Wenatchee Washington - Ice Age Floods Geology

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  • čas přidán 22. 07. 2024
  • Short video describes Wenatchee, WA geology related to the Ice Age Floods. Wenatchee River Valley features are also described from the Columbia River to Leavenworth, Washington. Giant flood bars, ice-rafted erratics and rhythmites are all explained.

Komentáře • 70

  • @Ellensburg44
    @Ellensburg44 Před 11 lety +8

    Really appreciate your comments, wafflesnfalafel! Just what we were trying to do! Thanks for watching.

  • @wafflesnfalafel1
    @wafflesnfalafel1 Před 11 lety +6

    That is really nicely done - enough information to be educational, excitement for the material, local references for folks to tie it close to home.

  • @vnvet2282
    @vnvet2282 Před 8 měsíci

    Like the bow tie. Grew up in Wenatchee and took my first geology course at Wenatchee Valley College in 1973. Our teacher, a chemist(!), took us on field trips where we saw the physical evidence of the flood waters released during the ice age. That geology course got me hooked as I look back as a retired geologist. Very good presentation.

  • @greatbigukes4269
    @greatbigukes4269 Před 3 lety +2

    For autodidacts, these really are wonderful videos. Congratulations.

  • @eljaysmiley
    @eljaysmiley Před 10 měsíci

    My Mama's family lived in Wenatchee in the 1940's on Mission or Methow Avenue. They had 2 huge boulders in their backyard; a "ship" which was long and low and a "castle" that was larger than the house! The kids loved the adventures there.❤

  • @patgorham4796
    @patgorham4796 Před rokem

    My grandfather and his father & mother and four brothers were all homesteaders in the Wenatchee Valley among the earliest homesteaders in the area. My grandfather drove a stagecoach between Clelumn and
    Wenatchee in those early days.

  • @robynmoon86
    @robynmoon86 Před 3 lety +2

    This video is great!!

  • @eburg301
    @eburg301 Před 9 lety +5

    Great informative videos packed into short clips. Keep up the good work!

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 9 lety +1

      Thanks for your enthusiasm, Raul. New videos coming real soon...

  • @charlesinglin
    @charlesinglin Před 7 lety

    This is a great series. Thanks for posting.

  • @almeisam
    @almeisam Před 6 lety +1

    Hello young people? I'm 62 and I enjoy the presentations.

  • @hillwalker250
    @hillwalker250 Před 9 lety +2

    Nick
    Thank you for your videos. We actually drove from Cougar, Wa. to The Dry falls yesterday. We took pictures of the places you showed in your videos. It has helped me and my friend leslie understand more of what we are looking at and therefore makes it more beautiful and exciting. Our trip lasted 17.5 hours and 650 miles it was epic. We want to visit the Wallula Gap next.

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 8 lety

      Wow. That sounds like quite a trip. Nice to hear our videos have been helpful. Thanks.

  • @m8x425
    @m8x425 Před rokem +1

    Nice to know. This kind of stuff wasn't covered at the local schools.
    I can tell this video was shot around mid April - mid May when the hills are still green and the Yellow Bells are in bloom. Almost all of the marketing pictures of Wenatchee are shot during this time of year.

  • @lowdownRS76
    @lowdownRS76 Před 3 lety +1

    Love it Nick!

  • @chiroyce72
    @chiroyce72 Před 7 lety +1

    I first saw this on our local PBS station between shows. Very nice to see the video with explanation. Really like the part that shows the current speed and water depth. I love driving out to Quincy and seeing those down at Crescent Bar. Really amazing to know how they were formed. The geological evidence is fascinating to comprehend.

  • @weesnatchee
    @weesnatchee Před 10 lety +3

    Thanks! I now have a much better understanding of this area I call home.

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 10 lety +1

      You're lucky to be living in such a beautiful place! Thanks for the note.

    • @kristenbarclay8658
      @kristenbarclay8658 Před 5 lety

      weesnatchee I’m from Wenatchee too! Great city!

  • @kylea.1223
    @kylea.1223 Před 10 lety

    I loved this video. It's nice learning new things about Wenatchee. I love spring time here because that's when the foothills and the plateau are green.

