Nick - Thanks for your info and enthusiasm - we enjoyed the replay this evening!
@katherinebirkett47062 жыл бұрын
FUN FACT: The town of Boring in Oregon, which you touched on in this video, is twinned with a village near Perth in Scotland called Dull, and a local government area in Australia called Bland! Collectively, they're known as the 'League of Extraordinary Communities'.
@dennisstorie46044 жыл бұрын
Truck driver in Texas. I usually get the replays. Love the material
@dorisnewirk59164 жыл бұрын
It's official I have seen all the 2020 shows. Thank you so much for all your time and being such a great instructor;
@bonblue49934 жыл бұрын
My parents were climbing Mt. Rainier when Mt. St. Helens exploded. Fortunately for them, they had their skis on their backs, so as soon as they saw the eruption and that the cloud was coming their way, they put on their skis and skied down to the parking lot. Their car was covered in ash, and mom took a picture of the car with Mt. St. Helens, 5-18-80, written on the windshield (which I still have). They had a difficult time driving down the mountain and were only able to get safely down by following the tail lights of the car in front of them. By the time they got to Longmire, it was as dark as night. So I guess you could say that they were technically survivors of the eruption.
@turkfiles4 жыл бұрын
Bonnie Barto would it be possible to post the photo of your parent’s car’s Winshield? Thank you. No problem if you can’t.
@bassmouter46944 жыл бұрын
Mister Nick Zentner, thanks A lot for your lectures, even at home! We’ e got THE same wheather at THE Netherlands.
@PrincessTS014 жыл бұрын
min 1:02:59 erik's question about why different volcanos, I believe is related to the story of exotic terranes and the interaction with the magma coming from below...
@bagoquarks4 жыл бұрын
New Subtitle: Pumice and Olives Thanks for another great one, Nick.
@touchtoomuch10004 жыл бұрын
That is the first real drink on the rocks.
@rescueuchief4 жыл бұрын
This was great Nick! Sorry I missed the live stream! Thanks so much for all you do for us hobby level geology lovers! Glad your well and cheers!
@caseyjude54724 жыл бұрын
🤣 Kitty says “no”! Your girl is so sassy, I love her! Thank you for another wonderful lecture “From Home”. I’m hoping to catch you live on my day off, but watching afterwards is just fine. It gives me something to look forward to when I get home.
@rbollard14 жыл бұрын
Thanks again Nick. Neat lecture.
@vanessaengelbrecht42124 жыл бұрын
Hey there, watching from Cape Town, South Africa
@touchtoomuch10004 жыл бұрын
A couple of years back, I found an unusual rock. I thought it had fossilized grass blades in it. As it turns out, it is basalt porphyrite. Thanks to your lessons and my new found passion, I was able to figure it out. It's a really cool rock, about 8" long, rather smooth, green in color with long white crystals. It looks just like one I found online from The Isle of Mull, Scotland. Thank you.
@bw-leftturnracing77792 жыл бұрын
1:14:43 I would love to watch this lecture, unfortunately can't find it on KZbin. You mentioned earlier in the stream that it would be on KZbin but I can't find it.
@jeffreyallen37964 жыл бұрын
Great show!!
@bernardtimmer67234 жыл бұрын
After the Boxing Day quake of Sumatra, 3 volcanoes were monitored over the months after in view of the possibility of deformation of the magmachamber, they were right to. Sinabung hadn't shown any activity since 1600, she has been active since the quake. Regarding wither a volcano is dormant or not? Chaiten in Chile erupted a few years ago after a period of non-activity of 9600 years. Shasta, I believe last erupted in 1780.
@davidpnewton4 жыл бұрын
What's a VEI 6? Simple: Pinatubo in 1991 was a VEI 6, as were Novarupta in 1912 and Krakatoa in 1883. They tend to happen two or three times a century. Formally it's an eruption with over 10 cubic kilometres and less than 100 cubic kilometres of dense rock equivalent material released. Rainier does not have a VEI 6 eruption that has been found. There are a number of Cascades centres with VEI 6 or VEI 7 eruptions confirmed. Mount St Helens is one of those as it had a VEI 6 just under 4000 years ago. Crater Lake was a VEI 7 but Mazama had a VEI 6 a few hundred years before that as well.
@terrapinrocks4 жыл бұрын
I can help with the Mt. Mcloughlin thing. I live close by. From what I gather it should indeed be on the maps. It is a typical composite Cascade volcano and is relatively young at less than half a million years old. The last eruption was around 20,000 years ago. However, I can't seem to find any information on the state of the magma chamber. I assume it is still very much active but in a quiet phase. Great day hike to the summit if you ever want to check out some fulgurites. Thielsen is actually a shield volcano (so is Medicine Lake) which has been glacially carved into a prominent peak. You can do Thielsen in a day too but the last 80 feet are kind of sketchy. One of the AWESOME things about climbing Thielsen is that its the only place outside of Crater Lake National Park where you can stand and see the water of Crater Lake.
@billblomgren96184 жыл бұрын
I wonder if there is a video showing acres of pumice in the middle of the ocean...where people knew there was a volcano somewhere.. but all they found was floating pumice... (seems to me it was the middle of the pacific somewhere...)
