Soil and Soil Dynamics

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • 006 - Soil and Soil Dynamics
    In this video Paul Andersen explains how soils are formed and classified. Weathering of rock creates particles which are mixed with water, air, and organic material. Soils are classified according to particle size, chemical makeup, and horizon distribution. A brief discussion of soil loss through erosion, compaction, and salinization is included.
    Do you speak another language? Help me translate my videos:
    www.bozemanscience.com/transla...
    Music Attribution
    Intro
    Title: I4dsong_loop_main.wav
    Artist: CosmicD
    Link to sound: www.freesound.org/people/Cosmi...
    Creative Commons Atribution License
    Outro
    Title: String Theory
    Artist: Herman Jolly
    sunsetvalley.bandcamp.com/trac...
    All of the images are licensed under creative commons and public domain licensing:
    “Agriculture.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, September 4, 2015. en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?....
    Agriculture, US Department of. English: Soil Profile. Units Are Inches., Unknown. soils.usda.gov/education/resou.... commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi....
    “Bathroom Faucet Tool - Free Tools and Utensils Icons.” Flaticon. Accessed September 6, 2015. www.flaticon.com/free-icon/bathroom-faucet-tool_47502.
    “Content Library - OpenStax CNX.” Accessed September 6, 2015. cnx.org/contents/1741effd-9cda....
    Fir0002. A Diagram of the Rock Cycle, February 10, 2008. Own work. commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi....
    “Irrigation.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, September 1, 2015. en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?....
    Khruner. English: Baveno Pink Granite., November 28, 2007. Own work. commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi....
    “Loam.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, August 12, 2015. en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?....
    Princedesmers01. Français : La Poterie À Safi Maroc., October 2, 2012. Own work. commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi....
    Rcole17. English: Primary Succession Occurring over Time., May 27, 2015. Template:Https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary succession. commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi....
    “Root Hair.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, September 4, 2015. en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?....
    “Soil.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, August 28, 2015. en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?....
    “Soil Horizon.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, August 31, 2015. en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?....
    “Soil Retrogression and Degradation.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, July 21, 2015. en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?....
    “Weathering.” Simple English Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, May 19, 2015. simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.....
    n.d. openclipart.org/detail/140107....

Komentáře • 367

  • @Tdavefnm
    @Tdavefnm Před 7 lety +429

    sums up my whole semester in 9 minutes on soil science.

    • @maryamalisworld
      @maryamalisworld Před 7 lety +1

      chuchu tv

    • @kiyavance
      @kiyavance Před 5 lety +6

      Semester? We went over this in like 4 weeks

    • @innerash_
      @innerash_ Před 4 lety +2

      SEMESTER?! we did ours in like 2 weeks and my brain hurts.

    • @kimberlymaxey4349
      @kimberlymaxey4349 Před 3 lety +2

      Doesnt materits wrong and incomplet

    • @Willwrz
      @Willwrz Před 3 lety +4

      @@innerash_ 2 weeks? my apes class went over this in like not even a whole class.

  • @MKTV77
    @MKTV77 Před 6 lety +174

    Dr. Andersen, I still remember watching your video lecture series on AP Biology from my junior year in high school. Four years later I'm in college taking a very challenging course in soil sciences, and I managed to find this video where you clearly and concisely reviewed many of the major topics in the course. I just want to thank you for all of your efforts to support open source education, and for being such a good teacher.
    Thanks, -Mike

