Glacial Lake Missoula

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  • Опубликовано: 4 апр 2023
  • From 2015: Nick Zentner & Tom Foster collaboration featuring stunning Foster photos and Zentner script. Video stand-ups filmed during a May weekend. More questions than answers in this video!

Комментарии • 374

  • @hollydatsopoulos7998
    @hollydatsopoulos7998 Месяц назад +5

    As a life long Missoulian, I’ve always wondered about the Lake Missoula story. It’s fascinating to think I live on the bottom of what once was a giant lake. The first time I heard about the lake, I was in the 4th grade. We were learning about ancient Egypt, and the Sphinx. Our teacher told us that no one knew why the Sphinx had those lines cut into it, and that it was a great mystery. One of my classmates, without hesitation said, “They’re watermarks, just like on Mount Sentinel!” (Mount Sentinel is where the “Big M” is.) That particular teacher was a bit of a jerk, and she didn’t believe his theory about the Sphinx, but she did confirm that Missoula was once a giant lake. The rest of us realized he was right. Years later, I saw a documentary about the Sphinx, and it confirmed our suspicions that it had been underwater. I wish I could have told my old teacher, “Told you so!” 😂

  • @johnprentice1527
    @johnprentice1527 2 месяца назад +2

    All I can say is "WOW"! This is the second video I have seen about the flooding caused by the draining of Lake Missoula. The first video was excellent, but this takes it to a whole new level. Nick Zentner is the kind of teacher of science that we all should be so lucky to have.

  • @sv.foamball
    @sv.foamball Год назад +80

    Nick Zentner - the only geologist who responds to "Field Trip!" with "Great! Let me get my blackboard!"
    Great to see these videos being repurposed in a very digestible and entertaining structure. Thank you - and more please!

  • @Anne5440_
    @Anne5440_ Год назад +78

    Over the decades, I have driven I90 through Montana many times. I recognized so many spots along the road that I had never known the origin of them. In the 80s, we went to the national bison refuge. We were so surprised to come across the plaque for the highest shoreline of Lake Missoula. Dry Falls in Washington is one of my favorite places. It was only after seeing the highest shoreline that I began to comprehend the size of the floods. Standing there near the top of the mountain and looking across and the length of the valley, then imagining it filled with water is what opened my eyes. One day a year or two later, we paddled our canoe to the base of Dry Falls. Sitting there and looking up to the edge of the falls and thinking of the water from Lake Missoula was one of my most spooky and a little frightening experiences in my life. I've seen parts or perhaps all of this video before. After the last year and a half of learning from you and the places you have shown, you have gotten me thinking a lot about the floods. My few trips around the state in the last year have made me realize what a truly immense event the floods were. I may be nearly bedridden with all my treatments but I have been to Spokane and also to Ft Spokane area to visit my daughters, have given a few outings in which I can see with my new perspective. I have gotten a small selection of geology books. Last week, I started reading in the Idaho one chapters about Shawn Willsey videos I watched. That gave me a deeper understanding of his video. Today, as we drove home from hubby's medical tests in Spokane, I decided to get out the roadside book on Washington and start reading about the floods. (Yes, he now has cancer, too). So, getting home to this video is very timely for me. I may be sick and fighting, but I'm still learning and finding joy. I'm also waiting for the videos on Baja to BC talks. I am sure they went well. Thank you again for all you have done that helps me so much.

    • @JBates760
      @JBates760 Год назад +2

      Sorry to hear about the cancer :( sending thoughts your way.

    • @bjdefilippo447
      @bjdefilippo447 Год назад +3

      I'm sorry to hear that both of you are facing that challenge. I know that Nick's videos definitely help me on the many days when walking isn't possible, and it's great to be able to learn about places I've been, even if I can't drive through any more. You're absolutely right that finding joy is critical, and I find learning new things does that for me. I hope that you have a good nutritionist and therapists, as I found with my mum especially that it helped manage the treatments to have the strongest, healthiest body and mind possible. Sending best wishes for you both.

    • @jamesadams893
      @jamesadams893 Год назад

      At that speed you must have gotten a helluva expensive speeding ticket in your Ferrari

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@JBates760 His stupid fault for drinking the water with fluoride, and eating garbage GMO foods, no pity here, just another sheeple fool, he just needs to get 5 more boosters, nothing to see here.

