I am in Australia but I can tell you all about the geology of the pacific north west. I started watching these lectures during Covid lockdown and really enjoy them. He is a great teacher.
What the heck just happened? An hour ago I was watching a "how to" video on teaching my cat to use the toilet. I just finished an hour long geological lecture on basalt lava floods of the Pacific Northwest.
The algorithm is learning more about you. This will be used to customize your re-education training criteria, as well as to determine which of your organs are most harvestable.
Ever since childhood, I have been fascinated by "pretty rocks". I am 75 now. I lived on a farm in the Willamette Valley just east of Lebanon. After watching these fun lectures, plus a few books about the region, I better understand what I was seeing. There was a hole that we called the quarry which contained water. Now, I think it was a vent hole. On that farm, there were tons of quartz, agates, thunder eggs, all over the fields so we could just pick them up. I have been lucky enough to travel through many areas discussed. Now I know that those "dinosaur backbones" were beautiful vent remains. So cool. Look forward to continuing to watch these shows. I went to school at Central, then Central Washington College in 1964 and was in the library during an earthquake when the building went east-west, then north-south. Thank you so much. I would love to come and visit Prof Zentner's class. He is a great teacher!
This. This is what the internet was invented for. On a cold winter evening in Minnesota I can curl up with a relaxing beverage and see what The Great Algorithm at RUclips suggests for me. Tonight it was flood basalts in the pacific northwest. As I enjoy the lecture by the AMAZING Nick Zentner, in another window I periodically look up various things in Wikipedia as he mentions them. (The mass extinctions are fascinating!) I don't know how much of the details I'll retain, but I'm left with such a sense of awe and wonderment at our amazing planet and what "we" have learned through the countless hours of hard working geologists etc. being able to weave our billions of years of history into a compelling story. Huge thanks to Nick for making geology too interesting to pass up, and to CWU for providing this wonderful material to us for free!
I'm watching this on a rainy night somewhere in Australia. I noted that we have flood basalts in the southwest corner of Western Australia ... only about 3,000 km from here. Very interesting and entertaining lecture ... I learnt something tonight - thanks!
@@kswsquared suspicious observers channel will teach you how to predict earthquakes using solar weather indicators, could give you crucial hours to prepare and save your life, I've been watching him a long time, he knows his stuff, hope this helps you
I'm sure Sir Berners-Lee had no idea what his proposed hypertext network would become, but I have no doubt he's quite pleased to see it used like this.
This is as good as teaching gets. You can completely forget all the modern techno BS, literally all you need is a chalk board and chalk. If you have a teacher who 1) Knows his or her stuff, 2) Is absolutely passionate about it, 3) can tell a story. That is all you need. This guy is fantastic.
This is ignorance at it's best. Not to be rude but dang . These are tree conglomerates they have been heated and inundated by salt water. This causes crystallization and mineralization. Hense basalt. These forms are all over the planet found in giants causeways wich are same shape different vegetation. Some on Africa and india. South America practically everywhere the area is volcanic but those pillars are not of that. Sorry.
Outstanding - I'm 84 and I never blinked for the whole video. I'm from Ireland, and we have a little bit of basalt columns too known as the Giant's Causeway.
Hi, Roger, MudFossil University, showed these the other day. He says its Giants' hair and scalp 'sebum' at the flakey scalp we use for making China plates, etc. Very interesting
Yes! On the north coast of County Antrim... we were there in 2019 - it was spectacular! Not only are there classic columnar basalt flows, but also textbook examples of pillow basalts from flows that were rapidly cooled in seawater.
basalt columns are remains of old world silica trees, there is no way lavas can cause those hexagonal shapes, they resemble plant cells on a large scale
This guy is one of my favorite teachers, ever, even though I have never had him IRL, as my own teacher. Whenever RUclips guides me here I stay and I don’t even bother to look at the topic of his lecture at the moment, I just listen, and enjoy! Thanks for the amazing personality and lectures!!
This should be on television. Instead of Jersey Shore, Kardashians and all the other mindless bullshit that is litteraly destroying young peoples(and older) minds.
I feel like my University failed me because my geology professors didn't care about engaging students or whether anything was really learned. If you weren't at the School of Mines (Golden CO) then why would you take a geology course anyway. They just assumed we were all idiots. The professors there killed my spirit. Thank you for the lecture. It reminded me why I fell in love with geology in the first place. I'd rather be in the field than working at a bank any day.
Being a truck driver in Washington, and an ex well driller, I've seen above and below the ground these basalt flows, and they always amaze me. In north Spokane thru Deer Park there is a silica sand formation under 200 to 300 feet of basalt with burnt cedar trees. The sand is loaded with water, and the wood so well preserved you can smell the cedar just like a fresh cut board. Amazing
Austin Nassat, so glad you mentioned this! The mainstream continues to ignore the remains of megafauna on our earth today. In the form of heaven reaching Cedar Trees. Not only are they mentioned in Ezekial 31, cultures worldwide speak of giant cedars, elms, ash, etc. in their legends. In my own research, I had suspected , some intense heat event had transmuted some of these giant trees to basalt. I also discovered this occured not that long ago. Approx. 3,500-4,000 yrs. ago. When ancient chronicles speak of cosmic events causing world conflagrations(fires). You and I both know those columns never were a result of lava flows. Darwin, really screwed up the sciences eh?
I saw a video showing petrified-looking silica - the beach was like concrete. As I recall, it was a process that occurred over time. A chemical reaction. Crazy stuff our world has going on. Wow. 🙂💛🌻
Every now and then the RUclips algorithms pass something across your viewing. This was a absolute gem, I'm not a American but a Australian and I was taken in by the lecture, wit and enthusiasm. Man I would have loved to be in your classroom. Many thanks. Jeff Moore
I revisit professor Nick for an educational weekend about once a year. Now 2021 and all the English speaking world needs a flow to bury the freedom stealing libtards under! Pay attention and question everything! Did you know Nazi party only got 38% of the votes in the last free election. Then the emergency measures went into place. Sound familiar? IMHO Canada will start the new REVOLUTION
I have noticed that most of the worlds politics seem to have a 2nd agenda that's why i building my own small town community to be able to operate independent of the worlds directions. Aussie Jeff
Love this guy and his methods, plus the fact at the end, he welcomes anyone interested to come join a class. If I was in the area, I certainly would have taken him up. Thank you for real teaching. A lost art nowadays. Nick is a gem.