  • @OliverLower
    @OliverLower Před 8 lety +187

    A clearly explained presentation which was easy to understand. Thank you

  • @pluckyfella7
    @pluckyfella7 Před 4 lety +6

    6:02: “What is the perfect soil? Well, if we have about 20% clay and we have about 40% of sand and [40% of] silt, we have what is called a loam”. Ah, yes, Horticulture wisdom like lovely music to my ears lol. And good Soil Science stuff ; may I please commend you Paul Andersen courtesy of Bozeman Science. A wonderful video, thank you.
    Sorry for the length, but this is something useful that I have learned from my Horticulture studies, that others might find helpful to solve a soil texture problem that they may have.
    Medium Loam IS the best soil, in retaining a temperate amount of water yet drains any excess, always moist but well-drained, has the right cosy conditions for the soil food web to drink water, breathe air, and eat humus, retaining nutrients without leaching due to rainwater just flushing through, has just the right balance of airpores, waterpores and micropores, to make this soil an absolute pleasure to work with, with the least maintenance and the least work, no-dig, chlorine-free watering, no -icides of any kind, all organic, having dozens of earthworms, with abundant fungi and bacteria to counteract pathogenic bacteria and fungi that causes diseases. It also provides the loveliest home for ground beetles and rove beetles, ladybirds and lacewing larvae to live to eat up all of your pests. Adding 5% of the soil's volume as compost helps the crumby, granular structure as well, besides inoculating or feeding the soil food web, though one can add a 1 inch layer of compost once a year. Like humans, plants need to breathe in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide but stuck in the soil, thus air must be able to enter the soil, and for most of the carbon dioxide to exit the soil without being trapped and thus poisoning the soil and its creatures, though some carbon dioxide is converted into carbonic acid H₂CO₃ to aid in releasing minerals.
    That is the very first golden rule of Horticulture that I learned in my classes for my Level 2 diploma. The 40-40-20 law. It is also called Medium Loam because it is right in the middle of a circle of Clay Loam at 12 o'clock, Silty Clay Loam, Silty Loam, Sandy Loam, Sandy Clay Loam on the Soil Triangle chart; and also because it is midway between light (sandy) and heavy (clay), and is the happy medium as per the Law Of Temperance, no deficiencies, no excesses, temperate.
    Yes, as the video says : Forget working with heavy clay ; it is no fun, which I know firsthand, and you don't have to suffer the hard way when your spade is working with sticky clayey soil that might just as well be setting glue lol.
    It is good and wise, though sometimes difficult, to temper your soil texture, to change it to Medium Loam, harder to do in larger areas, but doable with some effort and patience. Here is how to do it:
    ● Find out how much sand, silt, and clay that you presently have in litres, from ascertaining your texture percentages from a combo Jar Test/ Hand-test.
    ● Find out how much sand, silt, and clay that you SHOULD have in your soil in litres by 40-40-20, taking into account the amounts you already have in the soil.
    ● Add the deficits in litres to your soil.
    For example, let's say that you have a bed or border of 6 feet long by 3 feet wide.
    Suppose you have 38% sand, 32% silt, and 30% clay. You want 40-40-20. Thus this has too much clay though, not good, sticky and gets waterlogged fairly easily. I normally use 7 inches as a general depth, but we'll use 6 inches for our illustration.
    You use inches to convert into litres later. Convert 6 feet and 3 feet into inches respectively. Let's select a depth of say 6 inches. 72" x 36" x 6" = 15,552 cubic inches = convert into litres = 254·85 litres ; that is that bed's volume as a whole. 45% is the mineral part comprising of the sand, silt and clay; 5% is the compost.
    In our illustration, with 38% sand, 32% silt, and 30% clay, the present amounts would be
    43·58 litres of sand,
    36·70 litres of silt,
    34·40 litres of clay.
    (254·85 litres x 0·45%) x 0·38% sand = 43·579.
    Our soil in our illustration should have
    45·87 litres of sand,
    45·87 litres of silt,
    22·94 litres of clay.
    (254·85 litres x 0·45%) x 0·40% sand = 45·873 litres.
    Required amount minus current amount = amount to add. RA - CA = AA.
    45·87 litres of required sand amount - 43·58 litres of sand = add 2·29 litres of sand.
    45·87 litres of required silt - 36·70 litres of silt = add 9·17 litres of silt.
    No need to add any clay here; adding the deficits of the missing elements makes the clay 20% by proportion anyway. You don't count what you have an excess of OK? Just add the deficits. Be aware of say 90% silt with 10% clay; you will need to add more silt to 100% and another 10% sand to counterbalance the 10% clay to 40-40-20.
    As for the compost, that works out as 254·85 litres x 0·05% = 12·74 litres of compost. After adjusting your soil, adding a handful of montmorillonite or vermiculite clay with your 5% compost helps improve the CEC.
    Beware of the erroneous myth of "forming concrete from changing your texture in adding sand and clay" as it takes a special kind of sand or builder's sand mixed with a special mixture of cement, usually Portland Cement, to make concrete, as most sands cannot make concrete. So long you have 40-40-20, not using building sand, it will not form concrete OK? More than 50% silt and very low clay can form a hard paste that resembles concrete blocks, but that is way too much silt anyway. Horticultural /natural sand and natural silt doesn't form concrete.
    Getting the sand is relatively easy ; you can buy clay as pellets from amazon or a nursery or naturally if legal; but getting the silt can be quite difficult, unless you can find a gently-sloping high riverbank of a tidal river coming in/out from/to the sea at low tides at quarter-moons with pure silt or mostly silt and lawfully dig up shallow spadefuls along a span without any harm to the environment or wildlife, or contact your Internal Drainage Board or local de-silting company to get some (the high tides is replenishing the silt layer anyway). If you do get silt from an inlet river coming in from sea, it may be slightly too salty at first in affecting seed germination and stunting growth, yet adding LIME to the silt and soil in temperate amount will remove excess sodium, say 75-100 grams of lime per square metre.
    In the UK, some selfish, greedy 'environmental services" idiots wrongly regard silt as "environmental waste" - absolute bullsh, as nature recycles everything, so clean it and re-use the silt for your garden our allotment -- screw the stupid world out of touch with nature. Ask the Environmental Agency of your area for permission if you have to, as sometimes, there is the risk of introducing nasty non-native crayfish eggs or very invasive foreign plants like the Himalayan Balsam laid in the silt, hence in some cases silt needs to be treated silt and/or cleaned silt (just simply heat at 100°C - problem solved). Silt looks grey-yellow on riverbanks in aerial photos, and feels very smooth like flour. Excess silt clogs up rivers, so de-silting companies are always removing silt somewhere, at least in England where I live, if you can obtain it from them, the hard bit being finding it! In the US, the Mississippi River is notorious for its humongous excess of silt.
    Adding tonnes of compost is only a second-best, imperfect method that is not permanent, very costly, always deteriorating and needs constant replenishing, while it does not change the texture at all, only opening up airpores temporarily as per structure, a depressing fight against nature all the time. Inorganic stuff is permanent ; organic is not, so why go to all the trouble of adding tonnes of temporary compost a few times a year every single year that costs a bloody fortune to make a pseudo-loam on top of crap soil that is practically now the subsoil? It is OK if you are rich and retired though not ideal a method! lol. Charles Dowding must be bloody joking or mad if he expects me to put 680 litres of compost per bed of TWELVE 12' x 4' beds for a 6 inch thick bed of compost EACH for supposed 'organic gardening', for my allotment, costing a grand or £1000 (144" x 48" x 6" = 41,472 cubic inches = 679·60 litres; 680x12 = 8,160 litres), that needs topping up regularly. Sod that; a 'clear solution' it is not. I am not a retired millionaire! In soil microbiology, there's currently too much focus on structure and completely ignoring soil texture, the prime thing. Change the texture. The soil food web really only exists at its very best in Medium Loam anyway. It is best to go for a much more permanent amendment in the long run that you only need to do once, with perfect results with the least work long-term. Apologies again for the length lol. Agape. Andrew.

