Oh documentaries like this have become rare! Thank you for keeping it without hectic cuts and zooms and for keeping the camera steady, so pleasant to watch, i got pulled into the geologists enthusiasm by this interesting story!
i just found this late at night. very enjoyable. i have some questions. at 2:56, you say "no evidence of volcanic activity". of course there is lots of evidence of volcanic lava flows in victoria to the west of melbourne, scoria fields around colac and the red scoria mt fraser north of melbourne just east of the hume freeway. and at 12:57 your map shows sandstone all across victoria. there must be differences in the sandstone across this area because there were no sandstone deposits around melbourne suitable for the elaborate construction of banks and other buildings in the 19th century melbourne cbd. the sandstone that was sometimes used in these buildings came from sydney. at least some of the volcanics in western victoria are likely to be younger than the macquarie arcs. the western victorian aborigines have legends of active volcanoes. i have seen somewhere that there were hot spots deep below the surface that move relative to continental drift and that a volcano may appear in bass strait off the coast of warrnambool. your show raises the thought in my mind that the macquarte arcs in nsw may have a relationship with the concentration of gold into monster-sized nuggets that victoria was famous for and that there may be unknown deposits of copper.
Good questions. I should have said "no evidence of volcanic activity at the time of the Macquarie Arc". The volcanic rocks across the central and western plains of Victoria are much younger, mostly less than 7 million years old, compared to the Macquarie Arc volcanic rocks, which are more than 400 million years old. The young volcanism in Victoria is not obviously related to plate tectonics - it's a type of intraplate volcanism. The Macquarie Arc volcanism has all the chemical and physical characteristics of subduction related volcanism caused by plate collisions - so very different environment and timing. Likewise, when I mention the sandstones I'm talking about old 400-480 million year old rocks, which form most of the bedrock of Victoria. This bedrock is, in places, covered by a thin veneer (20 to 100+m) of the young 7Ma volcanic rocks. The story of these young volcanic rocks is itself, very interesting - they are so young that western Victoria is still regarded as an active volcanic province, the last eruptions having occurred < 15 thousand years ago. Thanks for watching.
Seeing helps me learn. Over the last 50 years, through the geological maps made by us, and with many different detectors, we see the earth beneath us. Humans are building a map or the Earth. Perhaps those thing will serve us to know more. Telemetry is prime.
Great live footage and animation, with not only Aussies but a Cubana too- the patterns and poetry of geology! Watching this has helped me understand what I have seen on the other side of the Pacific rim, as well as along other older mountains on the east side of N. America. Poetic justice in the linkage between the gold rushes of California and Victoria, and now I'm dreaming about the flow patterns of our living planet.
Without doubt the best series of documentaries I have seen, very well presented. Following the same format I Would love to see a series on how western australia evolved in such detail. Brillant......
Is there any good, easy-to-get-to- exposures around? Road cutting perhaps. I’d love to get a little piece of it as an education piece as I’m a science teacher 🙂
There are number of field guides available online from NSW Resources, a government department, but they are usually very technical. Generally there is a lack of easily digestible notes for the general public. You could try the field guide of NSW 2000. A little out of date but not too bad. Here's the link digs.geoscience.nsw.gov.au/api/download/34bb85066c7bd8e053b224e3490389ee/Field_Geology_of_NSW_2000_(OCR_version)_entire_volume.pdf
@@GeologyFilms your link sent me to the bibliography (or something like that), I did find it but. Thanks for the suggestion 🙂. I’m going to get it. Won’t be in time for my trip, but that’s ok. It is a real shame the science is beyond public understanding. That’s why I thought this video was so awesome! I’m really interested in geology, but there is so few resources out there for more laymen. Often I look at journal articles for things I’m interested in, but it’s often just too hard work 😂… I often just give up. Really appreciate your help 🙏
You should be able to download the files for free, as pdfs. But yes you're right about science not being easily accessible - that's been our motivation in making these films, and to make the science more easily understood. Check out Nick Zentner's channel, it's not Aussie geology but a fantastic for USA geology. Nick is a geology professor who has been doing excellent videos for last few years. The basic geology principles are the same whatever continent your on. www.youtube.com/@GeologyNick
Fantastic video! I have very much appreciated learning more about Australian Geology while watching them! Thanks a lot to all involved in there high quality production! Clive has a very clear and easy to listen to voice. Cheers from East Gippsland, Victoria
Great video! Wish we had more videos like this for other parts of the world! Was great to "see" Dick Tosdal again after having spent some time in the field with him years ago!
Exactly unreal minerals in that area.don't think rest of Australia realise how strong the % of mineral is in mount Isa area.and very deep down.explain how that was made.lead, Cooper,zinc,gold, silver ?????
