Geology of Minecraft: Caves!

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  • Опубліковано 5 вер 2024
  • I look at the caves of Minecraft and compare them to real life caves.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 540

  • @jonogrossett8407
    @jonogrossett8407 Рік тому +590

    As a hydrogeologist I love that you went and covered the caves, pretty perfect all round. Its great to see that you're out there raising awareness that we exist! Excellent use of the command blocks and the presentation is top notch.

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому +141

      Thanks, glad to hear I did alright. Always a bit nervous talking about areas that aren’t my specific discipline.

    • @nousernamejoshua1556
      @nousernamejoshua1556 6 місяців тому +5

      ​@gneissname Apologies to Jono. Gne, would you branch out on biometric weather, how climates form of geological formation, clustered biometric confluences, conditions and active patterns and maybe touch on land migration of biometric which are out of place and touch on how those affect weather patterns and speculate the pattern if migration hadn't occurred.
      Really wanting to learn of Utah, South Dakota.

    • @nousernamejoshua1556
      @nousernamejoshua1556 6 місяців тому +4

      How realistic are the caves? What is the longest cave network, and stability risks? Are the walls of lava tubes uniquely hardened in some way? Is it the same process at the mantle layer?

  • @NotShilKa
    @NotShilKa Рік тому +1277

    Quick tip;
    Instead of deleting files, you can share a drive folder and update the map inside it, so you won't need to change links with each update

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому +387

      Good idea

    • @TheTanadu
      @TheTanadu Рік тому

      @@gneissname I'd even thing further, and maybe "closed" for updating but repository on github, so people may download version of map they want, like your first version where caves weren't covered or something

  • @ainstrument
    @ainstrument Рік тому +768

    I have a materials science background, so the only thing I know about geology are the minerals and crystals. It's great being exposed to this field in such an approachable way. These videos absolutely feel like a field trip, with you walking along the different 'exhibits' and the being able to pick which blocks to show in the cave visualization. My favorite part is the cave formation process, which is something I can totally imagine in a museum.

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому +146

      Thanks, there is a lot of overlap with material science and geology. I have had several students go on to work in a materials related job.

    • @Ziggy-hy4fn
      @Ziggy-hy4fn Рік тому +11

      It does really feel like a field trip!

  • @vit.budina
    @vit.budina Рік тому +147

    I love when grown adults who know a lot about a certain complex topic delve into some of these more silly areas of their profession. Seeing how they treat these seemingly childish areas with respect and really put the time into their work to explain stuff in a way that is easy to understand is always fun. I'm not a person who would normally find interest in geology, but you presented it in a very entertaining way!

  • @tvre0
    @tvre0 Рік тому +494

    Nice! As somebody who knows next to nothing about real geology, I’m loving this series

    • @LaughingOrange
      @LaughingOrange Рік тому +22

      That's what a teacher who loves both their field and teaching does. They make anything interesting to anyone.

    • @Skulkin11
      @Skulkin11 7 місяців тому +3

      Shia LaBeouf?

    • @gui18bif
      @gui18bif 6 місяців тому +1

      ? ​@@Skulkin11

  • @commentOwO
    @commentOwO Рік тому +235

    You should talk about the "sinkhole" formation seeds, don't think they're similar to anything irl but they're very interesting in game

    • @muelesariocontra
      @muelesariocontra Рік тому +12

      Sinkholes actually exist in real life, as a consequence of karst subsidence and other factors

    • @commentOwO
      @commentOwO Рік тому +59

      @@muelesariocontra i know but i don't think they're like the weird ones in minecraft

    • @antoinedube-cote155
      @antoinedube-cote155 2 місяці тому

      @@muelesariocontra probably not as deep and wide though

  • @SupersuMC
    @SupersuMC Рік тому +103

    I've always thought of ravines as exposed seismic faults, but that's just my take on it. And we all know how sinkholes can form in Minecraft, especially deserts.
    Also, no mention of aquifers?