    • @weaksupremacy3799
      @weaksupremacy3799 Před 3 lety +2

      This comment is true gold. Thanks for taking your time to post this. ❤

  • @atifazim5094
    @atifazim5094 Před 7 lety +28

    It was not helpful, it was very helpful. My professor explained me this in the class but I didn't understand anything but you made it so simple and easy.

  • @dicygirl03
    @dicygirl03 Před 3 měsíci

    Mr. Anderson is the reason I was able to get my undergrade. I love these videos and how he breaks everything down and explains topics so clearly. I am able to not only understand but absorb the material. You are the best teacher!!

  • @brayne6802
    @brayne6802 Před 8 lety +34

    As an environmental/wetland/soil technician, that was a pretty good intro for people who are interested in environmental science. A great deal of environmental work (both public and private) deal with soils. Some advice for majors... don't expect the job resulting from an environmental science degree to be easy (if it does involve the major). Expect political stress in the public sector, while also enduring both physical and mental stress if you choose to take a job in the private sector. Environmental consultation (and regulation in some instances) is not an easy job... expect to deal with extreme summers, unsatisfied clients/citizens, bugs, some good ole fashion auger digging (in rocks if you are unfortunate), and regulatory grey areas. It is part of the job, however, it is all for the benefit of knowing that what you are doing according to the law (whatever that may be in your state) is sustainable.

    • @Bozemanscience1
      @Bozemanscience1  Před 8 lety +4

      +B Rayne Thanks for sharing your perspective. Good ole fashion auger digging with rocks sounds difficult.

    • @javierperea8954
      @javierperea8954 Před 5 lety +3

      I am afraid that most of agriculture and what we are doing today is not sustainable. We are killing off pollinators by the droves, killing off biology in the soil, getting rid of grasslands and wetlands and forests and jungles. We definitely have a problem with soil sustainability, and if modern agricutlure has it's way we will lose more biology and become more dependent on chemicals and fertilizers.

