FernieSkier
FernieSkier
  • 11
  • 83 316

Відео

2D UV Shifted Mesh Connecting Straits of the Central Salish Sea Aug 10 2015
Переглядів 758 років тому
2D UV Shifted Mesh Connecting Straits of the Central Salish Sea Aug 10 2015
2D Tidal Lagrangian Particle Test #3A 1 day and 16 hours
Переглядів 1648 років тому
Coarse Gravel = Yellow Medium Gravel = Orange Fine Gravel = Bright Green Coarse Sand = Dark Green Medium Sand = Cyan Fine Sand = Hot Pink Silt = Purple
Channeled Scablands of Washington State (Patrick Stewart)
Переглядів 65 тис.11 років тому
The Channeled Scablands are a barren, relatively soil-free landscape in eastern Washington, scoured clean by a flood unleashed when a large glacial lake drained. They are a geologically unique erosional feature in the U.S. state of Washington. They were created by the cataclysmic Missoula Floods that swept periodically across eastern Washington and down the Columbia River Plateau during the Ple...
That was pretty stupid
Переглядів 23011 років тому
Mount Washington, Vancouver Island, BC
Canada's Snowiest Mountain (GoPro Skiing)
Переглядів 45412 років тому
Mount Washington, Vancouver Island, BC Clips from three days in Winter-Spring 2012. Music: The Dandy Warhols "Sad Vacation" (DeBoer/Taylor-Taylor) This Machine (2012)
Boundary Pass 3D DIFF (3x) 2001-2011
Переглядів 5512 років тому
Boundary Pass 3D DIFF (3x) 2001-2011
Boundary Pass 3D MB (3x) 2001-2011
Переглядів 24812 років тому
Boundary Pass 3D MB (3x) 2001-2011
GoPro Skiing | Fernie, British Columbia | Feel It!
Переглядів 6 тис.12 років тому
Watch in 720p Filmed at Fernie Alpine Resort, Feb. 14-16, 2012. Song: "Feel It" - The Brian Jonestown Massacre
GoPro Skiing - Fernie, BC - Meet me in Timber Bowl!
Переглядів 10 тис.12 років тому
Filmed on Feb. 14, 2012.
UVic EOS students at the Kalapana lava flows, Hawaii
Переглядів 37413 років тому
February 2011 reading-break trip to the Big Island of Hawaii by Earth and Ocean Science Students from the University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. More info about the Kalapana lava flows: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalapana,_Hawaii Song: "Lava" by The B-52's (Self-titled, 1979)

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @Master-Blaster-4x4
    @Master-Blaster-4x4 4 місяці тому

    “Make it so Number One”

  • @michaelcurcio4025
    @michaelcurcio4025 Рік тому

    The gorge in Walla Walla is called Burlingame gulch.

  • @nibiruresearch
    @nibiruresearch 2 роки тому

    I know of a missing link in the education of geologists. They tell us that our planet Earth has the most to fear from an asteroid impact or volcano eruptions. But when we look at the many horizontal layers that we find everywhere on our planet, we clearly see the effect of a repeating cataclysm. These disasters are mentioned in ancient books like the Mahabharata from India and the Popol Vuh from the Mayans and others. They tell us about a cycle of seven disasters that separate the eras from the world. Certainly, regularly recurring global disasters cannot be caused by asteroid impacts or volcanic eruptions. The only possible cause is another celestial body, a planet, orbiting our sun in an eccentric orbit. Then it is close to the sun for a short period and after the crossing at a very high speed it disappears into the universe for a long time. Planet 9 exists, but it seems invisible. These disasters cause a huge tidal wave of seawater that washes over land "above the highest mountains." At the end it covers the earth with a layer of wet mud, a mixture of sand, clay, lime, fossils of marine and terrestrial animals and small and larger meteorites. Forests that existed are flattened and because of the pressure from the layers on top the wood is changed into coal. These disasters also create a cycle of civilizations. To learn much more about the recurring flood cycle, the re-creation of civilizations and its chronology and ancient high technology, read the e-book: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". It can be read on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: invisible nibiru 9

