Yeager Rock and the Waterville Plateau

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  • Опубліковано 1 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 184

  • @jeffpalmer5502
    @jeffpalmer5502 Рік тому +2

    Yeah, I’ve stopped at that rock a lot driving my motorcycle out of Mansfield . Mom and dad live in Manson so it’s not that far to go and I like eating at the old Tavern in Mansfield. 👍🍻great video once again.

  • @mileslong9675
    @mileslong9675 Рік тому +1

    This is fascinating. I’ve been curious about the geology of Washington State since I first came out here in the ‘70s. Thank you!!!

  • @martyheresniak5203
    @martyheresniak5203 Рік тому +1

    Milk Duds. German Chocolate Cake. Pizza Boxes. Pigs rising through Jello. Ruffles Potato Chips. Giant Bakery Whales. I wonder why I binge eat watching your videos.

  • @hollyegee2199
    @hollyegee2199 Рік тому +6

    My family is from Waterville…pioneers. The eratocs on the way to McNeil canyon and the cascades in the background are amazing!

  • @oldgandy5355
    @oldgandy5355 Рік тому +46

    Nick, I lived in Bridgeport for eight years, very familiar with this area. I am delighted to see someone of your stature talking about the plateau. Bridgeport, of course, is down in the valley. Obvious to me that there is a lot more to the story than just the Missoula floods. I lived above Tonasket on Mt. Hull for five years. Hunted and fished most of Okanogan county. Never had a good idea of how the Okanogan Valley was formed. Thank you for helping me understand there are huge gaps in my knowledge base. I have been following your presentations for about seven years now. I may be addicted to the quest for knowledge. Thank you for what you do.. Kennewick Man From Moody, Texas.

    • @DonnaCsuti-ji2dd
      @DonnaCsuti-ji2dd Рік тому +2

      We have a Bridgeport on the east side of the Sierra Nevada mountains must be a popular name.

    • @frankmoreau8847
      @frankmoreau8847 Рік тому +1

      I live about 400' above Tonasket and have wondered how the valley formed also. I have exposed banks of river deposits at my elevation. I don't know if the area somehow has risen up or the river ran up this high and eroded down. The deposits are sand and rounded rock, no irregular rock, making me think of river deposits rather than glacial till.

    • @oldgandy5355
      @oldgandy5355 Рік тому

      @@frankmoreau8847 On my place on Mt. Hull, at 3200 ft elevation, there are a couple erratics, one of them the size of a small house, which do not match the surrounding ground cover. I knew they had to come from somewhere else, but hadn't figured out how or where from. Still don't know where from, but how is easy. Don't know whether it was Wisconsin Ice sheet or Spokane ice sheet, but I think it was probably Wisconsin, as you would assume the last one would have moved all the previous debris out, and left only it's own graffiti in place. In your case, are the river deposits layer upon layer upon layer, or just one thick, jumbled mess? The DNR fire webpage has a good map with fire incidents overlaid on an impressive lidar background. Quite an eyeopener to me to see just how the terrain lays. Nick had a couple of "shows" on the Okanogan valley indicating several massive floods in the last couple hundred thousand years. If you can find them, they might shed some light on your sediments.

  • @101rotarypower
    @101rotarypower Рік тому +32

    Feel so fortunate we get to see all these POI and have a clear concise story to attach it to.
    Thank You Nick, Really Love these types of videos!

  • @RebeccaMundschenk
    @RebeccaMundschenk Рік тому +2

    My husband and i appreciate hearing your huffing and puffing up the rocks! Makes us feel better.

  • @TreDeuce-qw3kv
    @TreDeuce-qw3kv Рік тому +6

    Nick, as you no doubt know Ice carried erratics are found nearly as far south as Eugene(Oregon) in the Willamette valley; Some are not far off !-5. At a school near Eugene that I did some engineering on, there was a very nice specimen at the entrance to the school building. A lot more Erratics in the area were destroyed by farmers.
    I grew up in the Okanogan Valley and had the opportunity to travel all over the area and was fascinated and puzzled by the geology I viewed in the Okanogan/Okanagan, Methow, and as far as Spokane. Later I lived in the south Puget Sound area, and still later in the Columbia River Gorge, and later still, near John Day. All areas that incite your geological curiosity. Thanks for these informative posts

    • @starcrib
      @starcrib Рік тому

      He's so cool. Amazing knowledge he shares with people who are wanting to be informed !!! 🟧🔳🟥🌿🌿🇺🇸

  • @rogerallen6644
    @rogerallen6644 Рік тому +1

    These field trips are quite worth the time to watch. The story behind the terrain is fascinating.