    • @saminaneen
      @saminaneen Год назад +1

      @@JBates760 Just another stupid, Libtard, 'Democrap", in a terrible, "Blue State", why would you expect anything else?

  • @Xantec
    @Xantec Год назад +46

    as a non-graduate with zero college or university education, but instead just basic first to 11th grade education, I find Nick's methods result in an easy to understand and very engaging and informative experience. (Loved his CWU lectures on youtube)

  • @TheErik249
    @TheErik249 Год назад +77

    Thank you, Nick.
    You're the best geology teacher.
    I've learned more from you than any other teacher I've ever had.

    • @yupok318
      @yupok318 Год назад

      too bad its mostly misinformation. There was one massive flood ... see Genesis for details and hydroplate theory for the particulars

  • @kennyw871
    @kennyw871 Год назад +1

    If for no other reason, I would love to come back to life 100-200 years from now just to see "what's new" and what's old in science. But mostly to learn what scientists like Nick Zenter are out there in the field seeking answers to questions without end. It's the true essence of science.

  • @oceantree5000
    @oceantree5000 Год назад +4

    Phenomenal video about one of my favorite geologic phenomena: jökelhlaupir!

  • @ellenstanton2043
    @ellenstanton2043 Год назад +3

    It is wonderful to see this in my RUclips feed. Prof. Zentner’s informative videos got me through the Covid lockdown.

  • @hestheMaster
    @hestheMaster Год назад +3

    Without the late Tom Foster and his skills at photography the site HUGEfloods would not be possible. It must have been
    some great days spending so much time with him Nick. Two Minute Geology was like the video version of Tom's site
    and glad you were a major part of introducing the Ice age flood story.

  • @sriramadeepa
    @sriramadeepa Год назад +3

    Thank you Nick! Every time we watch your lectures we learn something new. Thank you for making this simple for us to understand!

  • @markwalton3706
    @markwalton3706 Год назад +6

    Nice video Nick.
    Interesting sedimentary stuff with the Varves v Rhythmites on that road cutting.
    You even got 'Ye Olde chalkboard' in a couple of times - you ole fossil you!!!
    Thanks again.

  • @myroncook
    @myroncook Год назад +18

    Love this, Nick. The chalkboard out in the field was a nice touch!

    • @GeologyNick
      @GeologyNick  Год назад +10

      Thank you, Myron. I love your videos.

    • @hestheMaster
      @hestheMaster Год назад +5

      Myron, Nick and Shawn Willsey are the BEST geology teachers on RUclips !!!

    • @bjdefilippo447
      @bjdefilippo447 Год назад +2

      @@hestheMaster I don't know of Shawn, but Nick and Myron are just great!

    • @PlayNowWorkLater
      @PlayNowWorkLater 8 дней назад

      @@hestheMasterAgree!

  • @101rotarypower
    @101rotarypower Год назад +42

    Love rewatching these via Nicks channel, Nice to see it all slowly get consolidated, really like that it is added over time rather than all added at once!
    Thanks Tom, pieces like this make us miss you all the more, Hopefully Nick will continue/finish the I90 series in some form as a tribute.

  • @iHATEbigots666
    @iHATEbigots666 Год назад +3

    I love these videos!!!!! One of the best teachers. I've been telling people about this unheardof INSANE flood and this is the perfect video to explain it to people.

  • @regular-joe
    @regular-joe Год назад +1

    My favorite topic, by my favorite presenter. Celebrate good times 😁.

  • @wyattstone8222
    @wyattstone8222 8 месяцев назад +2

    I graduated from CWU with a degree in geology in 2013. I can say that Nick is one of those professors whose passion and enthusiasm for their field of expertise permeates every aspect of their classroom and inspires their students to do their very best! 10/10 A+ teacher would take any of his classes over again in a heartbeat!

  • @eugenegilbert7024
    @eugenegilbert7024 6 месяцев назад +1

    I'm a 2004 graduate of CWU. Studied flight. But had a lot of interest in geology. I live near Davenport Washington near lake Roosevelt and recently discovered lake missoula via a DVD I bought from NOVA called Killer Floods. Being a pilot, I love looking down at the earth and seeing its shape and carving and wondering how it was formed. So much makes sense when you fly above it and put some thought into what may have happened. Thank you for your channel. I only discovered it this week. I think I was a student of yours 19 years ago.

