want to be a young man in this region, maybe sit in on one of these lectures. I'd be a rock hound for sure. what we missed by not having you tube in the early years of ones life. Stay safe Nick.
If only all of my college professors were like you. I really enjoyed this lecture, and enjoyed learning the history of where my family originated. Thank you for the way you teach!
Hi Nick Beeing from the "old"" land I am impressied by your commitment on bringing these stores to all of Us. Great work and Realy interesting for a Northen European guy to see such detailed "lokal" knwalge of the US of A to us, thank you Very much.
@@kniveznor1 did you enroll at CWU? I grew up in Thorp and graduated from EHS in 81. I wasn't interested in becoming a "brainiac" so never considered college until 40 years after graduating. I hope you followed your interests and enrolled. Nameste! and
Nick, just started watching your videos on geology. Has turned into binge watching!! Love geology. This started as curios interest into Washington state cause I thought it would be a great state to live in. Little did i realize all the geology involved in it's formation. This may be as clise as i get so please keep the lectures coming. Greatful ancient student.
A note about salmon being able to ascend the rapids or not; it's a myth that salmon always go back to the river where they were hatched. They will **TRY** to do so, but if they can't make it they'll lay their eggs wherever they find an appropriate stream bed. Also, a certain percentage of salmon will always get lost, which is how new rivers get populated. If salmon couldn't get into the upper Colombia for a few years or a few centuries it's not an issue. As soon as the waterway was navigable to them they would have repopulated the river again.
Yes, there's a reason instinct and genetics are a bit sloppy, to deal with natural variation. Salmon fisheries have been established in rivers in Chile and Argentina where they never were before, by bringing in smolts from the Columbia River. They have spread on their own to other rivers than the original release points. This new fishery can exploit the vast krill population of the SE Pacific Ocean, largely untapped since whaling wiped out most of the baleen whales in the 19th century.
Between 2011 and 2017 I transported a number of travel trailers through Oregon and Washington state. I was astonished when I realized I was seeing all that old lava layers and miles and miles of lava flow sheets. Well I in the last month after I found your lectures on RUclips I am beginning to understand what I saw with my own eyes. Thanks for your lectures and the hard work, I would love to attend you classes some day. It is a long way from Indiana.
I lived in and around Roseburg Oregon for 25 years. At the south edge of the I-5, the Pacific, Klamath and Cascade plates meet. About 15 miles east of Roseburg the only place in the world two rivers smash head on. Called Colliding Rivers. It causes a bubble with air where it appears a person has drowned. A gag on tourists. 70 miles east of Roseburg is Crater Lake. 2nd deepest in the world. I retired to Panama in 2013. Lived in Nicaragua , Ecuador as well and for the last 4 years Costa Rica. Living retirement as it should be. Enjoying travel, archeology, geology, volcanology, history, mountain biking in the Andes at altitudes as high as 21,000 feet. I will be 75 next month, take no medications, BP 104/55, resting pulse 56. I bench press 242 pounds in spite of having had 11 bone surgeries, 3 bone grafts and titanium enhancements on my left arm. And this year making up for my usual 3 months of International travels per years flubbed up from the Pandemic. I will likely be traveling 9 months this year, already at nearly 7. May be going to Munich Germany for Oktoberfest later this month. Earthquakes? I went through a 7.4 Magnitude one in Managua Nicaragua October 13, 2014. It was actually fun. The cement walls looked like flowing liquid cement. Especially the west wall. Only thing of concern was the air conditioner unit on the roof. No way was I going to go outside in the dark where there were electric wires and trees to worry about. A 6.3 quake had destroyed two thirds of Managua in 1973, forcing Howard Hughes out of the International Hotel there. About 3 kilometers north of where I was staying on the InterContinental Highway Route 1.
Little note for gold panners. You may find what appears to be spent 22 rimfire bullets in your pan. Yes they may be just that. But hold on to them as they could also be Platinum nuggets. Platinum is harder than lead. And at Diamond Lake, the lake has that name for a reason. Diamonds are found on the east shore of the lake. And Thunder Eggs are found on Mt Thielsen, AKA Lightning Rod of the Pacific Northwest. Lightning hits ore deposits making them. Free info on the region. I won't be returning to the US. My wife, a Costa Rican University Professor was denied a US Tourist Visa 3 times. So if she isn't welcome, I'm not going
I lived in Washington in the late sixties and have watched all of your series it is so nice to see the areas that I used to travel through and now I understand the geology much better thank you Nick keep it up
Moved away from the PNW a few years ago, but love the region and hope to move back soon. Really enjoy these honest, informative, and intelligent lectures-I barely scratched the surface of reading up on the geology of the region while living there-this is much better than just reading!
