There's a park somewhere in the hills on the outskirts of Cincinnati with some trails in the surrounding hills and exposed outcroppings of rocks, many loaded with fossils. When I was walking around the park area I tripped on something and looked down and dug up one of those golf ball sized clams that are common in that area. Quite a find when you're a kid.
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU for this video! It’s everything I wanted to know about the geology of my hone state, all rolled up into one tidy video! I guess I shouldn’t everything, but there’s enough info in here to help me on my way to more Ohio geology knowledge! Thanks again from here in northeastern Ohio! 🙏
My grandfather had a small lake built in north east Ohio on the farm in the 1960's and I would find seashell fossil imprints in the rocks along the shore.
Very informative video! This is a major gap in my overall education so thanks for sharing with us. How about a video on the ancient Teays River that once flowed through the Buckeye State?
A 250ft Sandstone bolder was dropped off in the middle of Lancaster. It was turned into a local park and you can climb to the top of Mt. Pleasant. The Local Natives called it Standing Stone. It has a great view of Lancaster & distant Columbus.
Great video … thanks. Fill in the blanks, needed: glacier reversal rivers, subterranean rivers (Teays, and whatever is under the Muskingum), the remnants of the xerotherm period(s) - Lynx Prairie and Lucie Braun’s grasses model, how the geology effected the ecology (dominant plants species across the various bedrocks), the desert plant species on the bluffs near Lynx, and the boulder anomaly outside of Otsego on Rt 83 which is outside the glacier boundaries, separation of the Hopwell and Adena mounds in the landscape/culture strata, Lake Erie salt mines - just to mention a few. Looking forward to your next installment.
Just east of Navarre along S.R. 212 before getting to Bolivar, there are some huge magnificent boulders which designate the end moraine of the last glacier.
in cincinnati i remember as a kid almost all the rocks had the ancient sea floor fosils in them...loaded. the family bought some land about 40 miles south about halfway to lexington in ky and i was excited to check out their fosils in the creek beds...nothing lol. I always wondered where shoreline was.
They keep forgetting places like black hand gorge. The geology there is awesome. I been studying geology and collecting rocks and minerals for over 30 years. Hocking hills is beautiful...I agree...but ohio has other great places too. Right by ohio caverns is one of the most unique caverns called zane caverns. Near columbus there is olintangey caverns as well. Middle bass island has perry's cave but also has the worlds largest celestite geode. This geode is called crystal cave.
There are some nice rock formations a few miles south of Beach City, Ohio. There are two falls down there coming from streams from ancient morraines formed by glaciers eons ago.
On my grandparents farm south of Camden Oh. after a heavy rain, there would be lots of "petrified cow horns" washed out where the driveway went up a hill side.
Check out black hand gorge in taboso Ohio in licking county it's definitely one of my favorite spots to go and it has everything you need to see waterfalls to caves I grew up around that area but my children lives around bellefontaine Ohio I will definitely put that on my places to go list.
I grew up in Hocking hills Ohio Ash cave Rock House Old Man's cave cedar falls and my favorite Tar hollow State Park I still live there and go almost every weekend. And not to mention they're the best roads to take your Miata Down or any other fun car.
How do I get a hold of any of you geologists that make these videos I would really like to pick your brain about the geology of Ohio State I'm from Ohio trying to learn more about if you care.lol
Examples and explanations for concretions would have been suitable for this presentation. Northern Franklin/southern Delaware counties have deep shale cuts which produce giant concretions.
@@TinaHyde Highbanks Park in Delaware and many Olentangy River tributaries south of the park expose shale and many sizes and shapes of concretions. Almost any creek that feeds into the Olentangy river from the East will cut into the shale and expose concretions. This continues along the Scioto river as well, south of Columbus....happy hunting.
This was an excellent top notch video: there was much info presented in clear, easy to understand language. The editing was first rate to keep the flow of the info in a fascinating way. Good job to the producers!
24:10 I got dinosaur bones in my field!😂 I thought he'd bring in a cow bone or a horse bone😂😂😂 My jaw just dropped cause it aint' no cow bone horse bone it's a mastadon teeth🤣🤣 ... ... I don't think we're gonna find the skull cause I think that was destroyed by the plow😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣
I live just 27 miles north of Ohio. I've been to Cave City in Kentucky which was really cool but I have never heard of the caves in Ohio. Planning on going to Serpents Mound soon with my kids. It you don't mind can you tell me are there caves near there or something interesting. We're into outdoors/nature stuff.
