A fascinating location. Thank you for explaining this. Here in the Wenatchee Valley, there is a location that started slumping on the side of the Wenatchee Heights. There was a big fuss over it for a couple of years. Houses built about halfway to the top of what looks to me to be a very old slump slide. The yards and road up the mountain began cracking and moving a bit. The county had it inspected. They decided that it was no longer moving. They are still allowing the people to live there. In college, I took 18 credits of Geography in Ellensburg. The professors pointed out and explained slump slides in that valley. It was stated that ground water is a factor. The area in Wenatchee is below the huge area of irritating for fruit orchards. It was very interesting in this video to see recent sliding. Thanks for this video.
Thanks for these fascinating videos, Shawn. I appreciate all the time and effort that goes into making these. Very interesting and a pleasure to watch.
Well, of course, Shawn needs to keep himself fit to wrangle his students through long terms of up skilling (which I suppose encouraged his rock climbing - scaling the many slopes towards higher knowledge).
First 25 years of my life in southern Idaho and acutely interested in geology and yet I missed so much. Thank you, makes me want to go back and just hike these areas, Could almost smell the sagebrush and feel the poke of dried junegrass seeds against my ankles. I'm a bit old now though.
❤🔨❤🇺🇸What more could I say about this brave and smart professor Sham? Nothing. He is the best in all he has done about Geology. Thank you teacher once more time for this fenomenal job. God bless you in all.🔨🇺🇸👍🙋📙
I live a couple miles away! I checked this place out 2 years ago. It has definitely moved more since! Ground water runs from the side out towards the salmon creek. There is also geothermal occurrences in that area. One I found a year ago seems to be a new one. If you go to balance rock park on the other side of the road(private property) inbetween the old pump house and the right top corner before the canyon wall. There is a spring of hot geothermal water. Different type of gravel which is red and just in that small spot.
As a lifelong climber, I feel very confident at the Bluegill Slide. Plus, the camera/selfie stick always makes it look spicier than it really is. Dramatic effect!
I've come to realize that the "fear of heights" really isn't a fear of heights...it's a "fear of falling from heights". I have no proof (No one will admit to it. LOL!) but I think my brother dropped me when I was a baby.
If you look on google earth, there's what looks to be a somewhat older slide section about 2000 feet north of this slide as well. I really enjoy these videos that show that geological processes are something that is continuously happening, not just something that happened some indistinct time in the past.
Wow, this was just a fascinating video. Very well explained too. Even for a layman cum auto didact like myself. I'd never know about this, or be able to appreciate it without Shawn having put so much effort into making and posting this video. So thankful.
Wonderful video Shawn - thank you! This may be my favorite one so far. It is amazing to realize just how quickly a major landscape change can take place when a landslide is involved.
Super interesting. Your explanation of this event is clear and easy to follow. Amazing processes and nice looking country also. Thank you for the outing.
Thank you for taking the time to show us these geological formations. The Earth is fascinating and a pleasure to see. It’s better when you have an idea of what you are seeing.
Thanks Shawn. Well done. Thoroughly enjoyed it and your other videos. Wish I could role back the clock 45 years and taken your classes…I might have become a geologist instead of an engineer. Again Thanks!!
As someone from another part of the world, southern England, I am fascinated by the geography and geology of the USA. Your presentations are informative and interesting and have watched your videos with fascination. Some slow pans of the surrounding scenery would be good too. Thanks for uploading and the clear explanations
A very good illustration of successional transformation.....Nature at work, and how our efforts to make change, are absorbed, and altered to fit Mother Nature...Wonderful Video. Thank You.
Ha ha, don't make me angry by panning too fast, Shawn. Another crazy good video sir! Appreciate the explanation of the likely factors involved in these ground movements. 10 cm per month or 120 cm per year seems significant enough to me.
Great video, For those of use who can't get out it's especially welcome to be taken on the geological walking tour. More so when I've no chance ever of visiting the USA Many thanks!