I recently found these lectures via RUclips serendipity. I am a Scot living in Scotland, but my husband is American and from Washington State. I can now appreciate his birthplace. Scotland isn't short of fascinating geology- my parents gave me a love of reading the landscape from an early age. Sadly my father is no longer with us, but my mother is also enjoying your lectures. If you ever get the chance- Scotland is a great place to explore. Thank you- we enjoy your style!
Fantastic amount of knowledge displayed by Mr Nick Zentner about the beautiful region in our American West! Thank you,sir for sharing your videos free of charge to us
A wonderful lecture! As a truck driver I often wondered about these because I saw them for thousands and thousands of miles of driving and I finally understand what they are all about and my enjoyment will be more so to look for the Fissures. I look forward to listening to this these lectures in the future as well
I was kid in the 60s too . We didnt have videos then , but the old guy next door , use to take me gold panning , and hed tell me rock stories like this . If he was alive today , he would have loved this .
A big thank you for this and other great videos that have taught be so much more than I learned in the last 60 + years . As others have commented , if half of the.teachers were as knowledgeable in their given subject as you we would have so many brilliant people the world would be a different place .
This guy is awesome. Reminds me of my geometry teacher in high school, who would just walk in and start 'chatting' about things, life in general. Then in the last minutes of the class, Mr. Rowlands would suddenly switch to the math portion of the lesson, and tie it all in so incredibly elegant the the simple chat we had been having. Kudos to this guy, and Mr. Rowlands.
Thank you so much for such a wondrous presentation. As for Mass Extinctions: I did a Graduate paper on the KT Mass Extinction (Impact ??), back in the early 1980s. I remained cautious/skeptical, wary of the tendency of the "most dramatic" hypothesis to be pushed to the forefront, in popular imagination. Back then, we didn't have the discovery of the Chicxulub Crater as the "smoking gun". And in a sulfurous region, exacerbating the climate impact. But even now, some Paleontologists argue that the Deccan Traps could ALSO have played a role, in stressing/decreasing world biodiversity, ~synchronous with the impact - similar to the Siberian Traps in the End-Permian. So I am reserved and (not being Paleo-vs-Geophysicist "tribal") am amenable to the Multiple Cause model.
I started watching GeologyHub in December, and this is the first of Nick Zentner's videos I've seen, definitely looking for more... GeologyHub was my first introduction to the Siberian Traps, and he seems to be cautiously supporting the theory that some flood basalts might have been "rejuvenated" by meteoric impacts that travel far enough through the earth to push magma higher in the mantle on the opposite side from the impact. But maybe I'm misunderstanding.... My last geology class was in 1981, and I just recently took up an interest in it again. So much to learn. So much new stuff researched since then...
This video was recommended to me over a dozen times before I finally said "okay, fine RUclips. I'll watch it." And so far, it's a really good presentation on German Chocolate Cake!
I've heard the rock hammer story several times. I didn't know the event was on video! I howled with laughter. I'm also glad your hammer was returned to you eventually. If belongs on display at the new geology department. I so enjoyed this video. Volcanos of all forms are a passion of mine. I'm currently studying the ice age floods but also starting on studying volcanos. Being covered by st Helen's ash cured I desire to see a live eruption in person. It also made my desire to learn more about volcanos stronger. Now that I'm turning 75, it is time for this studying. I just ordered the large igneous provinces book. Thank you Nick for all the teaching videos from the beginning to now!
As I sit here in the south of Britain on a blazing hot day, I find myself enthralled by this lecture! This was presented beautifully, and I wish I could have actually been there for the lecture as it happened. I consider it an absolute privilege to have watched this lecture, and I'd just like to say a big thank you for uploading it! Looks like I'll be binge-watching more of this now!
That was the most interesting video on Geology I've ever seen! I grew up in Southern New Jersey. When I moved out here to Springfield Oregon I couldn't believe how beautiful it was! Wish I'd taken an interest in Geology when I was younger.
If I had had a teacher like this, I would have gone into geology! After 25 years of teaching, he is still excited about what he's learning, and well able to share it!
When I first came to Oregon, I drove along the Columbia gorge and gazed in awe at the incredible basalt cliffs on either side of the river. I'd previously lived in places dominated by sedimentary rock, and seeing basalt, hundreds of feet high was a humbling and awe inspiring experience. I tried to conceive of the violence and scale of a lava flow that might generate that. I remember thinking, "no, this can't be. This must be some kind of original bedrock that's exposed somehow. There's no way you could have a lava flow like this." Then I drove a bit further and saw basalt atop metamorphic, layered rock. My jaw hit the floor. I'd been trying to grasp what I was seeing ever since. Thanks for explaining it to me finally.
I think I have watched every one of your videos. You are AWESOME!!!!! Thank you sooo much for the education. Nothing is more entertaining to me, than learning. I appreciate your hard work, and thank you soooo much!
I grew up in the Tri-Cities. I didn’t know anything about the geology of the area until I discovered the Roadside Geology series after I left college. Fascinating stuff! Nick, I have enjoyed watching your videos since I discovered them a month ago. The Teacher Company ought hire you to do a geology course of western North America. Geology, like history, can be boring or interesting, it just depends on the ability of the person telling the story. You are a good story teller.
