Yosemite's Greatest Hazard Lurks Above The Valley Floor

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  • Опубликовано: 19 янв 2025

Комментарии • 152

  • @shawnwillsey
    @shawnwillsey  Год назад +11

    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
    or here: buymeacoffee.com/shawnwillsey

  • @gailpearson9447
    @gailpearson9447 Год назад +44

    Park geologist sounds like a dream job.

    • @alexbradmckay
      @alexbradmckay Год назад +10

      It does. Mike Poland is the resident geologist at Yellowstone and he puts out a video once a month updating the seismic activity at the park. His videos are great and highlight really cool geological features of yellowstone. I'm really happy to get to watch my favorite geologists regularly on youtube: Shawn Wilsey, Nick Zentner and Mike Poland. Thanks guys!!

    • @codyhughes4472
      @codyhughes4472 Год назад

      The problem
      Is you have to do what you’re told

    • @codyhughes4472
      @codyhughes4472 Год назад +1

      They had to blast boulders huh. That makes sense, cause earthquakes brought them down

    • @codyhughes4472
      @codyhughes4472 Год назад

      Snow melt must make those holes

    • @ellenrittgers990
      @ellenrittgers990 Год назад +1

      @@codyhughes4472 That’s most jobs

  • @susanproctor7512
    @susanproctor7512 Год назад +7

    I was in Yosemite almost 70 years ago. I really enjoyed this video!

    • @williamfaulkner1959
      @williamfaulkner1959 Год назад +2

      What a small world. I also was there 70 years ago; I was about 13 years old. Me, my brother and father climbed the backside of half dome.

  • @yosemitechic9606
    @yosemitechic9606 Год назад +9

    Lived there for five years and was there for that fall. It was something else. Thunder still causes me to look up and nearly run 😂. Miss yosemite like crazy though. ❤

  • @wheezer324na3
    @wheezer324na3 Год назад +17

    Was in Yosemite during a rock fall. The sound is incredible, we werent close to the source but initially had no idea what it was. Some people thought is was gunfire!

    • @edwardlulofs444
      @edwardlulofs444 Год назад +2

      Zion NP has frequent rockfall. I heard it a couple of times and it sounded liked a dynamite blast at a quarry.

  • @runninonempty820
    @runninonempty820 Год назад +10

    I've been to a lot of National Parks, and when I finally add Yosemite to the list, I'm going to remember this video quite well. Thank you Shawn, for all you do.

  • @alexbradmckay
    @alexbradmckay Год назад +4

    Great video as usual. I always look forward to your videos.

  • @paulowens1715
    @paulowens1715 Год назад +16

    Experienced an awesome earthquake in immigrant basin just north of here in the late 1970s. Fully moonlit around midnight. Suddenly the birds started squawking and unseen animals could be heard running through the wooded areas. My little bro's saucer sized eyes clearly visible, the hair on my arms was standing on end. And then the trees swayed violently. Kibbie Lake began to slosh south to north and back. Bang!, Bang!, Bang! slabs of polish snapped loose and slid down into the upset water. After that, I stopped putting things on my bucket list. Every time I try to think of something to right down, it pales in comparison to these five minutes of absolute wonder!

    • @stevengill1736
      @stevengill1736 Год назад +1

      Yes! Seeing 100 foot trees swaying wildly with no wind and the deep rumble of an earthquake is something, all right!
      (1992 Petrolia quake for me...)

    • @paulowens1715
      @paulowens1715 Год назад

      Love Petrolia, homeless living there on the beach for a couple of months in 2011, settled 90 miles north of there still on the coast.@@stevengill1736

    • @kimbo5366
      @kimbo5366 Год назад +1

      I have retold your story. Well done.

  • @marksinger3067
    @marksinger3067 Год назад +12

    First time in Yosemite was 1960 when 10yrs old..No Bear-proof trash cans then and they roamed around everywhere..Worked there when 27 for six months..Camped many times since then all over the Park..Last time was 2018..Hope to go again..
    John Muir during a huge earthquake just marveled at the rock walls falling all around him..Special fellow..