  • @analytics8055
    @analytics8055 Год назад +1

    thx Nick, great story. It makes sense as the ice last ice age receded 20,000 years ago, the ice dams got smaller and their collapse more frequent. Here in CA our biggest lake back then is now, Death Valley!

  • @leslie3832
    @leslie3832 Год назад +2

    Thank you, Nick, for showing this. It was how my husband and I got interested in the flood and then all your geology courses. Last year we traveled this area and we’re particularly amazed at the size of the Mission Ridge valley and the Flathead Lake area. We realized the Flathead ice lobe plus mountain glaciers’ water flowed into this upper section of “Lake Missoula” making it the largest of the arms of Glacier Lake Missoula. It is an unsung reservoir. All of the arms of the Lake are beautiful, Bitterroot included. Thank you for showing us how the flood happened.

  • @davidcoleman757
    @davidcoleman757 Год назад +5

    Great to see there's still place in education for the trusty chalk-board. This was fascinating. I'm not a geologist, but the ice-age inundations in North America are awe-inspiring. It's impossible not to be drawn in by the tell-tale signs left by these events. What a super video. Many thanks.

  • @patrickmazza7055
    @patrickmazza7055 Год назад +4

    Nick is back! Never can get enough about the great floods. I’ve explored many of these settings myself with awe at the power and scale of the floods. Love to visit Farragut State Park and sit on jökulhlaup point at the south end of Lake Pend Oreille, pondering the floods that created this massive gravel outcropping. And the lake below me that’s as deep as the Empire State Building is tall. Will look forward to more from Nick.

  • @jenniferlevine5406
    @jenniferlevine5406 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great video - as always! I am fascinated by geologist's ability to read the land, and Nick has an amazing ability to teach! The scenery in this area is so beautiful, it's really distracting, so I had to replay over and over...!

  • @Taskerofpuppets
    @Taskerofpuppets Год назад +2

    Most excellent Nick & Co. Ever since reading the book The Great Floods of Glacial Lake Missoula in 2012, then visiting Glacier NP for the 1st time that same year. I’ve had a never ending fascination & passion trying to explore all the areas here in Oregon, WA, ID, MT. It’s incredible what created the Columbia River Gorge and all the beautiful columnar basalt. I love the dun brown hills and the layers of geological history right before my eyes every time I travel in these areas-fascinating geology. Keep ‘em coming. Cheers & enjoy the view.

  • @Komikino
    @Komikino Год назад +6

    I would really love to a see a TV series or a documentary of Lake Missoula on History Channel or Discovery. With the right group of scientists (you) and a good budget, it could be amazing! I am surprised at how little this is shown on other science channels.
    Make that show happen!

  • @henryzachary7489
    @henryzachary7489 Год назад +1

    For those of us who live in the urban northeast and marvel at the vastness of western states, it is great to know that for those who live in those states, the constant question is, how did this place come into being with the fantastic shapes and incredible and observable effect of wind and water. Over the eons. I am envious.

  • @shanewright4528
    @shanewright4528 Год назад +3

    This is amazing,
    I remember Graham Hancock book outlining the scablands and the amounts of huge boulders deposited in places they should've been.
    There's so much we don't know and should approach this with an open mind and an acceptance that all ideas should be explored.
    Awesome show, thank you😎👍

    • @Michael20089
      @Michael20089 Год назад

      Graham Hancock doesn't explore ideas he spreads misinformation

  • @OnTheHorizonSomewhere
    @OnTheHorizonSomewhere Год назад +6

    Before I discovered your videos the landscape of eastern Washington was just a chaotic desert. Now I have some answers to what happened there and it is fascinating knowledge to have when in these landscapes. I can imagine in my minds eye the changing of the landscape over time with lava, floods, the crinkling of the crust, the intrusion of rocks from deep in the ground and dissolving of these intrusions over time into mountains and valleys. Fun stuff.

  • @MH3GL
    @MH3GL Год назад +2

    I love the photos. Not just the images captured, but the texture and quality of some of them, as it reminds me of the color photos from cameras taken in the 50s/60s/70s that I used to see at my grandparents.

