That Skagit Gneiss is really VERY nice!!! Love that photo! I don't watch it live; found it randomly on UA-cam, but plan to join the live stream this November. I look forward to it. I have been a geology nut since third grade. My mom wanted me to play with Barbie, but rocks are alive and dolls are dead!
Hi Nick, I dont just watch this live, I pipe all the episodes round my house instead of background music. It's got me. Love all you do, Pete on the Isle of Wight.
Greetings rather late, 19:15 CST in Madison, WI. We were driving around the Driftless west & north of Mount Horeb when you were broadcasting live. But we wouldn't miss this for anything else!
HI Nick, Catching up on my Nick from Home and saw your gift from the folks in Klamath Falls of the OPALS. A quick look on google said that amber translucent looking opal is called a Mexican Opal. Hmmmmmmm. Could it be? Could it be? " Made in Mexico" ? You are a fantastic teacher. Thank You so much for your efforts.
Great, thank you, Nick. I really appreciate your efforts, and look forward to every episode. Much better picture quality when replayed, as picture was fuzzy when livestreamed - not seen it like that through all your live stuff. Fine after upload, thank goodness. Cheers from Jane in Hereford in England.
AFTER THE BARN SCHIST STORY I WAS SO GLAD YOU HAD YOUR 3 WEEKS OF COOLNESS AT 19. THE ZIRCONS SEEM TO BE LENDING A NICE PERFECT RATIO MODEL TO THE GAME. THAT'S ALL I GOT, BUT HAVE YET TO ENTER THE COZY FORT.
Nick I have seen increased magma flow in your region on Seismograms. Keeping you in my Prayers that the magma flowing beneath the region simply continues to move on by as it normally does. You of all people are well aware of what's normal and what's not. Just wanted you to know I'm Praying as are many others who are monitoring what is going on in the Cascadia Region. Believe it or not even northern Manhattan and the Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens New York City have become Seismically active as well. Sending you Love from the shores of Long Island Sound.
Enjoy your lectures very much. Thanks, you engage very well. As North America overrides the E. Pacific upwelling and obstructs its emissions, the subduction of JdF will diminish, but the output of the upwelling has to go somewhere - will the nature of west coast volcanoes change, perhaps to be more like Hawaiian volcanos?
Reading list, short and sweet: Ralph Haugerud USGS 2009 Map booklet, see Exotic S Robert B. Miller, The Mesozoic Rimrock Lake Inlier, Southern Washington Cascades: Implications for the Basement to the Columbia Embayment. GSA Bulletin (1989) 101(10): 1289-1305 And I concur, this is such a delightful online community. In an age of anti- this and that, pro-whatever, it’s nice to see nice people just wanting to learn and understand. Very much like a Mr. Rogers Neighborhood of geology. You gotta love it. ❤️
Yes I also had an issue with it being low. No idea why as sound is fine watching everything else. It did get a little louder when Nick pushed the plug in better.
The part where you talked about people confusing Cenozoic mammal fossils with dinosaurs reminds me of this cute clip: m.ua-cam.com/video/NsLKQTh-Bqo/v-deo.html
That Skagit Gneiss is really VERY nice!!! Love that photo! I don't watch it live; found it randomly on UA-cam, but plan to join the live stream this November. I look forward to it. I have been a geology nut since third grade. My mom wanted me to play with Barbie, but rocks are alive and dolls are dead!
Love watching these. Nick is such a gneiss guy.
@Erick Sawyer you're right no one cares. FO
@@lawsonjamison9681 what's your master plan?
Hi Nick, I dont just watch this live, I pipe all the episodes round my house instead of background music. It's got me. Love all you do, Pete on the Isle of Wight.
Thank you very much great programs cheers from South Wales.
Thank you Nick for this lecture really fascinated by it. We appreciate your time doing this for us. Have a great weekend from Ireland
Great episode! Thanks, Nick!
Always sad to miss the live stream but so glad to catch up later. Thanks so much for these, Nick!
Greetings rather late, 19:15 CST in Madison, WI. We were driving around the Driftless west & north of Mount Horeb when you were broadcasting live. But we wouldn't miss this for anything else!
