Please be sure to LIKE and SUBSCRIBE. You can support my educational videos by clicking on the "Thanks" button just above (right of Like button) or by going here: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EWUSLG3GBS5W8 Or: www.buymeacoffee.com/shawnwillsey
In 1966 I was a freshman taking Geo 101. Scientific American magazine (before it became a political science publication) had an article about continental drift. Being a foolish freshman I asked the professor , who was the head of the department, if this made sense. As I recall nearly 60 years ago, one argument had to do with coast line levels. His reply was something about cyclothems, some sort of periodic fluctuation in seal levels due to unknown reasons. After two years in geology, with a dexterity failure in preparing thin sections on slides t identify minerals., I switched to math as a major. After teaching in high school I managed to get into Duke as a grad student in computer science, met my wife of 44 years, and pretty much lived happily ever after. But I'm still a geology dilettante, and watch you and Nick Zentner as often as possible.
Thankyou professor Shawn. I'am 59 years old and I really enjoy listening and watching your Islandic, Hawaian and geological videos. Your English is easy to understand even though I'm Mexican. Enjoy your trip with your family.
I first learned about Wegener and continental drift in high school in Germany, which got me quite interested in geology in general. That was some 45 years ago, and life and other interests took over. Then I started following you for the Iceland updates. Have watched all of your videos since, plus many from other channels, and I love geology more than ever. Thank you!
PERFECT timing. Have seen all your mineral lessons, roadside geology, “field trips”, and volcano reporting. (All Absolutely wonderful.). Visited Ohio friend and in her backyard were fossils and clamshells in the rocks! No ocean for hundreds of miles, so got me wondering…now i am waiting for geology 101 lesson #3.
Thank you Shawn. I just Googled "best teaching styles" and your name was at the top of the list. Just kidding, but you are among the top 1-2 educators I have seen in action over my long career.
Looking forward to your future episodes, especially on continental Africa, I've been curious ever since reading Thomas Sowell's observations on the geological, geographical, and climatological influences on cultural development. What struck me was that Africa is, for the most part, a high plateau with the East coast being very steep, and so on. Thank you, most informative and engaging.
Best refresher I've ever had ! Not only the 101 but also the live streams and your other videos.Thanks you so much again. If someone had promised me a geology prof like you, I would have dared to study it! Ended up in humanities ...well, was o.k. 🙂
About 1960 I commented to my Geography teacher about the similarity of Western Africa to South America in my GCE O level course. He dismissed it as pure coincidence. He probably studied for his degree about 1930
Thanks for illuminating the distinction between continental drift and plate tectonics. In my mind, they've always been synonymous, which is why I thought PT was obvious long before that mechanism was discovered. Eager to see what new knowledge Lesson 3 will impart.
I looked up the plates that Indonesia is on. Wow! No wonder its geology is so turbulent. I have a brother buried there and have visited, thus my interest. Thanks, Shawn.
Hi Shawn Willsey, great job as always, particularly like that it is so natural flowing from you with ease. I grew up near the Hudson River and first climbed on the crude , crumbling basalt columns of the Palisades and remember from a kid learning it was identical to a wall on the northern coast of Africa.
Thanks Shawn for this class on plate tectonic. How fascinating. You explained it so well. I was so fascinated by what you were saying that the time flew by. I really enjoyed it. You are a very good teacher. Again thank you.
I know one thing that's evidence of plate tectonics is that the mountains we have in the north of Scotland have been discovered to be the same range as the Appalachians!
I started this video soon after you uploaded it, but life got unexpectedly busy and I’ve had to wait until Saturday night to finish it. Argh! You really have a gift for laying out a good survey course amount of learning, especially given you’re not getting any personal feedback from seeing our faces in the same room or know the backgrounds of all of your viewers. I’ve been rewatching or watching your rock and mineral ID videos, older videos and all the current ones. I purchased the Simon & Schuster rock & mineral book you recommended, too. I’m a college prof too, in music, so from one to another, I tip my hat to you: respect and appreciation from Minnesota!
I look forward to more episodes. At college...a long time ago...I focused my science requirements on earth the sciences. I took intro to geology, physical geography, geomorphology, cartography, and urban geography. The latter one also involved history and social science. I had several field trips in the Arizona desert. My favorite was to an alluvial fan.
Thank you so much, Prof Willsey. I am super excited about your initiative to deliver lectures about important geology topics, in addition to the fieldwork videos you have been doing. I cannot thank you enough. Cheers. The lectures about the basics of geology are really helpful for people like myself. Thank you.