    • @Forevertrue
      @Forevertrue Před 4 lety +1

      Boy did you ruin a good agricultural presentation with BS left wing garbage. Forget politics and ignore the left and get doing what needs to be done. Fool.

    • @solk.posner7201
      @solk.posner7201 Před 4 lety

      @@Forevertrue Don't pillock politics into this. This is science, not a left vs right issue. We've reached peak in everything; Peak oil, peak agriculture, peak water usage, peak deforestation, etc, etc. All of this for blind capitalism growth, which is sucking the life out of this planet and leaving harmful waste. The world is gonna collapse, we're on the edge of the descent.

  • @nosleepdelirium1214
    @nosleepdelirium1214 Před měsícem

    8 years later and still THE best videos for a companion for college classes. no nonsense

  • @michaelmead2496
    @michaelmead2496 Před 3 lety +3

    As a Certified Crop Adviser with a Masters degree in soil science and 40 years of experience, this is the best 10 minute video I've ever seen on basic soils. Great Job Mr Andersen!!

  • @MommaKnowsBestest
    @MommaKnowsBestest Před měsícem

    This has been so helpful with my family

  • @sandeshdeshmukh8520
    @sandeshdeshmukh8520 Před 2 měsíci

    Best video to summarize the Soils for Env Professionals course, Thanks!!

  • @tirelesssoul8932
    @tirelesssoul8932 Před 5 lety +1

    👍👌👌👌
    9 mins videos = 90 pages information
    Clear and good

  • @FaZeZombieslayer
    @FaZeZombieslayer Před 8 lety +50

    im watching your videos as homework, but i find them quite interesting and cool. way better than school

  • @whoareyou5278
    @whoareyou5278 Před rokem +2

    I am hooked to soil science, I am loving this information and wanted to thank you for sharing!

  • @MooMooMath
    @MooMooMath Před 4 lety

    Another example of why Bozeman Science is so helpful.

  • @soniagarcia1861
    @soniagarcia1861 Před 6 lety +1

    Finally a clear explanation in only English! Thx a lot.

  • @wellness285
    @wellness285 Před 4 lety +3

    Outstanding! researching where to take online classes with this guy!

  • @carlinbh27
    @carlinbh27 Před 8 lety +23

    That was very helpful, thanks! I'm from Brazil and I'm studyng geography to be a teacher. Thanks for the subtitles in english, It helped me a lot!

    • @phox.2234
      @phox.2234 Před 5 lety

      oi cara! eu tambem sou brasileiro! moro nos EUA ou USA e falo ingleis.

  • @JonelleNara
    @JonelleNara Před 5 lety +1

    I just watched this for the fun but I enjoyed it and learned so much. Thank you.

  • @felixreith9692
    @felixreith9692 Před 10 měsíci

    Hi i just wanted to say thank you for this great video! I have to write an essay for environmental engineering on the importance of soils in the ecosystem and treatment techniques for soil pollution and this was a perfect recap over all the different factors that play part in the soil.
    Definitely will help me!
    Thank you

  • @julianacardon8869
    @julianacardon8869 Před 4 lety

    Paul Anderson- you're a great man.

  • @user-zh1hp3mk1c
    @user-zh1hp3mk1c Před 5 lety

    you are the best teacher for soil.

  • @1cleandude
    @1cleandude Před rokem

    Awesome brother thanks for your time and expertise!🙏

  • @user-mu8qf4fx4d
    @user-mu8qf4fx4d Před 5 měsíci +1

    2023
    Hats off sir..❤ It is still relevant and benefiting even in the age of chatgpt and bard.

  • @CanbarSom
    @CanbarSom Před 4 lety

    this was so helpful mr andresen ,i cann't thank you enough ..

  • @Silent_2880
    @Silent_2880 Před 2 lety

    Easy explaination .
    Thank you Professor.

  • @marisolrubalcava7632
    @marisolrubalcava7632 Před 4 lety

    Best Soil Video Ever. Thank you so much

  • @rohitingle2920
    @rohitingle2920 Před 5 lety

    That's incredible, these video clear important concept of fundamental of soil

  • @v.jsteiner833
    @v.jsteiner833 Před 5 lety +1

    wow,so impressive how you can sum up a whole semester really understandable and give a perfect overview!

