This is an *incredible* video, Nick. Excellent job documenting this. I noticed those looked like pillow basalts as well, and my theory is, during a horizon between lava flows (ie a paleosol horizon), there was time for a forest to take root and grow rather old. This could have been a flood plain perhaps, since most of the flows seem to be pretty flat-lying, but essentially whatever river created the flood plain may have been dammed by a lava flow, creating a lake behind the lava dam, submerging the trees and creating a "drowned forest" (you can see good example of these in modern-day earthquake/landslide-dammed lakes) The trees were perhaps under the water for many years before another lava flow came in, but not long enough for the wood to rot away completely-and this lake must have been pretty deep, for the lava to create pillows, rather than exploding in contact with the water and simply vaporizing it-and the pillows that that formed gently entombed the trees, which were probably already white and ghostly even before the lava came in. Since pillow lava is instantly quenched in water, it did not burn away the log, leaving a tree mold, or even char the outside of the log. Just a theory, but seems probable! So cool, thanks again, loved this!
There's a problem with that hypothesis. There was plant growth between flows, but as I understand it, there are different types of trees from several different habitation zones...all in the same level in the stack of basalt flows. Not all the tree types would have been growing in the same area or elevation. It is a fact that a lake of sufficient volume had to be involved, but I don't believe the evidence supports the lake drowning a single forest. Also, from what I gather, the logs were partially or fully petrified before the lave encased them. A given area could change enough over time to go from swamp to forest, but that would require a sampling of trees to constantly be washed into a conveniently placed lake, which then stuck around for a few thousand more years, but even that would not result in the placement of many species of trees in the same layer of basalt. I think there was some event, probably volcanic, which basically blew thousands of trees down over a fairly wide area. Later, it may have been lahars, or 'regular' floods, but some of the resulting snags got washed down into a lake which had formed much like you described. The trees got waterlogged and sat at the bottom in heavily mineralized water for thousands of years before the lava encroached.
@@nevyen149 Yes, that makes sense. You mean, like the logs that clogged Spirit Lake after Mt. St. Helens 1980 eruption, but in a lava-dammed lake, right?
Thank you so much for your wonderful video and geology lessons. It would be near impossible to appreciate the petrified lodge poles without the technology of the drone. Thank you both for your efforts.
I remember Jason from the field trip. He was great and took q and a. This is a really great excursion, too. Thank you Jason and Nick. And thank you to Dave and Jeannie.
Well thank you, Jason and the home owner, Bishop's? You have answered my question on just where IS the Lodgestick. Great video and a wounderful house Thank you to Dave and Jeannie for the view. Yes with the drone I think we can see a few more possible Lodgesticks. This was a great supprise .
Love the personal historical account narratives. Great great storytelling talent you have, Nick as you do realize you make history, live. Many thanks, Jason for the amazing shots and contributing to the beauty of Nick's programs.!! Wow and he sings and plays guitar, oyeee!
Wow! This was lots of fun. It is so amazing to see the tree way up the cliff! Watching drone footage is so amazing because you get to see stuff that you would pretty much never get to see. Also, watching your videos is great because you do all of the work to get us to places most of us wouldn't get to see. So thanks, Nick, for all of your efforts to help us see the beauty and uniqueness of our beautiful planet! And by the way, that house is totally cool and in a totally cool place!
At the 9:40+ section of the video during the slow motion top to bottom of the tree, it looks as though there are many pieces of petrified wood also encased around the log.
Thank You Nick! The people you are collaborating with really are helping to create a more vivid picture and story. Really liking digging into the details and solidifying POI we have seen along the way!
Thank you for getting the couple and Jason to collaborate in making this video. Ever since you mentioned that tree, it has been a curiosity to me. I didn't see the other small tree you mentioned, but I did see a hole to the left of the tree at the base. Wondering if that hole could have been another tree that broke away, or just a piece of pillow lava that fell out of the wall? Another ancient lake that formed in between the lava flows. Such varied terrane during those times.
