Ice Age Floods Institute
Ice Age Floods Institute
  • 31
  • 47 541
Geology of the Sunset Highway - 2024 03 Wenatchee Meeting
Dr. Earl F. Cater, Director of the Douglas County Museum in Waterville, presented “The Geology of Sunset Highway.”
Early Euro-American explorations of the Big Bend country;
Difficulty in getting to Douglas County because of elevation and size;
Barriers to Euro-American settlement: Rocks and no roads, Banks Lake area’s 800-feet high basalt cliffs, Corbaley Canyon’s fractured gneiss and schist, rockslides from basalt layers;
Obstacles from glaciation: Yeager Rock and multiple haystack rocks and other glacial features;
The first stage in Okanogan, March 1884: The Jack Smith story;
1913 Declaration of the Sunset Highway as the Red Trail;
1926 Declaration of the Sunset Highway as the Yellowstone Trail.
zhlédnutí: 180

Video

Wave Erosion of Geomorphic Surfaces - Frank Reckendorf
zhlédnutí 102Před 2 měsíci
April 2024 presentation for IAFI Lower Columbia Chapter
Scabland - The Movie
zhlédnutí 3,6KPřed 2 měsíci
"Scabland" is complementary media for CWU Professor Nick Zentner's 2023-2024 A-Z CZcams geology series re-treading the ice age floods and the work of Professor J Harlen Bretz and others. In this short animation, viewers virtually fly to a selection of locations visited by geologist Dr J Harlen Bretz, with quotes from his original field notes, geolocated in Google Earth and animated with Google ...
Spirit Whales & Sloth Tales
zhlédnutí 98Před 6 měsíci
Join co-authors Dr. Liz Nesbitt and David B. Williams for Wenatchee Erratic's December 12, 2023 meeting presentation as they discuss a rich array of past life featured in their new book, “Spirit Whales and Sloth Tales: Fossils in Washington State“- the first book ever on fossils in the state! Why did they choose the fossils they did? What is the new science that has allowed paleontologists to t...
Jerome Lesemann - Moses Coulee - 2023.09.12
zhlédnutí 1,9KPřed 9 měsíci
Jerome's presentation of his research on the possible sub-glacial flow origins of Moses Coulee is missing the first 12 minutes or so due to technical issues. But the core concepts were captured in this video that we think you'll enjoy.
2023 03 23 LCC Presents Bill Burgel - Prepare for a PacNW Earthquake
zhlédnutí 185Před rokem
This talk focuses on the relatively short geologic history of the Portland Area and explains why this region has only recently awakened to the fact that we are overdue for a major earthquake. Preparatory actions that the Portland/Vancouver region should undertake are many and include the safeguarding of residents occupying over 1,800 Unreinforced Masonry Buildings (URM's). Also, constructing an...
Ancient Builders of the Amazon (Preview)
zhlédnutí 233Před rokem
For many years it was thought the Chaco Culture from ~14,000 years ago were the first peoples in the Americas. Recent archaeological discoveries have revealed strong evidence of peoples in the Americas at least 23,000 years ago. This suggests that indigenous peoples may well have been living in the areas of the Ice Age Floods. This program documents discoveries in the Amazon rainforest area tha...
Andrew Fountain - Glaciation in the American West
zhlédnutí 169Před rokem
Tualatin Heritage Center and Lower Columbia Chapter of the Ice Age Floods Institute are happy to have Andrew Fountain presenting "Glaciation in the American West", covering the history and current status of glaciers in the West.
Dr Paul Loikith - Climate Change Presentation
zhlédnutí 114Před rokem
Lower Columbia Chapter of Ice Age Floods Institute and Tualatin Heritage Center present Dr. Paul Loikith of Portland State University speaking about his research into "Climate Change" with a focus on the area of the Pacific Northwest
Ancient Megafloods on Mars by Dr Victor R Baker
zhlédnutí 1,1KPřed rokem
