St George Utah: A Geological Wonderland

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  • Опубликовано: 12 июл 2024
  • Presented by Rick Miller,
    Dixie State University
    The western United States contains a majority of our National Parks and Monuments, and the city of St. George is comfortably located within a short driving distance to many of these spectacular parks. However, the city itself is nestled within a diverse variety of geologic rocks and features that spans about 270 million years of geologic time. This provides us with truly spectacular geology and features that though NOT national parks often rival them for their scenery and stories. This geology results from the westward movement of the North American Plate that began about 180 million years ago. Within the framework of Plate (Global) Tectonics, the focus of my presentation will be to describe the geologic story of the St. George area and its relationship to areas even further away, though often better known, which include the Grand Canyon, Zion Canyon and Bryce Canyon.

Комментарии • 69

  • @stevewhalen6973
    @stevewhalen6973 Месяц назад

    Brilliant man , fascinating presentation . There is so much happening , with so much unfathomable time involved. Our lives are only a quick little snapshot.

  • @kendrayork3052
    @kendrayork3052 2 года назад +9

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge about this area. I thoroughly enjoyed the way you put this information together. Your sense of humor is awesome. I don't think I can ever look at "All" detergent in the same way as I used to. Your Texan pronunciations are hilarious. What a great teacher 👏.

  • @kwgm8578
    @kwgm8578 10 месяцев назад +1

    I appreciate this, folks. An interesting presentation by an engaging speaker. The fact that you included the date at the bottom of the page is also appreciated. I wish more RUclipsrs would do this. Again, thanks!

  • @susannerenner6464
    @susannerenner6464 Год назад +1

    Incredible lecture! I have now heard it twice, but the geology is so complex and I am so slow, I will need a third listen.

  • @jamesdobrovnik
    @jamesdobrovnik 2 года назад +4

    Incredible presentation as always

  • @jenniferreinbrecht7125
    @jenniferreinbrecht7125 4 месяца назад

    Wow. As a tourist/visitor lay person who loves geology and understanding the surrounds - this was amazing.

  • @HandymanKurt
    @HandymanKurt 2 года назад +2

    Thank You Dr. Miller. Hope you find volunteer help in your rescue efforts.🤞 Because we also need you in the field.

  • @Nobody-Nowhere-USA
    @Nobody-Nowhere-USA 10 месяцев назад +3

    If you go to St George please make time to visit the Mountain Meadows Massacre site! It is very informative and very well maintained with walking pathways that have many accurate and informative history plaques! It’s a trip you will never forget, well worth the couple hours or so it will take to visit this monument and see everything on display!

  • @robertschrum5496
    @robertschrum5496 Год назад +4

    If you have identified three (3) Supercontinents, is it possible that there could have been more Supercontinents & therefore older rocks that are yet to be discovered? Where on the planet might be the best place to search for a Supercontinent?
    Bringing joy to education is awe inspiring.
    Salute.

  • @eidrith493
    @eidrith493 2 года назад +3

    Send the link so we can all look closely at the slides. The information is presented in a very logical form but there is just so much of it.

  • @GoldenSkullProspecting
    @GoldenSkullProspecting Год назад

    Awesome B-Day present for sure and good luck with it🤞🤙 and sweet jar too ! Happy Birthday 🎉

  • @donnacsuti4980
    @donnacsuti4980 2 года назад +2

    Love the all / oil joke LOL 😆😂

  • @ttonysbirds
    @ttonysbirds Год назад +1

    WOW very nice

  • @Reziac
    @Reziac 9 месяцев назад

    Have only driven through St. George a few times, but that ginormous scarp outside of town is just amazing to look at. Neat to see what's really in it.
    (They did finally get rid of the neighborhood where that possessed car movie was shot...)

  • @thesjkexperience
    @thesjkexperience Год назад

    Thanks! Earth stories are the best.

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 4 месяца назад

    Great talk. It's why the western US is so interesting. We should also thank the dry climate, which makes the landforms visible.

  • @dancooper8551
    @dancooper8551 2 года назад +2

    Excellent presentation and material,

  • @donnacsuti4980
    @donnacsuti4980 2 года назад

    Very interesting thank you

  • @Spanworkhorse
    @Spanworkhorse 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks!