@@tashacherry1480 actually seven caves is not real far from serpent mound if you take Route 50 from Hillsboro going towards a town called RainsBoro and then Bainbridge before you get to Bainbridge on the right is a road leads to seven cage it’s not open to the public but you can still go through there and see the amazing scenery it is close to paint Creek Reservoir but on the other side of 50 it is truly awesome if you walk around the grounds.
Copley ohio i found a lot of impressions while putting a subdivision in almost every rock had impressions it was like hitting the jackpot .in Lake county rt 20 area Perry Ohio and we was down 26 feet we had the pumps getting out the water and about 80 feet off rt 20 to the south in the sand we hit a tree laying east to west on what we thought was a old beach . Because it was stones like at mentor headland beach .we sent the tree to a lab and I dont know what age it was but iam sure it was from the last ice age maybe I dont know but it was really cool.The water table in that area was about 3 feet meaning that if you dug down water is at three feet .
What is the humongoloid? I just learning the english and must be useing wrong? It means a old person? or something is old? Yes? I did not find in books and spend long time to use word right. It cause much embarrassing. Please, will help me?
Historians... check out the book I republished entitled, Barbara: A Romance of the Sandusky River Valley and a Tale of the War of 1812 and 1813. It and northwest Ohio history are available at bluebankspub.com. I worked very hard to put Barbara back in print because it is so freakin' good. Thank you. Jay from Old Fort.
There's more cool places other than Hocking hills/Ash cave Old Man's cave cedar falls rock house and everything else in Hocking hills.... There's a place called edge of Appalachia close to Peebles Ohio and they have awesome cliffs and fossils everywhere. And another place is Caesars Creek they have some of the coolest fossils ever and a huge field that's like 10 football fields put together where a glacier went through you can find fossils everywhere.
Its a great day to be alive by Travis Tritt. I just want to cry but its happy tears. I would love to take my kids to Hocking Hills and have Rick teach us! Whats crazy is I can sit there, listen to him but not hear the words he is speaking. Ppl want scientific explanation and thats great but I go to lala land with it. So majestic. All for the glory of love (God). Living through the ghost by Shinedown.
At the dawn of the VCR age we got to watch shows in school about Ohio natural history. I was always fascinated by them. To this day, at 53, I still drive around looking for glacial moraines. I wonder: Do kids still get to watch this kind of thing in school? I know it goes against "The Narrative" that there was no history before 1609. I'm genuinely curious, though - not just being political....(OK I'm kinda being political, but the question stands.)
The information given in the body of this video suggests it was produced for high schoolers but the host’s demeanor is well below that. It’s like he’s talking to 10 year olds.
Yeah, why? I think because science is compelling....even to them, but they can't accept changing their opinion....so they try to tear down other people.
@@bradweir6993 I thought it was his dad....oh maybe dad wore sandals too.....but geez, imagine making a star while wearing sandals....that's harder than frying chicken in the nude!
Completly Proves Al Gore deserved the Nobel Peace Prize for proving the world is not flat & that the world is warming up!!! Well done Al Gore sir!!! Mother Teresa & I are proud of your genius contribution to humanity.
How do you distinguish ice age glacial erosion from a worldwide flood eroding the land as the water drains rapidly away? How do you distinguish glacially scooped rocks from asteroid impact splashing?
A glacier, acting like a bulldozer, will produce moraines. A moraine is the rock and dirt deposit that the glacier will push up as it moves forward. A flood will cut and deposit the dirt and rocks in a different manner. An asteroid will deposit debris in a wide, scattered way. The glacial moraines will plow the earth into an organized U shaped fashion.
Easy to distinguish between all those. Simply look at the astounding amount of evidence compiled by thousands of different people. None of this was proven by one person with a simple opinion.
For that you would need a thing you probably don’t believe in. Science. Science based on evidence. You’re probably not happy here , maybe you should move on.
@@mikehorton6195 I believe real science. Not nonsense that is falsely called science, when all you have is hypothesis with zero demonstrable science to back it up. Perhaps you could point out some actual science to confirm your statements, something more than a bare pronouncement with no evidence to support it.
I also know where prehistory can be found ,I. The form of gaint bones of a man like creature!!! I can take you there just say when folks just say when!!!
