Supervolcanoes in the Pacific Northwest
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- Опубликовано: 24 апр 2019
- CWU's Nick Zentner presents 'Supervolcanoes in the Pacific Northwest' - the 26th talk in his ongoing Downtown Geology Lecture Series. Recorded at Morgan Auditorium on April 17, 2019 in Ellensburg, Washington, USA. www.nickzentner.com
Nick is a national treasure. A smart man who can speak to an audience of multiple educational levels. He never talks down or uses “tech” speak. What a skill.
Third time listening to this one and I still find it interesting it's just the passion he has for it it's infectious in a good way ☺️
Most impressive that this video has over one million views, as other from Nick on this channel.
I could listen to Mr. Zentner's lectures and discussions for hours on end without losing interest or focus! He was born to teach and many are blessed to attend in person but many more are blessed to attend here as I am one. I hope and pray that anyone finding their selves the opportunity to "attend" will take full advantage. I promise you will not regret or forget! Thank you so very much, Mr Zentner, for your time you spend teaching us students! Much love and admiration, God bless.
He's one very smart German!
I thought I found a Documentary.
Found a lecture.
Was not disappointed.
This was way better!
I also was looking fir a documentary. I found a lecture instead. The lecture was more fascinating than a documentary could ever be. The video production side was very well done. It made the lecture flow much better,
Some people are interesting and effective presenters. Others are so boring they put your teeth to sleep. Nice to stumble onto a good one.
This guy is a phenomenally engaging teacher.
I agree
@@troynoland2457Yo también. I also love your name.
@@jennifercochranwilcox687 the BEST ONES are!
I wonder how he gets me interesting listening to such boring stuff like rock formation. He is really a marvellous motivator of his audience.
He is so fckin smart tbh
I wish there was more geology content like this on youtube.
Just the best. Educational and entertaining from a master teacher.
Your prayers have been heard. During this year of pandemic and isolation, Nick did an amazing thing. A wonderful, amazing series of lectures from his own backyard. I strongly recommend all of them: ruclips.net/channel/UC4szl4Ra1ZD3m80wJP40UBA
Ever heard of Randall Carlson? Hundreds of hours of content by him are available on YT.
I've put together a collection of short field-based videos here: ruclips.net/channel/UCB1t-8MBhxyDVabeUcTj0Zw
Oh, me too!!!
It's cool to see someone so excited and not afraid to nerd out while they teach! Passion is a great asset to teaching.
That's why I keep coming back to this channel! His passion is infectious.
Nick is my fav
I watched a couple of times and I will watch more
#586 I'm 71 years old and I just learned something new! Thanks, Professor!
If I'd had Nick as my prof for first year geology I would have stayed as a geology major -- great lecturer!
I sure understand that - he's just wonderful.
Yeah, pretty cool stuff.
it's a self-selection thing. If one loves geology so much, that she/he can withstand a horrible lecturer and remain in the field regardless, she/he is born to be a geologist XD
Indeed we are
I agree. At one point, I had as many geology credits as I did for my major. (Mass Communications.) Had Nick been one of my teachers, it might have swayed me toward geology. (Well, that, and if I'd had a better memory. No matter how many times I read some of the material, it just wouldn't stick in my head long enough for a test.)
My late wife was a Geologist (sedimentary and carbonate) and watching this video brought back so many memories of her. Although I am a 73 year old engineer I took a number of geology courses (in self defense) and this was one of the best presentations ever. I also really appreciated the emphasis on the difference in scale between a super volcano and other types. I just subscribed and will be back for more.
Do you think 🤔 under the Arctic melting ice could be a super volcano caldron what do you think?😮
I get lots of random recommendations from RUclips. Most of them aren't worth the effort to click the mouse button. Every once in a while, though, one pays off.
This was one of them.
Professor Zentner is obviously in love with his work and his enthusiasm is wonderful to see. Now I need to watch the rest of his lectures.
You are in for a treat if you do. Welcome aboard John.
Agreed, John, Dr. Zentner is really engaging. I never took geology in school so his lectures are new information for me......and entertaining..
Just discovered these lectures. Nick Zentner is a national resource!