An hour long you tube video seemed to pass in five minutes..... i know nothing about geology and I failed school but can’t remember the last time I payed so much attention to somebody talking about something I never had an interest in. I was wondering what I am going to do with my two week Christmas holiday and now I know I will spend it watching more about basalt volcanoes Thank you for sharing your talk
Live in Rowena Oregon (West of The Dalles) and look across at a big fissure about 3 miles east of Lyle. Also the Interstate 84 cut just west of Hood River is a bank of spatter.....Thanks Nick
As soon as he said "it began 17 MYA", I knew Yellow Stone was involved. Only because I watched the vid about the gold deposits. I love this man's delivery style. Easy to listent to, easy to understand, and easy to remember a lot of it.
you are amazing.... watch your videos over and over. one of these days, one of these daysi will get my derriere in my van and head north from houston, tx to Washington state
I've watched many a lecture on various topics but this guy is just a mountain of enthusiasm and knowledge that I've yet to come across in other lectures. He really has a passion for Geology, as if he's also saying "we need to be aware of all these cataclysms - they are a huge part of our future coming from the distant past and we can't be ignorant of these events." Great stuff........................
@@BSokler1 Yap. I live in Copenhagen, Denmark, on chalk from the Tethys Sea, with a sprinkling of some upwards of 20 meters of moraine from the several glaciations :3
And school still push the lie of no such thing as a visual learner. Amazing how much influence silly doodles of the intended verbal information expressions can have on particular cognitive formats used by humans. I always find drawing ruff depictions of what I'm attempting to express makes my ability to express that info verbally
I started watching these geology lectures by Nick about 5 years ago. Somehow I always get sucked in by Nicks teaching style. As a trucker I know I can always turn on one of these lectures, and use them to rock me to sleep....pun intended. Thank you Nick and CWU. It's been very educational listening for so long now.
Great presentation. In 10,000 years, some future archaeologist will find that rock hammer and be able to say a lot about the lost civilization that once lived here.
@@warpmine1761 most tools are made from some variation of cromium-vanadium steel. As long as that part of Washington doesn't get lots of rain, the hammer will last a very very long time.
Like Jeff who commented just down the list, I’m in Australia as well. This is probably the 4th or 5th of these videos that I have watched and I think that they are exceptional. Bringing knowledge to the people who want to learn for no reason other that to seek knowledge and presented in an outstanding manner. Thank you, I will be sure to watch more and if the world ever settles down enough to travel again I will certainly come visit, buy a burger at some of the roadhouses you mention and maybe even drop into what appears to be a fine University.
Although this is 5 years old, I sat through the entire video learning about basalt, fissures, feeder dikes and more. I loved every second and I am a whole lot smarter today....loved the lesson. Great humor 🤗😁👍
My parents were both geologists so I know a lot of this, but you do a great job of bringing it all together and making it interesting. Excellent presentation.
Love this guy's lectures. I used to find geology boring in high school, but Zentner makes it very interesting, bringing a historical perspective & relating the work to local landmarks 👍🏻👍🏻
I like basalt! They are amazing ! There is a basalt formation in Dunsmuire CA called Hedge Creek Falls. The roof of the cave that the falls stream over befire spilling down as a falls, is basalt. To be able to stand under that roof and look up at the pillars of basalt is a marvelous experience!
'Organ Pipes' National Park, on the northwestern outskirts of Melbourne, Australia has a very similar feature - hexagonal basalt columns, a metre across and about 25 metres tall. Much of Melbourne's north and west, are a basaltic lava plain laid down in Australia's last major volcanic orogeny, about 25mya.
Excellent lecture by someone who truly knows how to engage and teach. Teaching isn't about pushing information it's about creating interest and passion. Future teachers and profs please take notes because this is how it should be done.
Love your way of teaching. The energy shows. I dont have anything to do with Washington Geology or even USA Geology But I watched all your roadside Geology video and following up on these lectures. Amazing. Keep up the energy. and humor :D
His teaching style will educate those who arn't interested. Never monotone, crisp, clear and punctuated with humour. I opened this vid by accident and I'm still here watching his stuff 90 minutes later LOL!! Obviously he's paid attn to what doesnt work.
Man I think it's pretty awesome that you let anyone come join your class like that. It'd be great for us older folk who don't really have time or money for actual courses but still enjoy some learning. Sorry about your hammer!
I am not a geologist (or even close), but these lectures are wonderful! Anyone can understand the principles behind these eruptions and can view nature with different eyes! Thank you!
If I lived out there, I'd definitely attend this professor's class. Always great to see someone in education who loves what they do. Thanks Mr. Zentner. Your are a fine educator, otherwise I wouldn't be living in Philly and enjoying a great talk on Flood Basalts of the Pacific Northwest.
This is what teaching should look like. Humility to point out that which isn’t known, or has various possibilities, or is the best current hypothesis being included is the icing on the ‘German chocolate cake’!
Shoot, I'm too old, mean and cranky now for picking up and going back to school here. This is an awesome lecture, my musician brain can handle this. Since I can't shoulda, woulda, coulda, I'm going to remember your name, Mr. Nick Zentner, and watch more of these just for the fun of it. I have already shared this with others.
@@Ellensburg44 thank you Nick, I love your lectures. I use them to learn and fall asleep to, not that you are bad anyway kinda good sleep aid. I love science, but wasn't that good in school. Now I at 40 I love to learn new things and old too.
Yet ANOTHER gr-r-r-r-reat Nick Zentner lecture! He makes a complicated subject--like Pacific Northwest geology--much easier to understand. If people here haven't checked it out yet, his "Nick at Home" series, I can highly recommend it.
As a newly retired resident to the PNW, I found this lecture absolutely fascinating and it helps me gain a greater understanding of the geomorphology here. I will certainly seek out more lectures my Nick Zentner. Thank you for making them easily available to a wider audience than CWU students.
I truly enjoyed this! When I take my motorcycle trips through all those areas I feel like I'm stepping back in time. I truly enjoy all the fanciest flows in the French Glen, OR area. Thank you for this posting
Central Washington University's Nick Zentner is the type of individual that makes learning fun and interesting. Geology has always been one of my most favorite subjects.
Very interesting subject. Great teacher ! I once had a botany professor that was so good I took every class he taught. It's so great to hear a knowledgeable opinion that all the media hype about Yellowstone is total BS.