    • @garywheeler7039
      @garywheeler7039 Год назад

      Back then our family would go to the dump in Yosemite Valley and watch the bears going through the stuff. We had a rectangular sheet metal cooler and once a bear rolled it around the campsite trying to get in. Camp 12 if I remember correctly.

  • @maryt2887
    @maryt2887 Год назад +7

    I’ve visited Yosemite a couple of times when my son lived in California. It’s so beautiful and varied. The light on the rocks and the shapes of the mountains and boulders is fascinating. I pulled up my photos from my visits there and had a nice reminiscence.

  • @jameshatchett8095
    @jameshatchett8095 Год назад +4

    I was working in Yosemite in May of 1982(as I recall) doing observations on a peregrine falcon eyrie on the north American wall. We were doing egg manipulations and the climb was sketchy so we wanted the timing right. That was when an earthquake touched off in Coalinga. I don't remember feeling the quake but I do remember seeing what looked like smoke but was actually simultaneous rock falls all over the valley. Being at my observation point in the rocks directly at the base of El Capitan it was surreal. I didn't know but surmised what had happened. It was not until I got back to my office at UC Santa Cruz and saw the big boulders that had broken loose and rolled into the lower quarry just how significant it was. Oddly enough I was at my office when loma Prieta touched off , that was one of my more memorable events.

  • @roads-end-adventures
    @roads-end-adventures Год назад +4

    I worked at Happy Isles when the big one happened back in the 90's. The only reason we survived is we closed up early to have a bbq. The slide happened as we drove away on the service road.

  • @mapleleaf902
    @mapleleaf902 Год назад +3

    Great lesson. Thank you! Have a wonderful Christmas!

  • @paulschweizer7696
    @paulschweizer7696 Год назад +7

    Yosemite is a great place to talk about batholiths, plutons and varieties of granitoids. There are at least 5 distinct varieties there.

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy 5 месяцев назад

      and exfoliation is an interesting freeze-melt phenomenon, from which ancient hominin chix may have gotten the idea for spa treatments.
      It IS curious to see some granite in Yosemite high country looking like onion peeling fossils.

  • @orchidorio
    @orchidorio Год назад +3

    I laugh at myself when I realize that I like rocks. So I'm glad to watch your video to the end. I also like to watch landslide videos. This is everywhere on the planet. especiallychinaha

  • @hestheMaster
    @hestheMaster Год назад +3

    Absolutely fantastic explanation of the minerology , plate tectonics ,and glaciation events here professor. Got to be careful
    for possible erosion activity that can ruin one's day.

  • @mustangmorris53
    @mustangmorris53 Год назад +2

    Excellent as always.

  • @rickforespring4834
    @rickforespring4834 Год назад +2

    from where you are right there, if you turned to the west, you can almost see hunters valley....the top of it at least. i went up there to the top of hunters valley and looked east. i was looking almost over el cap at half dome. the sheer face, i don't think i could see very far down though into the valley. good stuff there and b e a utifull place!

  • @stevea8590
    @stevea8590 Год назад +3

    The first time I went to Yosemite, I hiked the mist trail. I remember coming to a clearing in the trees where there was a switchback and a rock face. I looked up and there was a vertical drop of about 2000 ft about 6 feet away from me. It was very alarming on an instinctual level and I felt like I stumbled into a shooting gallery that could pop off at any second. It freaked me out.

  • @Glen.1966..
    @Glen.1966.. Год назад +4

    Great insight to Yosemite national park, didn't know the history dating back to the glaciers which occupied this are thousands of years ago, amazing its still so fragile .
    Wel done again Shawn, please keep this educational videos coming through!
    👍👍👍😉

  • @smaxwell7585
    @smaxwell7585 Год назад +7

    Thanks for the info about the granite in yosemite and it’s relation to ancient volcanic history. Just 45 miles southeast between yosemite and kings canyon on the south fork of the San Joaquin there are many hot springs, evidence of continuing activity on the west side of the sierras , would love to hear about what’s going on over there if you can make it out that way sometime.

