We're lucky to live in such a time when great teachers like Myron are able to educate us in the comfort of our homes for free. "Lucky" barely touches it--thousands of generations of humans looked at the living rock we stand on and regarded it as timeless and immutable, which we know to be false--it is entirely dynamic and, indeed, *alive.* Thanks so much, Myron.
And yet we have so many conspiracy nuts running around, refusing to acknowledge any information or facts and manipulate others into doing the same. In other words, always share knowledge with others
Denver is not in the mountains 😕 Sry not sry but I live here. Denver is situated in a high arid desert and the mountains are close by. People always associate Denver with mountains because it makes great marketing but you are being sold a lie. Denver is not in the mountains.
“Sold a lie”That sounds a bit dramatic. People associate Denver with the mountains because u r a proverbial stone’s throw or relatively super quick drive to them.
@@Hippydaze35 I'd be angry if Cherry Hill NJ sold itself as a beach town and I got there to find it's an hour drive to the beach. But yet people are fine with Denver pulling this shit. Without the suburban sprawl and manicured landscaping Denver wouldn't have any trees, have sand instead of soil, and paddle cacti would dominate the hillsides. You can be ok with them lying to you but I'm not that stupid.
I literally rearranged my work plan for the day on the fly specifically so that I could put this on my side monitor and work exclusively on the main screen, until the video is over. I *MUST* watch this video *NOW*.
Retired science teacher here. These lessons are wonderful in every way. Smooth, comforting tone, and available to novice and advanced alike. Really enjoyable. Mahalo nui.
Grew up on the front range, went to ted rocks school between the hogback and the amphitheatre. Mount Morrison was my front yard. Spent vacation in Moab. All that now geologic memory, myself dinosaurian.
Myron, I'm a young (relatively; I'm just 27!) Canadian living in Saskatchewan. I've so loved your videos and on location things you show and teach us. I live in a somewhat transitional area between the phanerozoic basin and the precambrian shield. It's mind bogling to think of the history of the rocks around me. Some are upwards of 3 Billion years old. I stop to think of the history they have endured. The archean. The birth of life on our planet. Id often find myself firmly planting head in the rocks and my mind imaging the world when they were formed. These videos and what you show us has had such a profound effect on my present life. I've even been considering returning to school to pursue an education in geology. Thank you. From the bottom of my heart. I look forward to your next video eagerly.
I grew up a bike-ride away from Red Rocks. The Bear Creek runs through there--ice-cold melt-water that lower down becomes a venerable cottonwood riparian corridor, much like all the mountain streams feeding the great Platte and Arkansas Rivers to the east, the Rio Grande to the south and the Colorado River west. Great place for kids, although now the suburban sprawl represents a sad, poorly regulated detriment to the Front Range of Denver. But what a treat it is, 60 years after riding my bike in the summers around the town of Morrison (near Molly Brown's summer bungalow!) to now hear Myron's explanation of how the great Morrison Formation came to be, and how Red Rocks amphitheater is astonishingly older than the Front Range of the modern Rocky Mountains, looming over 14,000 ft behind. Thank you, Myron--I can't tell you how meaningful your video classes are. And those introductory photos of Colorado are really gorgeous.
I'm late, but really glad I found this channel. I live in a mountain area, and my daily drive takes me through time as my mind wonders about its formation and history.
I lived in Denver for a dozen years and I loved exploring the geology of Colorado. I knew the basics about the area, especially Red Rocks but you really expanded my knowledge on the whole deep history. Absolutely wonderful - as usual!
Thank you for making all of your videos! Never, ever knew how little that I knew about the Rockies. That sentence probably didn't make sense, but I'm grateful that you do. Your videos encourage me to pause the video just so I can look up stuff, like the Uncompahgre mountains. Sure glad that the Internet knew what I needed to see because I didn't have a clue on how to spell those mountains!! haha!! : )
Greetings from Boulder! As a local rock climber, I’m so thankful for your videos. I’ve found a lot of evidence of petrified streambeds in the arkose of the Flatirons- long snaking tubes
You may have noticed that the Fountain formation exposed in Eldarado canyon tends to be significantly harder than most of the Fountain formation exposed in the Flatirons. Same rock, although typically more fine grained, but the Eldarado canyon rocks have been cemented with silica (quartz) complements to thermal springs activity. Rocks can have an interesting history post deposition. Geologist call post deposition changes diagenesis. - Long time rock climber.
