So now, after 40 years, thanks to the internet & utube and nick, i finally find out the answer to the big mystery of my life! I was approx the same age as young nick when i went on a backpacking adventure in arizona in a deep canyon with beautiful waterfalls and sharply etched narrow deep little canyons with perfectly vertical walls. I was mystified to find SEA SHELLS! (fossils? i now assume) embedded in the walls! In arizona?!!! If the expression wtf had been coined yet i would have used it. I just got to the part in your lecture about the belt series, so when you mentioned that it went down into mexico, the light bulb went off! Cant wait to hear the rest of the lecture :D .....⏰.... Fascinating! I had been among those who believed pangea was the first & only supercontinent and there wouldnt really be anything much to say on the topic, and had been procrastinating watching this episode for half a year. Im glad i ran out of all the other ones and had no choice. Thank you nick! You make learning fun :)
What a fabulous lecture, I was just blown away glued to my computer hanging onto every word. Indeed a national treasure to have as a Professor. YOu gotta love him.
I have learned more in the last year about geology then I have in the first 68 years of my life.. Nick you have a real gift ole son! I truly appreciate you.. Especially when you take time out of your day to do lectures from home! Have a happy holidays and a long and healthy life.. Carry on!
I’m missing something here, I was referring to the large public meeting ‘during’ the pandemic. I realise there is a lot of paranoia/conspiracy stuff in the U.S.
Yeah I saw your blast ..... comment, I'm not 'tuned' into your Don't ...... comment, my 1st impression was the big crowd .... Shock ... Horror , then I realised it was an old talk.
Thanks, Nick. Nice to see you back in front of a packed house sharing your knowledge. After your “A to Z” lectures, it is easier to visualize and interpret all that you presented that night in Ellensburg. Many thanks...
Nick Zenter's presentations and lectures always put a smile on my face. Not only does he impart a great, macro level view of what's going on he brings a real passion and wonder for the subject that shines through and animates these geological stories.
Thanks for these presentations Nick, until now (as a native Californian) my geological interests have never much gone outside of the state. So much more to learn!
One of these continental drift videos hereabouts continues on into the future, showing the expected remodeling of the current continents. Gondwanaland will indeed reunite!!
Addictively fascinating! In CC at Portland (OR) for law enforcement (77/78), I returned to the bookstore to purchase the two geology books I’d really wanted.. Did not professionally pursue it, but eventually relocated to the Blue Ridge (VA) because of it…
So it looks like my parents were "destined" to meet: her from Melbourne and him from Spokane. They just waited over 1,000 million years to do it in 1942.
Greetings from the Blue Mountains Liz, that's a nice pussy you've got there, my Ginger Tom died from a Taipan bight. Well at least we are heading their way again, I've been waiting 15 months to visit my girlfriend in Seattle, the way our government are handling the Covid19 vaccine rollout, I might as well wait a billion years and walk it.
@@krashdown5814 Sorry to hear about your cat's death. Ginger is my fourth ginger cat: two females and two toms over about 48 years with a number of other colours interspersed. The COVID-19 vaccine rollout is slow as molasses in January here in Victoria (or, I should say, July for the southern hemisphere). I have an appointment to receive my first shot on 11 May, then the second one will happen sometime in August. Re your idea of waiting for the continents to meet up again: Just how long would it take since the U.S. is moving southwest about 1" per year and Australia is moving north almost 3" per year? ;-) A billion years might be right.
So has the amount of dry land been consistently increasing? Rodinia and Columbia seem smaller than the amount of land we have now. Also, there are geologic records going back that far, does that mean once material gets deposited as part of a continental plate, it's more likely to remain there? Oceanic plates seem to get subducted, is there something that could sink a continent?
As a non-geologist who finds this stuff interesting but doesn’t have expertise: Is it possible that with the Atlantic Ocean widening and pulling apart from the Eurasia plate (and other plates that I can’t think of at the moment), there being a Mid-Atlantic Ridge forming in the middle of the ocean, and the Icelandic hotspot and continuing eruptions there, could the Mid-Atlantic Ridge/Iceland actually be the start of a new supercontinent or just a new continent?
It might be the Mandela effect or I'm just fuzzybrained because I'm old as dirt, but I could swear that I heard about the earlier supercontinents no later than sometime in the '70s.
I was in the area of Ellensburg in October. Really wish THE COVID PLANDEMIC didn't put a stop to these lectures. I would've made time and arrangements to attend one. Fortunately, The greatest professed ever, ran his A-Z live stream to keep me mostly satisfied.