  • @inharmonywithearth9982
    @inharmonywithearth9982 2 роки тому

    I have flown all over the entire west. It is ALL just like that at that elevation. Whatever happened it definately was NOT fresh water nor localized. It left salt pools and huge salt lakes in its wake. Had to be an ocean Tsunami from a volcanic blast. That explains the petrified forests and the swift water to make the wests bare grounds and deep eroded canyons

  • @smuckingfart
    @smuckingfart 2 роки тому

    It's absolutely fascinating to watch this video while trying to comprehend the massive, unfathomable volume of water it would take to cut through the bedrock and cause the large rippling effect of the landscape. I wonder if there's a way for them to measure how much time has passed in between each of those 39 layers of sediment in order to accurately predict when the next cataclysmic event will take place?... thanks for content!

  • @GregoryJByrne
    @GregoryJByrne 3 роки тому

    The Milankovitch cycles cause our planets climate to change. Obliquity is causing global warming. Precession of eh North star will cause global tsunami's. When the equator aligns with eclipses the solar orbital plane the gravitational pull of eh SUN will pull tsunami's around our water planet east to west because our planet spins west to east. Eccentricity and solar eclipses will be the trigger. Flat earth, chem/vapour trails and no coriolis effect all all propaganda distractions away from he inconvenient truth that our planet gets washed over by global tsunami's at the vernal equinoxes. Covid is yet another lie strawman built on the inconvenient truth that teh Baby Boomers who were born enmass 75 years ago are starting to die from teh usual suspects of seasonal FLU and old age.

  • @magicmarker90
    @magicmarker90 4 роки тому

    Runner wanted. Seeking t a n i s

    • @seanmullan8527
      @seanmullan8527 4 роки тому

      There are wondrous things. There are magical things. There are dangerous things. We get what we deserve.

  • @hertzer2000
    @hertzer2000 4 роки тому

    There's a crater basin in The Northern Yukon that has massive spillways radiating out from the center. The Ice damn theory would have filled The Basin and Range region in Nevada. The water that made the scablands came from Canada.

  • @sbkarajan
    @sbkarajan 4 роки тому

    Total nut science. Lake Missoula was not big enough for the ginormous scablands that is many times bigger in size, different in scale. Waters from Missoula lake could not even fill the whole scablands, let along carving out any basalt rocks. Plus, there is no evidence that Lake Missoula was blocked by a giant 2,000 ft ice dam, which is a nonsense guess at best, nor the lake was flooded out. The shorelines near the U. of Montana is an evidence that Lake Missoula did NOT violently flood out, but the lake was slowly drained over a long period of time.

    • @charlesbrowniii8398
      @charlesbrowniii8398 4 роки тому

      Go to Pend Oreille lake and you can see for yourself that it was clearly formed by a huge glacier which came down the Purcell Trench and blocked the Clark fork valley. You can even see the terminal moraine and many other glacial remnants on google maps. From there you can easily follow the path of the water. Just learn a little geology, explore the area, and you won’t be so confused.

  • @DezroTV
    @DezroTV 4 роки тому

    i didn't know there was any other utubers in fernie

  • @anoniconoclast2030
    @anoniconoclast2030 4 роки тому

    Love to see the lamestream hacks shaking in their boots!

  • @tikitiki7610
    @tikitiki7610 5 років тому

    not enough water in lake missouli to have carved the canyons

    • @DefenistrationAlley
      @DefenistrationAlley 4 роки тому

      There were a minimum of 10 flooding events over a period of 2000 years, possibly as many as 40.

    • @charlesbrowniii8398
      @charlesbrowniii8398 4 роки тому

      You should publish your brilliant calculations and straighten out those silly geologists.