  • @barrybeckford2733
    @barrybeckford2733 Рік тому +4

    You sir, have a gift... everything I've seen is informative, fun, and educational..thank you!

  • @garypaull9382
    @garypaull9382 Рік тому +1

    Your video jogged an old memory for me. One snowyfrozen winter day, I drove from Chelan to Spokane via McNeil Canyon with a friend. Totally socked in when we left Chelan, then the magic! Cresting out of McNeil onto the plateau was a scene straight out of the Ice Age. Shocking blue sky, and a flat, white expanse forever, wind blowing drifting snow around. It was as if we had gone through a portal and popped onto the surface of the Okanogan Lobe itself!

  • @TimKirkPhotos
    @TimKirkPhotos Рік тому +12

    That’s awesome. I was also in the area on Sunday. We drove up and over the Withrow moraine and talked about the topography before heading to Chelan for ice cream.

  • @ELMS
    @ELMS Рік тому +2

    Please take someone with you when you do this sort of thing. One twisted ankle, for example, and it’s a bad day. I say this as someone who once had to drive a car with a broken leg. Safety issues aside, you’re the best!

  • @bobbyadkins885
    @bobbyadkins885 Рік тому +9

    Thanks for taking us along, as an easterner I’m not only amazed by the geology but also by the quality of rural WA roads and the lack of traffic! and Nick be careful out there you’re no spring chicken ole boy, lol

  • @aspencrest
    @aspencrest Рік тому +1

    I loved the quiet scenic ending cut without further commentary. That was nice. Feel like the old Charles corralt show on Sunday mornings

  • @datobaggu
    @datobaggu Рік тому +3

    Welcome Home! and glad to see you back at it!

  • @jenniferlevine5406
    @jenniferlevine5406 Рік тому +10

    Wow - great video. Thanks for taking us along! This is so fascinating to actually see the rocks in the landscape they have been deposited in.

  • @Thedavidsavage
    @Thedavidsavage Рік тому +3

    Nick you are a national treasure. Thanks for your expertise and thorough presentation of a very interesting subject.

    • @ctfyer
      @ctfyer Рік тому +1

      Well said; I add my voice to this note of appreciation for Nick!

  • @peacenow4456
    @peacenow4456 Рік тому +2

    Many thanks, Nick!

  • @_Michiel_
    @_Michiel_ Рік тому +6

    Thank you for taking us along again, Nick! Looks like some giant has been sowing rocks to grow a mountain range! 😂

  • @witherbossbros1157
    @witherbossbros1157 Рік тому +5

    A cliff hanger! Tune in same time, same channel! Geology degree here. I'm an east coaster who happened to be in Seattle, and ended up driving by these back in '99 and "erratics" was what came to mind. Looking forward to your next video on this. Thanks for you time to share and explain these wonders.

  • @sharonseal9150
    @sharonseal9150 Рік тому +13

    Another fun field trip - always fun to see the landscape through your eyes and listen to your musings Nick! If you are driving through Wenatchee Valley this late summer or fall, try driving down the old Rock Island road as it branches off from Grant Road in East Wenatchee. You can get a good sampling of the diversity of erratic boulders that are imbedded in the Pangborn Bar just by seeing what is lined up on the edge of each home site. Also, there is a gravel operation into the side of the Pangborn Bar just above Rock Island Road, and you can drive right up to it as see the layers of till there on the walls of the excavated site.

  • @darrenmarrable2530
    @darrenmarrable2530 Рік тому +1

    Going above and beyond Nick....Brilliant...