  • @brento2890
    @brento2890 Před 5 lety

    Excellent explanation of Soil !!!

  • @evabriseis5944
    @evabriseis5944 Před 7 lety +1

    I love your videos. Thorough, simplified, efficient, and perfect visuals. Make more please! :] Thank you!!!

  • @adamk.1044
    @adamk.1044 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you for this video. 🌱

  • @applasamysubbharao2578

    Great. Simply Explained. Thank you very much

  • @kimmorgan3227
    @kimmorgan3227 Před 4 lety

    Filled in the picture for me of the historical movement and an understanding of CEC. Very good.

  • @sachinkanwat7059
    @sachinkanwat7059 Před 4 lety

    Superb 😘 briefly explained with super speed .

  • @Raytaotao
    @Raytaotao Před 4 lety

    very good illustration!

  • @winterbird4069
    @winterbird4069 Před 8 lety

    Paul, you deserve more credit for the things you do. thank you for all that you've help teach me.

  • @brizeeuk
    @brizeeuk Před 4 lety

    This is a brilliant tutorial gave me a better understanding

  • @Dispatern
    @Dispatern Před 3 lety

    Excellent overview of soil! Thank you.

  • @james3374
    @james3374 Před 3 lety

    Fantastic presentation!

  • @samarthseth3826
    @samarthseth3826 Před 6 lety +2

    an awesome explanation with perfect illustrations and animations

  • @derpallardie
    @derpallardie Před 2 lety

    Soil scientist here. Excellent presentation! You mislabeled the directionality of the particle sizes on the soil texture triangle, though, and it's really breaking my brain!

  • @MetalMario137
    @MetalMario137 Před 4 lety +2

    This is fantastic! I've been learning more about gardening, and this is a great source of information for me to do more research and do some soil experiments. Thank you!

  • @tadmarshall2739
    @tadmarshall2739 Před 13 dny

    Fast and efficient, thanks!

  • @nirmal6362
    @nirmal6362 Před 4 lety

    The best video and explanation.

  • @amandaebr
    @amandaebr Před 8 lety +4

    This was so clear and well explained, thank you

  • @BlackTubers
    @BlackTubers Před 6 lety

    Great video. About to be assessed on soil tomorrow.

  • @xiiixiiih.16
    @xiiixiiih.16 Před 2 lety

    I really am learning so much from your channel

  • @ColeB-jy3mh
    @ColeB-jy3mh Před 2 lety

    Exactly what I was looking for thanks!

  • @closkoi491
    @closkoi491 Před 6 lety

    Support from Hong Kong🤓this video is so much help for me to clear out the concept of the Geog syllabus in my hometow

  • @sheilafocht5648
    @sheilafocht5648 Před 3 lety

    Good morning, Marata here!!! Thank you for sharing.

  • @arthurmelo3177
    @arthurmelo3177 Před 5 lety

    thank you sir..you the most clear explanation about soil..

  • @nasrollahrajaei6703
    @nasrollahrajaei6703 Před rokem +1

    Thank YOU for your excellent explanation!🙏

  • @walkyourpath8340
    @walkyourpath8340 Před 6 lety

    You are the Best! A teacher I Never Had.

  • @mbahmarijan789
    @mbahmarijan789 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for the lesson. Greetings from Indonesia

  • @Lynettemagnificent
    @Lynettemagnificent Před rokem

    Thank you, you just summarized chapter 1 of my text book!!!

  • @yewondwondafrash4
    @yewondwondafrash4 Před 5 lety

    perfectly explained. Thank you

  • @thebroomsweepergaming1369
    @thebroomsweepergaming1369 Před 6 lety +36

    2:25
    *Rock:* Mr.Anderson... I don't feel so good...

  • @catiekrygeris438
    @catiekrygeris438 Před 7 lety

    Awesome video, thank you!

  • @sarahthompson5259
    @sarahthompson5259 Před 6 lety

    Thank you so much for these videos

  • @abdellah_elhamidy
    @abdellah_elhamidy Před rokem

    Best explanation ever made

  • @jessewu4528
    @jessewu4528 Před 5 měsíci

    Great video, thank you

  • @degamahesh550
    @degamahesh550 Před 4 lety

    really very nice finishing

  • @andrewgibbons7465
    @andrewgibbons7465 Před 3 lety

    This was so helpful, thanks heaps.

  • @lissjohn2575
    @lissjohn2575 Před 5 lety +1

    You’ve explained the whole chapter of my book in less than 10mins! Thank you!