Multiple spacecraft and landers are currently producing results related to the geological history of very ancient water-related activity on the surface of Mars. This talk will provide an overview of the topic in the light of current mission results.
"Constructing Oregon" by Sheila Alfsen
zhlédnutí 263Před 2 lety
Oregon is a state of wondrous natural beauty, with its diversity of stunning landscapes and even climates- all a result of its geology. A “photo-tour” of the state divides it into its physiographic regions, each distinct from one another due to their varied and complex geologic history. This presentation will visit each one; highlighting some of the notable locations and explain how they formed...
IRON MOUNTAIN - FIRST IRON SMELTING OPERATION ON THE PACIFIC COAST, LAKE OSWEGO, OREGON
zhlédnutí 333Před 2 lety
The story of mining iron for the iron furnaces at Oswego (i.e., Lake Oswego), Oregon provides one more piece of the tapestry that makes up the fascinating history of Oswego’s iron industry and the local geology.
Kayaking down the Columbia River: Evidence of the Missoula Flood from the Perspective of the River
zhlédnutí 391Před 2 lety
This hour-long presentation will show evidence of the power of the Lake Missoula floodwaters at various points along the Columbia River between Grand Coulee Dam to the mouth of the Willamette River in Portland. The author has kayaked nearly the entire length of this stretch of the river taking hundreds of photos as he drifts along downstream.
Dr Wm Orr - "Oregon's Checkered Past" (Volcanos & Fossils)
zhlédnutí 359Před 2 lety
One of the best kept secrets in Oregon Geoscience is the close relationship between the tectonic history of the state and its magnificent fossil record of both plants and animals.
IAFI 10 Ways The Lake Missoula Floods still Effect Us Today
zhlédnutí 163Před 2 lety
Rick Thompson shows how the Lake Missoula Floods not only affected our past but still affect us today and will into the future.
Incredible Plant & Animal Adaptations iin the Swiss Alps by Dr Scott Burns
zhlédnutí 149Před 2 lety
Incredible Plant & Animal Adaptations iin the Swiss Alps by Dr Scott Burns
Dr. Scott Burns - "Glaciers - Sculptors of the Swiss Alps"
zhlédnutí 163Před 2 lety
Dr. Scott Burns - "Glaciers - Sculptors of the Swiss Alps"
RT Travelling the Ice Age Floods National Geologic Trail, Aug, 2021
zhlédnutí 516Před 2 lety
RT Travelling the Ice Age Floods National Geologic Trail, Aug, 2021
Ready or Not - Cascadia Preparedness, July 2021
zhlédnutí 282Před 2 lety
Ready or Not - Cascadia Preparedness, July 2021
When Yellowstone was in Oregon, June 2021
zhlédnutí 2,7KPřed 3 lety
When Yellowstone was in Oregon, June 2021
Dr Scott Burns Majesty of the Beautiful Swiss Alps, May 2021
zhlédnutí 202Před 3 lety
Dr Scott Burns Majesty of the Beautiful Swiss Alps, May 2021
The Curtis Brothers & the Mazamas
zhlédnutí 175Před 3 lety
The Curtis Brothers & the Mazamas
New Mastodon Species by Dr. Andrew Boehm
zhlédnutí 307Před 3 lety
New Mastodon Species by Dr. Andrew Boehm
The Other Flood: Lake Bonneville Flood on the Snake River
zhlédnutí 11KPřed 3 lety
The Other Flood: Lake Bonneville Flood on the Snake River
Jauhn Brasseur Ice Age Bison 1 21 2021
zhlédnutí 330Před 3 lety
Jauhn Brasseur Ice Age Bison 1 21 2021
The Great Seattle Earthquake - Tom Hopp for IAFI Puget Lobe 2020 11 03
zhlédnutí 117Před 3 lety
The Great Seattle Earthquake - Tom Hopp for IAFI Puget Lobe 2020 11 03
Guatemalan Volcanoes - by Bill Burgel for IAFI
zhlédnutí 94Před 3 lety
Guatemalan Volcanoes - by Bill Burgel for IAFI
Lake Missoula Floods in NW Oregon & SW Washington - by Rick Thompson for IAFI
zhlédnutí 1,8KPřed 3 lety
Lake Missoula Floods in NW Oregon & SW Washington - by Rick Thompson for IAFI
Antarctic Glaciers - by Dr. Scott Burns for IAFI
zhlédnutí 676Před 3 lety
Antarctic Glaciers - by Dr. Scott Burns for IAFI
Global Megaflood Science - by Dr. Vic Baker for IAFI
zhlédnutí 17KPřed 3 lety
Global Megaflood Science - by Dr. Vic Baker for IAFI