This was amazing! Thank you Nick and Jason and the nice people who let you come to their property. It was just so beautiful! I wish I could touch that tree just to make sure it’s really petrified. 😂
Wonderful video. Although a botanist, I have always loved geology. In the 1980's I worked on "Vegetation Associated With Diabse Dikes & Sills in the Gettysburg Basin, PA" for my PhD in plant ecosystems at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. During my work, the Triassic Basin became a Jurassic Basin with an international geology conference. I had a fair brush w/ paleobotany and a Devonian paleobotanist (Dr. Pat Gensel) on my doctoral committee.
Super video, thanks for the views. I'm surprised they haven't explored the wall for additional trees. The TV just had a special on the Sandstone Amphitheatre in Colorado. As a novice drone flyer, I appreciate how well he did with the wing. Great stuff!!!
Wow. Incredible video. I heard you reference this in another video and now I get to see it. I have a drone myself but not the talent displayed here. Thanks
Thanks Nick and Jason for the video and thanks to the Bishops for access (for Nick and Jason). I love these kind of drone videos and images with a voice over from Nick.
From Captain T.W. Symons (1882, p. 45), "Nearly precipitous bluffs…composed of columnar black basalt, which takes many wonderful shapes…rivaling the Giant's Causeway of Ireland in weird beauty. The columns are in every conceivable position, sometimes piled up like cordwood, in some places erect, and others inclined; some great masses are twisted and bent, forming niches, arches, grottos, crowns, etc. In one of these niches…there lies in an inclined position a stick of timber, barkless and white with age. It never grew there. It is a thousand feet from the top of the bluffs, and could not have been put there from above. The only way in which it could have reached its present position was by being caught there when the river was thousand feet higher than it is now, drifting in and lodging, and being left there…My pilot, "Old Pierre", an Indian pilot and voyageur of the old Hudson Bay Company, said that this log was a landmark in the days when this company transported their furs and merchandise up and down the river in bateaux…Indians always considered that the log was left there when the river was up at that height…It may be that the log is petrified, but I had no means of getting at it to determine."
This is a great video! I'm surprised there are so many views but so few likes. I'd give it two thumbs up! Nick you should seriously consider creating and narrating a documentary of Washington geology.
i read somewhere that wood can petrify much faster in certain conditions. like as quick as 10000. but i cant remember where i read it and how truthful that was.
Way cool program! To think about those ancient forests that once stood there, which seem to have more layers of basalt beneath them… and how the forests must have been in a way different climate. It’s all just mind boggling. I always think Nick needs to get a drone for his own walks around geology.
Since I first began hearing you talking about this "lodgestick" I've been wondering how I can get there, how I can see this, would I have to rent a boat? THANK YOU FOR THIS! Now I don't need to. This is a better view than any human has ever seen this log. And I never realized how close I was to it (well I didn't even know it existed) going to see rock bands at Gorge @ George Ampitheatre. Thanks Jason and thanks Nick for another great video!
Looks like there are at least 2 stumps on the same horizon, one maybe 50m to the right somewhat downhill, casting a shadow and the other 100m to the left (both visible around 18:45 )
A question. There appear fairly clear layers to the volcanic deposits, above and below the tree spot, but the one just at that appears to be somewhat bulged, would that reflect the topography at the time, a lumpy landscape (where vegetation clusters including trees could have occurred, at least till that next wave of eruptions came along to fill over it, killing trees, some of which end up petrified.