  • @dabberdan3200
    @dabberdan3200 Рік тому +3

    Field tripping with Nick ❤
    Your facts mixed with the localities and explanations are very impressive.All of theses are mind blowing!
    I thought that I had a good grasp on Washington State geology.
    These are top notch videos and knowledge I’ve never fully understood. I’m very rarely impressed with a video collection like this one.
    Super Grateful for this information ❤❤

  • @johnbohnstedt4818
    @johnbohnstedt4818 Рік тому +3

    Thanks Nick! Looking fit, glad you got the knees done.

  • @russellbarndt6579
    @russellbarndt6579 Рік тому +1

    I so appreciate your interest in sharing your knowledge and discoveries, thank you good sir.!

  • @phillipstephens3079
    @phillipstephens3079 Рік тому +12

    There are a number of gouged-out “potholes” on that plateau that collect and hold water throughout the year…refuge and waypoint resting zones for migratory waterfowl and of course deer, coyotes, badger, now antelope plus other feathered fowl and raptors. Sage brush and bunch grass are dominant where tilled soil does not exist. Raptors love those Milk Duds….🦉

  • @mettenna2635
    @mettenna2635 Рік тому +7

    Excellent video storytelling in the opening of this video, using the expansive sky and fields of the Waterville to conjure up the ghost of the glacial lobe that once occupied it. A lobe that was modest compared to the Spokane lobe before it, but was still able to pluck up and transport a rock the size of Yeager. Really brings perspective to the enormity of the Bretz observations.

  • @julescaru8591
    @julescaru8591 Рік тому +4

    Just love field tripping with you Nick , always interesting and I never fail to learn something new!
    All the best Jules 👍

  • @runninonempty820
    @runninonempty820 Рік тому +3

    Wow, what a cool place! Thank you for showing it. I can't believe the size of some of those erratics.

  • @gregwarner3753
    @gregwarner3753 Рік тому +2

    Anne and I became fascinated by the Bretz floods several decades ago. Except for a couple of trips to Idaho and eastern Oregon we were unable to visit these areas. She dies a couple of years ago and I no longer have the energy to drive that far or the desire to take an airplane. Your videos make up for not being able to see these fascinating places myself.
    As I am recovering my health I plan on visiting Maine and the Canadian Maritimes. Hopefully I will be able to watch sunrise from Cape Spear, Newfoundland, Canada. Completely different geology but still fascinating. Thank you for your presentation.

  • @darlenemc3586
    @darlenemc3586 Рік тому +30

    I've driven by this rock many times and always wondered, how did it get there?!? Thank you!

  • @coreysue3451
    @coreysue3451 Рік тому +3

    so hard to imagine the giant ice there that left those boulders; holy cow. Nice vid, too! Look how techy you are now...I'm damn proud.

  • @filipisandre
    @filipisandre Рік тому +5

    wow, i was glued to this all the way through. i must admit that ice age floods and ice sheets are unfortunately where i start spacing out thinking about geochemistry or igneous stuff or all kinds of ”more titillating” geology instead lol, but as always, you make everything a learning adventure and im so incredibly appreciative of exactly that!

  • @KozmykJ
    @KozmykJ Рік тому +1

    Thanks Nick. Always something interesting ! 👍

  • @cdayperry2701
    @cdayperry2701 Рік тому +2

    I love these local geology lessons! I am native to N Central WA and am always curious about the landscape when it looks unusual. TY

  • @marsharose2301
    @marsharose2301 Рік тому +3

    Thanks for giving us new things to think about timing of ice sheets and ice age floods. It’s so fun to ponder more than the “normal” ice age sagas!

  • @mikegerbman8141
    @mikegerbman8141 Рік тому +1

    For sure geology about Seattle I had no idea or understanding.
    Thanks Nick.

  • @lordorion5776
    @lordorion5776 Рік тому +3

    Good day,
    Another fabulous outing! Looking at this Wisconsin tillscape (it's English, mangle the wording as needed), I can only think that the previous tillscape would have been similar, maybe with a more or less variegated set of large boulders, with a similar sand/gravel/cobble/small boulder composition. There would be the possibility that whatever was left after 100,000+ years of erosion is below that tillscape you were walking around upon. But, I would think that would mean that the Wisconsin ice moved 'over' the previous tillscape. I think it is more likely that the Wisconsin ice bulldozed/plowed the remaining previous tillscape and mixed it in with its own Wisconsin till in the various moraines left by the Wisconsin retreat. You may need to sample a pre-Wisconsin terminal moraine and make a comparison with a known Wisconsin Terminal moraine and samples of the surface till that you were just walking on. You may also need to make a comparison between the leading and tailing sections of a Wisconsin terminal moraine for differences in composition. More student activities,,,
    Tony

  • @laurafolsom2048
    @laurafolsom2048 Рік тому +4

    There are so many of them up there it’s amazing!