    • @LuckyBaldwin777
      @LuckyBaldwin777 Год назад

      There are many more hot springs in the Eastern Sierra along the fault scarp. I'm thinking the San Joaquin River follows a fault through the range and that's the reason for the hot springs.

    • @stevengill1736
      @stevengill1736 Год назад

      Yes, nice hot springs all around the Owens Valley too...

  • @vicbertfartingclack4559
    @vicbertfartingclack4559 Год назад +1

    These awesome videos are never a waste of time. This was fascinating - especially learning here why the granite rock walls tend to break away or “exfoliate” as you put it. I love this stuff because it offers new insight for us lay people.

  • @jonathanbush6197
    @jonathanbush6197 Год назад +1

    I remember reading about a rockfall fatality not far from Freerider, maybe a week after Alex Honnold's ascent.

  • @cubanmama4564
    @cubanmama4564 Год назад +9

    Thank you for featuring Yosemite in this video. We camp in the Yosemite Valley at least every other year and have done so in spring, summer and fall. We have been there when a crack on one side of the valley gave way and there was a rockfall. It was an eye-opener. Nature cares not if you are camping. Erosion does not wait for the folks on the trail to pass before letting go of a boulder. A number of deaths have happened when people stepped on a ledge that gave way (read the book "Off the Wall, Death in Yosemite). We have hiked to the top of Half Dome several times and to the top of the falls. Every time, it is a "crapshoot" people do not understand.

  • @markstewart9362
    @markstewart9362 Год назад +3

    The fast direct approach up to the base of nw face of half dome is called the death slabs for good reason. A few year ago when we climbed the face we spent the night at the base on the far left side. Well, we awoke to a giant falling boulder that had peeled off the wall and tumbled all the way down to the valley floor. Which was our approach the morning before. Thankfully the climb went without issue but it’s shocking how often that area lets off rock!

  • @Anne5440_
    @Anne5440_ Год назад +1

    How fascinating. Granitedoirite (sp) is my favorite rock. Especially that of the Mt Stewart batholith of Washington state. I have dreamed of seeing Yosemite, but life has not allowed it. It is interesting to learn of the forces at play within the granite itself from the formation underground but also pressure from glaciers. Yosemite Granite seems whiter than here in Washington. With the pressures and erosion from water and freezing, no wonder there are huge rock falls. Being a park geologist would be important and a dream job. Thank you for this lesson.

  • @texicaliblues
    @texicaliblues Год назад +8

    There's a really impressive area in remote northeastern Yosemite called simply "The Slide". It happened about 150 years ago, where a chunk of mountain about 1000 feet across and about 1000 feet above the canyon floor all came down at once. There are near house-size boulders along the creek at the bottom of the canyon and some boulders made it a ways up the other side. It's a mile or so from the nearest trail, just west of the Sierra crest. I was fortunate to see it on a free day during a trailwork trip in the area about 15 years ago.

  • @suppleberry3863
    @suppleberry3863 Год назад +4

    Yosemite always reminds me of Lauterbrunnen in Switzerland. They have a very similar look but I'm not sure if the geology and risks of rockfall are the same

  • @briane173
    @briane173 Год назад +1

    Yeah I'm glad you added earthquakes as an event that can "get the ball rolling." One famous one was the 8.0 Owens Valley quake in 1872. The epicenter was in Lone Pine, a good 140 miles away; but it ruptured so abruptly that it cut a 50-mile-long scarp along Owens Valley -- and John Muir felt it strongly while he was living at Yosemite. He actually got to witness a MASSIVE rockfall in Yosemite Valley once the quake shook; I don't remember which part of the valley the rock fell but El Capitan keeps popping in my head for some reason. I'd have to review Muir's journal again to see exactly where that rock fell but it was massive. Perhaps the last earthquake of any size that precipitated rockfall in Yosemite; but they do happen and they don't have to be big ones.

  • @durskoenig
    @durskoenig Год назад +2

    Was hoping you would talk about the recent the crack on the western side of the Royal Arches just around the corner from where you made this video.

  • @markday5797
    @markday5797 Год назад

    Thanks!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Much appreciated. Thanks for your kind donation.