Thank you so much for detailed information about mapping ,advance technology like survey of this type to identify ,faults ,earth quakes and potential resources . this is senior geologist directorate of ground water ,Karnataka state, India
Thoroughly enjoyed this, easy to understand for us who are less informed. My husbands family used to own land in the volcanic rich area of Mt Canobalas and the Warrumbungles further west. He used to tell the story, in the down time on the property, there was always something to do, however all the boys hated the job of clearing the paddocks of rocks. If only he realised he was picking up the history of the making of Eastern Australia. Fascinating. Thank you.
Geologist here. Very good documentary, but I hope you didn't aim it at 'the general public' because it's way too technical for that level. 3d year university students might get the details, nice class project. Also nice to see Brendan Murphy briefly (conference footing at the beginning). The only thing I didn't like is the repeated use of the word 'created' and 'creation'. Please please please, don't play into the hands of the creationists. We have a rich vocabulary so please use other words
Ancient tourist attraction volcano “Mt Warning” Northern NSW is to be closing the nature walks and the track to the peak of the Volcano ( first to see sunrise ) on the mainland. Taking all the fun away 😡
Thanks very much - geologists love their work, as all those end pieces show. Here's a couple more videos we completed more recently. ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html
Geology was the only thing that kept me in school during my last 2 years of secondary, and the only final qualification i care about. I still care deeply about learning new things to this day, and take every chance i get to play with and try to understand the rocks i come across.
First class production. You're getting pretty good at this. A great note to finish on too. If you ever get a chance to do something on the Petermann Ranges, it would be something unique
This would be one of the best films you will see explaining the geology of Eastern Australia. Like any film by Clive Willman this is valuable resource for anyone interested in Geoscience from professional geologist to a lay person. If you are interested in Gold in Victoria it is worth while seeing all the other films on this channel. Clive story telling will keep you engaged all the way and explains the latest geological models and evidence visually. It goes to show that even youtube has better content than National Geographic and Discovery Chanel. Thank you for creating this helpful resource.
Excellent video, thanks. I came here after digesting Nick Zentner's 101 course and his other videos this year so now applying it to other places worldwide. Cheers.
Thanks for this work. I live in the southern tablelands of NSW, surrounded by those ubiquitous folded seafloor sediments. I had the good luck to be on a geology tour with Dick Glenn regarding the Macquarie Arc back in 2014 and ideas about the fractured structure of the Macquarie Arc belts were still evolving at that time. I will check out your Vic films - they don't appear to be on your youtube channel.
Thanks for your comment. The Victorian films are on a Victorian Government channel - here are the links. 'Beneath The Australian Alps' ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html ’THE STAVELY ARC - uncovering the geological evolution of western Victoria’ ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html
What a great video! Have always wanted to know more about the NSW/ East Coast geology and this has been very informative. Would love to know about a lot more areas on the east coast and Australia that aren't really written about or is hard to find information on.
Thank you very much for your comment. If you haven't already, please try these 2 we completed 18 months ago ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html
Brilliant, thank you, and yes important and yes fascinating. I've been trying to figure out NZ geologic hx, seems a bigger cf than even SE oz, but oh lovely portrayal/representation of that change from subduction to crushing ...add a late oceanic separation and then split it down the middle ...side slide and ...voila NZ!
Thanks for your comment and I agree NZ is very interesting. The generally accepted idea is that NZ was connected to Australia as part of Gondwana. NZ split from Aust between about 100-80 million years ago.
The take away for me is that not all subduction zones are the same. This video takes the trouble to explain some of the differences. This is the second decent science video from Down Under I've seen recently Makes a refreshing change from endless soap operas.
Your series have been very informative. I live in the Bailingup Chittering complex which is a highly deformed region on the south western Yilgarn. We have Bodington and Greenbushes and another structure currently being drilled by Venture minerals. They are intersecting VMS at around 200 m. On that magnetic anomoly is also Yornup with PGE occurrences. There is some sort of layered ultramafic. Recently I panned platinum along with gold from a decomposed ultramafic (green clay). Do you know why we do not have oregenic Gold? Cheers Andrew
I don't know the geology of your area well enough to say why there's no orogenic gold but one of the factors in producing orogenic gold is the temperature of the metamorphic fluids. Recent work suggests that if the fluids reached temperatures greater than about 550 °C then this is bad for gold. There are many places in Western Australia that had just the right conditions and temperature - maybe your part of WA was not one of them?
