First time seeing you. You are much younger than I expected. Thank you for the wonderful informative videos given in your beautiful modulated voice. 🍀🍀🍀
I’m glad you did that face reveal, because there will be people who still won’t stop talking about your voice and someone will think it’s an AI, even though it’s not
I absolutely Love the doubters being proven wrong. This is a geology channel not an AI channel. Geologists all talk this way to contain our excitement about the world and how the planet is structured.
Thank you so much for this accessible lesson about a geological feature I had not heard of. I enjoy geology because of the lessons you have been providing me in bite sized amounts. Thank you so much.
Thanks so much, Geology Hub!I first heard of the Zhemchug canyon on a video by youtuber Atlas Pro. It is truly astonishing, so it is great that you finally covered it. I hope you can cover more submarine geological features. It is also nice to see you again.
It freaks me out just how _big_ some of Earth's hidden features are. Whether its massive submarine structures or stuff hidden deep below the crust, its amazing to think of everything that exists on the planet that we never interact with.
It's been rather nice to see the face behind the voice. Especially as usually you're stood near a volcano on Iceland, it's mizzling, and your hood is hiding most of your head. I hope that this is a new trend? It's stories like this that make me wish that I could go back in time to witness the geological changes. The area that I'd most like to visit is Doggerland before the sea came. 😊❤😊
I loved visiting Moss Landing [shown early in the video] and we even once were allowed to ur the MBARI Research vessel, which is docked there. [Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute] My Ex-Husband and I saw creatures from deep in the offshore trench [can't remember which trench] that were being kept alive by holding them in highly pressurized tanks. Seeing these animals live is something else! I am still grateful that the security guard/researcher so kindly snuck us aboard as he did, since the vessel and crew were having a day off. I love learning about these undersea canyons, how vast and deep they are, and imagining the animals and other sealife hidden there, as yet unknown to humankind. And I think we all appreciated your face reveal, how eager and kindly your expression was; you seemed happy to share this information with us, and we are happy to receive!
No! Give us a warning! After listening for so long, I have an image in my head of the narrator. Now it is shattered. (I've tried to ignore the other brief clips) It's like seeing Click and Clack after years of listening to Car Talk.
Years ago, I read that Yale University suggested that there was an extinct volcano in CENTRAL New Hampshire. Does this actually exist? Thank you for the brilliant videos that you produce that inform us or of things we would never know!
Yes the white mountain batholith within the white mountain igneous province are the remains of magmatic plumbing of ancient volcanoes produced when the New England hotspot passed through North America during the Cretaceous. Note that only the igneous dikes and batholiths that fed these volcanoes remain with the composition ranging from syenite to granite the intrusive counterparts of trachyte and rhyolite respectively so extremely siliceous volcanism perhaps somewhat similar to Yellowstone today.
I did a search to see if you've done anything on Hell's Canyon, and if YT can be trusted it looks like you haven't. Since you mentioned the Grand Canyon in this video, it made me think of Hell's Canyon. Also, there're a lot of turbidites off the Juan de Fuca plate boundary that confirms the megaquakes that have happened there, so it was cool you mentioned the "turbidity currents" off this Alaskan submarine canyon!
Interesting video and thank you for an up-close of your face. Speaking of deep submarine canyons, I thought that you may want to do a video featuring some underwater seamounts such as West Mata submarine volcano in the Mariana trench, the Monowai volcano in the Tonga-Kermadec Arc, and the New England Seamounts which are off the coast of the Eastern seaboard. I look forward to seeing these volcanoes in a future video.
Apart form continuing a very, very long unbroken stream of valuable and appreciated content in podcast episodes, it was welcome to have a face to match the voice. My respect can feel a little more directed now! Thank you for the work you do.
Wow that is amazing. I thought that these underwater canyons were carved when the sea level was low, but in this case, you showed how the canyons were carved underwater from the top of the shelf.
Hi sweetheart, so nice to see YOU again. Here I thought I knew the answer...the Marieana trench . This was excellently done. We learn new things everyday just packing in knowledge. You are 1 intelligent young man. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us! ty for your time, energy and effort! Much love from your fav lil ole disabled woman in nc.
haha His voice and face are real folks. Just giving you a hard time ghub. Always enjoy your content and you are my goto for anything geological. Interesting theory about the formation of that canyon. It’s also the same theory that is used to prove the existence of the 9.0 earthquakes off the coast of the state of Washington. Where the two plates meet. Turbidity.. small landslides but these were under water already.
That is an ocean trench not a canyon trenches are where one plate sinks down into the mantle so its a different process of formation. Canyons are erosional features.