Komentáře

  • @MichealMireles
    @MichealMireles Před 4 dny

    Thank you for your time and knowledge Dr Vic Baker! You are a wonderful person

  • @hobbitsumbarch5743
    @hobbitsumbarch5743 Před 12 dny

    Some on site pictures would be nice, too.

  • @Vomitbukkake
    @Vomitbukkake Před 22 dny

    Dude! I remember relaxing on my front porch when i lived off of NE Killingsworth at the time within the Vernon neighborhood and i forget how this conversation arrivee but i remember a passersby telling mentioning to me "you see all these abnormally large boulders scattered about everyones front lawns? They seem pretty outta place dont they? Well these are rocks that were washed here from hundred of miles away due to a great flood" and since then ive occasionally searched for info relating to what he said but not until now have i found content so detailed! Thank you for gifting us this video. It is very informative and the visuals are fantastic

  • @flatlandriver2471
    @flatlandriver2471 Před měsícem

    Retired ag engineer from Manitoba. Work took me many places and, whether the features are spectacular or frumpy, the visible surface geology has always created questions. An aside; hydraulic hoses on ag machinery typically contain oil operating at anywhere between 1500 and 5000 psi. Yes, Imperial units, I’m old. Occasionally a pinhole will develop in a hydraulic hose and an extremely high pressure spray is released. These pinholes can be lethal. The spray volume can be tiny and look harmless. The unexperienced can be tempted to place a finger or a thumb over the hydraulic spray in the same way a thumb can be placed over a garden hose. The result is that hydraulic oil is injected into the body. Even momentary exposure can result in extreme bodily damage. Water flowing at the earth/ice interface, with a glacial overburden of plastic ice, is also flowing at very significantly increased pressures. The plastic iceflow of the interface ice itself also occurs at these very high pressures. The erosional power of this interface ice and water may not be totally accounted for in current modelling. There is also a focus on mega-floods and catastrophic outbursts being the source of mega erosion, which necessarily occurs when glaciers are in retreat. Ice age weather likely had many polar/equatorial cycles. The surface topography of the glacier would have been continuously in flux. Surface basin proglacial lakes may have been possible during glacial advance or static periods as well as during decline. The vertical “outburst” of these lakes may have reached tremendous pressures at the basement level. Some of the erosional features may have been pressure washed into existence in days. In a way, they may have been similar to inverted volcanoes😳