    • @jamemswright3044
      @jamemswright3044 Рік тому

      I think you have a point. Also how does glacial ice form a dam capable of holding back water to a depth of 2000ft. 2000ft of water would create pressures of 850psi at the base of the wall, so magically the ice can withstand this pressure and somehow grout the bedrock in order to prevent undermining the dam. Then this process has to repeat itself 10-40 times. I think there has to be a better hypothesis.

  • @yourstruely9896
    @yourstruely9896 5 років тому

    Radio carbon dating of ash? And how come the ash was still underneath the sediments and not washed away..

    • @charlesbrowniii8398
      @charlesbrowniii8398 4 роки тому

      That same layer covers thousands of square miles and has a unique chemical signature. They wouldn’t date the ash; they would date organic material found within the ash layer - probably in areas not affected by flooding. The ash wasn’t washed away for the same reason that all the other layers of previous sediment were not washed away in that location.

    • @RetNemmoc555
      @RetNemmoc555 2 роки тому

      A rapidly flowing body of water will both scour and deposit. Look at the bend of any large river; a "sand bank" (i.e., sediments) will form on the inner side of the bend, while the river flows faster on the outer side. Scale this up to flood-plain level and you've got gradual (or episodic) build-up of sediment. When sufficiently above sea level, a flood even will cut channels in that previously deposited sedimentary plain. I'm not referring specially to the geology of the Channeled Scablands, which includes basalt lava flows, but any good geological resource could explain it better than I can.

  • @SOregonRob
    @SOregonRob 6 років тому

    Had me right up until you said ice dam, that is just way too far-fetched. The pressure involved and the fact that water will always find a way out is why I call bullshit on the ice dam.

    • @FernieSkier
      @FernieSkier 6 років тому

      Read up on "jökulhlaups" and hydrostatically-sealed lakes. There are modern examples and the basic processes are well understood.

    • @G-24x
      @G-24x 5 років тому

      It was caused by an asteriodal impact. The craters have been found under the Greenland Ice sheet. Listen to Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson.

    • @praxis6172
      @praxis6172 5 років тому

      @@G-24x how would a wave not destroy north America if a wave went from Greenland to Washington state?.

    • @G-24x
      @G-24x 5 років тому

      @@praxis6172 It wouldn't destroy North America but it would badly damage the landscape which is exactly what we see with the Channeled Scablands.

    • @kellyviolette1419
      @kellyviolette1419 5 років тому

      LOL

  • @123Goldhunter11
    @123Goldhunter11 6 років тому

    Coincides with the extinction of the mega mammals and megalith builders. Watch Randall Carlson.

  • @keironoconnor3283
    @keironoconnor3283 6 років тому

    Check out Randall Carson's hypothesis when he travels through here with Graham Hancock, very interesting and easy to digest.

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 5 років тому

      Problem is they were wrong and Randall now admits to the multiple floods from Glacial Lake Missoula. He now claims there are 2 different types of deposits and claims his Impact meltwater is simply a part of the story. Unfortunately Carlson and Hancock never take down their misinformation so people keep buying it and repeating crap they themselves no longer believe.

    • @anoniconoclast2030
      @anoniconoclast2030 4 роки тому

      @@swirvinbirds1971 They both are brighter than all the establishment scientists combined.

    • @swirvinbirds1971
      @swirvinbirds1971 4 роки тому

      @@anoniconoclast2030 can you dispute 1 fact I posted at all? No?

    • @anoniconoclast2030
      @anoniconoclast2030 4 роки тому

      @@swirvinbirds1971 You are in fact dull and can't face that those two got you beat by a mile.

    • @anoniconoclast2030
      @anoniconoclast2030 4 роки тому

      @@swirvinbirds1971 Sounds exactly like what the lamestream hacks like yourself have done always and forever.

  • @aylbdrmadison1051
    @aylbdrmadison1051 6 років тому

    Okies, but what happened to the rest? It cuts off abruptly, even mid-sentence. Yet it had barely started. :/

  • @lordelrond4750
    @lordelrond4750 7 років тому

    What happened to slow and gradual processes?