  • @kathleensayce6035
    @kathleensayce6035 Рік тому +1

    Looking forward to Jerome and you dissecting the geologic history of the prior ice age from here north into BC. Thank you also for taking the time to slow down and show in focus closeups of the rocks you look at in the field. Who knew that viewers could get motion sick watching the camera swing around too fast! Thanks for thinking of your audience!

  • @Utahdropout
    @Utahdropout Рік тому +1

    Love these vicarious field trips. Hope to get out there and see for myself some day.

  • @ccn6558
    @ccn6558 Рік тому +1

    The Waterville Plateau is my playground. I am in love with the geology, the sagebrush steppe, the birds & animals that live here. I'm still heart broken that the 2020 fire took out so much of the remaining sage habitat. It will take decades to recover.

  • @davec9244
    @davec9244 Рік тому +1

    I was there about 4 months ago was amazed by the size and amount of the erratic. thank you stay safe all

  • @DonnaCsuti-ji2dd
    @DonnaCsuti-ji2dd Рік тому +1

    Thanks Nick for an interesting field trip. I didn't know about the plateau before.

  • @jwardcomo
    @jwardcomo Рік тому +1

    Fascinating story. Thanks!!

  • @wendygerrish4964
    @wendygerrish4964 Рік тому +3

    Dancing with glacial till.Yow. Those are big erratics. Got one up in S Colton NY called Sunday Rock (there were no Sundays past there in indian times) where the old family farm is near. The town made a very nice little road stop park out of it, with an information plaque.

  • @lorenmorelli9249
    @lorenmorelli9249 Рік тому +1

    Beautiful Presentation .. 😎

  • @Redfour5
    @Redfour5 8 місяців тому +1

    It is so neat. I can get on google maps and see Yeager Rock then focus in and see the line of erratics in the fields around it. Then you can imagine the edge of the ice dropping these things and since they are so big you can infer the depth and mass of the ice before it let go of its load. And, in relation to previous ice sheets, much of it appears to be a plateau that has seen repeated coverings of ice over like the 2.6? million years of this particular ice age. The Wisconsin may have covered previous evidence, but you have to wonder how many times that area has seen ice covering it... And here we are, clever apes, trying to understand, very full of ourselves, thinking with zero evidence, we are God's gift to the Universe having made God up in the first place, our only real distinction being able to partially comprehend that which is so much larger than ourselves. Definitely a mixed blessing.
    We go to Alberta and there is a place up there with two massive erratics that are the size of like a 5 story buildings side by side up there, can't remember exactly where but all over there are the small boulders in campgrounds everywhere, slightly too big to pick up, laying in the forest dropped as the ice must of retreated leaving its legacy. Our favorite is Peter Lougheed Provincial park. I'm afraid to let out the secret to Americans, but it rivals Glacier National Park and is south of well known Banff and north of Glacier. It is a mass of carved mountains that once you begin to comprehend the forces that created the grandeur, you should be chastened as to how small we are as creatures.

  • @davidcooke8005
    @davidcooke8005 Рік тому +2

    I have a granite glacial erratic in my back yard on Tiger Mountain. I should do a video, 'Zentnerology 101, what I know about my back yard's geohistory from watching Zentner videos'.

  • @GeologyDude
    @GeologyDude Рік тому +2

    Good video! It has been a long time since I was there!

  • @Taskerofpuppets
    @Taskerofpuppets Рік тому +1

    Deserves as much attention as Avebury & Stonehenge. More interesting if you ask me. At least it’s natural. The Rock being tagged with Grad dates reminds me of Arco Peak Number Hill in Arco, Idaho right by Craters of the Moon. Cheers Nick, love your videos.