HI Nick, Catching up on my Nick from Home and saw your gift from the folks in Klamath Falls of the OPALS. A quick look on google said that amber translucent looking opal is called a Mexican Opal. Hmmmmmmm. Could it be? Could it be? " Made in Mexico" ? You are a fantastic teacher. Thank You so much for your efforts.
Great, thank you, Nick. I really appreciate your efforts, and look forward to every episode.
Much better picture quality when replayed, as picture was fuzzy when livestreamed - not seen it like that through all your live stuff. Fine after upload, thank goodness. Cheers from Jane in Hereford in England.
Thanks again, you are awesome.
Great show big guy!
The audio is usually pretty good with your shows. But this time it really sucks. Really enjoyed every program other than the sound quality this time
This gets so interesting!!!
AFTER THE BARN SCHIST STORY I WAS SO GLAD YOU HAD YOUR 3 WEEKS OF COOLNESS AT 19. THE ZIRCONS SEEM TO BE LENDING A NICE PERFECT RATIO MODEL TO THE GAME. THAT'S ALL I GOT, BUT HAVE YET TO ENTER THE COZY FORT.
Nick I have seen increased magma flow in your region on Seismograms. Keeping you in my Prayers that the magma flowing beneath the region simply continues to move on by as it normally does. You of all people are well aware of what's normal and what's not. Just wanted you to know I'm Praying as are many others who are monitoring what is going on in the Cascadia Region. Believe it or not even northern Manhattan and the Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens New York City have become Seismically active as well. Sending you Love from the shores of Long Island Sound.
Enjoy your lectures very much. Thanks, you engage very well.
As North America overrides the E. Pacific upwelling and obstructs its emissions, the subduction of JdF will diminish, but the output of the upwelling has to go somewhere - will the nature of west coast volcanoes change, perhaps to be more like Hawaiian volcanos?
Thank you Nick!
I watched all later on UA-cam from high above willow Alaska
Sorry I missed your livestream Professor Zentner. I was turning wrenches on the Jeep.
Reading list, short and sweet:
Ralph Haugerud USGS 2009 Map booklet, see Exotic S
Robert B. Miller, The Mesozoic Rimrock Lake Inlier, Southern Washington Cascades: Implications for the Basement to the Columbia Embayment. GSA Bulletin (1989) 101(10): 1289-1305
And I concur, this is such a delightful online community. In an age of anti- this and that, pro-whatever, it’s nice to see nice people just wanting to learn and understand. Very much like a Mr. Rogers Neighborhood of geology. You gotta love it. ❤️
...We all live on a Grellow Submarine... Grellow Submarine... Grellow Submarine...
I've been dying to say this: That's some "nice gneiss".
Nick, awesome program. Any thoughts about the recent up lift in Yellowstone?
I want to dig for fire opal! It'll take me awhile before I can travel though.
Zircons rule. Thanks again, Nick. Such a genuine treat.
Excuse me Professor.. Excuse me. I think your map @40:00 minutes is supposed to be colored flamingo not chrome yellow.
Nick is really gneiss man
Nick is the Schist! It’s Gneiss to seek the truth about our great Northwest!
You probably know this by now, but I micron (uM) is a micro meter or 1/1,000,000 meter. If your hair is about 6 µm wide. 1 inch is about 25,400 µm
Therefore, 100 µm is a little less than 4/1,000 inch (0.004”) which is in the adjustment range of many automotive engines.
Is it just me... but i never hear “muffler boy”?
Muffler boy has become an entirely metaphorical being representing all of the BS that the world places between Prof Nick and teaching geology.
i think opal is my birthstone
I’m sorry but do believe those questions do not come from Patrick.....
Was going to say, Gary takes gneiss pics but it sounded kind of lame to me.
OWL Olympic Wallowa Linament!
I could barely hear this. Did anyone else have this problem?
no
Yes I also had an issue with it being low. No idea why as sound is fine watching everything else. It did get a little louder when Nick pushed the plug in better.
@@TheDanEdwards I have no idea as normally I can hear Nick just fine, but not today.
I had to listen with the volume on highest. A bit better when he moved the mic away from his collar.
The part where you talked about people confusing Cenozoic mammal fossils with dinosaurs reminds me of this cute clip: m.ua-cam.com/video/NsLKQTh-Bqo/v-deo.html
Oh gosh, you mean you aren’t supposed to put the kitchen sink in the soup? I guess that’s why nobody ate it.
micro meters.