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Thanks Shawn. 🙂👍 Had to smile at the title of this video, after doing a double-take: Sandy is a place in Bedfordshire, England. It's quite acceptable to address a letter with 'Sandy, Beds.' Imagine what you did to this literalist's mind!
This is in my “Backyard”. I’ve been coming regularly to the Anticline in Fish Creek since 1986. It my favorite spot in Anza Borrego and I always bring guest to this spot. You opened my eyes, I always thought the anticline was tectonic now I know it was an impact.
Harry Glicken and the French volcanologists, the Kraffts, were filming pyroclastic flows at Mt Unzen, Japan, in 1992 when an unexpectedly large flow over-ran them and 2-dozen journalists, killing them all in a matter of seconds. Sometimes debris flows can travel unimaginable distances at more than 50+ MPH, across valleys, up and over mountain ridges, etc. Victims at Mt. St. Helens died over a dozen miles from the peak. Better to look back millions of years in time, and let your imagination go to work!
There's a huge landslide in a range of hills, in Washington State just north of the Columbia River. I've never heard any geologist talk about. But you can see this thing from over 20 miles way, especially when the shadows hit it from the sun. There's rumors that it buried an Indian reservation.
oh yeah, that is nothing compared to this slide in Washington. Probably several thousand of those torrey pine rockfalls can fit in one of the slide I'm referring to.@@inyobill
Glad you made it out here finally. I was camped about 10 mins away. I wanted to just warn people driving in that once past the little campsite on the left just before the mouth of the canyon, cell phones have no signal. Also to bring a shovel as the sand depth changes constantly from high winds and occasional rain and flash floods. Bring extra water! Can always bring it home. Camping is permitted unless specifically marked with signs, but camp fires in fire rings only, many are placed there in certain areas. Summer temps will reach 120f + and its no joke! There are also many "Mud caves" so bring a light and never go in alone. Some are HUGE, and all have very tight passages.
The localized folding is astonishing, the clear contact-zone is always where the excitement is. Drop-jawed to see that the megabreccia flow would bend the sandstone and not just break it. Some "punctuated equilibrium"-
Many years ago, I was planning to camp there. Further down the wash, it looked like tracks in the rock & then later fossils of shells at different levels of the walls. It rained to rain lightly, so we quickly left. Later we found out there was a flash flood in the wash. Yikes!😱
Just got back from a geology hike using things I learned from you and others on identifying shale vs slate and I was able to positively identify it as shale. Although according to USGS just a 1/4 mile away at an old mine it is identify as slate which completely possible ! Thanks again
Brought back memories of being there with Dr. Threet’s, San Diego State University, Structural Geology class in 1975. Great memories leading to a long career.
I have been through Split Mountain dozens of times with our local Land Rover club but didn't see the level of detail you showed in these videos. Now I have a good reason to go back soon. Thanks!
Trying to wrap my head around the forces that caused the rockslide and the resulting megabreccias and anticlines. The sound and the shaking of the earth must have been enormous.
This looks very much like the stuwwallen in the Netherlands, where icesheets plowed into the soft existing sand, gravel and clay lays. There is no english word for, usually push-moraine is used, but it is local river sand, gravel and clay that has been pressed away from under the icesheet. So, it is no moraine. Of course it is not consolidated here, because it is much younger (Saalien). Also anticlines, synclines, foldings, broken layers etc. Now it forms the mountainrange Veluwe and Utrechtse Heuvelrug in the centre of the Netherlands, about 100 meters high. If you don’t know it: just google stuwwallen and look for images of the structures in the sand, gravel and clay layers. Your story fits flawlessly on the Dutch story of the stuwwallen. Very interesting.
I’m getting ready to spend a few weeks in Southern California and specifically I want to visit and explore some interesting geological features. The geology there is so dynamic and exposed, whereas in so many other areas is covered by vegetation. Thanks for producing these informative videos. They’re serving as a guide as I’m planning my route.