I once saw an animation of the western US being pulled apart and Nevada gets split into two with a new seaway up and down in the center. Las Vegas will be a seaport on the Pacific Ocean about 15 to 20 million years from now! It also showed a new coastal mountain range going up and down the western edge along the part that the LA to Portland drifted area will be looking at to its east by then. Fascinating continetal drift stuff professor.
At start of your lecture, you mention "in person lab". Do you drill holes down and create mini volcano in your lab so students get to scoop up some lava to dip it in a water-filled bucket and then analyze it? 🙂 Do you let lava flow in corridors so students can see the difference between A-Ah and Pahoehoe 🙂 BTW, did you ever watch the series "From the Earth to the Moon" ? One episode at end of series is dedicated to geologists teaching astronauts on what to look for on the moon.
Yet another exciting episode of your Geology 101 series! Again, you have a captivating way of explaining complicated things. I can't thank you enough for doing this, Shawn :) When I was young, plate tectonics was somewhat "new", barely known to the general public and not taught at all in French schools before the 80s anyway. When I later found out about it, I was fascinated... Also, very interested in what you said about the magnetic signature of rocks, hope to dig further into this... And now on to Tectonics part 2! ;)
This is great! I'm going to recommend this series to friends who are interested in geology. Just liked and subscribed with the first video. I've loved the whole topic of geology since the age of 12 (blame Jules Verne lol) and yours is one of the best online series on TH-cam. Thank you for uploading, Professor. Your channel is one of the reasons I refer to TH-cam as my "free university".
Thank You!!🤗 You are such a fantastic teacher and make everything soo easy to understand and soo interesting!!👍 If I would have had You as my teacher in school I would definatley have become a geologist!! Glad to get to learn all this now !! Better late than never!! 🤗👍
You are so welcome! Thanks for your kind comments.
3 หลายเดือนก่อน
I love your geologylessons! I Think I'm learning! 😅 At least I'm paying attention now - as a teen in school, not so much.. 🫣 Thank You Professor! Looking forward to 101 #2 part 2 ! Wishing you + fam. a nice weekend! Greetings from Värmland Sweden
Thank you so much Shawn for all your lessons!🙏🏼My story is exactly like the story of @mungbean60. My life and understanding of our planet became so much richer because of you! Besides you’re a great teacher you are a very likable person. Love from the Netherlands 🧡🙏🏼🧡
as a boy growing up in the 1950's I always thought the continents were at one time one piece and through time, they grew apart. I would say this to teachers and others resulting to me being ignored as a dreamer
Thanks Prof Shawn for the lesson. I wondered what extra info could be found via the TH-cam links to your slides on continental movements and Earth's magnetic field - the 1st worked fine but the 2nd linked video no longer exists. You're welcome ;)
That animation for the future 50 million years or so did not include the formation of a new, fairly large island near East Africa. As far as I know, East Africa is rifting and eventually will move to the east, carrying Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and parts of a few other countries with it.
Ahh first year lectures again! Love it! I’d forgotten the details. What’s new to me is the future predictions of the plates. Thanks again. (Sent a PayPal donation the other week - really appreciate all your work and time).
Thanks, I enjoyed that a lot. Lately there's been talk of New Zealand being part of a "new" continent or plate. I look forward to any input you share about that.
Thanks for the video Shawn. I would have thought that you would have put the seafloor spreading earlier in the video for more of a chronological order of relevant discoveries where the bands of magnetic reversal in the sea floors that was discovered during WW II by the navies searching for submarines.
Maybe beyond an= 101 course, but would be interested for your take on the work of Karin Sigloch tracking what happens to subducting plates as the go down.
6:10 Surprised to see your animation has North America drifting northward over the next 50 million years. I thought that the general motion of (most of) North America currently is slightly south of due west, with NA having peaked in northerly latitude several millions of years ago.
I have a strong notion that we oversimplify the structures of the mantle and how everything works under the plates. And the fact that the continents were one giant landmass in ancient times should not have been a surprise to anyone: 'And God said, “Let the water under the sky be gathered to one place, and let dry ground appear.” And it was so.' ~Genesis 1:9
From a cartoon by, I think was, Anderson and that I think appeared in "Summit." Picture an Arctic waste, flat with distant hills on the horizon. Empty dog sled with the harnesses lying empty on the ice. An expedition member reporting to the leader on the situation: "Sir, we've eaten the last of the geologists."