I’ve always suspected that the eldo rock was fountain, but was always confused by this. I was kind of amazed at how the little chunks of rock in some of the cliffs are so strikingly similar to the Garden of the Gods rock. It just I guess didn’t make sense to me, because Gog rock is very very soft compared to eldo. Still somehow haven’t made it up a flatiron, gotta climb out there, I grew up on North Table, which is kind of out of place in the front range, being a random basalt dike that left a big flat top mountain since it's more resistant @@mandobob
It’s fascinating how the qualities of the fountain change up and down the front range. Have you seen the railroad tracks that run up the fountain formation south of Eldorado Canyon? It starts rising just north of the Ralston Dike- love the geologic story of the table mountains
@@CFEF44AB1399978B0011 Actually some of the rock fins at the GOG are another Ancestral Rockies sourced deposit called the Lyons Formation (also called the Lyons Sandstone). It is mostly wind-blown (eolian) sands that formed dune fields adjacent to the sea. The Lyons SS is named for the type location near the town of Lyons north of Boulder and has been used for many years as a decorative and building stone along the Front Range. The Lyons SS has been used for sidewalks all over Denver - clue, you can see fossil sand/mud ripples. Depending on where you are the Lyons Sandstone can be quite hard or much softer, and that may be what you have observed. Just one more thing, the basalt-capped North and South Table Mesas is actually a flow(s) and not a dike or sill. The flow originated up Ralston Creek north of Golden.
I grew up in the shadows of the Flatirons, and drove past the Hogbacks to the Red Rocks for concerts. I was lucky enough to have a great geology teacher in seventh grade, and have been fascinated ever since. He taught us about the how the Flatirons were created, and I knew that the other side was somewhere near Eagle, but I never did see it. Thank you for teaching us. Your teaching style rocks, and is very uplifting. I am hooked.
I was looking to tell you to come to Denver at Red Rocks and dinosaur ridge. But you already came there ! It's a really interesting place to visit for geological purpose !
Howdy, Myron. Welcome to the Front Range! I live near Boulder and would have offered you a little Colorado hospitality had I known that you were passing through my area. As you know, there's a lot of geology piled into our Centennial State, and isn't it a sad irony that one human life is so short. I'll never get to see it all, but videos like yours help greatly in extending my time here. At the end of each presentation, I'm always curious to see where you'll take us on your next exploration. Thank you, and I'll see you then.
Wow I have lived all over this stuff. I was in Larkspur in the 80's for a couple years. Then again off and on through the 90's. I lost a good friend rock climbing in Garden of the Gods. Gorgeous place though.
I should make everyone I hike with on the front range watch this before hiking any of the hog-backs, or canyon trails in the area. I was at Garden of the gods back in February, and was just mind blown at how such a soft sandstone conglomerate can be so old, and yet so soft that I can pluck little clasts from the rock with relative ease. Sometimes, if you're lucky, you can go just a few miles away from the hogback and see coal beds and limestones with leaf fossils and petrified wood, which really drives home the fact that there were really marshes and swamps and beaches here with the mountains. I highly recommend stopping at Marshal Mesa if you ever visit Boulder, you can see these coal and limestone formations right out in front of the rockies. . It’s really amazing how you connected so many locations together to explain just how all this fits together, and didn’t just tell people how there once was an ancestral rocky mountain range, but showed it so people could see it for themselves. Now I’m curious how you'd show the laromide, and subsequent uplift of the front range, which I only sort of understand at a hand-wavy level.
I live in Boulder County Colorado and have since I was a wee lad~ I’ve Always wondered how the Flatirons and Red Rocks were formed~ This video was So informative and Awesome l~ Thank You~!!!
Mountains recycle! Now cover all that with trees and you get my beloved Blue Ridge. Come to the east, please, and check out the road cuts here, or Natural Chimneys, Endless Caverns... It's crazy fun!
My favorite UA-cam show starts off in my very own back yard. I do have to get up in Myron's neighborhood to take a look at the Big Horn Basin first hand. Thanks Myron for your work.
Absolutely amazing. I never thought of Red Rocks that way. Just admired them. Wow, that was thought provoking. Living in a Denver 'burb, I'm pretty familiar with these rocks. So glad you made this video, Myron. Thank you.
My lucky day when I discovered this Channel and the explanation of this Great World and our Beautiful Mountains and how they formed. Thank You, Myron !
Thanks Myron, born and raised in the Morrison area but now live between the Grand Mesa and the Uncompahgre plateau. You have helped me understand some of the different geology in this area. Thanks.