I had always thought of anticlines as being on a mountain range scale. The ones I have seen here in Washington are huge rolling mountains, but we call them hill's because they are treeless desert and steppe. It is interesting to see this at an almost personal scale. It is still big. Thanks for showing the features and pointing them all out. I have a better understanding of what happened now. The forces involved are immense and powerful almost beyond belief but amazing to see the results of them.
I used to camp and hike at Joshua Tree(2,700'EL) and read about Anza Borrego (sea level) and San Jacinto Mountain(10,834' ). I still don't understand how these features can exist in a small geological area. Would be a great video to tie it all together. Did the inland sea cover the entire area at some point? What formed San Jacinto?
" Did the inland sea cover the entire area at some point? " - Shawn did not discuss ages in this video. But given the land slide occurred millions of years ago, San Diego County was farther south, 50 miles or so. The geology papers I've perused suggest the region where the Gulf of California is today was always a low elevation region, after North America came crashing into the exotic terranes that make up Baja California (which itself is complex of different terranes with a complex past.) The sedimentary rocks on the west side of the San Andreas Fault are full of shallow marine fossils.
I see the same kinda thing up on the shores of Shasta lake of coarse different kind of rock but folds made while rock was hot enough to be plastic and metamorphic
Do you feel this was one event and everything has remained intact since the event? Awesome presentation. Thank you. Grew up running around Anza Borrego. It's an amazing place.
Jaw dropping. We can almost literally feel the pressure and power! SMH. And fascinating.... could poke around there for hours. I'd never have known about this...huge thanks.
It's your lucky day. You've got 2 followers from the Gold Hill region of NC watching. Most of our geology here is underground unless we visit a quarry, road cut or the Appalachian mountains. Continue doing the wonderful work. I admire your sharing of your education and knowledge.
Wow. One of the most unusual outcrops that you’ve encountered. I’ve seen a lot of outcrops but have never seen deformation that looks like it was from large scale tectonic forces but was really from forces caused by localized gravity driven mass wasting. Truly fascinating! Thank you for sharing.
This is an incredible study! I snapped a couple screenshots. I'm on the East Coast, sitting on the Gold Hill Fault line at the Eastern Slate Belt. I would love to see an underground dissection of this area. Your explanations are awesome with what happened there.
Dear prof. Willsey! Just want to say thank you for your work!!! I love your content, one can learn a lot from you, your students are so lucky to have a mentor like you. Keep up the good work. :)
Wow! That was extremely interesting. Living in NSW Australia we have a lot of sandstone. I love seeing the different layering but have never seen anything like that folding. Thanks. 🦘🌟
Was hoping you'd highlight this. :) This is in my "backyard" as it were and is always an impressive site. Lots of interesting places to go in that area.
I've been to this area many times, but was looking for ancient native American settlements, and never noticed the rocks. This video was very informative.
I never saw one anticline over another until now. That looks amazing. I wonder how long it took to be created being so localized? Was it because of heavy rains that soften the sandstone and allowed such a thing to happen dramatically?
If you look at the current state of the California coastline, you can certainly see where a prolonged and heavy rain event might precipitate a huge mountain slide. Water saturation appears to be a very common mechanism in massive mud and rock slides. This effect has many examples all over the West Coast, including Washington and Oregon.
really appreciated the insight about what is needed to drive up there. guess I won't be taking the corvette. looks to be worth investigating, I used to camp in that park.
That’s amazing. I could imagine waves splashing up against the rock face once upon a time and leaving rock pools? There are indentations in the sand. I have no idea if that was ever possible in that area?
I was in here with my wife and cousin a couple of years ago and remember saying, "There's never a geologist around when you need one." Thanks for the videos. I'll have to remember all of this my next trip into Fish Creek. Did you go to the end of the canyon and hike up to the wind caves?
This feature is incredible, thanks for sharing this location! I had some thoughts about it. As the sandstone is compressed to form a dome shape, it appears to have a core region visible at the base from which cracks propagate upward through the layers. At the top of the dome (below the second anticline above) is a generally upside down V-shaped section. The combination of compression and doming leading to an upward propagating path that points at this upside down V-shape seems like the overall structure is effectively a cross-section of the anatomy of a volcano. In other words, compressive forces (say, of the Pacific ocean floor pushing into continental regions around it) colliding deep underground could perhaps lead to eruptive forces upward (namely where resistance from other directions is high so excess energy is caused to flow upward), and with a sufficient force it could perhaps induce an eruptive outcome that leads to the formation of volcanoes. Just a thought but this feature really seems to depict it in detail on a small enough scale to see it in full.