I'd love too my dad found ancient fire pits around brookville lake indiana and tools but the outer layer crumbles when you touch it I found a perfect double blade curved opposite ways behind an ancient waterfall the curtain crumbled and the limestone showed through I never would believe but it happened to me
I know of a missing link in the education of geologists. When we look at the many horizontal layers that we find throughout our planet, we clearly see the effect of a repeating cataclysm. These disasters are mentioned in ancient books like the Mahabharata of India and the Popol Vuh of the Mayans and others. They tell us about a cycle of seven disasters that separate the eras from the world. Certainly, regularly recurring global disasters cannot be caused by asteroid impacts or volcanic eruptions. The only possible cause is another celestial body, a planet, orbiting our sun in an eccentric orbit. Then it is close to the sun for a short period and after the crossing at a very high speed it disappears into the universe for a long time. Planet 9 exists, but it seems invisible. These disasters cause a huge tidal wave of seawater that washes over land "above the highest mountains." At the end it covers the earth with a layer of mud, a mixture of sand, clay, lime, fossils of marine and terrestrial animals, gravel and meteorites. They also create a cycle of civilizations. To learn much more about the recurring flood cycle and its chronology, the re-creation of civilizations and ancient high technology, read the e-book: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". It can be read on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: invisible nibiru 9
4400 years of sediment load in all river deltas of the world! This was the first time it had rained! No millions of years, you can only get a fossil if it’s covered up rapidly in the flood.
I figured out where my parochial school teachers found their materials. Bahahaha then they tried to push creationism after showing us these videos. What a joke creationism is.
Good video...i do want to say I think it’s funny that scientists state things as fact that happened “millions of years ago” that yea you can make a guess but guess isn’t fact and your crazy if you don’t believe it lol
I really enjoyed this video.. best one I've seen amonst many....surely you haters could look better on camera, would love to see you do this...isn't as easy as it looks...everyones a critic...until they do it themselves...until you carry the bucket of water and don't spill one drop, only then will you understand...
You are doing so great oh, you are courteous you were accepted to courtesy and then you had to go and add the million years thing that you have no idea what you're talkin about.
Stating the age of the earth is 10000 years old is an opinion that has no evidence behind it. Stating the earth is 4.5 billion years old has a mountain of evidence compiled by thousands of different scientists. You know, the scientist that used chemistry create your medications, or develop your phone or computer you use. Your science created car, using fuels made by scientist. Those people.
It's obvious you've never been to southwest Ohio. There's landslides/slippages all the time. They're not massive landslides, but landslides nonetheless. Plenty of retaining walls to keep things stable.
Being from and living in Ohio this is very interesting
Rick Sowash came to my elementary school and he is such an interesting guy
Used to go to Nelson ledges as a kid am 65 now was fun
There's a park somewhere in the hills on the outskirts of Cincinnati with some trails in the surrounding hills and exposed outcroppings of rocks, many loaded with fossils. When I was walking around the park area I tripped on something and looked down and dug up one of those golf ball sized clams that are common in that area. Quite a find when you're a kid.
Having worked in gravel pits most of my working life, I have found mastodon tusks, and molars and bones.
Hopefully, you kept some of those goodies....
Ricks at a 10. We need him at about a 6...
If you can't handle Rick at a 10, you don't deserve him at a 6.
@@Ranstone 😁✌️
I just want him to blink!
@@Ranstone lay off the crack...
This is apparently geared towards children hence the way he's speaking.
Dudes. Trippin at Nelson Ledges!!!!!!!!
Thanks for putting this video out. I really enjoyed it!
I to love Hocking hills. Go there every year
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU for this video! It’s everything I wanted to know about the geology of my hone state, all rolled up into one tidy video! I guess I shouldn’t everything, but there’s enough info in here to help me on my way to more Ohio geology knowledge! Thanks again from here in northeastern Ohio! 🙏
My grandfather had a small lake built in north east Ohio on the farm in the 1960's and I would find seashell fossil imprints in the rocks along the shore.
Crap.
Very informative video! This is a major gap in my overall education so thanks for sharing with us. How about a video on the ancient Teays River that once flowed through the Buckeye State?
A 250ft Sandstone bolder was dropped off in the middle of Lancaster. It was turned into a local park and you can climb to the top of Mt. Pleasant. The Local Natives called it Standing Stone. It has a great view of Lancaster & distant Columbus.
Great video … thanks. Fill in the blanks, needed: glacier reversal rivers, subterranean rivers (Teays, and whatever is under the Muskingum), the remnants of the xerotherm period(s) - Lynx Prairie and Lucie Braun’s grasses model, how the geology effected the ecology (dominant plants species across the various bedrocks), the desert plant species on the bluffs near Lynx, and the boulder anomaly outside of Otsego on Rt 83 which is outside the glacier boundaries, separation of the Hopwell and Adena mounds in the landscape/culture strata, Lake Erie salt mines - just to mention a few. Looking forward to your next installment.
