Hi y'all! So unfortunately, Steve's camera was not working during our interview, so it is just the voice over, but it's still just as insightful! I hope you all enjoy this collab and go check out his channel for all things Precambrian tectonics & tons of other geology content! -> www.youtube.com/@stevenbaumann8692
@jeffbybee52078 ай бұрын
It's fine to have the illistrations and not talking heads
@KGTiberius8 ай бұрын
Great presentation! 🇻🇮 US Virgin Islands here. Can you exemplify this video using the Caribbean plate? St. Croix is different than the boundary islands. Also, the plate has moved contrary to the other plates (or conversely hasn’t moved while the American Plates did move by). 🔹 2nd point are the impact and antipode of Theia impact and Roach Limit deposition 🔹 3rd point Lunar drift out of the gravity well and tidal churn within Earth’s various core and mantle interactions. 🔹 lastly, hot spots and traps.
@debivort8 ай бұрын
It was great! And I was just having a conversation with astronomy friends about the difference between oceanic and continental crust the week before.
@nonanaw45408 ай бұрын
Great one ❤️
@ossiedunstan44198 ай бұрын
Their should be laws against anti education on social media platforms. Like this channel
@stevenbaumann86928 ай бұрын
Thank you for having me on Rachel!
@scionofpluto34208 ай бұрын
Thank you Steven for teaching us about drip tectonics. This was incredibly fascinating and insightful, I had no knowledge about this mechanism before, and explains tectonics before the formation of plates, and also explains the relic hotspots that provide an alternate vestigial tectonic mechanism in the modern world.
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Of course! It was so fun and enlightening, we will certainly have to do it again sometime! ;D Thanks for all the amazing info, people really like this one!
@stevenbaumann86928 ай бұрын
@@scionofpluto3420I'm glad you enjoyed it!
@stevenbaumann86928 ай бұрын
@@GEOGIRLmost definitely. I won't babble so much. I have a working camera now
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
@@stevenbaumann8692 How was the total eclipse?! It looked amazing on all the videos I've seen :D
@sergiocaprara13148 ай бұрын
I am a theoretical physicist, with a passion for all sciences. Thank you for making geology accessible and exciting
@lasagnajohn8 ай бұрын
Physicists be slumming it, solving major problems in other fields without even putting their pants on these days. Who'd a thunk fluid physics would be solving economic and demographic problems, lol.
@firstnamelastname9918Ай бұрын
I'm a hypothetical physicist! I propose that I _could_ earn a degree in physics if I ever intended to go back to school. 😁
@joelmckinney168 ай бұрын
Metal casters will recognize that we live on what is basically the "slag" that has floated to the surface of the molten mesosphere.
@AnnoyingNewsletters8 ай бұрын
15:07 I was just coming here to say that. 😅
@eaterdrinker0008 ай бұрын
I'm not a metal caster, but I (and countless other people in the future) thank you for that analogy!
@Chris-ut6eq8 ай бұрын
Good to know I'm composed of slag, never did feel pure :)
@retrothink7 ай бұрын
As a teenager I remelted lead type in a print shop and scooped the slag from the surface before pouring new 'pigs'.
@lafenelson32127 ай бұрын
This is a fantastic description. Just.. perfect.
@nanettenyce41678 ай бұрын
I've been asking my geology professors to help with these questions. Thank you for providing such clear, illustrated answers on the best understanding we have so far!
@blakeroberts41408 ай бұрын
This video added to my understanding of, simply put, geology. I have watched many, many hours of videos on plate tectonics, geology of western N.America and it is a challenge, a big challenge to grasp these concepts. I learned on this video what tectonics is. How plate tectonics came to be. And most noteworthy describing the mantle as plastic. It is difficult to understand how a subducting mantle could move so deep into the 'solid' mantle. Now I understand this. Finally! Thank-you for your terrific geology talks.
@amacuro8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video!!! I've been reading some articles about early tectonics and it has become a new fascination for me. As someone who was born after Plate Tectonics was the accepted modern model, I just couldn't imagine any other process going on in our planet. So the thought of "what was before Plate Tectonics?" was like someone asking me "what was before the Big Bang" haha. Lovely stuff, I can tell you are keeping yourself current with the latest developments in the geology field
@PlayNowWorkLater8 ай бұрын
Finally! It’s like you read my mind. This is great stuff. I’ve been trying to hash through this stuff from academic conferences and lingo that was just a little Beyond my understanding. Thank you for synthesizing this into something that is digestible for someone who who is interested in geology but doesn’t have the education background to fully comprehend academic work presented to other academics in that field. Great stuff! Always enjoy the wide variety of topics you cover.
@CatharticCurios8 ай бұрын
Hell yeah geogirl! So stoked to watch this & thanks for bringing more rad content creators into my feed:)
@michellem30508 ай бұрын
Thanks for this great video! You've answered questions I've had for a decades about formation of the 2 kinds of crust, and What Happened Before. Clarification that it's all about heat loss very helpful. Also helpful are Ideas about differential temperatures of melting and how Hawaiian hot spot plumes fit into tectonics. It makes sense!