@@GeologyFilms that is very interesting information thank you. Since I posted that comment I have been researching the Donnybrook Goldfield. Your videos let me see that it is likely orogenic. It's a 12km epithermal quartz vein structure emplaced into sedimentary layers and associated with extension faulting from gondwana breakup and Bunbury basalt evolution. Specifically the sediment basement is gneiss and amphibolite. What I've read and seen first hand strongly resembles the process you describe. I am in your debt as I learnt much from you and can use that in my geotourism business about sw WA mining history. www.mindat.org/loc-251520.html
Brilliant viewing. So much beautiful land, so undeniably worthy of much scientific discovery let's hope we find the missing information here we need to piece it together 💫🌋✨🤙
The Warrumbungle Ranges are a much younger volcanic event less than 20 million years old. The Macquarie Arc which is nearly 500 million. It's interesting that there is a group of young volcanoes running down the east coats of Australia from Queensland and Victoria.
I think there is still debate about the origin of the Keweenaw deposits. One leading idea is that the copper was concentrated by "burial metamorphism" of a thick sequence of basalts. This sounds very similar to the way that orogenic gold forms.
Awesome Information and graphics. I want to learn more about Australia after always seeing overseas geology. Will you ever look at ACT to explain what features we have, even if it's short. :)
Thanks for your comment. No plans for ACT as yet. Canberra district has some great geology - there is a short video on the 'unconformity' in and near Parliament House at ua-cam.com/video/qzjlncmRHWo/v-deo.html
Thanks for your comment. You might also like to see our latest two films recently completed for the Geological Survey of Victoria. ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html
6:30 in, still no idea why the Macquarie Arc is there. I'm sure this video will have the answer. Yet "Geology Films" are good at no letting-on at this point in the story, I'm sure if I keep watching I will find out. lol
Many years ago a scientist said a hot spot developed in Heard Island and gradually travelled to Tasmania and up the east coast of Australia and is now under Rabaul Harbour, it last erupted in 1994. What caused Gondwana to break up into the tectonic plates we have today. did another planet crash into Earth?
The reasons for breaking up a Supercontinent, like Gondwana, is a good question, but not my expertise. Some people think 'plume push' may contribute, or something called 'subduction retreat'. These effects would weaken areas of the crust so that fragments can split off along the weakened zones and thereby start the process of breaking up a large continent.
It was originally distributed on DVD and hasn't been broadcast - but thanks for the vote of confidence. I've made a short film called 'The Origin of the Australian Alps' with Dr Vincent Morand and his ideas about the splitting of Australia and Zealandia - at this link. ua-cam.com/video/Q-nIGTF_M78/v-deo.html
Running around with a hand lens is one thing, but buffing specimens and getting infrared, Raman, and X-ray spectroscopy data on their minerals is more interesting and much more informative. Off hand, the crystals in gray lava look like anorthoclase feldspar. This is potassium feldspar.
Yeah and no explanation why the subduction stopped. Well, the pictorial schematic is backwards. The Gondwana side slid over the subduction zone going eastward. It overran and consumed the subduction zone. The same thing occurred in North America where the North American plate moved fast to the west and overran the Pacific Subduction zone from San Francisco, southward, but not to the north. The changed into the San Andreas fault as plates started to slide against each other instead of override one or the other.
Played tectonics did not create those rocks. The came from the superplume blob that resides in the mantle transition zone (410-660km deep within the Earth).
Now I have to rethink the Cascades in the United States as a island chain just as you described here although it is already been overtaken by the North American plate. Maybe it's the fundamental fingerprint of the siletzia subduction event.
Interesting that the basalt with the white crystals appear to be exactly like what is found in Northern California. The local rockhounds call it Chinese writing stone as the crystals look somewhat like Chinese crystals.
Yes it's interesting how rocks often look the same in different continents and that's because the geological processes are the same or similar. The white crystals will probably be feldspar.
If the Himalayas, andies and other mountains and African content are being pushed up in on place something has to filling the space underneath and supplying the monumental force. Something somewhere has to move 🤔. Ocean's floors have to get deeper or something 🤔.
It's a really good question but I'm not sure how well I can answer you. The ocean floor does get deeper along the edges of subduction zones. The other thing to consider is that as the rocks in the Andes or Himalayas are being compressed, they are not only being pushed up but the whole mountain region is becoming thicker - the thickened base is often referred to as the mountain's roots.
The only thing that I can nitpick on is that Australia isn't in the title, I only came across this video by chance and didn't know that it was about Australia until I heard the accent...