  • @greenfire6924
    @greenfire6924 Год назад +1

    The rockfall event that stands out in my mind is the July 1996 Happy Isles, YNP example.
    I was assigned to the Incident Management Team (IMT) managing the New Years 1997 flood recovery some six months later. While on that assignment I met the NP Law Enforcement Officer (LEO) who was first on scene. His description was a huge slab of granite (I don't remember the dimensions) released very high and simultaneously or within moments separated into two, unequal, sized slabs. The larger slab "got big air" on the way down and landed flat- like dropping a big book down flat onto a table except this "book" pulverized itself. This is why the devastating "air blast" occurred killing one person and injuring others some distance away. The "air blast" was embedded with rock debris, wood fragments and dust traveling some 110 meters/second. This dirty air blast is what stripped trees bare and toppled about 1000.

    • @stevengill1736
      @stevengill1736 Год назад

      Holy kitty cats! Had no idea air blast from rockfalls could be so intense...

  • @kmh20061
    @kmh20061 Год назад +1

    I visited Yosemite Valley shortly after the large 1997 rock fall off Glacier Point. It was impressive to see how the hurricane force winds generated from the fall blew down a large swath of trees.

  • @alessandrorossini8704
    @alessandrorossini8704 Год назад +1

    Hi! I knew you for your recent reports about Iceland and Grindevik crisis, very interesting stuff by the way, but this is a live-on-spot report type and it's also very interesting, possibly much more than webcam stuff. So thanx a lot for bringing an obscure italian guy in and around the majestic landscapes of your homeland and giving an inner view of it. Bye!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Glad you enjoyed it. Most of my videos are of this type.

  • @susiesue3141
    @susiesue3141 10 месяцев назад

    My husband and I have been to that Park. It was beautiful!

  • @professorsogol5824
    @professorsogol5824 Год назад +2

    In 2015 there was a large rockfall off the NW face of Half Dome above and behind Ahwiya Point. Did any of that debris make it Tanaya Creek and the Mirror Lake area?

  • @dianespears6057
    @dianespears6057 Год назад

    Interesting information on a lurking dynamic among the stunning scenery. Thank you.

  • @katesommerville7217
    @katesommerville7217 Год назад

    It’s fascinating to realise that what we see now has been on a spectacular journey.

  • @stanfullerton8485
    @stanfullerton8485 Год назад

    Geeze Shawn-----you're like the geology whirling dervish-----Half Dome, Devils Tower, Iceland Volcano. You keep us on our toes---where next.

  • @pchabanowich
    @pchabanowich Год назад +1

    The sound of that rock fall must've been mind-boggling.

  • @RumpledStiltskin-uz1uh
    @RumpledStiltskin-uz1uh Год назад +1

    Thank you

  • @robertphillips93
    @robertphillips93 Год назад

    Thanks for your presentation!
    Though rockfalls are common, witnessing a sizeable one is a rare treat. Our small party had to take evasive measures when the weather during a late fall hike threatened to strand us on the wrong side of the Sierra crest. We used a cross-country route to arrive at a small timberline lake at the foot of a peak towering high above it on the opposite western side. After sunset but before darkness had descended on our camp, a sharp crack split the calm air, followed by a protracted din and dust cloud visible through the sparsely wooded view of the talus slope between the northeast face and the water. Nice to have that little bit of buffer between us and the very impressive demonstration!

  • @gregindavis
    @gregindavis Год назад +1

    Thanks again Shawn for making events understandable, your explanations are clear and concise. To your explanation you could also add "Gravity", the LAW that is always present 🙂

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Good one. I also like “ gravity always wins”.

  • @mikeashely8198
    @mikeashely8198 Год назад +5

    What looks like drill marks in that Granite Are from rock snakes

  • @7inrain
    @7inrain Год назад

    A few days ago I coincidentally watched a documentary about Ansel Adams, the famous nature photographer of the 20th century. One of his best-known pictures was the Half Dome in dramatic light. And here we are with Shawn Willsey, showing us another aspect of exactly that landscape. Thanks so much.