Hello does anyone here believe in Jesus?
Not resource but a national treasure. The way he presents things are fascinating and interesting.
I truly admire and appreciate this brilliant gentleman! Not only is he full of fantastic info but his delivery of same is a combination of straight up and laughs and sarcasm! And I really dig the cheap shots!!! Thank you, thank you! And God bless you!
So good, no computers, no pie charts, just a teacher wise and enthusiastically full of ALL the knowledge. Love this !!! He's engaging and dynamic, but not gratuitously, he's specific, excited and a wonderfully dynamic communicator, imparting his teachings to us plebeians, can listen all day......
Thanks good sir, kind professor......
3 years on and I still watch Mr Zentner explaining the previously impossible to comprehend features of so long ago. The University is privileged to have such a fantastic teacher and communicator on its staff.
I love your teachings of the volcanoes, I had a hard time in school learning, but now at 50 I want to learn everything that I can.
You are a great teacher. Kids have no idea how lucky they are to have you. Keep up the great work.
God bless you!
Hello do you believe in Jesus?
I am a truck driver and have been amazed by the rock formations for the last 20 years.
Your explanation explains many of the questions I have wondering how these formations formed.
It has taken your lifetime of learning to explain my wonderment of nature.
It's 2:45 AM. I just finished another of Nick's lectures. I should know better than to start watching so late because I can't turn them off. I'm so glad I found these.
The way that he describes 1980 Mt Saint Helens eruption... this, is EXACTLY what we saw and felt in Moses Lake, WA. We watched the birds die. Painful. Unforgettable.
I am watching this from Australia. No doubt Nick Zentner is one of the best geology lecturer, if not the best. I find his lectures compelling and really informative. I am being re educated .
same here
He's making my brain fizz. Very nice. :) Now I want him to lecture on the Chico, CA area and I'm subscribing and and and....LOL! :)
Watching from Bogota, Colombia.
@@TheRaoulsdaddy snap same here
He's terrific! We so enjoy him!
Hello Nick, I am a Merchant Marine on a ship in the Salish Sea... in between driving, I found your lecture... you are a gem sir... Jim
❤Salish Sea...❤🧡💛💚💙💜❤
Such Expert Geologists should be treasured and never taken for granite! (yes..that was bad pun!)
he is so excited and engaging he doesn’t even have time to grab the eraser.
the accretionary lapilli part was INCREDIBLE! Fossilized hail... amazing
And the ice in my cup is lucky to make it 11.8 minutes. I agree.
I am so glad I found this video. I've been a hobbyist geologist, volcanologist, and seismologist for 20 years. I consume as much as I can on these topics and track earthquakes and eruptions worldwide. I am happy to say I knew nearly everything he presented from various other sources, but his presentation beats everyone else I've read or watched.
I dated this amazing profs son when I was in 10th grade for a month or so. He's this funny all the time and a popular professor amongst the many Ellensburg youths. Such a good lecture.
I'm glad I clicked on this. Wow. Just, wow.
I could listen to this guy all day, and I'm not even a geologist. I really learned a great deal today. "Know Your Volcanoes!", indeed!
I'm a Botanist and I'm enthralled.
Great lecture. Easy to understand and entertaining. It really kicks ash.
😇
Nick Zentner is the basalt of the earth, all right.
Lol.
...kicks ash...😂😂😂
😆...His lectures are a large blast.
1980 was 40 years ago-----wow how time flies,but hardly a moment in the scale of the volcanic timeline
I lived in Winnipeg Manitoba when Mt. St. Helens blew, 2360 kilometers away. Over the next few days we received ash that covered everything, my car included. And our sky turned pinkish, and our sunsets were magnificent!!!
1980 was the first year of my career as a chemist. I retired this year and discovered these talks. As luck would have it I have a bottle of St. Helen's ash sitting in a drawer that I got 40 years ago and I'm going to take a look at it now to see if it has black specks.
What a wonderful example of why everyone should love learning, love science, love their existence.
It makes my day when a Nick Zentner lecture gets uploaded.
Gerry James Edwards, makes my days also.