@stevenbaumann86928 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@Julian_Wang-pai8 ай бұрын
Wonderfully illuminating - and the picture of how planetary tectonics evolved over the cooling phase of planet Earth is apparently transferrable(!) and maybe the typical template for most if not all planets. Amazing!
@tedetienne76398 ай бұрын
Excellent video, and an excellent choice for a guest speaker! I subscribed to Steven’s channel immediately! I should correct you on one extremely minor point - you mentioned twice that plate tectonics will end “when Earth loses all of its heat.” Plate tectonics will end long before then. Another celestial body is a good example of this - Mars! That planet has a mantle that is too cold and brittle to allow plate tectonics, even though it still has plenty of heat in its molten core. Exactly how long it will take for plate tectonics to slowly grind to an end on Earth, we’ll have to wait a loooong time before we’re sure!
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Oh yes, that is very true! Thanks for clarifying that! ;D
@artstation7078 ай бұрын
@@GEOGIRL You sound intelligent, but you're posting a lot of questionable theories. Check out the Hydroplate Theory. If you're as smart as you seem, you'll appreciate this advice.
@bernard27358 ай бұрын
Thank you for always providing such interesting and high quality content. Every video delivers so much 😊
@rursus83548 ай бұрын
Wow, at last I understand why the continents formed. Because they're kind of a felsic foam from subduction.
@dmbeaster7 ай бұрын
Chemical differentiation driven by heat that allows the less dense to separate from the more dense.
@elizabethfierro81048 ай бұрын
Just stumbled across your channel. I love geology and am subscribed to several channels and podcasts and now i am adding yours.
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! So glad to have you :D
@AvanaVana8 ай бұрын
Nice to see Steve on here, he’s a KZbin geology original who deserves many more subscribers.
@kevinrussell11447 ай бұрын
Yeah, but to much of the male-leaning audience for videos like this, Rachel has a leg up in eye and audio appeal, although I am not at all judging Steve and his rustic, bearded appearance.
@noeditbookreviews8 ай бұрын
I've never heard tectonics described that way, but of course, it makes perfect sense.
@duhduhvesta8 ай бұрын
Right it makes so much sense
@joecanales96318 ай бұрын
Howdy Rachel, great topic. I was a little unsure of Steve Baumann’s definition of tectonics, which he described as heat loss of the earth. I had considered tectonics as the mechanical results driven by heat loss, elastic and brittle deformation. It might be as a result of hanging out at the Center of Tectonophysics at TAMU way back in the early 70’s. Seems we were studying how rocks deform. Drip tectonics was unknown then, but earth’s internal heat was a likely culprit for the drive. I was aware of the greenstones belts, and learning much more about newer theories of their evolution. Might have to look into Steve Baumann’s channel. Thanks!
@kevinrussell11448 ай бұрын
It's ALWAYS in the definitions, Joe, and you were correct to question. Look up the definitions given for "tectonics". What I see is...the evolution, structure and deformation of the lithosphere, not heat loss. Heat transfer seems to be the driving force, but stars do NOT involve tectonics because stars are not the same beasts as the rocky planets. Seems to me, then, that a better definition is the interactions of rock forming components of the lithosphere and how they change and evolve in their arc from accumulations of star particles, to molten state, and on to plastic and brittle states. Plate tectonics is the longest and current champion, but will it continue forever on earth? Probably not. I didn't recall hearing about the importance of radioactive decay to the long time span of plate tectonic or even garden-variety tectonism, but perhaps I dozed off. I, too, was not taught drip tectonics, but remember reading about many who questioned when plate tectonics kicked in during the early differentiation of the earth. Lumpers, splitters, and pigeon-holers never die, friends; they are absorbed into the literature. The stripes of the classifiers NEVER change. Thanks to Rachael and Steve for the great discussion.
@bluerendar21947 ай бұрын
I think that's something that got lost on the cutting floor (3 hrs -> 30 min!) - as you say, tectonics is *driven* by the heat loss of the earth, and, important to this discussion, the heat differential and loss rate is what determines the structure and behaviour of the tectonics given the composition of Earth. That is, the way tectonic behaviour has changed over the past on Earth directly relates to how heat loss behaviour has changed over that time period.
@kevinrussell11447 ай бұрын
@@bluerendar2194 Gold star for your comment, Senor Azul.
@SiqueScarface8 ай бұрын
20:45 I remember from my geography classes back in school the "Sial" and "Sima" layers in the Earth's crust. It occured to me much later that Sial stands for Si+Al, SIlicon and Aluminium, while Sima stands for Si+Ma, Silicon and Magnesium. It wasn't explained to us back then, just the names were dropped. Do I remember correctly, that the continental crust mainly consists of Sial-layers, while the oceanic crust consists of Sima? Are Sial synonymous to felsic (feldspar + silicon) and Sima to mafic (magnesium + ferric)?