Nick has been streaming from his home for months and in my humble opinion they are priceless. A gift from Nick to us and all for free. Some people don't let life's little glitches keep them down. I have viewed each and every one.
what if the circumference of the earth was smaller and all the land touched. expansion of the crust allowed magma to eject out the cracks making the oceans, the eruptions became magmatic with condensing steam as our atmosphere went from acidic to alkaline base. rising sea levels and accumulation of frost at the poles indicates there is a shrinking going on.
Great, but why no mention of meteors or asteroids? Things at rest stay at rest unless a force is acted upon them. A continent doesn't just decide one day to start moving. Continent movement requires trauma. You can find examples of those colossal impacts on Google Earth -- Guam, the entire Caribbean Sea, and the southern tip of South America just to name a few.
Continental plate movement is propelled by the convection currents in the mantel. The energy into the system you are looking for is already present in the heat of the Earth's molten core.
@@nevyen149 There are three main sources of heat in the deep earth: Frictional heat, heat from radioactive decay and more importantly the heat from when the planet formed and accreted from ongoing collisions which has not yet been lost. I suspect that without those collisions, the heat in the Earth's molten core would not be sufficient for those convection currents in the mantel to occur.
@@iviewthetube Looks like you added to part of that. Embellishing to fit your narrative? From Scientific American: "There are three main sources of heat in the deep earth: (1) heat from when the planet formed and accreted, which has not yet been lost; (2) frictional heating, caused by denser core material sinking to the center of the planet; and (3) heat from the decay of radioactive elements." Says nothing about "ongoing collisions"...hmmm. But even if we ignore what seems to be a bit of your thumb on the scale, that still doesn't equate to the impacts causing the plates to move. The heat was added billions of years ago when the solar system was full of debris, but it has long ago thinned out and that kind of bombardment no longer happens. Even things as big as Chixalub, Barringer or Wolfe Creek didn't move continents, and 'we' haven't had anything bigger in millions of years. While the dust sent into the atmosphere from some of the biggest strikes caused climate warming for hundreds of thousands of years, it didn't add that much to the mantel. Impacts space have been shown to create the hottest temperatures ever seen on the surface of the Earth, but the duration is actually quite brief. At the sites of big craters, there is evidence of minerals altered by heat and impact, but that alteration obviously does not effect the entire region. Dramatic as they are, meteorite impacts haven' been a major player in adding heat for close to an eon. Further, you've gone from "...Continent movement requires trauma...." to "...I suspect that without those collisions, the heat in the Earth's molten core would not be sufficient for those convection currents in the mantel to occur..." I don't see a legitimate geological source echoing your hypothesis, and as it ends up (only) a 'suspicion', I can understand why. If it's true...prove it. Do your research, write your paper, and when it is accepted by the world, and the text books are changed...then come back. Continents move because the plates move, and they move because the convection currents cause growth in some areas, subduction and sliding in others.
@@nevyen149 Yes, I used personal observations of the Moon, Mars and Jupiter to conclude that these bombardments are ongoing. The majority of the collisions occurred billions of years ago, but like radioactive decay, the rate of occurrences will decline, most likely, by the integral between -dN/dt. Last I checked dN is not equal to zero - so yes, it is still ongoing. But as Shoemaker pointed out, lucky for us we have Jupiter which vacuums many of the asteroids which would otherwise hit us. Without Jupiter, life on Earth may have never existed due to all of those disruptions. Of course, a lot of what I think are hunches; we are pattern seeking creatures. If you want me to prove it then get me a $40 million grant and I will spend the rest of my life working on this. Regarding Chixalubj, I agree that was not enough to initiate plate tectonics. That is why it is likely that Chixalub was just a small piece which broke of from the much larger body which I suspect formed the Caribbean Sea. There is much which could be learned from the recent collision of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 with Jupiter.
@@iviewthetube Find your own funding...you made the extraordinary claim, you have ALL the responsibility to prove it. Stop moving the goal posts...meteor impacts big enough or often enough to raise the temperature of the core of the Earth are NOT happening now...and are NOT responsible for the plate tectonic movement of the continents...period. And there was *no* "larger body", as there is no evidence for two impacts at the same time. In fact, the Caribbean Sea is geologically more than twice as old as the Chicxulub impact. FFS, Shoemaker-Levy 9 wasn't "recent"...it was almost two decades ago, but it too has *nothing* to do with continental movement. Your hypothesis doesn't work. Not for me now, and not ever, unless you convince actual geologists, and come up with actual evidence. More bluntly, your "personal observations" don't mean squat to me as verification for an otherwise scientifically unsupported hypothesis from a random UA-cam nobody.