  • @anoNEMOs
    @anoNEMOs 7 місяців тому +28

    Recently, when watching Daskalos (the archeologist who did "bronze age minecraft" and "trail ruins excavation"), I thought to myself that it would be great if other scientist started using minecraft to educate people. The first thing I thought of was geology. And a few days later youtube recommended me this channel.

  • @msteph2236
    @msteph2236 Рік тому +74

    I had zero interest in geology before seeing this series and now I’m researching geology of where I live. Awesome content man!

    • @nicreven
      @nicreven 6 місяців тому +6

      i guess you could say
      geology rocks

    • @that_tvhead
      @that_tvhead 3 місяці тому +1

      I loved my geology class when I was younger, and I still found geology cool, but this channel reignited me actually looking into it at all.

  • @alicemursteinlesbefaen666
    @alicemursteinlesbefaen666 Рік тому +56

    entry level science videos like (especially about geology) this are actually such a huge inspiration for the workdbuilding of my fantasy stories, thanks!

  • @aceitedeolivas1997
    @aceitedeolivas1997 Рік тому +88

    you mentioning yellowstone when talking about caves makes me wish that you gave your geological insight into a texture pack called Terralith. it is a resource pack that overhauls the biome generation of the overworld. it changes the shape and feel of most biomes, as well as adding a bunch of new (mostly realistic) ones by remixing vanilla blocks.

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому +57

      Thanks, several people have wanted me to look at terrafirmacraft too. Maybe I can do an impressions video or something.

    • @toatrika2443
      @toatrika2443 Рік тому +30

      Its a datapack/mod, not a resource or texture pack. The latter two arent able to change the content of the game world, only how what already exists looks

    • @EmilySmirleGURPS
      @EmilySmirleGURPS Рік тому +3

      @@toatrika2443 Terrafirmacraft is a separate thing from Terralith.

    • @toatrika2443
      @toatrika2443 Рік тому +9

      @@EmilySmirleGURPS im aware. I was responding to OP

    • @BanditLeader
      @BanditLeader 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@toatrika2443by technicality, all datapacks are resource packs. And the terralith "mod" is just a repacked datapack

  • @bpn12123
    @bpn12123 Рік тому +16

    I study Mining and Metallurgical engineering and I had a fair amount of geology, mineralogy and petrology classes. During all those classes we would be provided with crappy pictures of how "things" happened (formation of volcanoes etc) while in fact minecraft is a perfect tool to demonstrate things like these. Especially the 2D (17:38) explanation of caves formation could work with so many examples like explaining faults, rifts, the movements of tectonic plates and so on. Your videos are a great entry level to your field that I can show my younger brother and still find it entertaining but also informative. You seem to have created the "Minecraft Education Edition" that Mojang should have made. Excelent work! Can't wait for more videos!
    ps. In many videos you mention real life examples of locations and formations, it would be great if you added some pictures during the videos as a showcase of these exaples.

  • @sigmasuniverse
    @sigmasuniverse Рік тому +49

    Seeing those real life examples was amazing! Thank you for taking the extra time and effort you took to record that part for us to see.

  • @mo0od749
    @mo0od749 Рік тому +17

    Hello! I’d love to see you talk about oceans next! I read a paper called “Not a bathtub: A consideration of sea-level physics for archaeological models of human migration” that talks about the weird ways oceans behave in the real world. Do check it out!

  • @benjigalvani
    @benjigalvani Рік тому +19

    Interesting seeing the cave formation bit about water interacting with limestone, and seeing the water level change. In Terraria's caves, when you fing water and dig away, the water level changes accordingly with the direction you're digging

  • @wuketuke6601
    @wuketuke6601 Рік тому +2

    when you talk about things outside of minecraft, like the collapsing caves in china, or the lava tubes, it would be a great addition to show images of what you mean