  • @myhoule
    @myhoule Рік тому +1

    Howdy Nick. Great video. There are many rounded drop stones in the glacial deposits shown . Perhaps better described as diamictite rather than till since it is poorly consolidated and not showing classic overloading features of a typical lodgement till (see Eyles and Eyles 1992 in Facies Models section 5 edited by R.G. Walker and N.P. James, Geological Association of Canada QE651.F25 1992).

  • @IstasPumaNevada
    @IstasPumaNevada Рік тому +1

    I stopped there in July on a drive from western Washington back to western Montana. It was a really nice surprise.

  • @starcrib
    @starcrib Рік тому +1

    Fantastical ! You're always hitting the ground with erudite knowledge. We are better informed every single time you speak. 🇺🇸🌿🇺🇸 🟥🟥🟧🔳🌬🕯

  • @valeriehenschel1590
    @valeriehenschel1590 Рік тому +2

    Hope you get to spend some time in a place like Alaska where you can observe retreating glaciers and their trails. So much understanding comes from watching the actual process in a first hand experience. Places like Juneau, and Kennicott (Copper River) give you an excellent education quickly into the workings of moving and stagnant ice, rock, and water. How did they get the cars to the other side of the river/glacier without a bridge? They drive them over the frozen water in winter. Forget the land bridge to Alaska, the people just walked the ice in winter when moving to new locations without dirt under foot.

  • @billy-go9kx
    @billy-go9kx Рік тому +51

    The old farmer told his wife...I sure hope some Geologist appreciates me collecting these rocks in one place so he doesn't have to search the whole 50 acres.

  • @bigwheelsturning
    @bigwheelsturning Рік тому +1

    I always wondered about the way the land changed around where I lived back in Lawrence, Kansas. West and South of me it was just gently rolling land. Around my home and to the North and East, it was river bottoms. Then I did some "digging" and found that one of the Ice age's southern edge covered my home and area and did a number on the land when it melted. Never too old to learn Geology.

  • @ksphinney1
    @ksphinney1 Рік тому +4

    Yeah. More videos🎉 Kathi from Orem

  • @mikespangler98
    @mikespangler98 Рік тому +2

    Just a hair west of Yeager rock is Road I. It leads south into the very top of Moses Coulee. From 172 all you can see looking south is a gentle dip. There is no clue Moses Coulee is there.
    Now, about Foster Coulee, when was that carved? What happens when a preexisting coulee or valley going east-west gets run over by a glacier going south? The upper end of Foster Coulee is just a bit below the top of Steam boat Rock. There is a really big scour you can see from the lake end of Barker Canyon Road at the top of the cliff face. It's cooler now, I should take another crack at getting up there.

  • @drincmusic2769
    @drincmusic2769 Рік тому +1

    that drive is always a treat to go out and see all of these weird geological anomalies that just make the landscape look very alien. I think there are sand dunes out there too just before dropping down the hill into chelan

    • @drincmusic2769
      @drincmusic2769 Рік тому

      or maybe they're piles of that glacial till.

  • @Sailor376also
    @Sailor376also Рік тому +1

    At 8:45 so are those terminal moraines you just scanned? Michigan,, we have lots of erratics and terminal moraines. Just drove over two on my way home , one 60,000yo the other 14,000 yo

  • @GregInEastTennessee
    @GregInEastTennessee Рік тому +2

    I'll try to get out there next week. I'll get the drone up weather permitting.

  • @laurafolsom2048
    @laurafolsom2048 Рік тому +4

    I know that area well! I never knew the real name, we called it number rock

  • @Vickie-Bligh
    @Vickie-Bligh Рік тому +2

    This was cool. Thanks, Nick.

  • @johnmarkey5470
    @johnmarkey5470 Рік тому +7

    Looking in the glossary of my Geo 101 book for "ass over tea kettle". 😄

    • @kaboom4679
      @kaboom4679 Рік тому +2

      It's in the supplemental field techniques book .

    • @Steviepinhead
      @Steviepinhead Рік тому

      Look under P for Patrick...!

  • @d.t.4523
    @d.t.4523 Рік тому +1

    Thank you. Keep working, good luck.

  • @Every_Day_Adventure
    @Every_Day_Adventure Рік тому +1

    I've been atop that plateau, its a different world. I love dropping down into the Moses Cooley, that things is just Cool...