Just found this,01-02-23 Have seen others of your presentations. I Love them. VERY interesting. I used to live (45 years) blocks away from Lake Michigan, south of Milwaukee. Now I live at the base of the Sacramento Mtns in Alamogordo, NM. Just as fascinating here but warmer.
Thanks Nick, crew and CWU for these lectures. Very interesting to me as in early August 1959 I camped in the campground that was wiped out by the Quake Lake Slide that was caused by the Hebgen Lake earthquake. In a few months I will be going through Ellensburg, might stop in for a lecture if there is one at that time. Your lectures and Iron Horse Brewery are high on my list to visit there. Be well friend.
Outstanding lecturer and great presentation of the subject matter. Much appreciated. And thanks for the tips on these Roadside Geology books, which we’ve order and now are looking for where we can put them in our enormous book shelves and displays. Sent one on Texas to our families there. Great resource material. All so very interesting on the rock we all live.
At 33:50, the hazy sky of the 1882 photo can be explained by the blue (and UV) weighted response of photographic emulsions of the time, they barely picked up reddish light at all (thus red safety lights in darkrooms). It wasn't until the early 20th century that dyes were added to the film to enhance red sensitivity, and Ansel Adams was able to use blue-blocking filters to achieve his dramatic dark skies.
If I had a teacher like him I would be a geologist today. What a great resource for people to have. I am in Kansas and started looking for the same type of things about my area and what I find is (be nice) not the same caliber. Anyway thanks Nick and you may see me in your class in the winter of 21-22.
Love the Gorge and Bridge of the Gods. East Wind Cafe, too. LOL One of my favorite books is Bridge of the Gods by F L Balch. At one time I could quote many favorite lines from the book. The island in the river below the Mosier Rest Stop has a tall marker on it. That is Balch's grave and memorial. He asked to be buried amongst his friends, the Native Tribes of the Columbia. That island was much longer before Bonneville was built. It was the major burial site of the Native Americans in the area. Most of those bodies were removed and buried in a mass grave. The mass grave is on the Washington side across from The Dalles. Driving toward The Dalles, the grave is on your left as you head toward the bridge to cross the Columbia. Thank you for such fantastic information about my favorite places on earth!!
We are traveling Washington and I want to thank you for all the knowledge you have shared on your channel. It helped have just a little understanding as we traveled through the scab lands. What tortured landscape you have to explore in your backyard. Again thanks especially for your effort to educate beyond the lecture hall.
Thank you so very much Nick. I remeber paddling up the Copalis River and wondering why are these old trees as they are? Here in central NC, I turn a different leaf. Take care, oz
Professor Zentner provides the invaluable experience of fun in learning. Sad that the overwhelming number of his audience seems to be old folks like me; this topic is interesting, I would believe, even for the jaded younger generation. Thanks for you lessons on Cascadia geography and your other wonderful lecturers. Love, David
I absolutely love the idea of geologists eagerly emailing back and forth, with facts and theories, cross checking information and building up scenarios for geologic events.
Driven those roads without giving the geology much thought. Now in my 60’s I’m fascinated by all this. Can’t wait for my next road trip to look at things with a different perspective.
Im just an old grandma that has always loved geology. Thank you for making this information available to everyone.
me too!!
There's three of us 😁
I'm in my 40's An Also Enjoy You're Informative Video's Thank you
And grandpa’s too!
Did you notice all the Silver hair in the audience?.
So awhile back i wanted to learn to flint knap, which lead to learning about clovis people, which lead to videos about their possible origins, which lead to videos about the ice free corridor, which lead to videos about ice age floods and now I'm on lecture number two of yours, it's the deepest youtube wormhole I've fallen into to date, I'm glad I'm here. Thanks for all the history.
Memorable comment, Mike. Great!
Mike, sounds like a wonderful journey. Inspirational
These are the best kind of wormholes
It lead me all the way to "Symbols of an Alien Sky" Documentary, and the realization that there was no Clovis people , and History ain't what we thought , at all. then to Immanuel Velikovsky , and then off Planet to the very formation of the solar system , or the car wreck of a solar system we inhabit. And that's where I am now after three yrs.