  • @croissantman8809
    @croissantman8809 Рік тому +19

    there is also another rare / lesser known type of limestone karst where the limestone is corroded from the bottom by the ascention of sulfur based chemicals , turned into sulfuric acid by some bacterias , these caves have a lot of gypsum inside them (in a "normal" limestone karst , gypsum is very rare beceause of its high solvability ) .
    this type of karst is very rare and often present in very dry areas , or areas with a very limited "bassin versant" ( idk how to translate this one ) , in europe we have around two cave systems like this ,in america lechugilla cave if i recall the name correcly is one of the biggest example of this kind of karst .
    also i think it would be very nice (even if almost impossible to put in the game ) to add in minecraft a more "alpine" and young type of karst , with lots of meanders , fossile and active conduits and an important vertical layer feeding its water into a more horizontal interconnection of collectors before entering a submerged area and resurging somewhere .

  • @darkhawk155
    @darkhawk155 Рік тому +21

    Really slick visualization with the cross section advancing through time! Really liked the details comparing the in-game and IRL cave types, super interesting stuff communicated very well. Thanks for sharing your expertise!

  • @Paint_The_Future
    @Paint_The_Future Рік тому +159

    What cave biomes would you add to Minecraft?
    I've been endlessly exploring the big cave next to my base and I can travel extremely far underground. Dozens of hours of exploring and it never stops. I'm wondering if these caves are so numerous and large, then it must be technically possible to travel from one end of the world (the "Farlands") to the other end without coming up to the surface. I don't know how you would find that out though.

    • @connordarvall8482
      @connordarvall8482 Рік тому +59

      I'd love some glacial caves and lava tubes in Minecraft. Other ones I can think of are mushroom jungles due to how much space some of those newer caves have. Another one is groundwater oceans that could change the cave generation to be more open, maybe with some floating structures to mix up how they are traversed. Another idea is caves with naturally occurring glass to add a splash of colour to the underground with some lava lakes to be a bit more blatant about the volcanic glass reference.

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому +154

      It would be cool to have a bioluminescent cave biome, maybe specifically for underwater caves or something.

    • @padoin5332
      @padoin5332 Рік тому +24

      I'm surprised there isn't a volcanic kinda cave yet

    • @liamisafireplace
      @liamisafireplace Рік тому +23

      it’s a bit of a odd answer, but there are some minecraft seeds that happen to come out kinda weird where many generated structures (including caves) repeat infinitely along an axis, meaning that there would be caves that definitionally span the length of the world

    • @TheRedSmarty
      @TheRedSmarty Рік тому +5

      ​@@liamisafireplace I don't think those exist anymore after the world generation changes of Caves & Cliffs.

  • @biscade
    @biscade Рік тому +78

    can real life dripstone actually grow *that* large?

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому +139

      I have seen some pretty big formations, the largest stalagmite found is in Vietnam and its like 70 meters tall.

    • @biscade
      @biscade Рік тому +21

      @@gneissname but about a big stalactite, wouldn’t it break off or collapse?
      edit: woah 70 meters is really big

    • @Highlandword9
      @Highlandword9 Рік тому +3

      @@gneissname Speleothems are cool 😎

    • @Highlandword9
      @Highlandword9 Рік тому +7

      @@biscade sometimes, usually not

    • @piersonlawrence3467
      @piersonlawrence3467 Рік тому +8

      @@biscade They can and do get that big in large enough caves, they are soiid mineral rock afterall.

  • @skyheaven8257
    @skyheaven8257 Рік тому +1

    dear wake up,new geology of minecraft episode dropped

  • @vadernation1233
    @vadernation1233 Рік тому +18

    He’s back! So glad you’re bringing back this series it’s what brought me to your channel and as a big geology nerd I’m adoring it.

  • @captainfraser3827
    @captainfraser3827 Рік тому +5

    0:50 the amount of mobs that spawn specifically in these caves is actually noticably denser though, since the light sources act to restrict the area they can spawn in, not the total amount of mobs that can spawn (verify this)

    • @catharsis9789
      @catharsis9789 Рік тому +1

      correct they will all spawn more densly in a corner without light

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому +6

      yeah so the lush caves are serene and you walk around the corner and run into the horde

  • @HottieTobby
    @HottieTobby Рік тому +5

    ive never had cave formations explained to me like this and ive now learned how good minecraft is as an educational tool

  • @xxxmysticaldragonxxx
    @xxxmysticaldragonxxx Рік тому +8

    As someone who LOVES Geology and absolutely loves playing Minecraft, I really enjoy your geology Minecraft videos! (I'm not officially a geologist or anything but it is one of my main special interests.)