Just east of Navarre along S.R. 212 before getting to Bolivar, there are some huge magnificent boulders which designate the end moraine of the last glacier.
These are awesome facts I can use this for my school project, this is recommended for schools.
You could do shows like this for adults too.
in cincinnati i remember as a kid almost all the rocks had the ancient sea floor fosils in them...loaded. the family bought some land about 40 miles south about halfway to lexington in ky and i was excited to check out their fosils in the creek beds...nothing lol. I always wondered where shoreline was.
They keep forgetting places like black hand gorge. The geology there is awesome. I been studying geology and collecting rocks and minerals for over 30 years.
Hocking hills is beautiful...I agree...but ohio has other great places too.
Right by ohio caverns is one of the most unique caverns called zane caverns. Near columbus there is olintangey caverns as well.
Middle bass island has perry's cave but also has the worlds largest celestite geode. This geode is called crystal cave.
There are some nice rock formations a few miles south of Beach City, Ohio. There are two falls down there coming from streams from ancient morraines formed by glaciers eons ago.
That's where we all went for senor skip day! 1979
Paint Creek park has some hidden gems as well.
On my grandparents farm south of Camden Oh. after a heavy rain, there would be lots of "petrified cow horns" washed out where the driveway went up a hill side.
Probably solitary horn coral.
Where could I go in Cincy to show a few things I have found over the years?
I'm curious what you've found.
Grew up in east Ohio and found all kinds of fossils in my backyard ❤
Really really great!🦖🦕🦎
Came across this while searching for information on the geology of Wood County West Virginia which is on the border of Ohio.
For fossils try the Marblehead light shoreline across the bay from the amusement park!
Check out black hand gorge in taboso Ohio in licking county it's definitely one of my favorite spots to go and it has everything you need to see waterfalls to caves I grew up around that area but my children lives around bellefontaine Ohio I will definitely put that on my places to go list.
I grew up in Hocking hills Ohio Ash cave Rock House Old Man's cave cedar falls and my favorite Tar hollow State Park I still live there and go almost every weekend. And not to mention they're the best roads to take your Miata Down or any other fun car.
I live in South Amherst; the sandstone center of the world. Many of us have natural gas wells. Heating the house on your own gas rocks to!
You better not tell Mean Uncle Joe about that gas well.
@@duradim1 haha! My lips are sealed!
love the ice age stuff
What do you know about our flower gold?
How do I get a hold of any of you geologists that make these videos I would really like to pick your brain about the geology of Ohio State I'm from Ohio trying to learn more about if you care.lol
Why does it seem everyone forgets South Eastern Ohio?
What i was just thinking
Raven rocks in Beallsville is beautiful
If you don't know where it is just go to BEALLSVILLE Ohio and ask any one. there is a pine nursery a top.
Not much talk of north east Ohio either. Check out Mill Creek Park in Youngstown. It’s an absolute gem. Found an indigenous hand tool there.
South East Ohio missed out on the last glacier period . Wasn't much pushed there by glaciers .
Growing up near 93rd and Sandusky in Cleveland, I remember calling a field "Sandy Beach". I have little doubt it was once the shore of Lake Erie.
Examples and explanations for concretions would have been suitable for this presentation. Northern Franklin/southern Delaware counties have deep shale cuts which produce giant concretions.
Any areas in particular?
@@TinaHyde Highbanks Park in Delaware and many Olentangy River tributaries south of the park expose shale and many sizes and shapes of concretions. Almost any creek that feeds into the Olentangy river from the East will cut into the shale and expose concretions. This continues along the Scioto river as well, south of Columbus....happy hunting.
John Thomas Thank you, thank you, thank you! 🙏
I agree. The concretions found throughout the Huron and Vermillion rivers are awesome.
This was an excellent top notch video: there was much info presented in clear, easy to understand language. The editing was first rate to keep the flow of the info in a fascinating way. Good job to the producers!
24:10 I got dinosaur bones in my field!😂
I thought he'd bring in a cow bone or a horse bone😂😂😂
My jaw just dropped cause it aint' no cow bone horse bone it's a mastadon teeth🤣🤣
... ...
I don't think we're gonna find the skull cause I think that was destroyed by the plow😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣
Reminds me of the tales of Sy Gatton !
