1.2 Billion Years of Rock is Missing; The Mystery of the Great Unconformity

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024

Комментарии • 680

  • @GeologyHub
    @GeologyHub  Год назад +145

    So, do you also think “Cryogenian” is an appropriate name for one of Earth’s coldest geologic periods?

  • @drtrowb
    @drtrowb Год назад +119

    Of all geological mysteries, this topic, The Great Unconformity, is the most interesting ever since I’ve heard of it on this channel in the past.

    • @onemoreguyonline7878
      @onemoreguyonline7878 Год назад +6

      Semi frightening, semi awesome.

    • @campsitez2355
      @campsitez2355 Год назад +1

      it sounds like they don't know the difference between 1 billion years and 100 million years and since there is a clear lack of explanation for that, this may never actually get solved.

    • @bluerendar2194
      @bluerendar2194 6 месяцев назад

      @@campsitez2355 in the ~100 million year period, not only was very little new rock laid down, rock that was deposited over the previous ~1.1 billion years were ground down. I don't see the issue?
      It's like cleaning a house. 1 day of deep cleaning getting rid of many days of built-up dust, leaving only very old dust in long-forgotten spaces behind.

    • @campsitez2355
      @campsitez2355 6 месяцев назад

      @@bluerendar2194 wow that's one creative "absence of evidence is automatically evidence for whatever I want it to be"... tell me, are you a practicing psychopath or are you just naturally like that?

    • @harryrussell154
      @harryrussell154 Месяц назад

      Calling it an unconformity is saying reality does not conform to the theory. Wrong. The theory must conform to reality or it is a false theory.

  • @Iambrendanjames
    @Iambrendanjames Год назад +65

    One of those mysteries that makes being a living being so neat.

    • @treystephens6166
      @treystephens6166 Год назад +3

      I’d rather be a rock 🪨

    • @michaeltaylors2456
      @michaeltaylors2456 Год назад +2

      Grand Canyon was caused by water erosion 😂

    • @Iambrendanjames
      @Iambrendanjames Год назад

      @@michaeltaylors2456 Yes, the Grand Canyon was made by water erosion..
      However we're not talking about the Grand Canyon here, but rather what the erosion of the canyon revealed the story that told us about the billion+ years of missing rock strata.
      I guess if you are in that need of a pick me up, I hope the rest of your month is great.

  • @scillyautomatic
    @scillyautomatic Год назад +63

    "1.2 Billion Years of Rock is Missing"
    Well don't look at me! I didn't do it!

    • @Bdub1952
      @Bdub1952 Год назад +6

      I barely knew the guy...🍊

    • @hello-rq8kf
      @hello-rq8kf Год назад +6

      sorry guys it was under my couch pillow

    • @scillyautomatic
      @scillyautomatic Год назад +1

      @@hello-rq8kf 🤣

    • @nkronert
      @nkronert Год назад +8

      "Mr. Henning, where were you between 1700 and 520 million years ago and is there someone who can vouch for that?" 😂

    • @scillyautomatic
      @scillyautomatic Год назад +2

      @@nkronert I was at home in bed the whole time! My wife can vouch for me.

  • @cleanerben9636
    @cleanerben9636 Год назад +42

    I'm going to guess extreme and prolonged glaciation that ground the rock away in that area.

    • @cleanerben9636
      @cleanerben9636 Год назад +16

      I GOT SOMETHING RIGHT

    • @jjMcCartan9686
      @jjMcCartan9686 Год назад +5

      I think the origins of the great uncomformity can be traced back to the first upwelling of the chocolate mantle plume which burnt & twisted & contorted & basically evaporated that missing time frame until nick moved the plume to nevada where it melted back into the crust & formed mount chocolate. 😅🤣

    • @PSP92262
      @PSP92262 Год назад

      lol

    • @UserRandJ
      @UserRandJ Год назад +2

      Can't have glaciers everywhere there's unconformity. It's not the answer. The unconformity is so vast, and at various elevations. But it that answer means you can sign off on it in your head- that's what all athiests are doing. Not like it's very telling that its huge sedimentary rock directly above it, across the globe.
      Jake

    • @cleanerben9636
      @cleanerben9636 Год назад

      @@UserRandJ didn't have to be everywhere just more common

  • @Me3stR
    @Me3stR Год назад +60

    I didn't realize this was a mystery? I remember in my Geo 1010 class (nearly 20 years ago?!) my professor talking about the Snowball Earth Erasing/Skipping so much Rock history just before Animals were beginning to evolve.

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 Год назад +14

      I don't think its so much of a mystery anymore rather that the exact conditions aren't agreed upon fully within the community. It is important to note that it wasn't just snowball glaciation occurring you also had tectonic forces which contributed to the widespread erosion with the formation and break up of two supercontinents having likely contributed to the situation including seeding the Cryogenian glaciations in the first place the question is how much is attributed to both.

    • @mikepotter4109
      @mikepotter4109 Год назад

      Well the one thing I've realized is we only get bits of real information because they are so busy trying to make things up. So much brainwashing, such little time.

    • @campsitez2355
      @campsitez2355 Год назад +7

      if the earth is "missing so much rock history" the working assumption is that the method of "estimating rock history" is clearly flawed and layered so much in assumptions that the truth may never actually get revealed.