He reminds me of my h.s. earth science teacher. Engaging as well as humorous while you learned!
Totally. Im sitting way over in Copenhagen, Denmark and watching. Max cozy.
just got watchout for rising sea levels in Denmark @@ianallen738
What’s this guys story, he’s awesome.
I wish all professors had this guy’s enthusiasm. I love learning from people who get excited about what they do.
Being a great professor is a skill. Not just know the material - but also present it in a way that is engaging and easier to learn. This gentleman is very good. He is so into it that he got chalk stains on his cheek and just keeps teaching.
Mr Zentner throwing his chalk at 28:34 was the nerd version of a mic drop.
Dr. Zentner or Professor Zentner
Zentnerd is on that ash!
@@LJ_nowandalways "Nick" is more than enough.
🤣🤣🤣👊
I have no idea why RUclips recommended this video to me, but I loved it.
the fact that there are calderas even bigger than yellowstone is absolutely terrifying
"That's a lotta ash...." --- I am gonna have to give extra points for the solid nerd jokes.
As a 68-year old person who was raised in the Boise, Idaho area I have driven the Snake River Plateau on Interstate 84 for decades; even over to Yellowstone Park. l I have flown over the Bruneau-Jarbidge area in a small airplane at low altitude. I have also driven through Yakima and Ellensburg. With this wonderful lecture, I now have answers to the varied geology of the great northwest. Thank you.
This lecture is one of Nick’s finest. Within the first 30 seconds his story sets a hook that’s impossible to escape. I’ve never grown weary of this presentation. It’s gold. :-)
I love all of your lectures, but I think this one is my favorite. "That's why Yellowstone is such a freak show!!"
Once read "The Devil's dictionary" by A. Bierce in a bus. All the time laughing. People nearly called the police.
lol
Government or University employee? Always wonder who gets to watch hour long videos at "work".
@@dcpack I was thinking the same thing.
people who have to wait for work to come to them and can't "create" work - gotta be here whether there's anything to do or not.
His vocal inflection is so unique. I love it
How is this guy not a PHD? Oh right, he's too busy discovering things and sharing things to join the frat. Excellent lecture.
Isn't he? That's amazing to me. I always assumed that he was. He is the teacher I always tried to be and wish I'd had.
If he's already publishing it wouldn't take much to take a few courses and write the results into a dissertation.
He never wanted to be. Stopped at a Masters and just wanted to teach
Awesome lecture - thanks for posting.
Fantastic! I learned more in 1 hour watching this than in my 41 years looking at tv in Europe
I'm guessing your ass is pretty sore and flat. I had a hard time watching this for an hour. Sitting on the toilet is challenging after 10 minutes or so.....so to watch tv for 41 years, the entertainment value in the productions of your country must be absolutely on fire...
Fascinating. Going from Los Angeles up to Mammoth Lakes on 395 you pass some cylinder cones that look like they are from another planet. I've been a fan of geology all my life. Great talk. His enthusiasm is catching.
Awesome! Thanks. One day I will see myself!
Probably the only person on earth who can make geology downright exciting. Thanks for the upload!
I’m only a layman but I understood this and enjoyed it.
Great stuff ;)
He could give a lecture n how and why paint dries and the audience would be enthralled.
Hurricane
Super-volcanoes make big Earth-shattering kabooms.
Why are we no longer seeing Nick's wonderful geology lessons!?! I miss them!! ❤🖒❤
I have friends in Vancouver. At one point they had barrels of ash stored in the garage that was scooped up off the lawn and out of the driveway. Later they would mix it with the garden in spring.
On another note, my elder bro's wife was talking to her dad on the phone later that day (she in CA, he in Bozeman MT). She teased him about being in the path of the ash. He poo-pooed it, considering that Bozeman is on the fringes of the Yellowstone Plateau, then left his wife on the phone w/my SiL. A few minutes later, SiL's mom burst out laughing. Dad had gone out front for some reason, and found a thin dusting of ash on the the front step and on the sidewalk. He was not thrilled.
Some people bottled it up and sold it as a novelty. I think they made alot of money from it as the profit margin on ash is phenomenal.
