Random Roadcuts, Episode #15: Learn Geology At An Interesting Roadcut On US 20 In Southern Idaho

  Рет қаралды 9,924

Shawn Willsey

Shawn Willsey

Ай бұрын

Learn to "READ" the rocks with this innovative video series designed to help you learn geology. Join geology professor Shawn Willsey and investigate a random roadcut, make observations, and formulate basic interpretations. Here in Episode #15, we explore a nice roadcut along US 20 between Carey and Fairfield, Idaho. GPS Location: 43.33720, -114.40421
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Shawn Willsey
College of Southern Idaho
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Пікірлер: 95
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
Please be sure to LIKE and SUBSCRIBE. You can support my educational videos by clicking on the "Thanks" button just above (right of Like button) or by going here: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EWUSLG3GBS5W8 or here: www.buymeacoffee.com/shawnwillsey
@AaronSherman
@AaronSherman Ай бұрын
You and "Crime Pays, Botany Doesn't" should do a collaboration where you pick a spot like this and both of you do a video exploring it. I'd love to see what you see differently...
@reekoreeko1857
@reekoreeko1857 Ай бұрын
Now that, is a brilliant proposal. What do you say shawn?
@mandycleezehappyhour4238
@mandycleezehappyhour4238 Ай бұрын
That could make for a great PBS-type series!
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
I haven't heard of this YT channel. I doubt he is located nearby.
@hestheMaster
@hestheMaster Ай бұрын
Joey lives in Texas so that might be something of a special . Maybe one day.
@reekoreeko1857
@reekoreeko1857 Ай бұрын
I loved his latest on yet another pointless golf course set to destroy a wonderful habitat. makes me mad and Joey tells it like it is, that part makes me laugh. We need more joeys and shawns.
@LouinVB
@LouinVB Ай бұрын
I pull over for road cuts! My first fossil, a brachiopod stuck in a small chunk of limestone matrix, I found in a roadcut in the middle of the New Mexico desert. It really got my young 13 year-old mind thinking questioning how a seashell ended up in the middle of the New Mexico desert
@dancarlton7973
@dancarlton7973 3 күн бұрын
My grandma once found a fossil of a seashell on someone's ranch property in NM..
@LisaBelleBC
@LisaBelleBC Ай бұрын
You crack me up! “TaDa!” We made it to the top! I wish I could completely convey to you how interesting your videos are and how much I enjoy them! Thank you!
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
I appreciate this.
@Danika_Nadzan
@Danika_Nadzan Ай бұрын
I may not watch every single video, but I'm never disappointed when I tune in, especially for the Random Roadcuts! I really like that you're seeing the rocks for the first time with us. It helps knowing the process you go through to make your speculations and identifications. Plus, not a lot of people watching would look at a vertical wall surrounded by rubble and scree and say it's not too "spicy" to scramble up while holding a camera on a stick!😂 Thanks for another great adventure in geology, Professor!👏👍🏻
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
Thanks so much Danika for your kind words and helpful donation. Very much appreciated.
@Steviepinhead
@Steviepinhead Ай бұрын
Love these roadcuts and it's always a bonus when Shawn treats his viewers to a gnarly but not-too-spicy scramble!
@LizWCraftAdd1ct
@LizWCraftAdd1ct Ай бұрын
Geologist and part mountain goat! Well I got the first part of the video correct, so I'm learning more than I thought. Thanks Shawn.
@briane173
@briane173 Ай бұрын
2:00 You said "here's a good gap in the traffic" and _immediately_ a truck and trailer whizz by and it scared the crap outta me. Thought you were about to get mowed down -- "Here's a good gaKABOOM!"
@nitawynn9538
@nitawynn9538 Ай бұрын
Thinking about the violent birth of that road cut is truly amazing. Thanks, Shawn.
@689moonstone
@689moonstone Ай бұрын
I grew up in Fairfield. It's amazing to hear you dissect that road. So much we drive next to and know so little about it.