I am so glad you didn't go there about gw..... I'm a prospector and have learned so much from you.... wish I was 30 years younger.... Thank you for your knowledge....
Hi professor Nick, I'm a fairly distant guy in Italy, I'm not a student, not a graduate of any kind either, I'm 61 and I just like this kind of stuff. Let me thank you for the very interesting and entertaining lecture, THIS is the right way to help common people eat hard stuff in a palatable and digestible fashion. And let me also tell you that, thanks to your clear pronuntiation, I was able to understand 99% of what you've said, thus no subtitles were needed and so I had a fully satisfactory comprehension of the whole thing. Thanks a lot, very good job. 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼😉
This is very interesting. I was raised and still live around George, Wa. I work for a water well drilling company based out of Moses Lake and I’ve always thought it was cool so see the geology underground down to 800’ or more. I’ve always felt like it’s a special opportunity to see geology that most people never get to see on a daily basis all across Central Washington. I also manage a crushed stone operation out of Royal City so I look at rock formations and deposits every day. It’s interesting to see this and correlate my own thoughts and ideas about what we see every day on the job. It’s amazing how many different formations are underneath us and often wonder how they got there.
Great great and fun interesting presentation. It’s been a while since my tours of eastern Washington. I will do them again. Magnificent views aplenty. Thx man
I am 8 minutes in but I love this show. More to come.i am an amateur geologist and I've seen parts of Columbia River also and it has crossed my mind as to how those rocks were formed. Now I'm learning. Also more about a lot of other stuff.this guy knows his stuff.and funny.
Great teachers that are passionate about their subject are infectious spreading knowledge. If a subject interests you finding a teacher like Nick is a gold mine!
I am in Australia but I can tell you all about the geology of the pacific north west. I started watching these lectures during Covid lockdown and really enjoy them. He is a great teacher.
You’re awesome, we love Australians from Washington state!
You Tube's algorithm randomly brought me here and now I'm happily binge watching. Very interesting content. Thank you.
I'll never take for granted the fact that I can so easily access lectures like this.
What the heck just happened? An hour ago I was watching a "how to" video on teaching my cat to use the toilet. I just finished an hour long geological lecture on basalt lava floods of the Pacific Northwest.
The algorithm is learning more about you. This will be used to customize your re-education training criteria, as well as to determine which of your organs are most harvestable.
Welcome to the technological singularity. These are the last moments in history to stop it.
@@FelonyVideos I wish this comment wasn't so funny.
But you learned a lot....not so sure about your cat.
I think german chocolate cake might be connecting link
Ever since childhood, I have been fascinated by "pretty rocks". I am 75 now. I lived on a farm in the Willamette Valley just east of Lebanon. After watching these fun lectures, plus a few books about the region, I better understand what I was seeing. There was a hole that we called the quarry which contained water. Now, I think it was a vent hole. On that farm, there were tons of quartz, agates, thunder eggs, all over the fields so we could just pick them up. I have been lucky enough to travel through many areas discussed. Now I know that those "dinosaur backbones" were beautiful vent remains. So cool. Look forward to continuing to watch these shows. I went to school at Central, then Central Washington College in 1964 and was in the library during an earthquake when the building went east-west, then north-south. Thank you so much. I would love to come and visit Prof Zentner's class. He is a great teacher!
Thanks for watching. Yes, come visit and sit in on some classes!
This. This is what the internet was invented for. On a cold winter evening in Minnesota I can curl up with a relaxing beverage and see what The Great Algorithm at RUclips suggests for me. Tonight it was flood basalts in the pacific northwest. As I enjoy the lecture by the AMAZING Nick Zentner, in another window I periodically look up various things in Wikipedia as he mentions them. (The mass extinctions are fascinating!) I don't know how much of the details I'll retain, but I'm left with such a sense of awe and wonderment at our amazing planet and what "we" have learned through the countless hours of hard working geologists etc. being able to weave our billions of years of history into a compelling story.
Huge thanks to Nick for making geology too interesting to pass up, and to CWU for providing this wonderful material to us for free!
Watching this in a rainy night somewhere in the south of the Philippines right after a weak aftershock passed by from our M6 swarm some months back. 👍
I'm watching this on a rainy night somewhere in Australia. I noted that we have flood basalts in the southwest corner of Western Australia ... only about 3,000 km from here. Very interesting and entertaining lecture ... I learnt something tonight - thanks!
in mn right now too
@@kswsquared suspicious observers channel will teach you how to predict earthquakes using solar weather indicators, could give you crucial hours to prepare and save your life, I've been watching him a long time, he knows his stuff, hope this helps you
I'm sure Sir Berners-Lee had no idea what his proposed hypertext network would become, but I have no doubt he's quite pleased to see it used like this.
This is as good as teaching gets. You can completely forget all the modern techno BS, literally all you need is a chalk board and chalk. If you have a teacher who 1) Knows his or her stuff, 2) Is absolutely passionate about it, 3) can tell a story. That is all you need. This guy is fantastic.
Yes indeed I'm on my third teaching n definitely hooked😁
Students evaluations are proven to be unreliable
having the ability to record drawings the teacher makes can make a huge difference.
Ok boomer. Tech makes it easier for people like me that are dyslexic and have audio processing issues that need rewinding
This is ignorance at it's best. Not to be rude but dang .
These are tree conglomerates they have been heated and inundated by salt water. This causes crystallization and mineralization.
Hense basalt. These forms are all over the planet found in giants causeways wich are same shape different vegetation. Some on Africa and india. South America practically everywhere the area is volcanic but those pillars are not of that. Sorry.
Outstanding - I'm 84 and I never blinked for the whole video. I'm from Ireland, and we have a little bit of basalt columns too known as the Giant's Causeway.
