Part 4 of 4: A Journey Through 1.3 Billion Years of Time on a Transect of Antelope Island, Utah

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  • Опубліковано 14 жов 2024
  • In this four-part video series, head out with geology professor Shawn Willsey as he explores four distinct rock units and explains the fascinating stories of each. As we conclude with Part Four, we'll investigate the youngest rocks on the island, the Cambrian (500 to 550 million year old) Tintic Quartzite, which was deposited as sand and gravel deposits on the shoreline of ancient North America.
    Support these videos! Your generous support allows me to travel to these locations and create videos. Send support via:
    PayPal: www.paypal.com...
    or click on the "Thanks" button above.
    or a good ol' fashioned check to:
    Shawn Willsey
    College of Southern Idaho
    315 Falls Avenue
    Twin Falls, ID 83303
    Approximate GPS Location: 41.00404, -112.20778

КОМЕНТАРІ • 91

  • @SkepticalRaptor
    @SkepticalRaptor Рік тому +3

    I lived in Ogden and went to school at the University of Utah. I drove by Antelope Island hundreds of times. Little did I know that there was 1.3 billion years of earth history there. Thank you so much for this.

  • @willisfouts4838
    @willisfouts4838 Рік тому +14

    You do well, sir, making these little geological vignettes. I thoroughly enjoy them. If I don’t learn anything, I don’t waste my time. Yet I’ve watched almost all of your videos.
    Thank you very much.
    Looking forward to your next production.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому +4

      Thanks for being a loyal viewer. I like learning as well as I put these together. Win-win.

  • @stuartgagnon4471
    @stuartgagnon4471 Рік тому +12

    Hey Shawn I've been watching your videos for a while now and you do a great job. I really enjoy them! Funny thing, I made the connection the other day that you are a co-author of one of my favorite books 'Roadside Geology of Idaho,' a book which I have read numerous times and have with me on any outdoor adventure I go on. I really appreciate your work. Thank you.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому +1

      You bet. Glad you made the connection. I also wrote "Geology Underfoot in Southern Idaho" if you are interested.

  • @Dre56789
    @Dre56789 Рік тому +9

    Growing up around the great Salt Lake and actually in my younger years visiting antelope Island before it became a state park , I spent a lot of time working on the cattle ranch I was fascinated looking at the Wasatch Mountain’s from the top of antelope Island, and seeing the vast amount of sediment that must’ve been laid down between the two mountain ranges. I have heard that the sediment can be as deep as 5000 feet or more. I would love to understand and hear how this mountain ranges were formed and uplifted in this valley. Which would also involve the ocher mountains and the large, Kennecott copper mine on the Oquirrh mountains range

  • @BrianandMoe
    @BrianandMoe Рік тому +5

    Have to agree, best explanations reviewed I’ve seen, enjoying it a lot!

  • @Josh1888USU
    @Josh1888USU Рік тому +1

    Very well done. I will never look at Antelope Island the same way again.

  • @davidk7324
    @davidk7324 Рік тому +3

    Great series, Shawn. Thank you.

  • @digdug1577
    @digdug1577 Рік тому +1

    What a gorgeous day to take us on a geologic odyssey! Terrific series Shawn, the stories behind each one of those rock layers makes my head explode! WOW.

  • @SusanS588
    @SusanS588 Рік тому +6

    This series really interests me. I grew up seeing Antelope Island from my backyard! Never made it over, although my little brother’s boy scout troop did not long after the causeway was built.

  • @wyojohn
    @wyojohn Рік тому +3

    I enjoyed the four part geologic story. Nice job!

  • @journeywithstu7199
    @journeywithstu7199 Рік тому +1

    We visited Antelope Island a few years back, in February. Needless to say, a hike to the ridge wasn’t in the cards. Thanks for doing the hard work for us. I would never guess we were looking at rocks that old.

  • @cann5565
    @cann5565 Рік тому +3

    Excellent

  • @stevengeorge5605
    @stevengeorge5605 Рік тому +6

    Thank you, Shawn, for these thoroughly well done videos! 😊

  • @Uhtred-the-bold
    @Uhtred-the-bold Рік тому +3

    There is so much snow down there right now!

  • @treborupp
    @treborupp Рік тому +2

    Great series. Thanks for sharing.

  • @valoriel4464
    @valoriel4464 Рік тому +2

    Thx Prof ✌ Always enjoy your geo adventures.

  • @runninonempty820
    @runninonempty820 Рік тому +4

    Thanks so much for this video series. I've visited all of Utah's National Parks, but I've never been out to the Great Salt Lake. Never even knew about Antelope Island. It's very interesting how the rock outcrops are so different within a relatively short hike up a hill.