  • @lorrainegatanianhits8331
    @lorrainegatanianhits8331 6 месяцев назад +1

    As an ecologist and farmer I absolutely love your Balsamorrhiza sp. growing in your area. So amazing that they tend to dominate in such a wide diversity of habitats.

  • @philipdahl9001
    @philipdahl9001 Год назад +2

    Great presentation, thank you! I'm a retired railroad engineer out of Missoula and have had a strong interest in Lake Missoula since taking geology classes at the University of Montana in the mid 70s. I regularly traveled the length of the former lake and being able to observe the features left from the flooding was a great way to pass the time.

  • @hjpngmw
    @hjpngmw Год назад +4

    I really enjoy re-watching these videos from the past. I always learn something new that I somehow missed from before!

  • @veldasnyder2144
    @veldasnyder2144 Год назад +1

    I love your history and scince. Been watching for years. As a child I always had wondered about eastern WA having growen up around Sprague and Lamont.

  • @charliebartholomew1564
    @charliebartholomew1564 Год назад +3

    whopee, my two favorite wonderful people with more stories and pics. glad to see you again Nick and Tom

  • @jayolson578
    @jayolson578 Год назад +2

    It is always a great day when Nick posts a new video. Always learning

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 Год назад +3

    Greetings from the BIG SKY. I attended UM in 1970, Forestry.

  • @glitchlife4639
    @glitchlife4639 Год назад +1

    Missoula is my home, and University of Montana my alma matter. I have been to that M a 100 times. Thank you for make this video.

  • @Vickie-Bligh
    @Vickie-Bligh Год назад +76

    My grandniece is going to CWU next year. I'm going to encourage her to take GEO101 from you.

    • @dethmaul
      @dethmaul Год назад +4

      If you can buy a class at a time, I'd take just that class lol. I don't want to do a whole college course, but i love science and geology.

    • @jeffbybee5207
      @jeffbybee5207 Год назад +9

      @@dethmaul his 101 class is on utube

    • @williamjones7163
      @williamjones7163 Год назад +4

      I went to College in Missoula in 1984‐1986. This is the first-time I have heard of this. I should have taken a Geology class during my Business School Education. Damn interesting!

    • @dethmaul
      @dethmaul Год назад +1

      @@jeffbybee5207
      I watched it live and did notes in a lil notebook!

    • @doylebrockman8225
      @doylebrockman8225 Год назад +1

      Beautiful State.

  • @pookiedust2517
    @pookiedust2517 Год назад +3

    Good morning Nick from not so sunny England, i love your videos and really appreciate all your hard work making them, have a fab day.

  • @jimfalls8671
    @jimfalls8671 Год назад +2

    Great presentation! This is “where the rubber meets the road”: explaining these events so they’re understandable to the lay person.
    I had a chance to fly over this area a couple times and the sheer scale is astounding. Familiar bed forms, just enormous in scale. The eroded scars still clear from orbit even after all these millennia. 👍😎

  • @Tyrell.Walker
    @Tyrell.Walker Год назад +11

    After listening to this presentation, I couldn't help but think how great of a children's book this would be! I'd read it to my kids every night lol.

    • @bjdefilippo447
      @bjdefilippo447 Год назад

      That's actually a great idea! I wonder if he'd consider it.

  • @sunrisetacticalgear2676
    @sunrisetacticalgear2676 Год назад +2

    Thank you for the education, from a non college educated person. I live in the Yakima Valley and am always intrigued at our geology, whether it’s driving through the Columbia river gorge and looking at the strata lines in the cliff faces, or flying out of Pasco and seeing the ripples in the surface of the ground. I have often wondered how sand dunes and gravel pits are made.

  • @user-ec4hh1jl4i
    @user-ec4hh1jl4i Год назад +3

    Great video, prof Zentner. This could be a multiday summer field trip. It would be wonderful. Lucky for your students.

  • @jasontempest4233
    @jasontempest4233 Год назад +3

    I love it! It took me 2 hours to watch this because every place visited, I followed up with Google Earth and then other maps. What a journey! Hydrology, Geology, Earth History, it's all very fascinating. Many thanks.