This blew my mind Dr. Cook. I am going to have to watch it a couple more times for it to completely soak-in. I grew up on the west side of Denver, along the hogback wondering how it was formed and how the red rock formation fit in geologically and it has never been resolved for me until now with your explanation, so thank you for that! I hope you had time to visit Dinosaur Ridge, just a few miles north of Red Rocks amphitheater while you were there. There are dinosaur footprints fully exposed along the roadside on the rock walls. It too is a spectacular site to see and just a couple minutes drive from C-470 there. I have also been fortunate to see the areas of southern Utah that were once the great sand dunes you spoke of. Also a site to behold. Now it all is starting to make sense to me. Thank you once again for helping make sense of something so complex as this for my small mind.
Myron, I am such a great fan. As a James Madison University geology student, I turn to your content almost daily. One of the reasons I admire your work is that I am able to simplify it to others and I think that’s indicative of your mastery in this field. Please continue with the content, I truly enjoy your enthusiasm.
Thank you, Myron, for another excellent lesson in Rocky Mountain geology. Although I live in Ukraine, I vote in El Paso County where the Garden of the Gods is located. I thoroughly enjoyed learning about how this area came into being. Slava Ukraini!
Woohoo a new video I have been waiting to hear my Bob Ross of geology! Especially since it's on mountains I don't have any of those here in Florida lol
I just love your enthusiasm for geology! I truly enjoy learning from you, Professor Myron! I don't know if you're actually a professor, but it's like having your own personal geology teacher watching these videos 🤗
I just found your videos, and I love how you break it down to make it easy to understand, and the places you get to travel to are beautiful! Is there any way you could do a video looking at Makoshika State Park in eastern Montana? I think it could tie into this video, and the one on the ancient seaway as well.
The spectacular beauty of the opening scenes; the grandeur of the formations; the John Grisham novel type exposition of the hows and whys (ok that's excessive; lol) and lastly the warmth and sincerity of the presentation are kinda heartwarming. Many thanks for chipping away at that mountain of ignorance in all of us!
Your videos are amazing I really like to think about how everything was formed. The areas that really gets me going is where the layers of earth is pushed up in different directions within a small area.
Incredible video! I have 3 questions, just not enough info anywhere 😭 1. Was the front range much taller than today at the time when the laramide orogeny was in full swing ? 2. Was the Colorado Springs area covered in ice during the Pleistocene ? 3. What were the Eastern Colorado plains like during the Miocene epoch ? These questions occupy my mind day and night for the past 2 yrs😊 Would love any feed back please 🙏🌲🌲
holy cow... my mind is officially boggled now... that was fascinating! I love the way you teach... on the ground, in the field, from the air and pulling it together on the whiteboard! Thank you!
I'm glad you mentioned the Flatirons. I've been staring at them out the window from the beginning of the video. I've heard of the Fountain Formation, but never realized it's so old.
Myron, thank you so much for this video. Finally a video on the front range of Colorado. Recently I become very interested in geology. It’s very fascinating and you make it all the more fascinating. But videos mostly cover Utah and from you Wyoming. These sites are too far away for me. But I live within 30 minutes of these red rocks so this video is altogether more exciting for me. I have a drone also and I’m looking forward to taking a few shots of these sites.
Thanks for visiting so many places I love and have studied extensively. Excellent explanation of the complicated Front Range Geology discussed around so many campfires. (My Master's Thesis was on the faulting along the Front Range.) Cheers!
@@myroncook I always refer to the Ancestral Rockies as "Rocky 2" and the current Range as "Rocky 4". 1-The Nonconformity 2 - The Ancestral. 3 - The Laramide. 4 - The Current Rockies. Colorado has been through a lot!
This was a great little lecture. I saw Peter Gabriel at red rocks a few years back before the concert. I went and looked at all of those dinosaur tracks in the area. Anyway, the concert was amazing the sound of the surroundings. While the concert was in progress. There was a lightning storm in the distance that added to the amazing experience.
I'm 57 years old born,raised in denver. This was fascinating. All my time here I've never seen anyone explain it all so easily absorbed into my brain. I couldn't stop watching. Thank you sir you have a gift.
A video from our beloved Myron Cook is always a great way to cap off a day. Thank you for all your hard work! edit: And you start off in Red Rocks!! So glad to hear youve seen a show there, Id love to myself one day!!!