Nick Zentner, a national treasure, provides more insight into NW geology. Just wonderful.
Agree!
International treasure! ❤️ from Australia *
Thanks for this upload. Feeds my hunger for geology.
The only reason why I subscribed to CWU UA-cam channel... always hoping for some gems.
NIck Zentner is a different kind of "rock star".
I saw this video on washington university's youtube channel back in june. Loved the lecture
Fascinating and delivered by a professor who is a rock star! If we had more teachers like Dr. Zentner we would all be student rock stars!
So now, after 40 years, thanks to the internet & utube and nick, i finally find out the answer to the big mystery of my life! I was approx the same age as young nick when i went on a backpacking adventure in arizona in a deep canyon with beautiful waterfalls and sharply etched narrow deep little canyons with perfectly vertical walls. I was mystified to find SEA SHELLS! (fossils? i now assume) embedded in the walls! In arizona?!!! If the expression wtf had been coined yet i would have used it. I just got to the part in your lecture about the belt series, so when you mentioned that it went down into mexico, the light bulb went off! Cant wait to hear the rest of the lecture :D .....⏰.... Fascinating! I had been among those who believed pangea was the first & only supercontinent and there wouldnt really be anything much to say on the topic, and had been procrastinating watching this episode for half a year. Im glad i ran out of all the other ones and had no choice. Thank you nick! You make learning fun :)
This is even better the second time around!
Absolutely love this lecture series. Prof. Zentner, you are a treasure! Thank you.
Omg I love this one. Thank you once again, and always and forever!
Brilliant.
"That's all Geology is, really. Pressure. And time." - Ellis "Red" Redding.
It was these lectures that introduced me to Nick!
After the A-Z Livestreams, this was so easy to follow. Thanks. Love you Nick.
Wow! What a great awakening for me.
Nick Thank you for all great stuff you do.. I like how you teach ! I am hooked 😎 #AP666
Big fan Mr. Z
One of my favorites . Thank you professor.
What a fabulous lecture, I was just blown away glued to my computer hanging onto every word. Indeed a national treasure to have as a Professor. YOu gotta love him.
Excellent lecture. I was spellbound!
Wow Nick you are on a roll! Bless. Thank you!!!
I have learned more in the last year about geology then I have in the first 68 years of my life.. Nick you have a real gift ole son! I truly appreciate you.. Especially when you take time out of your day to do lectures from home! Have a happy holidays and a long and healthy life.. Carry on!
A blast from the past (Apr 11, 2019) and well worth the time to watch again. Cheers, Mark
Aw, I thought the cure had spread down from Canada.
@@givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 Don't 'beat-around-the-bush', put your cards on the table.
I’m missing something here, I was referring to the large public meeting ‘during’ the pandemic. I realise there is a lot of paranoia/conspiracy stuff in the U.S.
@@givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 ' *Supercontinents and the Pacific Northwest* ' was an event on *April 11, 2019* ! !
Yeah I saw your blast ..... comment, I'm not 'tuned' into your Don't ...... comment, my 1st impression was the big crowd .... Shock ... Horror , then I realised it was an old talk.
I love these videos; you're a great teacher!
Thank you for another wonderful lecture!
Excellent lecture! Always a treat to learn from you.
Thanks, Nick. Nice to see you back in front of a packed house sharing your knowledge. After your “A to Z” lectures, it is easier to visualize and interpret all that you presented that night in Ellensburg. Many thanks...
It is hard to believe the changes in geological history that Nick has shown us this year too bad there can’t be a new series in Ellensburg😷😪🖖👍
You got to love it!
Very interesting video. Thanks
Nick Zenter's presentations and lectures always put a smile on my face. Not only does he impart a great, macro level view of what's going on he brings a real passion and wonder for the subject that shines through and animates these geological stories.
Thanks for these presentations Nick, until now (as a native Californian) my geological interests have never much gone outside of the state. So much more to learn!
You answered my question on whether the dinosaurs were around for Pangaea. Indeed they were.
30:50 Wow, just wow. It’s crazy thinking about how long it has been since that was actual mud.
As we learned this fall, the Exotic Terrane collected North America ;)
My favorite bumper sticker: REUNITE GONDWANALAND!
😂😂😂
One of these continental drift videos hereabouts continues on into the future, showing the expected remodeling of the current continents. Gondwanaland will indeed reunite!!
a truly insider joke!
