How does one get involved with the excavation projects ?
@mevenstien14 күн бұрын
✨️🙂✨️
@StoneInMySandal19 күн бұрын
😂
@bravewave208420 күн бұрын
There was so much info I saved it. 🦅
@vhonkala20 күн бұрын
Brat!
@NickHershberger20 күн бұрын
That’s what’s up 💯💯 😂
@youngstooges110120 күн бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@cortez898621 күн бұрын
Shit aint funny
@rappar967322 күн бұрын
Why this video resolution? 360p?
@lesjones568422 күн бұрын
Please 🙏 marry me ❤❤❤
@nancytestani147023 күн бұрын
Very cool.
@paulfreeman2300024 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing, Thumbs Up
@paulfreeman2300024 күн бұрын
I love to hear Fred speak about this subject, please thank him for me. And thank you Maryland Nature for sharing this. Thumbs up
@patricknoveski640928 күн бұрын
This all makes such common sense to me. Ive always wondered why no one had done this as all the coasts would have been under water. Hmmm.
@paulfreeman2300029 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing, great video I will go to the portal soon. This will help me on my research of the upper Paleolithic of the east coast. I am working on the Gulf coast of Fla now, but Thanks for your excellent work.
@paulfreeman2300029 күн бұрын
Thumbs Up
@MarylandNature29 күн бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@lesjones5684Ай бұрын
You are just a nut 🌰 😂😂😂
@leeinwisАй бұрын
Once they used that fake climate change garbage I was out, ty for wasting my time.
@richardbates3272Ай бұрын
Trilobites are index fossils.
@BarbaraD-io9ioАй бұрын
GREAT OVERVIEW OF APPALACHIAN GEOLOGY! I'm relocating back to the southern blue ridge province (- just south of the NC/GA line). So I'm really excited to get out there to see those ancient mountains again! As a former park ranger in Yosemite, Yellowstone, and other western parks, learning the geology of the west was a wonderful bonus. Any suggestions about any other high quality presentations on this subject and other aspects of Appalachia will be greatly appreciated!
@hiker1658Ай бұрын
This was one of the best overviews of east coast geology I've come across. Thank you for a beautiful and clear presentation. I live near Philadelphia and have been working on understanding the geology around me. ❤
@muscovyducksАй бұрын
enjoyed this!
@MilesBellasАй бұрын
Trilobites = alien tanks In Malaysia there are living trilobites ?!!
@robertbuffalo8287Ай бұрын
I caught one ice fishing in Wisconsin on a lake and it was about 18 inches long.
@MarylandNatureАй бұрын
WOW
@jeffreyhanson6685Ай бұрын
This is amazing
@AllenSparkmanАй бұрын
What do you mean by the word "ah"? You seem to use it quite often.
@danajoseph6705Ай бұрын
Man, your camera is tripping me out. It's as if the video was filmed by Robert Crumb.
@adamemmrich283Ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@kristeenanderson1535Ай бұрын
you can google words and most will share how to pronounce them such as diaspora is dai·a·spr·uh
@atinwoodsmanАй бұрын
Google assistant recommended your video
@shadetreaderАй бұрын
Fascinating subject; too bad the sound is terrible.
@edwardlulofs4442 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation!
@edwardlulofs4442 ай бұрын
That first 2D diagram showing the different ways of thinking about the earth: chemical versus mechanical really clarifies a mystery about geology that I have always had. I have always seen both separately and have long wondered about how they matched up: your presentation clears it up immediately! Thank you. It’s always good to cover the basics.
@Mediax52 ай бұрын
Very interesting, from Nova Scotia in the Avalonia Terrane
@ronwilson981510 күн бұрын
Very interesting from Cornwall (UK), also in the Avolonia Terrane!
@masteroftheboomiverse82282 ай бұрын
Wasn't Eotyrannus found on the Isle of Wight?
@masteroftheboomiverse82282 ай бұрын
Did he say the nomen dubius Brontosaurus?