I grew up about 5 miles east of this spot. In the 80's I had an older neighbor that said at one time there was a tourist lookout at the edge of the "sinking canyon", but it went down with the continuing slides.The lookout would have been to the North a little ways where the activity mentioned in the 30's took place. I didn't know about all of this recent activity until finding this video. I love this channel. It covers so many places that I explored as a teenager.
This is such an exciting video. I was out exploring this area recently and it was a phenomenal experience. Finding this in depth explanation of this geological wonder makes it even better!
Hello from Maine! I’m in a graduate program in Trauma Informed Emergency Management at UMaine Augusta. This semester we are learning about natural hazards. Thanks for the field trip is mass wasting!
From Google Earth you can really see the scale of the irrigated crops and the effect of the drainage causing or accelerating the slides. Another great field class!
great video. I had to take a TUMs before it was all over. I learned. It made me wonder about the huge chunk of cliff that fell at lake Whitney, but looking at that aerial after watching your video made me think that the entire "hill" was slowly rotating into the lake, probably for some similar reason of a weaker plane eroding away under the huge limestone cap. Thanks for making this video.
Awesome! I can apply what I've learned here to many features I've noticed here in Central Oregon, especially crooked river canyon!This video made me smarter!Thank you!
Born and raised and still living in Southern Idaho and have never heard of the Sinking Blue Gill! Thanks for sharing very interesting. Love the videos keep em coming!
Impressively detailed and explained. Clarity of the videos is excellent. Thank you for posting. I felt that I was wandering through the slide myself. I look forward to following your adventures.
Oh, Shawn, my heart was in my throat as you navigated the holes and fractures! (Knew there would be trouble when you ignored the fence up top.) Had to keep reminding myself that the camera was extended beyond your feet. But what amazing terrain and geological history in this area. Great field trip!
These videos are so interesting, thank you. I have no plans to go back to school, so degrees in geology are out, but I always crave something a little more localized and specific than what documentaries can provide. Thanks!
Such a cool thing to see. Reminds me of places where people have built homes too close to the edge near a river. After which a tremendous rainfall then tragedy ensued.
I have hiked and sport climbed for over 50 years in Southern Arizona, and I have to say based on my experiences some of your locations were sketchy and your confidence level may have been too high. Tough to say without being there. Be safe. I know you are an experienced climber and in your line of work you have to be fearless. Thank you for showing us this. Between you and Nick Z I feel like I have a strong understanding of eastern Washington/Idaho. Beautiful land.
Great work, thank you. "Terra firma that's not so firma." Love it as someone who grew up in Idaho during the 50s-70s and spent a lot of time around Mountain Home, Glenn's Ferry, and the Owyhees. I would enjoy a Malad Gorge video in the future. I've driven over it a thousand times over the decades and finally turned off the interstate in the fall this year. They have detailed interpretive signs along the driving tour. I'll drive up to Bluegill Slide in the Spring.
Great video. It’s really interesting seeing a land slumping like that, and the effects of the surrounding areas .i’m sure it isn’t uncommon in volcanic areas. In my province of British Columbia, there has been many historical events. Most recent, the Chilcotin slide, which was huge. It actually flooded the Chilcotin River valley. I’ve see a couple of slides where the bedrock was clay, and the upper layer just slid right away. Thanks for the videos!
Thank you for sharing the beauty of the world 🌎 stunning views - your Blessed to be among the rocks and earth - sending you and yours positive energy from Sunny Florida 🌞🌞🌞thanks for a truly educational video
Shawn, what were those rounded cobbles that you place your clipboard on. why were they on top of the basalt? just something that looked out of place to me. thanks, really enjoy your videos, like the shorter format, fits my short attention span.
Great to hear you enjoyed this. the rounded gravels are called Tuana Gravel and are thought to be older deposits of Salmon Falls Creek before it began to incise the modern canyon.
This was so fun and interesting! (Do I say that every time?!?) We are lucky you love to teach, you do a super job. That it's recent movement is especially cool. Bruce Bjornstad's videos of the Hanford Reach slump point back to irrigation and groundwater runoff, too. Thanks, Shawn.