@d36williams4 ай бұрын
i love these videos, there's a lot of good science creators on youtube, I like how technical and specific your channel is, feels like undergrad classes rather than high school which is nice
@GEOGIRL4 ай бұрын
So glad to hear that ;D Thank you!
@shawnparadise65048 ай бұрын
This video was amazing. Super interesting and well made. Thank you!
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! I am so happy to hear that! :D
@Im-just-Stardust8 ай бұрын
Cheers Geogirl for the video!
@sbabcock74768 ай бұрын
I thank the algorithm for recommending this fascinating video & introducing me to your great channel with a bunch of cool videos to catch up on. And thanks for all the hard work making it! It’s a really interesting topic because, as far as I’m aware, no other planetary bodies in our system have plate tectonics. Which makes me wonder if they’re a critical factor (via nutrient cycling & ecosystem change) for the evolution of complex life.
@duhduhvesta8 ай бұрын
I HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS FOR ALL MY LIFE THANK YOU BOTH
@duhduhvesta8 ай бұрын
22 minutes in is where it’s at!!! Look at all those cratons!!!!!!!! It’s seeing those pieces that makes so much sense in getting this.
@duhduhvesta8 ай бұрын
Is partial melting like boiling salt water. The felsic is the water. It bubbles sooner. The mafic is the salt. It doesn’t evaporate away? I could be thinking about this wrong or flipped
@duhduhvesta8 ай бұрын
I want be a fly on the wall on that talk between you too.
@stevenbaumann86928 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@tomschmidt3818 ай бұрын
That was great. I had not realized there were three forces moving the plates around nor the geology of the US and Canada was so different. Rocks are cool, or I guess I should say hot so they move around.
@Matt_The_Hugenot8 ай бұрын
When I was at school in the 1970s plate tectonics was the hot new thing. Forty plus years has seen the field move on so far and it's amazing learning about all the new ideas that have developed. Thanks.
@ronaldbucchino10868 ай бұрын
Great job Doc. I look forward to your next presentation.
@JoesFirewoodVideos8 ай бұрын
What caused the earthquake in New Jersey on Friday? Plate tectonics? We had 4.6 earthquake in SW Michigan in May of 2015 but I was in the woods cutting firewood so I didn’t feel it. My mom felt it, she thought her furnace was about to explode. I ❤ GEO GIRL
@Neilhuny8 ай бұрын
All earthquakes are the result of sudden movement along faults within the Earth. The movement releases stored-up ‘elastic strain’ energy in the form of seismic waves and causes the ground surface to shake. Such movement on the faults is generally a response to long-term deformation and the buildup of stress. Not all faults mark tectonic boundaries though - most don't, but they are more minor than the plate boundary versions.
@eaterdrinker0008 ай бұрын
I felt tremors up here in Poughkeepsie, NY. First time "ever," cuz I didn't notice the one that happened in 2011. That might have been because I grew up in NYC and was somewhat used to the vibrations that subway activity caused in some Manhattan buildings.
@ahamill1308 ай бұрын
That quake was movement along a ~100 million year old transform fault, caused by tensional forces when Pangea was splitting apart and North America was moving away from Europe.
@ahamillphotography8 ай бұрын
I'm sure that was a cool experience for her! The reason for the earthquake there is linked to an old normal fault formed there when North America was splitting away from Europe over 100 million years ago. At that stage, tension forces caused the plate to break, causing faults, very similar to what's happening right now in Iceland. That fault is no longer at a spreading ridge, but clearly some stresses were operating on it to activate it at the weekend.
@mosquitobight8 ай бұрын
@@ahamillphotographyI think another factor in the earthquake was the ongoing erosion of the Appalachian mountains. Like an iceberg, most of a mountain chain is below the surface. As the top erodes, the roots of the mountain are buoyed upward by the denser mantle on which the mountain floats. The upward movement produces stress that can be suddenly released.
@kerianhalcon35578 ай бұрын
You really should upload the whole vid, Gutsick Gibbon has many 3 plus hour vids about evolution and we love them. Plus I do fins Steven's lectures awesome, love his interviews.
@PepsiMagt8 ай бұрын
That was a superinteresting talk, Dr Phillips. Y You are a treasure.
@GraemePayne1967Marine8 ай бұрын
1: I know you must be a good person, because you have a cat. 2. I started college in the early 1970's, after my active-duty service in the Marines. I had to choose a science course and I chose geology. I had a great professor who introduced us to plate tectonics, which was then new and NOT widely accepted. This presentation introduced me to more and newer information on the subject. Thank You for this! I will be looking for more information on plate tectonics. Now that I know there is a Lot More to learn, u will be looking our for it.
@sparklytreesarecool8 ай бұрын
Thank you, Rachel. Also an great summary review of plate tectonics.
@halfnelsonchoke8 ай бұрын
ive been watching geology videos for a couple of years now and always wondered where continental crust originated. Most people aren't concerned with the archaea era geology so no one ever bothers to explain it! I've also long wondered about the formation of hotspots and no one ever gets into that either. Thank you and your collaborator for the wonderful video. It was extremely educational.