Thank you so much for educating me on the red rocks. I always wondered how "The Garden of the Gods" was created. I was thru the tree back in 1987 with my family. I was only 15 then and absolutely enthralled with them. Love your white boards.
I can't tell you how much I enjoyed this "field trip". I only wish that I had seen it years ago when I took a trip to Colorado. And, I loved the John Denver reference. Thank you so much, Professor Cook!
I used to bike ride to Red Rocks from Denver in the 1960s as a kid and look at the formations. I did have an interest in geology back then. The dinosaur tracks on the east side of the Dakota hogback to the gneiss and granite on Mount Morrison behind the amphitheater. Someone tried to put a tram up Mt. Morrison once and a rock bed and a rail sticking out was left of that effort. I have a couple of ancestors that lived in the Morrison area herding sheep in the late 1800s. Thanks Myron! Brings memories!
My aunt took me to the Garden of the Gods back in 1985. I was very impressed by what I saw. Unfortunately I wasn’t into photography back then. So I have to enjoy your video to see them again.
Been watching and listening, enjoying and learning from these videos for a while, but it just struck me (GenX'r here) that the kindness, peace, and pace of his voice reminds me of Mr Rodgers. Thank you Mr Cook.
We're lucky to live in such a time when great teachers like Myron are able to educate us in the comfort of our homes for free. "Lucky" barely touches it--thousands of generations of humans looked at the living rock we stand on and regarded it as timeless and immutable, which we know to be false--it is entirely dynamic and, indeed, *alive.* Thanks so much, Myron.
And yet we have so many conspiracy nuts running around, refusing to acknowledge any information or facts and manipulate others into doing the same. In other words, always share knowledge with others
Also Roger Spurr at mudfossil university. Check Mr Roger out he's got DNA and cat scan evidence
Denver is not in the mountains 😕
Sry not sry but I live here. Denver is situated in a high arid desert and the mountains are close by. People always associate Denver with mountains because it makes great marketing but you are being sold a lie. Denver is not in the mountains.
“Sold a lie”That sounds a bit dramatic.
People associate Denver with the mountains because u r a proverbial stone’s throw or relatively super quick drive to them.
@@Hippydaze35 I'd be angry if Cherry Hill NJ sold itself as a beach town and I got there to find it's an hour drive to the beach. But yet people are fine with Denver pulling this shit. Without the suburban sprawl and manicured landscaping Denver wouldn't have any trees, have sand instead of soil, and paddle cacti would dominate the hillsides. You can be ok with them lying to you but I'm not that stupid.
Myron drops a video, and I drop everything I’m doing to watch. 🥞
I literally rearranged my work plan for the day on the fly specifically so that I could put this on my side monitor and work exclusively on the main screen, until the video is over. I *MUST* watch this video *NOW*.
What a beautiful place to live
Retired science teacher here. These lessons are wonderful in every way. Smooth, comforting tone, and available to novice and advanced alike. Really enjoyable. Mahalo nui.
Wow, thank you!
What a pleasure it is to go on these visual and informative journeys with you! Absolutely magnificent! Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Grew up on the front range, went to ted rocks school between the hogback and the amphitheatre. Mount Morrison was my front yard. Spent vacation in Moab. All that now geologic memory, myself dinosaurian.
That was sneaky Myron.... About to go to bed.
Had to get a beer and sit back and learn... Thanks mate!
Enjoy!
haha, same here, I couldn't stop watching.
I’m gettin paid to watch Myron! I love my job!
You are the BEST geology professor I ever heard !! Thanks for educating to all of us.
Myron, I'm a young (relatively; I'm just 27!) Canadian living in Saskatchewan. I've so loved your videos and on location things you show and teach us. I live in a somewhat transitional area between the phanerozoic basin and the precambrian shield. It's mind bogling to think of the history of the rocks around me. Some are upwards of 3 Billion years old. I stop to think of the history they have endured. The archean. The birth of life on our planet. Id often find myself firmly planting head in the rocks and my mind imaging the world when they were formed. These videos and what you show us has had such a profound effect on my present life. I've even been considering returning to school to pursue an education in geology. Thank you. From the bottom of my heart. I look forward to your next video eagerly.
I'm humbled that I somehow have had a positive influence in your life. You seem to have a "feel" for our planet like I do.
Also from sask and we have some crazy rocks here for sure
Your work is amazing and your presentation is so personable.
Warm greetings and best wishes from the west coast of Ireland 🇮🇪🇺🇸
Thank you very much!
