Rock Identification with Willsey: Volcanic Rocks (Tuff, Obsidian, Pumice)

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  • Опубликовано: 5 дек 2022
  • Dive into these distinctive and interesting volcanic rocks with geology professor Shawn Willsey. Learn how to identify tuff, obsidian, and pumice, and, more importantly, the story behind the rocks.
    Support these videos! You can ensure these videos continue by providing support (travel logistics, content creation, etc.)
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    or a good ol' fashioned check to this address:
    Shawn Willsey
    College of Southern Idaho
    315 Falls Avenue
    Twin Falls, ID 83303
    Link to PDF of document: drive.google.com/drive/folder...
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Комментарии • 72

  • @makeitbetter.1402
    @makeitbetter.1402 3 дня назад

    Root beer or Guinness!!! I love that, it’s a perfect analogy!

  • @jscottmaclean226
    @jscottmaclean226 Год назад +17

    I had no idea Pumice & Obsidian were the same material. I LOVE your Pumpkin Obsidian sample, almost doesn't look real. I really enjoy your channel, keep up the great work!

    • @LouisTroyAustin28
      @LouisTroyAustin28 Год назад

      Yah you can easily make pumice from obsidian by melting when not under pressure and letting it cool

  • @flakesinyershoe8137
    @flakesinyershoe8137 Год назад +4

    Flintknapping is what got me hooked on geology. It was harmless at first, a usgs report here, a usgs report there.. I only planned on using it to locate good chert sources... now I want to know things like the geologic processes involved in the formation of geodes in the local mississippian sedimentary formation and how the chaotic slumping (i think) exposed in the road cuts came to be. Boring sedimentary stuff.
    Thanks for filling some gaps in the obsidian story! I was unaware volcanic ash was so gnarly.

  • @davidk7324
    @davidk7324 Год назад +3

    Helpful analogy for the pumice/obsidian.

  • @Bri_Bri_the_Wise_Guy
    @Bri_Bri_the_Wise_Guy Год назад +2

    "The wonderful world of sedimentary rocks" I love it, can hardly wait,

  • @w4lauppe
    @w4lauppe Год назад +2

    31:20 wow devitrified obsidian (my rock vocabulary grows). Thanks for another amazing video.

  • @sdmike1141
    @sdmike1141 Год назад +1

    Obsidian…sneaky cool!! Thanks

  • @dustytrayl
    @dustytrayl Год назад +3

    Thank you for the root beer! I shall always remember now! Great analogy!

  • @Yetibiker67
    @Yetibiker67 Год назад +5

    Thank you Shawn for the lesson. Really appreciate all your efforts. Glad to see your subscriber list growing.

  • @tiffanyannhowe1712
    @tiffanyannhowe1712 Год назад +2

    Thanks for the vid drop 😊

  • @Rachel.4644
    @Rachel.4644 Год назад +3

    Gosh I really appreciate your classes about rock identification, focusing mostly on rocks we will see in the "wild." I have learned a lot! Still not super confident I've correctly id'd the rocks I've hauled home....but maybe....! 😁👌🏼

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +2

      Just takes practice and seeing lots of rocks. More important is interpreting the rock's story.

    • @Rachel.4644
      @Rachel.4644 Год назад +1

      @@shawnwillsey You're right! That is a big missing chunk of my learning. Thank you.

  • @holly50575
    @holly50575 Год назад +2

    Wow! Thank you! You just answered so many questions I have had for decades, I am so grateful.

  • @jdean1851
    @jdean1851 Год назад +1

    VERY KOOL" Thanx for posting!

  • @chucklearnslithics3751
    @chucklearnslithics3751 Год назад +4

    Outstanding! I have been waiting for this episode... It didn't disappoint!

  • @one44east77
    @one44east77 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks for a great video. Interesting and informative.

  • @farmermark2067
    @farmermark2067 Год назад +5

    Who uses or has used "Lava" hand soap with pumice? Have not used it in a while but now want to get some lol. Thanks Shawn, enjoying your vids!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      The corner of the package read, "Pumice Powered!"

    • @missingremote4388
      @missingremote4388 Год назад

      Some kitty-litter comes from pumice mines. In California.
      I've visited the mines . It's near Fossil Falls, on Owens river ( unknowingly my airfilter was not on my engine. But my trucks still works) lol

  • @jeaniechampagne8831
    @jeaniechampagne8831 7 месяцев назад

    From here I went straight to the history of pavements and the reason I did, was that your rocks reminded me of the pavement - street in front of our house growing up. The streets were paved with a rock layer then the black layer to smooth it out. Afterwards we had all these rocks on the side of the street that we played with and cracked them open to find all kinds of pretty stuff. Maybe everyone already knows this, about rock pavenents. This was way back in the 50's. Great video. Time well spent. I love rocks!