Hi, Roger, MudFossil University, showed these the other day. He says its Giants' hair and scalp 'sebum' at the flakey scalp we use for making China plates, etc. Very interesting
Yes! On the north coast of County Antrim... we were there in 2019 - it was spectacular! Not only are there classic columnar basalt flows, but also textbook examples of pillow basalts from flows that were rapidly cooled in seawater.
Aye, a wee bit !
oyou didnt blink the whole time ?... oh dear thats not good you'll strain your eyes if you do that
basalt columns are remains of old world silica trees, there is no way lavas can cause those hexagonal shapes, they resemble plant cells on a large scale
This guy is one of my favorite teachers, ever, even though I have never had him IRL, as my own teacher. Whenever RUclips guides me here I stay and I don’t even bother to look at the topic of his lecture at the moment, I just listen, and enjoy! Thanks for the amazing personality and lectures!!
From one geologist to another, awesome presentation. What energy!
This should be on television. Instead of Jersey Shore, Kardashians and all the other mindless bullshit that is litteraly destroying young peoples(and older) minds.
And thank you for making these videos accessible for everyone.
Wrong kind of eruption....
Let the dummies have their reality TV. I just hope YT doesn't start censoring informative stuff like this.
I can't imagine why they would, thank goodness!
Wille A - I am unable to agree more with your sentiment. Simply incapable. Stay classy.
I feel like my University failed me because my geology professors didn't care about engaging students or whether anything was really learned. If you weren't at the School of Mines (Golden CO) then why would you take a geology course anyway. They just assumed we were all idiots. The professors there killed my spirit. Thank you for the lecture. It reminded me why I fell in love with geology in the first place. I'd rather be in the field than working at a bank any day.
ye i an relate
Blaming universities for everything is dope
...
perhaps a better metaphor is your rock hammer falling in between some deep cracks...your spirit wasn't killed, just buried.
Its a shame, but i also believe its deliberate. An uninspired, discouraged populace is easier to control
University professors are the definition of useless idiots. Especially the ones in charge like chairs and deans. Pathetic. Spit!
Being a truck driver in Washington, and an ex well driller, I've seen above and below the ground these basalt flows, and they always amaze me. In north Spokane thru Deer Park there is a silica sand formation under 200 to 300 feet of basalt with burnt cedar trees. The sand is loaded with water, and the wood so well preserved you can smell the cedar just like a fresh cut board. Amazing
Austin Nassat, so glad you mentioned this! The mainstream continues to ignore the remains of megafauna on our earth today. In the form of heaven reaching Cedar Trees. Not only are they mentioned in Ezekial 31, cultures worldwide speak of giant cedars, elms, ash, etc. in their legends. In my own research, I had suspected , some intense heat event had transmuted some of these giant trees to basalt. I also discovered this occured not that long ago. Approx. 3,500-4,000 yrs. ago. When ancient chronicles speak of cosmic events causing world conflagrations(fires). You and I both know those columns never were a result of lava flows. Darwin, really screwed up the sciences eh?
@@nancyvernon3017 shut up
@@terrybabb2 some people can't handle the truth or are to low IQ to realize when it is staring them in the face. Go waste someone else's time D.B.
I saw a video showing petrified-looking silica - the beach was like concrete. As I recall, it was a process that occurred over time. A chemical reaction. Crazy stuff our world has going on. Wow. 🙂💛🌻
@@terracotta6294 yes I had read somewhere petrification can occur in as little as 15 min.!(if conditions are right).
Every now and then the RUclips algorithms pass something across your viewing.
This was a absolute gem, I'm not a American but a Australian and I was taken in by the lecture, wit and enthusiasm.
Man I would have loved to be in your classroom. Many thanks. Jeff Moore
I revisit professor Nick for an educational weekend about once a year. Now 2021 and all the English speaking world needs a flow to bury the freedom stealing libtards under! Pay attention and question everything! Did you know Nazi party only got 38% of the votes in the last free election. Then the emergency measures went into place. Sound familiar? IMHO Canada will start the new REVOLUTION
I have noticed that most of the worlds politics seem to have a 2nd agenda that's why i building my own small town community to be able to operate independent of the worlds directions. Aussie Jeff
@@genebohannon8820 Just like Donald Trump?
"...but _AN_ Australian."
Sorry, I had to.
@@MrEnjoivolcom1 you know we are all so individual we don't use plural definitions.
Love this guy and his methods, plus the fact at the end, he welcomes anyone interested to come join a class. If I was in the area, I certainly would have taken him up. Thank you for real teaching. A lost art nowadays. Nick is a gem.
If anything millions years ago its this guys information....Timelines are dropping faster than a skydiver jumping out of a plane...
I would love to attend one of his classes.unfortunatly I live in the midwest n can't travel at the moment 😜
These videos renewed my interest in geology and helped me work through my rather bothersome amphetamine habit
I recently found these lectures via RUclips serendipity. I am a Scot living in Scotland, but my husband is American and from Washington State. I can now appreciate his birthplace. Scotland isn't short of fascinating geology- my parents gave me a love of reading the landscape from an early age. Sadly my father is no longer with us, but my mother is also enjoying your lectures.
If you ever get the chance- Scotland is a great place to explore.
Thank you- we enjoy your style!
Thanks for the comments. Hello from the US. Would love to see your country some day.
Lots of basaltic flows along the edge of Scotland and Northern Ireland and now I know why thanks to the video and the breaking up of Pangea.
Only four minutes into this and this is a great educator and presenter.
Fantastic amount of knowledge displayed by Mr Nick Zentner about the beautiful region in our American West! Thank you,sir for sharing your videos free of charge to us
Nick is so wonderful...he shares his vast knowledge with so much enthusiasm... a treasure... Thanks to the people who produce this fine series...
A wonderful lecture! As a truck driver I often wondered about these because I saw them for thousands and thousands of miles of driving and I finally understand what they are all about and my enjoyment will be more so to look for the Fissures. I look forward to listening to this these lectures in the future as well
Thanks Mary. You know these places - and that helps these lectures have meaning. There is more if interested at nickzentner.com
If there had been videos like this around when I was a kid in the 60s, I'd be a geologist now. That was very interesting and well presented. Thanks!