I grew up a bike-ride away from Red Rocks. The Bear Creek runs through there--ice-cold melt-water that lower down becomes a venerable cottonwood riparian corridor, much like all the mountain streams feeding the great Platte and Arkansas Rivers to the east, the Rio Grande to the south and the Colorado River west.
Great place for kids, although now the suburban sprawl represents a sad, poorly regulated detriment to the Front Range of Denver.
But what a treat it is, 60 years after riding my bike in the summers around the town of Morrison (near Molly Brown's summer bungalow!) to now hear Myron's explanation of how the great Morrison Formation came to be, and how Red Rocks amphitheater is astonishingly older than the Front Range of the modern Rocky Mountains, looming over 14,000 ft behind.
Thank you, Myron--I can't tell you how meaningful your video classes are. And those introductory photos of Colorado are really gorgeous.
Thanks for sharing
I'm late, but really glad I found this channel. I live in a mountain area, and my daily drive takes me through time as my mind wonders about its formation and history.
Okay so this one of my favorites so far. Explained so much about one of my favorite drives in the whole country. Thanks Myron. ❤
Awesome! Thank you!
I always look forward to your geological excursions, they never disappoint.
Jerry
I lived in Denver for a dozen years and I loved exploring the geology of Colorado. I knew the basics about the area, especially Red Rocks but you really expanded my knowledge on the whole deep history. Absolutely wonderful - as usual!
Hello Douglas 👋
Thank you for making all of your videos! Never, ever knew how little that I knew about the Rockies. That sentence probably didn't make sense, but I'm grateful that you do. Your videos encourage me to pause the video just so I can look up stuff, like the Uncompahgre mountains. Sure glad that the Internet knew what I needed to see because I didn't have a clue on how to spell those mountains!! haha!! : )
Best geology content on the internet - absolutely amazing. Thank you so much Myron!
Greetings from Boulder! As a local rock climber, I’m so thankful for your videos. I’ve found a lot of evidence of petrified streambeds in the arkose of the Flatirons- long snaking tubes
That is awesome!
You may have noticed that the Fountain formation exposed in Eldarado canyon tends to be significantly harder than most of the Fountain formation exposed in the Flatirons. Same rock, although typically more fine grained, but the Eldarado canyon rocks have been cemented with silica (quartz) complements to thermal springs activity. Rocks can have an interesting history post deposition. Geologist call post deposition changes diagenesis. - Long time rock climber.
I’ve always suspected that the eldo rock was fountain, but was always confused by this. I was kind of amazed at how the little chunks of rock in some of the cliffs are so strikingly similar to the Garden of the Gods rock. It just I guess didn’t make sense to me, because Gog rock is very very soft compared to eldo. Still somehow haven’t made it up a flatiron, gotta climb out there, I grew up on North Table, which is kind of out of place in the front range, being a random basalt dike that left a big flat top mountain since it's more resistant @@mandobob
It’s fascinating how the qualities of the fountain change up and down the front range. Have you seen the railroad tracks that run up the fountain formation south of Eldorado Canyon? It starts rising just north of the Ralston Dike- love the geologic story of the table mountains
@@CFEF44AB1399978B0011 Actually some of the rock fins at the GOG are another Ancestral Rockies sourced deposit called the Lyons Formation (also called the Lyons Sandstone). It is mostly wind-blown (eolian) sands that formed dune fields adjacent to the sea. The Lyons SS is named for the type location near the town of Lyons north of Boulder and has been used for many years as a decorative and building stone along the Front Range. The Lyons SS has been used for sidewalks all over Denver - clue, you can see fossil sand/mud ripples. Depending on where you are the Lyons Sandstone can be quite hard or much softer, and that may be what you have observed. Just one more thing, the basalt-capped North and South Table Mesas is actually a flow(s) and not a dike or sill. The flow originated up Ralston Creek north of Golden.
I am a simple man: Myron's dulcet tones in a new silky smooth upload cause me to watch the video, enjoy the video, and upvote the video. Simple!
I grew up in the shadows of the Flatirons, and drove past the Hogbacks to the Red Rocks for concerts. I was lucky enough to have a great geology teacher in seventh grade, and have been fascinated ever since. He taught us about the how the Flatirons were created, and I knew that the other side was somewhere near Eagle, but I never did see it. Thank you for teaching us. Your teaching style rocks, and is very uplifting. I am hooked.
I've never been more excited to make some observations!
love that!
I was looking to tell you to come to Denver at Red Rocks and dinosaur ridge. But you already came there ! It's a really interesting place to visit for geological purpose !