  • @ultrametric9317
    @ultrametric9317 Год назад +6

    When I first saw Half Dome, my first thought was - where's the other half? :)

  • @MADDLADO1
    @MADDLADO1 Год назад +1

    Very cool !!

  • @terryatpi
    @terryatpi Год назад

    Very interesting and well presented. Definitely subscribed. Thank you!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Welcome aboard! Hope you enjoy the existing videos.

  • @hunt4redoctober628
    @hunt4redoctober628 Год назад

    Spectacular scenery and geology!

  • @davidsabbagh6815
    @davidsabbagh6815 Год назад

    Love your geology videos. Common wisdom states that to maintain brain health late in life it's important to learn new things. Now that I am 65 your videos should keep my brain going until I am 105 🙂

  • @eugenefoley3553
    @eugenefoley3553 Год назад

    I lived in the valley for a number of years. I love that rock!

  • @TheLawDawg
    @TheLawDawg Год назад

    Greg Stock was an old caving buddy of mine in high school not too far from Yosemite. Very smart guy, knows that area better than almost anyone.

  • @kymkauffman5000
    @kymkauffman5000 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you I enjoyed this!

  • @willisfouts4838
    @willisfouts4838 Год назад +1

    Another nice production by the wandering Willsey. Thanks bud.
    I’ve wondered where the other half of the dome is. Did it shear in half and get dragged away by the glaciers? Is it stuck below the current grade, waiting for the next ice intrusion to be exposed?
    I don’t ever recall hearing either the question or the answer. Might you shed some light on that, sir?
    Thanks again for the informative, well videoed and always pleasant production.

  • @briang70
    @briang70 Год назад +4

    Those saplings are incense-cedar or Calocedrus decurrens.

    • @marywolf1824
      @marywolf1824 Год назад

      Thank you! I was wondering. They looked kind of like cypress to me.

  • @valoriel4464
    @valoriel4464 Год назад

    Thx Prof ✌🏻
    Excellent video

  • @geoffgeorges
    @geoffgeorges Год назад

    I was there in 2002, some rockfall at night ( luckily) off Glacier point. In 2010 I went to The slabs below Glacier point and I think in 2009 there was a huge slide there that impacted the parking lots, we climbed anyway. We were right under the east end of El Cap and a few days later there was a big rock fall there. In 2015 when I was last there another big rock fall east end of El Cap.

  • @patrickkillilea5225
    @patrickkillilea5225 Год назад

    We love our Granodiorite down in Idyllwild, Ca. I think of it as a miniature Yosemite.

  • @allenra530
    @allenra530 Год назад

    When I was an undergrad at Cal State, Stanislaus, I went up to Yosemite on weekends, hitch hiking up on Friday and back on Sunday. I did a lot of climbing, joining other climbers to do popular routes. During that time, all of us switched from using pitons to using chocks and cams for anchors because the older climbers had seen that cracks were being widened by driving the pitons into them and we all feared that some slabs might come off when we were using them for anchor points or standing on them. Some of the routes that I climbed have since been modified or eliminated due to rockfalls. Everything in Yosemite changes and the rocks always obey the law, of gravity.

  • @HellBillyDeluxe
    @HellBillyDeluxe Год назад

    Yosemite is my beautiful backyard!

  • @TimT-um6rt
    @TimT-um6rt 8 месяцев назад

    Yes,I remember in my climbing days there was a tremor that released boulders from the higher rims in the evening hours with sparking
    Bursts against the shear walls
    Quite a spectacle to behold!

  • @InSurrealtime
    @InSurrealtime Год назад

    Tenaya Canyon is so gorgeous. I made it to the waterslide once when I was young!

  • @briseboy
    @briseboy 5 месяцев назад

    Originally i wondered at the big wall climbers' penchant for "trundling' lose rocks off the cliffs, even the mountain rescue guys.
    My quick, slime-mold mind never caught on to the safety utility of doing that, until, years later, just now clicking on the video.
    (I've always like approaching over big talus (you can duck into the cool, sometimes snow shadows of big talus boulders) and HATED scree. The bighorns just race up stuff that takes you hours, in a minute.
    But running down scree and volcanic pumice slopes is astonishing fun, useful when one realizes that lightning strikes two miles away are right NEXT to ya.)