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek Před měsícem

    When the BDR came too close, and literally dragged India across the bed of the nascent Indian Ocean, slamming it into the marshy fens of southern Asia, the impact displaced Asia, too, which rippled across the planet, dislodging ONAC, sending it down to slam into the Fractured Craton that held the Colorado Plateau, elevating Nunavik from sea-bottom, raising the Front Range, and sending a wall of water perhaps a half-mile high washing across southern Wyoming, and northern Colorado, across southern Idaho. This "flood" raced to the Sierra Nevada/Cascades chain, before turning southerly, to fill the Great Basin, with Lake Lahontan, and the Great Salt Lake, and an often-overlooked body I call Lake Anasazi, that sat atop the Four Corners, for about two millennia, before eating out the western volcanic plug in the Grand Canyon, to drain away. When that happened, the Anasazi walked away "in search of greener pastures". These events are spoken of, in our "oral history", a resource typically ignored by "scientists". The mega-floods were NOT caused by "ice sheets"! The water was "moving fast", because of the facts of their arrival, the conditions of "pre-Earth" (flatter, inland seas, and shifting plates due to water's weight!) Ice sheets were located at polar locations. Archaeologists have been saying for some time now, that wet clay adopts the magnetic signature of Earth, at the time of its firing, in the transformation to ceramic or pottery. SEVEN different locations for "magnetic north" have been found! We should talk!

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek Před měsícem

    No Ice Ages. Polar dislocations. Look at the "hot spot" track, and tell me that doesn't track with Isaiah, who claimed the "ten degrees taken from the clock of Ahaz will be returned". That is about ten degrees, by the time you get down to modern Israel. warren's book reflects the "Six Blind Indian Fakirs Describing an Elephant to the Rajah" thinking of his era. The Church would not look kindly on anyone suggesting anything else. The floods were delivered in Noah's time, circa the mid-25th Century BC, by a Big Dumb Rock. Not God, not Ice Ages, NOT anything else. It's very likely, the same BDR destroyed whatever civilization existed before about 4000BC. It seems as if civilization coalesced, and recoalesced, again, and again, in Noah, Babel, Exodus, Joshua, II Samuel, II Kings/Chronicles/I Isaiah, and Ezekiel (the last three causing the Fall of Empires, in the late 12th Century BC, AND the monotheism of Jews, Zoroaster, and very probably, Akhenaten). The agent of change returned, three more times, in less-catastrophic events, including a II Isaiah, before retreating to its present-day, tidally-locked-with-Earth position. It represents one of Astronomy's biggest conundrums, in its modern location. Mega-flood terrorized the human population during the times I mention, but the survivors were so discombobulated, they "forgot" to write down their impressions, so we are left with anecdotal evidence, that loudly, and commonly, speaks of titanic events endured by ancient populations. Every bad idea possible has been advanced to "explain" the plethora of evidence of flooding. In the American Southwest, one can find common examples of "bathtub rings" (one well-known geologist STOOD IN FRONT of one of these, suggesting he "couldn't" explain the origins of hoodoos in the Bisti Wilderness, where countless examples about as high as a rushing stream can be seen. Geologists should know the signs of erosion by water, before they go out into the field! I'd love to talk to you about what caused Lake Missoula -- I've been there hundreds of times, from 1957-2001, never really noticed the effects of long-term erosion. Maybe the trees blocked my views. I've been writing about this topic for most of the last 45 years, have a pretty complete theory I believe stands up to criticism. My theory goes on to explain human dispersion, animal traces (the Alaska gold fields), and the signs of fast-moving water, almost everywhere, in the West!

  • @georgerisberg8830
    @georgerisberg8830 Před měsícem

    Your findings are exciting. Your presentation of those findings was excellent. Being from Wisconsin, I have to wonder if there might be other areas in the upper Midwest and Ontario that have similar subglacial origins.

  • @christianrobertdemassy900

    Excellent. Trop.

  • @andrewbowlgarte4738
    @andrewbowlgarte4738 Před měsícem

    Lol , dumb no knowledge " scientists "

  • @jholt03
    @jholt03 Před měsícem

    Vick, if by some chance you ever read this I have two burning questions. Is solar energy alone sufficient to explain the rate at which the various ice sheets melted? Is there any evidence for some type of extraterrestrial impact into an ice sheet as a potential cause for any of these megafloods?