  • @core-indon2364
    @core-indon2364 Рік тому +9

    For the dripstone cave, the copper generation would make sence if is was aluminum, for exemple in south france, a karst region, a lot of stalagmites and stalagtites are present in caves. And when the calcareous rock decalcifies, they form "terra rossa", and clay in this "terra rossa" can be washed by rain revealing nuggets of bauxite (aluminum mineral). In france, most of the non recycled aluminum come from this region (baux de provence)!
    This would have been cool to implement into minecraft and could even ineract with others mecanics. For exemple putting calcite on a driptone woud have turned it into terracota, and teh terracotta could have been transformed into aluminum ore by watering it with a water bottle!

  • @dillphin5238
    @dillphin5238 5 місяців тому +2

    Most under-appreciated channel ever

  • @leedoucette
    @leedoucette Рік тому +3

    The basement rock topic interests me a lot. Living in an area that has basement rock exposed on the surface but always thought it was normal.
    Thanks for the great video.

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому +3

      Yeah its odd here in the mid west where we have tens of meters of glacial debris and then a bunch of limestone or sandstone. Locals will find a piece of granite in their yard and bring it to the university thinking they found something crazy. (usually a piece of Canada that got pushed down with the glaciers)

  • @Exotic_Dom
    @Exotic_Dom Рік тому +8

    W vid man youre a really cool geologist😎

  • @Late0NightPC
    @Late0NightPC 6 місяців тому +2

    The method i learned as a kid to remeber stalacites and stalagmites was that, stalaCites grow on the Ceiling, while stalaGmites grow on the Ground. Im sure if you get down to the nitty gritty details that trick isnt 100% accurate, but at least for an ordinary person who isnt deep into geology, its served me quite well.

  • @Ziggy-hy4fn
    @Ziggy-hy4fn Рік тому +1

    I always remember Stalac"T"ites as at the "Top". "T" for top. The "hold tight" strategy didn't help me much because something could just as easily hold "tight to the floor", but "T" is always TOP! Just another fun pneumonics trick I've used over the years.

  • @ramuk1933
    @ramuk1933 11 місяців тому +2

    Potential explanations for glowberries:
    1. Fantasy rock, maybe redstone, can be harvested from roots and concentrated to form a glowing orb, that the leaves grow to photosynthesize from.
    2. Thermo/chemotropic bacteria or other microorganisms, since one explanation of the water formation involves that kind of thing, the microbes that collect energy from it have a strain that evolved into endosymbiotic organisms within the glowberry vines that create light for photosynthesis.
    3. Magic, maybe they see light from a parallel plane or whatever.
    It's hard to make a plant that grows in complete darkness realistic...

  • @tornadomash00
    @tornadomash00 Рік тому +2

    in one of my survival worlds i built my house on top of an elevated area. behind it happened to be a hole with a small cave connecting to a giant underground cheese cave that went further down in typical minecraft fashion. i put a sign that labelled "what happened" and i put a fake date just for fun lol. i called it a sinkhole due to its proximity to the cave

  • @j1m_jim
    @j1m_jim Рік тому +5

    The lighting of the lush caves somewhat brings to mind the Glowworm Caves in New Zealand. With the obvious caveat that glowworms are animals and not plants which are present in the lush caves.