One possible explanation is that the trees were logs floating in a lake. The logs were multiple species swept into this lake by a flood from the Cascades to the west. The basalt flow encroached on this lake from fissures in the east. When hot liquid rock enters water the outer surface cools rapidly, forming shapes called pillow lavas. These encase the log in solid rock without incinerating it because steam has carried away most of the heat. The lake boils off leaving a thick layer of solid, warm rock marbled with the remnants of trees. Later basalt flows bury the earlier episodes which are insulating their embedded logs from incineration. Some flows cool slowly, forming columnar layers because they didn't touch a large body of water. Millions of years pass, allowing petrification to proceed undisturbed. My opinion of this great footage is that the lodgepole is surrounded by pillowed lava but other elevations on the cliff face show columnar shapes, but the latter are not near the log. *SUGGESTED VIEWING* th-cam.com/video/nfbMxrPnYcc/w-d-xo.html
N.P. Campbell (1975, p. 68) mentions "the remains of a large vertical petrified log known as the Gray Lady" in basalt cliff along Selah Creek near an old road tunnel off Firing Center Road. Still there?
MAN I AM A SUPPER GEEK ,that was sooo cool ! thanks Nick and Jason more drone footage please! surprised no one have repelled down to get a better look wonder what kind of wood ? did you see the root was it also petrified also ? thanks again
Worth noting that there were many types of construction for lodges ans other American Indian dwellings. Interior of Ceremonial Lodge, Columbia River - 1846 i.pinimg.com/originals/7e/47/f1/7e47f11a50b4ef05768633999edf8276.jpg
Yes, it appears the Yakima people of modern Washington state did use tipis, similar to the various Sioux tribes who are more well known for this type of building. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakama#/media/File:Yakimatent.jpg
NICK....thank- you. My curiosity in geology and history is always captured by your videos.
Me, too!
We just need to figure out how to clone him.
This is an *incredible* video, Nick. Excellent job documenting this. I noticed those looked like pillow basalts as well, and my theory is, during a horizon between lava flows (ie a paleosol horizon), there was time for a forest to take root and grow rather old. This could have been a flood plain perhaps, since most of the flows seem to be pretty flat-lying, but essentially whatever river created the flood plain may have been dammed by a lava flow, creating a lake behind the lava dam, submerging the trees and creating a "drowned forest" (you can see good example of these in modern-day earthquake/landslide-dammed lakes) The trees were perhaps under the water for many years before another lava flow came in, but not long enough for the wood to rot away completely-and this lake must have been pretty deep, for the lava to create pillows, rather than exploding in contact with the water and simply vaporizing it-and the pillows that that formed gently entombed the trees, which were probably already white and ghostly even before the lava came in. Since pillow lava is instantly quenched in water, it did not burn away the log, leaving a tree mold, or even char the outside of the log. Just a theory, but seems probable! So cool, thanks again, loved this!
Avana, Thank you for sharing your great theory! I was lost in visualizing this. And shocked when he mentioned pillow basalts.
There's a problem with that hypothesis. There was plant growth between flows, but as I understand it, there are different types of trees from several different habitation zones...all in the same level in the stack of basalt flows. Not all the tree types would have been growing in the same area or elevation. It is a fact that a lake of sufficient volume had to be involved, but I don't believe the evidence supports the lake drowning a single forest. Also, from what I gather, the logs were partially or fully petrified before the lave encased them.
A given area could change enough over time to go from swamp to forest, but that would require a sampling of trees to constantly be washed into a conveniently placed lake, which then stuck around for a few thousand more years, but even that would not result in the placement of many species of trees in the same layer of basalt.
I think there was some event, probably volcanic, which basically blew thousands of trees down over a fairly wide area. Later, it may have been lahars, or 'regular' floods, but some of the resulting snags got washed down into a lake which had formed much like you described. The trees got waterlogged and sat at the bottom in heavily mineralized water for thousands of years before the lava encroached.
@@nevyen149 Yes, that makes sense. You mean, like the logs that clogged Spirit Lake after Mt. St. Helens 1980 eruption, but in a lava-dammed lake, right?
@@AvanaVana Exactly the visual I had in mind!
Thank you so much for your wonderful video and geology lessons. It would be near impossible to appreciate the petrified lodge poles without the technology of the drone. Thank you both for your efforts.
A house with picture frames instead of windows. Spectacular! Just beautiful Dave & Jeannie! Thanks Nick, good fun!