  • @Michael-rg7mx
    @Michael-rg7mx Рік тому +1

    Open question. Bretz wrote about how the loess is deposited by a series of floods. The oldest being the bottom layer. But under them are very deep channels cut by the first flood.
    Another expert you interviewed talked about how every part has an indication of being under flood waters. But where they are, they can't be flooded with standing water now.
    So the question. Was the entire valley from the Cascades to the Rockies flooded with standing water? Lake Nick! Then, one day, an Earthquake allowed it to break through the Cascades and drained rapidly, carving those deepest channels??? Did it flood from BC to Oregon the first time?

  • @gfsimmons1
    @gfsimmons1 Рік тому +1

    My family farmed for over 70 years in the Yakima valley including bringing Rosa land under irrigation. Over the years we uncovered several granite boulders requiring equipment to move out of the fields.

  • @theMick52
    @theMick52 Рік тому +2

    We're very lucky that the glacier decided to drop that giant rock so close to the highway. If it was only 20 feet another way they would've had to go around it!

  • @douglasschafer6372
    @douglasschafer6372 Рік тому +2

    In western South Dakota almost on the North Dakota line, I find small boulders, roughly formed approximately 2 foot round or squarish. These look like they have been coated in a tan clay and fired. I've seen one or two of them that are broken and they still remind me of fired clay. I also imagine them being blown into the air from a volcano and coming to land approximately where they are. This is an area of dry prairie with many buttes. Not scientific but my guess.

  • @susanliebermann5721
    @susanliebermann5721 Рік тому +4

    Well, since you're on the topic of ice age boulders, I can't help but mention the enormous deposit of granitic boulders just south of the Canadian border, east of Curlew, on Boulder Creek Road...ON TOP of the ridge/pass! Millions of them! Inquiring minds want to know when they were dropped...and why? All of a sudden, as a result of some sudden melting? Why there? Anyone who wants to go on a field trip, I'd be happy to give you a tour! :)

  • @kurtu5
    @kurtu5 Рік тому +3

    The rock is just sitting there. Experiencing millions of years of change and just sitting here. Its almost saying witness me!". And then we come along...
    Complicated rock creatures made up of random bits of the same stuff. And what do we do? We witness. We see.
    Amazing! I love geology.

  • @jerylarcher6487
    @jerylarcher6487 9 місяців тому +1

    The Waterville plateau is high in elevation. Top of the cake, where would the basalt have come from?

  • @mikehoroho8453
    @mikehoroho8453 Рік тому +1

    I'm from Indiana. There were many eradics deposited over northern, central, and southern Indiana. But those eradics were not as large as the ones there in Washington. Most eradics in Indiana are now gathered in rock piles or have been placed adjacent to driveway entrances to homes and businesses alike.

  • @johnplong3644
    @johnplong3644 Рік тому +9

    That is one large Erratic

    • @johnmarkey5470
      @johnmarkey5470 Рік тому +1

      If you can fly low over western Montana and into Washington, you can see larger. I think Nick has shown them in earlier episodes.

  • @uriahheep8470
    @uriahheep8470 Рік тому +1

    Great episode. Strange how the granite and basalt erratics seem to each have their own part of that field.

  • @petechiarizio1766
    @petechiarizio1766 Рік тому +1

    Till may be poorly sorted, but its fabric can be seen in the video. But if it’s till shown by Yeager Rock then the rock was there before the last glacier. Fire up the drill rig. Maybe the old lodgement till deposited before and ablation till deposited with Yeager Rock are still there. $20 says DOT drilled near there and has a soil boring log due to its proximity to the roadway.

  • @jameswatt8841
    @jameswatt8841 Рік тому +2

    We have one of these near me in okotoks

  • @hamaljay
    @hamaljay Рік тому +3

    I often wonder how those boulders feel being all alone with no direction home, a complete unknown like a rolling Stone.

  • @cindyleehaddock3551
    @cindyleehaddock3551 Рік тому +1

    Yikes! Please be careful on those slopes all by yourself! I would love to see those clasts, sure, but you are worth more to your students than a rock....even a nice piece of green serpentinite. 😉 Thanks for another great geohike!

  • @ryznglascastle1995
    @ryznglascastle1995 Рік тому +7

    I like big rocks I can not lie...