  • @sarahjackson5139
    @sarahjackson5139 Před 7 lety

    A great studying tool, thanks.

  • @kaninma7237
    @kaninma7237 Před 7 lety +1

    Excellent video with a high density of information and insight. It bears repeated watching, and it is helping me as I work my way through Brady's "The Nature and Property of Soils." So far, I have nearly finished chapter two while taking extensive notes. This summarizes things well and helps me place things into the a larger perspective more readily. Thank you!

  • @pkohbodi
    @pkohbodi Před 5 lety

    Fantastic presentation! Thank you. Concise, informative, interesting and high quality

  • @mandycolleen123
    @mandycolleen123 Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome video, you rock!

  • @theonewiththename5867
    @theonewiththename5867 Před 3 lety

    was just sitting in my living and out of nowhere just started thinking about soil and what the heck it actually is, wow this was overwhelming in the coolest way

  • @johnlord8337
    @johnlord8337 Před 7 lety

    10* Absolutely love this subject, and the soil diagram made sense that I have been trying to understand since the 80s.

  • @francisabraham8546
    @francisabraham8546 Před 2 měsíci

    Great explanation

  • @alwayswondering4051
    @alwayswondering4051 Před 4 lety +1

    Love this.
    Nothing as crucial, as complex, or as critical as the very ground beneath your feet. Love it.

  • @sydneyolp1696
    @sydneyolp1696 Před 6 lety

    Best teacher ever!

  • @klaraw2594
    @klaraw2594 Před 8 lety +2

    you are the best, thank you so much!

  • @Cucianto
    @Cucianto Před 8 lety

    Fantastic video!

  • @AndyL1014
    @AndyL1014 Před 8 lety +2

    you almost finished my uni unit in 9mins
    thanks a lot, it was very helpful

  • @kuntarinirahsilawati920

    Very helpful. Thank you very much!

  • @mynk9046
    @mynk9046 Před 2 lety

    Very well explained. Helped a lot, Thanks.

  • @allthingsknb
    @allthingsknb Před 8 lety

    Excellent Video.

  • @firasalsibaie4209
    @firasalsibaie4209 Před 6 lety

    Your video is very helpful thanks

  • @johntindell9591
    @johntindell9591 Před 5 lety

    Was very helpful, thank you

  • @loole-vt6dk
    @loole-vt6dk Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks professor lam from somalia you give me good helpful to understand soil formation

  • @kiki.k5684
    @kiki.k5684 Před 5 lety

    WOW ! This video is very HELPFUL :D thanks for making such amazing tutorial video

  • @emmanuelocharles
    @emmanuelocharles Před měsícem

    Great teacher.

  • @adityaarga
    @adityaarga Před 8 lety

    Thanks, i got lots of knowledge from you.

  • @jillsmuttell8282
    @jillsmuttell8282 Před 2 lety

    Great Video!

  • @victorzhang2938
    @victorzhang2938 Před 7 lety

    Superb job!

  • @linhuyenle2148
    @linhuyenle2148 Před 3 lety

    Omg it’s so great. Your lesson help me deal with my homework

  • @jescaanatory6121
    @jescaanatory6121 Před 4 lety

    Great degest...easy to understand

  • @navcom20
    @navcom20 Před 8 lety

    So good. Thank you!

  • @HelloPiya
    @HelloPiya Před 5 lety

    Very nice video.

  • @lizlovin
    @lizlovin Před rokem

    Your amazing this videos helped me for my geology final

  • @kidinPJs
    @kidinPJs Před 4 lety

    good video man. keep up the good work.

  • @kevinbrown2507
    @kevinbrown2507 Před 2 měsíci

    Very informative !

  • @sherriesoultra310
    @sherriesoultra310 Před 5 lety

    That was really awesome thanks

  • @unknown1859
    @unknown1859 Před 8 lety +4

    Paul can you do more Redox Reaction? I'm really struggling at the moment and i understand your teaching way more than any other youtubers thanks

  • @TheMirrorslash
    @TheMirrorslash Před 8 lety

    That was really helpfull. I learned about this stuff in spring and had to dig it up again, this was entertaining and not time consuming :)

  • @cindywilkerson8126
    @cindywilkerson8126 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing🙂

  • @veronicacarvajal4138
    @veronicacarvajal4138 Před 3 lety +1

    I found your videos in highschool, they helped me through my undergrad and now a post grad. Thank you so much for all you do!