@raenbow66
@raenbow66 Ай бұрын
Another comment not about this roadcut particularly, but to really encourage viewers to watch your rocks and minerals series *again if it's been awhile *... It's amazing what I continue to learn by review! Really, thank you, Shawn, so much.
@gwynnfarrell1856
@gwynnfarrell1856 Ай бұрын
I traveled that road many times in years past and hadn't a clue about the geologic history it revealed. Thank you for a great lesson!
@causewaykayak
@causewaykayak Ай бұрын
Every time I am amazed how much detail there is in the most unassuming road cut. As always, in your debt !
@Splusmer
@Splusmer Ай бұрын
It’s gratifying to see even a geologist get tongue-twisted over “aluminum”! 😂 As always an enjoyable and informative video. If you’d told me back in October I’d be looking forward to videos on road cuts I’d never have believed you, but I most certainly do now! Thank you!
@craighoover1495
@craighoover1495 Ай бұрын
Lot of memories for me on Hwy 20 and that 28 mile long straight stretch. I hit 108 mph on that stretch in a 1964 Dodge Dart as a high school student on the way to Sun Valley. This was our families' route to Redfish Lake from Mtn Home AFB where we summered for several years. Thanks for featuring this spot for in all the years present in the area I never learned much about what was under my feet and where it came from.
@robbirobin9657
@robbirobin9657 Ай бұрын
My mum would say, “Be careful crossing the road!” Xx
@Selah-dl3ef
@Selah-dl3ef Ай бұрын
Layers and layers of rock.Layers of history.🤔 Thanks doll😉
@bobgnarley1
@bobgnarley1 Ай бұрын
Loving this series Shawn. It's great fun to "read" along too. Thank you Sir!
@sandrine.t
@sandrine.t Ай бұрын
@shawnwillsey I love the Random Roadcuts series! There is always more than what meets the eye and I love that you explain it so well, in a way that non-geologists and curious people like me can understand - thank you very much for that. It is the next best thing to actually going there :)
@sueellens
@sueellens Ай бұрын
Perfect end to my day…Random Roadcuts! Awesome. Thank you.☺️
@maryt2887
@maryt2887 Ай бұрын
Love the Random Roadcuts series! Geology plus travelogue plus climbing = a fun and interesting experience.
@x--.
@x--. Ай бұрын
It blows my mind that a giant hill was formed 5 million years ago when a volcano erupted and dropped so much ash it left a hill. Such a quick violent event leaving a record from so very long ago. Cool.
@reekoreeko1857
@reekoreeko1857 Ай бұрын
Thanks shawn, keeping the rocks alive.
@rogercotman1314
@rogercotman1314 Ай бұрын
Another among many geology educational videos. Thanks Shawn ...............612 like ..........
@judierickson7166
@judierickson7166 Ай бұрын
Im always happy to see a Road Cut!
@TexasRoadrunner
@TexasRoadrunner Ай бұрын
The great way to see a rock "road trip".
@runninonempty820
@runninonempty820 Ай бұрын
Appreciate all you do Shawn. Thanks for another road cut video.
@mikeladley5149
@mikeladley5149 Ай бұрын
As a rockhound roadcuts in many places can reward you with nice specimens along with it's geologic history. Greetings again from Mike in the Philippines and thanks for the videos.
@joannekellam191
@joannekellam191 Ай бұрын
Thanks for another great roadcut! I learn so much every time you post one of these! Happy to say I was tracking with this one right from the start, so your lessons must be sticking with me now. :)
@raenbow66
@raenbow66 Ай бұрын
Fun roadcut! Definitely cool to see the tuff, ash, volcanic evidence. Thanks, Shawn! ❤
@joaniewillow
@joaniewillow Ай бұрын
Thank you so much. You are a fine teacher.
@marinangeli3250
@marinangeli3250 5 күн бұрын
Almost literally in my back yard, I have passed this spot countless times. Wow, there really is a lot going on there, geologically. Along with the pumice quarry across the road (which I did not know is what they were mining, until this video, but I always wondered), there is also a hot springs very nearby and a lot of nicely exposed basalt layering along Camas Creek and Rock Creek. Thanks, for all you share, Shawn! :)
@kaytea2983
@kaytea2983 Ай бұрын
Thanks for the episode. I have been through that cut travelling along 20, hundreds of times over the decades, but I had no sense of it other than as a blur. Central Park and then a roadcut on Highway 20 east of Fairfield -- places I've spent considerable time in or travelled by repeatedly!