And likely unemployed.
I was kid in the 60s too . We didnt have videos then , but the old guy next door , use to take me gold panning , and hed tell me rock stories like this . If he was alive today , he would have loved this .
@@kokonanana1 ohhh what a way of perceiving things.like others careers are providing tremendous jobs
A big thank you for this and other great videos that have taught be so much more than I learned in the last 60 + years . As others have commented , if half of the.teachers were as knowledgeable in their given subject as you we would have so many brilliant people the world would be a different place .
Me TOO!
This guy is awesome. Reminds me of my geometry teacher in high school, who would just walk in and start 'chatting' about things, life in general. Then in the last minutes of the class, Mr. Rowlands would suddenly switch to the math portion of the lesson, and tie it all in so incredibly elegant the the simple chat we had been having. Kudos to this guy, and Mr. Rowlands.
Thank you so much for such a wondrous presentation.
As for Mass Extinctions: I did a Graduate paper on the KT Mass Extinction (Impact ??), back in the early 1980s.
I remained cautious/skeptical, wary of the tendency of the "most dramatic" hypothesis to be pushed to the forefront, in popular imagination.
Back then, we didn't have the discovery of the Chicxulub Crater as the "smoking gun". And in a sulfurous region, exacerbating the climate impact.
But even now, some Paleontologists argue that the Deccan Traps could ALSO have played a role, in stressing/decreasing world biodiversity, ~synchronous with the impact - similar to the Siberian Traps in the End-Permian. So I am reserved and (not being Paleo-vs-Geophysicist "tribal") am amenable to the Multiple Cause model.
I started watching GeologyHub in December, and this is the first of Nick Zentner's videos I've seen, definitely looking for more...
GeologyHub was my first introduction to the Siberian Traps, and he seems to be cautiously supporting the theory that some flood basalts might have been "rejuvenated" by meteoric impacts that travel far enough through the earth to push magma higher in the mantle on the opposite side from the impact. But maybe I'm misunderstanding.... My last geology class was in 1981, and I just recently took up an interest in it again. So much to learn. So much new stuff researched since then...
I'm in England, northwest and stumbled on these lectures..watched a few now and I think they are great talks.
Thanks much, Paul. Hello from the USA.
This video was recommended to me over a dozen times before I finally said "okay, fine RUclips. I'll watch it." And so far, it's a really good presentation on German Chocolate Cake!
Over 4 years old and still brilliant in content AND explanation. In never get tired of watching this presentation.
I've heard the rock hammer story several times. I didn't know the event was on video! I howled with laughter. I'm also glad your hammer was returned to you eventually. If belongs on display at the new geology department. I so enjoyed this video. Volcanos of all forms are a passion of mine. I'm currently studying the ice age floods but also starting on studying volcanos. Being covered by st Helen's ash cured I desire to see a live eruption in person. It also made my desire to learn more about volcanos stronger. Now that I'm turning 75, it is time for this studying. I just ordered the large igneous provinces book. Thank you Nick for all the teaching videos from the beginning to now!
Me, too!
It was so unexpected, and so 'REAL,' and this Man wasn't afraid/embarrassed to share it!
;-)
As I sit here in the south of Britain on a blazing hot day, I find myself enthralled by this lecture! This was presented beautifully, and I wish I could have actually been there for the lecture as it happened. I consider it an absolute privilege to have watched this lecture, and I'd just like to say a big thank you for uploading it!
Looks like I'll be binge-watching more of this now!
That was the most interesting video on Geology I've ever seen! I grew up in Southern New Jersey. When I moved out here to Springfield Oregon I couldn't believe how beautiful it was! Wish I'd taken an interest in Geology when I was younger.
If i had teachers like this, I would have enjoyed school.
Nice comment. Thanks Mark.
With audience that doesn't throw things at me or fight in class i would have enjoyed teaching :/
If I had teachers like this , I would have went.
You probably did.
If I had had a teacher like this, I would have gone into geology! After 25 years of teaching, he is still excited about what he's learning, and well able to share it!
I don't even know how or why i landed in this video, but this guy Nick Zentner is a good presenter and got me hooked
You remind me of my old geology teacher. One of the few people who can talk about rocks for an hour and make it engaging.
This was great! I'm so glad the uni recorded this and shared it with the public.
We take what is offered
Nick Zentner is my Favorite teacher, of Northwest Geology.
Thanks much.
MINE TOO NOW!!!
Outstanding! It’s instructors like you that keep the next generation wanting to explore and learn more.
When I first came to Oregon, I drove along the Columbia gorge and gazed in awe at the incredible basalt cliffs on either side of the river. I'd previously lived in places dominated by sedimentary rock, and seeing basalt, hundreds of feet high was a humbling and awe inspiring experience. I tried to conceive of the violence and scale of a lava flow that might generate that. I remember thinking, "no, this can't be. This must be some kind of original bedrock that's exposed somehow. There's no way you could have a lava flow like this." Then I drove a bit further and saw basalt atop metamorphic, layered rock. My jaw hit the floor.
I'd been trying to grasp what I was seeing ever since. Thanks for explaining it to me finally.
Very nice, Dawn. Thanks.
Dawn Alderman yup. And those basalt columns makes great rock climbing!
Remains of giant trees
@@furlonggg1 Yeah and Earth is flat too right?
@@Sphynx93rkn stay on topic
I think I have watched every one of your videos. You are AWESOME!!!!! Thank you sooo much for the education. Nothing is more entertaining to me, than learning. I appreciate your hard work, and thank you soooo much!
Thank you, Kevin!
I grew up in the Tri-Cities. I didn’t know anything about the geology of the area until I discovered the Roadside Geology series after I left college. Fascinating stuff! Nick, I have enjoyed watching your videos since I discovered them a month ago. The Teacher Company ought hire you to do a geology course of western North America. Geology, like history, can be boring or interesting, it just depends on the ability of the person telling the story. You are a good story teller.