Look up Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis
And Solutrean Clovis connection
Youre welcome guys! This story gets even crazier :)
I don't know exactly why RUclips has been sending me here all day but God damn this guy can hold my attention.
I am watching your lectures in Austria. Our Geology is so different from that of the Pacific Northwest. But after your lectures various things happened:
I start feeling connected to a part of the world I have never been to.
I start seeing our own Geology in a different way (and the Alps have some pretty awesome geology).
I start asking myself questions in a scientific way when I am dealing with the unknown: What do I know? What do others know? Where is the evidence? What is theory, what are the facts?
I try to see the story that connects all those dots of knowledge.
And I was Born in Ireland, but grew up in North Germany, Ireland had mountains and cliffs to spare, some of which I still go and glide of off. North Germany is kinda flat, with some hills, lots of swamps, and rivers.
Was there yesterday. Well worth the trip. Eastern WA is pretty much all desert, scablands and rolling hills. Good people too. There's nothing to see in Seattle.
Well, you know what they say: the Lord Alps those who Alps themselves.
@@e1ochai that doesn't sound butthurt at all
Nick and Randal Carlson have changed my life and helped me through drug addiction learning about this true history.
What a wonderful new focus for you! Congratulations on your hard work and finding a new way to "rock" your life.
I could listen to Nick Zentner all day long.
Another great video that makes this ole retired Geologist happy. Thanks for posting.
I cannot believe Nick’s undergrads aren’t excited about this guy! He’s a RUclips phenomenon!
An hour with Nick Zentner makes most Nova episodes look shallow. Thank you. If only there were somebody doing the same for Michigan geology (where I live).
That's a meaningful comment, Kenneth, since that's exactly what I'm trying to do with these lectures. Thank you.
Kenneth- you could always contact the universities up that way- I would be very interested in that area, as it seems to be the focal point for the Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis
We should give Nick the graduatud and appreciation he deserves. There are very few people with the passion for teaching that he has. He has made the most complicated subjects understandable while keeping your attention and not just quoting what is written in a book but combining that with factual info that paints the picture that creates in our minds. That picture is differant for every one and if everyone were to put that picture on canvas and from one to another you would see the same thing and thats hard to accomplish.. The world needs more teachers with his passion .
Thanks Joseph. I appreciate you taking the time to write. There a many, many good teachers out there, but most don't record themselves and post online.
What a WONDERFUL presentation. I became interested in the Bridge of the Gods back in 1971 after reading the book "The High Adventure of Eric Ryback". He detailed (as best a 18 year old can) the geology leading to and from the "current bridge" on his trek of the Pacific Crest Trail. That got the attention of this "then young" California backpacker. I had always wondered how the trail could be so steep on one side of the bridge, but much gentler on the other, and why the geology appeared to be so different. Thank you for making this video available. I am only sorry that it took me so long to find it.
Nick is quite entertaining with his teaching style and I can tell he enjoys what he does. Fun lecture.
I have been enjoying these lectures from my place in SE Australis, on what passes for 'geologiclly active' down here. It was once of course and you can walk along the beach and find 'frozen' pools of boiling lave, and the hills about were all active volcanoes between 130 and 18 mill. years ago.
Mr Zentner is quite rivetting in his presentations and has sent me off on another course entirely in my 77th year.
Thank you very much
Jeff Cole.
Damn it, came here to fall asleep, but after a few nights I ended up learning all about the geography and geology of the Pacific Northwest.
Ha!
Same, except I had engineering homework lol.
I thought that I would doz off but he is too energetic and he keeps me on the edge of my seat. I end up running something he says back and listening to him again. Sometimes 3 or 4 times until I fully understand it. Is there going to be a test on this? I feel like there is! Lol
Got any boring lectures to recommend? 😉
I did the same thing!
I don't know if Nick reads this or not but I would like to thank him for his wonderful videos as the information and the way he provides it is a boon to the student and teacher alike. My students love the content and the way you present it. Most all of my students want to know what and when I will be screening the next video by you and which one. Now get this.... they always watch your video a couple of times before I show it in class so they can ask questions. I've never had students pushing the boundaries of their own curriculum before your videos. I've also started doing my own version of roadside Geology in the form of weekend field trips, their parents love it too !!!.
Because they are High school students these field studies have to take place on weekends and with their parent(s) present. As I said the parents love it and so do my students. I have also received letters from 3 of the parents saying how participating in their children's educations has resulted in them becoming more involved in their child's lives once more and let's face it Geology is just cool.