@shawnwillsey - was any heat required for these folds, like in the friction of the movement.? Can larger sandstone layered structures also be dramatically folded, simply because they were saturated thru 100s of feet of sandstone? You see some of that in the base of the Grand Canyon, I think, as well as larger features on the surface in that area.
Awesome!!! I spend so much time walking and hiking in Anza Borrego, and I wish I had someone like you to tell me what this or that rock is. A good example is the painted desert just east of Ocotillo, CA. The different colors are amazing. In reality, I bought a "geology for dummies' book to start understanding what I'm seeing. Cheers!
Thank you for this series of videos. I have wondered about the geology of this area. We often go to Anzo Borrego to camp. I live in east county San Diego. We have many large boulders that I would like to know the geology for. I am also wondering what happened to the large mountain that the landslide came from.
For those without 4x4 you can hike the Indio badlands trail and see a lot of the same mountains of bent rock layers. Driving up route 74 out of Palm desert you can see more on the road as you drive by.
There is a place in southern Anza Borrego desert state park called the mud caves. I wonder when (not if) they will come a splashing down. Near Borrego Springs, there is a place called Slot Canyon, after a big rainfall a couple of years back it collapsed!!!
Cool, cool,cool!! So…..was the sasndstone that the landslide barreled into originally in a flat orientation and the landslide both compressed it into these amazing formations and pushed the following sandstone that wasn’t into direct contact with the impact site it into the angled direction or would all the limestone the landslide hit have previously been uplifted from some force of geology? Sorry if I’m not explaining well. I’m just picking up all my knowledge from all,your videos and trying to word it correctly which I’m probably not haha
Thank you for explaining this. I’ve been a big fan of this canyon for many years. I am taking a lot of friends there and showed them the anticline so my question is, when you say the sturzstrom contacted the sandstone beds that’s what caused the curvature of the layers. I am assuming that the sandstone layers were a lot softer and Plyable?
I remember riding my motorcycle out in those hills and washes. There was a spot of black glassy obsidian in this tiny gorge. It was flat maybe twenty feet wide and forty feet wide. And It boggled my mind and didn’t understand why it was there.
That's really cool! When I think of a massive landslide like that, I have to imagine that there would be huge amounts of organic material (trees, plants maybe some animals) that would get caught up in the slide. Are there any fossils that indicate that this was the case here?
Love looking for and studying anticlines.. what amazes me is that this doesn’t happen just where you are. It has happened on a global scale across many continents 😉
Maybe including a map or site video at the beginning would have helped me better understand the direction of the force of the slide in relation to its source. Was this the end point, diagonal, or side force? Guessing end force, but I am not a stress or impact engineer. Very interesting to see that the force was sufficient to create folds in the sandstone.
Wow, that is amazing! One question, was this the result of a sudden impact event or a slow mass wasting event where pressure continued over a period of time?
at about 1:40 you said the rock crashed down from the mountain here and travelled out across the ground for km or Miles. Man, how big were those pieces of mountain coming down at a time. it's not clear to me what it looked like.
You should do a video on the rock formations in Shawnee National Park sometime. I have a friend who lives right next to the park and some of the pictures she shares are amazing and such curious swirls of rock.
Wow! I’ve never seen nor heard of anything like that before. It would be difficult to believe without seeing it. Although, not impossible. But not a common occurrence.
You can support my educational videos by clicking on the "Thanks" button just above (right of Like button) or by going here: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EWUSLG3GBS5W8
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Thanks Shawn. 🙂👍 Had to smile at the title of this video, after doing a double-take: Sandy is a place in Bedfordshire, England. It's quite acceptable to address a letter with 'Sandy, Beds.'
Imagine what you did to this literalist's mind!
