Orogeny Geological Formation of North America: 600 Million Years Ago To Present

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  • Опубліковано 30 лис 2024
  • Sloss Diagram and Phanerozoic Evolution of North America:
    This animation shows the relationship of: (1) the geologic evolution of North America from the latest Precambrian (600 Ma) to the Present (right), and (2) the distribution of the six major stratigraphic sequences in time and space for North America, as defined by Larry Sloss (1963) (left).
    On the chart, the vertical axis shows geologic time (from 600 million years (base) to the Present). The horizontal scale is in distance and indicates where sedimentation was occurring on the North American continent. The orientation of the diagram is roughly east (right side) to west (left side). The orange areas in the central part of the chart show where no sediments were deposited (i.e. hiatus). The white area indicates where sediments were being deposited (various shades of blue on the map). The purple triangles on the left and right side of the diagram indicate the timing major orogenies (times of mountain building). The horizontal red line indicates the geologic time being shown on the chart and matches the geologic time shown on the map.
    The video demonstrates four concepts:
    (1) the movement of geologic plates through time;
    (2) the movements of the oceans through time,
    (3) how North America has been repeatedly below and above sea level during its geologic history,
    (4) the distribution of Sloss sequences and how they are related to the paleo-geographic map view.
    The maps are courtesy of and reproduced with the permission of Professor Ron Blakey, Colorado Plateau Geosystems (cpgeosystems.com). Video is created by Jay Austin, Kris Schwendeman, and Paul Weimer. Interactive Geology Project, University of Colorado-Boulder. igp.colorado.edu
    Source: vimeo.com/8425...
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    Media disclaimer: www.zimtu.com/...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 166

  • @bidenadministrationischina5091
    @bidenadministrationischina5091 7 місяців тому +41

    After five minutes of searching on UA-cam, I finally found a video that gets closer to what I wanna see. The history of the geography of our planet and great detail.

  • @PlayNowWorkLater
    @PlayNowWorkLater Рік тому +12

    One of the best animations of continental drift/plate tectonics geared towards North Americans I’ve ever seen. Nice job!

    • @kmacdowe
      @kmacdowe 10 місяців тому

      Best one I have seen. Please share the better ones. Cheers!

    • @SmuggledPineapples
      @SmuggledPineapples 10 місяців тому

      It’s definitely not drifting… the point of plate tectonics was to get away from that theory.

  • @SEPHICHI420
    @SEPHICHI420 Рік тому +23

    People laugh when I say the Rockies are just babies compared to the Appalachians.
    Then I say, I wasn't talking height, but age.
    Usually they go🤯

  • @ZENmud
    @ZENmud Рік тому +4

    Being a neighbor of the La Garita Caldera near Creede, Colorado ~ I enjoyed focusing on how regularly our State was submerged (in geological time) ~ and that at least two submersions came from Arctic Ocean waters coming from the north(!).
    Centering on the USA is fine, but doing so can give the impression that our proto-continent was static; "everything else came here and impacted"(?). But my studies include how, when Pangea broke apart, the "early Colorado" (if permitted to label it as such) was located in the current "Indian Ocean" ~ and drifted west, rotating clockwise, and eventually hitting the Pacific plate(s).
    In this animation, that westward drift isn't evident: we see the Pacific plates moving east as if waves striking the beach. As hindsight being "20/20" this could be rectified with a composite overlay, showing the actual global voyage of this landmass from the Indian Ocean original* point.
    (* "original" = post-Pangea formation)

  • @morgan1719
    @morgan1719 8 місяців тому +19

    Last ice age: 01:56 Don't blink, it lasted just 100,000 years, or .2 seconds in this video

    • @KevinKimmich44024
      @KevinKimmich44024 3 місяці тому +2

      yeah, pretty amazing how short it was, but shaped the landscape millions of people live on top of.

    • @svendragon8139
      @svendragon8139 3 місяці тому

      Not surprising that they didn't try to include the land changes that would be flashing by. The isostatic depression and rebound from a 2 mile thick continent-spanning glacier forming and dissipating would be incredible.

    • @liquid_butter
      @liquid_butter 2 місяці тому

      ​@@svendragon8139 Future project

  • @moonooze6171
    @moonooze6171 3 роки тому +8

    Would love to be standing where I am right now and go back, 400 million years or so. Just to see what was here.

  • @briseboy
    @briseboy 2 місяці тому +3

    It has been good to learn that i spend most of my life in the orogenous zone.

