I'm really loving the series. You are an incredibly gifted teacher and communicator, and it just happens geology is one of my favorite fields of interest so it's a perfect fit. Thanks for sharing these amazing lessons centering on the Bad Lands. I went there in my 20's and its impactful memories stand out to me. I'm just loving learning the history of its formation.
I just realized something as you explained Mesa formation. Whether they are topped with former river rock deposits or lava, they were once the lowest steepest parts since they followed the gradient of the topography around them. Then erosion takes place, and it sort of inverts, now they impose gradients of descent around them and are the highest parts locally. They're almost like fossils of previous gradients.
I have worked in the McCollough Peaks for four summer campaigns during my PhD (2016-2021, TU Delft) and we have high-resolution drone models that can be navigated in the software. my last visit was just last summer (not sure whether you know there is a big gathering every year on July 4th in Powell, where lots of geologists and paleontologists participate). I really enjoy watching your videos, which are well filmed and illustrated. Everybody, including geologists and laymen, should watch this, in my mind. Highly recommended! Hope to see you one day in the basin!
I haven't spent a whole lot of time in the McCollough Peaks area as compared to the Elk Creek region. I will be releasing a few videos focusing on fluvial systems soon which showcases the amazing outcrops in the area. I would be happy to meet you next time you are in the area and show you a bit of my area of the basin. Thank you for the feedback on my videos.
@@myroncook I look forward to both meeting you in the field and watching your upcoming videos. You can also find my PhD defense video on my channel if you are interested. Thank you for your work and inspiration!
Thank you for the excellent video on erosion. I love Geology and I'm interested in Life and Acient Evnironments. It's really neat when someone like you who knows the language of the rocks can interpret the story they tell for us viewers. Your hard work in putting this together is much appreciated. Thank you!
I love the drive west from Denver across Colorado and into Utah all the way to I15. The geologic scenery is incredible from start to finish. Especially the Utah leg. I could spend months out there and never get tired of the beauty of that nature. If anyone reading this comment hasn’t seen this in their life I highly recommend putting this on your bucket list.
Thank you for what you do! I have always been intrigued by geology and geography. I truly appreciate your educational videos. Please know you're videos are very appreciated!
Discovered your videos today and I've watched several of them. I'm really impressed with the photography and the way that you use the drone to show not only the examples you're talking about but just the transition shots while you're driving in the Jeep with the drone overhead or something. The composition in your videos and the use of lighting and other technical things are just as good as your knowledge of the geology. It's very beautiful and you really showcase the land you live in and make me want to go there to learn more about the geology of it.
Great video! I often thought while sitting in my own college geology classes that if geology was required of all students in high school, it would settle a lot of the disagreements people have over various belief systems.
Your lovely voice is right up there with Sir David Attenborough's, Myron! And your geology videos are wonderful to watch and to learn from. Thank you for making them for us!
I'm hooked. I use to go rock hunting when I was a kid. We'd drive out the one of the deserts in Southern California and spend the whole day day looking for different types of rocks. My dad would take a few home cut them and polish them. He'd make necklaces for my sister and her friends. I'm glad I found you channel. I'm now 65 and in a few more months I will be able to spend as much time in the wild as I want. Enjoying the natural beauty that we all need to slow down and enjoy!
Those are some of the coolest formations! Helped us understand erosion a lot better! We sure hope more people find your channel to learn about this amazing Wyoming geology!!
Myron, you are, without doubt, my favourite American, it's therapeutic and informative listening to you. So glad I found your channel. I love this world we are so lucky to inhabit, i'm like you, I notice everything and wonder, every little critter, tiny flowers, mountains to mole hills. I'm going to live my parrallel life as a Geoligist, who loves her job, through your eyes. Always wanted to visit the States, so many fantastic lanscapes. Australia is the same, fascinating history, and lots of erosion features (Bungle Bungles in the NW of Australia and Karijini National Park). Thankyou for sharing, your very lucky living where you do, it's so good for the soul to be able to see nothing but mountains, not concrete and steel. Love the name of the Badlands, which are anything but, I live in the badlands, called a city lol
I love Geology. I did have a class and a few field trips in college. I love archaeology and paleontology as well as astronomy. It is all so fascinating. Geology makes you stop and see the deep time of it all. Erosion is just as fascinating. Water is very powerful.