Jawdropping. I’m in awe. Thanks for expanding our horizons. Great teaching!
"Wow this is chaos here," some of my favourite words when looking at some rocks. Anza Borrego is a special place and this series is fantastic.
This is in my “Backyard”. I’ve been coming regularly to the Anticline in Fish Creek since 1986. It my favorite spot in Anza Borrego and I always bring guest to this spot.
You opened my eyes, I always thought the anticline was tectonic now I know it was an impact.
What makes videos like this watchable is how u present it. I can tell how u love what your doing and that makes it fun for us. Many thanks
Boy if we could go back and watch this in action it would be more amazing than any video we've ever seen before.
Yeah-no kidding, it springs to mind that to be far enough away to survive but still witness would be the ultimate-
Harry Glicken and the French volcanologists, the Kraffts, were filming pyroclastic flows at Mt Unzen, Japan, in 1992 when an unexpectedly large flow over-ran them and 2-dozen journalists, killing them all in a matter of seconds. Sometimes debris flows can travel unimaginable distances at more than 50+ MPH, across valleys, up and over mountain ridges, etc. Victims at Mt. St. Helens died over a dozen miles from the peak. Better to look back millions of years in time, and let your imagination go to work!
There's a huge landslide in a range of hills, in Washington State just north of the Columbia River. I've never heard any geologist talk about. But you can see this thing from over 20 miles way, especially when the shadows hit it from the sun. There's rumors that it buried an Indian reservation.
look for torrey pines rockfall video, on a smaller scale but i guess somewhat analogous
oh yeah, that is nothing compared to this slide in Washington. Probably several thousand of those torrey pine rockfalls can fit in one of the slide I'm referring to.@@inyobill
A masterclass in the joy of discovery.
One can never get bored of walking, looking, photographing such awesome rockscapes, thank you.
Glad you made it out here finally. I was camped about 10 mins away. I wanted to just warn people driving in that once past the little campsite on the left just before the mouth of the canyon, cell phones have no signal. Also to bring a shovel as the sand depth changes constantly from high winds and occasional rain and flash floods. Bring extra water! Can always bring it home. Camping is permitted unless specifically marked with signs, but camp fires in fire rings only, many are placed there in certain areas. Summer temps will reach 120f + and its no joke! There are also many "Mud caves" so bring a light and never go in alone. Some are HUGE, and all have very tight passages.
For those of us that will never get there, thank you for sharing.
@@garyb6219 Never say never!
@@mtlassen1992 Thanks, I appreciate that. And I could make a pretty good list of what I have seen. But it's never enough, is it? Cheers my friend.
This was awesome! I have never heard of the rock folding like that. Spectacular!
@mtlassen1992 🍾🥂🌄🥓 thank you for bringing me here! 😍
I love this. I have studied this and the entire Anza Borrego area to include the Salton Sea and Imperial Valley fault zone
The localized folding is astonishing, the clear contact-zone is always where the excitement is. Drop-jawed to see that the megabreccia flow would bend the sandstone and not just break it. Some "punctuated equilibrium"-
Agree. Would not have expected the sandstone to be able to deform that dramatically. Such fin stuff!
Thanks!
Many years ago, I was planning to camp there. Further down the wash, it looked like tracks in the rock & then later fossils of shells at different levels of the walls. It rained to rain lightly, so we quickly left. Later we found out there was a flash flood in the wash. Yikes!😱
When I visited, that was the overarching worry. I'm glad you were smart and cautious.
Just got back from a geology hike using things I learned from you and others on identifying shale vs slate and I was able to positively identify it as shale. Although according to USGS just a 1/4 mile away at an old mine it is identify as slate which completely possible ! Thanks again
Awesome report. Knowledge is power.
That was one hell of a rockslide. Awesome geologic tour. Very nice video.
Wow! that must have been epic. Thanks again for a fascinating llesson. You are a great teacher and I am learning so much!
Brought back memories of being there with Dr. Threet’s, San Diego State University, Structural Geology class in 1975. Great memories leading to a long career.
I have been through Split Mountain dozens of times with our local Land Rover club but didn't see the level of detail you showed in these videos. Now I have a good reason to go back soon. Thanks!