2 minutes after posting. I’m watching. Go Myron, Okay, why was only a few thousand feet red?
Howdy, Myron. Welcome to the Front Range! I live near Boulder and would have offered you a little Colorado hospitality had I known that you were passing through my area.
As you know, there's a lot of geology piled into our Centennial State, and isn't it a sad irony that one human life is so short. I'll never get to see it all, but videos like yours help greatly in extending my time here. At the end of each presentation, I'm always curious to see where you'll take us on your next exploration. Thank you, and I'll see you then.
thanks!
I feel just as fortunate to watch your videos! Thank you!
Wow I have lived all over this stuff. I was in Larkspur in the 80's for a couple years. Then again off and on through the 90's. I lost a good friend rock climbing in Garden of the Gods. Gorgeous place though.
Myron is a “rock” star! I live in Denver, and love his clear explanations of the beauty I see around me every day.
I genuinely wish more of my teachers would have been more like Myron.
What’s up
@@ShelleShelle-xc2qi The sky 😋
While you blow our minds, I find it wonderfully soothing when you present us with your trusty little tree on your whiteboard. Love your presentations!
Myron, you inspire me with your beauty.
Also the Rock formations and their absolute stunning beauty. Thanx
This is a very timely video, as I hope to make my first visit to Colorado later this year. I'm so looking forward to seeing this landscape.
We miss you John.
a masterful explanation Myron. Thank you
Very welcome
I live very close to Red Rocks. I had to watch. The geology around this area is fascinating.
I should make everyone I hike with on the front range watch this before hiking any of the hog-backs, or canyon trails in the area. I was at Garden of the gods back in February, and was just mind blown at how such a soft sandstone conglomerate can be so old, and yet so soft that I can pluck little clasts from the rock with relative ease. Sometimes, if you're lucky, you can go just a few miles away from the hogback and see coal beds and limestones with leaf fossils and petrified wood, which really drives home the fact that there were really marshes and swamps and beaches here with the mountains. I highly recommend stopping at Marshal Mesa if you ever visit Boulder, you can see these coal and limestone formations right out in front of the rockies. . It’s really amazing how you connected so many locations together to explain just how all this fits together, and didn’t just tell people how there once was an ancestral rocky mountain range, but showed it so people could see it for themselves. Now I’m curious how you'd show the laromide, and subsequent uplift of the front range, which I only sort of understand at a hand-wavy level.
You live in an awesome area...lots of geology
Thank you again. You're the best teacher I've ever had!
Wow, thanks!
When Bob Rocks drops a video, I drop what I'm doing to watch. Thank you Myron, these videos give me a sense of calm I oft lack in my hectic life.
The joy of seeing the past through your eyes is a great joy to me. Thank you really isn't enough to say.
Myron Cook and Nick Zentner geology lectures on the same morning. It's already a good day.
I live in Boulder County Colorado and have since I was a wee lad~ I’ve Always wondered how the Flatirons and Red Rocks were formed~ This video was So informative and Awesome l~ Thank You~!!!
It's great fun to have you shine a light on our amazing home. Helps me see and feel the magic of our Mother Earth and our very fleeting existence. 🙂
love to hear this!
Another great video Myron. Somehow you convey not only the science of geology but it's spirit. Safe travels.
Mountains recycle! Now cover all that with trees and you get my beloved Blue Ridge. Come to the east, please, and check out the road cuts here, or Natural Chimneys, Endless Caverns... It's crazy fun!
You're great, helping me to understand, have a lode claim ,I still have more to learn about it, granite diorite
My favorite UA-cam show starts off in my very own back yard. I do have to get up in Myron's neighborhood to take a look at the Big Horn Basin first hand. Thanks Myron for your work.
Absolutely amazing. I never thought of Red Rocks that way. Just admired them. Wow, that was thought provoking. Living in a Denver 'burb, I'm pretty familiar with these rocks. So glad you made this video, Myron. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
My lucky day when I discovered this Channel and the explanation of this Great World and our Beautiful Mountains and how they formed.
Thank You, Myron !
Wonderful!
great presentations! You are a wonderful geology teacher
Thank you! 😃
The living earth is such a beautiful thing to behold.❤
Thanks Myron, born and raised in the Morrison area but now live between the Grand Mesa and the Uncompahgre plateau. You have helped me understand some of the different geology in this area. Thanks.
thank you for visiting!
