The Massive Asteroid Impact That Created Chesapeake Bay

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2025

Комментарии • 64

  • @venturelord32
    @venturelord32 Год назад +15

    The Chesapeake Bay is such an important feature of Virginia... I'm surprised that I never learned about its meteoric origins before. Awesome fact to learn.

  • @austinmj64
    @austinmj64 Год назад +9

    Growing up in Hampton Roads we actually learned a tiny bit about the impact.

  • @ThePitbulllady1
    @ThePitbulllady1 Год назад +8

    Here is something else interesting that relates to this impact: tectite strewn fields confirmed to be linked to the CB impact event have been found on the border of South Carolina and Georgia, and as far away as Texas, half a continent away!

  • @susanread1246
    @susanread1246 Год назад +2

    Yay you're back 😊

  • @octavianova1300
    @octavianova1300 Год назад +8

    small correction: the estimated speed of the impactor was 17.9 km/s, not 179 km/s

    • @carolynm9638
      @carolynm9638 Год назад +2

      Great pick up. Thank you.

    • @carlzovko5802
      @carlzovko5802 9 месяцев назад +1

      Nice catch - I was just about to make a similar comment as 179 km/s seemed to be excessively fast for an asteroid. Overall video was well done!

  • @alanrogers7090
    @alanrogers7090 Год назад +2

    I've driven over the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel. As you have discussed non-Australian sites before, can you make an episode about Crater Lake in Oregon? It has a unique history.❤ Glad you're back and feeling better.

  • @maeedwards8387
    @maeedwards8387 Год назад +2

    I love watching your shows!!!!!

  • @Draco_Alpha
    @Draco_Alpha Год назад

    as someone who lived in this region for most of my life, i 100% appreciate the look at it's geologic history. i had no idea it was an impact crater! the coastline it created is absolutely wonderful. i lived in St. Mary's county for the better part of twenty years, and i absolutely loved how no matter where i was i could be no more than five minutes from water's edge. thank you for this!

  • @harrietharlow9929
    @harrietharlow9929 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for putting this up. You did a great job describing this.

  • @bobbiezarate2447
    @bobbiezarate2447 Год назад +1

    Oz! This is cool as...
    I had No idea there was an impact crater so close to us here in North Carolina! Mind blown, Again 🤯

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 9 месяцев назад

      The East Coast of the US is more interesting geologically than many realise. Maryland even has ophiolites.

  • @TheShankari33
    @TheShankari33 Год назад

    Very enjoyable❤

  • @ricklyle3739
    @ricklyle3739 Год назад

    Excellent content. This is the first time I have heard of this. Keep up the good work.

  • @knightsaberami01
    @knightsaberami01 Год назад

    YAY! We made it

  • @bobflendorg1064
    @bobflendorg1064 Год назад +3

    Ya!

  • @1Salts1
    @1Salts1 Год назад +1

    Just checking if you're aware of the Deniliquin Structure?
    If I've missed it, then let me know, if not, check it out, it's our own version of Chesapeake Bay.

  • @georgefspicka5483
    @georgefspicka5483 Год назад +11

    It's not pronounced "CHEESEapeake" Bay. It's more like "CHESSapeak" :) Thanks for mentioning, because many don't know about this significant event. Some think this was responsible for the Eocene-Oligocene extinction event, roughly 33,000,000 million years ago. Also, Earth's temperature started to cool, and at about 2.6 million years ago, our planet's latest Ice-Age began.

    • @OzGeologyOfficial
      @OzGeologyOfficial  Год назад +2

      Gotcha! Thanks! My bad.

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 Год назад +2

      This impact likely had nothing to do with the Quanatary Ice Age. But the Quanatary only has to with the Northern Hemisphere with minor glaciation in the south. The Southern Hemisphere has been in an Ica Age ever since around 30MYA. That's when the Circumpolar Current got established cutting off Antarctica from warm equatorial waters. The Quanatary likely got started with the rise of Panama cutting off Pacific/Atlantic circulation.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      Say cheese!

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад +1

      @@OzGeologyOfficial you had the wrong kind of crabs at the end of the video too. Those are not Maryland blue claw crabs. Which is the tastiest thing on planet Earth. Hot fat crabs!

    • @carolynm9638
      @carolynm9638 Год назад

      Love all the extra knowledge volunteered by the audience of this channel. Always a bonus.

  • @entity_unknown_
    @entity_unknown_ Год назад

    I live right in the center. It's Chesapeake btw, and I always wondered why there were so many meteoritic rocks

  • @helmutzollner5496
    @helmutzollner5496 Год назад +2

    That is interesting.
    Considering the map of the Eocene the tsunami from this impact could have gone through the thefts ocean all the way to Central Asia.

  • @robertboykin1828
    @robertboykin1828 Год назад +1

    Just south of the Bay bridge, is [ or was ] a deep place that was named Devels hole, 110 ft deep.. I wonder if it had anything to do with it.

    • @NatureGuy18
      @NatureGuy18 Год назад

      It did. The crater is actually still forming today because of erosion. That's why the bay just suddenly drops off to over a hundred+ feet in some spots.

  • @magicmusic8316
    @magicmusic8316 Год назад

    I have read many books where the setting was Chesapeake Bay, and indeed one of my favourite songs from the 70's is Moonlight, feels right. One of the lyrics is Chesapeake Bay. Always fascinated me how I was drawn to that area. Well, now I know! Geology! ☺ BTW I am an Aussie!