Such beautiful landscapes. I so enjoy your videos, Myron. Thank you so much for creating and sharing your experience, thoughts, knowledge, and talents 😊❤
Very delighted your teachings on Earth Science. Many thanks of your efforts and field trips that illustrate how to understand geological puzzle. Please keep the good works and share with me your reaching videos !!!
The colours at dawn and dusk on the little mushrooms would be phenomenal for photography, NW Australia is red dirt country and it enhances with sunrise and sunsets, beautiful,
I really like the way you talk about geology! It is enthusiastic and clear information. I myself live in Finland, where the entire landscape is shaped by ice ages, everything is so different from Wyoming. Here we can see only very old and very young processes, you also have a lot to look at in between!
Yes I agree. There are a couple channels that do a good job but they do so in the context of gold prospecting. Although that is also incredibly interesting it’s fascinating to learn about geology in a broader form
Warm greetings from Cornwall, fantastic videos! An engineer by trade and an armchair lover of the natural sciences, you are up there with Carlson Sir. Deep time, fractals, sedimentary form, brilliant! Thankyou.
I wish I could hit rewind on my age and sign up for a Geology course and have you as my instructor. You make it so easy to understand. Again, another great video...thank you for taking the time to educate us on this incredible planet we live on. Fred in Texas
These videos are so well made! I appreciate your passion for the geology of the world around us. The formations you showed in this video are beautiful examples. Thank you for sharing what you love!
Currently getting a B.A in geology. I find it difficult to watch teachings videos that draw my attention in its entirety and you have captured just that! Please post more. -Your new subscriber
Have you ever heard of the channel Hangman1128 before, I think his work on Geology is something to be looked at seriously. The paradigm needs an updating.
I am so impressed with this video. I like this collection of work and I've watched a lot of it. But this, I think, is Mr. Cook's best work. The locations are gorgeous. And the instruction is top notch. I love America's southwest. I think this work will help its beauty win many more hearts.
When hiking, it's always fascinated me that I can run into a creek that is cutting across a hillside. Thanks for explaining some of this, it's always baffled me.
Also, I was climbing in Kentucky recently, and the rock in the Red River Gorge area is all (at least the climbing areas) sandstone. Much like you describe in your sandstone section, there are areas with harder and softer sandstone. From what some of the people I was climbing with explained, there's iron rich sandstones that resist erosion more than the other sandstone around it, creating these plate features. The plate on the surface of the cliff doesn’t erode as fast as the less resistant sandstone behind so it creates climbing holds that you can just put your entire hand on. There's also random pockets in the rock and lots of roofs because the sandstone that's less resistant washes away and leaves a big roof that you can climb under. one thing that surprised me was how strong the rock was, i could literally yank as hard as I could on a little quarter inch thick plate to jug up and it was just fine. the products of erosion there are fasinating.
I really enjoy flying over the west ang looking at thd geology in that macro view. Videos like this let me see the details of places i hope to see more of. Geology, evolution, and astronomy are all about time, unfathomable amounts and evolving conditions. Thanks for the vid
Dear Myron, thanks for unlocking some of the secrets of geology to those of us in your audience whose only experience with rocks is playing with some in the garden. Thanks so much. Love from Australia - one of the oldest Continents on Earth.
Dear Mr Cook, my first real encounter with a geologist was about 20 years ago. I spent the better part of my work career in excavations. My father was a quarryman in our local limestone industry and I'm a retired construction superintendent. This young geologist was performing soil testing for a large resort foundations. As we walked through the glacial till he would pick up small stones and explain to me where they came from. I've always been aware of the Wisconsin glacial period, in fact where my home is was once under a mile thick glacier. The more I learn the more my curiosity increases. We live on the Niagara Escarpment. To imagine the type of erosion that occurred almost yesterday, in geologic time. Thanks for the wonderful videos.