    • @orange70383
      @orange70383 6 років тому

      This was obviously not a slow gradual process, not many things are. The slow and gradual talk is applied to think that aren't understood so the process has got to be slow and gradual.

  • @ibenrubbinov5463
    @ibenrubbinov5463 7 років тому

    Nice snippet! I would love to know the source. I searched through a bunch of Sir Stewart's narration jobs. as well as a good bit of Dr.Waitt's publications..I'm having troubles sifting it to the surface. . any assistance would be much appreciated.

    • @G-24x
      @G-24x 5 років тому

      It was caused by an astroidal impact. The craters have been found in the Greenland Ice sheet. Listen to Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson.

    • @hestheMaster
      @hestheMaster Рік тому

      @@G-24x It happened too many times to be from a single asteroid impact! It happened from 1200 to 2000 years of a timespan from about 16,700 to 14,700 years ago. During which an ash layer from Mt. St.Helens was deposited amid that 2000 year long cycle between floods.

  • @alphalunamare
    @alphalunamare 7 років тому

    missed explaining the big one that carved the Dry Falls though.

  • @jasoreed
    @jasoreed 7 років тому

    Brought on by a comet/asteroid impact

  • @michaelmcdermott5329
    @michaelmcdermott5329 7 років тому

    this looks awesome. My neighbor went here a few years ago and had a great trip. Canada is so beautiful may god bless you all.

    • @seanmullan8527
      @seanmullan8527 7 років тому

      Thanks Michael! Come visit Canada anytime.

  • @alphalunamare
    @alphalunamare 7 років тому

    I enjoyed the voice ... not sure there was any evidence. Sure there were layers but how long did they take?

    • @killsalive1
      @killsalive1 6 років тому

      There are layers to be found all the way to Missoula.

  • @wendella6442
    @wendella6442 7 років тому

    Good video. Would like to see the rest of it. The book Universal Model - A Millennial Science by Dean Sessions explains the flood and the rock layer formations with empirical evidence and do it yourself experiments.

  • @tw64
    @tw64 7 років тому

    Read magicians of the gods by Graham hancock

    • @robwarren544
      @robwarren544 5 років тому

      Seems they found the impact crater! www.theguardian.com/science/2018/nov/14/impact-crater-19-miles-wide-found-beneath-greenland-glacier

  • @mensuddevic8983
    @mensuddevic8983 7 років тому

    fernie is awesom place to ski

  • @patgenier1965
    @patgenier1965 7 років тому

    Thanks for posting the vid. Gives a good idea what to expect. Cheers.

  • @Crispy2012A
    @Crispy2012A 8 років тому

    Search this here on youtube "symbols of an alien sky episode 2 full"...then come back and watch this again...and tell me if any of this ice age theory makes any sense at all.

  • @thomasbeirne6078
    @thomasbeirne6078 8 років тому

    At the 1:02 mark of the video to the 1:22 mark of the video is my favourite thanks for the video. I want to marry Tiffany 6'2. I have a video of me donating 1600 worth of MADE IN CANADA clothing to UGM. It is 1 of 7. If you could LIKE or SHARE or COMMENT or even SUBSCRIBE this would be a good deed. THANKS

  • @normanbfifteen3468
    @normanbfifteen3468 8 років тому

    What chair is this?

    • @FernieSkier
      @FernieSkier 8 років тому

      +Norman Bfifteen Off-loading Timber at the start. Loading/off-loading White Pass after that.

  • @TheRustyriddle
    @TheRustyriddle 9 років тому

    Noah's flood period, but they don't what to believe that lol

    • @fudgedogbannana
      @fudgedogbannana 6 років тому

      Maybe not Noah's flood but melting ice against the dam as they say here in this vid, just a couple hundred years after Noah's flood. The Ice age must have come fast right after Noah;s flood, also melted fast a few hundred years after the great flood. I say that because there could not have been an ice age before Noah's flood, the whole earth was lush green from top to bottom. the flood must have come, and an ice age immediately after, then the sun got hotter and melted that ice quickly causing huge floods down hill from glaciers.