@artstation7078 ай бұрын
Hydroplate Theory.
@paulcooper88188 ай бұрын
Very informative and well explained.
@philochristos8 ай бұрын
My brain is getting so big because of this channel that my scull is developing multiple ridge pushes.
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Haha! Just as long as the slabs do not pull the sections of your skull down into your brain ;)
@philochristos8 ай бұрын
@@GEOGIRL No subductions so far, but there could be trouble if I stop watching and my brain atrophies.
@eaterdrinker0008 ай бұрын
Bist du Klingone?
@mosquitobight8 ай бұрын
Brain tectonics for the win. No smooth brains here.
@johngrundowski36328 ай бұрын
Thanks ,great coverage of awesome topic🪨⛰️🏔🌏
@punditgi8 ай бұрын
Very well done! ❤🎉😊
@michaeleisenberg78678 ай бұрын
Rachel 🛼, Superb format with Steve. Great idea 💡. 👏👏👏👏
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! Was the first time I have tried anything like this so there were certainly some hiccups, but I want to start incorporating more interview-like videos like this so I think it was a great start and good practice for me :) And it was so fun to get to talk to him about this. We may do another one at some point about tectonics on other planets like Venus, so let me know if you'd be interested in something like that! ;D
@michaeleisenberg78678 ай бұрын
It would be worthwhile for you to do more videos with him and other experts. Geology of other planets and moons is fascinating.
@artstation7077 ай бұрын
Hydroplate... hydroplate... hydroplate...
@nathanmiller56588 ай бұрын
Super video Geo Girl! Very informative. Great to find out about Steve 's channel.
@ArbitraryConstant8 ай бұрын
this is fascinating, thanks for doing this
@silverjade108 ай бұрын
So... Since tectonic activity gets rid of internal heat...the plate boundaries are kinda like the pit zips on a hardshell.
@StuartdeHaro8 ай бұрын
I had a cat that LOVED thicker plastic bags and shower curtains. She would just sink her teeth into them. I think she just liked the puncturing sensation because she would immediately move on to another spot and do it again. It was her bubblewrap I guess.
@pikmin47438 ай бұрын
my tortie has a major plastic fetish. sometimes she bites, sometimes licks, doesnt ever seem to consume any, but she's like a truffle pig if plastic bags are in a room
@eaterdrinker0008 ай бұрын
I'm no ultra-organic super-crunchy off-the-grid mofo, but OMG PLASTIC IS ADDICTING US ALL
@jamesbarton19698 ай бұрын
There is no way to know why a cat does what it does and the effort to stop a cat from doing what it wants generally is far beyond the worth of getting the cat to stop.
@kevinjkelliher8 ай бұрын
unless you are obsessed with cats
@neotericrecreant8 ай бұрын
I can't tell, did you get an interveiw with him or did you use clips from his videos?
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
We did an interview, but unfortunately his camera wasn't working so it is just the audio ;) (you can tell it's an interview if you listen close because occasionally you can hear me saying 'mm hmm' lol)
@shadeen36048 ай бұрын
Great video DR GEO GIRL THANK YOU
@rebeccawinter4727 ай бұрын
The recent research into the tectonic activity on Venus is really interesting - it has a totally different tecronic regime than Earth. Mars on the other hand has its huge volcanoes, which completely has shifted the mass centre of the planet.
@barbaradurfee6458 ай бұрын
One of your best Dr Rayray 😊. ❤❤❤to Hope
@jamesdelcol37017 ай бұрын
I love geology. I love the fact that we still have a lot of research happening. We need to learn more about the earth. I know they tried to read the basalt rocks in the northwest US and could not determine age of North America because the plumes it formed in was erratic. It is hard to learn everything. Knowing the basics of density and rocks is enough for me. I am a builder. I drill, rock blast, excavate earth materials and recycle my earthwork (always sustainable) and backfill using virgin soils. I do some geotechnical work. Mini-caisson piles -125' into bedrock. The fracking is 1,000's of feet down for natural gas. I don't do that work. I don't know how I feel about drilling that far down.
@inkermoy8 ай бұрын
It's kind of amazing how Io can be so active due to tidal stress while Mercury is a solid ball of rock so close to the Sun.
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Yes, but Io is only about 400,000 km away from jupiter, while mercury is nearly 60 MILLION km away from the sun! ;D So it is quite a bit further :)
@-wotiu_778 ай бұрын
It's Hollow sames all Planets
@Enkaptaton8 ай бұрын
I would really love to watch a three hour long vodeo of Geogirl talking to other geologists! One hour would also be ok I guess...
@pequerobles8 ай бұрын
this is a great video. Love it 😘
@VersaiOnline8 ай бұрын
I'm curious how Earth's water wasn't all evaporated away during the hadean or archaen? A vid I watched yesterday on Sci Show about the sun mentioned that the sun's luminosity is increasing 1% every 100m years and in just 1b years the sun will get bright enough to evaporate Earth's oceans. So I'm guessing during the hadean or archaen, the sun wasa lot dimmer/cooler, making me think Earth's water must have been frozen, but Earth was still very hot from accretion then? Some models show the later, expanded sun nearly or completely engulfing the Earth. Could the sun continue to drive tectonics after Earth's own heat is lost?