  • @easytiger6570
    @easytiger6570 Рік тому +5

    Just got your igneous rocks video recommended, and there is a new geology episode up, less than an hour ago! Praise algorithm

  • @muno
    @muno Рік тому +2

    Google drive lets you upload a file as a "new version", so you can update the world without needing to change the download link ^^
    It happens if you just upload the file again with the same name. It replaces the old one

  • @marshmiillow
    @marshmiillow Рік тому +4

    I have never been more interested in geology in my life. Rocks!! 🎉❤

  • @glitchyentity2117
    @glitchyentity2117 Рік тому +1

    I've always been fascinated by caves. I live in Kentucky which is quite well known for karst, and there is a bunch here.

  • @Everest111
    @Everest111 Рік тому +6

    The production of these videos is unparalleled, so much work must go into your set design and command block work. Keep it up man!

  • @invincabl355
    @invincabl355 Рік тому +5

    As someone who finds insane amount of enjoyment in world building and geology itself, these videos are amazing and makes me want to actually world build more than i already do!
    Keep up the amazing work!

  • @gwynbleiddd
    @gwynbleiddd Рік тому +7

    Just yesterday I was binge watching all of your Minecraft geology videos and thinking “I can’t wait for the next part!” And here we go :D

  • @evanvandeneinde7095
    @evanvandeneinde7095 Рік тому +1

    holy mackerel. just hit 1k subs a week ago and now within the hour he has 1k views on a video about geology. (I'm a geologist too so I'm allowed to call us boring) this one has so much production value as well. good work.

  • @justadragonryu
    @justadragonryu Рік тому +1

    I loved the end seeing the actual formations in person.

  • @jesselauch
    @jesselauch 6 місяців тому +3

    I just discovered you brother and you are a blessing. Watching your videos with my kids and we both learn a lot

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  6 місяців тому +3

      Great to hear, glad you and your kids are enjoying it.

    • @jesselauch
      @jesselauch 6 місяців тому +1

      @@gneissname I also sent one of your videos to my best friend from the Marine Corps expecting him to watch a few minutes of it so we could appreciate the value of an educational Minecraft video and though he’s the most responsible person I know he ended up staying up until 1 AM consuming your content. You were his first Minecraft video 😂. Again thank you for making educational content that is easy for children to engage in.

  • @cathat4813
    @cathat4813 Рік тому +5

    I've been looking forward to this concept of a video from you!! I'm absolutely loving these videos!

  • @Aspen1117
    @Aspen1117 Рік тому +2

    Loved seeing the samples at the end of the video. Up in northern Wisconsin here we have the Ice Caves In Cornucopia, but due to increased temps in winter tourists haven’t been able to visit since 2015

  • @brettmichal1047
    @brettmichal1047 6 місяців тому +2

    This channel/videos are incredibly underrated. I wish I would've found these videos sooner they're incredibly fun and entertaining to watch. Keep it up!

  • @seek.l2215
    @seek.l2215 Рік тому +1

    This video style reminds me a lot of ethos lab and I love it. Keep up the good work.

  • @u12bdragon
    @u12bdragon 5 місяців тому +1

    The way I was taught stalacTites and stalagMites is that if you draw lines connecting all three lines of the T, it forms a downward facing spike, and the M is easy, it already has 2 upwards facing spikes

  • @slemire
    @slemire Рік тому +2

    I know for a fact these videos will be used in classrooms soon to get kids interested in geology and earth science. Great video!!

  • @doktormozg
    @doktormozg Рік тому +1

    I have been expecting this one from the first episode!! :) great stuff

  • @Mikelaxo
    @Mikelaxo Рік тому +2

    That's really cool, I wish I would have learned more about cave formation in my geology classes, but the professor just briefly touched on it in my hydrogeology class. Also I learned something new this video, I didn't know that's how karts topography formed, that's very cool and it makes a lot of sense.

  • @PokeRedstone
    @PokeRedstone 5 місяців тому +1

    I vividly remember the underwater viewing area for sea lions at my local zoo clearly had a spot in the concrete ceiling that dripped so bad it caused the smallest of bumps on the ground. It was just a small mound no more than a mile quarter inch high if that.

  • @guitaristtony9913
    @guitaristtony9913 Рік тому +4

    These videos are great! I know almost nothing about geology, so it's awesome to hear how it all applies to Minecraft.
    I think a video on the different ores in the game would be really interesting too!