  • @mrpieceofwork
    @mrpieceofwork Год назад

    Geological processes going on for ~4B years is an "interesting
    situation"... that little quote made me chuckle. IDK why, but
    it did... AND yes, indeed it is an interesting situation.
    TYSVM!

  • @fenzhang007
    @fenzhang007 6 месяцев назад

    North America plate overrun former Farallon plate spreading ridge. The ridge sweeping eastward underneath the basin and range area, functions as a "hot slit", might partially responsible for the heating and uplifting and faulting underneath the basin and range

  • @douglascheerio1257
    @douglascheerio1257 2 года назад +1

    A wealth of information but the wandering pointer made it confusing.

  • @secularsunshine9036
    @secularsunshine9036 Год назад

    *Let the Sunshine In*
    In the land of the Sunlight clear,
    "Wyoming."

  • @patrickoneill1341
    @patrickoneill1341 Год назад +12

    The reason Dixie State University was called “Dixie” is because the St George region is/was once known as “Utah’s Dixie”. Why was this region bestowed with this name? Because the first LDS settlers were sent to St George to grow cotton. It was thought with the warm climate of southern Utah and the water provided by the Virgin and Santa Clara rivers, this portion of Utah could provide a good environment for growing cotton. I lived in St George from 2013 until 2018 and this was common knowledge. The Mormon settlers were from the northern United States and never endorsed slavery. Utah’s Dixie has nothing to do with slavery. The people that sought to change the name of Dixie State were either ignorant or dishonest about this fact. In addition, they were completely inconsiderate of the local community’s history and culture. I moved to San Diego to St George, having been a Californian most of my life. A little respect for local history and culture can go a long way. The Mormon pioneers built a civilization out of the desert. Acknowledging this and respecting this is the least that newcomers can do.

    • @marszenka
      @marszenka Год назад +5

      Doesn’t matter. I’m LDS and graduated from Dixie the last year it was Dixie, and I still think the name needed to change. I don’t like the one they picked for it, but considering their mascot used to be the Rebels in a Confederate uniform… yeah. People will swear up and down that it isn’t racist, but not caring that the history of a massive swath of the country outweighs the meaning of “dixie” in a podunk town in the middle of nowhere is a jerk move. Keep calling the region Dixie, whatever, but a school trying to grow and welcome students from across the country and internationally needs to shed a name that’s so strongly associated with hate.
      You see confederate flags flying in the area, on bumper stickers, and on keychains too so I’m calling BS about “it’s not racist.” The fact that there is a city in the middle of the desert and lovely old worship buildings and orchards is enough monument for me to the pioneers. The name is the least important thing.

    • @patrickoneill1341
      @patrickoneill1341 Год назад +5

      @@marszenka you’ll find whatever it is you’re looking for anywhere if you try hard enough. Your statement speaks more to your mindset than it does about the general population and culture of southwestern Utah.

    • @Nobody-Nowhere-USA
      @Nobody-Nowhere-USA 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@marszenkaoh please make up some more fake history to be offended by, you are obviously so good at it! 😂

    • @LamaniteLiving
      @LamaniteLiving 10 месяцев назад

      Don’t forget the fact that Brigham Young and Mormons are disgusting racists… Dixie is still painted on the hillside… and everyone is white and delightsome that lives there.

    • @King_Verb
      @King_Verb 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@Nobody-Nowhere-USAWhat exactly did he make up?

  • @georgeflitzer7160
    @georgeflitzer7160 Год назад

    I wonder how they determined the age of rocks? I’ve always been told that rock ages cannot be determined. Ty

    • @georgeflitzer7160
      @georgeflitzer7160 Год назад

      I need further education

    • @alexburke1899
      @alexburke1899 11 месяцев назад +2

      They use radiometric dating which looks at two different nuclear isotopes a type of atom, in the rock and how long they’ve decayed for.
      They decay in a predictable way so they can calculate when the rock formed. Uranium and other radioactive elements have been decaying and losing isotopes since they were first formed in a supernova or neutron star explosion in space. As an example they know that when Uranium loses enough isotopes it becomes Lead instead of Uranium.