@Andre-ft6wx8 ай бұрын
Thanks for your work.
@terenzo508 ай бұрын
My cats go quite mad for the cellophane on cellophane-wrapped boxes. Including licking the cellophane which must be a good deal less than hygienic. (Probably logienic.) The pix of drip tectonics makes me sort of think that the Earth has a hernia.
@eaterdrinker0008 ай бұрын
I'm no ultra-organic super-crunchy off-the-grid mofo, but OMG PLASTIC IS ADDICTING US ALL
@terenzo508 ай бұрын
@@eaterdrinker000 The question is: Am I getting enough plastic in my diet?
@gregweatherup95968 ай бұрын
Given that fluids (gasses, liquids) volume decreases or expands based on its temperature, does a plastic deformation regime solid also change volume (minuscule as it may be) with temperature change? If so, then as a planet cools its size would shrink, and thus its surface area decreases- does this decreasing area stress on a brittle crust also play a role? I can almost picture that contributing to the formation of plates.…
@sbabcock74768 ай бұрын
I’m curious: how important are hydrated rocks to the dynamics of subduction? Because the oceans are likely to boil off eventually-potentially prior to the predicted end of plate tectonics. So I wonder how subduction would operate on such a planet.
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
That's a great question! To my understanding, the hydration of the rocks that are subducting doesn't actually affect or heavily alter the actual process of subduction, but rather it drives melting and volcanism at the surface. Now, it is plausible that the melting has a small effect on the plate remaining in the mantle, but I doubt it is large given that such a small amount of the plate actually melts and rises to the surface. My guess is plate tectonics, including subduction would continue to go on as normal without water, but I could be wrong, I am not the right person to ask this question, just taking an educated guess ;) I hope there is a geophysicist or geodynamicist in the comments who can answer this for us! ;D
@artstation7077 ай бұрын
@@GEOGIRL Plate subduction has not happened.
@ellenmcgowen8 ай бұрын
This is a wonderful video. I'm very interested in the geological history of Earth from its earliest times up to the Phanerozoic -- which of course is also interesting, but we tend to hear a lot more about it. I'd like to note that the Magma Ocean picture of the early Hadean is not universally accepted among planetary scientists, where there is a more recent competing idea that even the earlier Hadean was cool and wet. In this picture the surface of Earth solidified very rapidly after the giant impact that formed the moon. Earth in the Hadean, as in the later Archean, may have been a water world, with island arcs and crater rims projecting above water. Studies of Hadean zircons indicate that they formed under water in pillow lavas. While some of Earth's water may have been delivered by bombardment, the solar nebula during Earth's formation was rich with hydrogen, and the planetesimals that formed the planets were rich in silicon dioxide. Under conditions in the early mantle, these can react to form water, so the Earth's mantle was probably hydrated as it formed and outgassed water vapor. This, together with the lower luminosity of the young sun, lead to a cool, wet Hadean.
@robertcook52018 ай бұрын
Great job, most informative and interesting
@Alex_Plante8 ай бұрын
Great video! I learned a lot! Thanks!
@markotrieste4 ай бұрын
I wish I could give four likes to this video... it cleared a lot of half-baked concepts I had about the topic. Thanks
@Zeldafan10097 ай бұрын
One of the best channels on the internet!
@GEOGIRL7 ай бұрын
@ChristopherSummer898 ай бұрын
I rejoiced when I saw the Video-Topic, hoping it may shed some Light on some Thoughts that I have been having lately: Can it be the the Development of Free Oxygen through early Cyanobacteria in the Archaean somehow kicked off Plate Tectonics? I get that it would seem more obvious that tectonic Activities affect Oxygenation, but if I understand correctly, the cyanobacterial Oxygen-Production seemed to be influenced by other Factors like the increasing Brightness of the Sun above the Water-Surface, and Plate-Tectonics begin only around / shortly befoer the Great Oxygenation Event, so it almost seems like the GOE could have caused Plate Tectonics. That Oxygenation also involved the Oxidation of Iron(II)-Ions and Hydrogen Sulfide (and also cooling the Earth quite a Bit more), so maybe that Change in the Water surrounding the Crust somehow affected the Composition of the Crust and aided the Beginning of Plate Tectonics? Or in this Case, it may have aided the "Drip & Plume" Tectonics which probably set the Foundation for later Plate Tectonics? I am just a clueless Layman throwing around Ideas, please have Mercy on me.
@Privacityuser8 ай бұрын
How about solar máxime and storm vs earthquakes a over 4 points in the interval of 11 days post solar storm impact?