Please keep the awesome content coming, you make my job easier and help me define my curriculum each quarter ..... cheers!
Memorable email, Wayne. Thank you! Nice to hear that our programs are helping. Great to hear that you are teaching geology so effectively. Congrats.
I've just discovered this series, and as a teacher myself, I am really impressed, though not surprised, to hear of this response in your students, and I appreciate what a remarkable phenomenon that is! How wonderful to find a tool that provokes so much self-driven learning and enthusiasm, even if the "tool" is the recorded work of someone else. (But isn't that really what a textbook is?) I'm an (early) retired neuroscientist, I have taught at the university level and now part-time at a middle school, and I confess, I watch Nick's videos more out of interest in becoming a better teacher. The geology is fascinating, but his technique is unmatched, and I'm taking notes! But now I am certainly engaged in many of the mysteries he presents. Correlation is not causation, but the Bridge of the Gods landslide and the 1456 quake as a putative cause seems to be a fantastic (if not blatantly obvious) hypothesis, at least worthy of a hypothesis paper (including, I'd hope, the "amateur" with the email that got it all rolling as a co-author).
As a student, I love to hear about wonderful teachers like yourself, stay awesome 😎
Thats great to hear as im over 50 l didn't have that luxury in school. It's now that im taking advantage of the amazing amount of information at ones finger tips. Its good to hear kids are using this important resource.
I think it's great that your education of your students is so through, as a senior now I wish my teachers had taught the way you Gentlemen do, I had to slug it out until I got to University, to cross paths with such a prof. he was the one that posed the question can you see yourself in a classroom for another 6 years, I was going for a History Ph.D. I decided to take a high paying but a mindless job, as a shipyard labourer it paid well and I did retire at 50, know I dig for any information to expand my knowledge
I'm an older guy who never studied or read much about geology. I find these lecture fascinating. I want to keep learning more. Thanks so very much.
I’m not even into geology, but I watched the whole playlist. Stunning lecturer!
Nick is going to be showing more lectures coming soon in April mid- month
This is one of several videos by Mr. Zentner that I've watched. I am not from the Pacific North West but these are fascinating lectures and extremely well presented. Thank sir.
I really enjoy Nick Zentner's talk's.... Very intelligent and personable speaker!! .... Thank-you to everyone who helps put these video's out here!!
I'm so grateful to learn from these presentations. I live right near the bridge and have been fascinated since 1988 with its geological history. THANK YOU GUYS!
Prof. Zentner: Your passion for geology and your skill as a presenter have infected this Canadian computer guy. My life has been considerably enriched. Thank you.
Very nice comment, Larry. Thanks for sending it.
I lived in Seattle for 11 years then moving to Yakima for 5 years. Your lecture really opened up my understanding about what I was seeing all those years ago. Thanks
This is a truly wonderful presentation! Conducted very professionally, unbelievably thorough for the amount of time used and explained in a manner that someone like me can comprehend!
This guy is a great teacher. I've never been interested in geology,but he really makes it interesting. 😻🌋
I ordered Roadside Geology of Washington and Oregon yesterday from Amazon, both arrived today. I am SO excited. I haven't seen one of these since around 2000. Thanks for the recommendation. They look excellent.
I just found these lectures and am fascinated. What an excellent teacher.
So wonderful to learn from a lecturer who's so animated and passionate about his topic and so knowledgeable! Fascinating information! Thank you for sharing this on RUclips!
You have to know your subject well enough to teach it to someone else. I learned some from this presentation. It was long but valuable.
I loved the lecture. I'm sorta binge-watching your classes. You're a great teacher. Thanks
Hah! Me too. Rewatching "Chelan" and "Supercontinents" programs. Excellent!
I love the way he draws your
attention, then rewards it :
never boring , never
patronizing.🦉☺️.
The more you see,
the more you want to learn!
The best kind of teaching !
Look how many older
folk are there : it's never
too late to be inspired !
I'm best part of 75 , and
these lectures are a
revelation, a lovely
development
at a ripe age ! ☺️.
I had a chuckle when a cliff
had unusual strata / dark stripes :
I muttered," They're Basalt
Feeder Dykes".
Then, " Oh, hark at me !!"😊
Greatly looking forward to
learning much more.