Thanks for the comments, Bonnie. Glad you are enjoying the lectures.
Excellent. Fascinating. Loved the ending icing on the cake to see him laugh too.
An hour long you tube video seemed to pass in five minutes..... i know nothing about geology and I failed school but can’t remember the last time I payed so much attention to somebody talking about something I never had an interest in.
I was wondering what I am going to do with my two week Christmas holiday and now I know I will spend it watching more about basalt volcanoes
Thank you for sharing your talk
Live in Rowena Oregon (West of The Dalles) and look across at a big fissure about 3 miles east of Lyle. Also the Interstate 84 cut just west of Hood River is a bank of spatter.....Thanks Nick
I started watching these a few years ago, because they were interesting. Now, I’m planning my second trip to the area. Truly an amazing channel. 🤠
Flood basalt, spatter; words that are stuck in my head forever.
As soon as he said "it began 17 MYA", I knew Yellow Stone was involved. Only because I watched the vid about the gold deposits.
I love this man's delivery style. Easy to listent to, easy to understand, and easy to remember a lot of it.
you are amazing.... watch your videos over and over. one of these days, one of these daysi will get my derriere in my van and head north from houston, tx to Washington state
The teacher we all wish we’d had! I’m 80 years old. Never to old to learn. Thank you.
Fastest hour I’ve spent on RUclips good job
I am apparently very rich; having access to sources like this lecture enriches me :3
I've watched many a lecture on various topics but this guy is just a mountain of enthusiasm and knowledge that I've yet to come across in other lectures. He really has a passion for Geology, as if he's also saying "we need to be aware of all these cataclysms - they are a huge part of our future coming from the distant past and we can't be ignorant of these events." Great stuff........................
Jacob Bøge Andersen, Are you from Denmark? Or perhaps a grandfather was from Denmark. My family were from Scotland and Denmark.
I
@@BSokler1 Yap. I live in Copenhagen, Denmark, on chalk from the Tethys Sea, with a sprinkling of some upwards of 20 meters of moraine from the several glaciations :3
I own several small islands in the Med. Where do you live?
The best geology lecture I've ever experienced. Thank you!
Your delivery is so engaging, an hour flies by in an instant!!
And school still push the lie of no such thing as a visual learner.
Amazing how much influence silly doodles of the intended verbal information expressions can have on particular cognitive formats used by humans.
I always find drawing ruff depictions of what I'm attempting to express makes my ability to express that info verbally
Geology lecture meets standup comedy. Never thought I'd see that. Love it! Thanks for sharing!
Wonderful, my son is studying to become a geologist and I've shared this gem with him.
I started watching these geology lectures by Nick about 5 years ago. Somehow I always get sucked in by Nicks teaching style. As a trucker I know I can always turn on one of these lectures, and use them to rock me to sleep....pun intended. Thank you Nick and CWU. It's been very educational listening for so long now.
This is what teaching should be like. I wish I had this guy teaching me Geology.
Thank you, Julia.
His audience' attention span is a little longer than the average schoolchild's.
Julia S
this "geology" is rubbish.
Julia S -
He IS teaching you geology! :)
Julia S Yeah then everything you think you know would be completely WRONG.
Passion and excitement in teaching. Even my 8-year-old son likes to watch these presentations.
Great presentation.
In 10,000 years, some future archaeologist will find that rock hammer and be able to say a lot about the lost civilization that once lived here.
Dannan Tavona
Unless they are lazy
Then those rock hammers will be called "for ritual purposes"
Unless it has some computer attached to it ( like a phone) I doubt they'll be interested!
Not likely becasue of corrosion unless it's made from corrosion resistant steel.
@@warpmine1761 most tools are made from some variation of cromium-vanadium steel. As long as that part of Washington doesn't get lots of rain, the hammer will last a very very long time.
Exactly what I thought!!!
Having a professor with a sense of humor always helps to keep your attention. this guy is great at teaching.
A primo professor! Oh, what a teacher! Thank you!
Like Jeff who commented just down the list, I’m in Australia as well. This is probably the 4th or 5th of these videos that I have watched and I think that they are exceptional. Bringing knowledge to the people who want to learn for no reason other that to seek knowledge and presented in an outstanding manner.
Thank you, I will be sure to watch more and if the world ever settles down enough to travel again I will certainly come visit, buy a burger at some of the roadhouses you mention and maybe even drop into what appears to be a fine University.
Nick, Thanks for sharing your love of PNW Geology. I really enjoy your lectures!
Although this is 5 years old, I sat through the entire video learning about basalt, fissures, feeder dikes and more. I loved every second and I am a whole lot smarter today....loved the lesson. Great humor 🤗😁👍
My parents were both geologists so I know a lot of this, but you do a great job of bringing it all together and making it interesting. Excellent presentation.
Thanks much. I like your parents.
Thank you.
Love this guy's lectures. I used to find geology boring in high school, but Zentner makes it very interesting, bringing a historical perspective & relating the work to local landmarks 👍🏻👍🏻
I like basalt! They are amazing !
There is a basalt formation in Dunsmuire CA called Hedge Creek Falls. The roof of the cave that the falls stream over befire spilling down as a falls, is basalt. To be able to stand under that roof and look up at the pillars of basalt is a marvelous experience!
I learned more from this video than I did in 3 years of highschool.
Thank you Nick!
'Organ Pipes' National Park, on the northwestern outskirts of Melbourne, Australia has a very similar feature - hexagonal basalt columns, a metre across and about 25 metres tall.
Much of Melbourne's north and west, are a basaltic lava plain laid down in Australia's last major volcanic orogeny, about 25mya.
Awesome!
Excellent lecture by someone who truly knows how to engage and teach. Teaching isn't about pushing information it's about creating interest and passion. Future teachers and profs please take notes because this is how it should be done.