    • @grindupBaker
      @grindupBaker Před měsícem

      The proportions of the things that warmed Earth by 7.45 degrees from the last glaciation period (colloquial "ice age"), warming from 17,300 to 6,000 years ago are: 0.5 +- 1 w/m**2 8% Milankovitch cycles orbital eccentricity, axial tilt & precession of the equinoxes changes forcing (what pulled the trigger that started it) 3.5 +- 1 w/m**2 53% ice sheets & vegetation changes albedo-change feedback 1.8 +- 0.3 w/m**2 27% CO2 change feedback 0.4 +- 0.1 w/m**2 6% CH4 change feedback 0.4 +- 0.1 w/m**2 6% N2O change feedback ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 6.6 +- 1.5 w/m**2 total That 6.6 w/m**2 of total imbalance plus water vapour & cloud feedbacks is what increased Global Mean Surface Temperature (GMST) by 7.45 degrees from the depths of the glaciation period "Ice Age" 17,300 years ago to the Holocene Optimum 6,000 years ago, which is a factor of 7.45 / 6.6 = 1.13 degrees per w/m**2. It calculates to only 0.97 degrees per w/m**2 since 1750 because ocean-cloud pattern effect takes a few hundred years more (ocean spreads heat over several hundred years)

  • @amacuro
    @amacuro Před měsícem

    Love the work, love the effort, love the science, love the artistry of the video, including the music and the way it flies around and show's the virtual scenes that happened in those places. But the rotating/spinning shot makes me dizzy, which made the video unwatchable :(

  • @SonOfTheOne111
    @SonOfTheOne111 Před 2 měsíci

    Now can you explain how even bigger erosional features appear further south, in the Colorado plateau?

  • @paulhedman7387
    @paulhedman7387 Před 2 měsíci

    I hade it to 1:41. Getting air sick.

  • @dennisosborne9993
    @dennisosborne9993 Před 2 měsíci

    The sound is terrible

  • @farmermark2067
    @farmermark2067 Před 2 měsíci

    Zentnerd approved!

  • @authorknown1623
    @authorknown1623 Před 2 měsíci

    MAGNIFICENT! The incidental music and imagery of this production certainly evokes the awe of these epic inundations.

  • @painmt651
    @painmt651 Před 2 měsíci

    At 4:00 the evidence of catastrophic flooding and the speed and depth of water is super obvious from the aerial view.

  • @thomasdykstra100
    @thomasdykstra100 Před 2 měsíci

    "Ideas without precedent..."? Hardly! It is good for a vocal few to have suffered at the hands of "intellectual" mockers and scoffers, while the vindicating evidence lay all about their "court", at large and incontrovertible; it is not for nothing that informed perjurers will finally cry out for their own just condemnation! If Bretz was persecuted for merely describing tangible, regional effects of an incredible ice age, do we wonder at the "academy's" stonewalling of a global cataclysm that provoked an aftermath involving many catastrophic after-effects, including "the Spokane Flood"?

  • @Poppageno
    @Poppageno Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks, 1 bit though, I would like a slightly longer stay at each location next time. Well done!

  • @susantrott3338
    @susantrott3338 Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent, now can we have an animation of the flood itself, to see where it was released from and how it ran?

    • @kimlarso
      @kimlarso Před 2 měsíci

      That’d be Awesome 😊

  • @mickmccard
    @mickmccard Před 2 měsíci

    I really enjoyed Nick Zentner's class and was a little overwhelmed with all the material he gathered from many sources. This presentation exhibited the power of Google earth and the skill of the documenters and persons who compiled the movie about the work of J. Harlan Bretz in the Northwest US.

  • @PlayNowWorkLater
    @PlayNowWorkLater Před 2 měsíci

    Are those the sites that recently got put together on the Nick Zentner’s A-Z series this year on J Harlan Bretz, the Scablands and the Missoula Flood? Nicely Presented here. One of the viewers compiled all the locations Bretz visited from his field notes. Fascinating how detailed he was. What an inspiration

    • @thomasdykstra100
      @thomasdykstra100 Před 2 měsíci

      So, what do you think of similar compilations for evidences demonstrating an Earth pulling itself to pieces amidst a Global Deluge?

