Jay Chapman
Jay Chapman
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Geology of Glacier National Park
Learn about the glacial landforms of Glacier National Park, Proterozoic Belt Supergroup rocks, and the Lewis thrust fault in the park, part of the Sevier thrust belt.
zhlédnutí: 3 732

Video

Geology of Olympic National Park
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 2 lety
Learn about how rocks scrapped off the subducting Juan de Fuca plate are bulldozed together to form an accretionary complex and build the Olympic Mountains. The rainy weather on the Olympic peninsula not only results in a rainforest, it also help preserve the unique geomorphology of the mountains.
Geology of Glacier Bay National Park
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 2 lety
Learn about Glacier Bay National Park, the biggest tsunami ever recorded, and what controls glaciers shape and movement.
Geology of Cape Hatteras National Seashore
zhlédnutí 1,3KPřed 3 lety
Learn about the dynamic barrier island systems in the Outer Banks and how waves, currents, and sea level changes continue to shape the islands today.
Geology of Great Sand Dunes National Park
zhlédnutí 4,3KPřed 3 lety
Learn about all the diverse geologic phenomena and events that came together to produce the giant sand dunes at Great Sand Dunes National Park.
Geology of Guadalupe Mountains National Park
zhlédnutí 3,2KPřed 3 lety
Learn about the geology of Capitan Reef in the Permian Basin and carbonate depositional systems.
Geology of Mesa Verde National Park and Depositional Systems
zhlédnutí 1,9KPřed 3 lety
Learn about the sedimentary rocks that make up Mesa Verde National Park including their depositional environment and why they accumulated there in the first place.
Geology of the Grand Canyon and the Great Unconformity
zhlédnutí 8KPřed 3 lety
Learn about the stratigraphy of Grand Canyon National Park and different types of unconformities. The Great Unconformity , spectacularly exposed in the Grand Canyon, has been linked to the evolution of life and a global glaciation, called Snowball Earth.
Geology of Yellowstone and heat flow in the Earth
zhlédnutí 3,1KPřed 3 lety
Learn about Yellowstone National Park and the connections between mantle plumes, hotspots, decompression melting, continental flood basalt, and giant rhyolitic calderas.
Geology of Grand Teton National Park
zhlédnutí 5KPřed 3 lety
Learn about both the ancient and more recent history of the Teton Range and Jackson Hole. The ancient history includes the formation of the Wyoming craton and Laurentia. The the more recent history includes the Teton fault, uplift of the Teton Range, and the Pinedale glaciation.
Geology of Denali and the role of isostasy in building mountains
zhlédnutí 1,9KPřed 3 lety
Learn about Denali National Park, isostasy, and what makes Denali so high. The restraining bend in the Denali strike-slip fault and the collision of the Yakutat microplate both influence the highest peak in North America.
Geology of Crater Lake National Park
zhlédnutí 4,2KPřed 4 lety
Learn about Crater Lake National Park, the subduction of the Juan de Fuca plate, and how water released from the subducted plate causes melting in the mantle that gives rise to the Cascades volcanic arc.
Geology of Joshua Tree National Park
zhlédnutí 12KPřed 4 lety
Discover how weathering and erosion produced the rock shapes at Joshua Tree National Park and how this processes can explain why the oceans are salty. Also learn how Joshua Tree may be the epicenter for the birth of a new plate boundary - one that could see California rift apart from the rest of the conterminous U.S.
Geology of Petrified Forest National Park
zhlédnutí 3,9KPřed 4 lety
Learn what gives the Painted Desert its colors, how petrified wood is created, and what makes a mineral a mineral.
Geology of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
zhlédnutí 1,7KPřed 4 lety
Learn about volcanic rocks and the oceanic hot spot beneath Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. The hot spot did not just create Hawaii, but also a long chain of now-extinct volcanoes stretching for over 6,000 km.
History of the National Parks
zhlédnutí 4,8KPřed 4 lety
History of the National Parks
Geology of Yosemite and igneous processes
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 4 lety
Geology of Yosemite and igneous processes
Geology of Canyonlands and the formation of the Earth
zhlédnutí 3,4KPřed 4 lety
Geology of Canyonlands and the formation of the Earth

Komentáře

  • @sylviacardona9815
    @sylviacardona9815 Před 4 dny

    Love your videos Short and sweet and with fun slides to illustrate

  • @zorgonox8479
    @zorgonox8479 Před 8 dny

    So I am curious about the uplift and/or uplift events in the area and their time frame; specifically - I have seen competing maps which will stop the Rocky Mountains at Albuquerque and others have the Rockies extend down to El Paso and include the Guadalupe mountains. I speculate that the Rockies are defined by the Laramide orogeny but the mountains extending passed the Rockies into Mexico must have distinct uplifting events. In any case, driving south through New Mexico into Texas - it just looks like mostly mountains all the way down.