@dadsonworldwide32388 ай бұрын
Gosh we haven't discovered much of anything on earth like tectonic plates in many many many decade actually more like a century. But I am curious to learn more about the milkyways galactic nuclei past and if earth was indeed on the outskirts of the center of our galaxy. It's the best uniformity hypothesis I've ever heard. If you ever see it up close in like the grand canyon it's horizontal ground up deposit on top really makes it hard to adopt our mainstream narrative on its ordering. It's like gyroscope earth took place as if the inside was moving faster than the mantle or vice versa. A very cool thing to witness in person at some point in life. It will draw out the scientist within us all. Lol
@SolarScion7 ай бұрын
This was surprisingly easy to follow, even sped up ( I promise I was paying attention). I didn't realize the mechanisms of vulcanism.
@GEOGIRL7 ай бұрын
So great to hear that! :D
@reidflemingworldstoughestm13948 ай бұрын
Yes! Geo Girl is back to geology!
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
I appreciate your love for tectonics! But I also just want to point out that climate is also geology, Geo = Earth ;)
@reidflemingworldstoughestm13948 ай бұрын
@@GEOGIRL Yeah, but I already know the climate and bio schtuff. Besides that they are kinda frilly and decorative like trim work, whereas the rocks are more structural, like framing.
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
@@reidflemingworldstoughestm1394 Hey, I can't blame you rocks are so cool! :D
@reidflemingworldstoughestm13948 ай бұрын
@@GEOGIRL You could say they rock, but I won't.
@KoalaMeatPie8 ай бұрын
Hey! I'm merely one of your viewers, this isn't meant to be anything. I just wanted to say that I really like your lectures and hope you keep doing them. You hit the right and a particular rare spot on the technical knowledge to simple scale. I really hope your numbers are doing good, I have been pursuing a degree in animal health and thus have found myself lacking in time to watch your deeply interesting and insightful presentations (There were Rockies before there were Rockies!?). Did you ever look into the Post Permian Extinction Fungal Event? Atop a mountain tomorrow seeing the eclipse, hope you get to see it to.
@alanbuban90204 ай бұрын
so, what is this drawing showing us at ~ 7:45 where continental crust is sitting on ocean crust as steve says it doesn't drift around like this? I am trying to understand how tectonics work when there is no subducting plate and the continental crust meets ocean crust. Like when N America crosses the E Pacific rise spreading ridge and subduction ends....what does that boundary look like; and will N America continue to drift south west? Does it become part of the pacific plate and what happens at the transform boundary ; san andreas fault. It was a nice presentation but leaves me so many question, cheers.
@colubrinedeucecreative8 ай бұрын
This was great! Well done! Followed him too! I have more questions about what a earthquake looks like and what moves?
@TheGuruNetOn7 ай бұрын
What does the simulation of all this activity look like? An animation is worth a million words.
@ianhorsham77518 ай бұрын
Slightly off topic. There is a channel called SSGEO that discusses the planetary forces on the earth and attemps to predict earthquakes and their magnitude. I wonder if this seems reasonable? Tale a look and see what you think.
@daleeagar40148 ай бұрын
Excellent analysis of the data, I really can see the drip better than the sheet like subduction of the entire boundary of a plate. Especially as the temperature at depth was higher. Better model if you ask me, even in the Siletzia stuff the plate wasn't a uniform sheet.
@adamredwine7747 ай бұрын
Awesome to get this deep technical talk. Thanks for the info.
@dancooper85518 ай бұрын
Amazing video! Will be watching this one again and taking notes.
@gregoryrollins598 ай бұрын
I have a question 🤔. Research out of northwestern university recently discovered more water under the earth's surface in the blue rock or ringwoodite than in all the oceans above. Will this change the understanding of everything you just talk about, or does it support it even more? Peace and Ahev
@TheUltimateTerran8 ай бұрын
A lot of novel information for me communicated well. Well done. Great video.
@peggieincolfaxca38187 ай бұрын
Thank for having Steve on
@jadams34278 ай бұрын
As usual, great stuff Rachel and Steve. I have often been puzzled by why one side of the planet is covered with water. It is very fluid and could also move around Earth in less than a day and be more evenly distributed. I concluded that the centre of mass of Earth must be offset towards the Pacific Ocean. Otherwise we'd all be a bit wetter on the other half of the planet. If I am correct, then you could resolve the g force on the crust into two components... vertical and a tiny horizontal component pulling the Pacific rim continents 'downhill' towards each other, Ripping other oceans apart and making things like the mid Atlantic ridge. Does this sound silly ?
@artstation7078 ай бұрын
Hydroplate Theory. I suggest Bryan Nickel's six part series, or Pastor Kevin Lea's discussions.
@joefkems88778 ай бұрын
Hello from Netherlands 🌷 I looked over your videolist if you already made one on supervulcanos, their eruptions and especially the MtToba eruption being potentially the cause of the bottle neck hypothesis that homo sapiens experienced an almost extinction around the same time… (as you asked for subjects to further videos 😉). Looking forward 👀 and thanks 🙏 in advance. And good luck with your post-doc 🍀
@-wotiu_778 ай бұрын
That's bs...😮.
