As someone from the neighbouring Ontario, I’ve always wondered: Why do sedimentary rocks cover the U.S. side of Lake Superior Shore but barely the Canadian side? I mean, on our side, there are pockets of Jacobsville Sandstone deposits, some clastic sedimentary rocks, then the Sibley Group in the ancient rift that spans from Thunder Bay to Nipigon, but that’s pretty much it. Elsewhere along the shore, the basement crustal rocks come right out.
Correct in what sense? The French pronunciation of a French named and spelled island is correct. Cornish and Irish immigrants that settled in the area relatively recently had a difficult time pronouncing it correctly and so just didn't bother, that doesn't make it correct.
@@dcl97 Local pronunciation over time results in changes and deviations from the original. In particular, French names in the US get modified, often because English speakers pronounce letters that are almost silent in the original. Thus there is a “Versales” Kentucky (spelled, of course, Versailles) and a “Duboys” county Indiana (accent on the first syllable and spelled, of course, Dubois).
😱😱 you mean the Climate has always changed 😂😂😂 The doomsayers need to get educated….Lesson #1 the Climate has always changed. Lesson #2 Climate will always change even when Humans no longer exist.
Lesson #3: The half-educated will make claims regarding things they know nothing about; like ignoring rate versus time and the obvious parallels to the Permian mass-extinction (aka The Great Dying) But that's ok. Because they will go extinct too. An obvious bait, to be sure. But I'm bored of humiliating YECers. That tends to be too easy.
I love the northern rocky shores. it's the best 👊🏼
#NorthMichigan Paddle on!
As someone from the neighbouring Ontario, I’ve always wondered:
Why do sedimentary rocks cover the U.S. side of Lake Superior Shore but barely the Canadian side? I mean, on our side, there are pockets of Jacobsville Sandstone deposits, some clastic sedimentary rocks, then the Sibley Group in the ancient rift that spans from Thunder Bay to Nipigon, but that’s pretty much it. Elsewhere along the shore, the basement crustal rocks come right out.
It's just ROYAL.
Carolina Bays
Why the reverse faults on either side of the rift?
Isn't that a normal part of graben formation?
What stopped the rift?
The chippewa
@@PavelDatsyuk-ui4qv Was this an ethereal or physical process?
ua-cam.com/video/2_i5_rcpIpY/v-deo.html
Sometimes things just stop.
I cringed every time he said "I'll Roy-al". The Michigan Geological Survey ought to know it's pronounced "I'll Roil".
Correct in what sense? The French pronunciation of a French named and spelled island is correct. Cornish and Irish immigrants that settled in the area relatively recently had a difficult time pronouncing it correctly and so just didn't bother, that doesn't make it correct.
@@dcl97 Local pronunciation over time results in changes and deviations from the original. In particular, French names in the US get modified, often because English speakers pronounce letters that are almost silent in the original. Thus there is a “Versales” Kentucky (spelled, of course, Versailles) and a “Duboys” county Indiana (accent on the first syllable and spelled, of course, Dubois).
A mistake? Yes. A cringeworthy mistake? NO!
I'd put that Michigan-shaped rock in a locked case INSIDE the building. The way people are, you're just begging for it to be stolen.
😱😱 you mean the Climate has always changed 😂😂😂 The doomsayers need to get educated….Lesson #1 the Climate has always changed.
Lesson #2 Climate will always change even when Humans no longer exist.
Lesson #3: The half-educated will make claims regarding things they know nothing about; like ignoring rate versus time and the obvious parallels to the Permian mass-extinction (aka The Great Dying)
But that's ok. Because they will go extinct too.
An obvious bait, to be sure. But I'm bored of humiliating YECers. That tends to be too easy.