@piratessuckattrading4828Ай бұрын
Some paleontologists(maybe majority?) concluded that it’s worth it’s own genus in 2015. Still some debate around it though
@BenDover-kt2pe2 ай бұрын
I have seen a couple "Alligator" Turtles in MD. Severna park & Pasadena marsh lands..
@johnaugsburger61922 ай бұрын
Thanks
@DreadEnder2 ай бұрын
Hey could you make a video about the MyFossil app/website? It’s a great concept and just what I was looking for but every time I attempt to do anything I get errors so it’s completely unusable for me.
@georgefspicka54832 ай бұрын
Excellent! Thank you.
@Jeffrey-ed8sz2 ай бұрын
Thanks for a comprehensive history, from the piedmont region of South Carolina.
@MyMeteorite2 ай бұрын
Do you have an email address I can send photos to of my microscopic minerals that I found with my digital microscope, and also from a S E M
@Keylmepie2 ай бұрын
Fascinating history! I wish I’d have been exposed to these cultures in my youth as I’m certain I’d have chosen a different career path! Too bad there aren’t mobile exhibitions for schools for children to experience!
@jonrettich-ff4gj2 ай бұрын
I believe that with 15% larger eye sockets Neanderthals were dawn and dusk hunters so projectile weapons were very hard to use in twilight. I also think that living in very cold, so rather sparser animal populations food was generally scarcer so their populations were very possibly quite small. It is possible with our extreme reproductive proclivity we are capable of overwhelming any species including close relatives by sheer numbers including ultimately ourselves. I thought your presentation, and therefore also your work, really excellent. Thank you and this organization so much
@kellymurphy66422 ай бұрын
Great info .I grew up in the Scranton area and have 4 generations of grandfathers who came to NEPA from Ireland as well. My father would tell us stories that his grandfather worked the mines in Mauch Chunk with the Moly Maguires. Hard times. The last one to mine was my grandfather until 1950 in Scranton..1850 was my great great grandfathers in CoalDale region and I believe also Centralia and Shamokin they all lived in those towns I had multiple families come here from Ireland. My fathers fathers, but not just them but my gg mothers father’s..there was 8 of them that worked the mines for many years.
@kellymurphy66422 ай бұрын
Great info. I took the Lackawanna coal mine tour back in the 90s it was neat. I grew up in the Scranton area and have 4 generations of grandfathers who came to NEPA from Ireland as well. My father would tell us stories that his grandfather worked the mines in Mauch Chunk with the Moly Maguires. Hard times. The last one to mine was my grandfather until 1950 in Scranton..1850 was my great great grandfathers in CoalDale region and I believe also Centralia and Shamokin they all lived in those towns I had multiple families come here from Ireland. My fathers fathers, but not just them but my gg mothers father’s..there was 8 of them that work led for mines for many years.
@АлексейКац-я6б2 ай бұрын
In fact, the owl hybrid shown is a "sparred owl", i.e. a cross between spotted and barred owls. Thus, these are not different genera, but closely related species of the same genus.
@joycepreibisch-km8wc2 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@paulfreeman230002 ай бұрын
Great video, Thank You for sharing this interesting information.
@mtkelly3 ай бұрын
Uh, uh, uh, impossible to listen
@DreadEnder3 ай бұрын
I tried to sign up for MyFossils but it said the email address was already used. Turns out it was one of the palaeontology apps I downloaded last week.
@FatherFish3 ай бұрын
Has a captive breeding operation been created for the blackbanded sunfish?
@MarylandNature3 ай бұрын
The presentation goes over efforts including plan for captive breeding in partnership with the National Aquarium.
@FatherFish3 ай бұрын
@@MarylandNature There are hundreds of highly qualified Master fish breeders in our area who are fully prepared to raise thousands of these fish with extreme detail for the genetics involved. Why are they not being included? This would provide more than enough animals to replenish the population. The National Aquarium, of which I am a founding Board of Directors official, is not capable of providing what concerned and qualified aquarists can accomplish.