Its good to have people back, even though its a year old.
Addictively fascinating! In CC at Portland (OR) for law enforcement (77/78), I returned to the bookstore to purchase the two geology books I’d really wanted.. Did not professionally pursue it, but eventually relocated to the Blue Ridge (VA) because of it…
So it looks like my parents were "destined" to meet: her from Melbourne and him from Spokane. They just waited over 1,000 million years to do it in 1942.
Greetings from the Blue Mountains Liz, that's a nice pussy you've got there, my Ginger Tom died from a Taipan bight. Well at least we are heading their way again, I've been waiting 15 months to visit my girlfriend in Seattle, the way our government are handling the Covid19 vaccine rollout, I might as well wait a billion years and walk it.
@@krashdown5814 Sorry to hear about your cat's death. Ginger is my fourth ginger cat: two females and two toms over about 48 years with a number of other colours interspersed. The COVID-19 vaccine rollout is slow as molasses in January here in Victoria (or, I should say, July for the southern hemisphere). I have an appointment to receive my first shot on 11 May, then the second one will happen sometime in August. Re your idea of waiting for the continents to meet up again: Just how long would it take since the U.S. is moving southwest about 1" per year and Australia is moving north almost 3" per year? ;-) A billion years might be right.
@@lizj5740 Nah, don't think I'll make it, stuff going on inside.
So...you're telling us that you're Craig's fault?
THANK YOU, CRAIG!!!
12:46 sorry Patrick😲🤣
Im waiting for the day he drops a sorry Patrick in the middle of one of a CWU lecture
@@101rotarypower Maybe one of his students should post here when he does ;-)
AH! I MISSED ONE!!
Just popped up on the I-PAD, not know why. Sound good though.
Aaaw...Professor Z. just can't quit us.
what lasts longer a super contenent or the drift between?
WOW this is fascinating hearing about all this when so many people are happy they know about Pangea😊
@3:31 "You can see how high we were..." lol, oh man. I bet :)
I live nearMesquite, NV. Is the Virgin River an old river that outflowed to ocean at one point?
So has the amount of dry land been consistently increasing? Rodinia and Columbia seem smaller than the amount of land we have now.
Also, there are geologic records going back that far, does that mean once material gets deposited as part of a continental plate, it's more likely to remain there? Oceanic plates seem to get subducted, is there something that could sink a continent?
Nick, was this remastered for a fresh upload? Great to see it again regardless.
Columbus's journey across the Atlantic was around 40 meters shorter than for us today. 😁
The Belt Series... just East of John Stockton's house.
I love these lectures. Just wish he had some better visuals.
You mean, like a fruitcake??
Like what?
As a non-geologist who finds this stuff interesting but doesn’t have expertise: Is it possible that with the Atlantic Ocean widening and pulling apart from the Eurasia plate (and other plates that I can’t think of at the moment), there being a Mid-Atlantic Ridge forming in the middle of the ocean, and the Icelandic hotspot and continuing eruptions there, could the Mid-Atlantic Ridge/Iceland actually be the start of a new supercontinent or just a new continent?
27k views and only 930 likes?! That's a crime.
It might be the Mandela effect or I'm just fuzzybrained because I'm old as dirt, but I could swear that I heard about the earlier supercontinents no later than sometime in the '70s.
I was in the area of Ellensburg in October. Really wish THE COVID PLANDEMIC didn't put a stop to these lectures. I would've made time and arrangements to attend one. Fortunately, The greatest professed ever, ran his A-Z live stream to keep me mostly satisfied.
@@TheDanEdwards didn't realize I posted a meme, sorry.
Nick has been streaming from his home for months and in my humble opinion they are priceless. A gift from Nick to us and all for free. Some people don't let life's little glitches keep them down. I have viewed each and every one.
❤❤
Where's Bijou and Muffler Boy?
I thought the other continent with Rodinia was Gondwana?
Dinosaurs were on Pangea, dinosaurs were on breaking Pangea and dinosaurs (birds) are still with us on today Earth.
Um-excuse me professor, are we still assembling 'The Fruitcake' or is this more GERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKE???? A-Ha-ha-ha-ha *-)
VB
Australia* 😀
what if the circumference of the earth was smaller and all the land touched. expansion of the crust allowed magma to eject out the cracks making the oceans, the eruptions became magmatic with condensing steam as our atmosphere went from acidic to alkaline base. rising sea levels and accumulation of frost at the poles indicates there is a shrinking going on.
Doesn't work. There's no place for the extra mass to have come from.