So exciting to hear this dramatic story! Loved it.
that circular fold is way cool...thank you so much for explaining why these things happen..
Trying to wrap my head around the forces that caused the rockslide and the resulting megabreccias and anticlines. The sound and the shaking of the earth must have been enormous.
This looks very much like the stuwwallen in the Netherlands, where icesheets plowed into the soft existing sand, gravel and clay lays. There is no english word for, usually push-moraine is used, but it is local river sand, gravel and clay that has been pressed away from under the icesheet. So, it is no moraine. Of course it is not consolidated here, because it is much younger (Saalien). Also anticlines, synclines, foldings, broken layers etc. Now it forms the mountainrange Veluwe and Utrechtse Heuvelrug in the centre of the Netherlands, about 100 meters high. If you don’t know it: just google stuwwallen and look for images of the structures in the sand, gravel and clay layers. Your story fits flawlessly on the Dutch story of the stuwwallen. Very interesting.
I’m getting ready to spend a few weeks in Southern California and specifically I want to visit and explore some interesting geological features. The geology there is so dynamic and exposed, whereas in so many other areas is covered by vegetation. Thanks for producing these informative videos. They’re serving as a guide as I’m planning my route.
I lost count of how many times I said wow, while watching this. Thank you!
Geology is freaking awesome. Thank you!
I had always thought of anticlines as being on a mountain range scale. The ones I have seen here in Washington are huge rolling mountains, but we call them hill's because they are treeless desert and steppe. It is interesting to see this at an almost personal scale. It is still big. Thanks for showing the features and pointing them all out. I have a better understanding of what happened now. The forces involved are immense and powerful almost beyond belief but amazing to see the results of them.
Looks like your classroom is the entire planet, very cool 👍
I used to camp and hike at Joshua Tree(2,700'EL) and read about Anza Borrego (sea level) and San Jacinto Mountain(10,834' ).
I still don't understand how these features can exist in a small geological area. Would be a great video to tie it all together. Did the inland sea cover the entire area at some point? What formed San Jacinto?
" Did the inland sea cover the entire area at some point? " - Shawn did not discuss ages in this video. But given the land slide occurred millions of years ago, San Diego County was farther south, 50 miles or so. The geology papers I've perused suggest the region where the Gulf of California is today was always a low elevation region, after North America came crashing into the exotic terranes that make up Baja California (which itself is complex of different terranes with a complex past.) The sedimentary rocks on the west side of the San Andreas Fault are full of shallow marine fossils.
@@TheDanEdwards Thanks!
I see the same kinda thing up on the shores of Shasta lake of coarse different kind of rock but folds made while rock was hot enough to be plastic and metamorphic
Do you feel this was one event and everything has remained intact since the event?
Awesome presentation. Thank you. Grew up running around Anza Borrego. It's an amazing place.
Love watching and learning with you 🫶
This is my first time here!! I struggled to attain a C grade in my college Geology class but I really enjoyed this video!!! Thanks, Prof. Willsey!!!!
Jaw dropping. We can almost literally feel the pressure and power! SMH. And fascinating.... could poke around there for hours. I'd never have known about this...huge thanks.
Great formation to detail! Thank you Professor.
Wow that’s one of the coolest geological things I’ve ever seen! Thank you Shawn for your awesome videos.
It's your lucky day. You've got 2 followers from the Gold Hill region of NC watching. Most of our geology here is underground unless we visit a quarry, road cut or the Appalachian mountains. Continue doing the wonderful work. I admire your sharing of your education and knowledge.
Thanks for watching and learning with me.
Wow. One of the most unusual outcrops that you’ve encountered. I’ve seen a lot of outcrops but have never seen deformation that looks like it was from large scale tectonic forces but was really from forces caused by localized gravity driven mass wasting. Truly fascinating! Thank you for sharing.
wow! Awesome! Thanks for sharing your knowledge! Just what I needed my daily dose of geology! I love your channel!
Love your updates, very interesting. Hope all the people are doing well and are safe.
Bedankt
Many thanks!
