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Kec103
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 27 ม.ค. 2013
Problems with Lextran Wheels paratransit service continue
Video project for JOU 204, University of Kentucky, Fall 2022
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coloridentifier
มุมมอง 1148 ปีที่แล้ว
I'm teaching a visually-impaired student how to identify rocks and minerals next semester, so I tested out an audible light probe and color identifier on some samples.
Geology Mannequin Challenge
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featuring geology majors and mining engineers in EES 230 at the University of Kentucky
Geology and Ecosystems of Everglades National Park
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Geology and Ecosystems of Everglades National Park
Maggie knows her minerals (and fossils)
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Maggie identifies some minerals and fossils from her father's collection.
Alguém sabe me dizer porque os rakers de celular bacha esses mapas
Have you watched Nick Zentner at central Washington University geology depth and his online lectures and field trips? Those geologists explain how much material has been added along the west coast from oceanic volcanic zones and also some from other continents .
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst_and_graben. Jenny Lake is a 'sag pond'.
Lex tran need to get this fixed if this new company isn't solving it problem they need to find another company
Just another corporation taking advantage of people. I vote for CEOs to be jailed for corporate criminal crime. Does anything else work? I'm a senior and this is the worst corruption that I have seen in my life. Watch "It's a Wonderful Life" movie to see how jail for corporate executives can motivate more corporate lawfulness.
The video identifies the Middle Teton as Mt. Moran starting around 34:37. It then shows the real Mt. Moran in the next slide. Both have an basalt dike running up their eastern aspect. Mt. Moran has Leigh Lake & Jackson Lake at its base. The Middle Teton is set back into Garnet Canyon.
Thanks! I appreciate the correction.
So,the Grand Tetons have about the same vertical relief as the peaks at the Eastern end of the San Gabriel Mountains (Cucamonga pk,Ontario Pk) but far less than the Mt San Jacinto just West of Palm Springs or the Eastern Sierra Nevada. And the Grand Teton's are about twice the age San Gabriel Mountains just North of Los Angeles.
Fantastic...... Thank you for this.
The Tetons are a very young range. They have little to no foothills. Absolutely beautiful mountains, and very are very assessable. The valley, Jackson Hole, is just paradise as well. The Tetons were lifted up along a fault on the Wyoming side, creating a "hinge" on the west/Idaho side. On the other side of the fault, the valley fell. The valley has since mostly filled in. On the Idaho side of the Tetons, one can walk up to and stand on the hinge where the Tetons begin. Incredible.
A few inaccuracies. Death Valley National Park is the largest US national park outside of Alaska.
Wonderful presentation by a teacher. There are a few minor inaccuracies, but that happens with professional presenters as well. Great job overall. A-
Hi Steve. Appreciate your comments. Can you let me know of the inaccuracies you mentioned? I'm always interested in improving my lectures.
excellent!
Well done.
Hey there Greg. Thought that picture looked familiar.
Exceptional class. Would like to see others posted if you have others on the geology of the National Parks.
I have a bunch of other lectures available, but you have to enroll in the class I teach at the University of Kentucky to get them all! :)
Very interesting. How I can view other lectures on Yellowstone, Hawaii and glacier national Park?
Thanks, and glad you found it interesting! I haven't posted those other lectures publically. This is just one of many that I made for my Geology of the National Parks course that I teach.
@@Kec103 can I ask where do you teach?
@@AnshumanGoel28 University of Kentucky
I really enjoyed this! You mentioned other lectures, are they available somewhere in some capacity? I'd love to learn more!
The other lectures are part of an online course that I teach at my university. Unfortunately, I don't plan on posting that entire content. I'm glad you found this one useful.
PLEASE UPDATES MORE VIDEOS LIKE THIS ❤️❤️❤️🔥🔥🔥🙏🙏🙏
You mention other lectures, but I don’t see them on your channel?
The other lectures are part of an online course that I teach at my university. Unfortunately, I don't plan on posting that entire content. I'm glad you found this one useful.
Fantastic lecture. Thank you very much!
Does anyone have any idea why a geological map is compared to a political map?
Very helpful - great slides and explanations 👍👍 Thank you
Excellent presentation - love your details, tempo and voice. very understandable! thank you!
Really interesting....but I hope there’s not a quiz.... lol. Thank you! TJ
If the process was extension, how did the tetons rise to 13,700 feet? That block must have started at that height, then the eastward block dropped. Or did the western block become uplifted since 40Ma? Then the mountains are not left from extensional processes.
It would appear that the Western Block was dramatically uplifted, with the Eastern Block only moving up as the rest of the continent rose. Note the lack of some of the other older rocks on the Western side of the Tetons. The mountains ARE what is left of the extensional process... All the other rock has eroded away.
Ļving right next door to the Everglades made this a fascinating view. I'm bump up to the Picayune near Naples. It's different here, that's for sure.
I'm from Lakeland, FL myself, but unfortunately only got down to the Everglades once.
Excellent generalized lecture. Thank you for taking the time and expending the effort to share this video.
Excellent overview of the geology of this remarkable park. Thank you!
Do you like The Grand teton national park
What about glacier water melting.
Can you be more specific?
Thank you for posting this great video. I has very great information just the kind of things a amateur Geologist like me loves
Thanks for your kind comments! By the way, I removed the replies that were posted to yours, as they weren't very helpful.
Would you agree that YECs ultimately have to resort to invoking the miraculous to explain the scientific problems with their views, in which case they end up contradicting their own central premise, namely, that all their views can be directly verified through science alone?
Yes, definitely.
Although I'm not a creationist, I think your argument about the Tigris and Euphrates is flawed. The modern day rivers could've been named after the Biblical ones. (Yeah, it's unlikely, but it's the sort of possibility creationists would clutch at.) Apart from that, this was a great video. You made a lot of good and interesting points. Keep up the good work.
I appreciate your comments, Paul. About those rivers, yes, you are correct that the YEC interpretation is that they were named after previous unknown rivers located who knows where. If just the names of the rivers were given in Gen. 2, that might be a remote possibility, but considering that a number of other features are mentioned in this passage that line up with these modern rivers or at least the modern Mid-East region as being the place referred to (e.g., the locations of gold and onyx deposits, bdellium (a fragrant gum resin), and bitumen seeps),I think the balance of the evidence is pretty strong. Carol Hill's paper in Perspectives on Science and Christian faith (where I got this idea) provides additional details. An online copy can be found here: www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/2000/PSCF3-00Hill.html
Incredible! How does she do that? She knows more than me.