I love the field trips : it feels
as if you're really there :
you get the parelax, as the little
video camera moves along,
with the amiable Professor's
narration.🦉⛏️🌿
Many, many thanks from
England.☺️🌿⛏️🦉☺️
🇬🇧💕🇺🇲🦉⛏️🌿😊🇬🇧
This is really good series. I've driven through the area for years and have always wondered about it's geologic history.
I wish I could find someone who does talks like this on our Tennessee/ Mississippi River/ Smokey mountain geology. I’ve watched a few of these, and I really enjoy them.
We are so lucky to be educated by such a wonderful enthusiastic professor. I feel spoiled. Thank you for taking the time to share with those of us way beyond our college years.
Natural speaker and probably an amazing teacher...I'm a right-ponder, had barely even heard of this river, and was immediately hooked, and stayed...which makes him just a tiny bit special...
right-ponder???? from Europe???? ( was told that Brits etc never refer to the Atlantic Ocean as the "pond"--strictly USA)
@@gggreggg then kindly be told otherwise direct from the horse's mouth
I love your humor, Nick!
Nick Zentner is without a doubt a Living National Treasure.
Nick, I really hope you continue to post these lectures on here. I have learned a lot from you, and greatly appreciate your efforts.
This guy is great. I've watched several hours of his lectures. I'm from Oregon and studied a fair amount of PNW geology years ago. So I'm pretty familiar with most of these places and topics and really enjoy hearing these great stories. And some I didn't really know and love to learn about. Now I live in the Sierra Nevadas and the rocks and geology are all pretty different. No volcanoes or exotic terranes around here. Figure I am sitting on a giant granite batholith. And I'm actually surprised how many earthquakes we get.
the first time I heard about the Ice Age Floods in the Pacific Northwest was reading about the geologic detective work that went into analysis of the English Channel and it was formed when Doggerland was submerged by the big tsunami caused by the subsurface Norweigan slide - the geologists were familiar with the geologic features the Ice Age Floods caused by breaching the glacier/ice dam of Lake Missoula and how they found similar features in the bottom of the Channel - as well as matching up the sediments along the English and French coastlines - I guess once you begin you just can't stop learning about geology and history!
So glad my son attended CWU. He now is teaching high school history classes and also enjoys your presentations. Your style of presenting information is very enjoyable and entertaining. You are so good I don't even realize that I'm learning! Keep up the great work!
Thanks Brian!
Nick is a great story teller... and teacher... all based on the fascinating science of Geology... I thoroughly enjoy his videos... thanks Nick!!!
These lectures are so interesting. Reminds me of Penn State geology Professor Lattman in the 60's; his lectures were so good that hundreds of students "audited" them every day.
Thanks John. Nice to hear about Lattman - have not heard about him.
Great video. I'm not even from WA., but can't stop watching these. If today's teachers had just half of your ability to teach a subject, we'd be a lot better off. Thanks for putting these out there!
Thanks!
Honestly; recently everything has felt so meaningless in life, but these lectures help me keep the absurd nausea at bay. So thank you :)
I was born in the early '50s, and for 20 years lived downstream about a hundred miles from this location, and traveled there a few times to see Bonneville Dam and the locks. It seems laughable today that back then there was some people who still believed in the Stone Arch Story. I, as well as everyone, had no clue this stuff had occurred, but not as much time and money was spent on studying it then and so everything was just a theory without enough evidence to prove. This sort of "education" on YT is pretty cool. He's a true scientist bc he's willing to thoughtfully consider the possibility a theory he doesn't like could be real. He doesn't rely on preconceived notions or "feelings"; only evidence.
I would move to Ellensburg just to have the opportunity to attend some of his lectures.
Nick, thank you sir, these are great videos.
I now find myself slowing down a little more as I drive up 410 and other areas to notice exactly what you are speaking about.
Thoroughly enjoying all these outreach lectures. You are an amazing communicator and the lecture was pitched perfectly to the audience.
I came to you via Shawn Willsey and now spend a huge amount of my free time learning about the PNW … an area I only knew of from tv and books. I live in the uk and the geology of the PNW is amazingly complicated and diverse, absolutely fascinating. Thank you Nick…. Next it’s the A-Z of the Ice Age Floods…
Im 61, and I want to thank you for this series. Im on the East Coast and have wondered about the geological history of many places. From past events like Cumbre Vieja like events, like off the coast of Morocco, to the effects of the Puerto Rico trench, from earthquakes to landslides. Im getting a lot of education from you and trying to envision both past and future events. Thank you for this entire experience.