    • @graydanerasmussen4071
      @graydanerasmussen4071 Год назад +9

      @@campsitez2355 Not really. It's a "mystery" because mysteries generate clicks. If the Great Cooling (snowball earth) involved a mile of almost stationary ice, not much sedimentary action would happen. Contrarily, moving ice (in the quantities mentioned here) is INSANELY abrasive! It will scour the underlying rock pretty thoroughly, when the glaciers break back up. There are no "clearly flawed" aspects of our understanding of geology.

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 Год назад +1

      ​@@campsitez2355I mean how do you think they know it's missing to begin with exactly?

  • @TerryBollinger
    @TerryBollinger Год назад +50

    Another Great Unconformity outcrop occurs in southeast Missouri due to the Ozark Dome uplift. If you look just west of Fredericktown, Missouri, in Google Maps, the small rounded hills are exposed fossil islands from the end of the erosion period, when shallow seas reformed. The view driving west from Fredericktown is a bit unique since there aren't too many places in the world where you can view not just a fossil, but an entire fossil landscape from over half a billion years ago.

    • @manomyth11
      @manomyth11 Год назад +1

      Yea', Missouri is very interesting itself', from the ice factories in the hills of Kansas City to the Ozarks where my ex's Grandfather', the last of the Mob had to hide out', and when we went to see him I met Roy Sessions', guitarist for George Jones', crazy world'''''''LoL.

    • @TerryBollinger
      @TerryBollinger Год назад +1

      @@manomyth11 Jesse James's hideout in Elephant Rocks!

    • @lauraschroeder8177
      @lauraschroeder8177 7 месяцев назад

      Not billions of years. The Great Unconformity shows evidence of erosion. On top of this is sandstone with Cambrian fossils of sophisticated creatures. This happened from a global flood. The Great Unconformity is global! The rocks verify RAPID sedimentation happened, and fossils take rapid burial to preserve. Billions of years is false.

    • @stevemiller1517
      @stevemiller1517 Месяц назад +1

      Another one at the base of Frenchman mtn. East of Las vegas.

  • @d0nKsTaH
    @d0nKsTaH Год назад +7

    Truth is....
    I took the 1.2 billion years of rock for my own keeping.
    I sneaked around the Earth taking rocks and dirt wherever I went....
    Sold it to some Aliens for a pretty good price.
    I got several thousand pounds of Reeses Cups, a few cases of Vanilla Coke, and a Special Edition Magazine the Aliens made on their home world of Voltan called: "How We Killed and Ate Earth's Dinosaurs".
    Since then, I got bored with the Magazine and sold it on "Space Ebay" to some Xenomorphs

  • @Misterwhistle
    @Misterwhistle Год назад +19

    It's hard to wrap my head around years in the billions. You explained this very well. Thank you.

    • @campsitez2355
      @campsitez2355 Год назад

      the bigger the lie, the better it works. everyone knows that. Pretty sure that if there were 1 billion years of time on that piece of the earth there is a significant chance the plate tectonics would have generated a volcano there by now and destroyed any of the evidence you wish you had in the first place. "but hey let's not include that as a possibility" because why?

    • @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
      @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Год назад

      Ah its a thousand, thousand, thousands!
      Billion times bigger than 1
      1000 times bigger than a million

    • @mrloop1530
      @mrloop1530 Год назад

      It's hard for everybody

    • @mrloop1530
      @mrloop1530 Год назад

      @@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 The numbers aren't difficult

    • @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
      @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Год назад

      @@mrloop1530 You said they hard for you! For a lot of people they are not!

  • @kadourimdou43
    @kadourimdou43 Год назад +19

    Would you do a video on how plate tectonics might have got started, or how and when the Earth’s Core formed, and what effects it had?

    • @Muskoxing
      @Muskoxing Год назад +7

      There's no accepted answer for when and how plate tectonics started. Lots of geologists strongly disagree with each other!

    • @Techno_Idioto
      @Techno_Idioto Год назад +7

      @@Muskoxing That's why science is cool. People might think because scientists always disagree that science isn't trustworthy, but science is built upon the fact that bitching at your lab partner that the sodium hypochlorate caused the reaction and not the arsenic pentoxide is required for it to work.

    • @ObsidianRadio
      @ObsidianRadio Год назад

      Plate tectonics is most likely wrong. Earth was smaller.

    • @Muskoxing
      @Muskoxing Год назад +1

      @@ObsidianRadio Sure, buddy.

    • @ohasis8331
      @ohasis8331 Год назад

      @@ObsidianRadio Yep, the place was so cold it shrank

  • @mcoffroadinaz4075
    @mcoffroadinaz4075 Год назад +6

    Is there a way you could do more of a deep dive into this topic? Fascinating!

  • @stevecam724
    @stevecam724 Год назад +1

    Living in Western Australia you realize how friggen flat the place is and how much topsoil is missing, it's crazy here.
    There is supposed to have been a mega-tsunami hit the west coast after a massive meteorite impacted off the coast of South Africa, a wall of water 4 to 500 feet high and this is in recent times just before the pyramids were built.

  • @shawncaradine6016
    @shawncaradine6016 Год назад +2

    I find it incredible that I just left the Grand Canyon 5 days ago for a short field camp!

  • @FrancisFjordCupola
    @FrancisFjordCupola Год назад +5

    At the start I was thinking "wasn't Snowball Earth near the end of that period?" Cool to see agreement on a potential cause. Though I'd love to see scientists underpin it better than just hunches.

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 Год назад

      Where do you think research starts when dealing with something that happened on the earth hundreds of millions of years?? Are the researchers supposed to wait indefinitely before out any proposals for how to explain what we clearly see in the geologic record. And in this case the Great Unconformity is very real geologic phenomena indeed!!