@jameshall27698 ай бұрын
Let's cut to the chase, where's the gold at? Ok mostly kidding, but it's worth saying that gold prospecting has driven my desire to understand more about geology and thus Techtonics which then triggers larger questions about our planet and my little garden plot on it, the solar system, and the meaning of life! lol. Good show! Keep them coming.
@danwylie-sears11348 ай бұрын
10:18 "Ridge push is not powerful enough. Those are shallow magmas ..." I'm confused. I didn't think ridge push had anything to do with magma. Ridge push, as I remember it from college back in the dark ages, is a matter of hydrostatic equilibrium between hotter (and therefore less dense) solid rock at the ridge and cooler (and therefore more dense) solid rock farther from the divergent boundary. An appreciable horizontal temperature difference extends to some depth. It's like having a stack of slightly tapered boards floating on water: the top ones are lifted up at the thick side, so they tend to slide away from the thick side. So not only does aesthenosphere material well up to replace what slid off, but the sliding component of the stress imparts some ridge push to the plate. It seemed as though ridge push was probably a real part of how things worked, just not as important as the other parts.
@daveanderson7188 ай бұрын
Great video for grade schools!!
@curtisblake2618 ай бұрын
Glad to include Mr. Or Dr. Baumann and give Geo Girl a little break. She works so hard.
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Haha Actually, this interview format was more work for me lol! But I think it was just because it was the first time I was trying it and next time I think I will prepare better which will make editing much more efficient ;) I am super excited to incorporate more of these collabs into my channel! :D
@pikmin47438 ай бұрын
tectonic regime would be a cool band or album name
@eaterdrinker0008 ай бұрын
\m/ Plate Teutonics \m/
@florinadrian51748 ай бұрын
28:20 "Hotspots will probably cease to exist" @Stevenbaumann8692 is probably wrong about that. If we look at Mars, plate tectonics (if they ever existed there) died before the hotspots responsible for the tallest mountains in the Solar System.
@jamescampbell54748 ай бұрын
Help!! Please make a video on Palaeomagnetism!! Some of the concepts brought up this semester are unnecessarily hard to grasp 🥲
@siggyincr74477 ай бұрын
New to your channel and you got my sub right away. Great video, very informative. I always assumed that tectonics was plate tectonics and never even considered that it was related to heat convection through the earth more generally. On a side note, I imagine I'm not the only one who might enjoy listening to you full 3 hour conversation with Steven.
@_andrewvia8 ай бұрын
I remember the old song - And those cratons go rolling along Also, totally off topic: Do you have a plan for hurricane season? Did any hurricanes reach to your area when you were in Texas?
@volbla8 ай бұрын
What is it that causes the edges of the plates to be where they are? Like, why don't plates crack in two and start subducting in the middle? Does the size of plates perhaps correllate with the rate of subduction/heat loss?
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Actually you said it exactly right! They can crack in two sometimes and then eventually that can cause subduction at that zone. For example, before the mid-atlantic ridge formed, the continents on either side (South America and Africa as well as Europe and North America) were connected as one big plate (in the supercontinent, Pangea). Then hot spots (literal hot spots in the mantle caused by fluctuations in mantle convection) led to what we call 'rifting' of that continental mass (forming a divergent plate boundary), in that magmatism below the crust began thinning the crust in the middle of the continent until it broke apart and propagating in a strip of magmatism that kept spreading from the center to form the mid-atlantic ridge. This spread caused the crust to thin and become much lower in topography than the surrounding continents and thus, water began filling this basin. Eventually what started as a continental basin turned into a shallow inland sea and eventually a full ocean basin, which we now call the Atlantic ocean ;) Now, at the beginning of ocean basin formation like this, the continent-ocean margins on either side of the basin are called 'passive margins' because they are not an active tectonic boundary where subduction is occuring; however, subduction can begin at those margins if the tectonic forces change from stretching/pulling forces to pushing forces, which can force the ocean crust to subduct beneath the continent, forming a new convergent plate boundary. Hope that makes sense! I have a very old video about the wilson cycle which goes over how ocean basins form and close through plate tectonics if youwant to check it out: kzbin.info/www/bejne/aqjaZ2qPgNuNf5Ysi=POjUyKu6voUwlwdL :)
@volbla8 ай бұрын
@@GEOGIRL Cool! I'll def check that video out. Thanks for the reply.
@firstnamelastname9918Ай бұрын
31:47 Cat licking a plastic bag, SO CUTE! Cats are like this -- they have their idiosyncrasies. I LOVE this explanation of how our tectonic regime has evolved! Thank you!
@thelostone69818 ай бұрын
Do ice ages affect plate tectonics?
@ahamill1308 ай бұрын
The causal link is more the other way round. Tectonic processes can impact longer term regional and global climate. Tectonics are part of the global carbon cycle, and so are one of the controls on how much carbon is released or stored. When you have periods of significant eruption, such as those that produce the large igneous provinces, that can change the climate enough to result in large extinction events. Additionally, the distribution of continents over time scales of 10 to 100s of millions of years can impact things such as global ocean circulation, affecting climate. At present, for instance, the Antarctic is physically isolated from all other continents, allowing cold water circulation all around it, which may have contributed to the development of a permanent ice cap there.