I'd love to stay a week or two in that house as an AirBnB but I'd never blame someone for never wanting to rent such a beautiful home out
Thank you Jason and Nick! Fantastic! My Dad graduated from Central and loved geology. Wish he was alive to see this. I love geology too.
Stunning footage! Beautifully done by Jason, and framed so well by the geologic story Nick tells like no one else!
That animation at the end gave me goose bumps!
I remember Jason from the field trip. He was great and took q and a. This is a really great excursion, too. Thank you Jason and Nick. And thank you to Dave and Jeannie.
Liked the flood behind the"Gorge". Great. Video.
One of my favorites, well done Nick, thanks, Jason and the land owners too.
Well thank you, Jason and the home owner, Bishop's? You have answered my question on just where IS the Lodgestick. Great video and a wounderful house Thank you to Dave and Jeannie for the view. Yes with the drone I think we can see a few more possible Lodgesticks. This was a great supprise .
Thank you Nick for providing factual videos full of information on TH-cam. It's hard to find truthful videos like your on TH-cam.
Perfect start to the day. Watched it while washing up here in UK. Thank you!
Amazing columns around that timber!
Thanks, Nick for another fun video! Thanks, Jason for the great footage!
Thank you, Nick, for sharing this with us and educating us to the wonders of our past.
Love the personal historical account narratives. Great great storytelling talent you have, Nick as you do realize you make history, live. Many thanks, Jason for the amazing shots and contributing to the beauty of Nick's programs.!! Wow and he sings and plays guitar, oyeee!
This was so thrilling! Loved hearing one more new historical reference I had not previously been aware of as well. Thanks Jason and Nick!
Wow! This was lots of fun. It is so amazing to see the tree way up the cliff! Watching drone footage is so amazing because you get to see stuff that you would pretty much never get to see. Also, watching your videos is great because you do all of the work to get us to places most of us wouldn't get to see. So thanks, Nick, for all of your efforts to help us see the beauty and uniqueness of our beautiful planet! And by the way, that house is totally cool and in a totally cool place!
Wonderful, in every sense. Thanks again to everyone who made it possible.
One downside to watching Nick's videos is realizing how geologically challenged my own area is.
You know, I lived in Kansas my whole life and his videos are one of the reasons I now live in the Seattle area, and I am loving it here.
Amazing drone shots! The petrified tree is so tall! It’s great to get a close up look and see the rocks around it! Thanks Nick and Jason! 👌- Jennifer
At the 9:40+ section of the video during the slow motion top to bottom of the tree, it looks as though there are many pieces of petrified wood also encased around the log.
Thank You Nick!
The people you are collaborating with really are helping to create a more vivid picture and story. Really liking digging into the details and solidifying POI we have seen along the way!
Thank you for getting the couple and Jason to collaborate in making this video. Ever since you mentioned that tree, it has been a curiosity to me. I didn't see the other small tree you mentioned, but I did see a hole to the left of the tree at the base. Wondering if that hole could have been another tree that broke away, or just a piece of pillow lava that fell out of the wall? Another ancient lake that formed in between the lava flows. Such varied terrane during those times.
Yes I noticed there was a shallow basalt cave there, not deep enough to be a bat cave but deep enough to be a nice bird rest area.
Thank you Nick, and Jason! That's a great view of the tree. 👍
Spectacular work... thank you everyone... the river bed cobbles at the base of the lodgestick (@27:00) are fantastic!
Thank you so much Nick and Jason! So beautiful.
Amazing resulting image of the log
Thank you,Nick.From switzerland. 👋
If I remember correctly Dave and Jeanie Bishop were at the pop up geology event for West Bank. Thanks Fave and Jeanie!
This was amazing! Thank you Nick and Jason and the nice people who let you come to their property. It was just so beautiful! I wish I could touch that tree just to make sure it’s really petrified. 😂
Thank you to all involved. Really beautiful and interesting.
What a view!! Oh my!!! 😳
Wow!!! Beautifully done all around. 😍 Thank you Nick and Jason!