  • @kathleenbaker2167
    @kathleenbaker2167 Рік тому +2

    Thanks!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому

      Thanks so much for your kind donation in support of my geology videos.

  • @tomgraham7755
    @tomgraham7755 9 місяців тому

    I have been to antelope island many times over fifty years. I four wheeled to it Before the paved road war built and a State park. I marveled over the geology on the island . I take my two young grandsons out to the island and we drive all over looking at Stansbury island to the south west and Fremont island to the north. Spectacular views. My imagination runs wild thinking of the ancient lake Bonneville surround by water up to 900 feet. And now it is evaporating. Help save the Great Salt Lake!

  • @101rotarypower
    @101rotarypower Рік тому +4

    This was fun to watch, thank you for all the details and defining the parts of the story and how they intertwine.

  • @tadpolefarms631
    @tadpolefarms631 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for taking us along in your backpack. As I can no longer go on hikes, I so do appreciate!

  • @Rachel.4644
    @Rachel.4644 Рік тому

    Tintic quartzite 👌🏼 so fascinating and attractive. 500 ma, continental north american shore. Wow. A real pleasure to hear about and see. I'm grateful that you love to teach!

  • @paulbugnacki7107
    @paulbugnacki7107 Рік тому +1

    Very cool story. How incredible to have three ver distinct periods of earths history. I’ll have to stop there the next time I’m in UT.

  • @atomdent
    @atomdent Рік тому +2

    Wow,was in the Tumalo highlands( Eastside Cascades near Bend, below the 3 sisters)hiking in a canyon with my wife, rock hammer and dog. Stopped to eat a salad and this series pops up, talk about timely! Just awesome professor Willsey! Felt like I was exactly where I should be doing what I should!

  • @georgesorenson2982
    @georgesorenson2982 Рік тому

    This four part series is fantastic. I have hiked Antelope Island. Now the next time I go there I will know what’s going on

  • @seanwelch007
    @seanwelch007 Рік тому

    This series rocked! I’ve endured the biting gnats in May on Antelope Island but also admired and reflected on the very same rocks you’ve highlighted and it’s very appreciated to know their back story.

  • @antoniodelrio1292
    @antoniodelrio1292 Рік тому

    Enjoyed the 4-part series very much. Thanks for the videos.

  • @agmartin2127
    @agmartin2127 Рік тому +4

    Another excellent series... Hopeful you can do a road trip to Heart Mountain in Wyoming to explore / explain the same (snowball earth?) dolomite age rocks that represent one of the greatest mysteries in geologic history. Seems there is no 100% consensus as to how those rocks, mountain sized, moved so far east. Thank you for all you do...

  • @tinadelaluz3197
    @tinadelaluz3197 Рік тому +1

    Fantastic series, thank you!

  • @mikekirk1513
    @mikekirk1513 Рік тому

    Thank. you for this 4 part series on a specific area of Utah, which seems to have more geology than anywhere else.

  • @galatura
    @galatura Рік тому

    An excellent walk and geological explanation of the area

  • @laurafolsom2048
    @laurafolsom2048 Рік тому

    Thank you! I enjoyed all 4 of the series!

  • @kellykelly7747
    @kellykelly7747 Рік тому

    Wow! Beautiful island and valley. Thanks, Shawn, for another informative interesting video. ❤

  • @muzikhed
    @muzikhed Рік тому

    This has been such an interesting series. Quite amazing how in this one small area you are able to find these sedimentary conglomerate/ cuartzite, metamorphic rocks and igneous rocks all having a role in the formation of early Earth and the beginings of early North America.

  • @richheimreal
    @richheimreal Рік тому

    What an amazing part of the world. It's amazing how flat and spread out it is then the contrast of the Wasatch Mountains. Awesome videos, thanks for posting!

  • @michaelallison2262
    @michaelallison2262 Рік тому

    That was really interesting. I live nearby and it is great to better understand the geology in an area I see everyday.

  • @drmichaelshea
    @drmichaelshea Рік тому

    Thanks very much for this series and for the Goblin Valley State Park episode. I grew up in Utah, but I really never learned anything about the geology of the state except for Lake Bonneville, its shorelines, gypsum deposits to the south, orogenies that gave rise to the Wasatch range, the tectonic forces that lead to the Basin and Range province. It would have been good to visit these areas on foot, but I’m in Arizona now and have little opportunity to travel in Utah. I appreciate the work you do.

  • @MrFmiller
    @MrFmiller Рік тому +2

    This was a fabulous series, Shawn. Although I have seen videos about the snowball earth, I never knew many of the details you presented.