I'm enjoying your videos a lot. Thanks for sharing your knowledge in such an inspiring way. It really helps us see the beauty of earth while also helping us understand nature's processes.
As a lifelong rock-hound, I've been enjoying these videos immensely for a couple months now(recently found and subscribed) and have often wondered the time scale of erosion? Dr. Cook generously provided the answer (for the Bighorn Basin) in this video: ".7 inches per 100 yrs". Wow! I don't know what I expected, but that blows my mind. This guy is such a gift! I'm glad he had the inspiration to start this channel and makes the effort to create so much excellent content. Thank you Dr. Cook.
I grew up in Cody and spent most of my childhood in the Big Horn Basin and the Beartooth Mountains and now I work in the northern end of the Beartooths in an underground mine. I've been enjoying these videos as a history lesson on stuff I looked at my whole life!
Thank you again, Mr. Cook, for another outstanding presentation! I love your enthusiasm clear explanations. I'm sure you make geologists everywhere proud! You've certainly helped enlighten this southern Nevadan !
Thanks for this video - I like your presentation style. Once in a while (a great while ;-) I even like the way YT's algorithms actually succeed in suggesting something pleasant, wholesome and edifying to me.
So happy I found your videos, thank you for the educational content!! Im from Argentina and love our landscapes, now I can see the nature patterns making more sense 😊
I was never interested in geology when I was younger, as I’ve gotten older and had the opportunity to travel I’ve found it very interesting to research how things have been formed. I stumbled across your channel after coming home from Capitol Reef and “looping the fold” . All I wanted to do was stare at the beauty of it. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
I love your videos, but I feel like I can never finish them because first I get depressed then I get angry. But I do love how you take what most people would find boring, but you make them fascinating.
It was perfect! Bro I totally loved your video. The ability you have at showing the beautiful examples and bringing it to a level that we can all understand. I’m also amazed of the knowledge you have at being able to answer the questions of the why’s? I also enjoy the enthusiasm you have for the land and it’s beauty…
I don't mean to be negative, just concerned about you hiking ALONE. Please don't do that. You are a treasure of knowledge and you'd be missed if you got hurt & layed up.
It’s incredible that there is nobody else around, this would be a major tourist attraction if it was in France or somewhere like that. Much more beautiful that it is empty
You transformed my eyes to see these beautiful formations with a huge amount of awe. They already blew my mind and now I understand the depth of time it took for these processes to occur, my thought processes are now open to the immense scale of these things. I really appreciate your intro to this topic down the road from your house. The small fractel of what is to come. I had noticed these things but didn't fully form my understanding. I really value your knowledge and thank you for sharing it. If I lived in the States, I feel like I would follow you about like a little shadow if I had the chancel hahaha! Kindest regards from the UK I am surrounded by flint shrimp burrows and fossils here. My daughter found crystals in her garden. A badger dug them up. Southern England is fascinating for geology but heartbreaking for the falseness of the natural environment. Thank goodness re-wilding is becoming a thing over here :)
Sir, you're a Bob Ross of geology! That's how soothing your videos are. I'm gonna watch each and every one of them...
wow, thanks!
I'm really loving the series. You are an incredibly gifted teacher and communicator, and it just happens geology is one of my favorite fields of interest so it's a perfect fit. Thanks for sharing these amazing lessons centering on the Bad Lands. I went there in my 20's and its impactful memories stand out to me. I'm just loving learning the history of its formation.
Wow, thank you!
Thanks Mr. Big Star. Well said. I so enjoy geology as well, but really appreciated gifted teachers too.
I love hiking with geologist Myron. Erodes the rocks in my curiosity.
Is that how we get wrinkles on our brains?
I just realized something as you explained Mesa formation. Whether they are topped with former river rock deposits or lava, they were once the lowest steepest parts since they followed the gradient of the topography around them. Then erosion takes place, and it sort of inverts, now they impose gradients of descent around them and are the highest parts locally. They're almost like fossils of previous gradients.