  • @shawnwillsey
    @shawnwillsey  Год назад +3

    You can support my field videos by going here. Thanks! www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EWUSLG3GBS5W8

  • @cinderelly2592
    @cinderelly2592 Год назад +1

    Awesome

  • @minnafinland1660
    @minnafinland1660 3 месяца назад

    Very good series for me... Thank You, Shawn!

  • @caspervegas3288
    @caspervegas3288 Год назад

    Love the information very intelligent

  • @nitawynn9538
    @nitawynn9538 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you. I found obsidian and pumice fascinating. 😁

  • @MountainFisher
    @MountainFisher Год назад +5

    I remember hiking near Devil's Postpile over a few miles of greyish white pumice. The way it crunched was irritating like fingernails on a chalkboard way. The whole area was covered by a pyroclastic type flow, by then broken down, but plenty of plum sized pumice.
    Obsidian Dome in California is full of that first piece of obsidian with the snowflake effect. I couldn't find a piece of it without it. A whole big hill of the stuff.
    I recognize that as Bishop Tuff, that light color gives it away. I used to live there. Are you familiar with the Gila Caldera Tuff of Southern New Mexico Shawn? It is a little more brownish than the Bishop Tuff. There is a road cutout on route 52 where right in the middle of the tuff is a car sized boulder of milky quartz tossed there millions of years ago.

  • @RichardFreeberg
    @RichardFreeberg Год назад

    Thanks! I really enjoy your mini lectures. Entertaining and edifying.

  • @loisrossi841
    @loisrossi841 24 дня назад

    Thank you.

  • @oscarmedina1303
    @oscarmedina1303 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you Shawn. Very helpful presentation. I have a much better understanding of the three types of rock materials after watching your video.

  • @pmm1044
    @pmm1044 Год назад

    Thanks for tuft info. Went to smith Rocks and saw the hard and dense pink rhyolitic tuft and the soft pyroclastic flow tuft.

  • @Meggligee
    @Meggligee Год назад +2

    Thanks for covering my favorite volcanic product, obsidian. I thoroughly appreciate the explanation on the devitricication of obsidian and snowflake obsidian. I originally thought my samples were dirty but after cleaning, the same white crystals you’re showing on these pieces show up on my samples also.
    If there are crystals, what age does that signify the obsidian is or range?

  • @NNn-lt1rf
    @NNn-lt1rf Год назад +1

    You need to visit Maona Loa. Soon.

  • @stevewhalen6973
    @stevewhalen6973 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @broadcastmyballs
    @broadcastmyballs Год назад +2

    Excellent video I learned a lot from. I'm glad you showed and explained volcanic ash, I have never seen it before in person so I never knew its texture.
    Does pumice devitrtify as obsidian does? Would that account for the opacity and frangibility of some pumice relative to others?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +2

      Yes, both glassy rocks devitrify over time as molecules slowly migrate and form small crystals.

  • @murarirajagopalan3771
    @murarirajagopalan3771 Год назад

    Kudos to a nice presentation. You might consider a value -add by showing the rocks first followed by thin section display to identify the minerals and maybe even a chemical composition analysis. You can plan paid sessions too for Value-adds!

  • @tinymetaltrees
    @tinymetaltrees Год назад

    I am astonished that I have never heard of devitrification before!
    I wonder which other materials are the final results since they must ordinarily go unrecognized after having undergone this metamorphosis.

  • @directcoolingservice7225
    @directcoolingservice7225 Год назад +2

    Jewelers loop amigo

  • @cecinit2007xyzzy
    @cecinit2007xyzzy Год назад

    Lots of rock identified to me as ash in Galapagos. Should mostly be pretty mafic rock (hot spot somewhat like Hawaii) - even a green sand beach (or several) there

  • @haroldtanner9600
    @haroldtanner9600 Год назад

    You weigh equal volumes of the tuff samples to compare density? It seems that the rock from the bottom of the gorge should be more dense.