  • @PlayNowWorkLater
    @PlayNowWorkLater Před 2 měsíci

    Vic Baker is such a concise and detailed storyteller, with a talent for weaving in an engaging narrative. Great stuff!

  • @nincumpoop9747
    @nincumpoop9747 Před 3 měsíci

    Overall good. Plz practice your lecture skills and remove as much “umm” and lip smacking as possible. It’s not meant to be rude, it’s just very distracting as a viewer.

  • @lucasalexander4722
    @lucasalexander4722 Před 4 měsíci

    Christ Almighty. Mars? Stick to not producing disgusting lung sounds in public. What on earth does fake Mars nonsense have to do with what you were previously talking about? What on Earth can you possibly ever know about Mars? This is ludicrous.

  • @lucasalexander4722
    @lucasalexander4722 Před 4 měsíci

    Oh. This presentation became fact-free right about the 47 minute. mark. Reduced to an old man barking.

  • @davidduma7615
    @davidduma7615 Před 4 měsíci

    Nick sent me.

  • @nibiruresearch
    @nibiruresearch Před 4 měsíci

    An Ice Age is a recurring natural event. Our planet suffers from a cycle of seven natural disasters best known as a flood. The worst disaster leaves us a planet with a lot of ice on it and hence a low sea level. The cycle occurs because we have a ninth planet in our solar system orbiting our sun in an eccentric orbit. After the usual period, the planet approaches our sun at a very high speed, crosses the ecliptic plane of the other planets and disappears into the universe for a very long time. The last time this planet was seen with the naked eye from Earth, and depicted, was just before our era. Thanks to many ancient books, texts, statues, coins, cylinder seals and other artifacts, we were able to reconstruct this cycle and predict when the next ice age will occur. We explain much more about planet 9, the recurring flood cycle and its timeline, the rebirth of civilizations and ancient advanced technology in the e-book: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". It shows abundant and convincing evidence both in text and many depictions. It can be read on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: planet 9 roest

  • @mpetersen6
    @mpetersen6 Před 5 měsíci

    The disctiption in Genesis about fountains of the deep and extended period of rain. Religous aspects aside it could describing the effects of an impact event in an ocean basin (1). First we would see very large tsunami. Followed by extended periods of rain due to all of the sea water blown into the atmosphere. 1) One possible candidate being the Burckle structure in the Indian Ocean SE of Madagascar. That is if Burckle is an impact crater and can be dated to sometime in the last say 50k years.

  • @alanmarston8612
    @alanmarston8612 Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you for explaing the hot spot. This was much clearer that I have ever seen before.

  • @Rachel.4644
    @Rachel.4644 Před 7 měsíci

    Wow. Brilliant. Somehow, I missed this at the time, but it's really helpful now. I've copied parts of Livingstone et al. 2022, so thanks for that reference, too.

  • @churlburt8485
    @churlburt8485 Před 7 měsíci

    Wow trying to keep up with Jerome, and then having to try to convert the metric measurements. We should have gone metric years ago.

    • @SueFerreira75
      @SueFerreira75 Před měsícem

      Yep, three Metric Luddite countries left on the planet - Myanmar, Liberia and the USA. The USA PISA Math Scores are way down the ranking in 18th place, yet the Metric System is so logical and simple compared with the illogical Imperial System which could improve the Math capabilities of their students.

  • @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515
    @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515 Před 7 měsíci

    Interesting pliestocene fossils!

  • @SaveYourselfGents
    @SaveYourselfGents Před 8 měsíci

    Normal ice sheet melting that has resulted from climate warming doesn't produce high pressure mega-floods. Thanks.

  • @robsimer9296
    @robsimer9296 Před 8 měsíci

    Is the clockwise rotation forming the Grande Ronde Valley, a large rift valley ringed by an escarpment, east of Pendleton?