@oscarmedina1303
@oscarmedina1303 Ай бұрын
Thank you Shawn. Very interesting video.
@marcosfreijeiro8763
@marcosfreijeiro8763 Ай бұрын
Great content Shawn , absolutely love these random road cuts. It's as you say in the video it helps us where ever we are in the world to understand what rocks and geological features we are looking at. Thanks you
@susansmart8086
@susansmart8086 Ай бұрын
I have my copy of Roadside Geology of Idaho on the table next to me. I’ve been reading about the three regions that come together in my neck of the woods, but I’m going to take a break and read about this area. Interesting to see such dark felsic rock that isn’t obsidian.
@jackmcmichael3560
@jackmcmichael3560 Ай бұрын
Thank you for posting this
@user-fx2mx5ml5c
@user-fx2mx5ml5c Ай бұрын
Family in Fairfield, will have to check it out!
@karentrimmer
@karentrimmer Ай бұрын
Most roadcuts usually have some tail-o-light.
@quake_er1149
@quake_er1149 Ай бұрын
That was really interesting
@user-wk1mw9nj3i76
@user-wk1mw9nj3i76 Ай бұрын
❓Shawn, do you know why that white layer of soft, ashy dirt hasn’t completely eroded away, after 5 million years? Is it lack of rain/wind erosion or does it form a resistant crust over the softest layers? Is there a way to tell how much may have already eroded? Comparison with other formations? ❓ Also, when your camera was pointed south(?) showing miles of empty highway, I thought you were joking when you said you’d “wait until there was a break in traffic” to cross the road. I almost jumped out of my chair when a huge truck and car immediately roared past from the other (north?) unseen direction. Oh, yessir, go ahead and please do wait, it’s no joke! 😂. Always happy to see Willsey alive and well at the end of every road cut episode. Thank you as always!!
@lelandkelley2199
@lelandkelley2199 Ай бұрын
Very good! 😊
@marionnadeau8457
@marionnadeau8457 Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@jamesrussell7760
@jamesrussell7760 Ай бұрын
Interesting, Prof Willsey. You picked some wild country to explore. You were fairly close to the Craters of the Moon National Monument. I drove that same stretch of US 20 in the winter of 1955, west to east (Oregon to Virginia) in my 5-year old Ford convertible. That was before the Interstate highway system was built. I drove through an intermittent snow storm, then picked up US 30 at Pocatello and ran into a full fledged blizzard near Soda Springs. My old convertible was mechanically reliable, but the wind whistled through the gaps around the cloth top - about froze my buns off. But I was young and adventurous in those days, lol! About the geology in the cut. . . . could the very thin top layer be wind-driven volcanic ash, post-eruption?
@brucedymock6635
@brucedymock6635 Ай бұрын
Great explanation love these random road cuts I’m learning a lot about your geology and what to look for at home here as I travel in Australia
@johnlord8337
@johnlord8337 Ай бұрын
Enjoying the vids. Learning, and now almost think-saying what you are saying at the same time as you identify what geological strata etc is being viewed. So I am getting there, and almost becoming a little second nature - which means that I am learning, and have learned up the majority of all of the basic geological types.
@JanetClancey
@JanetClancey Ай бұрын
Wicked road it… great rocks thank you
@scottsluggosrule4670
@scottsluggosrule4670 Ай бұрын
Yikes..be careful out there...don't try this at home :) Very cool I called it based on your previous videos..may be learning something in my old age. TY
@aureaphilos
@aureaphilos Ай бұрын
I can mentally visualize an Etna-like eruption wherein the initial blast of lava rapidly covers the nearby land, creating the dark glassy base layer; as you ascend thru the fallout horizons, you would be seeing material that was launched higher and higher into the atmosphere. The scale of this specific eruption is probably much more epic, but that's what comes to mind. One editorial comment, if I may: please leave the end card information up longer, so it can be read and digested; I had to replay the ending and freeze for a few more seconds to read and take in the info. A lighter background would also make reading easier (higher contrast). Love the series! Thanks again.