EVERTHING GOES IN CICLES OF CHANGES & EVEN DOES PEOPLE TOO THS IS EVEN BEING BORN OVER & OVER ????????????
EMPIRES ALL SO COME & GO OVER & OVER & LEAVE GRANT RUINS BEHIND EVEN IN THE SEAS
Great, but why no mention of meteors or asteroids? Things at rest stay at rest unless a force is acted upon them. A continent doesn't just decide one day to start moving. Continent movement requires trauma. You can find examples of those colossal impacts on Google Earth -- Guam, the entire Caribbean Sea, and the southern tip of South America just to name a few.
Continental plate movement is propelled by the convection currents in the mantel. The energy into the system you are looking for is already present in the heat of the Earth's molten core.
@@nevyen149 There are three main sources of heat in the deep earth: Frictional heat, heat from radioactive decay and more importantly the heat from when the planet formed and accreted from ongoing collisions which has not yet been lost. I suspect that without those collisions, the heat in the Earth's molten core would not be sufficient for those convection currents in the mantel to occur.
@@iviewthetube Looks like you added to part of that. Embellishing to fit your narrative?
From Scientific American:
"There are three main sources of heat in the deep earth: (1) heat from when the planet formed and accreted, which has not yet been lost; (2) frictional heating, caused by denser core material sinking to the center of the planet; and (3) heat from the decay of radioactive elements."
Says nothing about "ongoing collisions"...hmmm.
But even if we ignore what seems to be a bit of your thumb on the scale, that still doesn't equate to the impacts causing the plates to move. The heat was added billions of years ago when the solar system was full of debris, but it has long ago thinned out and that kind of bombardment no longer happens. Even things as big as Chixalub, Barringer or Wolfe Creek didn't move continents, and 'we' haven't had anything bigger in millions of years. While the dust sent into the atmosphere from some of the biggest strikes caused climate warming for hundreds of thousands of years, it didn't add that much to the mantel. Impacts space have been shown to create the hottest temperatures ever seen on the surface of the Earth, but the duration is actually quite brief. At the sites of big craters, there is evidence of minerals altered by heat and impact, but that alteration obviously does not effect the entire region. Dramatic as they are, meteorite impacts haven' been a major player in adding heat for close to an eon.
Further, you've gone from "...Continent movement requires trauma...." to "...I suspect that without those collisions, the heat in the Earth's molten core would not be sufficient for those convection currents in the mantel to occur..."
I don't see a legitimate geological source echoing your hypothesis, and as it ends up (only) a 'suspicion', I can understand why.
If it's true...prove it. Do your research, write your paper, and when it is accepted by the world, and the text books are changed...then come back.
Continents move because the plates move, and they move because the convection currents cause growth in some areas, subduction and sliding in others.
@@nevyen149 Yes, I used personal observations of the Moon, Mars and Jupiter to conclude that these bombardments are ongoing. The majority of the collisions occurred billions of years ago, but like radioactive decay, the rate of occurrences will decline, most likely, by the integral between -dN/dt. Last I checked dN is not equal to zero - so yes, it is still ongoing. But as Shoemaker pointed out, lucky for us we have Jupiter which vacuums many of the asteroids which would otherwise hit us. Without Jupiter, life on Earth may have never existed due to all of those disruptions. Of course, a lot of what I think are hunches; we are pattern seeking creatures. If you want me to prove it then get me a $40 million grant and I will spend the rest of my life working on this. Regarding Chixalubj, I agree that was not enough to initiate plate tectonics. That is why it is likely that Chixalub was just a small piece which broke of from the much larger body which I suspect formed the Caribbean Sea. There is much which could be learned from the recent collision of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 with Jupiter.
@@iviewthetube Find your own funding...you made the extraordinary claim, you have ALL the responsibility to prove it.
Stop moving the goal posts...meteor impacts big enough or often enough to raise the temperature of the core of the Earth are NOT happening now...and are NOT responsible for the plate tectonic movement of the continents...period.
And there was *no* "larger body", as there is no evidence for two impacts at the same time. In fact, the Caribbean Sea is geologically more than twice as old as the Chicxulub impact.
FFS, Shoemaker-Levy 9 wasn't "recent"...it was almost two decades ago, but it too has *nothing* to do with continental movement.
Your hypothesis doesn't work. Not for me now, and not ever, unless you convince actual geologists, and come up with actual evidence.
More bluntly, your "personal observations" don't mean squat to me as verification for an otherwise scientifically unsupported hypothesis from a random UA-cam nobody.