  • @AmazingPhilippines1
    @AmazingPhilippines1 Год назад +3

    I am open to all explanations but I believe your conclusion is correct on this one.

  • @redbarchetta8782
    @redbarchetta8782 Год назад +5

    Snowball Earth?

    • @redbarchetta8782
      @redbarchetta8782 Год назад +1

      Yep, what I thought when you first started the video. I agree, Snowball Earth had something to do with it.

  • @kansmill
    @kansmill Год назад +40

    Is it possible a previously unidentified nearly-worldwide geological catastrophe needs to be considered? It seems to me that geology relies on some assumptions around ‘slow and gradual’ that discount catastrophic events.

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher Год назад +7

      That applied about 60 years ago, but not anymore. Modern geology takes into account such things as catastrophes, local, regional and global.

    • @Muskoxing
      @Muskoxing Год назад +4

      Your point about non-uniformitarianism is sort of true, but these things aren't entirely unconsidered by geologists. What kind of catastrophe could remove such massive amounts of rock?

    • @PatMcCarthy420
      @PatMcCarthy420 Год назад +4

      ​@@MountainFisher people still think the Younger Dryas events didn't happen. You're giving the scientific community way too much credit lol

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher Год назад +5

      @@PatMcCarthy420 When did I mention the Younger Dryas? I just said modern geology doesn't think like they did 60 years ago. Still even 60 years ago they left room for major catastrophes, but also were committed to Lyell's Uniformitarianism maybe a bit too much.

    • @loboalamo
      @loboalamo Год назад +1

      I can appreciate how fast and violent geologic time can pass. We have been witnessing mountains falling, the leveling of cities and towns by floods. tornadoes, fires, rock and landslides.👩‍🌾☀️
      And earthquakes and wars.

  • @OehrchenVT
    @OehrchenVT 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this really quick overview on that topic. I was trying to watch another video which was supposed to go 30 minutes and didn't get to the point, just drama talking and music.
    Appreciate when creators keep it short.

  • @25scigirl
    @25scigirl Год назад +8

    Nice video as always! I think this is the first time that I have heard of the term "Cryogenian" and I think it is appropriate word to describe the "ice age." A topic that I would like to suggest for a future video is Nisgah's lava bed in Canada and the volcanoes in that area. Thank you for educating us on Geology!

  • @ValeriePallaoro
    @ValeriePallaoro Год назад +1

    It's a fundamental point you've made that the Great Unconformity is not world wide. I wondered this after watching the PBS episode on it. Thanks for clearing it up. The snowball earth hypothesis as a cause for it seems to be less sure, now. If snowball earth caused the great unconformity, then there would be similar occurrences world wide to be viewed. The other hypothesis is that the erosion caused 'snowball earth'. And 'Cryogenian' is definitely appropriate!

  • @eclipsedeluna6580
    @eclipsedeluna6580 Год назад +12

    Gracias por compartir esa hipótesis, muy interesante, un saludo desde Barranquilla Colombia Sur América.
    Aquí tenemos 3 volcanes q están muy inestables : Volcán del Ruiz, Cerro Bravo, en el centro del país, de tipo explosivo y Puerto Escondido en Córdoba en la costa caribe, este último muy preocupante porque hay movimiento de tierra hacia el mar.

  • @peterway7867
    @peterway7867 Год назад +2

    The Great Unconformity is also clearly visible at Buffalo Bill Reservoir on the Shoshone River in Cody Wyoming. I suggest you take look, it is fascinating.

  • @fab199105
    @fab199105 Год назад +2

    It seems very clear to me. There has been a period where the Vishnu Schist has had the time to become vertical. Before subcomming to layers of new organic debris forming on top of it. It would explain the time gap and the visual difference between the two rock formations.

    • @UserRandJ
      @UserRandJ Год назад

      Yeah, it's detailed very well if you research tectonic flood. It's as simple as that.
      Jake

  • @LadyAnuB
    @LadyAnuB Год назад +5

    The follow up video needed for this is on plate tectonics as I am curious as to why that part of Michigan and California produced geologic products during The Great Unconformity time. Were they in the tropical zone at this time? Were these in sheltered areas? Is there a list of the current areas that made it through this time unscathed?