  • @jomini14
    @jomini14 2 місяці тому

    15:58 I actually got to go into the lava tube in Flagstaff, AZ while I was on vacation there earlier this month! The funny thing about it is that based on what you said at 15:04, it technically is considered an ice cave since there was straight up a frozen waterfall not too far from the entrance. At the start of summer. In the middle of Arizona. It was pretty cool (literally)! The floor of the cave was relatively flat for most of it, but in a lot of places the floor looked like it was collapsed, with the raised section where it looked like it fractured being in the middle of the tube, going down on either side towards the walls. Much of the floor also had a weird cobblestone-like texture. The only other thing I can think of to compare it too is a field of stromatolites because the floor was really bumpy and the bumps were sort of mushroom shaped. Going through the cave was a really cool experience and I recommend it for anyone traveling to Arizona.

  • @nl_morrison
    @nl_morrison Рік тому +4

    you did this exactly like a mammoth cave tour guide, it was so good, i loved how informative and funny your little bits (which obviously took effort! like the lights turning on and the bridges) are! ✨

  • @Raven-Blackwing
    @Raven-Blackwing Рік тому +1

    I wouldn't think a half an hour video on the geology of a 12 year old game would be interesting, but this is extremely fascinating.

  • @mariovelez578
    @mariovelez578 Рік тому

    I absolutely love this video series!
    How I remember:
    StalacTites (the T looks like a stalactite)
    StalagMite (the M looks like stalagmites)

    • @SupersuMC
      @SupersuMC Рік тому +2

      Or:
      StaCtite (C for ceiling)
      StalaGmite (G for ground)

  • @Litch016
    @Litch016 Рік тому +1

    I love your educational approach of teaching geological facts, terms, and geology in general through Minecraft!

  • @FukaiKokoro
    @FukaiKokoro Рік тому

    I love hearing people talk about things they are passionate about. Thank the almighty algorithm for recomending you!

  • @Noelwiz
    @Noelwiz 2 місяці тому

    That lush cave scene is so pretty! Makes me want to build something like that in my own world.
    It reminds me of when I visited Carlsbad Caverns :)

  • @TheDeadOfNight37
    @TheDeadOfNight37 Рік тому +1

    This is quite the long-awaited episode, huh?

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому +5

      Lol yeah, I started it a little before caves and cliffs were announced so i delayed it, then it was delayed, then I had a new daughter, moved, etc. The recent popularity of the igneous video gave me the kick I needed to finish it. These take a lot more time than some of the other things I do here.

    • @TheDeadOfNight37
      @TheDeadOfNight37 Рік тому +1

      @@gneissname I can see why these would take so long, the amount of hard work you put in is clear, keep up the great work

  • @ProfessorThock
    @ProfessorThock Рік тому +2

    Just discovered this series. Cool stuff! Super innovative to create this amazing minecraft world as an interactive museum.

  • @Eliasdbr
    @Eliasdbr 5 місяців тому

    Is amazing how those geological formations can tell us about what happened in the past! Great work!

  • @foolofdaggers7555
    @foolofdaggers7555 7 місяців тому +1

    I really like the rock samples. Those are some neat rocks!

  • @vicara1111
    @vicara1111 Рік тому +4

    Would love to see you cover the way Vintage Story's generation of geological stuff works, these videos are really awesome! Keep it up

  • @1st1anarkissed
    @1st1anarkissed Рік тому +1

    sweet lessons, bro, I never knew about karst topography and it really excites the imagination. I looked at some images of landscapes and imagined the cave roof still overhead, partially collapsed so the light reaches in and allows all the valley farming. I realized the cave roof would have done a lot to level the valley inside and that a lot of the hills would have been stalactite/stalagtite (I forgot the name already for that) pillars that got left behind. Pretty nifty.