Wow oh Wozza that was just pretty slick. I just loved seeing this, thank you Jason, I will try and find more of your photos.
Excellent!!!
Very
Interesting 🙏
Thanks as always!
Now the drones can get some rock samples 🤗🤗🤗🤗👌
The stunning features created by the nearly incomprehensible physics, well presented. Another fine teach Prof.
Wonderful video. Although a botanist, I have always loved geology. In the 1980's I worked on "Vegetation Associated With Diabse Dikes & Sills in the Gettysburg Basin, PA" for my PhD in plant ecosystems at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. During my work, the Triassic Basin became a Jurassic Basin with an international geology conference. I had a fair brush w/ paleobotany and a Devonian paleobotanist (Dr. Pat Gensel) on my doctoral committee.
Thanks for the tour! Amazing footage!
Super video, thanks for the views. I'm surprised they haven't explored the wall for additional trees. The TV just had a special on the Sandstone Amphitheatre in Colorado. As a novice drone flyer, I appreciate how well he did with the wing.
Great stuff!!!
Funny, closed captions calls it Logitech Bluff!
Thank you so much for this. What a thrill to see this up close.
Wow. Incredible video. I heard you reference this in another video and now I get to see it. I have a drone myself but not the talent displayed here. Thanks
Fabulous production Nick. I loved every minute of it. Thanks again.
Fascinating! Thanks for sharing.
What a treat …thanks Jason! Nice job Nick!
Thanks Nick and Jason for the video and thanks to the Bishops for access (for Nick and Jason). I love these kind of drone videos and images with a voice over from Nick.
Nick, would love to hear you explain in more detail just what we are seeing in that wall that holds the Lodgestick.
From Captain T.W. Symons (1882, p. 45), "Nearly precipitous bluffs…composed of columnar black basalt, which takes many wonderful shapes…rivaling the Giant's Causeway of Ireland in weird beauty. The columns are in every conceivable position, sometimes piled up like cordwood, in some places erect, and others inclined; some great masses are twisted and bent, forming niches, arches, grottos, crowns, etc. In one of these niches…there lies in an inclined position a stick of timber, barkless and white with age. It never grew there. It is a thousand feet from the top of the bluffs, and could not have been put there from above. The only way in which it could have reached its present position was by being caught there when the river was thousand feet higher than it is now, drifting in and lodging, and being left there…My pilot, "Old Pierre", an Indian pilot and voyageur of the old Hudson Bay Company, said that this log was a landmark in the days when this company transported their furs and merchandise up and down the river in bateaux…Indians always considered that the log was left there when the river was up at that height…It may be that the log is petrified, but I had no means of getting at it to determine."
Thanks for these amazing images!!!
Truly amazing
Wow, the scenery is great.
What an amazing drone video, an amazing home.
Superb. cheers Nick.
This is a great video! I'm surprised there are so many views but so few likes. I'd give it two thumbs up! Nick you should seriously consider creating and narrating a documentary of Washington geology.
Can't ask for much more than that!
i read somewhere that wood can petrify much faster in certain conditions. like as quick as 10000. but i cant remember where i read it and how truthful that was.
Wow, just wow, thank you.
Way cool program! To think about those ancient forests that once stood there, which seem to have more layers of basalt beneath them… and how the forests must have been in a way different climate. It’s all just mind boggling. I always think Nick needs to get a drone for his own walks around geology.
Wow! What a view!
Absolutely love this! One of your coolest videos yet! Thanks Nick and Jason!! BTW- if that house ever goes on sale I want it!😎
Great video; thank you for posting this interesting site and the background information.
Since I first began hearing you talking about this "lodgestick" I've been wondering how I can get there, how I can see this, would I have to rent a boat? THANK YOU FOR THIS! Now I don't need to. This is a better view than any human has ever seen this log. And I never realized how close I was to it (well I didn't even know it existed) going to see rock bands at Gorge @ George Ampitheatre. Thanks Jason and thanks Nick for another great video!