  • @brianjacob8728
    @brianjacob8728 Před 8 měsíci

    I think the YS hotspot originated in NE Oregon, probably resulting from an apparent cosmic impact there. The Snake River tracks where the crust migrated over the hotspot. I don't think it was ever in or near CA or the pacific coast.

  • @gerrycoleman7290
    @gerrycoleman7290 Před 9 měsíci

    I am seeing in satellite imagery what appears to be several old nearly filled in megacalderas east of Chemult, Oregon. Looks like they were formed by very large supervolcanic eruptions long ago.

  • @candui7278
    @candui7278 Před 9 měsíci

    This story continues to blow my mind! I'm 43 years in Santa Barbara CA, land of billionaires and imminent doom, mining Cali gold (construction worker). Having grown up near Mondovi, then the Okanogan delta (Brewster), your story is dear to my very soul Jerome.

  • @jodyfairchild5446
    @jodyfairchild5446 Před 9 měsíci

    Explains a lot. Would water under pressure be warmer than water on the surface?

    • @SaveYourselfGents
      @SaveYourselfGents Před 8 měsíci

      High pressures would tend to generate heat. But you need a damn nice source of heat to melt that much of the ice sheet into water way up north of the snout of the glacier. The evidence says huge flows came down gradient and bursted out of the front edge of the ice. Not to mention the drumlin fields, which we're not mentioned here. The energy paradox has not been solved. I'd venture that is because the answer involves impacts into the ice sheet and unGodly amounts of super hot flood water running over and under the glacier. Why did this most recent de-glaciation create these sort of catastrophic floods across the United States (and fires)? Something big happened to bring the last ice age to an end. What that something is has not been properly determined. At least not publicly.

  • @danielvermeer3363
    @danielvermeer3363 Před 11 měsíci

    More Mars videos please. This is amazing information 👏 👌

  • @ja6995
    @ja6995 Před rokem

    Absolutely amazing lecture. Loved every minute.

  • @SoggyNugh
    @SoggyNugh Před rokem

    15:11 Nice beehive photo 36:56 42:19

  • @TheShredartist
    @TheShredartist Před rokem

    Solutrean hypothesis lmao nope, sorry, didn't happen.

  • @chefboy2160
    @chefboy2160 Před rokem

    BS

  • @mattdillon2331
    @mattdillon2331 Před rokem

    Funny how nobody ever talks about the climate effects of 1000s of nuclear tests or that a large amount of CO2 is not man made. Thanks NASA!

  • @dawnderhenker
    @dawnderhenker Před rokem

    Great video. You should talk with Randall Carlson some time :)

  • @sumio11
    @sumio11 Před rokem

    Love this talk. Thank you for all of the flood examples and the Mars analogues.

  • @RobertJl9516
    @RobertJl9516 Před 2 lety

    Really appreciate your video and as a retired geologist, now an overland Jeeper', I'm excited to visit the Snake River area and see the great Bonneville flood sites as we so the IdahoBDR.

  • @James-pq5pi
    @James-pq5pi Před 2 lety

    How on earth could a “ice dam” hold back enough water to create the scablands? The ice dams in Alaska and elsewhere fail annually because an “ice dam” fails at just under 45 PSI of pressure. No modern engineering firm could / would build an “ice dam” big enough to form Lake Missoula. So advocates of the Lake Missoula Lake theory say it was created and failed multiple times. No way that happened. Glacial lakes form in front of RETREATING glaciers not behind advancing glaciers. Further, there is no way to explain Moses Coulee with water from Montana. The floods happened very fast and were caused by something other than a draining Lake Missoula. Think mentors and asteroids striking the ice sheets in Canada.

  • @sharonseal9150
    @sharonseal9150 Před 2 lety

    Is there a youtube link for the video presentation that Sheila was planning to give on stitching together Oregon? I am very much interested in watching that but the zoom presentation has already occurred .