you lead we will follow! As long its' not off the cliff, thank you
@Anatoli5026 күн бұрын
Nick, you are officially a village elder. Teaching Geology 101 may be your most important contribution. You never know that first day of class who you will reach and inspire. I was a freshman in Steven Porter’s Geology 101 class at the UW in 1971. He opened my eyes to a lifelong fascination with the Natural Sciences. Steven has passed on and I will soon, but my life has been much richer due to his unselfish efforts to engage and educate. Thanks for all you do.
@GeologyNick26 күн бұрын
Thank you for this beautiful comment.
@paulbrallier702826 күн бұрын
❤from a 201 steven porter student. took me another 30 years to comprehend what he taught
@royireland112718 күн бұрын
I am a retired geologist but I still learn from Nick's teachings. So, I always try to encourage his little adventures into the back country. One never knows what will pop up.
@royireland112718 күн бұрын
Sounds like a good plan to me! Look and learn while having a fun adventure! What a life to have!
@Elizabeth-uz1mn26 күн бұрын
I like it so much when you take us along on your hikes.
@OldLugnutz26 күн бұрын
When I was a freshman in college (1974), I took Physical Geo 101. Great professor, and I was very interested in earth sciences, and he made even an introductory course exciting (still love plate tectonics). But I was a burgeoning computer nerd and went in that direction. After all these years, I am still not sure if that was my best choice. My geology prof was one of the few from the time I can still name; Bob Lingner. Keep up the excitement, Nick!
@kyleroth102526 күн бұрын
Thank you professor Zentner
@just_kos9926 күн бұрын
Having lived in Western WA for 40 years, I'd never seen Rainier from that angle, looking west! I'm in Missouri now, but Washington and Mt Rainier are forever in my heart.
@PaulThomsen1E26 күн бұрын
Around 8 minutes you say "what's the story here?" That's why I love geology so much - there's amazing stories that it tells us. We don't always have the full story, but at least we're asking that question, and thanks to people like you we have part of the answers. Awesome!
@FiddleyBits26 күн бұрын
I LOVE your little field trips like this one! I do feel like I"m out there with you. But, I LOVE everything you do for us. Many hugs and thanks!
@DonnaCsuti-ji2dd26 күн бұрын
Beautiful hike. I used to love hiking but am old and can't do it anymore except short ones, so thanks for taking me along.on this beautiful hike with wonderful views
@susanranger65226 күн бұрын
One of my favorite hikes! Especially in the spring when the flowers are blooming. Thank you, Nick!!
@hjpngmw26 күн бұрын
I have always loved it when you take us hiking. The views are spectacular and the information wonderful. Thank you for sharing your hike with us.
@Vickie-Bligh26 күн бұрын
You are the ideal teacher. You engender enthusiasm while getting solid concepts across. I have enjoyed all of your series, but I am such a neophyte that the simple yet profound lectures you gave during the lockdown helped me understand. Because of those lectures, I have been able to follow what the experts have to say. And even though I'd get lost in the weeds, because of the basics you taught, I was able to wander my way out. Thanks, Nick. I am so very much looking forward to the Cascades A-Z.
@charleswelch24926 күн бұрын
I'm glad you are getting back to road cuts and trails again. I love it when you try to figure things out one step at a time.
@grandparocky26 күн бұрын
Hmm you are not alone when you share this with the Zentnerds! Thank you so much!
@andrewkeiper6226 күн бұрын
I teach in very different field, but your approach to education has profoundly influenced me, and your 101 students are blessed to have ya.
@GeologyNick26 күн бұрын
Thank you.
@barrydysert297426 күн бұрын
Nick, i can feel the excitement growing !:-)
@hjumper823826 күн бұрын
Thank you for the hike, Nick. The geography lesson is also appreciated along with the geology lessons. It is a relatively easy thing to open my maps program (application in newer terms) and see where you are, although there does not always exist some type of street view to see from the same perspective as your camera views. Sometimes people will take pictures such as 360 degree views and place them on the maps program and voilà, a view that is recognizable through your video is revealed. We thank you for keeping us well-informed.
@SCW106026 күн бұрын
I'm loving the Cascades series already Nick Thank you
@TheFretman224 күн бұрын
Beautiful country…enjoyed the hike and narrative.
@JNobleDaggett26 күн бұрын
Believe in the joy of teaching, the joy of learning, and keep the faith.
@michaeltrboyevich785426 күн бұрын
Nick , you are so full of information and enthusiasm . What a pleasure to follow you ! I'm an old guy now . You bring the outside , inside to me now . I miss , what you experience now . I ran all construction at South Pole , Antarctica ....Dark Sector , in the early 90's to 1998 . Took me a week to get acclimated to the altitude . Love what you do for us !!!!!