    • @jaychapman4898
      @jaychapman4898 Před 8 dny

      Fantastic question! "Rocky Mountains" as a physiogeographic province could include the ABQ and ELP regions... it's often just used to talk about mountains located more inland than the Sierra Nevada and other more coastal mountain ranges. Geologically, you are correct that the Rocky Mountains are generally associated with the Laramide Orogeny. Unfortunately, there is a bit of a terminology/language disconnect between geologists and how normal people use "Rocky Mountains." Geologically, the Guadalupe Mountains are not considered directly related to the Laramide Orogeny. The uplift there (as well as most of central and southern New Mexico) is a result of normal faulting that occurred during the Late Oligocene to Early Miocene (ca. 25 Ma) and is generally attributed to crustal extension and opening of the Rio Grande Rift.

  • @yeaforbes1
    @yeaforbes1 Před měsícem

    This was thorough but I didn’t learn that much about canyonlands

  • @miken4348
    @miken4348 Před 2 měsíci

    Wow, great video. I learned a lot in 10 minutes, thank you.

  • @lneal333
    @lneal333 Před 4 měsíci

    What is the song at the end of the video?

  • @daltonwiggins8302
    @daltonwiggins8302 Před 4 měsíci

    This video was so good! And seeing that you have a playlist of a lot national parks is so exciting, thank you!

  • @reneerayburn6882
    @reneerayburn6882 Před 5 měsíci

    Excellent! Thanks!

  • @KV-1Enjoyer
    @KV-1Enjoyer Před 5 měsíci

    Nice video doc

  • @TD-np6ze
    @TD-np6ze Před 6 měsíci

    Great video!!! So much great information! (Suggestion for making easier to follow: how about a "dry-board" with names of famous people, keywords and numerical data in place of bookcase? ...i realize that it's tricky to balance time/length -- many viewers, such as myself, search for <10 minutes!!)

  • @lauraschroeder8177
    @lauraschroeder8177 Před 6 měsíci

    There is no missing time. The globe shows the same great Unconformity because there was a world wide catastrophic FLOOD and that's why we see erosion. We find sea creatures from the deep in Cambrian fossils and sophisticated creatures such as the Trilobite ( no evolution). Sedimentary rocks were layed rapidly not billions of years or we would see evidence of animal life burrowing which we do not! Coal is formed rapidly as it was created from buried rapid VEGETATION that had HEAT applied by volcanic activity. That's why when it's mined we see methane gas release. It took enormous pressure to create! Billions of years would have decomposed vegetation because of oxygen. Coal is buried in knife rock bands. It forms a Z because of rapid sedimentation.

  • @lauraschroeder8177
    @lauraschroeder8177 Před 6 měsíci

    Deposition does not take millions of years. Visit Death Valley. We see deposition happening every year by flooding. It's a RAPID process.

  • @lauraschroeder8177
    @lauraschroeder8177 Před 6 měsíci

    Lol you admitted to a GLOBAL FLOOD

  • @hippojuice23
    @hippojuice23 Před 6 měsíci

    Too many pop -ups, bro!

  • @orionfire85
    @orionfire85 Před 6 měsíci

    Your videos are all great!!

  • @normanzimmerman5029
    @normanzimmerman5029 Před 7 měsíci

    Good luck

  • @sevasocialite5265
    @sevasocialite5265 Před 7 měsíci

    Was the Sierra Nevada the source for volcanism that petrified these trees?

  • @JS-wg4px
    @JS-wg4px Před 7 měsíci

    Your snowball earth image is wrong. That was not the continental configuration at that time.

  • @carolynallisee2463
    @carolynallisee2463 Před 8 měsíci

    I often think that these days our perception of how volcanos erupt is often distorted by the way they are portrayed in visual entertainments. I'm thinking of films like '2012' and 'Pompeii'. Whilst much larger than Mt Mazama, the Yellowstone super-volcano would have erupted in a very similar fashion, with multiple vents erupting along the ring faults spewing out ash, rather than the massive single central explosive vent depicted in '2012'. As for the eruption of Vesuvius in the 2014 film 'Pompeii', the film maker admitted adding fireballs for dramatic effect, though nothing of the sort occurred during the eruption. If it had, the volcanologists excavating and studying the deposits the eruption left would have found abundant evidence of such things... and they haven't. Volcanos are dangerous enough without film makers inventing fictitious dangers solely to make the eruption dramatic. in fact, most explosive eruptions tend to be more messy than movie dramatic, with all the ash they pump out. Also, such eruptions tend to be rather quiet between explosions, and but for the turbulence to be seen in the rising ash column, you might be forgiven for thinking it all quite peaceful. And yes, when calderas are spoken of, most times it's those formed during big explosive eruptions that are cited. Yet the Hawaiian Islands' shield volcanoes have pit calderas, as do the shield volcanoes of Galapagos, and they really do form in a similar way to sinkholes. I don't know if it can still be accessed, but the USGS had time lapse footage of a caldera collapse event at Halema'uma'u, after the 2018 Lower East Rift Zone eruption drained Kilauea's magma chamber. It was something to see crescent shaped sections of rock quietly slip down several hundred metres: there seems to be so little disturbance of the layers of the blocks it looks possible to stand or sit on the top of the sliding slabs and ride down safely, though this may be a deceptive view.

  • @scottmccrea1873
    @scottmccrea1873 Před 10 měsíci

    Very well done video. Bummer the channel didn't take off.