  • @michaelbuley3373
    @michaelbuley3373 Год назад +11

    Ah, this brings back memories. I was a student at UM in the 70s and took a couple of geology courses just for general interest. We had a field trip out to the scab lands where the Professor was explaining what we were looking at. His teaching assistant didn't seem to agree that we were looking at a massive flood result from Glacial Lake Missoula. I remember the professor asking his TA for his explanation of the land forms then and the TA getting pretty flustered.

    • @wiscgaloot
      @wiscgaloot Год назад +2

      The TA was very likely a young-earth creationist.

    • @cavecookie1
      @cavecookie1 Год назад +2

      Sounds like my story...took several geology classes, as electives.

    • @outfitr9703
      @outfitr9703 Год назад

      Me too, 1975 or 6 I think.

    • @Bl913
      @Bl913 Год назад +2

      The loudest people usually get the quietest when asked to explain their outlook. Thanks for sharing!

  • @tb4876
    @tb4876 Год назад +18

    Thanks Nick, you're one of my favorite geologist on you tube. I am a 62 year old life long geology nut living in Southern Louisiana . I always learn something new from your videos. Thanks so much! I hope to one day get to visit your neck of the woods. Such fascinating geology up there. I just wanted you to know how much I enjoy and appreciate your teaching style.

  • @andrewmantle7627
    @andrewmantle7627 Год назад +2

    Thanks again Nick. So interesting.

  • @christinaeldridge2623
    @christinaeldridge2623 4 месяца назад +1

    I was born I Missoula but moved when away I was 6. I remember the Big M and the Big L and I remember riding in the car and looking around and taking note of the fact that there were mountains on all sides of me.

  • @__Willy__
    @__Willy__ Год назад +2

    It could all be from one flood from an extraterrestrial impact into the ice. It is hard to imagine how the ice dam would keep reforming with enough strength to hold that much water and Randall Carlson has presented evidence of that. I appreciate the info on the topic and understand if you as a professor are hesitant to address or discuss theories that are considered outside the realm of accepted theory but I would love to hear a discussion between you and Randall about this subject because this area clearly represents something out of the norm of our easily identifiable uniformitarian processes.
    Thank you for your efforts.

  • @CrazyCuteThing
    @CrazyCuteThing Год назад +20

    Thank you for making your videos. I never knew I loved geology until I found your channel. You make the subject so interesting. Cheers

  • @genebohannon8820
    @genebohannon8820 Год назад +1

    I knew most of this from most of your citizens lectures. Rock on Prof. Nick.

  • @rogerclark2641
    @rogerclark2641 Год назад +2

    Thank you for doing these programs and making your knowledge so accessible. I am 69 yrs old, and learning a lot about the beautiful Pacific Northwest. I, recently, came across your channel purely by chance! Following Exotic Terranes A-Z was an education and I will carry on learning ... Eocene A-Z next! Thank you again!

  • @jacklund9366
    @jacklund9366 Год назад +1

    Thank you. I lived in this area for 16 years traveling all over western Montana and even took geology 101 at University of Montana. We didn't discuss this as in depth as you have.

  • @_Michiel_
    @_Michiel_ Год назад +9

    It is always fun to revisit older videos, Nick! Details which might have been forgotten are refreshed in the mind. Recapitulation burns the subject deeper into the memory, allowing one to have a deeper and richer understanding of the matter at hand.
    Thank you for posting this!
    Love from Dreischor in The Netherlands.

  • @Strykenine
    @Strykenine Год назад +1

    This is such a fascinating subject, thank you for putting this lecture together.
    I don't find the existence of the lake hard to believe, but I do find the scale of this event difficult to imagine.

  • @vinnynorthwest
    @vinnynorthwest Год назад +7

    This is one of Nicks great videos which I've watched several times and I will watch again, but I was hoping to see the recent talks in Ellensburg, are we going to get to see those?

  • @xlr8tedzoom
    @xlr8tedzoom Год назад +2

    You are such a great teacher Nick. Your videos should be shown in schools to spike a child's interest and increase knowledge. I click anything about Lake Missoula. Your videos are the best by far! Thank you for all the great information!!!

  • @nolongeramused8135
    @nolongeramused8135 Год назад +1

    I grew up there, and during the late summer you could easily make out the various high water lines on Mt. Jumbo on the east side of town. For the size of the lake, the trip from Missoula to Drummond takes an hour at highway speeds.