Is it ok to refer to these as fossilized rivers?
I have worked in the McCollough Peaks for four summer campaigns during my PhD (2016-2021, TU Delft) and we have high-resolution drone models that can be navigated in the software. my last visit was just last summer (not sure whether you know there is a big gathering every year on July 4th in Powell, where lots of geologists and paleontologists participate). I really enjoy watching your videos, which are well filmed and illustrated. Everybody, including geologists and laymen, should watch this, in my mind. Highly recommended! Hope to see you one day in the basin!
I haven't spent a whole lot of time in the McCollough Peaks area as compared to the Elk Creek region. I will be releasing a few videos focusing on fluvial systems soon which showcases the amazing outcrops in the area. I would be happy to meet you next time you are in the area and show you a bit of my area of the basin. Thank you for the feedback on my videos.
@@myroncook I look forward to both meeting you in the field and watching your upcoming videos. You can also find my PhD defense video on my channel if you are interested. Thank you for your work and inspiration!
I'll have to check it out.
This was an absolutely awesome video. I can’t wait to see more. Well done Myron. 👍
Thank you
This men is inspiring just as nature is only by being him. Thank u men that I could see the world with geology lens
Thank you for the excellent video on erosion. I love Geology and I'm interested in Life and Acient Evnironments. It's really neat when someone like you who knows the language of the rocks can interpret the story they tell for us viewers. Your hard work in putting this together is much appreciated. Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I too appreciate the women of geology.
Lovely comment. 👍☺️🌱
I love the drive west from Denver across Colorado and into Utah all the way to I15. The geologic scenery is incredible from start to finish. Especially the Utah leg. I could spend months out there and never get tired of the beauty of that nature. If anyone reading this comment hasn’t seen this in their life I highly recommend putting this on your bucket list.
Spectacular production, Myron. Virtually seamless, makes it easy to watch.
I LOVE how you love geology. You make it so interesting. I love it too, and thank you so much for all you do. :)
thanks!
Thank you for what you do! I have always been intrigued by geology and geography. I truly appreciate your educational videos. Please know you're videos are very appreciated!
Absolutely Fascinating
Badlands are amazing places!
Wow, Mother Nature is beautiful.
It really is!
You are bringing this Wyoming to me, to my room, and I appreciate it. Thanks.
Well done examination and explanation of some incredible sights!
Discovered your videos today and I've watched several of them. I'm really impressed with the photography and the way that you use the drone to show not only the examples you're talking about but just the transition shots while you're driving in the Jeep with the drone overhead or something. The composition in your videos and the use of lighting and other technical things are just as good as your knowledge of the geology. It's very beautiful and you really showcase the land you live in and make me want to go there to learn more about the geology of it.
Thank you for that, Bill.
These are great to watch !
Thank you for producing them Myron !
Just wish I could be there with you.
Glad you like them!
Thank You Myron. Wonderful lesson on Erosion. We need more passionate teachers like you. The Very Best Fred Lawlor
Simply wonderful. Thankyou.
Myron, that grass in your yard is pristine!!
Great video! I often thought while sitting in my own college geology classes that if geology was required of all students in high school, it would settle a lot of the disagreements people have over various belief systems.
Great point!
Very informative, thanks! Every time I fly west I see nothing but erosion, I love it .
Thankyou for making such videos
You are a fantastic teacher, thank you so much!
Thank you for another stellar presentation. Very good drone and stills.
Your lovely voice is right up there with Sir David Attenborough's, Myron! And your geology videos are wonderful to watch and to learn from. Thank you for making them for us!
So nice of you
I'm hooked. I use to go rock hunting when I was a kid. We'd drive out the one of the deserts in Southern California and spend the whole day day looking for different types of rocks. My dad would take a few home cut them and polish them. He'd make necklaces for my sister and her friends. I'm glad I found you channel. I'm now 65 and in a few more months I will be able to spend as much time in the wild as I want. Enjoying the natural beauty that we all need to slow down and enjoy!