  • @marksinger3067
    @marksinger3067 10 месяцев назад

    Search up the 1872 Owens Valley Earthquake when John Muir lived in Yosemite Valley..
    I worked in Curry Village 1976 and hiked several of the trails to the rim..
    Very special place in many ways..

  • @marilynmurray3041
    @marilynmurray3041 Год назад

    Thank you!

  • @wyojohn
    @wyojohn Год назад +2

    Or, those are 90 million year old drill marks that just happened to end up by the trail. Aliens!!! :)

  • @Barley150
    @Barley150 Год назад

    Once again, a great explanation of geologic processes, with all their complexities. I have been told that the Sierra that we see today is just the most recent of a series of mountain ranges that have risen and worn away -- is that true? --charles johnson, sacramento

  • @LisaBelleBC
    @LisaBelleBC Год назад

    I wish you could stay on sabbatical forever! Love your videos!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Me too. But also excited to get back to teaching.

    • @LisaBelleBC
      @LisaBelleBC Год назад

      Wow!thats awesome you love your career like that!@@shawnwillsey

  • @mikemclennan8917
    @mikemclennan8917 Год назад +1

    When they call on the Emergency Geologist how many years do is take him to turn up?

  • @wardsdotnet
    @wardsdotnet Год назад +2

    What about freeze/thaw cycles?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Yes, those are important as well but they tend to expand the cracks rather than create them.

  • @judierickson7166
    @judierickson7166 Год назад +1

    Now i know, which is a good thing!

  • @77hodag
    @77hodag Год назад

    The term that park geologists use to describe rockfalls is “exfoliate” - the rock walls of the valley are constantly exlfoliating flakes of solid rock. There are piles of rocks like this all over Yosemite valley.

  • @vipertwenty249
    @vipertwenty249 Год назад

    So if you're walking in that area in march, some sort of sturdy hat might be in order. A tall stovepipe hat might offer some crumple zone.

  • @edwardlulofs444
    @edwardlulofs444 Год назад

    Yosemite is a beautiful wonder, no doubt about it. But it’s only 12 miles long. A beautiful canyon over 100 miles long can be found on Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada in Auyuittuq National Park. If that’s too far, then Yosemite is a must see.

  • @generathjen890
    @generathjen890 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks

  • @dousiastailfeather9454
    @dousiastailfeather9454 Год назад

    Stood atop half dome via the cable route and felt a strange, intense fear of the edge. Im seventy now and feel great to have been there and felt the fear so strongly. Intuition? Sure!

  • @TimothyBratcher
    @TimothyBratcher Год назад +1

    Why is lava black in Iceland and Idaho, for example, but white ot nearly white here in Yosemite? Are there different / distinct pools of magma under the crust? Do they commonly and diffuse? Or do they remain distinct and unconnected?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      The rock here in Yosemite is very different chemistry than in Iceland or Idaho. In short, the rocks in Idaho/Iceland contain more iron and magnesium which makes the rock darker. In Yosemite, there is more sodium and potassium in the rocks which yield a lighter color.

    • @TimothyBratcher
      @TimothyBratcher Год назад

      ​ @shawnwillsey I guess my point was this: isn't it all just one giant blob / layer of magma or are there different pockets of magma way down there? Saying that Idaho has one kind of magma and Yosemite has another sounds (to a novice like me) like the left side of my coffee has cream and the other half (in the same cup) doesn't. Does that make sense?
      ​@@shawnwillsey

  • @Nrc3neallyo
    @Nrc3neallyo Год назад

    😳 I was unaware of the expansion concept, but it makes sense.
    How deep was the Half Dome granodiorite at crystalization?

  • @karentrimmer
    @karentrimmer Год назад +1

    What is going on with all the mag 5 earthquakes along the Reykjanes ridge (24 in 48 hrs). I realize they're several hundred miles from Iceland, but along the same plate boundary.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      I'll answer this in the next Q&A/Iceland update

  • @blackrockcrystalco
    @blackrockcrystalco Год назад

    Sean if your in Reno anytime soon, i have a great hydrothermal altered Peg if you wanna check it out, very unique geology.