Theoretically, how high could the Himalayas get before their height simply crushes and laterally fluidizes the lower rocks? Right now I calculate about 35,000 psi (didn't show my work) under Mount Everest.
@shawnwillsey Naive question about your comments about the climate changes when australia moves north or baja california goes north- I was under the impression that the placement of the continents also affects the oceanic and atmospheric currents. So as the plates keep moving the weather patterns worldwide might significantly change. Perhaps you might cover this aspect as you describe the plates in more detail.
In my experience, climatology and oceanography is not really discussed in an intro geology class. Could be that Shawn will make a mention of climate changes when he covers deep time in an example later, but this video may be all that is covered about climate in this class. Yet, AFAIK, there is no easy way to determine an expected climate by looking at land distribution on the planet.
@@TheDanEdwards Let's see what Shawn says. Geogirl had some videos covering how the ocean currents were affected. For example if there is no Atlantic ocean there is no gulf stream carrying warm waters to Europe...
Shawn, thanks so much for posting this content. I always wished that I taken a course in geology while in college, and now that I'm retired, I have time to enjoy your videos. What text do you use with your course?
Very tiny detail, but the animation showing the United Kingdom docking to France, caused me to smile from ear to ear: the English will be so pissed ;-)
So glaciers emanating from Southern polar regions ok. So that was a land mass . But arctic gives no glaciers - Is that right ?? It is all deep ocean even today ? (territorial claims abound). So interesting and many thanks for the stimulating lesson .
Prof Willsey, I noticed that the shapes of the continents seemed to fit together as a child of 8 or 9 in 60s1! Possibly thanks to the National Geographics my grandparents provided for me! I should also mention, my interest in the subject is also due in part to a HS friend, who became a geologist! We lost him as he was exploring Alaska via helicopter. They went down, no survivors. He was a good friend, I think of often! Thanks for letting me share! And, excellent post, although I'm only 9min in.. !!
Interesting as I did also about that time and the same age. I remember telling the teacher and he laughed at me. He did not know that scientists were already accepting the Pangea theory. I have also noticed that Pangea also resemble a perfect circle (with a little tweaking) and this has more increased my believe recently by the discovery of another continental crust Zealandia which would have been at the Tethys sea. However I do not know the reason for this.
Please be sure to LIKE and SUBSCRIBE. You can support my educational videos by clicking on the "Thanks" button just above (right of Like button) or by going here: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EWUSLG3GBS5W8 Or: www.buymeacoffee.com/shawnwillsey
You're a naturally born teacher. Thank you
Wow, thank you!
This is so fascinating! You know your teacher is outstanding when the presentation flies by and you don’t want it to end. 👏🏼
In 1966 I was a freshman taking Geo 101. Scientific American magazine (before it became a political science publication) had an article about continental drift. Being a foolish freshman I asked the professor , who was the head of the department, if this made sense. As I recall nearly 60 years ago, one argument had to do with coast line levels. His reply was something about cyclothems, some sort of periodic fluctuation in seal levels due to unknown reasons. After two years in geology, with a dexterity failure in preparing thin sections on slides t identify minerals., I switched to math as a major. After teaching in high school I managed to get into Duke as a grad student in computer science, met my wife of 44 years, and pretty much lived happily ever after. But I'm still a geology dilettante, and watch you and Nick Zentner as often as possible.
Thank you - it helps solve my "I wish I had taken Geology in college" need
Same here.
Thankyou professor Shawn. I'am 59 years old and I really enjoy listening and watching your Islandic, Hawaian and geological videos. Your English is easy to understand even though I'm Mexican. Enjoy your trip with your family.
Excelente!
I'm 71 and still passionate about geology and learning about our earth. Also LOVE to meet people who are also interested in this!
I first learned about Wegener and continental drift in high school in Germany, which got me quite interested in geology in general. That was some 45 years ago, and life and other interests took over. Then I started following you for the Iceland updates. Have watched all of your videos since, plus many from other channels, and I love geology more than ever. Thank you!
Awesome. Glad to hear this.
thanks professor, you really explain this complex stuff in understandable words.
PERFECT timing. Have seen all your mineral lessons, roadside geology, “field trips”, and volcano reporting. (All Absolutely wonderful.). Visited Ohio friend and in her backyard were fossils and clamshells in the rocks! No ocean for hundreds of miles, so got me wondering…now i am waiting for geology 101 lesson #3.
Wow! Fantastic explanation, thanks Shawn for sharing your knowledge with us 👍
Appreciate these so much Shawn, thank you.