  • @jessimatic
    @jessimatic Рік тому +1

    I drove to Spokane from my dad's house in Chelan once and had a hard time paying attention to the road because I kept appreciating the Milk Duds!

  • @notvanpron4115
    @notvanpron4115 Рік тому +4

    I went looking for sources of water today. And due north of to okanogan valley, and next to the Columbia valley is the Wells Gray-Clearwater volcanic field. I would like to know if there is any evidence. I am sure this flows to the fraiser valley but who knows if it was all under ice 15+k ago.

  • @brianlhughes
    @brianlhughes Рік тому +5

    where did the milkduds come from?

  • @symbungee
    @symbungee Рік тому +5

    Awesome. Thanks for showing the glacial till.
    We have similar stuff around Wynyard Tasmania called Wynyard Tillite, facinating.
    The erratics around here aren't BIG but they are cool. We have gneise from Antarctica and LOTS of alluvial glacial gold. Have you ever done a trip to Tasmania?
    Rocky Cape area was once connected to the Grand Canyon.... ❤

  • @kenbaker2850
    @kenbaker2850 11 місяців тому +1

    I found a basalt boulder with a quartz vein on the back side, sitting on a mountain in the Okanogan valley. Would that be a sign of a gold deposit?

  • @Steviepinhead
    @Steviepinhead Рік тому +1

    Another harrowing episode of Nick on the Moraine...!
    Whew!

  • @johnplong3644
    @johnplong3644 Рік тому +6

    Ok ready to
    Learn

  • @malcolmcog
    @malcolmcog Рік тому +1

    Glacial erratics ! We have in glacial erratics in south Birmingham UK, most from the Anglian of 450,000 years back ! North of here is from the Devensian glaciation, went away 16,000 years. We live on glacial till, once called boulder clay.
    Thank you for your programs about ice age stories, because the same thing applies here, what glacial till is from 450,000 years ? What is from 16,000 ?

  • @Bonsaidude
    @Bonsaidude Рік тому +1

    I would love to hear your thoughts about Hydroplate theory. Love your videos.

  • @williamosmith8162
    @williamosmith8162 Рік тому +4

    love your shirt.

  • @paulliebenberg3410
    @paulliebenberg3410 Рік тому +1

    Very fascinating those big boulders! The question I'd like to put in the hat is "are they Columbia River Basalt?"

  • @johnnash5118
    @johnnash5118 Рік тому +2

    Dig under the suspect milk duds (not too far in😬) or perhaps into suspect till in hopes of finding charcoal that could be dated older than the Late Wisky?

  • @richardstephens3642
    @richardstephens3642 Рік тому +4

    WOW BIG rock😮

  • @frankhocker1724
    @frankhocker1724 Рік тому +1

    enjoy your geology of the glaciers. which glacier produced the Mima mounds in south Puget sound around Tumwater?

  • @timroar9188
    @timroar9188 Рік тому +3

    Another question since you were in the Chelan area. Are you familiar with the Chelan ice caves? I don't know if they still exist, but we used to go there 50 years ago. Would they have been remnants of the Okanogan lobe of the ice sheet?

    • @Retr0racin
      @Retr0racin Рік тому +2

      They dynamited the entrance in the 60`s , I remember going there as a young boy. We use to go from Tacoma to Spokane a few times a year.
      I found this on a hiking site.
      There are no signs or structures here indicating that this was once a State Park (but at least the maps list it as Ice Caves State Park). However the ice caves may no longer be entered. The entrance to the caves was dynamited in the sixties because the local government figured the caves was a hazard. But before that, since it was also a natural cold environment, the local fruit growers used to store their fruit over the summer in the caves.

    • @timroar9188
      @timroar9188 Рік тому +1

      @@Retr0racin Thanks. I was very young when we went in the 60’s. :) My mother went when she was young also.

  • @kczcb4697
    @kczcb4697 Рік тому +1

    My favorite is the boulder that’s bigger than the house next to it on the way to McNeil canyon road.

  • @noelwade
    @noelwade Рік тому +1

    We fly gliders (sailplanes) out of Ephrata and Mansfield (as well as this erratic) are common waypoints in our flights!