  • @echohunter4199
    @echohunter4199 Год назад +3

    Fascinating! I had no idea! I grew up in Klamath Falls, OR which is at the western edge of the Oregon High Desert and we have similar terrain as you’re describing in Missoula but no noticeable signs of a deep lake or floods. We have Crater Lake and the Tulelake Lava Beds which is amazing to walk around on. I’ll have to look into the Klamath Basin history to see what I’m missing since there must’ve been something that moved through there that caused the flat basins.
    I’m wondering if each flood was caused by smaller lakes around the main lake as they were quickly filled either by seasonal storms or when temperatures rose high enough to melt the glacial buildup so when the two factors combined, it would quickly build up massive pressure that would cause a cascade of events in rapid succession that overwhelmed each body of water as it flowed down the chain. Could the remaining silt, debris and rock left by each previous flood have created pile ups at natural choke points that acted as a dam as the water levels subsided? If this happened it might explain how annual flooding would gradually build up more debris that was deposited on these natural dams/obstructions. And again, when a warm period hit the glaciers, it would again overwhelm the lower dam levels until no deposits of any material remained since the numerous floods had slowly carved out river paths that we see today.
    Kevin, Retired Infantryman.

  • @royalfish8324
    @royalfish8324 Год назад +2

    This story NEVER gets old! Amazing 👏

  • @_c_y_p_3
    @_c_y_p_3 Год назад +2

    Greetings from Sweden, Thank you for sharing! These glimpses into my childhood memories of a region I explored glued to the window of family cars screaming STOP 🛑 STOP ✋🏼 STOP ✋🏼 I think I saw fossils, but those fossils were not to be found here like over in Yakima and around Cowlitz county . So very interesting! I have examined countless road cuts through white pass, then on across East and right up through where this flood would have flowed, its creepy to imagine the force, but growing up near all those mountains I don’t remember a time in my life I was unaware of the force and power of nature. As May 18 nears, another anniversary of the PNW having a crash course in force.

    • @_c_y_p_3
      @_c_y_p_3 Год назад

      I have to make clear, I am talking about the pan handle of Idaho, Courdelaine pass and LOLO.

  • @relaxingnature2617
    @relaxingnature2617 Год назад +1

    Canadian connection : According to an old man we talked to in Canada at Trail British Columbia..high above the Columbia river at 4200feet is a cave with 2 ancient Indian canoe's inside. ..we went to the correct hillside searching but failed to hike high enough , hot weather and tangle brush. ..but it's worth another look someday. ..the old man was my buddy's grandpa and says he saw the cave and canoe's with his own eyes

  • @WinchesterLock
    @WinchesterLock Год назад +3

    Really interesting and informative video. Took me back to my University's sedimentary geology and structural geology classes 15-20 years ago. Honestly, it felt like the video only lasted 5 mins. It is always really amazing seeing and hearing people describe how complex the recent geologic history of the Northwest is (compared to the comparatively simple southeastern US, that I'm accustomed to).

  • @alexbradmckay
    @alexbradmckay Год назад +2

    Thanks for re uploading this. This is what got me interested in Washington state and Nick Zentner.

  • @jamesparker1071
    @jamesparker1071 Год назад +1

    Fascinating stuff. Thanks. Been to Montana. Beautiful country. Never knew the scope and scale of the ice age water flow out there.

  • @bjbrown
    @bjbrown Год назад +1

    Ive wondered about the horizontal formations. This makes so much sense. I have climbed up to the M. I have driven I 90 and I've been on the buffalo range and now this shows how it happened.

  • @PlayNowWorkLater
    @PlayNowWorkLater 8 дней назад

    I don’t know how I missed this one. I’ve watched almost all of Your videos Nick. But THIS video helps me with my own story. Where I live at the location of an ancient glacial lake. Love the field evidence

  • @stevekolstad4445
    @stevekolstad4445 Год назад +1

    These videos are very much like the Nick on the rocks. Thanks for doing them

  • @789563able
    @789563able Год назад +2

    Haven’t heard from Nick for a while. Glad he’s back. Keep the vids coming.