Love your way of teaching. The energy shows. I dont have anything to do with Washington Geology or even USA Geology But I watched all your roadside Geology video and following up on these lectures. Amazing. Keep up the energy. and humor :D
Hello from the USA! Nice to hear these lectures are being enjoyed so far away! Thanks for leaving a comment.
same here, i loved the lecture even i am from europe. also i will never look at the german cake without thinking of geology really :D
Hello from the USA! Really appreciate your note.
I'm watching this at 12 am during the last day of November, 2021
This guy does and incredible job with his public lectures and when I see him in a video I press play!!
His teaching style will educate those who arn't interested. Never monotone, crisp, clear and punctuated with humour. I opened this vid by accident and I'm still here watching his stuff 90 minutes later LOL!! Obviously he's paid attn to what doesnt work.
Man I think it's pretty awesome that you let anyone come join your class like that. It'd be great for us older folk who don't really have time or money for actual courses but still enjoy some learning. Sorry about your hammer!
I am not a geologist (or even close), but these lectures are wonderful! Anyone can understand the principles behind these eruptions and can view nature with different eyes! Thank you!
Thank you Nick......great lecture. Love your enthusiasm and delivery style.
If I lived out there, I'd definitely attend this professor's class. Always great to see someone in education who loves what they do. Thanks Mr. Zentner. Your are a fine educator, otherwise I wouldn't be living in Philly and enjoying a great talk on Flood Basalts of the Pacific Northwest.
The USGS has a great series of public talks like this.
I am a geologist. He is definitely a good teacher. I enjoy listening. Thank you.
Thank you.
Only 5 minutes in, Watched most of your lectures about this stuff. Yet still learned some new stuff already! the next 55 minutes should be great.
Hope you enjoyed it, Nathan. Thanks.
What a great lecturer. What a fascinating story.
This is the kind of professor I would love to listen to, promptly get a C on his exam, and still go home happy.
This is what teaching should look like. Humility to point out that which isn’t known, or has various possibilities, or is the best current hypothesis being included is the icing on the ‘German chocolate cake’!
This is a BEYOND awesome lecture. Nick you present the information in such an intelligible way to non experts like me.
Nick Zentner is best of all Prof^s, I ever listened to, and I have heard many , first in medicine, then, 40 years later in geo
Shoot, I'm too old, mean and cranky now for picking up and going back to school here. This is an awesome lecture, my musician brain can handle this. Since I can't shoulda, woulda, coulda, I'm going to remember your name, Mr. Nick Zentner, and watch more of these just for the fun of it. I have already shared this with others.
Thanks much. Glad you liked it. All of my stuff is at nickzentner.com if interested.
Thank you, Nick. I will check this out.
@Aayantegirl Your musician brain is a lot better than my musician brain. I can't retain info any more!
just listen to the dulcet tones of his voice :)
@@Ellensburg44 thank you Nick, I love your lectures. I use them to learn and fall asleep to, not that you are bad anyway kinda good sleep aid. I love science, but wasn't that good in school. Now I at 40 I love to learn new things and old too.
Yet ANOTHER gr-r-r-r-reat Nick Zentner lecture! He makes a complicated subject--like Pacific Northwest geology--much easier to understand. If people here haven't checked it out yet, his "Nick at Home" series, I can highly recommend it.
Guy looks like he should be on a farm throwing hay bales around! What a lecture! And he opens up his lectures to anyone, you sir, are a legend!
There is a part of his life that is just what he did. Some of his videos tell about that.
As a newly retired resident to the PNW, I found this lecture absolutely fascinating and it helps me gain a greater understanding of the geomorphology here. I will certainly seek out more lectures my Nick Zentner. Thank you for making them easily available to a wider audience than CWU students.
Welcome Steven. All of my stuff is at nickzentner.com if interested.
I truly enjoyed this! When I take my motorcycle trips through all those areas I feel like I'm stepping back in time. I truly enjoy all the fanciest flows in the French Glen, OR area.
Thank you for this posting
Central Washington University's Nick Zentner is the type of individual that makes learning fun and interesting. Geology has always been one of my most favorite subjects.
Very interesting subject. Great teacher ! I once had a botany professor that was so good I took every class he taught. It's so great to hear a knowledgeable opinion that all the media hype about Yellowstone is total BS.
I am so glad you didn't go there about gw..... I'm a prospector and have learned so much from you.... wish I was 30 years younger.... Thank you for your knowledge....
Fantastic lecture. Brilliantly delivered.
Nice comment. Thanks.
Hi professor Nick, I'm a fairly distant guy in Italy, I'm not a student, not a graduate of any kind either, I'm 61 and I just like this kind of stuff. Let me thank you for the very interesting and entertaining lecture, THIS is the right way to help common people eat hard stuff in a palatable and digestible fashion. And let me also tell you that, thanks to your clear pronuntiation, I was able to understand 99% of what you've said, thus no subtitles were needed and so I had a fully satisfactory comprehension of the whole thing. Thanks a lot, very good job. 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼😉
This is very interesting. I was raised and still live around George, Wa. I work for a water well drilling company based out of Moses Lake and I’ve always thought it was cool so see the geology underground down to 800’ or more. I’ve always felt like it’s a special opportunity to see geology that most people never get to see on a daily basis all across Central Washington. I also manage a crushed stone operation out of Royal City so I look at rock formations and deposits every day. It’s interesting to see this and correlate my own thoughts and ideas about what we see every day on the job. It’s amazing how many different formations are underneath us and often wonder how they got there.
As someone from Wenatchee WA, this is ABSOLUTELY & COMPLETELY within my field of interest! 💓
Good shiz. Great lecture!
Great great and fun interesting presentation. It’s been a while since my tours of eastern Washington. I will do them again. Magnificent views aplenty. Thx man
I am 8 minutes in but I love this show. More to come.i am an amateur geologist and I've seen parts of Columbia River also and it has crossed my mind as to how those rocks were formed. Now I'm learning. Also more about a lot of other stuff.this guy knows his stuff.and funny.
Thanks!
Great teachers that are passionate about their subject are infectious spreading knowledge. If a subject interests you finding a teacher like Nick is a gold mine!