Hey chief, watch your step on terra-not-so-firma! We’ve all grown accustomed to these field reports. Hate to suffer a disruption on a misstep!😂Great stuff as usual. Thanks.
outstanding--my reclusive retreat is the Owyhee county creek drainages. in 50 years I have found endless treasures ---from Oregon to the highway to jackpot and in the north near Homedale to the Nevada boarder is heaven. Sinners welcome to the chapel of the ineffable force of the universe. Would be wonderful to hear the geological specifics on Balance Rock.
How are those little lakes fed? Are they spring fed due to the land movement and "opened up" due to this movement? Thanks for your geological expertise. I've been to this area several times and its great to have explanations of what is going on.
And maybe some of these ponds are underlain by a rotated layer of a more waterproof clayey deposit that can help to sustain their contents. Just below your first location there was a small pond at the bottom of a wedge-shaped crack that looked a bit big for just a rain fed puddle but also seemed higher in elevation than the new stream channel's path nearby it, so probably mostly from groundwater making its way down and through the slump's sand and gravel layers from precipitation and the water table sourced above.
Is the Sinking Canyon at the northern tip of the Basin and Range Province? It's clear from G. Maps that it's on the southern edge of the Snake River Plain, itself an artifact of the Yellowstone Hot Spot. If the Canyon is within the Province one might speculate that the long term crustal thinning process would contribute to the creation of these landslides and escarpments. Thanks for this great video tour. Be safe!
And it's still amazes me seeing this slide you're walking around even though when I was a kid we got to see big landslides too I can understand why you like it so much there as you get older you'll see more then just that slide you'll see a lot of other things in the landscape..... You know I lived in Missoula Montana and studied lake Missoula I actually found where the real structures of the dam sat that held back lake Missoula the foundations of the dams are still there in places...... It was a big damn that held back lake Missoula and I got to drive through the spillware area and I got to see the damn footings on both sides of the canyon miles away from Missoula it held back a lot of water............. Truly amazing
Feel like I’ve attended the most informational class ever - you have a wonderful speaking voice - makes it easy to learn , thank you for sharing your knowledge , just stunned - I found your channel threw UA-cam recommendations- your a kind human for sharing your intelligence with others for free , some of us can’t afford university 📚thanks for all you do to share with others 🗿🪨🌋🌵🏜️🌞🐎📚👨🏫🦖🦕
Sun Valley born, grown up in Hailey, and shoshone. Lived in Twin for almost a year and a half before boot camp. I have always been fascinated with the outdoors after moving south as a child and seeing the vast differences from the forested part to the lava fields. Have you seen the mammoth ice cave that cinched it for me but my time in the service put a big hold on broadening my education, till just a few years ago. But I digress, I was wondering if you are doing or go could point me in some good info on the snake river hot spring around the boise, mountain home, and Buell, area. There used to be a really good place were as a kid our parents took us that a natural pool were you could swim (they used a log of some kind that was around 1 to 2 ft thick which made it quite different for a local swimming hole. But now I have heard they turned it into an alligator farm but I haven't been able to verify that. well thanks again for all of these very edifying vid's and keep them coming!!
@@shawnwillsey The time it would take to lay down that layer over such a huge area is mindboggling. Thanks so much for taking the time to explain that.
You can support my field videos by going here. Thanks! www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EWUSLG3GBS5W8
A fascinating location. Thank you for explaining this. Here in the Wenatchee Valley, there is a location that started slumping on the side of the Wenatchee Heights. There was a big fuss over it for a couple of years. Houses built about halfway to the top of what looks to me to be a very old slump slide. The yards and road up the mountain began cracking and moving a bit. The county had it inspected. They decided that it was no longer moving. They are still allowing the people to live there. In college, I took 18 credits of Geography in Ellensburg. The professors pointed out and explained slump slides in that valley. It was stated that ground water is a factor. The area in Wenatchee is below the huge area of irritating for fruit orchards. It was very interesting in this video to see recent sliding. Thanks for this video.
Awesome info to accompany this video, @Anne5440_ !
"irritating for fruit orchards" = typo/autocorrect of the week. 😂
Thanks for these fascinating videos, Shawn. I appreciate all the time and effort that goes into making these. Very interesting and a pleasure to watch.