    • @arthurcutaiar9994
      @arthurcutaiar9994 4 месяца назад

      The bay is indeed nice. But the mid Atlantic region is a human CESSPOOL. Something to do with an overabundance of yuppies/Demonrats and it's proximity to Washington District ofCriminals

  • @morrismurray3621
    @morrismurray3621 Год назад

    Just driven the Nullarbor and saw these huge cliffs that went almost from Esperance, ran parallel to the Nullarbor road for a few hundred kms and then became the Bunda Cliffs. How about an episode on what caused this huge long cliff?

  • @shanascontrino5737
    @shanascontrino5737 Год назад +1

    So with impact theory wheres the traps on other side?

  • @acm4213
    @acm4213 Год назад

    This area has some really interesting features related to this impact, all the way west to the edge of Richmond 90mi/144km inland. Evidence of the tsunami creating massive piles of land debris spread out in radial and ripple pattern all the way to the “Fall Line” where the land abruptly drops down from the Piedmont plateau into the flatter terrain of the Tidewater.

  • @kenbrady119
    @kenbrady119 Год назад

    Thank you for showing, tacitly, how the current residents of this ecosystem with deep history are clueless about its significance.

  • @mpetersen6
    @mpetersen6 Год назад

    Why do animations of impacts always show the impactor heating up long befor us hits the atmosphere? In reality depending on the impact angle the impactor would only be in the atmospere for seconds.

  • @robbello6207
    @robbello6207 Год назад +5

    Thank you for your videos, please keep them up. I use to live on the Chesapeake Bay. Your pronunciation is a bit off, think... Chess A Peak. Chess like the board game.

  • @davemeeks8109
    @davemeeks8109 Год назад

    When was this impact. 😊

  • @No_Fuse8771
    @No_Fuse8771 Год назад

    I can't tell if you are saying cheesespeak bay, or Chesapeake bay, either way, I'm calling it cheesespeak bay from now on. Great video as always my guy. 👍
    [EDIT] Let me add, I'm hard of hearing.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад +1

      Get someone from Baltimore to say the word, "home". It's so funny! They like sing it.

    • @carolynm9638
      @carolynm9638 Год назад +1

      Sounds like the locals are pronouncing it Chesapeake (chess), which is what you’d expect from the spelling. 😊

  • @GordonMyers-y1x
    @GordonMyers-y1x Год назад

    Why doesn't anyone acknowledge the southeastern corner of the Hudson Bay as an impact crater? There is a circular shore and pushups in the bay.

  • @CBCycles
    @CBCycles 28 дней назад

    I think you meant 11.1 miles per second, not 111

  • @Jagdtyger2A
    @Jagdtyger2A Год назад

    If Chesapeak Bay is an impact site, what about Hudson's Bay?

    • @desyncer
      @desyncer Год назад

      There is a lot of geological debate about if part of the Hudson Bay was formed by a meteor impact. Specifically, the southeastern shore of the bay, called the Nastapoka Arc with it's nearly perfectly circular shape and the Belcher Islands in the middle look like they could have formed this way.
      However, after it was first suggested that it could the the rim of an impact site, research found no evidence of things like shocked quartz, shatter cones, melted rocks, radial fractures or other evidence of shock metamorphism. Instead, folded strata in the area indicates it was created when two ancient cratons collided that formed a fold-and-thrust belt where the crust would split to accommodate the compression. Evidence of these folds can be found in the meta-sediments of the Belcher Islands.

    • @Jagdtyger2A
      @Jagdtyger2A Год назад

      @@desyncer Thnks for the info

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 9 месяцев назад

      @@desyncer The Nastapoka Arc definitely is a strange feature. I'm interested the the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt near the northern end of the arc and in spite of the current consensus (which is probably right), I have to wonder about compressional forces forming a very nearly-perfect semicircle. But hey--I'm weird. I find Archean cratons fascinating.

  • @oskarsrode2167
    @oskarsrode2167 Год назад

    I am absolutely sure that the Gulf of Riga must be an asteroid hitting at a shallow angle from Riga towards N-NW with a rebound in the midle where the island of Ruhnu now lies.
    Of course it could be a volcano crater, but it is a bit too elongated for that.
    Unfortunately, I can only find depth charts and nothing about the layers.

  • @108doublestitches
    @108doublestitches 10 месяцев назад

    We don't learn about it in Norfolk public school. We only gotta take EID class to graduate.

  • @tyler5784
    @tyler5784 Год назад

    i’m a virginia beach native and have never heard of this, this is fascinating!

  • @1pcfred
    @1pcfred Год назад +1

    Those aren't Maryland blue claw crabs. It is pronounced chess a peak. If you said cheese a peak folks would look at you funny here.

  • @myleskgallagher
    @myleskgallagher 7 месяцев назад

    "What we now know as the Cheese-Ah-Peeg Bay"
    ........I dunno what you know it as, but that ain't it for us 😂

  • @kevincinnamontoast3669
    @kevincinnamontoast3669 5 месяцев назад +1

    Mmm, cheese a peak bay.

  • @ericjohnson9468
    @ericjohnson9468 7 месяцев назад

    ‘BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS’… not ‘Blue Mountains’…

  • @tymcfadden8496
    @tymcfadden8496 Год назад

    It's "chess-a-peak" not "cheese-a-peak".

  • @jacobwatts202
    @jacobwatts202 Год назад

    I live in Virginia and never knew this

  • @robertcook5201
    @robertcook5201 7 месяцев назад

    Could have been better, not your best effort