Do as much as you can while you are mobile. Life is short.
@@myroncook Thank you. I agree.
Those are some of the coolest formations! Helped us understand erosion a lot better! We sure hope more people find your channel to learn about this amazing Wyoming geology!!
Myron, you are, without doubt, my favourite American, it's therapeutic and informative listening to you. So glad I found your channel.
I love this world we are so lucky to inhabit, i'm like you, I notice everything and wonder, every little critter, tiny flowers, mountains to mole hills.
I'm going to live my parrallel life as a Geoligist, who loves her job, through your eyes.
Always wanted to visit the States, so many fantastic lanscapes. Australia is the same, fascinating history, and lots of erosion features (Bungle Bungles in the NW of Australia and Karijini National Park).
Thankyou for sharing, your very lucky living where you do, it's so good for the soul to be able to see nothing but mountains, not concrete and steel. Love the name of the Badlands, which are anything but, I live in the badlands, called a city lol
Thank you, Zed!!! You absolutely made my day!!! Welcome aboard! Maybe someday you can visit the American West.
I love Geology. I did have a class and a few field trips in college. I love archaeology and paleontology as well as astronomy. It is all so fascinating. Geology makes you stop and see the deep time of it all. Erosion is just as fascinating. Water is very powerful.
awesome
Such beautiful landscapes. I so enjoy your videos, Myron. Thank you so much for creating and sharing your experience, thoughts, knowledge, and talents 😊❤
Thanks!
Very delighted your teachings on Earth Science. Many thanks of your efforts and field trips that illustrate how to understand geological puzzle. Please keep the good works and share with me your reaching videos !!!
Many thanks!
The colours at dawn and dusk on the little mushrooms would be phenomenal for photography, NW Australia is red dirt country and it enhances with sunrise and sunsets, beautiful,
I really like the way you talk about geology! It is enthusiastic and clear information. I myself live in Finland, where the entire landscape is shaped by ice ages, everything is so different from Wyoming. Here we can see only very old and very young processes, you also have a lot to look at in between!
Thank you for watching. Indeed, we live in very different geology landscapes.
No woke bs too
Yes I agree. There are a couple channels that do a good job but they do so in the context of gold prospecting. Although that is also incredibly interesting it’s fascinating to learn about geology in a broader form
@@toserveman9265😂
@@toserveman9265 rolls eyes, what a stupid comment.
Great series. Watched two or three in a row - will be coming back for more.
Warm greetings from Cornwall, fantastic videos! An engineer by trade and an armchair lover of the natural sciences, you are up there with Carlson Sir. Deep time, fractals, sedimentary form, brilliant! Thankyou.
Glad you like them!
I wish I could hit rewind on my age and sign up for a Geology course and have you as my instructor. You make it so easy to understand. Again, another great video...thank you for taking the time to educate us on this incredible planet we live on. Fred in Texas
These videos are so well made! I appreciate your passion for the geology of the world around us.
The formations you showed in this video are beautiful examples.
Thank you for sharing what you love!
Thank you very much!
Loved the learning and views Myron! Very well done! You do a wonderful job teaching!
Glad you enjoyed it
Currently getting a B.A in geology. I find it difficult to watch teachings videos that draw my attention in its entirety and you have captured just that! Please post more. -Your new subscriber
Glad to hear it!
@@myroncook Nicest teacher I´ve ever known. Your videos are awsome!!! Greetings from Spain from a geology ignorant (but interested in the subject).
Thank you so much Eric. I love Spain! I lived there two years.
It really is a beautiful video.
Have you ever heard of the channel Hangman1128 before, I think his work on Geology is something to be looked at seriously. The paradigm needs an updating.
I am so impressed with this video. I like this collection of work and I've watched a lot of it. But this, I think, is Mr. Cook's best work. The locations are gorgeous. And the instruction is top notch. I love America's southwest. I think this work will help its beauty win many more hearts.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Really a treat for the visuals and your excellent instruction!