  • @sdmike1141
    @sdmike1141 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for hoofing it! (So we don’t have to…🤣). Nice rock “stories”.

  • @kenwilson3304
    @kenwilson3304 Рік тому

    Great series, Shawn! I'm looking forward to being able to identify the diamictites of the Pocatello formation on my next hike up Scout Mountain!

  • @jakegroat4447
    @jakegroat4447 Рік тому

    Great series Shawn! Love your videos, keep up the good work!

  • @patmayer7222
    @patmayer7222 Рік тому

    ,,,,wow...!................land o' lakes,wi.....here for class x 4 .....beautiful footage,,,,..total picture of stone age explained...thank you for this great vid.....what a view !.😯😯...pat& family

  • @Jonathan_and_Tammie
    @Jonathan_and_Tammie Рік тому +7

    The bugs can be so bad that you can't even get out of the car!!!

  • @vickihubach4388
    @vickihubach4388 Рік тому

    fascinating series! thank you!

  • @gabrielford3473
    @gabrielford3473 Рік тому

    Thanks! I love Antelope Island! Such a little gem in the Great Salt Lake! I can't thank you enough for all the education you offer on your channel. You inform so much of my work and it has really helped make me so much better at what I do. If you're ever back up in the Yellowstone area, I'm in Livingston! I'd love to join you on an adventure, or buy you lunch! Cheers!

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому

      Thank you for your kind donation and I'm glad you enjoy the geology videos I make. I did a bunch of Yellowstone videos last fall (and a few this winter) so I think I covered the park pretty well for now, but I will let you know when my travels bring me that way again. Thanks again.

    • @gabrielford3473
      @gabrielford3473 Рік тому

      @@shawnwillsey I definitely have enjoyed those episodes from Yellowstone! Again, cheers and thank you!

  • @joetybo
    @joetybo Рік тому

    Thanks! Informative and entertaining. I've enjoyed revisiting some of these locations.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому

      Thanks for your kind donation. Much appreciated.

  • @siddupuy5666
    @siddupuy5666 Рік тому

    Great series! Thx for this info.

  • @Danika_Nadzan
    @Danika_Nadzan Рік тому

    Great series, beautiful place, phenomenal rocks! Thank you for breaking it into logical segments. Once again, the excellent descriptions accompanying actual views of the rocks and their placements in the landscape make everything easier to understand and retain. I learn and remember more from one of your 10 minute videos than some hour-long lecture or 400-page textbook. (Today's word is "diamictite"...)😊

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому +1

      Danika, thanks for your kind words and generous donation. So glad to hear my efforts resonate and help folks. win-win!

    • @Danika_Nadzan
      @Danika_Nadzan Рік тому

      @@shawnwillsey Quite welcome! I'm glad to finally have the opportunity (at 64) to learn geology, and even better, from a professor who takes us on field trips!

  • @3xHermes
    @3xHermes 4 місяці тому

    Awesome!

  • @Uhtred-the-bold
    @Uhtred-the-bold Рік тому +2

    Go to Desert mountain down by the sand dunes there. It’s a awesome place!

  • @JanetClancey
    @JanetClancey 6 місяців тому

    Is there no end to the amazing geology in Idaho thank you for sharing ❤

  • @Anne5440_
    @Anne5440_ Рік тому

    This has been an interesting series about an area I didn't know about. Thanks to you i I have learned a lot more about this part of Utah. I had one trip where we drove both ways on I 80 from CO to CA. At one stop across the salt beds I did test to see if it really was salty. A very tourist thing I suspect but I was a tourist at the time. This series has been good for me to learn more about sedimentary rocks and landforms. Sedimentary is my weakest area of rock id. This has also covered the most I have seen about snowball earth. I'm becoming more interested in it. I just got the book titled Large Igneous Provinces, as part of my flood basalt study. That book will be a challenge for me to read. I've also gotten more books about the ice age floods. Thank you for your videos which are helping me learn about our earth.

    • @Anne5440_
      @Anne5440_ Рік тому

      Oh,learning that Antelope Island was part of the shoreline of North America was nice. One thing I wondered during the Baja BC series was about where the shoreline of Western North America was. I realize now that Blakey's book will tell me more. That was good to learn. I had known it was also part of Lake Bonneville. I'm seeing there is a water story there through different times.

  • @secularsunshine9036
    @secularsunshine9036 Рік тому

    *Let the Sunshine In...*
    thanks

  • @brianpeers
    @brianpeers Рік тому

    Thanks

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому

      Thanks for your kind donation. Cheers!

  • @clintonturner5545
    @clintonturner5545 Рік тому +1

    Your jacket is the same blue of the 1970 Fiat 850, which was a convertible. A truly tiny car.