  • @kingswayguitar
    @kingswayguitar 5 місяців тому +3

    thanks for this

  • @bengillis8524
    @bengillis8524 6 років тому +4

    I'd like to see URLs pointing out the data for 0:54 showing a mountain belt through what is now Louisiana. I found articles years ago correlating Alabama and Argentina fossils. But, nothing on the abrupt end of the southern Appalachian chain.

    • @toughenupfluffy7294
      @toughenupfluffy7294 Рік тому +1

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ouachita_orogeny

    • @bengillis8524
      @bengillis8524 Рік тому

      @@toughenupfluffy7294 Thanks. Been 4 years! However, it abrupt end of the Appalachian chain correlated to Argentina, not the Gulf Coast, is what I was looking for.

  • @palisadeshistory2010
    @palisadeshistory2010 4 роки тому +1

    This is a great video. Whom should I contact about its usage--probably 15 seconds worth or less--in 10 minute video about how the DC area came to be?

  • @sisfantasto7004
    @sisfantasto7004 3 роки тому +21

    It's going to break apart again. Earth is in constant movement and there is nothing you can do about it.

    • @jameso1447
      @jameso1447 3 роки тому

      It only broke once. See Neal Adams expanding Earth. No physics are suggested by him, but *all the continents fit together on a smaller globe.*

    • @melodiefrances3898
      @melodiefrances3898 2 роки тому +4

      Um, I am pretty sure no one is crazy enough to believe that they can do anything about the movement of the world's plates ...

    • @___domey
      @___domey Рік тому +1

      @@melodiefrances3898that is until you met me…

    • @zombieregime
      @zombieregime Рік тому

      Awe, how cute. Next tell them their bones are wet..... 🤣

    • @Auroral_Anomaly
      @Auroral_Anomaly Рік тому +1

      @@jameso1447Expanding earth is a stupid theory that is not supported by any actual evidence.

  • @evertonrichetti6518
    @evertonrichetti6518 3 місяці тому +1

    Perfection, I'm going to use this in my biology classes

  • @cowboygeologist7772
    @cowboygeologist7772 2 роки тому

    Very cool; thanks for posting.

  • @laoqinyou
    @laoqinyou 3 роки тому +4

    Silitizia accreted to the Pacific Northwest at around 50-55 million years. This is more or less all of the real estate to the west of I5 from Roseberg Oregon to Port Townsend. It was a basaltic flood province out in the ocean that came ashore courtesy of the Farallon plate. This is not shown and should be fixed. Having said that I am wondering if you showed Vancouver Island and the rest of the Wrangellia terrane coming ashore at around 100 million years?

  • @EclecticEssentric
    @EclecticEssentric 6 років тому +6

    Seems like it was just yesterday.

  • @m.s.l.7746
    @m.s.l.7746 6 років тому +2

    What was that at the end? Things that couldn't be mapped out or understood?

    • @cameronmueller-harder3916
      @cameronmueller-harder3916 Рік тому +1

      Glaciation! The very quick white flash is the ice age about 10,000 years ago. It's kind of wild to see the time scale difference between plate motion and something that we think of as being long ago and a huge global phenomenon. But plate movement is orders of magnitude slower and older. All of human existence is just in the last frame (or so)!

  • @jerrodbeck1799
    @jerrodbeck1799 3 місяці тому

    Amazing thank you for sharing that👍🏻

  • @johnaugsburger6192
    @johnaugsburger6192 4 місяці тому +2

    Thanks

  • @yellowking862
    @yellowking862 2 роки тому +1

    Exelent job

  • @duhduhvesta
    @duhduhvesta 5 місяців тому +1

    Thank you

  • @GregInEastTennessee
    @GregInEastTennessee 2 роки тому +1

    Interesting! But what about Baja BC? Is it in there and I missed it? Good job!

    • @toughenupfluffy7294
      @toughenupfluffy7294 Рік тому +2

      Although there is no Baja BC per se in the animation, you can see how it might've occurred if you watch the northward translation of the Pacific plate (and other plates?) as spreading ridges move north. I'm now more of a Baja BC believer watching this.

    • @joycefairfield9102
      @joycefairfield9102 Рік тому +1

      Zentnerds assemble.

    • @GregInEastTennessee
      @GregInEastTennessee Рік тому +1

      @@joycefairfield9102 You said it! 😀

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn 6 місяців тому

      Baja California is moving north really fast in geologic time.