This is just great. Nick is teaching me to like geology. Oh nooooo! Thank you Central Washington U!
Brilliant. Especially as I've been there from the UK. I remember dry falls lake, there is a distinctive knotch in the cliff where the flood happened. I also went to East Washington desert, saw the petrified trees and the Colombia River which is huge. Love geography.
Thank you.
You have made geology understanble to me. Whish you had been around 40 years before you were. May have wound up being geologists in stead if just a rock hound.
God bless you.
Omg I’ve driven through this area so many times and never realized this was a landslide area. So cool. As a newbie rockhound I’ve been trying to learn about the geology of the area to know where to look. I came across your ancient rivers lecture and got hooked. I love learning from people that are excited and passionate about the subject they are teaching. I live near Mt Hood but if I lived in WA I would totally go to all of your in person lectures.
I have thoroughly enjoyed watching Nick's series. Excellent, informative and never boring.
Some very beautiful country out there that I didn't even know existed in this country . Loved the lecture , Pat was very entertaining . He would keep you awake and focused..
Nick, after coming up here since I was a kid to see my uncle in Seattle, I was 6 at the World Fair in 1962, it's been my pleasure now to live up here since '06. You have a wonderful set of teachings here on RUclips that are such a great source of college level knowledge! Thanks so much for making it all available!
Thanks Thomas! Nice to hear that you're enjoying these.
I absolutely love these lectures, although , almost literally or figuratively I live in Nick’s or CWU’s back yard . Native of western Wa transplanted in 1990’s to Yakima’s Lower Valley , now nearing my aperture of 60 yr
I would never in a billion yrs ( geology speaking ) have guessed that I would be so struck by rocks and Nick’s video lecture series played huge part . I like to describe Nick as the Bob Ross of Geology 101 Great Work to all of CWU and contributors to the exploration and recognition world wide ( web anyway) of new information right under our feet or mine at least .. and this year I will get there for some long overdue seat time!
Thank you so much for a wonderful lecture series. I particularly like how you show the transparency of the scientific process as it evolves, comparing sources and possibilities at various levels of confidence. Your spontaneity/humor while addressing what could be "dry" topics is also much appreciated!
I'm also interested in the effects of the drainage changes of Lake Agassiz (relating to Younger Dryas and extinction/climate events) and how this affected various regions and the whole world. Sources suggest that sometimes it switched to drain through the Columbia River Valley. While the final, most catastrophic drainage was into Hudson Bay, I would also love to hear your take on how earlier episodes affected your region and others. It's a good example of the distant yet deep interconnections of our world.
May your good work continue, and the Norns smile upon your endeavors :)
Thanks for the nice comments!
Prof “What evidence can we find for a landslide? We look for a pile of rocks! This isn’t rocket science”
No, it’s geology...rock science
The dead trees, dip stick!
This is the second lecture of yours that I have had the pleasure of seeing. You are an excellent educator. I shall keep watching and thank you Nick!
His chalkboards are time machines!
Excellent lecture, I'm from another world on the east coast. Been watching your lectures on you tube for a few years. I always have google maps open in another tab since your speaking to locals that know your area. We have nothing that compares to the geology of the Pacific North West. I've never been to your area of the country other than you tube videos & content of your geology lectures. If I wasn't so old I'd want to be a young man in this region, maybe sit in on one of these lectures. I'd be a rock hound for sure. what we missed by not having you tube in the early years of ones life. Stay safe Nick.
If only all of my college professors were like you.
I really enjoyed this lecture, and enjoyed learning the history of where my family originated.
Thank you for the way you teach!
As always, thank you for all that you do. Looking forward to the next series
Thanks Jeffrey. Next lectures will be in 2019.
I'll just have to wait.
Hi Nick
Beeing from the "old"" land I am impressied by your commitment on bringing these stores to all of Us. Great work and Realy interesting for a Northen European guy to see such detailed "lokal" knwalge of the US of A to us, thank you Very much.
Another one? What a week to be alive. Currently ignoring my history homework to watch this.
Ha! No more new ones for a year!
Nick Zentner , So what you're saying is I have to enroll at CWU to learn more? You've convinced me.
@@kniveznor1 did you enroll at CWU? I grew up in Thorp and graduated from EHS in 81. I wasn't interested in becoming a "brainiac" so never considered college until 40 years after graduating. I hope you followed your interests and enrolled. Nameste! and
Absolutely fabulous Sir. Thank you. You love this subject. Its contagious! You make it dimensional!