@Siletzia26 күн бұрын
Maps are foundational, but a panoramic view is priceless when it comes to learning and exploring new landscapes. Thank you for showing us the small summit with huge Cascade views.
@wpherigo126 күн бұрын
I love, love, love how you incessantly ask “why is it like that?”
@lindsaymalone937121 күн бұрын
Oooo! Basalts in the Cascades exploration? I need to watch the second interview with Don Swanson. When I was up on Mission Ridge a few weeks ago I was delightedly surprised to be in Columbia River Basalt at 5000+ feet with Western Larch. Speaking of w. Larch, American Ridge jas some gorgeous stands and views of the Fifes Peak Formation to the north. I'm so curious to explore more of the Burnt Mountain area this winter and on trail in a coming season. Love the connections to this area with the lahars of the Kittitas Valley. Thank you Nick so much for sharing your time and knowledge. Here's to beginning anew each quarter, may this autumn's class be an excellent one. ❤⛰️🏔️❤️
@deantheot729626 күн бұрын
Thanks Nick! The walk was good. Always enjoy getting out and just enjoying the hike (rocks, trees and education). See ya next one. Thanks again.
@jayolson57826 күн бұрын
What an awesome hike and views. Nick your hikes and lectures are always interesting and informative.
@danieldoss198722 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing professor!
@rayschoch588226 күн бұрын
A fun exploration of an area I'll likely never see in person.
@kateclover87424 күн бұрын
What a nice late September hike along with a little geology. Beautiful part of the wold! Like your excellent on-line teaching to us around the world, I bet your in-class enthusiasm inspire your 101 students. It fun.
@colleennobbs721826 күн бұрын
Thank you Nick for the videos. For all the effort you put into them so we can “see” into the past and gain some perspective of the vastness of geologic history .❤🎉 it’s a breathtaking adventure.
@sharonseal915026 күн бұрын
Absolutely spectacular vistas from this opening vantage point! Thank you for this fabulous field excursion and and all the speculations and musings. You are doing a stellar job setting the table for a new winter learning adventure. Looking forward to the A to Z!
@stephen62725 күн бұрын
What a view. Always educational.
@elaineinoregon272726 күн бұрын
So very beautiful! Thank you! ❤
@alanrobbo698026 күн бұрын
Nick, That’s a Fantastic Backdrop, I Envy you as I’m stuck in a town.
@jsherbenou26 күн бұрын
Going back to 2020, using colors to learn basics for part! Good!
@_Michiel_26 күн бұрын
What a treat! Taking us along on a walk filled to the brim with stunning views of the magnificent Cascade Range! Oh my. I can't get enough of learning about the geology of the Pacific Northwest. And videos like this only make it 'worse'. ❤
@inqwit126 күн бұрын
Thanks for the beautiful views. The A to Z series is getting exciting. Ready to move on from the politics into a realm of discovery.
@josephlwallssr616626 күн бұрын
Very cool, Nick! I am down in the desert for the winter and miss the beautiful Wa scenery already! Not the snow! Lol! Thank you for sharing.Enjoy the new freshman class! Ausum!👌
@xwiick26 күн бұрын
Thanks for all the hard work on these videos!
@bigomondis10426 күн бұрын
I really hope to bump into you on the trail one day. Would be an awesome day.
@mikeymad26 күн бұрын
Thanks Nick - looking forward to more learnings in the future - cheers
@gregpaull976826 күн бұрын
Those views are epic Nick!
@Geoplanetjane26 күн бұрын
Thank you, professor.
@medievalcreatures26 күн бұрын
What a frickin view!
@JenniferLupine24 күн бұрын
Awesome hiking and geology! What a beautiful September day!! Gotta love the Cascade Mountains! ❤❤
@susandobbs357526 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing your hike with us, very much appreciated.
@DonEricksen26 күн бұрын
thank you
@stevewhalen697326 күн бұрын
Such a beautiful world there !
@guiart472826 күн бұрын
Some beautiful views! Thanks! It must be awesome to see the light bulb go on in a young person’s head when you’re sharing your enthusiasm for geology! Even if it’s the only geology class they take they will never see the world the same way again. That happened to me!!!
@grandparocky26 күн бұрын
Beautiful!
@cyndikarp336825 күн бұрын
Got to Love It. You are good at finding a learning path for us to go along on hikes, too. Thanks for sharing.