Well, of course, Shawn needs to keep himself fit to wrangle his students through long terms of up skilling (which I suppose encouraged his rock climbing - scaling the many slopes towards higher knowledge).
Do be careful. Looks like a place only want to fly over. Unbelievable what's going on in such a short amount of time. 😳
First 25 years of my life in southern Idaho and acutely interested in geology and yet I missed so much. Thank you, makes me want to go back and just hike these areas, Could almost smell the sagebrush and feel the poke of dried junegrass seeds against my ankles. I'm a bit old now though.
Dramatic example of landslide thank You again!
❤🔨❤🇺🇸What more could I say about this brave and smart professor Sham? Nothing. He is the best in all he has done about Geology. Thank you teacher once more time for this fenomenal job. God bless you in all.🔨🇺🇸👍🙋📙
I live a couple miles away! I checked this place out 2 years ago. It has definitely moved more since! Ground water runs from the side out towards the salmon creek.
There is also geothermal occurrences in that area. One I found a year ago seems to be a new one.
If you go to balance rock park on the other side of the road(private property) inbetween the old pump house and the right top corner before the canyon wall. There is a spring of hot geothermal water. Different type of gravel which is red and just in that small spot.
I trust your judgement regarding walking up to the edge of the cliff. It still makes my toes tingle! 😁 Thanks for sharing this amazing place.
Makes my stomach clench, my knees knock, and chills go down my spine!
As a lifelong climber, I feel very confident at the Bluegill Slide. Plus, the camera/selfie stick always makes it look spicier than it really is. Dramatic effect!
I've come to realize that the "fear of heights" really isn't a fear of heights...it's a "fear of falling from heights".
I have no proof (No one will admit to it. LOL!) but I think my brother dropped me when I was a baby.
If you look on google earth, there's what looks to be a somewhat older slide section about 2000 feet north of this slide as well. I really enjoy these videos that show that geological processes are something that is continuously happening, not just something that happened some indistinct time in the past.
Yes, the older slide to the north (and another further south) were what led this to be called "Sinking Canyon" by locals.
Wow, this was just a fascinating video. Very well explained too. Even for a layman cum auto didact like myself. I'd never know about this, or be able to appreciate it without Shawn having put so much effort into making and posting this video. So thankful.
Wonderful video Shawn - thank you! This may be my favorite one so far. It is amazing to realize just how quickly a major landscape change can take place when a landslide is involved.
I agree, one of your best!
Thanks for the kind words and glad you enjoyed it.
Super interesting. Your explanation of this event is clear and easy to follow. Amazing processes and nice looking country also. Thank you for the outing.
Thank you for taking the time to show us these geological formations. The Earth is fascinating and a pleasure to see. It’s better when you have an idea of what you are seeing.
Thanks Shawn. Well done. Thoroughly enjoyed it and your other videos. Wish I could role back the clock 45 years and taken your classes…I might have become a geologist instead of an engineer. Again Thanks!!
Super cool. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Significant geological movement in the eye-blink span of 15 years is mind-boggling. Fascinating place I wouldn't have even known about. Thanks.
As someone from another part of the world, southern England, I am fascinated by the geography and geology of the USA. Your presentations are informative and interesting and have watched your videos with fascination. Some slow pans of the surrounding scenery would be good too. Thanks for uploading and the clear explanations
Thanks for watching and learning with me.
I grew up in Twin and was always fascinated by the geography. I’m enjoying the education, as revisiting the area vicariously.
A very good illustration of successional transformation.....Nature at work, and how our efforts to make change, are absorbed, and altered to fit Mother Nature...Wonderful Video. Thank You.
Ha ha, don't make me angry by panning too fast, Shawn. Another crazy good video sir! Appreciate the explanation of the likely factors involved in these ground movements. 10 cm per month or 120 cm per year seems significant enough to me.
Great video,
For those of use who can't get out it's especially welcome to be taken on the geological walking tour.
More so when I've no chance ever of visiting the USA
Many thanks!
