Valles Caldera Geology Tour (Part 3 of 6): The Bandelier Tuff

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 9

  • @AZAce1064
    @AZAce1064 10 месяцев назад

    I used to live in Los Alamos in 1990 and explored many paces there. And I have flown into and out of the airport in in a Mooney. It’s challenging at times. Thanks you for these videos, it’s hard to explain to my wife but your videos showed her what I’m talking about 👍

  • @stanburman9978
    @stanburman9978 Год назад

    Great discussion of the temperature of the pyroclastic flow's affect on the deposit's solid/soil-like composition.

  • @TrainLordJC
    @TrainLordJC 3 года назад +7

    Excellent series of volcanic presentations and most informative. I have subscribed to the channel. Looking forward to learning more about the area.

  • @hollybyrd6186
    @hollybyrd6186 Год назад

    Amazing series

  • @chrisjones5482
    @chrisjones5482 Год назад

    Woohoo, I'm your 1000th subscriber! Thank you for the video series, I just spent three days in the Jemez Mountains and wish had seen this beforehand.

  • @nancytestani1470
    @nancytestani1470 Год назад

    Fascinating, awesome…

  • @cshinghirtis
    @cshinghirtis 3 года назад

    Geology is the most entertaining of the sciences...use of google earth-flight helps a lot👏
    Valles is one caldera I never really learned about in detail...great...

  • @tommunyon2874
    @tommunyon2874 3 года назад +1

    My buddy and I ducked into a cave on the southern side of Horse Mesa during a monsoonal thuderstorm and watched a huge waterfall blast off the side of the airport on the opposite side of the canyon. Erosive--you bet!

  • @tommunyon2874
    @tommunyon2874 6 месяцев назад

    When I would dig in my yard in Los Alamos as a small child I would come across the reddish layer of tuff not far beneath the topsoil. My first first thoughts were that the layer was made up of the remains of dead devils that had been buried in Hell's ceiling,