  • @katieflowers4163
    @katieflowers4163 Год назад +1

    See mudflood, great reset, tartaria, mudfossils, more.

  • @rickmessina5396
    @rickmessina5396 2 года назад

    From your description of the area it appears to have many geologic similarities as where you could look for gold. Or am I way off.????

    • @matthewxalinoficial3049
      @matthewxalinoficial3049 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/vJm5IZvkn98/видео.html

    • @alexburke1899
      @alexburke1899 11 месяцев назад +1

      Idaho and Nevada are much better locations for gold prospecting. The biggest placer gold deposit in Utah is the huge Bingham copper mine so it’s probably better to focus on Idaho or Nevada, or even Montana if you are into gold prospecting.

  • @tifacola
    @tifacola 3 месяца назад

    I just want to know what my house was built on.

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek 2 месяца назад

    If you would look out the window, at those sharp peaks that made Jackson Hole famous, if you would say those mountains are "millions of years old" (much less "billions"), I'd say you don't know much about Planet Earth. Starting with its famous "reducing atmosphere". Plate tectonics do NOT explain the mega-ranges, the Andes, Himalayas, Rockies/Sierra Madres, Sierra Nevadas, et al. Those ranges were pushed up by other means, and in doing so, the Grand Canyon came to be. The "Great Unconformity" was probably a mystery to Charlie Brown but a few looks around, and one notices great upheaval, twisted rocks, and more than enough signs of something driving a very large chunk of old crust (ONAC), into the fractured craton holding the Colorado Plateau, pinned against the "accretionary plate" running from Siberia to Guatemala. An inland sea lay on top of much of the region, and a waterway traveled from the Arctic Ocean, to the mid-Atlantic region, where the Gulf of Mexico now sits (it had been on the other side of the ocean, off Africa).
    Something MORE than mere plate tectonics was at work, and not that long ago, because NONE of the great ranges of Earth SHOW "millions of years" of weathering, much less "billions"! There is a very different story that explains all of this, without the caveats, oopsi-doodles, and the "Great Unconformity" to poke a plot hole big enough for a semi truck to drive through! The ROCKS are old, made back when Earth was in the rock production phase. Their current location, appearance, and conditions, are far more modern than these OLD theories allow for. I bet there isn't a geologist alive who would recognize Earth of only ONE million years ago, instead of the plural version they insist on.

  • @devarskinnee8760
    @devarskinnee8760 2 года назад +1

    It's a rocky university, that there outer space area.i got rocks in my head he,he.

  • @1ntwndrboy198
    @1ntwndrboy198 Год назад

    There is nuclear fission underground then it was like inverted sunspots that created Hawaiia and Yellowstone.?

    • @alexburke1899
      @alexburke1899 11 месяцев назад

      I don’t think so it’s just where mantle melts the crust and is thinner that allows a hotspot to form. It’s also because the ocean crust gets recycled by thrust faults and when a plate is pushed under a different continental plate it creates a cold spot. So the magma usually comes out in a different thinner area that doesn’t have a cold spot under the continent.
      The hot spots actually stay in the same spots and the continent or ocean is moving across the same spot. Like the Yellowstone hotspot moved from Oregon, to Nevada, to Idaho, before it erupted in Wyoming. So the North American plate is moving west over the hotspot making the hotspot seem like it’s moving east.

  • @BretBerger
    @BretBerger Год назад

    Teton Range

  • @alxmeadows
    @alxmeadows 2 года назад +1

    Why wouldn’t he point at what he’s talking about, on the map, with the mouse??

  • @brianjacob8728
    @brianjacob8728 8 месяцев назад

    the yellow stone hotspot is due to a cosmic impact.

  • @bunnieoneloves8248
    @bunnieoneloves8248 Год назад +1

    This is not very thought outcast even see your mouse arrow can't see what your talking about. And it being a theory just makes it less interesting..I apologize but I was really interested at first and then you lost me.
    😢

  • @Hollywoodhouse74
    @Hollywoodhouse74 2 года назад

    Ur math says earth is 800,000,000 plus years old....

  • @melvincastillo2496
    @melvincastillo2496 Год назад

    Nonsense