  • @rodbhar6522
    @rodbhar6522 Год назад

    Never knew that Obsidian was young rock. I’ve been hoping to find some locally amongst the 600 million year old basalt where I live. 😂

  • @alicemiller3139
    @alicemiller3139 Год назад

    General question. I hear the term country rock. I live in NC now but used to live in NJ and still go back. I see a lot of shale and wonder if that is our country rock formations in all the states out east. Can you explain exactly what country rock is? Thanks!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Country rock is a broad term referring to the dominant rock in a region, often one that has been intruded by magma or mineralized.

  • @padraicmurphy6045
    @padraicmurphy6045 Год назад +1

    Particularly interesting rock vid. Had no idea pumice was a glass. Does pumice devitrify as well or does the foamy structure prevent crystals from forming?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Yes, pumice is prone to devitrification also.

  • @3xHermes
    @3xHermes 3 месяца назад

    👍

  • @haroldtanner9600
    @haroldtanner9600 Год назад

    Ash from Mt. St. Helens destroyed many vehicle engines and also damaged the jet engines on aircraft that flew through the ash cloud enroute to SEATAC during the St. Helens’ eruptions in 1980. More recently the routing of trans-Atlantic flights was affected for a period of time during the eruption of volcanoes on Iceland.

  • @c1s1125
    @c1s1125 11 месяцев назад

    @shawnwillsey I have obsidian limbcasts from the VV. Too bad you don't discuss opal in any of your videos. Your channel would blow up if you made a few videos about opals. You've already got plenty of Yellowstone keywords. Thanks for your content!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  11 месяцев назад

      You bet. This series is on rocks and opal is considered a mineraloid, but I agree it would be a good topic. I wrote a whole chapter on the opal deposits of Spencer, ID in my book, Geology Underfoot in Southern Idaho.

  • @jeffrysmith8200
    @jeffrysmith8200 Год назад

    When obsidian denitrifies are the crystals that form quartz or some sort of xeolite or?

  • @WaylonFoxtrot
    @WaylonFoxtrot 23 дня назад

    Idaho, you say? It's a petrified potato! 😂

  • @grizzlymartin1
    @grizzlymartin1 Год назад

    Glad I found your channel. “Oh, this is the neighborhood I’m in.“
    Question, as a recent hobbyist into all things geology, one of my first main goals (like you say) is to “know the story.” In other words, I want to be able to go out into the hinterlands and begin to familiarize myself with my geological friends all around me. I’m wondering if you can do a program devoted to the very first steps of knowing where to begin to understand the story of “What neighborhood I am in” - no matter where on earth I am dropped?
    I live in the Rockies, so I quickly see all around me a lot of sedimentary structure with a lot of upheaval metamorphic rock formations. And the majesty of much of it is that it can change so dramatically in such a short time or distance. So that is my question really is - where does a person like me begin, matter where they dropped on the face of the Earth, to look around and say “Oh, this is the neighborhood I’m in.“

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      Welcome aboard and thanks for subscribing. Your suggestion is a good one. I've got a few ideas on that front. I supposed the first video in the Rock ID with Willsey series would help too as I cover how to tell groups of rock apart. Stay tuned and hopefully I can address this soon.

    • @grizzlymartin1
      @grizzlymartin1 Год назад

      @@shawnwillsey do you have a link for this show you reference? Thank you.

    • @grizzlymartin1
      @grizzlymartin1 Год назад

      Just went and looked. I see several rock ID videos and series. I guess this is what you’re referring to. Thanks.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      @@grizzlymartin1 ruclips.net/video/K9Kcaoc8A0Q/видео.html

    • @grizzlymartin1
      @grizzlymartin1 Год назад

      Have you put out any kind of syllabus online that someone like me can download and follow.?

  • @madman9333
    @madman9333 Год назад

    What is the rock called that (I’m guessing) forms inside of trees that are (petrified/vulcanized/vitrified/fossilized???) where I suppose water/sand ??? Is trapped in the tree when a pyroclastic flow ??? occurs?? I have some big chunks of it and pictures of it in veins of what was definitively a tree found in the same area around Mono Lake

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад

      Most wood is replaced by various forms of silica (quartz). Small impurities yield various colors.

  • @Rockhoundingcolorado
    @Rockhoundingcolorado Год назад +1

    You forgot Scoria?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Год назад +1

      I believed this was covered in basalt episode since scoria is a type of basalt.

  • @mauricerieffel5627
    @mauricerieffel5627 Месяц назад

    Thanks!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Месяц назад

      Welcome! Thanks for your support.