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 Год назад +2

      Its a bit tricky to say which were at play where but many of the locations where rocks were preserved were those sites where the glaciers dumped their loads onto what were ten continental shelves and or interior basins.
      The Great lakes region which is probably where that rock from Michigan came from was notably a major failed rift zone with the presence of vast rift lakes that represent failed ocean basins that would subsequently in the modern ice age be largely re-excavated to form the modern great lakes. Actually thinking about the timeline for the rifting that pretty much occurred during the timeframe erased by the great nonconformity, thus in all likelihood the reason these areas preserved rocks is that they were low lying areas that didn't get subducted. The Geology of California and the western US in general is extremely complicated and not well resolved as recent work shows that existing models are incompatible with observations. Nick Zentner's recent Baja BC controversy A to Z livestream series provide a lot of food for thought on this with the most comprehensive big picture perspective being Robert Hildebrand's work which seems to be painting a far more complex picture with Laurentia having piled up lots of terrane fragments somewhat like bugs on a windshield where the "bugs" are bits of past collisions which stayed with North America after the bulk craton/continent detached and that is before the Jurassic to Paleogene story of North America colliding with a major mature volcanic arc microcontinental complex or the Cenozoic extensional rifting/unzipping of the continent.
      When working on a term paper back in grad school related to climate science I remember reading a paper describing the geology of the death valley region which included rocks of this age notably in the form of glacial dropstones from the Cryogenian mixed with volcanic products This at the very least suggests that the region was likely costal at the time though unfortunately in light of the bigger geological picture its hard to say where the rocks in question actually originally came from.
      The main commonality though for other sites I read about when writing that term paper was they either seemed to be costal dropzones and or frigid dry valleys which didn't receive enough precipitation to become ice covered so its really just the same old depositional environments of any other time on Earth' s history. Glaciers like other forms of erosion preferentially carve away the highlands and soft rocks.
      Its also important to note that the timeline of the great unconformity includes the assembly and break up of two supercontinents so its very unlikely that all the erosion happened at once in fact there is pretty good evidence that in some places it didn't occur at once . Towering mountain ranges rose and fell during this interval which some work has made a fairly strong case were likely responsible for much of perhaps most of the great Unconformity as Columbia gave rise to Rodinia and Rodinia violently broke apart, likely triggering the Cryogenian glaciations through associated flood basalt eruptions and a new interior seaway opening up pelagic(open ocean) habitats for aerobic life for the first time in Earth's history which had previously been confined to continental shelves bays estuaries and freshwater environments, before rejoining on the other side of the world as Pannotia/Greater Gondwana.
      As for interesting rocks related to the great unconformity timeframe there is a bit of obducted(opposite of subduction i.e. oceanic on top of continental crust) seafloor which got docked to North America when the continent collided with the mature volcanic arc complex known as Avalonia. Obduction happens when a closing ocean basin brings a formerly oceanic oceanic subduction zone towards the passive costal margin of a continent. slab pull brings the continental shelf down with the closing oceanic crust before the buoyancy of the continental crust breaks it off from the slab leaving the continental margin beneath the section of former ocean floor turned volcanic arc saving that section of ocean crust from getting subducted back into the mantle. This provides a valuable window into a Neoproterozoic abyssal plain environment with the Mistaken point Ediacaran biota a series of soft bodied fossils which were entombed and preserved by the volcanic ash from the volcanic arc complex. The sequence preserves part of the ancient Mohorovicic discontinuity as well. The lack of major deposition during the Cryogenian could perhaps be taken as evidence that the then open ocean arc environment was probably beneath the ice but I don't know how robust that is.

    • @W1se0ldg33zer
      @W1se0ldg33zer Год назад +1

      Look up Midcontinent Rift System. It was tropical with raging volcanos. There are areas in Michigan where exposed rock is 3.5 billion years old. So yes - protected from calamities all those years.

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn 3 месяца назад

      ​@@W1se0ldg33zerThat rifting started well after the Great Unconformity.

  • @grokeffer6226
    @grokeffer6226 Год назад +1

    Fascinating stuff!!

  • @bystandard239
    @bystandard239 Год назад +3

    One of my favorite mysteries! So much is still debatable. I love it!

    • @UserRandJ
      @UserRandJ Год назад

      No, it's quite obvious how this extends throught the globe. Not going to be ice rivers/ glaciers that achieved it globally. They are kidding themselves, but people are buying it.
      Jake

  • @frzferdinand72
    @frzferdinand72 Год назад +4

    I figured it might have had something to do with the Cryogenian period. Both of them happened roughly during the same-ish time period.

  • @JustaReadingguy
    @JustaReadingguy Год назад +2

    Always learn something from your videos. And this was very interesting.

  • @RangerMcFriendly
    @RangerMcFriendly Год назад +3

    Seen the Ouray, CO location at Box Canyon Falls State Park. So cool to see that. Was a Park Ranger at Black Canyon of the Gunnison NP so am very familiar with the Precambrian layers.

    • @hardrockminer-50
      @hardrockminer-50 Год назад

      An interesting unconformity exists in the Ouray-Silverton area (Silverton Caldera) thousands of feet of San Juan Breccia are on top of the Telluride Conglomerate.
      In the Motherlode of California, basalts can be seen covering rivers where huge paleo placer deposits of gold have been mined.

  • @punchkitten874
    @punchkitten874 Год назад +3

    Glaciers were my first thought. I've been living in Seattle for the past dozen years, and glaciers from the last ice age maximum carved some really unique features in the landscape, like deep north-south parallel gouges like some giant just raked their fingers through the earth.

  • @kimberlyperrotis8962
    @kimberlyperrotis8962 Год назад

    The rocks exposed in the Tonapah range, outside of Death Valley, show continuous deposition across the Great Unconformity, which is fairly unusual. This unconformity is widespread, but not planet-wide. I got hooked on geology when my introductory geology instructor showed us a map of the ages of the oceanic crust and asked “why is there no oceanic crust older than the Jurassic?” He gave us the evidence and let us come to our own “discoveries” about plate tectonics, the then just-accepted theory of geology that changed everything and explains the many mysteries we hadn’t previously understood. What was meant to be a summer course to meet my physical science requirement, turned into a lifelong passion and career. It was a grueling 3-hour class four evenings a week and I loved every minute of it. I realize not everyone wants to become a geologist, but I suggest everyone take such an introductory geology course, at least, you’ll never see the earth in the same way and will enjoy what you do see a hundred times more, even from a plane, looking at satellite images or even road maps. Geology is a wonderful exciting and satisfying career and it consistently reports the highest job satisfaction compared to every other profession. It has the two things most workers most long for: autonomy and variety.