  • @watcherspirit2351
    @watcherspirit2351 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent!

  • @Mephilis78
    @Mephilis78 Před 4 lety +1

    These were all just random facts until I moved to Wenatchee in June. I'm from the Midwest, around the Eastern Nebraska bluffs along the Platte River. I bet Nick would have some interesting things to say about Nebraska too, especially the bluffs (over almost all of Nebraska) and the giant rock formations in the West, like Chimney Rock. He may even have something to say about the Sandhills in North central Nebraska.

  • @pprehn5268
    @pprehn5268 Před 8 lety +2

    I suspected that before, thanks for the confirmation for Leavenworth

  • @rapidcabin
    @rapidcabin Před 7 lety

    I very much enjoy the complex nature of the valley's development. Thank you for these videos. While building a house not far from where you were standing above Sunnyslope, we found shells as we were digging our foundation. Amazing how deep the water was.

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 7 lety

      Thank you. Shells on your property probably mean something different than the Ice Age. Would like to see them...

    • @rapidcabin
      @rapidcabin Před 7 lety

      Hi Nick. That foundation was dug 25 years ago, sadly I did not keep any of the small shells. They were quite small, no more than 1/4 to 3/8 inch and similar to what a clam would look like. Also while digging a foundation in the downtown area we dug through very hard layers of silt, almost like slate. As we split the layers open there were perfect ferns. How long ago would that have been in this area?

  • @marktwain368
    @marktwain368 Před 6 lety +1

    This is perfect! I am half done a novel set in Wenatchee, and the more I know, the better setting I create!

  • @yorkshire_tea_innit8097
    @yorkshire_tea_innit8097 Před 10 lety

    Ice rafted erratic found at the upper margins of a periglacial lake/basin, that is very cool. I hadn't thought about that possibility when geologising.

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 10 lety +1

      Was new to me too - last year! Thanks Ryukey.

  • @nelsonwalker7105
    @nelsonwalker7105 Před 8 lety +3

    Very interesting and very entertaining.

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 8 lety +1

      +Nelson Walker
      Very nice comment, Nelson.

  • @philnau7902
    @philnau7902 Před 5 lety +8

    Could you possibly clone yourself and come down to Southern California and explain what went on down here in such an informative way? ;-)

  • @djolley61
    @djolley61 Před 4 lety +2

    We need a guy like you in Utah.

  • @RAIDERxNATION
    @RAIDERxNATION Před 2 lety +1

    I was wondering why those high peaks stood that tall around Leavenworth but it makes sense the ice age because I haven’t heard of giant peaks created by crust plates crashing…

  • @stevekingsford-smith6957
    @stevekingsford-smith6957 Před 8 lety +1

    Great stuff. Somehow, I just discovered this. I teach PNW History in the White Salmon School District and these are perfect conversation starters/project reinforcement! Thanks TONS!!!

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 8 lety +1

      +Stephen Kingsford-Smith Glad you found us, Stephen. Nice to hear our videos will help you.

  • @THEBOSS-vn2ky
    @THEBOSS-vn2ky Před 3 lety +2

    It's NOW 2020
    GOOD JOB KID

  • @HJWhitehall
    @HJWhitehall Před 6 lety

    Hey Nick, will you do a video on Moses Coulee? My family tried to farm the land east of the coulee just off of Highway 2 (Whitehall Road) and Jameson Lake, but lack of water in the basalt rocks made it hard to irrigate the fields in the summer month and crops failed. I have always loved this coulee and this is where I found my love for geology as a child. There is so much geologic history in the Waterville Plateau with glacial erratics, floods, and more.
    Go Wildcats!

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 6 lety +1

      On my list, Heather! Go CWU.

    • @HJWhitehall
      @HJWhitehall Před 6 lety

      GREAT! Thanks, Nick. I have to make my way Eburg for one of your lectures. I am sure my husband would love an excuse to see his alumni and admire the geology of Eastern Washington...again. :)

  • @Wahunganganshapunck
    @Wahunganganshapunck Před rokem

    So I am an archaeologist monitoring a construction project in Wenatchee, about a half mile south of the confluence of the Wenatchee and Columbia. They have cut down from the surface to about 5 meters. Its all stratified sand, silt. I think I have at least one rhythmite visible in some of my profile photos. Its just a stark white layer of silt loam about 5 cm thick. My geology map calls it fan deposits, but strats seem generally flat. Is it safe to assume that this terrace or fan might be from these floods.