@jefft43032 жыл бұрын
A fair fraction of the 1980 fatalities were as much a product of blast effect as incandescent gas. Before a given section of the Juan de Fuca plate began subducting, it was seafloor of a given composition, which absorbed X amount of sea water. As that section of seafloor subducted and reached "melting depth" it was under a corresponding area of North American plate, with its own unique composition, which varies, with depth and liquid content, layer by later, all the way to the surface. Magma doesn't form at depth and squirt or get forced to the surface, per se. Instead it melts rock around and above it, and the heat energy is the only certain transported variable by the time it surfaces, if it ever does. So "today's hot volcano" would be a product of time, the materials in both plates, water content, localized pressure regimes, where the rising blobs just happen to be most numerous. Are there even discrete magma conduits andchambers? Yes, in the shorter term, as pressure will vent via the easiest escape path, but long term, these aren't given.
@daltongrowley52803 жыл бұрын
As an aspiring teacher I hope that I can incorporate aspects of your pedagogy into my own someday
@adriennegormley93584 жыл бұрын
Which is my favorite Cascade? Do I have to be specific? Although I'mpartial to: Rainier, St Helens, Hood, Adams, Mazama, Shasta, Bachelor, 3 Sisters (Bachelor and the 3 sisters were the first ones I ever saw back in 1964), and............... you get the idea. ALL OF THEM. I have friends in Vancouver WA, and I've seen the barrels of ash storedin the garage. But what's funny is, my sister-ini-law's parents in Bozeman MT had ash on their front walk.
@IamValentina664 жыл бұрын
Mt Jefferson
@mrbillmacneill4 жыл бұрын
Hi Nick I am doing a bit of a review today and was wondering about hot springs in the state of Washington when you mentioned Garibaldi [and Mt Meagher, I reckon too] ... I was wondering about a relationship concerning Mt Meagher and Mt Baker specifically and the 'valley[s]' that connect them kind of. there are at least 4 hot springs that I know of.
@whyme35134 жыл бұрын
Wow this was in my feed. I plan on getting caught up on these.
@mrbillmacneill4 жыл бұрын
I got my sample of Mt St Helen ash from a truck tarp that was covering a load of 'Kiln Dry' lumber going south of the border. I still have it in a little plastic pill bottle. I bet there are more than a few just like it.
@beachbum2000094 жыл бұрын
Yup.... a friend sent me a pill bottle of ash right after the blast. I was very happy to get it. I was out on Mt Rainier July 4 1979, so I missed St Helens blast by 10 months. I love geology!!! Happy to sit in on Nick's classes. Stay safe.
@philipschmierer34294 жыл бұрын
I picked up my sample of St Helens Ash off a flatcar in Stockton Yard where I worked for the railroad then. Still have it too !
@johnski1969 Жыл бұрын
Come visit Florida..do a video on sink holes and aquafirs..😁😁
@billblomgren96184 жыл бұрын
Per wiki...Mt McGloughlin underwent three major eruptive periods before its last activity took place between 30,000 and 20,000 years ago. It is not currently monitored for activity or deformation. So.. one might assume it is possibly alive, but only sleeping.. but may be no longer even snoring...
@bonblue49934 жыл бұрын
I would think that to find the answer to why certain volcanos erupt would be by doing core samples of the earth way below the mountains and near to the plate to see which kinds of rocks and minerals are softer than others which would mean that the energy from the plate could more easier move up to a particular mountain/volcano.
@stevenschofding13082 жыл бұрын
Any evidence for bad wildfires from andesite flows?
@ffieditor4 жыл бұрын
Nick, I enjoy your talks. give me insight to my dad I did not have. I dont comment or ask questions because I just dont feel right. Knowing things, with the quakes caused from the stress release at the edge of the 2 plate, it doesn't much brain to realize a 9.+ quake it at the ever edge is not going to restart volcanoes way inland. They would need new lava feed to restart them. When the heat source is cut off from deep inside, there no way to restart them. once that happen they go dead.
@cronicwizard4 жыл бұрын
greetings from wise river montana T.R.
@just_kos993 ай бұрын
When Boeing moved my mom, sister and me to Seattle the first place sis and i went to was the Pacific Science Center, being a couple of science geeks. At the time (August 1978) it was believed that of the five WA volcanoes, Mt Baker would be most likely to blow next. Ha, were they wrong!
@megmolkate Жыл бұрын
As far as a link between a major earthquake in the subduction zone and eruptions I think the earthquake has an effect on the magma bodies. However due to the variability in the rock and magma bodies combined with the time scale a link would be nearly impossible to prove.
@rongaul81694 жыл бұрын
Regarding pyroclastic flows, Mt. Merapi, in Indonesia, has some spectacular videos of the flows that occur there.
@spddiesel4 жыл бұрын
Love that you're doing this, unfortunately I've tried the live stream a few times and with no WiFi up here in the mountains it lags badly, so I gotta catch then afterwards. But you casually mentioned saving a lecture for the fall, do you have a schedule set for when the current madness ends? I'm currently (sorta) relocating to Port Angeles and would enjoy a trip to Ellensburg with the Mrs to catch a lecture. Stay safe and cheers 🍻
@mikez30963 жыл бұрын
Vodka ? Also are there atomic geologists ? Is there such a thing as atomic geology study ?
@jecarification2 жыл бұрын
kool
@AlohaMilton4 жыл бұрын
'Your not telling the complete highly complex story!' 'I dont understand what your talking about!' Poor Nick! Can't win!
@marynelson36344 жыл бұрын
WHAT IS THE TAB THING BEHIND YOUR HEAD? IS IT A VOLCANO?
@TerryHenwood3 ай бұрын
Mount Vernon WA here
@larrygrimaldi14004 жыл бұрын
Lots of interesting stuff for any age--- Who knew it was an Indonesian word?