Thank you for the wonderful interpretation of the rebirth of the Rockies. Earth's History is so exciting when one learns the language of the rocks.
This blew my mind Dr. Cook. I am going to have to watch it a couple more times for it to completely soak-in. I grew up on the west side of Denver, along the hogback wondering how it was formed and how the red rock formation fit in geologically and it has never been resolved for me until now with your explanation, so thank you for that! I hope you had time to visit Dinosaur Ridge, just a few miles north of Red Rocks amphitheater while you were there. There are dinosaur footprints fully exposed along the roadside on the rock walls. It too is a spectacular site to see and just a couple minutes drive from C-470 there. I have also been fortunate to see the areas of southern Utah that were once the great sand dunes you spoke of. Also a site to behold. Now it all is starting to make sense to me. Thank you once again for helping make sense of something so complex as this for my small mind.
Thanks for the feedbacK! I have been to Dinosaur Ridge...very cool
Myron, I am such a great fan. As a James Madison University geology student, I turn to your content almost daily. One of the reasons I admire your work is that I am able to simplify it to others and I think that’s indicative of your mastery in this field. Please continue with the content, I truly enjoy your enthusiasm.
Love this feedback!
Thank you, Myron, for another excellent lesson in Rocky Mountain geology. Although I live in Ukraine, I vote in El Paso County where the Garden of the Gods is located. I thoroughly enjoyed learning about how this area came into being. Slava Ukraini!
Thank you Myron! That filled in some blank spots in my understanding of the Rockies and the Ancestral Rockies!
Excellent!
Woohoo a new video I have been waiting to hear my Bob Ross of geology! Especially since it's on mountains I don't have any of those here in Florida lol
I always like to set time aside to really follow the narrative Myron builds. I always learn something new 🙏
Thank you Myron for yet another insightful video.
I just love your enthusiasm for geology! I truly enjoy learning from you, Professor Myron! I don't know if you're actually a professor, but it's like having your own personal geology teacher watching these videos 🤗
My Favorit places is, Purgatory River Canyon Lands in Southeastern Colorado. From Las Animas Colorado. to Trinidad
Colorado.
I just found your videos, and I love how you break it down to make it easy to understand, and the places you get to travel to are beautiful! Is there any way you could do a video looking at Makoshika State Park in eastern Montana? I think it could tie into this video, and the one on the ancient seaway as well.
That is a very neat area...recently helped some high school students there...via video
Thanks, Myron.👍
The spectacular beauty of the opening scenes; the grandeur of the formations; the John Grisham novel type exposition of the hows and whys (ok that's excessive; lol) and lastly the warmth and sincerity of the presentation are kinda heartwarming. Many thanks for chipping away at that mountain of ignorance in all of us!
thanks!
Observations!
What a great word.
👀🔎💡
well said!
Yea, I just love your 34:13 hat.😮
This videos and voice is perfect to ease into Sleep.
Your videos are amazing I really like to think about how everything was formed. The areas that really gets me going is where the layers of earth is pushed up in different directions within a small area.
Well I guess it’s scotch & cigar time in the morning!
🥃🥃☘️🇮🇪🇺🇸
@@ClannCholmainwas a coin flip between Corryvreckan & Red Breast 15, Irish it was!
@@revolvermaster4939 a man of good taste.
@@ClannCholmain likewise my brother!
Incredible video!
I have 3 questions, just not enough info anywhere 😭
1. Was the front range much taller than today at the time when the laramide orogeny was in full swing ?
2. Was the Colorado Springs area covered in ice during the Pleistocene ?
3. What were the Eastern Colorado plains like during the Miocene epoch ?
These questions occupy my mind day and night for the past 2 yrs😊 Would love any feed back please 🙏🌲🌲
mountains weren't much taller, the springs wasn't covered in ice
@@myroncook Thanks!😊
Thank you, Myron! I love having a deeper understanding of the landscapes that I hike through!
holy cow... my mind is officially boggled now... that was fascinating! I love the way you teach... on the ground, in the field, from the air and pulling it together on the whiteboard! Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I'm glad you mentioned the Flatirons. I've been staring at them out the window from the beginning of the video. I've heard of the Fountain Formation, but never realized it's so old.
I live in Broomfield, just east of the Flatirons. I really enjoyed watching this video. Thanks so much!
thanks!
I'm in Arvada so love the views
Blowing my mind with every video. I will never look at the Colorado Rockies the same again.
love to hear that!
