I grew up in the Santa Clara valley and often noted that before the Golden Gate was opened by seismic action the next low elevation passage to the sea was the Coyote Creek valley to Morgan Hill, then the Llegas Creek drainage to the Pajaro River, accounting for the huge submarine canyon in Monterey Bay.
I saw a simulation video of the progression of water levels going above sea level and california did get very flooded in the middle, Sacramento was GONE
Because of the amount rain and snow pack we had a couple of years back Lake Tulare has reappeared. That is in the southern valley. Now the town of Cochran is surrounded by water. Lake Tulare would be a good follow up video to this one. Farm land, houses, roads all underwater. I guess the has refilled several times in the past. Once Lake Tulare was the largest body of fresh water west of the Mississippi. Up until the early 1900s Riverboats could make it all the way inland to Fresno from the Sacramento delta on the San Joaquin river. I called BS on that when I first herd that but it is true.
There are atleast 2 lakes that disappeared in the west and that loss of water and the resulting, lake effect, on loc a l weather contributed greatly to the arid nature of the west. One is mentioned here the other is or was lake bonneville in the great basin area to the east towards utah. These two very large lakes were destructed by earthquake s thus altering the enviroment
Although the Giant Ground Sloth 🦥 of the Pleistocene epoch is mentioned, they're not shown in the animations. However the massive Short-faced Bear of that age is shown several times but wasn't named! The giant canid species called the Dire Wolf was mentioned but wasn't well illustrated unfortunately! 'INTERESTING CONTENT HOWEVER I'd prefer water being illustrated flowing downhill and ESPECIALLY A HUMAN VOICED NARRATION! 🇨🇦 🍁 🇺🇸 🌎 🐘 🐘 🐘 🌎 🇺🇲 🍁 🇨🇦
It is doubtful that animals would just drop dead from lack of food or water as portrayed in the video. Animals are resourceful. They would have migrated to areas where food and water can be found.
Animals are not that smart but to me it would seem more likely the animals would simply follow the shoreline of the receding lake for water when the draining period began rather than embarking on some giant migration to completely different area in search of water ?
I grew up in the Santa Clara valley and often noted that before the Golden Gate was opened by seismic action the next low elevation passage to the sea was the Coyote Creek valley to Morgan Hill, then the Llegas Creek drainage to the Pajaro River, accounting for the huge submarine canyon in Monterey Bay.
I speculated that the Central Valley had been a lake on my first drive southbound on I-5 in the early 1970s.
It's "Car-KEEN-ez" Straight.
I'm looking at it right now. :)
I saw a simulation video of the progression of water levels going above sea level and california did get very flooded in the middle, Sacramento was GONE
Because of the amount rain and snow pack we had a couple of years back Lake Tulare has reappeared. That is in the southern valley. Now the town of Cochran is surrounded by water. Lake Tulare would be a good follow up video to this one. Farm land, houses, roads all underwater. I guess the has refilled several times in the past. Once Lake Tulare was the largest body of fresh water west of the Mississippi. Up until the early 1900s Riverboats could make it all the way inland to Fresno from the Sacramento delta on the San Joaquin river. I called BS on that when I first herd that but it is true.
There are atleast 2 lakes that disappeared in the west and that loss of water and the resulting, lake effect, on loc a l weather contributed greatly to the arid nature of the west. One is mentioned here the other is or was lake bonneville in the great basin area to the east towards utah. These two very large lakes were destructed by earthquake s thus altering the enviroment
Although the Giant Ground Sloth 🦥 of the Pleistocene epoch is mentioned, they're not shown in the animations.
However the massive Short-faced Bear of that age is shown several times but wasn't named!
The giant canid species called the Dire Wolf was mentioned but wasn't well illustrated unfortunately!
'INTERESTING CONTENT HOWEVER I'd prefer water being illustrated flowing downhill and ESPECIALLY A HUMAN VOICED NARRATION!
🇨🇦 🍁 🇺🇸 🌎 🐘 🐘 🐘 🌎 🇺🇲 🍁 🇨🇦
Thank you for the feedback!! It's helpful! Working out all the kinks with this new channel.
It is a real voice. He is not a professional though. Maybe he needs some more direction...
The earth changed rotation around the sun and that's it!
Disappeared when nestle sucked it all out to make strawberry flavored “milk”
I think Lake Tulare is partially full again.
It is doubtful that animals would just drop dead from lack of food or water as portrayed in the video. Animals are resourceful. They would have migrated to areas where food and water can be found.
Animals are not that smart but to me it would seem more likely the animals would simply follow the shoreline of the receding lake for water when the draining period began rather than embarking on some giant migration to completely different area in search of water ?
INTERESTING....
YEP!
It disappeared the second dinosaurs started driving diesel trucks...lol
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And wtf.... it's about animals or geology?
Where there's water there is life!
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