  • @successthruknowledge
    @successthruknowledge Рік тому

    That was awesome!

  • @jeil5676
    @jeil5676 5 років тому +5

    This is really neato. I find fossils of coral, limpets and a bunch of clams and stuff just north of lake Ontario. Its obvious it was once part of an inland sea and I have always wondered how long ago it was like this, or how old those fossils were. According to this, it was last possible something like 300 million years ago? Amazing. If anyone knows better please leave a remark as I'm not even sure where to ask such questions.

    • @dragonridley
      @dragonridley Рік тому +1

      Old comment, I know, but I looked up some geologic maps of the Lake Ontario region. It looks like most bedrock on the north shore is from the Late Ordovician, 458-444 million years ago.

    • @jeil5676
      @jeil5676 Рік тому

      Thanks, the comment is still appreciated, though the fossils I find I doubt are just above bedrock. I'm not even sure whether sedimentary rock could be considered bedrock or not. There is a fossil free, thick layer of limestone above the layers where fossils are found, I suppose suggesting some type of event, maybe involving glacial silt/clay. I was thinking 300-350 million years ago was the last time there was an inland sea in the area, from some animations I had seen lately.@@dragonridley

    • @dragonridley
      @dragonridley Рік тому +1

      @@jeil5676 Yeah, sedimentary rock is considered bedrock. The deeper igneous and metamorphic rock is called the basement. Limestone usually indicates a shallow tropical sea without much sediment input from land. Generally the rocks in this region get older as you go north because the younger layers were eroded away by glaciers.

  • @kmacdowe
    @kmacdowe 2 роки тому

    Greeeeaaat! thanks!

  • @yellowking862
    @yellowking862 2 роки тому +1

    Verry good

  • @windwhipped5
    @windwhipped5 Рік тому

    Tge chart on the left represents transgressions (ocen rises) and regressions (ocean lowers) . In the older texts u would see it simplified as a just the left edges of the landmasses as jagged line going in and out (left and right) thats represented in the video.. the line kinda like a opposed mountain range on the left side going up and ages on the left kina like they are now..

  • @krystynahaberek5086
    @krystynahaberek5086 3 роки тому +2

    I once read that the distance from Vancouver Island in BC, Canada to Mainland Vancouver is decreasing. This would make this theory true. Who carries out these distance measurements?

  • @defiantspirit8512
    @defiantspirit8512 6 років тому +2

    Cool story bro

  • @omargonzalez5240
    @omargonzalez5240 6 років тому +2

    Interesting

  • @damedesmontagnes
    @damedesmontagnes 2 роки тому +1

    Woooooow...makes you wonder what happened...

  • @drawengrave01
    @drawengrave01 Рік тому

    Nice!

  • @paulgann7935
    @paulgann7935 2 роки тому +1

    I have always wondered if any evidence exists that would show the existence of a rift valley forming in the area of Florida as Pangaea split up similar to east Africa today? I have never read about any evidence of associated volcanism in Florida.

    • @toughenupfluffy7294
      @toughenupfluffy7294 Рік тому

      Florida looks like it was stretched at a triple junction when Africa and Europe split away during the breakup of Pangaea. From what little I know, I think the Atlantic spreading ridge migrated eastward, away from North America, before the opening of the Gulf of Mexico, making the entire area a passive margin setting without volcanic activity.
      Excellent observations!

  • @ritagonzalez1370
    @ritagonzalez1370 6 років тому +3

    Extremely fascinating but I guess I'm too dumb to understand it looks like water being pushed up against the land for years and years but I don't get how water turned. INTO land...

    • @tremblence
      @tremblence 6 років тому

      what you think are waves are a chain of islands, like Hawaii

    • @JaKeV46
      @JaKeV46 4 роки тому +1

      calcium dissolved in water precipitates into calcium carbonate deposits (like limestone) when acidity in water is low, many meters of limestone deposition from old oceans thru middle of canada, us, mexico.

    • @BlGGESTBROTHER
      @BlGGESTBROTHER 3 роки тому +3

      The biggest factor of "water turning into land" is climate change. During those periods where water covered much more of the surface of the earth than today the climate was much warmer. There were no polar ice caps at those times so the levels of the oceans were hundreds of feet deeper than they are today. Also, new land is constantly being created and destroyed through volcanism and plate tectonics.