  • @herbf2700
    @herbf2700 Рік тому +1

    Here in the San Rafael, the rule is be ready for gnats on months that start with J. June and July. They're gnasty and agnoying.

  • @Snappy-ut4bj
    @Snappy-ut4bj Рік тому

    Thumbs up!

  • @MountainFisher
    @MountainFisher Рік тому +2

    Any fossils in that Cambrian Rock Shawn? I had a question out of context if you don't mind. Australia's 3.6 billion yo Stromatolite fossils are the oldest ever known fossils of life, a prokaryote cyanobacteria that started the Oxygen cycle on Earth because it was photosynthetic. I seem to remember reading somewhere there was some extreme ancient rock exposed in Greenland of the same age, do you know anything about that? All I can find is Australia. Retired bio/engineer here.

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому +1

      Not in the Tintic Quartzite. Overlying it in the Wasatch is the Ophir Shale (also Cambrian) which has trace fossils and I think some trilobites in places. I did a video here on a roadside outcrop. ua-cam.com/video/WlfA0jnUySg/v-deo.html
      I don't know anything about your Greenland question. Sorry.

  • @Helix-ge1ld
    @Helix-ge1ld Рік тому

    A good lesson of stratigraphy and petrology. Fluvial deposits near the shoreline?

  • @mikeprice2701
    @mikeprice2701 Рік тому

    The San Rafael Swell intrigues me to no end. To be honest the radium and uranium deposits got me wondering what had happened and then the layering of Moenkopi to Navaho Sandstone are fascinating to me. My wife thinks I'm nuts... anyway do you have anything in that area. Or would you be interested in a SXS ride?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому

      I have few videos from the San Rafael Swell area: ua-cam.com/video/IqiJOlfYwMo/v-deo.html or ua-cam.com/video/7qiwik6usvc/v-deo.html

  • @ResortDog
    @ResortDog Рік тому

    The lastest, but not the leastest that tells the facts of Geologic time and how rocks can be read to KNOW what actually happened in the past every 6,000 & 12,000 years. Do one on the failing magnetic field we are living out today.

  • @keithstudly6071
    @keithstudly6071 11 місяців тому

    I am wondering if some of the changes in the size of the stones in the rock you showed us could have been due to glacial drift? The rounded gravel seems like it could have been deposited during periods of glacial retreat.

  • @jeffbransky7966
    @jeffbransky7966 Рік тому

    I’m curious why the exposed rocks from snowball Earth do not look very weathered. How long ago were they exposed to the elements? The surfaces that are exposed look quite angular, especially the second group up from the valley floor shown in a previous video.

  • @nitro13333
    @nitro13333 Рік тому

    Is Antelope Island typical of a Horst-Graben structure and, if so, is it part of the larger area to the west throughout most of Nevada, or is it connected geologically to the Wasatch Range?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  Рік тому +1

      Yes, steep normal faults on both sides of island define the horst structure. It is part of the Basin and Range province where normal faults have uplifted large crustal blocks. This region stretches from the Sierra Nevada to the Wasatch Range.

  • @marknovak2413
    @marknovak2413 Рік тому

    There are clasts of banded iron formation in the Tintic Quartzite. No Idea where the source area was.

  • @carnakthemagnificent336
    @carnakthemagnificent336 11 місяців тому

    Professor Willsey, how can it be determined that a beach/shoreline is an ocean front versus a shoreline of a lake?

    • @shawnwillsey
      @shawnwillsey  11 місяців тому +1

      Fossils would be one indicator. Another might be looking at rocks either above/below or adjacent to see if they change to shale/limestone sequence.

  • @ResortDog
    @ResortDog Рік тому

    Fun Fact: Electronic bikes are NOT considered motorized vehicles. This allows you to get miles into wildernesses in minutes, not hours.

  • @satanofficial3902
    @satanofficial3902 Рік тому

    "Rocks are rocky. But not bullwinkle-y."
    ---Albert Einstein
    "Rocks are rocky because they're always rocked with rocking."
    ---Albert Einstein

  • @jettyeddie_m9130
    @jettyeddie_m9130 Рік тому

    Utah bugs ❤🥰

  • @DJBoise
    @DJBoise Рік тому +1

    They look like some Roman ruins I saw in Europe.

  • @outsider2222
    @outsider2222 Рік тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @gregnelson4722
    @gregnelson4722 Рік тому

    Thanks!

  • @mikeprice2701
    @mikeprice2701 Рік тому

    Thanks!

  • @davidmccann3535
    @davidmccann3535 Рік тому

    Thanks!