It's been so long since I was at college I'd almost forgotten how utterly engrossing a good lecture from a good professor could be. Thank you, Nick Zentner!
Ever since my semester ended, I've been craving something new to learn. This guy reminds me of my Genetics professor, who used the lecture hall black boards and told a story every lecture. I sure miss that class.
I love his enthusiasm - passion makes a good teacher
Only Super Humans can produce like that, thank you very much Nick.
Oh that was SUPER cool!
Being an Inland Northwest resident, I sure do appreciate these lectures. Something about knowing what has happened with the ground I stand on; it's for whatever reason very important to me.
Nick, Chris, and Central are doing a great thing with these. I can tell that they're having an impact with people the world over, and the time and effort and money that goes in; it's all free for the general public. It's amazing, and extremely important. So, thank you!
This is the coolest thing I've watched all week.
I've been meaning to make my evening coffee while watching this, but I just can't pull myself away from the screen; that's how good it is
I'm a meteorologist from Colorado and just found this channel, (and this is the first video I watched). Whenever there is a geologic event, who do the TV and Radio people turn to? The meteorologists. I've had one semester of (extremely) basic geology. This lecture is absolute gold, especially the petrified hail. Professor Nick is amazing.
Nick is changing the world by enlightening minds !
What I like most about Nick Zentner's lectures is that he always seems to bases his lectures around recent findings in geology. He gives the audience access to research that is mostly hidden behind pay walls. Much of what he has presented over the last decade has only reached popular literature since 2016. Keep up the good work, Nick.
Nick Zentner. A master teacher. Worth the watch for the mastery alone.
how can you not get infected by Nick's enthusiasm ?
I wish my professors would have been like that !
thanks for a wonderful presentation !
I was blessed to have such a geology professor where I went to college. He was also a photography enthusiast, which also infected us.
I'm sure there are professors wishingfor the sane from students.
Wow, what a great lecturer Nick Zentner. Phenomenal talent. I'll be searching for more of his videos.
As a survivor of MT ST Hellens I can tell you that this video and lecture is even informing me, who was there.
I'm bingeing on the best geological info ever! When I was in university the prof put us to sleep(then we got a new one) but they never made it so informative or easy to understand! At 64 I'm officially a Nick Zentner fan.
I reside in Oregon and a native to the US Pacific Northwest.. Because of your on-line lectures, my trailhead hikes and roadside travels to the Oregon coast, the Columbia Gorge, the Oregon high desert, and into Washington State take on a completely new lens and appreciation for Geology.
Congratulations for being an effective advocate and educator of Geology to an ever growing regional, national, and global audience. Geology matters. You make talking about rocks a very cool thing.
Visit the crooked river caldera that Prineville sits in. It blew 29 million years ago. 20 plus miles long 12 miles wide
This man is a wonderful speaker! If I could I would take classes from him!!
I learned more from this YT channel,then I ever learned at school, subscribed.thanks and greetings from CZ
Better watch out for that supervolcano next to you in Germany. That might be fun to explore and look at the rocks there.
treck87 hello😊 could you please tell me that name of that volcano please I'd like to research that one some🙂🙂 cheers🍻from🇨🇦
@@redinthethevalley The Laacher See volcano. It is increasing it's activity more these days.
I’m 60 yr old SW Wa. resident & always been interested in geology but listening to professor Zentner’s lectures gets me excited. Every trip I take I’m examining the landscape with a better understanding.
This gentleman’s presentation should be a template for teaching methods, totally engrossing .
One inescapable conclusion suggests itself to me thanks to Prof. Zentner and this brilliant (as usual) video: _Marching Calderas_ would be a great name for a rock band. 😎
I concur
Could be the Central WA U’s marching band
myearsloveit pol
myearsloveit ll
That was too cool! Thanks for sharing!!!
Wow, what information. Love his 'this ain't bs' statement.
Great video! I was still living at my parents ranch, Vian, Oklahoma. There was volcanic ash from the Mt. St. Helens eruption on top of their cars, about 2 days after it went off. I thought 'whoa, baby!', 'that must have been a monster!'. Who can forget that? It affected everyone! Great video!