Thanks for the feedback. Check out my two latest films made for the Geological Survey of Victoria. ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html Cheers Clive
FANTASTIC. Thank you. absolutely a wonderful and scientifically logical production. What a far cry from the crappola that are produced now a days, in America and Europe (to cater to their scientifically illiterate TV viewers). The only pitfall I found with this, is found @30-34, where the collision of Macquarie Arc with Gondwana/Australia is shown. Physically, that is untenable and logically an error: Heavy things do not ride on light things. Then the rest that follows becomes more of a fudge and wishful thinking, since it moves away from logic
Thanks for watching and your comments. Ideas about the evolution of eastern Australia continue to change since we made this film nearly 10 years ago. I think the basic ideas presented in 'Islands of Gold ..' still stand - but more recently geologists at the Geological Survey of Victoria (GSV) have come up with a radical new theory that suggests the Mac Arc, after its collision with Australia, was then caught up in a huge continental-scale fold called the Lachlan Orocline. We highlight some features of the Lachlan Orocline in a brand new film made for the GSV. ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html
@@GeologyFilms I should be thanking you and your team for this fantastic production. My suggestion was a possible future improvement, not a criticism. AND the Lachlan Orocline would certainly be more tenable than other theories, being at least logical if not actual.
This question is veering a little off subject, but can anyone answer for me: The Maori in New Zealand did nothing with gold that they must have come across while prospecting for their greenstone; they used greenstone for weapons, cutting tools and adornment. Did the aborigines in Australia ever do anything with gold, given, like NZ it was there for the taking.
@@GeologyFilms Thanks so much for your reply; I will search for a copy/try local library. Thank you also for the excellent uploads to YT. How wonderful it is to see someone so interested and enthusiastic about their subject.
Oh documentaries like this have become rare! Thank you for keeping it without hectic cuts and zooms and for keeping the camera steady, so pleasant to watch, i got pulled into the geologists enthusiasm by this interesting story!
i just found this late at night. very enjoyable. i have some questions. at 2:56, you say "no evidence of volcanic activity". of course there is lots of evidence of volcanic lava flows in victoria to the west of melbourne, scoria fields around colac and the red scoria mt fraser north of melbourne just east of the hume freeway. and at 12:57 your map shows sandstone all across victoria. there must be differences in the sandstone across this area because there were no sandstone deposits around melbourne suitable for the elaborate construction of banks and other buildings in the 19th century melbourne cbd. the sandstone that was sometimes used in these buildings came from sydney. at least some of the volcanics in western victoria are likely to be younger than the macquarie arcs. the western victorian aborigines have legends of active volcanoes. i have seen somewhere that there were hot spots deep below the surface that move relative to continental drift and that a volcano may appear in bass strait off the coast of warrnambool. your show raises the thought in my mind that the macquarte arcs in nsw may have a relationship with the concentration of gold into monster-sized nuggets that victoria was famous for and that there may be unknown deposits of copper.
Good questions. I should have said "no evidence of volcanic activity at the time of the Macquarie Arc". The volcanic rocks across the central and western plains of Victoria are much younger, mostly less than 7 million years old, compared to the Macquarie Arc volcanic rocks, which are more than 400 million years old. The young volcanism in Victoria is not obviously related to plate tectonics - it's a type of intraplate volcanism. The Macquarie Arc volcanism has all the chemical and physical characteristics of subduction related volcanism caused by plate collisions - so very different environment and timing. Likewise, when I mention the sandstones I'm talking about old 400-480 million year old rocks, which form most of the bedrock of Victoria. This bedrock is, in places, covered by a thin veneer (20 to 100+m) of the young 7Ma volcanic rocks. The story of these young volcanic rocks is itself, very interesting - they are so young that western Victoria is still regarded as an active volcanic province, the last eruptions having occurred < 15 thousand years ago. Thanks for watching.
@@GeologyFilms , thanks for the explanation.
Seeing helps me learn. Over the last 50 years, through the geological maps made by us, and with many different detectors, we see the earth beneath us. Humans are building a map or the Earth. Perhaps those thing will serve us to know more. Telemetry is prime.
I really appreciate your efforts Clive to pull all this together in such a clear exposition. Well done.
The geology of Australia is fascinating. Glad I found this.
Great live footage and animation, with not only Aussies but a Cubana too- the patterns and poetry of geology! Watching this has helped me understand what I have seen on the other side of the Pacific rim, as well as along other older mountains on the east side of N. America. Poetic justice in the linkage between the gold rushes of California and Victoria, and now I'm dreaming about the flow patterns of our living planet.
Thanks for your great comment and I'm glad you enjoyed it!
And I thought it was going to be a story about slab plutons and shifting fault strike zones. Wow this is way better and cool thank you
Without doubt the best series of documentaries I have seen, very well presented. Following the same format I Would love to see a series on how western australia evolved in such detail. Brillant......