  • @johndocherty178
    @johndocherty178 Год назад +12

    A video about Scotland's geology would be greatly appreciated, to see it described nicely yourself, believe it's the birthplace of the field and should have a mention ae

    • @viona-6408
      @viona-6408 Год назад +3

      On RUclips BBC Men of Rock 1 of 3 Deep Time presented by geology professor Ian Stewart.

    • @GrouchyHaggis
      @GrouchyHaggis Год назад +2

      @@viona-6408 Seconded, anything Ian Stewart does is great

  • @AhJodie
    @AhJodie Год назад +1

    This is one of the most interesting things I have ever heard, thank you so much!

  • @edwardharley9
    @edwardharley9 Год назад +1

    Great video and narration. very well done. fascinating topic...intriguing that we can still learn so much from not direct methods...I also always appreciate a narration that admits as scientists it is much less worthwhile to say we KNOW this happened, instead of we THINK this MAY have happened. Cheers thanks a lot.

  • @IndigoBikeTouring
    @IndigoBikeTouring Год назад +2

    Theres one in Scotland called Huttons Unconformity on the Isle Of Arran.

    • @davidcranstone9044
      @davidcranstone9044 Год назад

      Although the first unconformity Hutton found was on Arran it wasn't very clear and he only got it half right. The term is generally used for the very clear unconformity at Siccar Point (on the east coast of Scotland about 20 miles ESE of Edinburgh), where gently dipping Devonian red sandstones overlie almost-vertical Silurian mudstone and greywackes forming the north edge of the Southern Uplands.

  • @TheSadDuck
    @TheSadDuck Год назад +1

    Awesome topic. Love your channel.

  • @agentlandy
    @agentlandy Год назад +4

    Surely the rock can’t disappear? It’s ground down but is it still traceable?

    • @sotek2784
      @sotek2784 Год назад +3

      If it gets ground down into sand/silt/dust later it can get washed to sea or otherwise basically completely removed, so no, it wouldn't be traceable.

    • @zGJungle
      @zGJungle Год назад +7

      He explains what happens to the missing rocklayer in the video, dude, it's only 5 mins long.

    • @loboalamo
      @loboalamo Год назад

      Probably alluvium or colluvium or became aggregated in sediment layers.

    • @complimentary_voucher
      @complimentary_voucher Год назад

      @@zGJungle Agentlandy no watch to end, see banana in kitchen, he make banana his own. Banana good.

    • @doglover31418
      @doglover31418 Год назад

      He tells you that sea bed doesn't last more than 200 M years before it slips down a subduction zone.

  • @ricklyle3739
    @ricklyle3739 Год назад +4

    Very interesting. I'm mostly a history nerd but I do enjoy learning about geology and forces that have influenced our planet. Good content. Thanks.

  • @Bumblesski
    @Bumblesski Год назад +1

    Both of my ears enjoyed this video.
    I would like to see a video on the periodic springs in Wyoming.

  • @Sasquatchprospector
    @Sasquatchprospector Год назад +1

    Great video, thanks!

  • @albertperson4013
    @albertperson4013 Год назад

    Immanuel Velikovsy studied ancient writings which revealed that "the Earth turned over" in the past whereby mountains were displaced due to most likely a magnetic pole shift, causing this great unconformity, in my humble opinion.

  • @outlawbillionairez9780
    @outlawbillionairez9780 Год назад +9

    Yeah. 1.2 billion years of rock missing.
    They're at Mar-A-Lago.

  • @Codysdab
    @Codysdab 3 месяца назад

    I'm so happy we live in a lovely warm period of geological time.

  • @geosark1448
    @geosark1448 Год назад +1

    Today I learned that Kermit the Frog grew up to be a video commentator for RUclips nature videos.

    • @UserRandJ
      @UserRandJ Год назад

      He also makes up a bunch of shallow minded guesses. Glaciers had nothing to do with it. Glaciers always leave rubble. Debris. This is CLEAN, AND GLOBAL.
      Jake

  • @bettyswallocks6411
    @bettyswallocks6411 Год назад +1

    The Magratheans had a major public holiday the weekend before this was supposed to be installed, to celebrate the very rare double-eclipse of their moon and both suns, Soulanis and Rahm. Then, when they came back to work, the shifts were re-organised, some paperwork went astray and that entire slab of geology was never installed, just left lying about the building yard.
    All that rock was taking up too much space, so the rock was installed in another client’s custom planet, which had their geologists scratching their heads over the _extra_ 1.2 billion years in their geological record.

  • @Quinna78
    @Quinna78 Год назад +1

    Very intresting. Thx:)

  • @whiteknightcat
    @whiteknightcat Год назад +5

    FIRST! (And not missing any layers)

    • @scillyautomatic
      @scillyautomatic Год назад

      I think I beat you by 4 seconds. But, you can have it for the record books. Cheers.

    • @whiteknightcat
      @whiteknightcat Год назад +1

      @@scillyautomatic

  • @mencken8
    @mencken8 Год назад +1

    This does no trouble me, any more than the absence of dark matter for sale in the stores.
    “-They are mysteries. And I am both terrified and reassured that there are things in the universe beyond our explaining.” - G’Kar, on the phenomena associated with Sigma 957

  • @stevesloan7132
    @stevesloan7132 Год назад

    Awesome discussion, dude! Thanks!