  • @gkookies1254
    @gkookies1254 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the presentation. I really enjoyed it. It is amazing what we can learn from our surroundings if we take a good look.

  • @rodevans602
    @rodevans602 Год назад +3

    A fascinating story, brilliantly told. Thanks Nick!
    Here in Oz we have very little in the way of modern glaciated terrains; just a few areas in the South Eastern Highlands. As a young geologist working in such places (long ago), I had to figure out what I was seeing based on textbook first principles. How good it would have been to have learned about these things in your classroom. I’ll join the queue at the time machine!

  • @VegasC63
    @VegasC63 Год назад +1

    Finally, RUclips promotes one of your educational videos and we can all see the results: 113k views 4/9/23. Thanks for all you do for us, hopefully this will expand the number of Zentnerds!

  • @LuckyPierre789
    @LuckyPierre789 Год назад +1

    Love it. My family has roots in De Borgia, MT and we visit every year. I've been fascinated with Glacial Lake Missoula since I learned about it. And living in Spokane, I see what those floods did every day! Thanks for this.

  • @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515
    @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515 Год назад +7

    Great content, thanks for putting this together, and picking outstanding images.
    The whole story still needs pieces, that's the best part!

  • @maggies5049
    @maggies5049 Год назад +2

    Forgot how enlightening and educational his videos are. Awesome educator!!!!

  • @Neotenico
    @Neotenico Год назад +1

    I have to be honest. I never gave much thought into geology past learning my "igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic" in grade school. In college I went into chemistry, and the infamous "Rocks for Jocks" was used to tease friends that didn't have science-oriented minds. After seeing this video, I feel like my entire perception of the field has changed. I'm fascinated by the detail and passion you express while explaining what I could only describe as a tremendous mystery that predates any living person. I'm amazed that each geological feature, no matter how small, is a clue to be compiled and corroborated to help solve this puzzle. Thank you, Mr. Zentner, for opening my eyes to a science that I've neglected for so long!

  • @lorrainewaters6189
    @lorrainewaters6189 Год назад +7

    This is always a good story, no matter how often it is told. Thanks NicK! I hope your talks went well.

  • @starcrib
    @starcrib Год назад +2

    Lake Missoula 🌊🌊🌊 thousand feet deep or more !! With those shore lines / strand lines at 4200 feet evaluation. !! ...Fantastic, Frightening, Planet Earth. MR. ZENTER IS ALWAYS A ROCK STAR. 🌊🌊🌊🪨 🪨🪨🪨🌊🌊🌊

  • @neebeeshaabookwayg6027
    @neebeeshaabookwayg6027 Год назад +3

    Wow!! Thank you so very kindly!! Wish i could see you all!! Great job!! 🎉❤

  • @cyndikarp3368
    @cyndikarp3368 Год назад +2

    Thanks for sharing. We are looking forward to your next series from Ellensburg, WA.

  • @Rufus_West
    @Rufus_West Год назад +1

    I love this story and you tell it so well. Earth history is cool. 😊

  • @CrowSpirit1977
    @CrowSpirit1977 Год назад +1

    This planet really blows my mind!!

  • @sitiesito715
    @sitiesito715 Год назад +3

    I love learning about geology from your videos Nick. You're really effective at communicating complex research to lay folks who arent in the thick of the science. The WA and northwest focus of your work is really valuable to me as a newcomer to the area who is curious about our many amazing geological wonders!

  • @bhaebe6671
    @bhaebe6671 Год назад +2

    An excellent compilation by Nick Zentner. We love all of his presentations concerning the geology of the Pacific Northwest.
    I first learned about the Bretz ice fields and channelled scab lands in 1986 and have been fascinated since then.
    DOES ANYONE know if Mr. Zintner's traveling lecture series, or any series open to the public, will resume? We were set to attend one in Vancouver WA but the C virus shut that down.
    Thank you!

  • @ronammologist16
    @ronammologist16 Год назад +2

    I live on Ponderay Lake off hwy 95.
    Today i spent a good bit of time digging up large rocks to form a fire ring in a corner of our land up behind my garage where there is a goodview of the lake. The rocks i dug up were lake bottom of Lake Missoula.

  • @Maastrichian
    @Maastrichian Год назад +2

    My first favorite glacial lake! (and so close to home!)