    • @ritagonzalez1370
      @ritagonzalez1370 3 роки тому

      @@BlGGESTBROTHER you are amazing thank you so much

    • @jameso1447
      @jameso1447 3 роки тому +1

      @@ritagonzalez1370 Big picture: The moon tidally flexes the Earth. Cracks opens and close. Dirt falls into cracks, cracks do not fully close. Earth is forced outwards away from the core. Cavities develop underground and water migrates below surface. Volcanoes erupt burning crude oil and building mountains.
      You are right to question how large segments of Earth were drowned and then drained. The answer is: meteors - major meteor events that buried Earth. Those tend to flatten the Earth, sending water onto the continents.

  • @chriscopeland1318
    @chriscopeland1318 2 роки тому

    AMAZING….WOW

  • @KevinGonzalez-vu5bo
    @KevinGonzalez-vu5bo 4 роки тому +1

    Hmm, I don't know guys. But I still think that is hard to know how it was formed. There are other theories related on this. But still, others are trying to solve this mystery.

    • @JaKeV46
      @JaKeV46 4 роки тому

      whats the other theory

  • @saltygenes
    @saltygenes 10 місяців тому +2

    So....about Pangea...?

    • @BlueViper8907
      @BlueViper8907 6 місяців тому +2

      0:53 - 1:14, about 200-300 MYA. You can actually see the breakup of the Pannotia (the supercontinent that existed before Pangea) at the start of the video.

  • @CityNightsBLVD
    @CityNightsBLVD 2 місяці тому

    I have to do more research. I searched this video to find when the great flood happened. Seems like Earth at 600 million years ago seems to be the closet to what the flood could have look led like. But the dates may be wrong.

    • @oscarmedina1303
      @oscarmedina1303 8 днів тому

      If you are referring to the flood in the Bible, that never happened. Keep in mind the Bible is not a history book and if it were, it would only encompass about 6000 years of history. The last ice age ended about 12,800 year ago. That is about the last 1 second of the video.

  • @kellymurphy6642
    @kellymurphy6642 4 місяці тому

    So I understand the ice age, but what exactly was happening when the oceans were much higher? Was our daily temperatures much higher? Did the ice caps melt? Can someone explain that more? I’m sorta stoopid lol

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy 2 місяці тому

      Snorkel sales were booming in that era.
      (there were several ice ages. Buy a text, show up in class.)

  • @Halo-nf6xt
    @Halo-nf6xt 4 місяці тому

    Me 2, MORE What I Want To 👀 !
    Thanks 😇 🎵 MJB

  • @j1j1j1j1j1
    @j1j1j1j1j1 3 місяці тому +1

    Neat cartoon but how do you know all that actually happened

    • @liquid_butter
      @liquid_butter 2 місяці тому +2

      Geological evidence + hypothesis then evidence proving it ( or not) . It's a rabit hole if you choose to research it. DR. CHRISTOPHER WHITE has great lectures on UA-cam. Dig in and make your own conclusions if thus is a accurate ( yes some flaws I'm sure) depiction.

  • @teddyjackson1902
    @teddyjackson1902 Місяць тому +2

    The Appalachians aren’t in the right spot.

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek 5 місяців тому

    What is that old saw about "assumptions"? Assuming everything looked as it does today is as fallacious as assuming anything else.

  • @BlackBoi1daybeforeElectionDay
    @BlackBoi1daybeforeElectionDay 3 місяці тому +1

    No nunavut

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy 2 місяці тому

      No, No, Nunavut. Wasn't that a famous musical?

  • @Sparkitus805
    @Sparkitus805 6 років тому +2

    Nice cartoon
    Sorry that’s not how it happened.

    • @bensingletary4419
      @bensingletary4419 4 роки тому +2

      This is exactly what I was taught...

    • @Sparkitus805
      @Sparkitus805 4 роки тому +2

      The earth was bumped by another large object possibly the birth of Venus. You can readily view the impact swath on Google earth. It starts in The Atlantic Ocean cuts across the top of South America into the Pacific Ocean where all these continents were one large land mass at one time. Colossal trees covered this land mass with deep dark prehistoric forests. The story of Noah’s Ark.

    • @mariomcpokemon
      @mariomcpokemon 4 роки тому +1

      Sparkitus Maximus h

    • @Sparkitus805
      @Sparkitus805 4 роки тому +1

      Anonymous you were lied to by your teachers.

    • @Sparkitus805
      @Sparkitus805 4 роки тому +1

      Science Daddy it’s shameful how people like you think you’re the end all because you’ve been indoctrinated by traditional institutionalization lies and disinformation.