  • @seankrake4776
    @seankrake4776 Год назад

    I have a question about the hypothesis outlined. If ice sheets eroded most geologic features across large portions of the earth, why don’t we see deposits from the American southwest in the ocean? Like if ice sheets were effectively sanding the earth, and depositing the sediment in the ocean, shouldn’t we be able to core a coastline and see minerals from all across the continent? Particularly in places where there aren’t a ton of rivers that connect inland to ocean.
    This is one defense I’ve heard people use to show how the Grand Canyon wasn’t carved by a single, rapid event.

  • @blakespower
    @blakespower Год назад

    thanks you for making this a short video!

  • @markiangooley
    @markiangooley Год назад +1

    Vishnu meets Tonto. That is some weird fan fiction!

  • @cyankirkpatrick5194
    @cyankirkpatrick5194 Год назад +2

    Well I was watching a channel on engineering and he said that people can't control river's because of the build of moving silt and other things in the rivers and it can build up in dam's and cause issues later.

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher Год назад +1

      That's true, Lake Powell is heavily silted up, but it has saved Lake Mead to a large degree, but not wholly so. Eventually, decades, Powell will not be able to hold half as much water as now and will have to have something done.

    • @cyankirkpatrick5194
      @cyankirkpatrick5194 Год назад

      @@MountainFisher I was thinking about the same thing while I was watching that and I'm just a lay person but my dad sparked a lot of things inside my head just watching him was wow, and has kept my mind sharp until I can put everything in my head to real life.

  • @SCanxyz
    @SCanxyz 8 месяцев назад

    True. This great unconformity ( the missing parts) exists in the entire Norther hemisphere. 1.2 billion years of rock strata are missing.

  • @mrquackadoodlemoo
    @mrquackadoodlemoo Год назад

    One of the least known topics in geology and seismology. THA K YOU FOR COVERING THIS.

  • @poowg2657
    @poowg2657 Год назад

    The answer is obvious: billions of years ago the Borg needed material to build ships and simply took it.

  • @LIVEONTHEEDJ
    @LIVEONTHEEDJ Год назад +2

    How do you date individual samples of rocks or minerals such as those you described in this video?

    • @Muskoxing
      @Muskoxing Год назад +2

      Uranium-lead dating can accurately date zircon crystals in crystalline (igneous/metamorphic) rocks to within a few million years. Dating sediments is harder - you can go by the date of the youngest zircon in the sediments, but it's usually more accurate to date volcanic ash or lava layers in the sediments.

    • @TheCreditDisputeCenter
      @TheCreditDisputeCenter Год назад +1

      @@Muskoxing I distrust any form of radiometric dating. Too many assumptions... 1. Decay rate is a constant, 2. The starting number of parent and daughter atoms. It's a known fact that you can have a rock formed in a labratory, or better yet, rocks that we know the exact date they were formed (IE: Mt. Saint Helens) still date millionsto billions of years old

    • @Muskoxing
      @Muskoxing Год назад

      @D R Yeah, but the dates he's looked up come from radiometric dating.

  • @gregjones2217
    @gregjones2217 5 месяцев назад

    The material is not actually missing, as in dissappeared, it has simply been transported to elsewhere by geologic processes. Probably by ice, but partially by atmospheric processes.

  • @rubylouh7849
    @rubylouh7849 Год назад

    Found this in my feed and thought I'd take a look. I noticed something at the 3.07 mark, looking over a rocky outcrop offshore, a white tic tac shape shoots across the sky from left to right. The object doesn't look like a bird or a plane. Just thought I'd point this out. Interesting video.

  • @Pellepopper
    @Pellepopper Год назад

    You should use some sort of suspenseful mysterious background music as it would make the video even more intriguing and adds to the mysterious feel of the video. Great video regardless! 💫

    • @UserRandJ
      @UserRandJ Год назад

      Yeah, like music they use at magic shows, where slight of hand is used- fooling people into believing glaciers could possibly have achieved all unconformities. People will believe anything now days.
      No chance did glaciers achieve it globally. There's a very good explanation. But let's all pretend that is not what we see. (Tectonic flood, look it up).
      Jake

  • @AtarahDerek
    @AtarahDerek Год назад +3

    It's amazing what a whole lotta water can do in an extremely short amount of time. 😏

  • @andreweaston1779
    @andreweaston1779 Год назад +2

    Is it really a mystery if we know what happened to it?

  • @davidgriffiths7696
    @davidgriffiths7696 Год назад

    I guessed immediately the missing rock was carved out during the Cryogenic period. No other widespread explanation.

  • @billwilson-es5yn
    @billwilson-es5yn 3 месяца назад

    Myron Cook has a series of YT videos about Geology that are easy to understand (could be named Geology for Dummies). He has a video about Snowball Earth that discussed the Great Unconformity, how that occurred and what broght about the extreme change in temperatures. All of his videos are well worth viewing several times to get a good grasp of the terms and geologic processes.

  • @kevinslater4126
    @kevinslater4126 Год назад +1

    I've never heard of that theory of the Great Unconformity. I think most textbooks steer clear of it because of the lack of information to teach students.

    • @UserRandJ
      @UserRandJ Год назад +1

      It's a rediculous concept that people are accepting. The unconformity is throughout the globe. Glaciers would not achieve all of it.
      J

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn 3 месяца назад

      That anomaly has been found around the World. The Snowball Earth theory was proposed in 1998. Myron Cook has a YT video about it. He's an experienced oil & gas geologist that has several YT videos that explains geologic formation creation, their erosion and deposition of the sediments.