Thanks Shawn. This was fascinating. Walking along telling other companions, “Well.. We’re almost to the top”, as your pointing down to the slump. 🤩
I grew up about 5 miles east of this spot. In the 80's I had an older neighbor that said at one time there was a tourist lookout at the edge of the "sinking canyon", but it went down with the continuing slides.The lookout would have been to the North a little ways where the activity mentioned in the 30's took place. I didn't know about all of this recent activity until finding this video.
I love this channel. It covers so many places that I explored as a teenager.
That is really interesting, thanks for sharing that.
Thank you, Shawn! Your videos are, as always, great!
Glad you like them!
This is such an exciting video. I was out exploring this area recently and it was a phenomenal experience. Finding this in depth explanation of this geological wonder makes it even better!
Hello from Maine! I’m in a graduate program in Trauma Informed Emergency Management at UMaine Augusta. This semester we are learning about natural hazards. Thanks for the field trip is mass wasting!
From Google Earth you can really see the scale of the irrigated crops and the effect of the drainage causing or accelerating the slides. Another great field class!
great video. I had to take a TUMs before it was all over. I learned. It made me wonder about the huge chunk of cliff that fell at lake Whitney, but looking at that aerial after watching your video made me think that the entire "hill" was slowly rotating into the lake, probably for some similar reason of a weaker plane eroding away under the huge limestone cap. Thanks for making this video.
Geological changes in our lifetimes! And it's helpful to see this with a climber. Thanks
Awesome! I can apply what I've learned here to many features I've noticed here in Central Oregon, especially crooked river canyon!This video made me smarter!Thank you!
Win win.
Born and raised and still living in Southern Idaho and have never heard of the Sinking Blue Gill! Thanks for sharing very interesting. Love the videos keep em coming!
Impressively detailed and explained. Clarity of the videos is excellent. Thank you for posting. I felt that I was wandering through the slide myself. I look forward to following your adventures.
Thanks and welcome aboard. Remember I am a geologist and educator first, and a very crudely developing videographer second.
I just found these videos, I love them! Always been a bit of a rock hound, and am learning a lot. Thank you!
I love the drawings. They help me understand things conceptually. Thank you prof Willsey!
⚠️ Dad Joke ahead ⚠️ “…terra firma that’s not so firma”
LOL! 👏🏻😆
Good joke. Thank you.
I don't get it.
Thank you Shawn, this program was awesome. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks!
Hi Shawn, So far, this is one of your best videos! Fantastic Slide Formation. Perfect Presentation.
Hey, thanks for the compliment. Glad you enjoyed it.
I'm a lifelong Idahoan, lived in Southern Idaho for the first 23+ years of my life and I never knew this existed! Thank you for the video, Shawn.
Early in my career at CSI, I had a student from Buhl who told me about this place and had me intrigued.
@@shawnwillsey CSI is a great college, I'm an alumni and one of my best high school friend is the Dean of Communication, Chris Bragg
Great video.
Just legendary geology. Thanks again
Cool. Idaho sure rocks and rolls. There is lots of interesting stuff going on down there along the snake with the history of yellowstone.
Oh, Shawn, my heart was in my throat as you navigated the holes and fractures! (Knew there would be trouble when you ignored the fence up top.) Had to keep reminding myself that the camera was extended beyond your feet. But what amazing terrain and geological history in this area. Great field trip!
Just found your UA-cam channel...!!!.. Love your videos...!!! Love learning about Idaho's geography..!!!
enjoy these videos more than I thought I would.
I have vertigo -- this has been a fun and highly educational trip while praying that you didn't trip!
Awesome. I like geology and traveled to a lot of places. Never made it to bluegil. Thanks
Some interesting places over there. Thank you for sharing and this very educational video.
These videos are so interesting, thank you. I have no plans to go back to school, so degrees in geology are out, but I always crave something a little more localized and specific than what documentaries can provide. Thanks!
That lake will lubricate the footing nicely! Very interesting location. Nicely explained...
Such a cool thing to see. Reminds me of places where people have built homes too close to the edge near a river.
After which a tremendous rainfall then tragedy ensued.
just finished Mike Cothern's book which was really enjoyable and it led me to your cool video. our community is lucky to have you around
Hey Patrick. Thanks so much.