Thank you, Nita
I find your videos super interesting. I love how you present your lessons with the whiteboard. The whiteboard lesson ties it all together for me.
When hiking, it's always fascinated me that I can run into a creek that is cutting across a hillside. Thanks for explaining some of this, it's always baffled me.
Also, I was climbing in Kentucky recently, and the rock in the Red River Gorge area is all (at least the climbing areas) sandstone. Much like you describe in your sandstone section, there are areas with harder and softer sandstone. From what some of the people I was climbing with explained, there's iron rich sandstones that resist erosion more than the other sandstone around it, creating these plate features. The plate on the surface of the cliff doesn’t erode as fast as the less resistant sandstone behind so it creates climbing holds that you can just put your entire hand on. There's also random pockets in the rock and lots of roofs because the sandstone that's less resistant washes away and leaves a big roof that you can climb under. one thing that surprised me was how strong the rock was, i could literally yank as hard as I could on a little quarter inch thick plate to jug up and it was just fine. the products of erosion there are fasinating.
You bet!
I really enjoy flying over the west ang looking at thd geology in that macro view. Videos like this let me see the details of places i hope to see more of. Geology, evolution, and astronomy are all about time, unfathomable amounts and evolving conditions. Thanks for the vid
Dear Myron, thanks for unlocking some of the secrets of geology to those of us in your audience whose only experience with rocks is playing with some in the garden. Thanks so much. Love from Australia - one of the oldest Continents on Earth.
Really enjoying your videos.
Since my retirement I’ve spent a lot of time in Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and Texas “looking at rocks”.
Keep ‘em coming.
Excellent video.
Thank you very much!
I like your shows.
Wow! What marvels our Earth contains. I love it. Thanks for sharing.
Dear Mr Cook, my first real encounter with a geologist was about 20 years ago. I spent the better part of my work career in excavations. My father was a quarryman in our local limestone industry and I'm a retired construction superintendent. This young geologist was performing soil testing for a large resort foundations. As we walked through the glacial till he would pick up small stones and explain to me where they came from. I've always been aware of the Wisconsin glacial period, in fact where my home is was once under a mile thick glacier. The more I learn the more my curiosity increases. We live on the Niagara Escarpment. To imagine the type of erosion that occurred almost yesterday, in geologic time. Thanks for the wonderful videos.
Thanks for sharing your story!
congratulations for the channel. you speak slowly and very clearly.
Wow... !!! My best friend, It's always great. I wish you every day of your development. Have a happy day!
Thank you! You too!
Very nicely done! Thanks.
I can see with new eyes, and what I see is amazing! Thanks for explaining things in a way that is so understandable and enjoyable.
You are so welcome!
Thanks so much for the amazing teachings, I appreciate it greatly
You are very welcome
this is magic how we can read the layers like a book and travel through history . thank you I love what you do
I'm enjoying your videos a lot. Thanks for sharing your knowledge in such an inspiring way. It really helps us see the beauty of earth while also helping us understand nature's processes.
Thank You so sweetly!
Excellent!
As a lifelong rock-hound, I've been enjoying these videos immensely for a couple months now(recently found and subscribed) and have often wondered the time scale of erosion? Dr. Cook generously provided the answer (for the Bighorn Basin) in this video: ".7 inches per 100 yrs". Wow! I don't know what I expected, but that blows my mind. This guy is such a gift! I'm glad he had the inspiration to start this channel and makes the effort to create so much excellent content. Thank you Dr. Cook.
Magnificent scenery. Thank you for taking us on another journey of discovery.
Winds, also freeze thaw cause erosion. Nice representation for all the worlds rivers and trickles and falls.
Just wonderful and enriching instruction! Can't wait to see some of these vistas someday! Thanks so very much!
Beautiful...
Thanks a lot 😊
I really like your channel, Myron. Easy to absorb geology lessons. Thanks!
Thank you, David. I hope you are doing well!
I believe your video has answered my questions about the spectacular area between Wikiup and Wickenburg AZ. I’m so thankful for your explanation.