  • @manomyth11
    @manomyth11 Год назад

    Well''''' I finally had to subscribe', because I keep on ending up watching your videos', mainly because of your Titles, something is always interesting'.

  • @tonyneilson1652
    @tonyneilson1652 Год назад

    By my calculations, one square mile of ice, one kilometer thick would weigh something on the order of 2.7 billion tons. Surely, thousands of square miles of ice would be more capable of massive erosion more so than any flood of epic proportions which, would certainly be of less duration than the slow incessant movement of glacial ice.

  • @gopal_kolathu1960
    @gopal_kolathu1960 Год назад +1

    Wow…. That ice sheet was one Planet-sized sandpaper indeed 😮😅, and I suppose that coincided with the Pangaea phase of tectonic movement as well?

  • @rocketraccoon1976
    @rocketraccoon1976 Год назад +1

    I think aliens mined the missing rock layers to build a civilization on Mars.

  • @dennishillman3502
    @dennishillman3502 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @leoverran311
    @leoverran311 Год назад

    I’m no geologist but how did I solve this puzzle in 1.62 seconds? Must be having a slow day

  • @buzz385
    @buzz385 Год назад

    Check out the little cave drawing on the copper nugget @2:17

  • @MaterLacrymarum
    @MaterLacrymarum Год назад

    I don't know the specific reason, but I'm sure it's something to do with the following: The great flood; advanced civilizations with technology we can only dream of; aliens; A nuclear war 1.2 billion years ago; God got bored and skipped some steps when creating the world 4000 years ago.

  • @malcolmyoung7866
    @malcolmyoung7866 Год назад

    Great video any thanks

  • @dragonshivers2836
    @dragonshivers2836 Год назад

    It's like Earth wiped it's browser history with ice. Neat :D

    • @UserRandJ
      @UserRandJ Год назад

      No, it's like earth copped a tectonic global flood, just as we have been told in Genesis. Nothing else can explain this unconformity, throught the globe. And the amount of creatures found in the Rock. Animals don't fosilise ordinarily.
      Jake

  • @rorygay3529
    @rorygay3529 Год назад +2

    Could it be that dating techiqes are off?

    • @Yezpahr
      @Yezpahr Год назад +2

      Error bars are taken into consideration, but yea all the dating techniques have huuuge error bars, meaning on a 1 billion year scale they could be off by 250m years or more even. Other than that, the techniques are pretty solid. Solid as in, people tried to debunk it and failed. That's not to say it's infallible.
      This still yields a high guarantee that something like 800-1200 million years of soil deposition didn't happen, or this many years of soil was crushed to dust by glaciers before new soil could be deposited.

    • @scillyautomatic
      @scillyautomatic Год назад +2

      Everyone knows that the dating scene in the 21st Century is pretty dicey now.

    • @sotek2784
      @sotek2784 Год назад

      That wouldn't explain how the unconformity is of different sizes in different regions - if you take the two layers of rock from the biggest of this unconformity, then look at them in other parts of it you see more layers of rock in between. Even if we were off with the dating (we're not, at least not in a relevant way - there's error bars but the ordering and separation is solid) that wouldn't explain the intermediate rock layers in *some* places but not all.
      But an erosive hypothesis does explain that - in some regions they got scraped off, and in other regions they didn't (possibly due to different levels of glacial activity, or varying uplift heights, or any number of other candidate explanations).
      Now, a non-erosive hypothesis can also explain it, but that hypothesis is a failure-to-deposit one, where the regions with larger time gaps just didn't form rock for a while.
      I'm not qualified to judge between the erosive and non-depositive hypotheses (note: there are definitely unconformities that are caused by each one, it's just this specific one that is in question) but the maker of the video likes the erosive one better and I have no reason to gainsay him on that.

    • @Muskoxing
      @Muskoxing Год назад +2

      ​@@Yezpahr Your first point about uncertainties in U-Pb dating just isn't true. Many billions-year-old rocks have been confidently dated to within a few million years.

  • @Rubensgardens.Skogsmuseum
    @Rubensgardens.Skogsmuseum Год назад

    In Sweden we have at least two peneplanes. One on which the sedimentary rocks are deposited. If the boundry is flat the cause is likely water erosion since water will erode until most of the rock is about 1m or 3feeet below the water. This will create a flat plane. I am not sure, though, when the planet was almost entirely covered in water. It was prior to continental drift. Maybe big icesheets could have also made a flat plane, but I doubt it. The bedrock peneplane is visible in my hometown Vänersborg and Trollhättan. The second peneplande I think of is up in the Scandian mountainrange. The Caledonian mountainrange that is also represented by eastern Greenland, the Appalacians and northern Scotland: The Scandinavian portion was eroded to near sea level until it got lifted up again. The topography later got sculpted mainly by glaciers, resulting in the very scenic landscape we see today, especially in Norway. In Dovrefjell, Norway the old peneplane is visible as flat mountaintops.

  • @ObsidianRadio
    @ObsidianRadio Год назад +1

    The reason this unconformity even exists is because the way geological material is dated might actually be wrong. The Earth might be younger or older than we thought and the way these things form may be so incredibly alien in process compared to what we've been told.
    The Grand Canyons well as other canyons all over the globe were carved by fire and lightning. The water filled in after. 😉
    Just something to think about. 🙂

    • @Muskoxing
      @Muskoxing Год назад

      What are you talking about?

    • @ObsidianRadio
      @ObsidianRadio Год назад

      @@Muskoxing Not sure if I should answer. You're coming across like one of those trolls that end sup wasting time in comments ready to get into arguments with random people.