So awesome! Thank you so much for doing all of the informational videos. Sooo interesting!!
This is an incredible study! I snapped a couple screenshots. I'm on the East Coast, sitting on the Gold Hill Fault line at the Eastern Slate Belt. I would love to see an underground dissection of this area. Your explanations are awesome with what happened there.
I was there 5 years ago. My friend and I rescued a couple who buried their car in the dust. A great place for geology buffs like me.
Dear prof. Willsey! Just want to say thank you for your work!!! I love your content, one can learn a lot from you, your students are so lucky to have a mentor like you. Keep up the good work. :)
You're very welcome!
Curiously intriguing rock formations! Thanks!
structural geologist here - that's a pretty remarkable site, thanx for sharing..
Geology IS fun! Thank you.
Wow! That was extremely interesting. Living in NSW Australia we have a lot of sandstone. I love seeing the different layering but have never seen anything like that folding. Thanks. 🦘🌟
Exceptional approach in teaching.
Thank you
Was hoping you'd highlight this. :) This is in my "backyard" as it were and is always an impressive site. Lots of interesting places to go in that area.
I've been to this area many times, but was looking for ancient native American settlements, and never noticed the rocks. This video was very informative.
I never saw one anticline over another until now. That looks amazing. I wonder how long it took to be created being so
localized? Was it because of heavy rains that soften the sandstone and allowed such a thing to happen dramatically?
If you look at the current state of the California coastline, you can certainly see where a prolonged and heavy rain event might precipitate a huge mountain slide. Water saturation appears to be a very common mechanism in massive mud and rock slides.
This effect has many examples all over the West Coast, including Washington and Oregon.
thank you. been there a number of times and never appreciated it. now i'm looking forward to going back out there.
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing! 😊
That's a really cute mini fault. It would look cool as a paperweight block on your desk.
Great geological information and lesson 🎉
We camped there lots when I was a kid. We moved away in the mid sixties and I haven’t been back, more’s the pity. I loved it
Very cool! Mindblowing actually💥
really appreciated the insight about what is needed to drive up there. guess I won't be taking the corvette. looks to be worth investigating, I used to camp in that park.
I hiked Anza-Borrego on my way to Palm Canyon..
Stunning.
That’s amazing. I could imagine waves splashing up against the rock face once upon a time and leaving rock pools? There are indentations in the sand. I have no idea if that was ever possible in that area?
Thanks for including the cite to the thesis in your reply to one of the comments below.
I was in here with my wife and cousin a couple of years ago and remember saying, "There's never a geologist around when you need one." Thanks for the videos. I'll have to remember all of this my next trip into Fish Creek. Did you go to the end of the canyon and hike up to the wind caves?
Very cool! Amazing and unusual contact area. Thx!
This feature is incredible, thanks for sharing this location! I had some thoughts about it. As the sandstone is compressed to form a dome shape, it appears to have a core region visible at the base from which cracks propagate upward through the layers. At the top of the dome (below the second anticline above) is a generally upside down V-shaped section. The combination of compression and doming leading to an upward propagating path that points at this upside down V-shape seems like the overall structure is effectively a cross-section of the anatomy of a volcano. In other words, compressive forces (say, of the Pacific ocean floor pushing into continental regions around it) colliding deep underground could perhaps lead to eruptive forces upward (namely where resistance from other directions is high so excess energy is caused to flow upward), and with a sufficient force it could perhaps induce an eruptive outcome that leads to the formation of volcanoes. Just a thought but this feature really seems to depict it in detail on a small enough scale to see it in full.
@shawnwillsey - was any heat required for these folds, like in the friction of the movement.? Can larger sandstone layered structures also be dramatically folded, simply because they were saturated thru 100s of feet of sandstone? You see some of that in the base of the Grand Canyon, I think, as well as larger features on the surface in that area.
Has there been any attempt to date the megabreccia, the adjacent sandstone and the folding in the sandstone?
Awesome!!! I spend so much time walking and hiking in Anza Borrego, and I wish I had someone like you to tell me what this or that rock is. A good example is the painted desert just east of Ocotillo, CA. The different colors are amazing. In reality, I bought a "geology for dummies' book to start understanding what I'm seeing. Cheers!