Thank you Shawn. I just Googled "best teaching styles" and your name was at the top of the list. Just kidding, but you are among the top 1-2 educators I have seen in action over my long career.
Looking forward to your future episodes, especially on continental Africa, I've been curious ever since reading Thomas Sowell's observations on the geological, geographical, and climatological influences on cultural development. What struck me was that Africa is, for the most part, a high plateau with the East coast being very steep, and so on. Thank you, most informative and engaging.
Truly loving this new series, much appreciated!!
Best refresher I've ever had ! Not only the 101 but also the live streams and your other videos.Thanks you so much again. If someone had promised me a geology prof like you, I would have dared to study it! Ended up in humanities ...well, was o.k. 🙂
Can't wait for the next episode. We will find out if I remember the basic tectonic boundaries, convergent, divergent and strike slip.
About 1960 I commented to my Geography teacher about the similarity of Western Africa to South America in my GCE O level course. He dismissed it as pure coincidence. He probably studied for his degree about 1930
Yes I did the same around the same time...and got the same answer!!😆
Thanks! Finally getting around to pony-ing up. All the Iceland material, interviews, random road cuts, and now this 101 series.
Although I didn't make it my career, Geology has always been my favorite subject and I was blessed to live in the Eastern Sierra for 16 years
the paleomagnetism story was really interested story, thanks again Dr. Shwan Willsey
There's actually a documnetary series about what Australia will look like in that future. It's called Mad Max. ;)
Ha!
Thanks for illuminating the distinction between continental drift and plate tectonics. In my mind, they've always been synonymous, which is why I thought PT was obvious long before that mechanism was discovered.
Eager to see what new knowledge Lesson 3 will impart.
Thank you! Such a clear presentation of tectonics. Interesting to see what the continental lineup looks like next. Baja BC, The Sequel!
I looked up the plates that Indonesia is on. Wow! No wonder its geology is so turbulent. I have a brother buried there and have visited, thus my interest. Thanks, Shawn.
Thank you so much, Professor, you're absolutely fascinating to listen to.
Thank you, Shawn. The time just flew by, it was fascinating to get some of the history around the development of the theory of plate tectonics.
Hi Shawn Willsey, great job as always, particularly like that it is so natural flowing from you with ease. I grew up near the Hudson River and first climbed on the crude , crumbling basalt columns of the Palisades and remember from a kid learning it was identical to a wall on the northern coast of Africa.
Thanks for giving us the opportunity to get the basics. Really fascinating and so clearly taught!
Thanks Shawn for this class on plate tectonic. How fascinating. You explained it so well. I was so fascinated by what you were saying that the time flew by. I really enjoyed it. You are a very good teacher. Again thank you.
I really love these lectures. They reinforce what I learned many years ago.
I know one thing that's evidence of plate tectonics is that the mountains we have in the north of Scotland have been discovered to be the same range as the Appalachians!
This leads to a lot more questions for me - looking forward to future videos!
I started this video soon after you uploaded it, but life got unexpectedly busy and I’ve had to wait until Saturday night to finish it. Argh! You really have a gift for laying out a good survey course amount of learning, especially given you’re not getting any personal feedback from seeing our faces in the same room or know the backgrounds of all of your viewers. I’ve been rewatching or watching your rock and mineral ID videos, older videos and all the current ones. I purchased the Simon & Schuster rock & mineral book you recommended, too. I’m a college prof too, in music, so from one to another, I tip my hat to you: respect and appreciation from Minnesota!
I look forward to more episodes. At college...a long time ago...I focused my science requirements on earth the sciences. I took intro to geology, physical geography, geomorphology, cartography, and urban geography. The latter one also involved history and social science. I had several field trips in the Arizona desert. My favorite was to an alluvial fan.
Thank you so much, Prof Willsey. I am super excited about your initiative to deliver lectures about important geology topics, in addition to the fieldwork videos you have been doing. I cannot thank you enough. Cheers. The lectures about the basics of geology are really helpful for people like myself. Thank you.
Very enjoyable, many thanks for taking your time to help others
I was a geology major at USC in the late 60’s; plate tectonics was just entering the text books and lectures.
I once saw an animation of the western US being pulled apart and Nevada gets split into two with a new seaway up
and down in the center. Las Vegas will be a seaport on the Pacific Ocean about 15 to 20 million years from now! It
also showed a new coastal mountain range going up and down the western edge along the part that the LA to Portland
drifted area will be looking at to its east by then. Fascinating continetal drift stuff professor.