Was driving through Oklahoma when it happened. Black ash falling on the windshield, no clue till we stopped for supper at a truckstop and saw the evening news. Ash travels!
I was not disappointed. Another great lecture. Excellent!
"theres my fancy field equipment, a leather backpack with a bunch of poptarts in it"
As a recent Texan transplant, I really enjoy these lectures. So informative and presented in a vivacious (animated, if vivacious is too feminine) manner by a very intelligent man with a love for his subject. I, too, enjoy having the updated material included, and I am sure they are not easy to add to already taped material. Thank you to CWU and Nick Zentner!
Fascinating. First thing I've ever seen from Nick Zentner, but definitely not the last!
You're so entertaining while you teach! Thank you for these lectures!
Thanks CWU!!!!!
I'm 74 years old and have more than the average layman's interest in volcanology and i learned more from this lecture than from all my previous sources. Fantastic AND easy to understand .
Happy 74th birthday son!
Recently I heard, of all the planets in our solar system, earth is the only one with tectonic plates and also the only one we know off at this time. And it was suggested this might even be a reason we exist at all and how rare it is that we exist in this universe so maybe that explains the Fermi paradox.
I would love a talk on Mt. Adams and the lesser known mountains of the Pacific Northwest. Thank you so much!
This guy grabbed my attention with some dates, then captured my attention with some teaching.
Holy shit... I thought this subclass of human was extinct?
SO MUCH INFORMATION was in this video! Thank you!
For all the college lectures I fell asleep in as a student many years ago, I must say that Professor Zentner's presentation was fascinating. I learned several new facts from this lecture. Very entertaining and informative.
What a presentation! 👍👍👍
Born in Tacoma Washington, I awoke every morning viewing Mount Rainier from my bedroom window. If you love nature, well, be envious! We visited it and Yellowstone National Park very often. Thanks mom! If not for her we would have never gone to anything out west. (Military Brat 😊)
She took my sister and I to every sight seeing worthy location.
So, if you can, go! Go to Yellowstone for sure!
Thanks, Nick. Geology is WAYYY more interesting now than when I was an undergrad.
This man was born to teach.
Great information along with a superb presentation. Good to know how our Continent works. Learned about Volcanoes I never new existed. Time to take a field trip. Thanks Prof.Nick
Definitely a different style of entertaining program than the Dog & Pony Show staged by Nadler & Mueller.
Thank You, Nick!
Yes! Another excellent presentation by Nick!
Very informative and interesting; I watched it right through. Thanks.
Wow, this gentleman is an extremely good Presenter. Kudos, thanks for posting.
I love geology. I can learn a lot listening this Gentleman and never tire of his lecturers.
Haha it's go good at it 😉
Thanks. Incredible. I live at the foot of the southern Colorado Rockies. Amazed every single day at what our rocks show me. Seashells, sea horses, fossils, and fuels - all found at 8,000' plus.
Earth is so full of secrets and mystery. Too bad we don't treat her better
Thank you for making Geology interesting.
Now this is the type of teacher America needs a true expert and loves his job
"We erased the cascades. They're there, we could do a lecture on them. But we're not doing it tonight." Damn, bde. Love the enthusiasm!
Fabulous lecturer.
We just don't have science instructors like this anymore.. Sad. I would loooove to teach a course like him. He's what I would completely aspire to be like. Amazing guy.
Good instructors still exist. They are the exception now, and they were the exception then. It's the nature of EXCEPTIONAL talent.
Whatever floats your boat. His words are crap when it comes to make decisions on expected outcomes of unprecedented actions though. We have come to rely on hard facts and well established evidence as good bases there.
@MyBrothersKeeper Religion is a deeply rooted human need, created by humans. I therefore won't denigrate it. But it certainly does a bad job at uniting them.
Excellent SuperVolcano presentation = I learned a lot! BOOM
I live 15 min away from the gorgeous Valles Caldera in NM : I feel privileged ;) We have Rhyolite, Basalt and Welded Tuff here, and a lot of Obsidian too, WooHoo!
Thank You Nick Zentner, your lecture was fun too..
This is what makes RUclips great. Great lecture. I learned so much.