  • @bengoodwin2141
    @bengoodwin2141 Рік тому +1

    I'd love to see mods that add a little realism to cave generation but keep the variety, so you might have some regions with realistic shapes and some with weird exotic shapes, and same with the other aspects of the caves.
    Here's one way it could work: change the world generation to simulate the erosion that forms caves, rivers, ect, like in the later part of the video. Deeper than these, form the vanilla caves and explain it with some fictional thing, like maybe they're weird kind of mine held up by magic for so long that new natural caves formed around them

  • @mxrcusf.3711
    @mxrcusf.3711 Рік тому +3

    Hi, I think that your videos are really interesting! I am currently studying forest engineering, and part of that is also learning about geology, so your videos are quite interesting to see in comparison to what we learn in class about geology and soil science!

  • @NOVA-vj8iu
    @NOVA-vj8iu 5 місяців тому

    You have no idea how surprised I was when you mentioned my hometown Flagstaff lol. Nobody talks about it. And yes, the lava tubes near the base of the San Francisco Peaks are very fun and interesting to explore.

  • @Pinsplash
    @Pinsplash Рік тому +1

    14:47 i once made an icy (sorry, glacial) cave in the minecraft art style in team fortress 2 and it looked a lot like that. i feel weirdly validated by that.

  • @promaster4758
    @promaster4758 Рік тому +2

    Great video! I am a geology student in Spain and this videos are really interesting for me. Even if they are basic geology I still learn new things!

  • @isobarkley
    @isobarkley Рік тому

    that cave formation x-sec was so cool!! i need to learn to mess with command blocks like this

  • @ArchDennam
    @ArchDennam Рік тому +2

    I've been watching a few of your geology videos recently and in this one I was just thinking, when you started discussing the real types of caves, _man, I'd love to see a timelapse of the process of some of these caves forming_ and then BOOM delivered! Masterful work Gneiss :)

  • @rerurmaximov
    @rerurmaximov Рік тому +2

    Dude, your videos are really entertaining!
    leaving comment just for an algorithm, cause I'll be able to watch it only tomorrow

  • @Doctor_Sex_Ass
    @Doctor_Sex_Ass Рік тому +1

    I love how you posted this the same day my geology professor was teaching us about caves and after I just wrote a review paper about Onondaga Cave State Park!

  • @RedRanger-ll7hx
    @RedRanger-ll7hx Рік тому +2

    Very, very under rated. This is one of the only things that I would donate to on something like patreon because I love to see educational stuff through the format of games. You can really tell how much effort are put into these and as a Geography student and Minecraft player this is really nice to watch. Keep up the good work ♥👍

  • @cosmopoiesecriandomundos7446
    @cosmopoiesecriandomundos7446 Рік тому +2

    4:09 the official Brazilian Portuguese translation of the game (at least in Bedrock) does call the dripstones "espeleotemas", which means "speleothems".

  • @Smolnsalty
    @Smolnsalty Рік тому +1

    Getting your Minecraft geology videos in my recommendations was one of the best things to happen to me

  • @crash5642
    @crash5642 3 місяці тому

    I work in a cave in real life and usually don’t understand anything that you say in these videos but this one finally made sense 😂😂

  • @_marshP
    @_marshP Рік тому +2

    imo a better way to remember the stalactite-stalagmite thing is:
    stalaGmite, G for ground
    stalaCtite, C for ceiling

    • @bigdumb1
      @bigdumb1 4 місяці тому

      this is the way i learned it!

  • @FriendlyNeighborhoodLamia
    @FriendlyNeighborhoodLamia Рік тому

    This is why Minecraft is a surprisingly good medium for education, provided the teacher in question cared enough to learn how to use the game to its best potential.

  • @Honey_Bot_833
    @Honey_Bot_833 Місяць тому

    16:33 In Minecraft 1.18 there were terrain generation bugs that were just HUGE holes to huge caves (Like to the Lava Layer, which we coined the name sinkhole for, You could Find Many Underground Biomes and Structures (Ancient Cities, Mineshaft, Dungeons, etc.)