Thanks Myron, really enjoyed finding your channel! Just got the next video to watch and then I’ll be caught up 😊 (kinda went backwards watching them).
Thanks for putting in the work and the great explanations!
Glad you like them!
I grew up in Cody and spent most of my childhood in the Big Horn Basin and the Beartooth Mountains and now I work in the northern end of the Beartooths in an underground mine. I've been enjoying these videos as a history lesson on stuff I looked at my whole life!
I could spend a week there just wandering ,looking ,thinking ,
I agree!
My future hikes will never be the same, thank you!
Thank you
TYSM! Love Geology!!!
If I ever wanted a geo teacher this would be the guy I’d want. Good work man appreciate jt
Thank you again, Mr. Cook, for another outstanding presentation! I love your enthusiasm clear explanations. I'm sure you make geologists everywhere proud! You've certainly helped enlighten this southern Nevadan !
just discovered your channel sir
so much beauty and history in the colors and textures
Love your videos!!!!!
Thanks for this video - I like your presentation style. Once in a while (a great while ;-) I even like the way YT's algorithms actually succeed in suggesting something pleasant, wholesome and edifying to me.
You ROCK, Myron!
Excellent work!
Glad you like it!
Love so much with this video
Good idea to explain what is a Erosion and how it make on the earth surface
Thank you
So happy I found your videos, thank you for the educational content!!
Im from Argentina and love our landscapes, now I can see the nature patterns making more sense 😊
Wonderful!
Thank You Mr. Cook. The finding of your channel has renewed my confidence in getting my bachelors in geosciences and pursing geology .
Best of luck!
Thank you sir!
Edit : “pursuing” Typos haha
Well done and enjoyable.
Cool. Im doing it tomorrow morning.
enjoyable. thank you
Glad you enjoyed it
I was never interested in geology when I was younger, as I’ve gotten older and had the opportunity to travel I’ve found it very interesting to research how things have been formed. I stumbled across your channel after coming home from Capitol Reef and “looping the fold” . All I wanted to do was stare at the beauty of it. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Unbelievably wonderful landscapes. Greetings fron Finland.
I love your videos, but I feel like I can never finish them because first I get depressed then I get angry. But I do love how you take what most people would find boring, but you make them fascinating.
A beautiful thing to see he's done this most of his life and he's still in love with the science
Thank you, Daniel
It was perfect! Bro
I totally loved your video.
The ability you have at showing the beautiful examples and
bringing it to a level that we can all understand.
I’m also amazed of the knowledge you have at being able to answer the questions of the why’s?
I also enjoy the enthusiasm you have for the land and it’s beauty…
Thank you very much!
I could listen to you all day. 🌱☺️🌿
I don't mean to be negative, just concerned about you hiking ALONE. Please don't do that. You are a treasure of knowledge and you'd be missed if you got hurt & layed up.
Thank you for your concern!
It’s incredible that there is nobody else around, this would be a major tourist attraction if it was in France or somewhere like that. Much more beautiful that it is empty
I think there are less than 10 people who know where these features are.
@@myroncook Wow
You transformed my eyes to see these beautiful formations with a huge amount of awe. They already blew my mind and now I understand the depth of time it took for these processes to occur, my thought processes are now open to the immense scale of these things. I really appreciate your intro to this topic down the road from your house. The small fractel of what is to come. I had noticed these things but didn't fully form my understanding. I really value your knowledge and thank you for sharing it. If I lived in the States, I feel like I would follow you about like a little shadow if I had the chancel hahaha! Kindest regards from the UK I am surrounded by flint shrimp burrows and fossils here. My daughter found crystals in her garden. A badger dug them up. Southern England is fascinating for geology but heartbreaking for the falseness of the natural environment. Thank goodness re-wilding is becoming a thing over here :)
thank you for the feedback!
I bet you do have some beautiful photography of the toad stools. Wow I would love to photograph that.
It is a magical place to photograph. You will see more of it in a future video.
One of my favorite classes in college was Geomorphology. Thanks for bringing that class back to life! 👍