@davidgleatham996626 күн бұрын
Thanks for the walk. I can't do those nowadays. I live very near Washington Park and been to Slate Peak several times. Maybe Mt. Shasta sort of shows multiple active cones. See you again soon.
@charlesward819626 күн бұрын
Nice that the wildfire smoke is all gone for the season.😊
@montpelier2826 күн бұрын
Yes thank you so much I needed that and need to get back with this page. ty again from Vermont
@hestheMaster26 күн бұрын
That is one hell of a view for this very clear fall day at 0:57 in. So friggin' surreal just like a painting. Was an amazing hike to get there I'm sure. Burnt Mountain seems aptly named with many dead trees. Great stuff professor.
@paulbugnacki710726 күн бұрын
Thanks for taking us back on a hike. Love it. I to think it’s rhyolite.
@doncook358419 күн бұрын
Wonderful
@briane17326 күн бұрын
Stunning view of Rainier, that's for certain. Camera doesn't do justice to how close it looks from where you were standing either. This area between Rainier and the Columbia R. is getting more and more intriguing, just with the sheer numbers of cones that _were_ there 20 mil. years ago. WA Cascades has been a happenin' place geologically from the time it began to build and rise to the present, with composite cones that by comparison are _babies_ when stacked against what _used_ to be there.
@Snappy-ut4bj26 күн бұрын
Sounds great to me. Thanks Nick.
@ksphinney126 күн бұрын
Loved it. Yes go back to that. This way I'm hiking along with you in the ease of my chair. Beautiful day and amazing views.
@wendygerrish496426 күн бұрын
What a view, and what a contrast to the weather today 10/26-autumn atlast and with a vengence.
@itakephotos114126 күн бұрын
Many years ago, I was at a 101 level, and was never inspired. I wish I had instructors like you.
@itakephotos114126 күн бұрын
Why can't you have clusters of cones?
@rmsrmsrmsrms26 күн бұрын
Don't stop, Nick :)
@jacotacomorocco26 күн бұрын
I was following along on google maps it was fun thanks
@robdiesel287626 күн бұрын
Was hoping for a weekend upload!! Thanks for the fix professor.
@JackMorningstar00126 күн бұрын
Beautiful place!
@BoringVolcanicField25 күн бұрын
Great to get the skyline tour thanks! I hope you cover the reach of the Ohanapecosh formation further. My understanding is that landslides on the Washington side of the Columbia Gorge are on the tilted Ohanapecosh formation, tilted by the Yakima folding.
@graham210526 күн бұрын
Love the videos and always appreciate the content, but dont wear yourself out mate. 👍🏻
@dancooper855126 күн бұрын
Beautiful scenery!🌋
@FrankBarnwell-xi8my26 күн бұрын
Like I'm on your backpack, Nick. Gorgeous view
@donthorpe630124 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing your hike. very informative.
@skagited961726 күн бұрын
Hi, Nick! I scanned earlier comments... At time stamp 15:48, the peak you were pointing to (per Google) is Rattlesnake Peaks North. So, yes, the peaks to the right and behind are the Mt Aix 'cirque'... Mt Aix would be the one to the left of the two small firs at far right of the screen. I love triangulating off Google Maps...
@giaxxone26 күн бұрын
This is wild! At 2:08, when you’re looking E at Bethel ridge there’s a spine in the foreground running uphill from S to N that turns into a crescent bluff swinging around to the E, then S. At 12:08 your finger is directly over a pull-off from Cash Prairie Road and overlook on that bluff. On 10/7 I woke up in that spot, after having set up my tent in the dark the night before, and looked out over that bluff… that was made entirely of chalky white stuff peppered with a mix of rounded and sharp edged rocks. “How am I standing on a bluff, at 5,800ft looking down at Tieton dam, made entirely of stuff from a volcano?” Is what I thought, followed by “I should ask Nick!” I have no idea what it is. Is it ash? Is it mud? All I know is that the only reason I really care is because I found your channel a few years ago. And I thought you might know because you’ve been kinda picking around this general area for the past few months. Lo and behold you end up in almost exactly the same spot, asking almost exactly the same questions. Edit: Also, totally random, I worked on a fire crew out of Colville in the early ‘90s and my first fire was on Mission Ridge.
@susanwymer691223 күн бұрын
Well I learned a new thing which I missed in an older episode, “Rhyolites are rare!” Here I am in Death Valley in the Black Mountains which are volcanic wondering if I am seeing rhyolites - my new guess nope! Thank you Professor Zentner!
@davediaz512726 күн бұрын
I was working up at the radio tower at Bethel Ridge Thusday. It was a nice day.