@hestheMaster
@hestheMaster Ай бұрын
Sawtooth National Forest lies to the north and the Magic Reservoir (man - made lake) from snowmelt to the south. During drought times the rocks seen in that reservoir are amazingly exact to what is in this cut less the top . We see 5.8 mya rhyolite flow, 5.6mya Pliocene Square Mountain basalt, 5.6 mya rhyolite ash flow tuff, 11.7 mya rhyolitic dome and less than 2.6 mya basaltic flows and sediments. Lots of stuff going on volcanic wise for quite some time in the last 6 million years! Nice investigation on this cut Shawn! See the paper : The Geology and Geothermal Setting of the Magic Reservoir Area by Struhsacker/Jewell/Zeisloft/ Evans Jr. (1982)
@davidedgar2818
@davidedgar2818 Ай бұрын
I agree with the comment about Crime pays but Botany doesn't. It could be a good colaberation. Your roadcuts are wonderfull. It reminds me of riding in the car as a child. I'd look at many roadcuts on family trips and wonder about how they were created. Once i grew older and had taken earth science, geology, as well as joining the geology and mineralogical society of Rochester. I came to recognize many of the formations. No matter what, roadcuts still hold my eyes and mind. Thanks 💥🎊💥💥👍
@johnleslie7788
@johnleslie7788 Ай бұрын
Hey Shawn Just got a copy of 'Geology Underfoot in Southern Idaho'. I'm looking forward to reading about it and soon going there. Thanks.
@reekoreeko1857
@reekoreeko1857 Ай бұрын
Oh, and next time you cross the road, please use the camera too to look both ways, I was on edge, lol.
@Once-a-weak-man
@Once-a-weak-man Ай бұрын
Great lesson Shawn. At first glance I would have said that dark coloured igneous rock was basalt, the composition of the phenocrysts is critical in arriving at the correct answer. Is the pink feldspar orthoclase ?
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
Actually, most is sandine.
@contrafax
@contrafax Ай бұрын
Mafic and felsic! Oh my.
@Steviepinhead
@Steviepinhead Ай бұрын
Mafic and felsic are the terms, I think, but clearly you've got the basic contrast between the concepts!
@contrafax
@contrafax Ай бұрын
@@Steviepinhead Brain farts. I got so excited! You are correct.
@Steviepinhead
@Steviepinhead Ай бұрын
I just like to make sure if someone wants to look up one of the terms, they have a chance at success. As Shawn says, we're all learners here.
@contrafax
@contrafax Ай бұрын
@@Steviepinhead That is why I fixed :) No worries.
@carlwest859
@carlwest859 Ай бұрын
We can take the school class for a trip looking for Prof. Shawn petroglyphs. Is there any significance to the patterns you make with your hammer? All fun aside, still enjoy your scaling of random road cuts. Take care.
@3xHermes
@3xHermes Ай бұрын
Great Thx!
@user-sm4un8pd9m
@user-sm4un8pd9m Ай бұрын
Road side geology has this area as the magic caldera of the Yellowstone hot spot. 12-14 million years ago. Nearby lava flows 8 miles away are 4-6 thousand ago.
@DrGeorginaCook
@DrGeorginaCook Ай бұрын
So the lower unit is dark because of the glassy texture, rather than composition? Thanks again for an interesting virtual field trip.
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
Yes, essentially the basal dark layer is a vitrophyre.
@davec9244
@davec9244 Ай бұрын
So Hot spot or not? I think Yellowstone hot spot thank you stay safe ALL.
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
Well, it's complicated.