Awesome Wow! Crazy its happening right before our eyes. Thank you for sharing. Going there for sure will be part of some adventure one day. Thanks!
Thanks for this awesome video, Shawn. There are similar, albeit older, landslides in many canyons within central Arizona.
I ❤ your geology videos prof. Willsey especially those in the field. Dr. Riazi from Tehran
Glad you like them!
Thank you so much shawn for bringing us this interesting and valuable knowledge 🙏
My pleasure!
Thank you so much. All the best,
Thanks
I have hiked and sport climbed for over 50 years in Southern Arizona, and I have to say based on my experiences some of your locations were sketchy and your confidence level may have been too high. Tough to say without being there. Be safe. I know you are an experienced climber and in your line of work you have to be fearless. Thank you for showing us this. Between you and Nick Z I feel like I have a strong understanding of eastern Washington/Idaho. Beautiful land.
Thank you for the detailed history lesson. Interesting to say the least!!
Very cool and a cliffhanger to boot..
LOVE this sort of information, thank you
Fascinating content!!!! Ty from NH♥️
That was cool!
Got the vertigo when you xd the bridge
Great work, thank you. "Terra firma that's not so firma." Love it as someone who grew up in Idaho during the 50s-70s and spent a lot of time around Mountain Home, Glenn's Ferry, and the Owyhees. I would enjoy a Malad Gorge video in the future. I've driven over it a thousand times over the decades and finally turned off the interstate in the fall this year. They have detailed interpretive signs along the driving tour. I'll drive up to Bluegill Slide in the Spring.
Yes. Malad Gorge is on my list.
Great video. It’s really interesting seeing a land slumping like that, and the effects of the surrounding areas .i’m sure it isn’t uncommon in volcanic areas. In my province of British Columbia, there has been many historical events. Most recent, the Chilcotin slide, which was huge. It actually flooded the Chilcotin River valley. I’ve see a couple of slides where the bedrock was clay, and the upper layer just slid right away. Thanks for the videos!
Thank you Shawn, you always have interesting content presented very well, I really enjoy them
I appreciate that!
Thanks Shawn, excellent video
Thank you for sharing the beauty of the world 🌎 stunning views - your Blessed to be among the rocks and earth - sending you and yours positive energy from Sunny Florida 🌞🌞🌞thanks for a truly educational video
Nice hike with good explanations.
That was really cool! Thank you so much for this excellent video! ❤
Thanks for the tour
Kind of scary! Thanks Shawn!! ❤❤ watched two times
Great video, it would be interesting if you could get updated information from the USGS on the current movement. Thanks for the informative video.
I put out some feelers to some colleagues who can check and see if it is currently being monitored.
A fascinating place. Would love to go exploring. I haven't been to Idaho since 1991.
Shawn, what were those rounded cobbles that you place your clipboard on. why were they on top of the basalt? just something that looked out of place to me. thanks, really enjoy your videos, like the shorter format, fits my short attention span.
Great to hear you enjoyed this. the rounded gravels are called Tuana Gravel and are thought to be older deposits of Salmon Falls Creek before it began to incise the modern canyon.
@@shawnwillsey , I thought they looked like a river had been there. thanks.
Another nice breakfast field trip and enjoyed following your your trek from Google Earth
Next best thing to being there, well planned and executed tour. I figure UA-cam recommend you to me because I'm a part-time Zent-nerd.
I live in Idaho. Never knew this. Thanks for the lesson. I live near "Hell's Half Acre". I'm sure you're aware of the area. Thanks, again.
😮 that is definitely incredible. How in the last two decades or less that the geolographical land has moved that much!
Another great field trip.
Wow! This was a great Video. Very Good!
Absolutely remarkable.
This was so fun and interesting! (Do I say that every time?!?) We are lucky you love to teach, you do a super job. That it's recent movement is especially cool. Bruce Bjornstad's videos of the Hanford Reach slump point back to irrigation and groundwater runoff, too. Thanks, Shawn.
I never tire of hearing you say it, Rachel. Thanks for the continued positivity and good vibes.
