Great summary of current technology. I enjoyed watching it and learned a lot. Well done.
@arjundigitalmarketer-i8s16 күн бұрын
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@arjundigitalmarketer-i8s16 күн бұрын
Hello! I have visited your KZbin channel. Your videos are awesome. I love it. But your channel has some problems. your videos could be SEO-friendly so that you get more views and subscribers on your videos. SEO of your channel will increase channel growth, channel views, and subscribers. You don’t have channel tags or video tags. Your overall SEO score is very low. I can help you in this matter-100% Guarantee. Can we have more discussion on this matter? Best Regards Arjun
@MahmutAyabakan18 күн бұрын
Smith Brian Brown Kevin Rodriguez Brenda
@GinaMazzola20 күн бұрын
Well done Mulisa. I wish you continued success in your career.
@reynaldog.arenascastro828926 күн бұрын
Abanto se resigna? o no quiere darle la contra a Keiko, porque gobierna a travez de ella, porque es la unica oportunidad de gobernar, nunca pisara Palacio como presidenta.
@nellwhiteside3042Ай бұрын
Thanks for a fascinating talk. Unfortunately, where I live most people are creationists! Crazy in the 21st century - but I guess SAfrica is behind in many things - except fossils.
@r2khari3Ай бұрын
thank you sir you have shared some great knowledge
@allyc5916Ай бұрын
🥺❤❤ your presentation is so nice💕
@malumbokanyerere9915Ай бұрын
Beautiful sister doing a magnificent presentation ❤❤❤❤🎉
@geologistaman7229Ай бұрын
These video series deserve more veiws
@geologistaman7229Ай бұрын
I am shocked to see why these courses do not have much views. This should be viral
@pacogoseb6737Ай бұрын
Have been waiting for this✌️
@LifebythepageАй бұрын
yes sir
@rogerdudra1782 ай бұрын
Greetings from the BIG SKY of Montana. Almost sunset here.
@kyawminsusu65693 ай бұрын
Great talk!! Thanks so much 😊
@tshialasilasraluthaga49553 ай бұрын
Well structured presentation that contained informative information.
@colinmcgee59314 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, this was fascinating. And Kate, your drawing was excellent, including the oxen! :) I'm interested in finding out if there are any first-hand accounts by the early miners, those who lived in tents right at the beginning. My great grandmother was among them, but she was very tight-lipped about her personal history so I was never able to learn much from her. She'd have been in Joburg from around 1885 to 1899 or thereabouts. Can anyone tell me if they know of any books or diaries / memoirs dating back to those times in Joburg?
@paulaogilvie98415 ай бұрын
Thanks Bjorn. We observe the same decoupling of Co and Cu grades at KCC and Mumi. We suspected it must have something to do with temp but didn’t consider S fugacity and temp. Great talk. Will help greatly with refining the precepts for our resource estimation.
@AbdussalamAdamu-om7ku5 ай бұрын
I don't know how to join
@andyarnold11405 ай бұрын
Hi Gerrie, great talk and great hearing it from a "miner". @ 28:30 you refer to two generations of extension fractures and mentioned you have recorded striation🙂... I assume your record indicates that E1 is right lateral slip and E2 is left lateral slip where E1 has rotated about 40degrees (+-5) relative to E2 if we use the same plane as reference 😅...
@gerrievanaswegen58245 ай бұрын
Hi, sorry, I do not know how to address you. Note that the primary striations on the E1, E2 and E3 fractures are fractographic, not kinematic. Subsequent to their dynamic formation, because of the advance of the mining face, the direction of load on the fractures do change and some slip is possible, leading to slickensides superimposed on fractographic striae.
@billmckechnie526 ай бұрын
Thank you to you and your team for this great contribution to our scientific understanding of Barberton geology.
@VijayGoswami-dl9vp6 ай бұрын
Very beautiful sir 🚩🇮🇳🙏
@ashleydace50936 ай бұрын
Great talk thankyou
@mydhilisb74816 ай бұрын
Please improve audio
@isabeedemski36357 ай бұрын
Great illustrations!