So would I Rob. Where are our formations? The geology here is so complex.
Is there any good, easy-to-get-to- exposures around? Road cutting perhaps. I’d love to get a little piece of it as an education piece as I’m a science teacher 🙂
What's your general area, nearest city for example?
@@GeologyFilms. I’m on the NSW Central Coast, but I’m actually heading to Jundabyne on Thursday. I don’t mind going out of the way.
There are number of field guides available online from NSW Resources, a government department, but they are usually very technical. Generally there is a lack of easily digestible notes for the general public. You could try the field guide of NSW 2000. A little out of date but not too bad. Here's the link
digs.geoscience.nsw.gov.au/api/download/34bb85066c7bd8e053b224e3490389ee/Field_Geology_of_NSW_2000_(OCR_version)_entire_volume.pdf
@@GeologyFilms your link sent me to the bibliography (or something like that), I did find it but. Thanks for the suggestion 🙂. I’m going to get it. Won’t be in time for my trip, but that’s ok. It is a real shame the science is beyond public understanding. That’s why I thought this video was so awesome! I’m really interested in geology, but there is so few resources out there for more laymen. Often I look at journal articles for things I’m interested in, but it’s often just too hard work 😂… I often just give up. Really appreciate your help 🙏
You should be able to download the files for free, as pdfs. But yes you're right about science not being easily accessible - that's been our motivation in making these films, and to make the science more easily understood. Check out Nick Zentner's channel, it's not Aussie geology but a fantastic for USA geology. Nick is a geology professor who has been doing excellent videos for last few years. The basic geology principles are the same whatever continent your on.
www.youtube.com/@GeologyNick
Fantastic video! I have very much appreciated learning more about Australian Geology while watching them! Thanks a lot to all involved in there high quality production! Clive has a very clear and easy to listen to voice.
Cheers from East Gippsland, Victoria
Thank you very much for your comment. East Gippsland has some wonderful geology.
Great work and an excellent production.
Great video! Wish we had more videos like this for other parts of the world! Was great to "see" Dick Tosdal again after having spent some time in the field with him years ago!
Would be interesting to see a documentary on the Mount Isa north west Queensland area. Due to the vast amounts of minerals found there. Regards Rob.
Exactly unreal minerals in that area.don't think rest of Australia realise how strong the % of mineral is in mount Isa area.and very deep down.explain how that was made.lead, Cooper,zinc,gold, silver ?????
Thank you so much for detailed information about mapping ,advance technology like survey of this type to identify ,faults ,earth quakes and potential resources . this is senior geologist directorate of ground water ,Karnataka state, India
Thank you for your comment and I'm glad the video is useful. I have seen many excellent Indian videos on subjects like structural geology.
Thoroughly enjoyed this, easy to understand for us who are less informed.
My husbands family used to own land in the volcanic rich area of Mt Canobalas and the Warrumbungles further west.
He used to tell the story, in the down time on the property, there was always something to do, however all the boys hated the job of clearing the paddocks of rocks.
If only he realised he was picking up the history of the making of Eastern Australia. Fascinating. Thank you.
Thanks for your great comment. That part of the NSW is a fascinating part of Australia.
Excellent geo-history clearly and intrically explained, so very interesting. Thanks to all the team for their good work.
Thank you watching and I'm glad you enjoyed it
This is a masterpiece! Accesible to a layperson but interesting enough for a geologist!
These fantastic documentaries are really underappreciated, they are brilliant.
Thanks for your comment and I appreciate that!
Very well presented and researched a pleasure to watch.
Thank you for watching
Very educated video, this explained that tectonic understanding will guide us how 's mineral district were form!
Geologist here. Very good documentary, but I hope you didn't aim it at 'the general public' because it's way too technical for that level. 3d year university students might get the details, nice class project. Also nice to see Brendan Murphy briefly (conference footing at the beginning). The only thing I didn't like is the repeated use of the word 'created' and 'creation'. Please please please, don't play into the hands of the creationists. We have a rich vocabulary so please use other words
Excellent production. Beautifully presented scenery and science a lay person can understand.
Thank you very much
Ancient tourist attraction volcano “Mt Warning” Northern NSW is to be closing the nature walks and the track to the peak of the Volcano ( first to see sunrise ) on the mainland.
Taking all the fun away 😡
Absolutely fascinating story. Thanks for putting it all together!
Thank you for watching and we're glad you found it interesting.
Omg!
I’m obsessed with this channel
The last minute in the vid was so touching and beautiful 🤍🪨🌋
Thanks very much - geologists love their work, as all those end pieces show.
Here's a couple more videos we completed more recently.
ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html
Now that has answered many of my questions, thanks heaps.
Your welcome and thanks for watching
Geology was the only thing that kept me in school during my last 2 years of secondary, and the only final qualification i care about. I still care deeply about learning new things to this day, and take every chance i get to play with and try to understand the rocks i come across.
I really enjoyed this documentary, having just moved to NSW and having an amateur interest in geology.
Rarely have I cried over a subduction plate compressing and deforming thanks to the locking of a plate boundary...
This was absolutely brilliant.
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing!
Yeah, the Victorian Alps have a huge volcanic geological history stretching back to the Devonian.
I found this information easy to digest, thanks for explaining this in a way a simple concreter can understand
Thanks for your comment and I'm glad you got something out of it.
Well done. Clive and Davide
Most enjoyable- thank you.
Thank you for watching
First class production. You're getting pretty good at this. A great note to finish on too. If you ever get a chance to do something on the Petermann Ranges, it would be something unique
I'm definitely going to visit there to investigate. I'm inspired by this unusual area
This would be one of the best films you will see explaining the geology of Eastern Australia. Like any film by Clive Willman this is valuable resource for anyone interested in Geoscience from professional geologist to a lay person. If you are interested in Gold in Victoria it is worth while seeing all the other films on this channel. Clive story telling will keep you engaged all the way and explains the latest geological models and evidence visually. It goes to show that even youtube has better content than National Geographic and Discovery Chanel. Thank you for creating this helpful resource.
Thank you very much. And I can recommend Geo newmedia for a great range of videos, long and short ua-cam.com/channels/K_hZqaRvf2NGFKqOx51IeQ.html
A great video! Accessible to the layperson yet interesting to a crusty, old, know-it-all geologist.
Brilliantly explained. Great work.
Thank you for watching. Your comment is much appreciated.
Excellent video, thanks. I came here after digesting Nick Zentner's 101 course and his other videos this year so now applying it to other places worldwide. Cheers.
Thank you very much and Yes, Nick is a great teacher indeed!
Excellent doco, really interesting and well presented...
Thank you and glad you liked it!
Very interesting, explains the land i an sitting on right now, thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it
Thank you. Explained beautifully.
You're welcome and thank you
What amazing and knowledgeable information thank you that was very informative
Thanks you very much for your comment and glad that you find the videos useful
Thanks for this work. I live in the southern tablelands of NSW, surrounded by those ubiquitous folded seafloor sediments. I had the good luck to be on a geology tour with Dick Glenn regarding the Macquarie Arc back in 2014 and ideas about the fractured structure of the Macquarie Arc belts were still evolving at that time. I will check out your Vic films - they don't appear to be on your youtube channel.
Thanks for your comment. The Victorian films are on a Victorian Government channel - here are the links.
'Beneath The Australian Alps'
ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html
’THE STAVELY ARC - uncovering the geological evolution of western Victoria’
ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html
What a great video! Have always wanted to know more about the NSW/ East Coast geology and this has been very informative. Would love to know about a lot more areas on the east coast and Australia that aren't really written about or is hard to find information on.
Thank you very much for your comment. If you haven't already, please try these 2 we completed 18 months ago
ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html
I love learning about the country I see daily. Great video! I have a deep interest in rock formations. I really should’ve been a geologist.
Thank you for watching and your great support
Yay you are back! I love your videos !
But now....they are gone again lol =(
Wonderful! Would love to visit from Florida.
Thank you for watching, and yes, the area is a great place to visit.
Love it.. sooo exciting. Thanks
Thank you for you comment
Very nice informative
Brilliant, thank you, and yes important and yes fascinating. I've been trying to figure out NZ geologic hx, seems a bigger cf than even SE oz, but oh lovely portrayal/representation of that change from subduction to crushing ...add a late oceanic separation and then split it down the middle ...side slide and ...voila NZ!
Thanks for your comment and I agree NZ is very interesting. The generally accepted idea is that NZ was connected to Australia as part of Gondwana. NZ split from Aust between about 100-80 million years ago.
The take away for me is that not all subduction zones are the same. This video takes the trouble to explain some of the differences. This is the second decent science video from Down Under I've seen recently Makes a refreshing change from endless soap operas.
Thank you very much. We were very fortunate to have access to some of world's best geologists.
Any salt deposits there after the closing of the back arc sea?
A very informative video.
Thanks for watching and your comment.
Your series have been very informative. I live in the Bailingup Chittering complex which is a highly deformed region on the south western Yilgarn. We have Bodington and Greenbushes and another structure currently being drilled by Venture minerals. They are intersecting VMS at around 200 m. On that magnetic anomoly is also Yornup with PGE occurrences. There is some sort of layered ultramafic.
