Thanks. I'd never heard of the Museum of Earth, and just checked it out online. I'll visit sometime. I don't know why the map was turned to put north at the bottom - but no worries. Good info.
Bryan, I respect your knowledge, I am having a problem, though, picturing ice being a shaping force that cuts down and gouges long thin lake basins. Glaciers round off and flatten out hilltops, no? Where else have we seen glaciers cutting down into lake beds?
+James Livingston There is a reason why they don't call the Finger Lakes fjords. They're not. They were carved out by flowing liquid water, they are not "U Shaped" as are typical fjords, and they were not carved out from "ice gouging"
Sub surface liquid rivers, filled with large chunks of ice and rock scoured the shape of the finger lakes. Randall Carlson covers this beautifully in Joe Rogan experience.
Did you honestly ask if there are any photographs of this geologic process happening 17,000 years ago ?? Or has something been lost in translation here....lol
@@rondias6625 I don't think you need comprehension classes to understand my comment... at least I hope not . Also if you took my comment as serious ....maybe you do need some instruction ? Anywhatever , I love the Finger Lakes and spend much of my time there , hope you do too !
I disagree with the assertion that moving ice sculpted the finger lakes. I believe they were cut by fast moving and fast melting ice water from whatever the event was that ended the Younger Dryas. You can see it plain as day in your colorful topographic map in this video. Think of the potential energy of the sheer mass in the ice that was suspended as high as 2 kilometers in the air. Now, picture that melting RAPIDLY and the water welling up and releasing over and over cutting DEEP channels into that soft shale. I would go back to the drawing board here, respectfully.
Love it when uneducated individuals just open up their mind and vomit their thoughts. To be fair, this video sucked, not just as far as presentation (her delivery, and poor selection of maps to use) and so thinking it explains how the glaciers did the job (they did, not water) isn't fair. In order to understand how the glaciers actually did it, you need to understand the entire process, which really can't be explained in a short video like this.
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If you adjust the speed to 0.25 times faster it's actually possible to listen to her
Lmfao
sometimes slow is better......
lol thanks
True, much better at 1.25x
I used 1.5x, made it sound pretty normal, if a bit overdramatic in tone.
When you record a kindergarten teacher reading this as a book aloud to their class.
Excellent information ! Thank you! Incorporating intoa regenerative farming video! 🌱
Thanks. I'd never heard of the Museum of Earth, and just checked it out online. I'll visit sometime.
I don't know why the map was turned to put north at the bottom - but no worries.
Good info.
Wow what an interesting story of how these areas formed. Thanks for sharing!
Fascinating. I could imagine Mr. Rogers giving this lecture with little bells sounding in the background.....
Imagine....whirled peas......
How do you explain the dovetail drumlins to the north?
Bryan, I respect your knowledge, I am having a problem, though, picturing ice being a shaping force that cuts down and gouges long thin lake basins. Glaciers round off and flatten out hilltops, no? Where else have we seen glaciers cutting down into lake beds?
+Andy MacDougal fjords in Alaska and Norway??
+James Livingston There is a reason why they don't call the Finger Lakes fjords. They're not. They were carved out by flowing liquid water, they are not "U Shaped" as are typical fjords, and they were not carved out from "ice gouging"
Sub surface liquid rivers, filled with large chunks of ice and rock scoured the shape of the finger lakes. Randall Carlson covers this beautifully in Joe Rogan experience.
Are there any photographs of this happening to substantiate this ? Thanks again .
Yes, the geomorphology of this area sculpted by glacial movement is a snapshot documenting this process.
Did you honestly ask if there are any photographs of this geologic process happening 17,000 years ago ?? Or has something been lost in translation here....lol
@@rondias6625 I don't think you need comprehension classes to understand my comment... at least I hope not . Also if you took my comment as serious ....maybe you do need some instruction ? Anywhatever , I love the Finger Lakes and spend much of my time there , hope you do too !
Even 2x feels slow
Great ASMR Ice!
1.25x is your friend
Damn if Ice do, damn if ice don't,
change the narrator PLEASE
I disagree with the assertion that moving ice sculpted the finger lakes. I believe they were cut by fast moving and fast melting ice water from whatever the event was that ended the Younger Dryas. You can see it plain as day in your colorful topographic map in this video. Think of the potential energy of the sheer mass in the ice that was suspended as high as 2 kilometers in the air. Now, picture that melting RAPIDLY and the water welling up and releasing over and over cutting DEEP channels into that soft shale. I would go back to the drawing board here, respectfully.
+Andy MacDougal I agree that moving water really sculpted the land
@Bryan Isacks Why did the ice recede, who was driving those big SUV back then
I think Warmer summers caused many different floods over hundreds of yrs.freezing again every winter.They just didn't all melt in one summer
Love it when uneducated individuals just open up their mind and vomit their thoughts. To be fair, this video sucked, not just as far as presentation (her delivery, and poor selection of maps to use) and so thinking it explains how the glaciers did the job (they did, not water) isn't fair. In order to understand how the glaciers actually did it, you need to understand the entire process, which really can't be explained in a short video like this.
Looks more like water erosion.
This shit is hilarious 😂😂😂
Send in the asteroids
can she talk any slower? jfc..