@michalf64607 ай бұрын
Thenk you
@gamzahoosain7 ай бұрын
Interesting find
@kennethdoyle4699 ай бұрын
🤭 P r o m o S M
@iankempe113110 ай бұрын
Magnificent. Needs to be showcased ASAP.
@helmutzollner549610 ай бұрын
Very interesting presentation. Thank you.
@luhohnel10 ай бұрын
She has great energy, best video i've watched from the channel.
@phumlanikubeka508410 ай бұрын
Very interesting talk. The connection of Vredefort to the surrounding deposits was insightful.
@Bildad197611 ай бұрын
There has to be some explanation as to why there are billions of fossil pieces all violently smashed & broken, and crammed together throughout various fossil graveyards around the world. It's like there was a Flood of Biblical proportions!
@ericgardiner771511 ай бұрын
I think Hempcrete can play a good role in reducing the cement footprint of buildings.
@michalf6460 Жыл бұрын
Thenk you ! very interesting !
@michalf6460 Жыл бұрын
what is the name of the Farm, where the fossils are?
@michalf6460 Жыл бұрын
so much interesting !
@Frostbiker Жыл бұрын
Exceptionally good unintentional ASMR. I get it is not why you do this, but Stephen Fry's droning voice is great to put people to sleep.
@GeologyIsARealScience Жыл бұрын
I was in UJ in 2008, for about a month... There was not any sign of Berthus :) They hid him in a dungeon!
@21micsmoneyiscomingsoon94 Жыл бұрын
My leadership ✊💓🫂
@brucemcdonald8529 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for a very enlightening presentation. As a resident of Sedgefield, since 2016, always wondered what fed Groenvlei. Now I know! I remember seeing the wet-stacks at PG Bison - Fairview and saw the installation of the well gear of the forth well from the west as per the image at 22:02. I think the wet-stacks had just started by then and what an impressive sight it was. Many Sedgefielders get really upset when the knysna municipality imposes level 3 water use restrictions on us, as we all know, there is no real shortage of water. I hear there is a possibility of a dam being built on the far northern upper reaches of the knysna river, as a supply to knysna. Surely the Muni know of the water that's available from the PG Bison - Fairview wells? The challenge is getting the water to where its needed. I would love to see the floating bog near Fairview. I hear there is interesting flora in the wetland area. Thanks again!
Thank you sharing a detailed insight on the job responsibilities of environmental geology.
@GeologyIsARealScience Жыл бұрын
This is a very contradictory talk, misinterpreting many facts and/or twisting information in the presenters' favor. Here are a couple of examples: polar bears ARE going extinct, I was in the Arctic Polar Circle in 2021, and each bear literally has a GPS chip under the skin, and they are being monitored 24 hours. They can be counted by fingers on your hands. When you said that there can not be a mass extinction caused by humans because not every mass extinction was caused by CO2 levels increase - you are hiding facts. Current mass extinction is not only caused by warming but, at large, by uncontrolled mass poaching of animals (South African white rhino, pangolin, passenger pigeon in the USA, Mauritius tortoise - you name it!). Destroying habitats for crops, roads, and settlements is a huge factor too. You can not come across any landscape that has not been modified by humans. And what about trashing the oceans and microplastics caused by the hydrocarbons as well? Further, you said - look, not all global warming in history was correlated with an increase in CO2 - therefore, the current one is not. You forget that CO2 is not the only greenhouse gas that can cause warming. Hence, in the past, it could easily be that other gases caused an increase in global temperature. Saying that there are no catastrophic events due to global warming is simply unsupported by anything. We have at least one war caused by global warming/famine with catastrophic consequences and millions of refugees worldwide - the one in Syria. I laughed when you said that before the industrial revolution, people would break their backs just to survive :) Implying that nowadays people do not? In what delusion you, oil and gas people, are living? Perhaps, you don't break your backs. I can speak for myself - with 2 MSc degrees and a Ph.D., I can't remember a single evening or weekend when I did not have to work - apart from my 8-10 working day in the office. All to provide a few Rands to pay my load and school fees for my child. Congrats if you don't have to work hard - I wish I had such a life. My only vacation is when I am so sick I have a fever of 39, that is when I have a luxury of not working.