  • @DansBackcountry
    @DansBackcountry Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for this video

  • @markvincent522
    @markvincent522 Před 10 měsíci

    "It's wuh-LA-muht, damn it." Thats what they told me at Oregon State, anyway. Beavs forever!

  • @kevinjohnson8261
    @kevinjohnson8261 Před 11 měsíci

    This video would have been more badass if he was holding an AR-15.

  • @history.mp4993
    @history.mp4993 Před rokem

    Some of the cutaways were alright but there are just way too many cut the number in half or more it really takes away from the video tbh I just want to hear you talk about fossilized wood

  • @syrathdouglas1244
    @syrathdouglas1244 Před rokem

    Wait you mean Joshua trees weren’t made up for Donut County?

  • @vinyetmj6973
    @vinyetmj6973 Před rokem

    We want more about glacier

  • @vinyetmj6973
    @vinyetmj6973 Před rokem

    Awesome video but it’s ok to talk slower and resulting to a longer video. We will watch it anyway 😂

  • @taylorwomack9389
    @taylorwomack9389 Před rokem

    This was a very informative video, and I too love our national park system as one of the few things we can be truly proud of the United States for accomplishing. However, I was a bit put off by how quickly your video skimmed over the "military involvement" period of Nat'l Park history. What do we think the US military was primarily doing? Actively expelling and dislocating the peoples that lived on this land. Also phrasing "the discovery/looting of Indian sites" makes it sound like these were sites of some past society, not the actively inhabited and lived in places that many of them were. This is a dark history, and it's quite painful to learn. But it's essential to acknowledge when discussing this topic because only by grappling with the full truth of the darkness of the US's founding century can we have any hope of healing from the trauma that that past has left our country with. And another small thing, of course you must know the bison did not go extinct due to non-conservation of nat'l parks but due to a federally endorsed and funded campaign to completely eradicate the food sources and other bison materials used by the plains Indians who successfully resisted US expansion several times over. Beyond the obvious ecocide that this constituted, the campaign was clearly motivated by genocidal intentions.

  • @The_Starkindler
    @The_Starkindler Před rokem

    Solid information, but the pop culture cuts were really distracting.

  • @KT_571
    @KT_571 Před rokem

    Awesome and informative video! Thanks!

  • @sbkarajan
    @sbkarajan Před rokem

    Have you looked at the Olive Grove in Turkey, after the earthquake about 1 month ago? They look like a mini grand canyon. Can Grand Canyon have been made that way? I know that they tell us it's made of water erosion, but I think water erosion should look smooth. Grand Canyon is nothing but smooth, it looks like it was made yesterday, or maybe 10,000 years ago at best. Pyramid and sphynx erosions look older than Grand Canyon.

    • @OZTutoh
      @OZTutoh Před rokem

      My jaw dropped when I looked that up

  • @HoldenDoesBikeStuff

    God this is so cool. And you made it so an idiot like me could follow along.

  • @djfauna66
    @djfauna66 Před rokem

    I love all the info in this video! Iv found some killer quartz and epidote in this area!

  • @MiaBloom-yf7fq
    @MiaBloom-yf7fq Před rokem

    Love this video, its really helping me with a project on the Glacier Bay Fjord Estuary

  • @juliozewge3650
    @juliozewge3650 Před rokem

    Awesome

  • @juliozewge3650
    @juliozewge3650 Před rokem

    Awesome. Thanks for sharing your research about Joshua tree. I really enjoy this park.

  • @LeeBoatworks
    @LeeBoatworks Před rokem

    Juan de Few-cah, not Juan de Foo-cah

  • @stevengao1966
    @stevengao1966 Před rokem

    now i understand the formation of the mt olympia,

  • @mwild2198
    @mwild2198 Před rokem

    Love this

  • @SolaceEasy
    @SolaceEasy Před rokem

    Annoying cuts

  • @jdfehrenbach
    @jdfehrenbach Před rokem

    How do you have a billion years of missing time across the whole planet - glaciation would have had to take place across the whole planet

  • @jeffreywickens3379
    @jeffreywickens3379 Před rokem

    The little injections of cartoons, is not in keeping with the rest of the video.

  • @neilvasquez-0
    @neilvasquez-0 Před rokem

    Amazing videos! Thank you for your work!

  • @nicollesworld6558
    @nicollesworld6558 Před 2 lety

    Great video!

  • @AppleTVclassroom
    @AppleTVclassroom Před 2 lety

    Totally using this video in HS Earth Science class.

  • @ericvulgate
    @ericvulgate Před 2 lety

    I live here. It never gets old.

  • @PaolaTourGuide
    @PaolaTourGuide Před 2 lety

    Grazie!!!!

  • @TomDavisMD
    @TomDavisMD Před 2 lety

    Hey Jay This is great content, keep making them. If the practical engineering guy can get a mil subscribers, you can, too👍

  • @NationalParkDiaries
    @NationalParkDiaries Před 2 lety

    Jay, this is an excellent explanation and is very accessible! Thank you!

  • @sohpiejo3598
    @sohpiejo3598 Před 2 lety

    so engaging and I learned a lot! thank you!