  • @Bebeu4300
    @Bebeu4300 Рік тому +1

    I really love the way you explain things in an understandable way and especially the way you do the visuals in Minecraft. It's a great way to explain things and keeps everything visually interesting, while fitting in with the game. It's also interesting to see some real life examples of speleothems, especially the calcite crystal covered stalactite.
    I'm so happy to have discovered this series.

  • @twistedkitty
    @twistedkitty Рік тому +1

    Came for the igneous rocks, stayed for the caves. I hope to see more of your amazing content soon!

  • @thorild69
    @thorild69 7 місяців тому

    Nice. I live in Missouri which also has a nickname of The Cave State.
    I have had the pleasure of visiting many of our tour caves, but also done some spelunking into some wild caves in parks.
    It's a lot of fun as long as your careful. Just like Minecraft!

  • @lmbrjckwharfie
    @lmbrjckwharfie Рік тому +1

    As soon as you explained what "karst" was, it reminded me of Karst Farm Park, a recreational complex near Bloomington, Indiana, where I sometimes had lacrosse practices. I had always just assumed the name came from somebody with the last name "Karst" owning a farm that later became the park, so I had to look it up and figure out how that connection was made. Turns out it literally is named that because of the karst topography of the area (and yes, also a farm that was there before the park, but not owned by anyone named Karst). Really enjoy these videos, please keep doing these!

  • @maikeldekwant
    @maikeldekwant Рік тому

    I never knew' hearing a guy talking about the geology of a video game could be so interesting and relaxing. I literally subbed because of that one video about the geology of minecraft stone! I SUBSCRIBED BECAUSE OF A LECTURE ABOUT MINECRAFT STONE! I guess that really shows how good this guy is.

  • @trulyinfamous
    @trulyinfamous Рік тому +1

    I love your little museum in minecraft. I think video game musuems are always fun. I have been building a musuem about space and the apollo program in a modded minecraft server so I have spent a lot of time trying to teach others in that game. I've done more research for that project than any school projects lol.
    Looks like I'll be subbing to this channel. I find rocks and geology really interesting.
    I'd love to have a geologist friend that I could explore with. I think I would probably talk their head off.

    • @gneissname
      @gneissname  Рік тому

      Sounds cool Truly, I have thought about doing a scale solar system in the end and covering some planetary geology there.

  • @ShayanQ
    @ShayanQ Рік тому

    The diagram of the cave forming under the village was amazing!

  • @adalet127
    @adalet127 Рік тому +1

    woow, I just recently subbed and went through all of your videos and instantly got a new one to watch, how nice :D

  • @trinkey
    @trinkey Рік тому

    its really interesting to see the geology of minecraft

  • @jacobbradley5235
    @jacobbradley5235 7 місяців тому

    I gotta say while this video is of course fascinating, as someone who knows very little about this topic the thing I was most awestruck by was the way the map turned out

  • @Mr.FastZombie
    @Mr.FastZombie Рік тому

    Presenting Geology through Minecraft is great. It makes it a lot more interesting when you make connections to one of my favorite games which also makes it much easier to focus on and digest this information, and it truly is fascinating

  • @Empyrean55
    @Empyrean55 Рік тому +1

    The fact that these videos don't have 100k+ views is a crime

  • @billyr2904
    @billyr2904 Рік тому

    Timelines are interesting and your timeline is the best part of the world in my opinion.

  • @martinlysy
    @martinlysy 7 місяців тому

    The cave forming was amazing demostration.

  • @aviaceae8677
    @aviaceae8677 Рік тому

    You're everything I wish to be in life. I love rocks, and your videos make Minecraft super immersive.

  • @JuiceVendr
    @JuiceVendr Рік тому

    Another good way to remember the difference between Stalagmites and Stalagtites is to think of the T and the M that differenciates them, the T pokes down like a stalagtite does and the M pokes up like a pair of stalagmites

  • @dabylch
    @dabylch Рік тому +1

    wow! 10k views in just 12 hours!
    I would love to see your channel grow. keep it up with the videos, Good luck!