    • @mavisemberson8737
      @mavisemberson8737 Год назад

      @@ObsidianRadio Troll

    • @ohasis8331
      @ohasis8331 Год назад +1

      You're sounding more and more like a YEC.

  • @treborg777
    @treborg777 Год назад +1

    You also have to consider the configuration of land masses during the unconformity. Which supercontinent existed then, and where was it located with respect to the equator?

    • @Muskoxing
      @Muskoxing Год назад +2

      The supercontinents during this era were Columbia (1.8-1.5 Ga) and Rodinia (1.1-0.75 Ma). Though those might be more accurately thought of as one single long-lived supercontinent. Plate tectonics didn't quite work the same then as it does now.

    • @NovaGirl8
      @NovaGirl8 Год назад

      Plus the amount of oxygen vs CO2

  • @MentallyRetardedHamilton
    @MentallyRetardedHamilton Год назад

    The geologic event stoked the earth's internal engine with freshly ground material.

  • @sirussid3671
    @sirussid3671 Год назад

    One possibility is the Snowball Earth, when widespread ice sheets covered the land during the Cryogenian period. The other is the action of plate tectonics during the breakup of the supercontinent Rodinia. Could you explain these two events and how you distinguished between them?

  • @bobthebuilder9553
    @bobthebuilder9553 Год назад

    Geology, cosmology, and paleontology, are not what we've been taught.

  • @bjbeardse
    @bjbeardse Год назад

    Most logical answer to the unconformity I have ever heard.

    • @UserRandJ
      @UserRandJ Год назад

      It's an absurd explanation.
      J

    • @bjbeardse
      @bjbeardse Год назад

      @@UserRandJ Oh good the flat earthers are here.... LOL

    • @UserRandJ
      @UserRandJ Год назад

      @Brian Beard Is that all you've got? Side stepping the discussion of evidence for what? Mockery? I'm not a flat earther. So what caused the unconformities? You have no idea do you.
      Jake

  • @phil20_20
    @phil20_20 Год назад +1

    👽 Nice Place
    Earthshake! 😮

  • @ZanyYooper
    @ZanyYooper Год назад

    I grew up in the Upper Peninsula (da UP), and my Dad worked at thise mines. Very incredible!

  • @MostlyIC
    @MostlyIC 11 месяцев назад

    first, am I correct in inferring that most rocks created after the cryogenic are composed of the great unconformitiy's missing material that has been recycled by subduction followed by intrusion and/or volcanism ? and second, are there any places where the eroded material still exists as sediment ?

  • @thewpwizard
    @thewpwizard Год назад

    The layer(s) is/are not missing, simply covered over by an enormous volcanic event.

  • @seanhuds7351
    @seanhuds7351 Год назад

    We all know that feeling. I am sad that I cant find my singing tie pin.

  • @chetanpuntambekar1808
    @chetanpuntambekar1808 Год назад

    Do a video on the step by step formation of the Himalayas

  • @georgew.5639
    @georgew.5639 Год назад +5

    Perhaps the 1.2 billion years just simply never existed. Perhaps this time is incorrectly assumed to have existed.

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards Год назад +1

      There is still the unconformity.

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 Год назад

      If we have rock dated back to the billions of years BEFORE the time of the unconformity that it is simple logic to assume the Great Unconformity is real. This video provides the best explanation I have heard to date.

    • @ohasis8331
      @ohasis8331 Год назад

      Maybe Noah's flood explains it eh?

  • @Dragonflypsk
    @Dragonflypsk Год назад +4

    It's possible that all that material was removed in a cataclysmic event, like the global flood. The flood that also explains many other significant geological features around the world.

  • @grassnothing1631
    @grassnothing1631 Год назад +1

    I want to do to the grand canyon but sadly can't go there

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn 3 месяца назад

      Try Google Earth and Google Street views. Then see if anyone has posted videos of the morning sun rising up from the east to gradually reveal the canyon.

  • @TheSpaceEnthusiast-vl6wx
    @TheSpaceEnthusiast-vl6wx Год назад +3

    The great unconformity is truly a captivating geological mystery.
    I am not a geologist, but to explain the sediments deposited during the Snowball or Slushball Earth events, I believe that the Snowball Earth events had interglacial periods too, like the Cenozoic Ice age right now.

    • @ItsReallyJackBlack
      @ItsReallyJackBlack Год назад

      ...or an ancient alien civilization strip mined earth on a large scale at some point. There is some evidence that earth was slightly more massive at one point.

  • @Hellgazer
    @Hellgazer Год назад +1

    Of course, the Earth's formation and geologic models are totally wrong.

  • @Surannhealz
    @Surannhealz Год назад

    The simulation only renders what is needed. That time period wasn’t needed.

  • @darcyfaegre8447
    @darcyfaegre8447 Год назад

    I would love to see something on the Scotia plate and the South Sandwich plate. Particularly the similarities to the Caribbean plate

  • @liamredmill9134
    @liamredmill9134 Год назад

    That's a great and logical hypothesis

  • @peterdebaets4590
    @peterdebaets4590 2 месяца назад

    Except that there is no subduction and at that time there were no ocean basins. So where did all of the scoured layers of sediment go?

  • @User-kjxklyntrw
    @User-kjxklyntrw Год назад

    The continent flipping 180° and after 1.7 B years it once again flipping 180°

  • @johnchemist8628
    @johnchemist8628 Год назад

    What a great hypothesis!