Be neat if you did a geology segment on the Fraser River Canyon area. It used to be a fault but is stationary now. What else I find interesting about the Fraser River is that during the great floods the deposits it left on the coast to create the Lower Mainland and parts of the Bellingham area all the way down the the Skagit River Valley. 😊
Not as large or as deep, but closer to home, perhaps you other subscribers would share my interest in hearing what you have to say about the Hudson Canyon.
At one time the Great Lakes drained through the Hudson River because the St. Lawrence was still blocked by the continental ice sheet. With the ice sheet melting, the amount of water draining through the Hudson must have been immense.
I spotted that Anton seamount a while ago while perusing maps, turns out its an old volcano, but it does look stunning...now we just need someone to remove a couple of miles of water so we can get a real good view of it.
Whoa..voice does not check out lol. Hello there glad you arent some boutique AI narration lol..very unique voice sir...NPR radio would snap you up in a second lol
If you are going to do a series on canyons, might I suggest both Black Canyon of the Gunnison in Colorado and King's Canyon in California? Also, are the deep oceanic trenches/convergence boundaries steep sided like a canyon or how are the structurally different?
that looks an awful lot like a River Canyon we have similar Topography undersea off of Fremantle Harbor where the Swan River enters the sea but if you lower that sea level back to full ice age periods! is a map or aerial photo or something that while not so fantastically deep gives a good reason and accurate equivalent for the depths of the Ocean a wee bit back in Time when we had Glaciers Everywhere and everyone was huddled in the equatorial regions working on their Tans!
Finally that intro should stop the AI voice accusations. Good job!
wow geologyhub facecam intro :D
I always pictured "Butthead" narrating. I'm disappointed.
@@EnlightnMe48 Heh heh, heh heh!
Thanks for all the hard work on these videos!
His face was revealed years ago FYI
@@xwiick yeahhh on the q&a video, then on the iceland volcano video
I think the last time we saw your visage was in Iceland at Fagradallsfjall. This time, you don't need a parka.
If I remember right isn't geologic hub quiet a short fella
@@wazaagbreak-head6039He’s not short. He’s as tall as an average NBA swing man (shooting guard-small forward).
Tim, nice to see you at last.
First revealed when he visitted the Icelandic volcanoe all those years ago.
I’m really happy you showed yourself. You’re special. I’m glad you did that .
Good to see you.
Just a casual face reveal
He’s shown his face a few times.
Yeah, he's shown his face in some of his Iceland videos when he visited there.
Chad jumpscare
Might (not holding my breath) shut up some of those "It's an AI voice" trolls.
AI improved recently to be able generate videos :P
Sorry, just trolling :)
He is a great YT creator and educator!
My son and I LOVE your videos! Thank you for all your hard work!
First time seeing you. You are much younger than I expected. Thank you for the wonderful informative videos given in your beautiful modulated voice. 🍀🍀🍀
Wow! You missed Iceland??
Instead of obsessing over the Titanic, shouldn't the undersea explorers be pursuing features like this?
As long as the sea explorers are billionaires in poorly made submarines..... I encourage them to follow their dreams to the fullest extent possible 🙏
Because the deeper you go, the more pressure there is, and submarines tend to implode...
I’m glad you did that face reveal, because there will be people who still won’t stop talking about your voice and someone will think it’s an AI, even though it’s not
Thanks for all your hard work ❤
I absolutely Love the doubters being proven wrong. This is a geology channel not an AI channel. Geologists all talk this way to contain our excitement about the world and how the planet is structured.
👀 A rare sighting of the elusive Geologyhubici Excelcius......
😂
Aloha from Pahoa🤙🏼🌴🌋
Thank you so much for this accessible lesson about a geological feature I had not heard of. I enjoy geology because of the lessons you have been providing me in bite sized amounts. Thank you so much.
Thanks so much, Geology Hub!I first heard of the Zhemchug canyon on a video by youtuber Atlas Pro. It is truly astonishing, so it is great that you finally covered it. I hope you can cover more submarine geological features.
It is also nice to see you again.
Same
Tim, it's great to see you doing the intro to this video. Very interesting subject too.
It freaks me out just how _big_ some of Earth's hidden features are. Whether its massive submarine structures or stuff hidden deep below the crust, its amazing to think of everything that exists on the planet that we never interact with.
Love your content 👍
It's been rather nice to see the face behind the voice. Especially as usually you're stood near a volcano on Iceland, it's mizzling, and your hood is hiding most of your head.
I hope that this is a new trend?
It's stories like this that make me wish that I could go back in time to witness the geological changes. The area that I'd most like to visit is Doggerland before the sea came.