Thank you Shawn.
At start of your lecture, you mention "in person lab". Do you drill holes down and create mini volcano in your lab so students get to scoop up some lava to dip it in a water-filled bucket and then analyze it? 🙂 Do you let lava flow in corridors so students can see the difference between A-Ah and Pahoehoe 🙂
BTW, did you ever watch the series "From the Earth to the Moon" ? One episode at end of series is dedicated to geologists teaching astronauts on what to look for on the moon.
I found the part about Wegener' s theory very interesting. Along with rest
This was fantastic! Super fascinating. Thank you so much for teaching in such an easy to understand way. The illustrations are super helpful.
Great lesson!!! Thank you!!!
They should give Shawn Willsey crash course Geology series
Thanks again for the lesson. 2:2.
Excellent video. Have been following all your updates on Iceland and this (after episode #1) really starts to put everything into context.
I'm so happy you're making these video's. Thank you so much 🙏
Such a great update to my geology course from years ago! Thank
You!
Yet another exciting episode of your Geology 101 series! Again, you have a captivating way of explaining complicated things. I can't thank you enough for doing this, Shawn :) When I was young, plate tectonics was somewhat "new", barely known to the general public and not taught at all in French schools before the 80s anyway. When I later found out about it, I was fascinated... Also, very interested in what you said about the magnetic signature of rocks, hope to dig further into this... And now on to Tectonics part 2! ;)
Love today's lecture 👌 very interesting. Thank you
This is great! I'm going to recommend this series to friends who are interested in geology. Just liked and subscribed with the first video.
I've loved the whole topic of geology since the age of 12 (blame Jules Verne lol) and yours is one of the best online series on TH-cam. Thank you for uploading, Professor. Your channel is one of the reasons I refer to TH-cam as my "free university".
Awesome, thank you! Welcome aboard.
Fascinating stuff!
Thank You!!🤗 You are such a fantastic teacher and make everything soo easy to understand and soo interesting!!👍 If I would have had You as my teacher in school I would definatley have become a geologist!! Glad to get to learn all this now !! Better late than never!! 🤗👍
You are so welcome! Thanks for your kind comments.
I love your geologylessons! I Think I'm learning! 😅 At least I'm paying attention now - as a teen in school, not so much.. 🫣
Thank You Professor! Looking forward to 101 #2 part 2 !
Wishing you + fam. a nice weekend!
Greetings from Värmland Sweden
Another excellent class! I have recommended your videos to so many people.
Thanks for your support.
I once heard that California will one day go north to Alaska. Good program, thank you.
Great 101 class!!
Thank you again! Catching up. Busy summer
This is soooo exciting
Thanks, Shawn. Inspiring, as always.
Thx for the great presentation, Shawn! 😎
Thank you so much Shawn for all your lessons!🙏🏼My story is exactly like the story of @mungbean60. My life and understanding of our planet became so much richer because of you! Besides you’re a great teacher you are a very likable person. Love from the Netherlands 🧡🙏🏼🧡
as a boy growing up in the 1950's I always thought the continents were at one time one piece and through time, they grew apart. I would say this to teachers and others resulting to me being ignored as a dreamer
That was awesome. Thank you.
Thanks Prof Shawn for the lesson. I wondered what extra info could be found via the TH-cam links to your slides on continental movements and Earth's magnetic field - the 1st worked fine but the 2nd linked video no longer exists. You're welcome ;)
I watched this earlier on my TV cuz the monitor is bigger than my crappy little lap top. Love this series . 8-)
¡Gracias! A small donation, but with admiration.
Garcias por tu amabilidad
That animation for the future 50 million years or so did not include the formation of a new, fairly large island near East Africa. As far as I know, East Africa is rifting and eventually will move to the east, carrying Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and parts of a few other countries with it.
Ahh first year lectures again! Love it! I’d forgotten the details. What’s new to me is the future predictions of the plates. Thanks again. (Sent a PayPal donation the other week - really appreciate all your work and time).
Thanks for watching and your kind donation.
Thank you, I can't believe all the stuff I've forgotten over the years!
Excellent review of 100 yearsof historic geology
Thanks, I enjoyed that a lot. Lately there's been talk of New Zealand being part of a "new" continent or plate. I look forward to any input you share about that.
I'd be very interested in seeing some of the lab components of your class. As a former lab technician, I'm actually more than interested.