@jackprier7727
@jackprier7727 Ай бұрын
Great breakdown, I was thinking a lahar for a bit but the relative rates of fusing of hot ash sure is plainly explanatory- I'm shocked at what a huge "belch" of ash material this represents, the thickness of the blob-
@brucedymock6635
@brucedymock6635 Ай бұрын
Thanks
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
Much appreciated
@mandycleezehappyhour4238
@mandycleezehappyhour4238 Ай бұрын
Can you please make a pocket version of yourself that I can carry with me on EVERY loooong roadtrip I take with my husband? I cannot recount how many times I've seen some curious geologic feature or outcrop (as we sped by) and desperately wanted to understand what I was seeing. Reading the rocks always adds such richness to those journeys. My husband is nowhere near as intrigued as I am, so he just shrugs. Booo! 😊
@Riverguide33
@Riverguide33 Ай бұрын
👍
@1mmickk
@1mmickk Ай бұрын
Its handy to see how they lie in the landscape.
@charlesward8196
@charlesward8196 Ай бұрын
My first thought was “ash-flow tuff” good place NOT to be around when it formed.
@stephenhudson8739
@stephenhudson8739 Ай бұрын
It seems like the plants would have a hard time getting a foothold
@user-ny4bp4oe4j
@user-ny4bp4oe4j 23 күн бұрын
..having observed uninformed and likely illegal mineral removal along a roadside in south central Alaska, where someone with a pickup truck and helper with shovels, had backed up to get some loads from there.. and probably did not notice or care this 'gravel' was not naturally occurring, there. The state of Alaska filled in a very muddy hill-slide with gravel embankment materials from elsewhere at great cost and effort. At least a mineral hammer, does not seem threatening to official passers by! While this latter-day excavator, appeared to know nothing of local geology; the state hired a good contractor who did a fine job, of hiding the fact this was a just a covered section road-cut; and not a large deposit of costly machine made broken rock roadbuilding gravels. As long term resident of south central AK and smaller villages along the few roads, I'm rather aware of resources and their source; when they are not local to the geography.. Too bad the roadside removal of taxpayer funded mineral deposits was not observed by someone in authority. A uniform and side arm would likely be good accessories, to help convince those who'd mine imported filler along State Road #1 and #9 on the Kenai Peninsula. Thanks for these nice video archives; first aware of your effort due to Geology Nick at CWU online lecture series. His educational style & yours, reminds me of my father, hired as early instructor before any campus, for UAA/Kenai -- from the front porch of our family house in Moose Pass area, in 1966.. Eventually he took the job offer, not that he didn't already have four or five other avocations in life. That he was even in AK, was a matter of personal exploration after experience of WW2 Europe, with curiosity of natural sciences and art. Dad eventually made a good living, talking to people as he always did; in wilderness & classrooms. Rather than hellish WW2 battlefields he'd seen, and as a USAAC veteran; and self-taught natural scientist, from Utah, who went on to teach five topics in AK; and fairly much wrote his own ticket.. Unconventional, independent; like outdoor scientists who also share what they know, and keep on learning more. Kinda a good addiction? Take care w/crossings and crossroads as you travel.. ~ from small town AK-USA!🇺🇸🌳❄🍄🐚💮
@andrestein6022
@andrestein6022 Ай бұрын
Indonesia tomorrow? Lol
@merryhunt9153
@merryhunt9153 Ай бұрын
It's a surprise that the lower rhyolite is so dark. Why is that? Why is Poison Creek called that? You missed a chance to tell people to ask themselves how they will get up a slope AND ALSO ask how they will get down. Getting down, with gravity pulling on you and loosening rocks underfoot, can be harder and more dangerous than going up. Nonetheless, you did a good job, and I learned something.
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
rhyolite at base has glassy matrix so it is actually a vitrophyre. There was an easy scramble off top of roadcut to east.
@-8of12
@-8of12 Ай бұрын
??? If this is a road cut, shouldn't the other side of the road look the same???? Love your videos! Thanks for sharing 🖖😎
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
It is mostly similar
@lelandkelley2199
@lelandkelley2199 Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@jpalm406
@jpalm406 Ай бұрын
👍
@davidhaugen9966
@davidhaugen9966 Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@MyMemphisable
@MyMemphisable Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@jansutton2717
@jansutton2717 Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@shawnwillsey
@shawnwillsey Ай бұрын
Thank you
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