Thank you for this series of videos. I have wondered about the geology of this area. We often go to Anzo Borrego to camp. I live in east county San Diego. We have many large boulders that I would like to know the geology for. I am also wondering what happened to the large mountain that the landslide came from.
I spent Christmas Eve there several years ago. Borrego Springs and Salton Sea area. Very interesting to see but go in winter.
A great close up look! Thanks for another fascinating fieldtrip! Would you consider doing a video on the Marysvale gravity slide complex?
Wow! That’s fascinating! Thank you!
Was that erea under water during the movment making it more flexible?
For those without 4x4 you can hike the Indio badlands trail and see a lot of the same mountains of bent rock layers. Driving up route 74 out of Palm desert you can see more on the road as you drive by.
My old structural prof (George Davis) would have loved this. Great video.
There is a place in southern Anza Borrego desert state park called the mud caves. I wonder when (not if) they will come a splashing down. Near Borrego Springs, there is a place called Slot Canyon, after a big rainfall a couple of years back it collapsed!!!
Cool, cool,cool!! So…..was the sasndstone that the landslide barreled into originally in a flat orientation and the landslide both compressed it into these amazing formations and pushed the following sandstone that wasn’t into direct contact with the impact site it into the angled direction or would all the limestone the landslide hit have previously been uplifted from some force of geology? Sorry if I’m not explaining well. I’m just picking up all my knowledge from all,your videos and trying to word it correctly which I’m probably not haha
Thank you Professor.
Thank you for explaining this. I’ve been a big fan of this canyon for many years. I am taking a lot of friends there and showed them the anticline so my question is, when you say the sturzstrom contacted the sandstone beds that’s what caused the curvature of the layers. I am assuming that the sandstone layers were a lot softer and Plyable?
I remember riding my motorcycle out in those hills and washes. There was a spot of black glassy obsidian in this tiny gorge. It was flat maybe twenty feet wide and forty feet wide. And It boggled my mind and didn’t understand why it was there.
That's really cool! When I think of a massive landslide like that, I have to imagine that there would be huge amounts of organic material (trees, plants maybe some animals) that would get caught up in the slide. Are there any fossils that indicate that this was the case here?
Love looking for and studying anticlines.. what amazes me is that this doesn’t happen just where you are. It has happened on a global scale across many continents 😉
Amazing story. i seen thanks for closer
Freeze frame at 10:31 crop it, print it, and hang it on a wall. Great stuff.
Did the impact create enough heat to melt sandstone? Is that why it curved instead of shattering?
Maybe including a map or site video at the beginning would have helped me better understand the direction of the force of the slide in relation to its source. Was this the end point, diagonal, or side force? Guessing end force, but I am not a stress or impact engineer. Very interesting to see that the force was sufficient to create folds in the sandstone.
Have you done a video about how arches form? I've seen your bridge videos.
Very interesting , a moment in time.
❤❤❤ Thank you!!
Wow, that is amazing! One question, was this the result of a sudden impact event or a slow mass wasting event where pressure continued over a period of time?
Very rapid.
@@shawnwillsey wow, that boggles the mind
the recent torrey pines bluff rockfall comes to mind, at a smaller scale.
at about 1:40 you said the rock crashed down from the mountain here and travelled out across the ground for km or Miles. Man, how big were those pieces of mountain coming down at a time. it's not clear to me what it looked like.
Professor, did you manage to explore the Oyster shell wash? or outside the gypsum mine?
It was an aggressive trip on limited time so no.
You should do a video on the rock formations in Shawnee National Park sometime. I have a friend who lives right next to the park and some of the pictures she shares are amazing and such curious swirls of rock.
Great Stuff!!!👍👍👍
thank you! I have so much to learn!!!
Thank you..very impressive
Wow! I’ve never seen nor heard of anything like that before. It would be difficult to believe without seeing it.
Although, not impossible. But not a common occurrence.
Amazing! Thanks!
Fonts point is really nice worth looking at