  • @joeharris3878
    @joeharris3878 8 месяцев назад +1

    I went to a week long conference on the college campus at Missoula. I noticed what looked like terraces on the newest mountain.
    Couldn't figure it out . I looked every morning and afternoon that week. I was sure they we man-made but that doesn't make sense.
    Years later I learned about the glacial lake and the scablands. Amazing world we live in.

  • @alexkaring
    @alexkaring Год назад +4

    This is so well illustrated that even my dog gets it. Love it!

    • @bjdefilippo447
      @bjdefilippo447 Год назад

      He's taking notes about where NOT to bury bones.

  • @consentofthegoverned5145
    @consentofthegoverned5145 Год назад +1

    A truly great scientific discussion will have so many more questions than answers. The proportion of questions to answers in this presentation leaves so much to discover.

  • @oldengineguy
    @oldengineguy Год назад +2

    Thank you Nick, for all your hard work in putting this stuff up so we can all learn and become more curious about our surroundings. I’ve driven through those areas on the way between Alberta and B.C. to Portland Oregon and I marvelled at the time but I didn’t know about quite what. Now after watching a bunch of your videos it makes a lot more sense. I’m no geologist but I enjoy hearing your lectures and presentations very much.

  • @russellehler6706
    @russellehler6706 Год назад +1

    That same phenomenon is apparent here in northern Lower Michigan. If you know where and how to look, you can see that Lake Michigan was MUCH deeper than it is now...like 500ft deeper.

  • @JAOM
    @JAOM Год назад +2

    You are a master story teller! Your stories comes from the rocks! Nick Rocks!

  • @brianlhughes
    @brianlhughes Год назад +5

    Up in the Okanogan near Tonasket we found in exposed sand sediment beds a thin line of mussel shells about 5 feet down from the top of the bed. Mussel reproduction requires fish, the mussels use fish gills to spread their young. That means at some point during the ice age the ice had cleared up in the valley floor enough so fish from the Columbia could make their way up as far as Tonasket, probably even further to provide the mussels with food. There the line of shells is around 50 feet higher than the current river bed. Did the fish swim up a rock dam south of Tonasket, probably around the area where Tunk creek flows into the river north of Riverside? The line of shells is only about an inch deep with course sand above and below, the line was solid with shells across the face of the exposure, they really must have been prolific. But they were covered over with more course sand, perhaps an ice dam further up river broke and flooded the area. The current wasn't strong enough to scour away the shells. Eventually later on the Okanogan lowered to it's current level, quite a mystery. I have been told the shells were studied by students from WWU. It's too bad we don't have mussel shells in the Missoula story, but it might be something to look for.

    • @GeologyNick
      @GeologyNick  Год назад +5

      Thanks Brian. Can you please email me? nick@geology.cwu.edu

  • @dave082360
    @dave082360 Год назад +1

    Nick, I so appreciate you, Man! Your enthusiasm talking through this, and other vids is captivating. One day, because of you, I hope to make it up that way to see these things. You're always intriguing and always pulling my interest in - even at 1 in the morning!

  • @beverlyweber4122
    @beverlyweber4122 Год назад +2

    Fascinating.
    Stuff you never knew you never knew!

  • @claytonbonsai
    @claytonbonsai Год назад +1

    I am always interested in The flood lakes and outlets of the Pacific NW. I was fortunate to meet J Harlan Bretz at his home while I was a Geology student at Albion College in the early 1970's. Bretz was an Alumni and was donating part of his collection to the school. We had studied the Channeled Scablands in our Pleistocene and Geomorphology classes, but to hear him talk during our visit about how he developed his theory was riveting. A truly great man.

  • @dmmchugh3714
    @dmmchugh3714 Год назад +1

    I know zero about geology. But love these videos ! I'm learning about it for sure as Nick is a talented instructor.

  • @scott-qk8sm
    @scott-qk8sm Год назад +2

    Very interesting and well presented, thank you!

  • @gordonormiston3233
    @gordonormiston3233 Год назад +2

    Great story. Very interestingly presented. Stimulates the old grey matter and accompanied with stunning photography.

  • @joycecaudell6047
    @joycecaudell6047 Год назад +2

    Awesome on-site and clear information, Nick! I keep learning from you. Thank you very much!