Recently I panned platinum along with gold from a decomposed ultramafic (green clay).
Do you know why we do not have oregenic Gold?
Cheers Andrew
I don't know the geology of your area well enough to say why there's no orogenic gold but one of the factors in producing orogenic gold is the temperature of the metamorphic fluids. Recent work suggests that if the fluids reached temperatures greater than about 550 °C then this is bad for gold. There are many places in Western Australia that had just the right conditions and temperature - maybe your part of WA was not one of them?
@@GeologyFilms that is very interesting information thank you. Since I posted that comment I have been researching the Donnybrook Goldfield. Your videos let me see that it is likely orogenic. It's a 12km epithermal quartz vein structure emplaced into sedimentary layers and associated with extension faulting from gondwana breakup and Bunbury basalt evolution.
Specifically the sediment basement is gneiss and amphibolite. What I've read and seen first hand strongly resembles the process you describe. I am in your debt as I learnt much from you and can use that in my geotourism business about sw WA mining history. www.mindat.org/loc-251520.html
Many Thanks! It was very nice.
this has to the next best thing from being there
Excellent !!
Brilliant viewing. So much beautiful land, so undeniably worthy of much scientific discovery let's hope we find the missing information here we need to piece it together 💫🌋✨🤙
Are the Warrumbungle Ranges included in the Macquarie Arc? Or are they from a different volcanic event?
The Warrumbungle Ranges are a much younger volcanic event less than 20 million years old. The Macquarie Arc which is nearly 500 million. It's interesting that there is a group of young volcanoes running down the east coats of Australia from Queensland and Victoria.
Great work. Thanks
Fascinating geology, my appreciation !
Thank you very much
Did the Keweenaw Peninsula's Copper Country deposits form in the same way?
I think there is still debate about the origin of the Keweenaw deposits. One leading idea is that the copper was concentrated by "burial metamorphism" of a thick sequence of basalts. This sounds very similar to the way that orogenic gold forms.
Does this type of geology appear in other places? As far as I know where I live in El paso Texas was once under an inland sea
Yes this type of geology occurs in lots of places, especially around the Pacific rim.Thanks for watching.
@18:20 Is this Red Symonds 🤔
Well done
Great video! I am a retired Geologist but do we really ever retire? LoL.
Yes the history of the Earth is endlessly fascinating. Thanks for watching.
Very interesting! Up here in the Pilbra we have some old rock billion of years old and there amazing to go and check out...
Fantastic!
Awesome Information and graphics. I want to learn more about Australia after always seeing overseas geology. Will you ever look at ACT to explain what features we have, even if it's short. :)
Thanks for your comment. No plans for ACT as yet. Canberra district has some great geology - there is a short video on the 'unconformity' in and near Parliament House at ua-cam.com/video/qzjlncmRHWo/v-deo.html
What happened? Where are the new videos?
what a great video. I would love to help film or edit more videos like this @geology films
Thanks for your comment. You might also like to see our latest two films recently completed for the Geological Survey of Victoria.
ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html
6:30 in, still no idea why the Macquarie Arc is there. I'm sure this video will have the answer. Yet "Geology Films" are good at no letting-on at this point in the story, I'm sure if I keep watching I will find out. lol
Great video. Thoroughly enjoyed by a Brit recently moved to Queensland
Sunscreen
Fantastic
Many years ago a scientist said a hot spot developed in Heard Island and gradually travelled to Tasmania and up the east coast of Australia and is now under Rabaul Harbour, it last erupted in 1994.
What caused Gondwana to break up into the tectonic plates we have today. did another planet crash into Earth?
The reasons for breaking up a Supercontinent, like Gondwana, is a good question, but not my expertise. Some people think 'plume push' may contribute, or something called 'subduction retreat'. These effects would weaken areas of the crust so that fragments can split off along the weakened zones and thereby start the process of breaking up a large continent.
I guess by now youve been to Hopetoun western Australia where west area by the park by the cave has sloping rocks and lava splashes over them
No I haven't but it sounds good.
Has this been on the ABC? If not, it should be. Have you done one on the Australian Alps or how The Ditch was formed?