  • @loisstanford8736
    @loisstanford8736 Год назад

    Hi Shawn I’m still with you ,, I imagine that you might have some interesting segments about Yellowstone ,, 😊🙋🏻‍♀️😘

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Most of this playlist is Yellowstone videos: ruclips.net/p/PLOf4plee9UzBZ-5ZMLYjx4kTLv_T-5-8m

    • @loisstanford8736
      @loisstanford8736 Год назад

      Thanks I’ll enjoy watching over 🎄break 😘

  • @Coinbro
    @Coinbro 2 месяца назад

    Makes you wander how many periods of rock falls happened before and were the fallen rocks just shoved into the floor by weight of ice or removed or turned into fine particles?? Either way fun stuff

  • @jeffreygosselin7576
    @jeffreygosselin7576 Год назад

    Wow I had no idea!

  • @kennethbarney6249
    @kennethbarney6249 Год назад

    What do you make of the “hit and run” by Basil Tikoff? Wondering what your theory is on the formation on the Rocky Mountains. I’m seeing more and more that the farallon plate is definitely the cause of the Sierra Nevada, albeit there might be westward subduction into the terrains that accreted, and might explain a bit further how the Rocky Mountains came into being. I guess I’m not buying into the flat slab theory

  • @marklang5169
    @marklang5169 Год назад

    Thank You again:-)

  • @DeereX748
    @DeereX748 Год назад

    Your perspective below Ahwiyah Point makes it look much smaller than it really is.

  • @Lando62
    @Lando62 Год назад

    Very nice. Thank you! Well, it makes a nice home for rodents and rattlesnakes in all the openings.

  • @alicemiller3139
    @alicemiller3139 Год назад +1

    Interesting video as usual. You are going to think I am a royal pain and hate rock climbers, but I really don’t! What I question is why are allowing rock climbing in these parks knowing the cracks in the rocks can cause the rock falls?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      It's really no different than allowing hikers or tourists to walk the valley floor with cracks in the rock above. Every landscape has a hazard and some level of risk. We enjoy nature because it helps us feel alive and part of that is a small amount of risk. The chance of climbing a cliff when the cliff collapses are much lower than dying in the cars we drive.

  • @jamesreynolds5045
    @jamesreynolds5045 Год назад

    ? Does (can) Aplite grade into Pegmatite?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      No. They require different conditions.

  • @user-wk1mw9nj3i76
    @user-wk1mw9nj3i76 Год назад

    Wow. So recent. Must have woken up a few campers.

  • @adsp1965
    @adsp1965 Год назад

    9:30 squirrel

  • @alphalunamare
    @alphalunamare Год назад

    3:06 The scars on the rock face? There is something going on there that is not explained thus far. 3:20 It's the same on the other side. Those aint rock fall scars. I reckon you got it right with 'expansion'.

  • @garyb6219
    @garyb6219 5 месяцев назад

    Probably the number one question would be, "you sure you wanna camp there?".

  • @66kbm
    @66kbm Год назад

    This rock is "Plutonic" in origin? Or Magmatic?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Both! Magma is molten rock underground. Plutonic refers to magma that cools underground.

  • @AJShiningThreads
    @AJShiningThreads Год назад

    Would pay for geology tours!!!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      I will have a few in 2024. Stay tuned.

  • @3xHermes
    @3xHermes 9 месяцев назад

    Ouch... Should always pack an Umbrella!

  • @LuckyBaldwin777
    @LuckyBaldwin777 Год назад

    What you call a xenocryst I've heard called phenocrysts. What's the difference?

  • @stan.rarick8556
    @stan.rarick8556 Год назад

    A 2.4 earthquake is miniscule IMHO ( former LA resident)
    Otherwise great video. Been to Yosemite a number of times

  • @lauram9478
    @lauram9478 Год назад

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @stephenolson532
    @stephenolson532 6 месяцев назад

    It's human beings 😮