@charlesheaton399426 күн бұрын
I remember not too far in the past each of the mountains of Ranier, Adams, and St. Helens were still covered with snow in late summers. This here is such a cool panorama of the Cascades. Thank you for sharing.
@craighoover149525 күн бұрын
Thank you
@2ddw25 күн бұрын
Beautiful scenery.
@adamcollegeman226 күн бұрын
excellent love love love
@Rocket39Smoke1426 күн бұрын
Mt. Rainier; she's a Beaut !
@rexbrowning143626 күн бұрын
Hiked to the top of Mt. Aix a couple of weeks ago unbelievable views .l believe Pear Butte was where the F18 crashed last week.
@Dave-Xtown-Ohio25 күн бұрын
👍👍👍
@lesliepropheter504026 күн бұрын
I like Randy’s rounded out take
@bbcpropaganda51426 күн бұрын
Myron Cook just released a great video (part 2 of a series) about recreating the history of old ghost volcanoes in the Absaroka range, including ones that got blasted away by Yellowstone and are now covered by Yellowstone Lake, based on the layering of lahar and other deposits. Well worth a watch. Many parallels with the Cascades Myron implied that the Absaroka volcanics were a result of flat slab subduction, but I think we need a Zentner special 'Idaho batholith' type mini-series to fit them into the wider regional tectonic story, especially given the dates
@donnaminar468926 күн бұрын
No one ever seems to mention poor Mt. Adams!
@rexbrowning143624 күн бұрын
@@donnaminar4689 Mt. Adams is like the Gen X of volcanoes
@donnaminar468924 күн бұрын
@@rexbrowning1436 Well, it IS in the Southern Washington Cascades, so they better talk about it!
@docBZA25 күн бұрын
More hiking excursion vids please!
@pmgn844426 күн бұрын
I guess Nick's a South Cascades Daydream Believer! 😆
@lettymendonca26 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤
@snarky_user25 күн бұрын
US12? Wow, I only have to drive 90 miles to Minneapolis and turn left to join you.
@rexbrowning143619 күн бұрын
The peak just to the left of Gilbert peak pointed out at 4:52 is Bear Creak Mountain , birthplace of the Tieton Andesite flow.
@rollietaylor17626 күн бұрын
I spent many elk seasons camped on Burnt Mtn. When you were on top did you go far enough north to see the rocky ridge diving down into the Rattlesnake drainage. I've always wondered what the story was for that feature . One of the peaks you thought was Pear Bute I'm pretty sure is Rattlesnake Peak . I believe Bismark Peak is in the same area. I know a fellow who has an app on his phone that will give you the name(s) of mountain peaks by just pointing the camera at them (Peak Finder?)
@deecaputo148026 күн бұрын
What a treat, Nick, to share these views with you!!!
@deecaputo148026 күн бұрын
Re: Names of the peaks - We need an APP for that!
@kidmohair815125 күн бұрын
01:22 yup. that’s a pretty decent view you’ve got in front of you, Fran. (Laugh-In reference) 04:10 that’s a fine looking bit of stratification happening there, Frank
@Geoplanetjane26 күн бұрын
There are clusters of cones in Lassen Volcanic National Park, where every mountain is said to be a volcano.
@StewartSmith-g4f26 күн бұрын
Great views, looks like a significant volcanic area, not well defined.
@JudithThompson-w6l25 күн бұрын
You are so close to the shelrock volcano. You'll go through a small dip ( don't want call it valley) just a head of you then you'll climb back up as youu climb up a short way keep looking right shelrock volcano crater just over that small rocky ridge starting. Very short distance maybe 1 to 200 feet you will be on the floor of the volcano. You'll see crater is quite ways across an flat and level. Loo at the tree growing on the floor they are on short bubble like where the lava rose when the crater was molten. You will also notice to the easy a saddle like place where the lava flowed out and down into yhe rattle snake i think maybe all way to Yakima perhaps. Jim Thompson
@ryanmarshall875826 күн бұрын
I cant help but wonder, pondering those cascade volcanics with you, are the plutons and ghost magma domes all over the enumclaw area in the same time frames as those? Whats the story with Mt Peak? Seems like there are similar aged basalt formations all over the east and northeast side of enumclaw. Wrong side of mt rainier though. I guess most of what Im looking at out my window is mostly buried by mud flows, just showing the peaks of what once was...... Thinking out loud..... Thanks for bringing us along. I love that area.
@ronaldcampbell246924 күн бұрын
Some of the worn down hills in southeast Missouri are rhyolite, though from what you say I wonder if I've incorrectly id them. Very similiar to what you show, though they are very old, 1.2-1.5 billion ya.