😊❤😊
That is cool i heard that turbidity currents can break underwater cables
Great to put a face to the voice…always interested in what you offer…thankyo🌀♥️
Hallo Tim! Nice to see you!🙂
Excellent video thanks
I loved visiting Moss Landing [shown early in the video] and we even once were allowed to ur the MBARI Research vessel, which is docked there. [Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute]
My Ex-Husband and I saw creatures from deep in the offshore trench [can't remember which trench] that were being kept alive by holding them in highly pressurized tanks. Seeing these animals live is something else! I am still grateful that the security guard/researcher so kindly snuck us aboard as he did, since the vessel and crew were having a day off.
I love learning about these undersea canyons, how vast and deep they are, and imagining the animals and other sealife hidden there, as yet unknown to humankind.
And I think we all appreciated your face reveal, how eager and kindly your expression was; you seemed happy to share this information with us, and we are happy to receive!
Thank you. that was so interesting.
Earth is amazing!
Awesome
When the voice matches the face in my head. Nice, man. Keep up the good work. I love your content!
No! Give us a warning! After listening for so long, I have an image in my head of the narrator. Now it is shattered. (I've tried to ignore the other brief clips) It's like seeing Click and Clack after years of listening to Car Talk.
You got catfished 😂 like meeting the girl you've been talking to online just to find out it was a man all along.. 😂😂
Years ago, I read that Yale University suggested that there was an extinct volcano in CENTRAL New Hampshire. Does this actually exist? Thank you for the brilliant videos that you produce that inform us or of things we would never know!
Yes the white mountain batholith within the white mountain igneous province are the remains of magmatic plumbing of ancient volcanoes produced when the New England hotspot passed through North America during the Cretaceous. Note that only the igneous dikes and batholiths that fed these volcanoes remain with the composition ranging from syenite to granite the intrusive counterparts of trachyte and rhyolite respectively so extremely siliceous volcanism perhaps somewhat similar to Yellowstone today.
Good to see you without a volcano erupting behind you. This was an interesting video. I enjoy hearing and seeing our world's geology. Thank you. 🙂🖖💕
Thanks for sharing!
Very cool story, btw! Keep 'em coming!
I did a search to see if you've done anything on Hell's Canyon, and if YT can be trusted it looks like you haven't. Since you mentioned the Grand Canyon in this video, it made me think of Hell's Canyon. Also, there're a lot of turbidites off the Juan de Fuca plate boundary that confirms the megaquakes that have happened there, so it was cool you mentioned the "turbidity currents" off this Alaskan submarine canyon!
Interesting video and thank you for an up-close of your face. Speaking of deep submarine canyons, I thought that you may want to do a video featuring some underwater seamounts such as West Mata submarine volcano in the Mariana trench, the Monowai volcano in the Tonga-Kermadec Arc, and the New England Seamounts which are off the coast of the Eastern seaboard.
I look forward to seeing these volcanoes in a future video.
And now I know ! Thanks .
I’d like to see more of these underwater oddities featured. Thanks!
Class act, this is one of my favorite geology channels.
Awesome work GH. Thanks so much for a constant stream of high quality factual videos. Great to get a bit more of a glimpse of you. Thank you 🙏
Check out the undersea Perth Canyon … might even be a bit bigger than the GC.
Facecam reveal though he showed his face when he went to Iceland ;)
The AI allegation bros are in shambles
Thank you and glad to see your picture!
Hello! Thanks for always educating me
Apart form continuing a very, very long unbroken stream of valuable and appreciated content in podcast episodes, it was welcome to have a face to match the voice. My respect can feel a little more directed now! Thank you for the work you do.
More!!! This is so good! I wish it was 15 mins long imo
Good to see you! I had no idea about this canyon! Thank you so much for all of your work in putting out your great videos!
Looking good fella. Keep up the good work.
Amazing. Never imagined a river valley that continues under the ocean. 🤯
Wow that is amazing. I thought that these underwater canyons were carved when the sea level was low, but in this case, you showed how the canyons were carved underwater from the top of the shelf.
What about Weber deep? The deepest point in the ocean that is not in a trench.
Such canyons and undersea "rivers" are being mapped all over the world lately. They are much more extensive than was once imagined.
Love learning about underwater geological & ecological processes! 👍
You finally show your face! Grand Canyon is my backyard! I do fossil research in that Canyon!
Very interesting. Thank you! 😊
That’s very interesting. Continental shelf. Continental slope. Abyssal plain. I don’t deal with these topics so often.
I love your channel! Thank you!