There has been a series of earthquakes today going on along the Pacific and Antarctic ridge. It started with a 6.2 at 09:55:49 UTC.
Thanks for the video Shawn.
I would have thought that you would have put the seafloor spreading earlier in the video for more of a chronological order of relevant discoveries where the bands of magnetic reversal in the sea floors that was discovered during WW II by the navies searching for submarines.
Thanks! Another great video, Shawn. Enjoying your channel very much!
Thank you kindly for your donation. Glad to hear you enjoy these.
Just finished watching the Iceland Geology video and that was very interesting. Also congratulations on 109K.
Maybe beyond an= 101 course, but would be interested for your take on the work of Karin Sigloch tracking what happens to subducting plates as the go down.
That is a 400 level course! I assume you follow Nick Zentner?
A fascinating topic, thanks again!
Glad you enjoyed it!
6:10 Surprised to see your animation has North America drifting northward over the next 50 million years. I thought that the general motion of (most of) North America currently is slightly south of due west, with NA having peaked in northerly latitude several millions of years ago.
absolutly love your teaching thanks from Denmark :)
Excellent. Very interesting.
Thank you 🙏
Fascinating! Thanks.
Great stuff👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Di…Cumbria
Weird to think Aus ending north! I’d love to see how different we would look.
I have a strong notion that we oversimplify the structures of the mantle and how everything works under the plates.
And the fact that the continents were one giant landmass in ancient times should not have been a surprise to anyone: 'And God said, “Let the water under the sky be gathered to one place, and let dry ground appear.” And it was so.' ~Genesis 1:9
From a cartoon by, I think was, Anderson and that I think appeared in "Summit." Picture an Arctic waste, flat with distant hills on the horizon. Empty dog sled with the harnesses lying empty on the ice. An expedition member reporting to the leader on the situation: "Sir, we've eaten the last of the geologists."
Ty this was grest.
There are many quakes in Italy the swarm is scary 100s of light shakes
Theoretically, how high could the Himalayas get before their height simply crushes and laterally fluidizes the lower rocks? Right now I calculate about 35,000 psi (didn't show my work) under Mount Everest.
@shawnwillsey Naive question about your comments about the climate changes when australia moves north or baja california goes north- I was under the impression that the placement of the continents also affects the oceanic and atmospheric currents. So as the plates keep moving the weather patterns worldwide might significantly change. Perhaps you might cover this aspect as you describe the plates in more detail.
In my experience, climatology and oceanography is not really discussed in an intro geology class. Could be that Shawn will make a mention of climate changes when he covers deep time in an example later, but this video may be all that is covered about climate in this class. Yet, AFAIK, there is no easy way to determine an expected climate by looking at land distribution on the planet.
@@TheDanEdwards Let's see what Shawn says. Geogirl had some videos covering how the ocean currents were affected. For example if there is no Atlantic ocean there is no gulf stream carrying warm waters to Europe...
Shawn, thanks so much for posting this content. I always wished that I taken a course in geology while in college, and now that I'm retired, I have time to enjoy your videos. What text do you use with your course?
I passionately recommend you watch. “Voyages of the Continents”. It’s very interesting and very scientific.
Shown on Amazon Prime Video
Thanks!
My late friend wad given a 'Brunton Compass' by his parents!
It’s shown on Amazon Prime video.
Very tiny detail, but the animation showing the United Kingdom docking to France, caused me to smile from ear to ear: the English will be so pissed ;-)
So glaciers emanating from Southern polar regions ok. So that was a land mass . But arctic gives no glaciers - Is that right ?? It is all deep ocean even today ? (territorial claims abound). So interesting and many thanks for the stimulating lesson .
Prof Willsey, I noticed that the shapes of the continents seemed to fit together as a child of 8 or 9 in 60s1! Possibly thanks to the National Geographics my grandparents provided for me!
I should also mention, my interest in the subject is also due in part to a HS friend, who became a geologist! We lost him as he was exploring Alaska via helicopter. They went down, no survivors. He was a good friend, I think of often!
Thanks for letting me share! And, excellent post, although I'm only 9min in.. !!
I noticed the same thing in grade school looking at a classroom globe.
Interesting as I did also about that time and the same age. I remember telling the teacher and he laughed at me. He did not know that scientists were already accepting the Pangea theory. I have also noticed that Pangea also resemble a perfect circle (with a little tweaking) and this has more increased my believe recently by the discovery of another continental crust Zealandia which would have been at the Tethys sea. However I do not know the reason for this.