Thank you, Colleen!
Oh wow. These are awesome. Please don't stop making these, Nick! I can't stop watching your lectures. (And I've never known that I'm into geology.)
Thanks much. I do 4 next lectures every winter.
Oh wow, Nick, that's too long to wait :(
Nick, just started watching your videos on geology. Has turned into binge watching!! Love geology. This started as curios interest into Washington state cause I thought it would be a great state to live in. Little did i realize all the geology involved in it's formation. This may be as clise as i get so please keep the lectures coming. Greatful ancient student.
A note about salmon being able to ascend the rapids or not; it's a myth that salmon always go back to the river where they were hatched. They will **TRY** to do so, but if they can't make it they'll lay their eggs wherever they find an appropriate stream bed. Also, a certain percentage of salmon will always get lost, which is how new rivers get populated.
If salmon couldn't get into the upper Colombia for a few years or a few centuries it's not an issue. As soon as the waterway was navigable to them they would have repopulated the river again.
Yes, there's a reason instinct and genetics are a bit sloppy, to deal with natural variation. Salmon fisheries have been established in rivers in Chile and Argentina where they never were before, by bringing in smolts from the Columbia River. They have spread on their own to other rivers than the original release points.
This new fishery can exploit the vast krill population of the SE Pacific Ocean, largely untapped since whaling wiped out most of the baleen whales in the 19th century.
@@r0cketplumber Wow, that's awesome to know, thank you for sharing that knowledge, marine biology has always fascinated me 🙂
Between 2011 and 2017 I transported a number of travel trailers through Oregon and Washington state. I was astonished when I realized I was seeing all that old lava layers and miles and miles of lava flow sheets. Well I in the last month after I found your lectures on RUclips I am beginning to understand what I saw with my own eyes. Thanks for your lectures and the hard work, I would love to attend you classes some day. It is a long way from Indiana.
Nick's enthusiasm for geology is infectious..
I lived in and around Roseburg Oregon for 25 years. At the south edge of the I-5, the Pacific, Klamath and Cascade plates meet. About 15 miles east of Roseburg the only place in the world two rivers smash head on. Called Colliding Rivers. It causes a bubble with air where it appears a person has drowned. A gag on tourists. 70 miles east of Roseburg is Crater Lake. 2nd deepest in the world. I retired to Panama in 2013. Lived in Nicaragua , Ecuador as well and for the last 4 years Costa Rica. Living retirement as it should be. Enjoying travel, archeology, geology, volcanology, history, mountain biking in the Andes at altitudes as high as 21,000 feet. I will be 75 next month, take no medications, BP 104/55, resting pulse 56. I bench press 242 pounds in spite of having had 11 bone surgeries, 3 bone grafts and titanium enhancements on my left arm. And this year making up for my usual 3 months of International travels per years flubbed up from the Pandemic. I will likely be traveling 9 months this year, already at nearly 7. May be going to Munich Germany for Oktoberfest later this month.
Earthquakes? I went through a 7.4 Magnitude one in Managua Nicaragua October 13, 2014. It was actually fun. The cement walls looked like flowing liquid cement. Especially the west wall. Only thing of concern was the air conditioner unit on the roof. No way was I going to go outside in the dark where there were electric wires and trees to worry about. A 6.3 quake had destroyed two thirds of Managua in 1973, forcing Howard Hughes out of the International Hotel there. About 3 kilometers north of where I was staying on the InterContinental Highway Route 1.
Little note for gold panners. You may find what appears to be spent 22 rimfire bullets in your pan. Yes they may be just that. But hold on to them as they could also be Platinum nuggets. Platinum is harder than lead. And at Diamond Lake, the lake has that name for a reason. Diamonds are found on the east shore of the lake. And Thunder Eggs are found on Mt Thielsen, AKA Lightning Rod of the Pacific Northwest. Lightning hits ore deposits making them. Free info on the region. I won't be returning to the US. My wife, a Costa Rican University Professor was denied a US Tourist Visa 3 times. So if she isn't welcome, I'm not going
I lived in Washington in the late sixties and have watched all of your series it is so nice to see the areas that I used to travel through and now I understand the geology much better thank you Nick keep it up
Very nice. Thanks Paulette.
Great lecture what Nick does is greatly appreciated!
I always learn something from these video lectures! The power of nature is amazing!