@@ahamill130 Thanks for the reply! The reason I asked was because I had taken a geology class in college as an elective a couple of decades back and I vaguely remember being taught that Canada was slowly rising because the ice sheet had melted away. But like I said, that was a couple of decades back, might have been old/bad information and I can’t remember whether we talked about it in that class. Cheers
@zimbothemagnificent8 ай бұрын
Has anyone worked out where Venus is on the drip/slab/roof continuum? Does it even apply?
@rocktapperrobin93728 ай бұрын
I’ve read something about Venus effectively ‘resurfacing’ itself periodically with a nearly complete turnover of the crust. Because radar imagery shows no sign of plates but it is tectonically active. No mechanism was suggested and the whole thing sounded to me like ‘we don’t know’. Also not 100% sure about this drip model. If crust sinks, somewhere else material has to rise to replace it, that is if the earth stays the same diameter.
@zimbothemagnificent8 ай бұрын
@@rocktapperrobin9372 there’ s some wiggle room with tension, horsts & grabbens, spreading ridges keep things under some compression that can rebound
@davidwilkie95518 ай бұрын
So if we reiterate temporal thermodynamical superposition of vertices in vortices, nodal-vibrational emitter-receiver holography under the holistic vertically integrated convective interpretation of Quantum-fields pulse-evolution differentiates integrated metastability here-now-forever.., the work has to be spread around Math-Phys-Chem and Geometrical phase-locked coherence-cohesion sync-duration resonance shell-horizons analysis at all scale proportioning probability as is to be expected in amplitude-frequency density-intensity quantization. None of it is trivial. Excellent presentation thank you.
@cafiend8 ай бұрын
😽hello to your cat! And thank you for these great videos. I considered going back to school to get a degree in geology after my first one in English, but never got around to it. I have always been interested in the natural processes of Earth: geology, weather…
@charlesjmouse4 ай бұрын
Very interesting, thank you. So many questions... I'd love to see a follow-up or three! For now, questions: Cratons, how? And... Best guesses on how the terrestrial planets compare - ie: if Venus, Mars, and Mercury are 'stuck' in states Earth is going though that implies sufficient size + water = plate tectonics. Current best guess is Venus was Earth-like until it's runaway greenhouse - so how do you go 'backward' from plate to drip tectonics? Alternately if plate tectonics isn't 'automatic', how did this happen on Earth but not Venus?
@arthurvrielink32298 ай бұрын
Liked your item and explanations. However in my opinion there ares some doubts in the explanation about magma, it's involving between tectonic plates and hiw it is still of importance between and underneath the lithosphere and earthcrust. I have been trying to figure out how earthquakes could excellerate in strength and time after time I came out on almost the same number if excellerating. With thus keeping in mind i am coming to the conclusion that magma is playing a maguire part in moving and causing of earthquakes. In the beginning of your video you are talking about how the earth is looking into ways to loose it heat. And that is the most important thing in this item. If you would go out as the earth started as a bowl if anti matter close to the sun, then with turning the first parts if matter light enough would be able to form a plate, like ice, with meteorite and other dust from space there will have been reactions of particles. Some where able to deform, some will not. The lithosphere is the next step of cooling diwn. Tge core witch would have been containing the most gravity parts will have caused the earth to stay close to the sun. With more impacts the earth would have gained a more heavy content, weight which would have been a trigger for gravity particles to make the earthplanet to come in its orbid around the sun. With gravity lost in time it could also explain why the earth starts turning quicker than the time table we had before. As magma also carries anti matter seems like gravity particles, CERN found something like it and it was found at meltingpoint it could even be more of importance to look perhaps more simple at earth crust, earth hquakes and how to combine it with magma. Greats Arthur
@nsk3707 ай бұрын
I've always wondered what early earth was like and how it changed trough geologic time, ever since i was a kid reading books on dinosaurs and prehistoric life - but i never got a solid answer and always just kind of assumed plates and continents formed directly as the molten earth cooled down, long before life appeared. This video was kind of mind blowing to me. Combined with how drastically life has changed even basic things we take for granted like composition of atmosphere, it really makes you realise how incredibly alien and unrecognisable to what we see our planet used to be for a large part of its existance.
@thezood7 ай бұрын
Could there be drip tectonic going on still today, for example around hotspots under oceanic crust?
@GEOGIRL7 ай бұрын
Yea, to my understanding the hot spots are potentially relics of this regime! :D
@robloggia8 ай бұрын
If it's possible to have subduction without plates does that mean it's possible to maintain a carbon cycle?
@GEOGIRL8 ай бұрын
Yep! It is possible, that is why, even though worlds like Europa, Enceladus, Titan, etc. probably don't have plate tectonics, we still explore them because they could still have life! ;D
@anaryl8 ай бұрын
Oh there ain't no mountain high enough, Ain't no ocean wide enough To keep me from listening to you!