  • @marciano5709
    @marciano5709 5 місяців тому +4

    Because geologist have no answer on how the continent’s and mountains , they came out on this idea, they had formulated this.. they have to have something to tell the people.. for me , this is totally wrong.

    • @Gabe-d6z
      @Gabe-d6z 5 місяців тому +8

      How so?

    • @Gabe-d6z
      @Gabe-d6z 4 місяці тому +8

      @@marciano5709 you have no answer. You say something is wrong and then refuse to say why. I hope you reflect with yourself and think about what you really believe.

    • @marciano5709
      @marciano5709 4 місяці тому +3

      @@Gabe-d6z do you think that the magma can move trillions of tons of material, the mass of the dry materials is twice or more bigger then the magma, volcanoes is the valve to release pressure, so, how it can move continents? Just because a fossils that they found in different continents, animals can emigrated true the ice, those times the planet was covered by ice mostly.

    • @Gabe-d6z
      @Gabe-d6z 4 місяці тому +5

      @@marciano5709 because magma literally creates new crust? It doesn’t push the continents as much as literally extrend them. Do you look at a map of the Atlantic and assume the correlation in the shapes of the coasts are just a coincidence?

    • @marciano5709
      @marciano5709 4 місяці тому

      @@Gabe-d6z yes,what about the others coast? Doesn’t match any ones. What about Australia Alaska Asia. Geologist need to go deeper on this topic, there’s no way that the mountains was created by tectonics plate, how they formulated make sense, but in reality doesn’t work.

  • @BeamMonsterZeus
    @BeamMonsterZeus Рік тому +1

    The state borders are distracting and this whole thing looks really stupid as a result since it seems to be an oceanographic-type model overlaid on a map of the US + Mexico has no state borders for some reason, lol.

    • @ukraine-gonna-beat-ruzzia
      @ukraine-gonna-beat-ruzzia Рік тому +8

      For some users, the state borders help with identification of the possible context of marine fossils since some regions, identifiable by state borders, were underwater.

    • @SmuggledPineapples
      @SmuggledPineapples 10 місяців тому +3

      And the fact that this is a reconstruction from present meaning where things are now are broken down from what we observe and interpret the past to be. The state borders make perfect since.

  • @artstation707
    @artstation707 5 місяців тому

    Fiction.

    • @stargatecommand714
      @stargatecommand714 4 місяці тому +2

      No, it's science

    • @artstation707
      @artstation707 4 місяці тому

      @@stargatecommand714 This is absolute nonsense. Plate Tectonics is an illogical theory.

    • @stargatecommand714
      @stargatecommand714 4 місяці тому +1

      @@artstation707 get a degree in geology and then get back to me

    • @artstation707
      @artstation707 4 місяці тому

      @@stargatecommand714 A degree in nonsense is a degree in nonsense. I studied geology way back in the 1980s, probably before you were born. Plate Tectonics is a theory long since debunked.

    • @stargatecommand714
      @stargatecommand714 4 місяці тому +1

      @@artstation707 lmao what's your evidence, boomer?

  • @kellymurphy6642
    @kellymurphy6642 4 місяці тому +5

    So I understand the ice age, but what exactly was happening when the oceans were much higher? Was our daily temperatures much higher? Did the ice caps melt? Can someone explain that more? I’m sorta stoopid lol

    • @codydonreeder4056
      @codydonreeder4056 3 місяці тому +8

      On this scale the ice ages would be coming and going every few frames of video. This is loooong term variation. The sea level changes here are really the rocks moving up and down not the water.

    • @idle_speculation
      @idle_speculation 3 місяці тому +2

      It's a combination of less ice and also the seabed just being shallower, which pushes water into low-lying areas.

    • @kellymurphy6642
      @kellymurphy6642 3 місяці тому +1

      @@idle_speculation oooh I didn’t realize the seabeds were shallower. Thanks I feel a little bit more enlightened

    • @MajapahitEagleLeader
      @MajapahitEagleLeader 3 місяці тому +1

      What would happen if the North Pole was covered in 100 meters of ice?

    • @MajapahitEagleLeader
      @MajapahitEagleLeader 3 місяці тому

      *north pole

  • @krystynahaberek5086
    @krystynahaberek5086 3 роки тому +1

    I once read that the distance from Vancouver Island in BC, Canada to Mainland Vancouver is decreasing. This would make this theory true. Who carries out these distance measurements?