Amazing lectures. it is like reading geology detective book. Also Nick's sense of humor makes these stories addictive!
Moved away from the PNW a few years ago, but love the region and hope to move back soon. Really enjoy these honest, informative, and intelligent lectures-I barely scratched the surface of reading up on the geology of the region while living there-this is much better than just reading!
Memorable comments, Sara. Thank you!
Just found this,01-02-23 Have seen others of your presentations. I Love them. VERY interesting. I used to live (45 years) blocks away from Lake Michigan, south of Milwaukee. Now I live at the base of the Sacramento Mtns in Alamogordo, NM. Just as fascinating here but warmer.
Thanks Nick, crew and CWU for these lectures. Very interesting to me as in early August 1959 I camped in the campground that was wiped out by the Quake Lake Slide that was caused by the Hebgen Lake earthquake. In a few months I will be going through Ellensburg, might stop in for a lecture if there is one at that time. Your lectures and Iron Horse Brewery are high on my list to visit there. Be well friend.
Interesting. Thanks Randy. Come visit. See nickzentner.com for lectures this year.
If I had a teacher like this 30 years ago, I would have had a lot more interest in learning. I'm impressed! Keep up the good work.
Thank you!
Really entertaining ,but what's more important, really educational, really, really, REALLY GREAT CONTENT..
Goldfinger was my teacher at Oregon State! Never will forget his name, knows his stuff too.
Outstanding lecturer and great presentation of the subject matter. Much appreciated. And thanks for the tips on these Roadside Geology books, which we’ve order and now are looking for where we can put them in our enormous book shelves and displays. Sent one on Texas to our families there. Great resource material. All so very interesting on the rock we all live.
I actually enjoyed your lectures, this is the second one ,keep ‘em coming
At 33:50, the hazy sky of the 1882 photo can be explained by the blue (and UV) weighted response of photographic emulsions of the time, they barely picked up reddish light at all (thus red safety lights in darkrooms). It wasn't until the early 20th century that dyes were added to the film to enhance red sensitivity, and Ansel Adams was able to use blue-blocking filters to achieve his dramatic dark skies.
what a wonderful teacher. central washington university is very lucky to have this man
If I had a teacher like him I would be a geologist today. What a great resource for people to have. I am in Kansas and started looking for the same type of things about my area and what I find is (be nice) not the same caliber. Anyway thanks Nick and you may see me in your class in the winter of 21-22.
Love the Gorge and Bridge of the Gods. East Wind Cafe, too. LOL One of my favorite books is Bridge of the Gods by F L Balch. At one time I could quote many favorite lines from the book. The island in the river below the Mosier Rest Stop has a tall marker on it. That is Balch's grave and memorial. He asked to be buried amongst his friends, the Native Tribes of the Columbia. That island was much longer before Bonneville was built. It was the major burial site of the Native Americans in the area. Most of those bodies were removed and buried in a mass grave. The mass grave is on the Washington side across from The Dalles. Driving toward The Dalles, the grave is on your left as you head toward the bridge to cross the Columbia. Thank you for such fantastic information about my favorite places on earth!!
You are a great explainer! I can watch most of your lectures twice.
Was at Frenchman coulee yesterday. Climbed down the waterfall. Beyond beautiful.
Enjoyed my geology afternoon with Nick. Thanks
Superb. Thank you for opening these to the public.
Fascinating! I have spent many weeks in this area for work and never fully understood the story. Thank you for sharing.
We are traveling Washington and I want to thank you for all the knowledge you have shared on your channel. It helped have just a little understanding as we traveled through the scab lands. What tortured landscape you have to explore in your backyard. Again thanks especially for your effort to educate beyond the lecture hall.
Thanks much, Bryan. Hope that you enjoy your trip.
Thank you so very much Nick. I remeber paddling up the Copalis River and wondering why are these old trees as they are? Here in central NC, I turn a different leaf. Take care, oz
Very enjoyable lecture series, thank you for sharing online!
Makes so much sense! Thanks for the great information as always. Enjoy your work. I can’t wait to visit Washington.
Professor Zentner provides the invaluable experience of fun in learning. Sad that the overwhelming number of his audience seems to be old folks like me; this topic is interesting, I would believe, even for the jaded younger generation.
Thanks for you lessons on Cascadia geography and your other wonderful lecturers.
Love,
David
Thank you, David. Younger people busy with families, jobs, etc.
A very good lecture - bringing in evidnce from multiple fields to show reinforcement of theory.