Super interesting and kind of mind blowing to think about an entire range that was around before the current rockies
I fell in love with geology in 1980. Thanks for bringing that wonder back...
love to hear that!
Myron, thank you so much for this video. Finally a video on the front range of Colorado. Recently I become very interested in geology. It’s very fascinating and you make it all the more fascinating. But videos mostly cover Utah and from you Wyoming. These sites are too far away for me. But I live within 30 minutes of these red rocks so this video is altogether more exciting for me. I have a drone also and I’m looking forward to taking a few shots of these sites.
Thanks for visiting so many places I love and have studied extensively. Excellent explanation of the complicated Front Range Geology discussed around so many campfires. (My Master's Thesis was on the faulting along the Front Range.) Cheers!
cool
@@myroncook I always refer to the Ancestral Rockies as "Rocky 2" and the current Range as "Rocky 4". 1-The Nonconformity 2 - The Ancestral. 3 - The Laramide. 4 - The Current Rockies. Colorado has been through a lot!
My goodness. What a story over time. Thank you.
Thank you for another beautiful educational and interesting geology video. ❤❤❤
So nice of you
This was a great little lecture.
I saw Peter Gabriel at red rocks a few years back before the concert. I went and looked at all of those dinosaur tracks in the area. Anyway, the concert was amazing the sound of the surroundings. While the concert was in progress. There was a lightning storm in the distance that added to the amazing experience.
Fantastic video again. Thank you for a beautiful explanation, Myron. Uluru in Australia was an ancient alluvial fan from ancient mountains as well.
Interesting!
I feel very fortunate as well, this one was exceptional and it shows in your smile. Many thanks!
Many thanks!
I'm 57 years old born,raised in denver. This was fascinating. All my time here I've never seen anyone explain it all so easily absorbed into my brain. I couldn't stop watching. Thank you sir you have a gift.
Thanks!
Now I want to drive all down the Rockies, snaking back and forth to see all these amazing sights and sites!
And you can see the Dinosaur Footprints across from Red Rocks Ampitheater...there is a hiking trail above the footprints
Great stuff Myron love what you’re doing thanks
Love, love, love these journeys in geology. Thank you Myron!
My pleasure!
A video from our beloved Myron Cook is always a great way to cap off a day. Thank you for all your hard work!
edit: And you start off in Red Rocks!! So glad to hear youve seen a show there, Id love to myself one day!!!
do it!
This drone footage is incredible
I love your videos! You don't just highlight oddities you explain how to interpret them and that is what I love to learn
Awesome, thank you!
My cousins live in Roxborough Park. I’m always so jealous with the beautiful scenery they have in their backyard. Excited to learn more about it!
It has great hiking but the ridge across from the Ampitheater is Dakota/Dinosaur Ridge with Dinosaur Footprints and you can hike that ridge.
Enjoyed walking through millions of years of the Rocky Mountain range! Equally enjoyed the art / drawings of the past.
Thanks, Myron, for this amazing class. What enchanted views! I live in Brazil and I'm always enjoying your videos.
Glad you like them!
Thank you so much for educating me on the red rocks. I always wondered how "The Garden of the Gods" was created. I was thru the tree back in 1987 with my family. I was only 15 then and absolutely enthralled with them. Love your white boards.
I can't tell you how much I enjoyed this "field trip". I only wish that I had seen it years ago when I took a trip to Colorado. And, I loved the John Denver reference. Thank you so much, Professor Cook!
Enjoy your videos immensely. As a wyoming native, I have visited many if the places you describe and your insights have been inspiring to me.
love to hear that!
I used to bike ride to Red Rocks from Denver in the 1960s as a kid and look at the formations. I did have an interest in geology back then. The dinosaur tracks on the east side of the Dakota hogback to the gneiss and granite on Mount Morrison behind the amphitheater. Someone tried to put a tram up Mt. Morrison once and a rock bed and a rail sticking out was left of that effort. I have a couple of ancestors that lived in the Morrison area herding sheep in the late 1800s. Thanks Myron! Brings memories!
neat story
My aunt took me to the Garden of the Gods back in 1985. I was very impressed by what I saw. Unfortunately I wasn’t into photography back then. So I have to enjoy your video to see them again.
Another great adventure with mr. Myron - thank you sir, keep well.
I love opening youtube on my computer to see a video of Myron ready to watch!
Been watching and listening, enjoying and learning from these videos for a while, but it just struck me (GenX'r here) that the kindness, peace, and pace of his voice reminds me of Mr Rodgers.
Thank you Mr Cook.