Hey chief, watch your step on terra-not-so-firma! We’ve all grown accustomed to these field reports. Hate to suffer a disruption on a misstep!😂Great stuff as usual. Thanks.
Thanks for the concern. I've visited this site several times, even with students, so I feel OK there.
outstanding--my reclusive retreat is the Owyhee county creek drainages. in 50 years I have found endless treasures ---from Oregon to the highway to jackpot and in the north near Homedale to the Nevada boarder is heaven. Sinners welcome to the chapel of the ineffable force of the universe. Would be wonderful to hear the geological specifics on Balance Rock.
ME WHY
How are those little lakes fed? Are they spring fed due to the land movement and "opened up" due to this movement? Thanks for your geological expertise. I've been to this area several times and its great to have explanations of what is going on.
Yes, small lakes are fed by groundwater. I think the slide created lumpy, irregular topography, including low areas that filled with groundwater.
And maybe some of these ponds are underlain by a rotated layer of a more waterproof clayey deposit that can help to sustain their contents. Just below your first location there was a small pond at the bottom of a wedge-shaped crack that looked a bit big for just a rain fed puddle but also seemed higher in elevation than the new stream channel's path nearby it, so probably mostly from groundwater making its way down and through the slump's sand and gravel layers from precipitation and the water table sourced above.
Nice but glad I played on 2x. Thanks for the share
thanks Shawn love your content
Glad you enjoy it!
Amazing! Geology in Motion.
Very interesting. Thank you.
Is the Sinking Canyon at the northern tip of the Basin and Range Province? It's clear from G. Maps that it's on the southern edge of the Snake River Plain, itself an artifact of the Yellowstone Hot Spot. If the Canyon is within the Province one might speculate that the long term crustal thinning process would contribute to the creation of these landslides and escarpments.
Thanks for this great video tour. Be safe!
Thanks Shawn!
And it's still amazes me seeing this slide you're walking around even though when I was a kid we got to see big landslides too I can understand why you like it so much there as you get older you'll see more then just that slide you'll see a lot of other things in the landscape..... You know I lived in Missoula Montana and studied lake Missoula I actually found where the real structures of the dam sat that held back lake Missoula the foundations of the dams are still there in places...... It was a big damn that held back lake Missoula and I got to drive through the spillware area and I got to see the damn footings on both sides of the canyon miles away from Missoula it held back a lot of water............. Truly amazing
Feel like I’ve attended the most informational class ever - you have a wonderful speaking voice - makes it easy to learn , thank you for sharing your knowledge , just stunned - I found your channel threw UA-cam recommendations- your a kind human for sharing your intelligence with others for free , some of us can’t afford university 📚thanks for all you do to share with others 🗿🪨🌋🌵🏜️🌞🐎📚👨🏫🦖🦕
Glad it was helpful!
Sun Valley born, grown up in Hailey, and shoshone. Lived in Twin for almost a year and a half before boot camp. I have always been fascinated with the outdoors after moving south as a child and seeing the vast differences from the forested part to the lava fields. Have you seen the mammoth ice cave that cinched it for me but my time in the service put a big hold on broadening my education, till just a few years ago. But I digress, I was wondering if you are doing or go could point me in some good info on the snake river hot spring around the boise, mountain home, and Buell, area. There used to be a really good place were as a kid our parents took us that a natural pool were you could swim (they used a log of some kind that was around 1 to 2 ft thick which made it quite different for a local swimming hole. But now I have heard they turned it into an alligator farm but I haven't been able to verify that. well thanks again for all of these very edifying vid's and keep them coming!!
How did the gravel layer form? It's hard to believe how far that has dropped in 25 years. Amazing.
Gravel layer above basalt is the Tuana Gravel and thought to be stream deposits from ancestral Salmon Falls Creek.
@@shawnwillsey The time it would take to lay down that layer over such a huge area is mindboggling. Thanks so much for taking the time to explain that.
Another amazing educational informative video ..............Thanks Shawn ...............281 like .... so much effort on your part .......
I cannot "fault " any of these informative viddz!
I'm sure Prof.Willsey has heard this call b4!🤘😉
Thank you. I enjoyed your video.
So glad!