It was originally distributed on DVD and hasn't been broadcast - but thanks for the vote of confidence. I've made a short film called 'The Origin of the Australian Alps' with Dr Vincent Morand and his ideas about the splitting of Australia and Zealandia - at this link. ua-cam.com/video/Q-nIGTF_M78/v-deo.html
Running around with a hand lens is one thing, but buffing specimens and getting infrared, Raman, and X-ray spectroscopy data on their minerals is more interesting and much more informative. Off hand, the crystals in gray lava look like anorthoclase feldspar. This is potassium feldspar.
brilliant
Yeah and no explanation why the subduction stopped. Well, the pictorial schematic is backwards. The Gondwana side slid over the subduction zone going eastward. It overran and consumed the subduction zone. The same thing occurred in North America where the North American plate moved fast to the west and overran the Pacific Subduction zone from San Francisco, southward, but not to the north. The changed into the San Andreas fault as plates started to slide against each other instead of override one or the other.
Played tectonics did not create those rocks. The came from the superplume blob that resides in the mantle transition zone (410-660km deep within the Earth).
Awesome!!!
Now I have to rethink the Cascades in the United States as a island chain just as you described here although it is already been overtaken by the North American plate. Maybe it's the fundamental fingerprint of the siletzia subduction event.
wonderful
Thank you for your support.
Interesting that the basalt with the white crystals appear to be exactly like what is found in Northern California. The local rockhounds call it Chinese writing stone as the crystals look somewhat like Chinese crystals.
Yes it's interesting how rocks often look the same in different continents and that's because the geological processes are the same or similar. The white crystals will probably be feldspar.
If the Himalayas, andies and other mountains and African content are being pushed up in on place something has to filling the space underneath and supplying the monumental force. Something somewhere has to move 🤔. Ocean's floors have to get deeper or something 🤔.
It's a really good question but I'm not sure how well I can answer you. The ocean floor does get deeper along the edges of subduction zones. The other thing to consider is that as the rocks in the Andes or Himalayas are being compressed, they are not only being pushed up but the whole mountain region is becoming thicker - the thickened base is often referred to as the mountain's roots.
Aloha hugs 🤗 Gold dust is awesome for the mine I ate cake with I thought it was glitter wow O would like to see that.
"These are some of the oldest rocks, and they're quite unusual." Proceeds to belt it with a hammer...
Come to think of it that is quite funny!
@@GeologyFilms Indeed! Excellent video btw.
..grinding plates.......
The only thing that I can nitpick on is that Australia isn't in the title, I only came across this video by chance and didn't know that it was about Australia until I heard the accent...
Thanks for the feedback. Check out my two latest films made for the Geological Survey of Victoria.
ua-cam.com/video/yPf4UAK4k14/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html
Cheers
Clive
Macquarie is a dead giveaway. The bugger named about a million things in Oz after himself
Excerpt gold is not reacting with sulphure...
FANTASTIC. Thank you. absolutely a wonderful and scientifically logical production. What a far cry from the crappola that are produced now a days, in America and Europe (to cater to their scientifically illiterate TV viewers).
The only pitfall I found with this, is found @30-34, where the collision of Macquarie Arc with Gondwana/Australia is shown. Physically, that is untenable and logically an error: Heavy things do not ride on light things. Then the rest that follows becomes more of a fudge and wishful thinking, since it moves away from logic
Thanks for watching and your comments. Ideas about the evolution of eastern Australia continue to change since we made this film nearly 10 years ago. I think the basic ideas presented in 'Islands of Gold ..' still stand - but more recently geologists at the Geological Survey of Victoria (GSV) have come up with a radical new theory that suggests the Mac Arc, after its collision with Australia, was then caught up in a huge continental-scale fold called the Lachlan Orocline. We highlight some features of the Lachlan Orocline in a brand new film made for the GSV.
ua-cam.com/video/_S-024Cb5VE/v-deo.html
@@GeologyFilms I should be thanking you and your team for this fantastic production. My suggestion was a possible future improvement, not a criticism. AND the Lachlan Orocline would certainly be more tenable than other theories, being at least logical if not actual.
628 likes in three years. What is wrong with the universe?🙁
Thank you for watching.
Agreed. Loved it. Amazing amount of information with lots of sources.
Go Clive. Class geologist.
With that make up ,there has to be hard rock lithium as well
This question is veering a little off subject, but can anyone answer for me: The Maori in New Zealand did nothing with gold that they must have come across while prospecting for their greenstone; they used greenstone for weapons, cutting tools and adornment. Did the aborigines in Australia ever do anything with gold, given, like NZ it was there for the taking.
There is a book by Fred Cahir (2012) that might give an answer, it's called: Black Gold: Aboriginal People on the Goldfields of Victoria, 1850-1870
@@GeologyFilms Thanks so much for your reply; I will search for a copy/try local library. Thank you also for the excellent uploads to YT. How wonderful it is to see someone so interested and enthusiastic about their subject.
Thank you for watching our videos
As a Geologist , you must know where all the Gold is.😆
Just see ur channel