Nice to meet you!!!
Thank you for also including Imperial measurements in some of your narrations. It just makes everything you point out relatable.
Hi sweetheart, so nice to see YOU again. Here I thought I knew the answer...the Marieana trench . This was excellently done. We learn new things everyday just packing in knowledge. You are 1 intelligent young man. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us! ty for your time, energy and effort! Much love from your fav lil ole disabled woman in nc.
There you are. Nice to see the face with the voice. 👍
Thanks for the reveal I've always wondered if you were AI or just a very well spoken individual
My favourite underwater canyon has to be the one just off the coast of Nazaré, Portugal - primarily because of the amazing waves it helps create.
Nice to see you sir!
Bill Nighy vibes. Love it
Da man behind da voice🤙🏼
Aloha from Pahoa Hawai'i🤙🏼
Fascinating, add this one to one of my fave videos 👀🤩🤩🤩
Awesome thank you!
haha His voice and face are real folks. Just giving you a hard time ghub. Always enjoy your content and you are my goto for anything geological.
Interesting theory about the formation of that canyon. It’s also the same theory that is used to prove the existence of the 9.0 earthquakes off the coast of the state of Washington. Where the two plates meet. Turbidity.. small landslides but these were under water already.
Wait... But Mariana Trench is 10,908 m (35,787 ft) deep. 🤔
That is an ocean trench not a canyon trenches are where one plate sinks down into the mantle so its a different process of formation. Canyons are erosional features.
@Dragrath1 Thanks for explanation. I ♥ the community here. Exchange of knowledge without the usual bulltrollery.
Be neat if you did a geology segment on the Fraser River Canyon area. It used to be a fault but is stationary now. What else I find interesting about the Fraser River is that during the great floods the deposits it left on the coast to create the Lower Mainland and parts of the Bellingham area all the way down the the Skagit River Valley. 😊
Nice to see you dear
Kool , the man behind the knowledge 😊
My man! Good to see your face!
Not as large or as deep, but closer to home, perhaps you other subscribers would share my interest in hearing what you have to say about the Hudson Canyon.
At one time the Great Lakes drained through the Hudson River because the St. Lawrence was still blocked by the continental ice sheet. With the ice sheet melting, the amount of water draining through the Hudson must have been immense.
Nice occasionally putting a face to the voice
Oh, and typically interesting content too.
Fascinating!
Nice to meet the face behind the voice
There you are, cutie!! I so appreciate you and your wonderful channel 😍❤️🥰
You have no peers, GH!
Fun fact: "zhemchug" is russian for "pearls"
Zhemchug sounds like the icky side of pearls.
Wow, this is fascinating! I know you probably have already covered the Marianas Trench, but could you update and reissue?
It reminds me of the largest waterfall on earth, which too is hidden from sight.
Your channel is the greatest. Thank you!
I wonder how long it will take us to stop the planet from warming.
I spotted that Anton seamount a while ago while perusing maps, turns out its an old volcano, but it does look stunning...now we just need someone to remove a couple of miles of water so we can get a real good view of it.
Whoa..voice does not check out lol. Hello there glad you arent some boutique AI narration lol..very unique voice sir...NPR radio would snap you up in a second lol
this reminded me of a video by atlas pro which talks about canyons
If you are going to do a series on canyons, might I suggest both Black Canyon of the Gunnison in Colorado and King's Canyon in California?
Also, are the deep oceanic trenches/convergence boundaries steep sided like a canyon or how are the structurally different?
Ty for dace revesl ❤
Thank you. You truly are beautiful as David was,omg.
How about the Monterey Bay Submarine Canyon? 2.5 Miles deep (4 km)! My front yard.
If this was the effluent from the Yukon, there should be a plunge pool in the canyon. Anyone else wanna go gold diggin'?
Oh, what about the Kermadec Trench and associated subduction related seamounts?
I think 'infamous' isn't the word you really wanted to describe the Grand Canyon. Otherwise, outstanding presentation and information.
What is the origin of the canyons name? It sounds like something in chess
That’s what I was thinking too
🙏🙏🙏🙏
You look almost exactly what I thought you'd look like.
Take that either way.
I love how you occasionally do a face reveal to disprove the AI allegations lol...
that looks an awful lot like a River Canyon we have similar Topography undersea off of Fremantle Harbor where the Swan River enters the sea but if you lower that sea level back to full ice age periods! is a map or aerial photo or something that while not so fantastically deep gives a good reason and accurate equivalent for the depths of the Ocean a wee bit back in Time when we had Glaciers Everywhere and everyone was huddled in the equatorial regions working on their Tans!