Stunning ! Thanks a lot! 🥰❣️
Looks like there are at least 2 stumps on the same horizon, one maybe 50m to the right somewhat downhill, casting a shadow and the other 100m to the left (both visible around 18:45 )
A question. There appear fairly clear layers to the volcanic deposits, above and below the tree spot, but the one just at that appears to be somewhat bulged, would that reflect the topography at the time, a lumpy landscape (where vegetation clusters including trees could have occurred, at least till that next wave of eruptions came along to fill over it, killing trees, some of which end up petrified.
One possible explanation is that the trees were logs floating in a lake. The logs were multiple species swept into this lake by a flood from the Cascades to the west. The basalt flow encroached on this lake from fissures in the east. When hot liquid rock enters water the outer surface cools rapidly, forming shapes called pillow lavas. These encase the log in solid rock without incinerating it because steam has carried away most of the heat. The lake boils off leaving a thick layer of solid, warm rock marbled with the remnants of trees.
Later basalt flows bury the earlier episodes which are insulating their embedded logs from incineration. Some flows cool slowly, forming columnar layers because they didn't touch a large body of water. Millions of years pass, allowing petrification to proceed undisturbed.
My opinion of this great footage is that the lodgepole is surrounded by pillowed lava but other elevations on the cliff face show columnar shapes, but the latter are not near the log.
*SUGGESTED VIEWING* th-cam.com/video/nfbMxrPnYcc/w-d-xo.html
Awesomeness !!!!
Wow, the bottom of the tree looked like a lava tree well.
Amazing. Thank you.
I enjoyed this tremendously. Thank you.
Thanks Nick!
This is amazing!!!
Awesome, a must share...
N.P. Campbell (1975, p. 68) mentions "the remains of a large vertical petrified log known as the Gray Lady" in basalt cliff along Selah Creek near an old road tunnel off Firing Center Road. Still there?
So Cool Nick...So Cool.
MAN I AM A SUPPER GEEK ,that was sooo cool ! thanks Nick and Jason more drone footage please! surprised no one have repelled down to get a better look wonder what kind of wood ? did you see the root was it also petrified also ? thanks again
Brilliant, many thanks.
I did not know about that log. Thank you for a great video.
Great episode.
Professor Nick, "Lodge-Stick" refers to one of the poles that holds up the skins, or cloth on the outside of a Tepee, or "Lodge". Ask Randy. ;)
Ditto. a.k.a. Lodge pole.
Worth noting that there were many types of construction for lodges ans other American Indian dwellings.
Interior of Ceremonial Lodge, Columbia River - 1846
i.pinimg.com/originals/7e/47/f1/7e47f11a50b4ef05768633999edf8276.jpg
Yes, it appears the Yakima people of modern Washington state did use tipis, similar to the various Sioux tribes who are more well known for this type of building.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakama#/media/File:Yakimatent.jpg
@@AvanaVana Yes, the picture I found is of a structure attributed to a branch of the Chinook tribe on the Lower Columbia River.
Another great lecture. Thank you.
Nick, I'm a big fan.
You probably would benefit by looking at the works of Andrew Hall.
That was great! Thanks Motojow photography!!! Thanks Nick?
Wonderful video. You have really upped the editing skills!
This has been an excellent video!
Excellent.
That was cool at the end! Nice work!~
Great video! Thank you!
Great perspective. Organizing the timeline. If correctly done would make a great true story.
Thank you, well done!
Looks like there’s pillows all around it
love it
Good work!!
great video cool subject
Great programs, I am enjoying them very much. How can a wooden log survive being imbedded in lava without being burned to a cinder?
I wonder what the white rectangular object is at 18:05 to the right of the lodgestick on the same plane in the lower right of the screen is.
Great vid , Nick!
Talk about a bird’s eye view.
Very cool! Any idea if Lodgestick is visible from either the Lower Ancient Lakes trail or from the Quincey Lakes area- all public access.