    • @bdrichardson403
      @bdrichardson403 6 років тому

      The Ararat Mountains (where the Ark supposedly landed, are an average of some 14K feet. There is not enough water on earth to cover it to that depth. It is not rational not sensible to believe the Noah's Ark story or any other of those silly fairy tales such as talking snakes, Jacob's Ladder, Tower of Babel etc.

    • @G-24x
      @G-24x 5 років тому

      It was caused by an astroidal impact. The craters have been found in the Greenland Ice sheet. Listen to Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson.

    • @savannahkrochalis7955
      @savannahkrochalis7955 Рік тому

      @@fudgedogbannana Maybe, just a though, the ice age ended with the flood. Because, you know, melting glaciers caused a 400ft rise in global sea levels. Also WTF you mean the sun got hotter?

  • @danhworth100
    @danhworth100 9 років тому

    nice work

  • @JungleJargon
    @JungleJargon 9 років тому

    A single flood can deposit multiple layers so it could have been as little as two times that the ice dam caused a flood. It still does not explain the initial deposition of sediment layers that were washed away. The same can be said of the consecutive layers of the Grand Canyon

    • @tikatowowplayer
      @tikatowowplayer 9 років тому

      You are speculating go do research. ((Lol asking a creationist to acctually do reserch))

    • @williamstokes2312
      @williamstokes2312 9 років тому

      Alexia Richardson I imagine the information presented in this video would be rejected totally by a literal "the Earth is less than 10K years old" creationist. I wonder if the argument of uniformitarianism vs. catatastrophism would apply here? Maybe the plain was gouged slowly by ice instead?

    • @tikatowowplayer
      @tikatowowplayer 9 років тому

      William Stokes the grand canyon was formed by the Colorado River

    • @williamstokes2312
      @williamstokes2312 9 років тому

      Alexia Richardson Absolutely. Over a great period of time. The video in this post claims that an ice dam kept breaking and released huge amounts of water that did the gouging quickly. I am no great logic guy but I have a problem with visualizing that ice dam remaining ice while the immense amount of liquid water accumulated behind it. More plausible, for the great Northwest, was that a huge amount of ice did the gouging and moved the large rock with opposing sediment layers and also pushed the gravel along slowly as it advanced. Further south, the Colorado River had millions of years to slowly carve out the Grand Canyon.

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 9 років тому

      William Stokes So did it take millions of years to deposit the consecutive layers of water deposited sediment with sea life in them or millions of years to carve out the layers going uphill?

  • @Gohot229
    @Gohot229 9 років тому

    Scabland weed..... the best.....

  • @hedgegraph
    @hedgegraph 10 років тому

    Love your vid! Check out Cyberlink PowerDirector. It has an excellent image stabilization tool! Keep 'em pointed down!!

  • @johngirvan5754
    @johngirvan5754 10 років тому

    That was awesome!

  • @innovationsurvival
    @innovationsurvival 10 років тому

    Thank you for posting.

  • @ekkles9570
    @ekkles9570 11 років тому

    1st comment

  • @Sadizzle82
    @Sadizzle82 11 років тому

    scotty 2 hottie?

  • @Gunnjamin
    @Gunnjamin 11 років тому

    This is awesome, love to see gopro videos of people that can really ski, you charge!

    • @stephenward2743
      @stephenward2743 7 років тому

      Ben Lokhorst Fun fact, the term skiing origonates from the greek word skiiratius meaning amphibious land mammal. Anyway, a meteor hit my swimming pool, got to go!

  • @Shufflebotwannabe
    @Shufflebotwannabe 12 років тому

    0:43 Instabeard!