  • @WestCoastGoldProspecting

    Hi there, I prospect for gold at the sleepy hollow bridge and I found a couple pieces of what seem to be rock (whitish) with an almost black rounded friction mark in each piece. One of them is actually stamped with the number 42 on it and I have been wondering for years now, and I figured who better to ask then you 🙂

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 7 lety

      Not sure I have much to say, Damon. No idea, really. Where is Sleepy Hollow Bridge? That might give me an idea or two.

    • @WestCoastGoldProspecting
      @WestCoastGoldProspecting Před 7 lety

      Oh sorry, I thought you were from here in Wenatchee. Sleepy hollow bridge is the 3rd bridge up the Wenatchee river.

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 7 lety

      Thanks. The bridge is in a spot where the rocks come from both the Cascades and from northeastern WA due to Missoula Floods coming down the Columbia. So the source of the white rocks have many possibilities. Email me a photo or two and I will try harder on this. Thanks. nick@geology.cwu.edu

    • @WestCoastGoldProspecting
      @WestCoastGoldProspecting Před 7 lety +1

      I will do that now. And by the way, me and my wife have watched a lot of your stuff. You do awesome.

  • @heatherxmars46
    @heatherxmars46 Před 8 lety

    What would happen if the rocky reach dam and rock island dam failed?

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 8 lety

      Am not an engineer. Your guess is as good as mine. Thanks for watching.

  • @patgorham4796
    @patgorham4796 Před rokem

    Talk about the floods of 1948 & 1949, I remember houses floating down the Columbia River. We all had to get typhoid vaccination.

  • @jeffalexander6306
    @jeffalexander6306 Před 6 lety

    Isn't it true that there are still some buried glaciers in the Okanagan valley?

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 6 lety

      News to me. Let me know if you have information.

  • @hillwalker250
    @hillwalker250 Před 9 lety +1

    Oh by the way
    I see you're giving a lecture at the Sandhill Crane Festival next weekend. I hope to encourage my friend Leslie to go and to hear your talk. Until i went to the website I thought the festival was all ballon animals and face painting, I'm happy to be wrong on that. Maybe you could make a wiener dog out of a ballon!

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 9 lety

      Will see you in Othello, James. Many good speakers and field trips - balloons optional.

  • @charlenadequeiroz5483
    @charlenadequeiroz5483 Před 6 lety +1

    I live in Wenatchee

  • @haroldsmith8698
    @haroldsmith8698 Před 9 lety +1

    I WILL KEEP ON SAYING WHAT YOU SEE AND HEAR ON THE COMPUTER IS A LOT DIFFERENT THAN WHAT YOU GET OUT OF THE TEXT BOOKS. IF YOU WANT TO GET A LOT OF GOOD INFORMATION READ DAVID ALT'S BOOK..
    ON THE GREAT MISSULA FLOOD..HE HAS BEEN ALL OVER THE AREA.

    • @Ellensburg44
      @Ellensburg44 Před 9 lety +1

      Harold, I agree that David Alt's book is good...but our video here is more specific and carefully tailored to the Wenatchee area. Both sources of information are accurate. Thanks for watching.

  • @PhothreeniX
    @PhothreeniX Před 11 lety

    brownwaterboys

  • @branscoset
    @branscoset Před 11 lety

    none of these videos are 2 minutes long

  • @MrHeepspo
    @MrHeepspo Před 6 lety

    "ice age"... lol.

  • @davidwhite2116
    @davidwhite2116 Před 2 lety

    It's a guess. We don't know

  • @Entropy106
    @Entropy106 Před rokem

    Is it hotter than Seattle there

  • @galacticwizard5442
    @galacticwizard5442 Před rokem

    60 years ago my grandfather and his friends shot .22s at eachother playing cowboys and Indians at the giant rocks.