Prehistoric is just a place in time where other before us lived. Every thing behind us is now working their way to being prehistoric to others.
You need to do a video on the seven caves area very unusual paint creek
I live just 27 miles north of Ohio. I've been to Cave City in Kentucky which was really cool but I have never heard of the caves in Ohio. Planning on going to Serpents Mound soon with my kids. It you don't mind can you tell me are there caves near there or something interesting. We're into outdoors/nature stuff.
@@tashacherry1480 actually seven caves is not real far from serpent mound if you take Route 50 from Hillsboro going towards a town called RainsBoro and then Bainbridge before you get to Bainbridge on the right is a road leads to seven cage it’s not open to the public but you can still go through there and see the amazing scenery it is close to paint Creek Reservoir but on the other side of 50 it is truly awesome if you walk around the grounds.
Do you have a CD or other format of this?
I have a computer
In a he top soil of southern oh there’s a lot of loose slab limestone and boulders geology is amazing !
Copley ohio i found a lot of impressions while putting a subdivision in almost every rock had impressions it was like hitting the jackpot .in Lake county rt 20 area Perry Ohio and we was down 26 feet we had the pumps getting out the water and about 80 feet off rt 20 to the south in the sand we hit a tree laying east to west on what we thought was a old beach . Because it was stones like at mentor headland beach .we sent the tree to a lab and I dont know what age it was but iam sure it was from the last ice age maybe I dont know but it was really cool.The water table in that area was about 3 feet meaning that if you dug down water is at three feet .
I just dug up some odd rocks that peel off in layers and different colors in Ohio.
What is the humongoloid? I just learning the english and must be useing wrong? It means a old person? or something is old? Yes? I did not find in books and spend long time to use word right. It cause much embarrassing. Please, will help me?
Historians... check out the book I republished entitled, Barbara: A Romance of the Sandusky River Valley and a Tale of the War of 1812 and 1813. It and northwest Ohio history are available at bluebankspub.com. I worked very hard to put Barbara back in print because it is so freakin' good. Thank you. Jay from Old Fort.
There's more cool places other than Hocking hills/Ash cave Old Man's cave cedar falls rock house and everything else in Hocking hills.... There's a place called edge of Appalachia close to Peebles Ohio and they have awesome cliffs and fossils everywhere. And another place is Caesars Creek they have some of the coolest fossils ever and a huge field that's like 10 football fields put together where a glacier went through you can find fossils everywhere.
I can't get this specific video to play :(
tres intéressant,,, cool video
Bro.. BLINK man, BLINK.
Riddle me this? What’s hi in the middle and round on both ends.
Answer to follow.
Wonder where all those giant animals found enough leafy greens to eat during this ice age???
In the areas not covered by ice sheets. Most of what's now the USA was ice-free during the last glaciation.
Nw Ohio here 2019
Lima
@@travismaenle9416 russells point
Flat as hell, Newbavaria
Williams co
I'm in love
Rick Sowash makes me smile. It's like watching God in the flesh excitedly talking about His amazing creation!!! The power of the holy spirit!!
Its a great day to be alive by Travis Tritt. I just want to cry but its happy tears. I would love to take my kids to Hocking Hills and have Rick teach us! Whats crazy is I can sit there, listen to him but not hear the words he is speaking. Ppl want scientific explanation and thats great but I go to lala land with it. So majestic. All for the glory of love (God). Living through the ghost by Shinedown.
Is rick sowash the animated guy? That would explain it. He’s used to doing this for school age kids.
Or it could be the drinking of Spirits!
That all petrified wood fro. Anciengiant tree stumps all mountains are giant petrified tree stumps
Earth and the moon is still young puppies from cosmic perspective..
4.5 billion year old teenage wastelands..
I must say that the melting of the ice sheets has become somewhat of a controversy.
The rapid melting was caused by volcanic activity or it would still be there
off course you would underestimate the man on the street so to speak. what many judge to be just common
At the dawn of the VCR age we got to watch shows in school about Ohio natural history. I was always fascinated by them. To this day, at 53, I still drive around looking for glacial moraines. I wonder: Do kids still get to watch this kind of thing in school? I know it goes against "The Narrative" that there was no history before 1609. I'm genuinely curious, though - not just being political....(OK I'm kinda being political, but the question stands.)
i have to take a quiz on this video so yes
This whole video is contradictory
Too warm today for the glacier
There are differents science's in that state......
Wow. I didnt expect such comments on this...usually stuff I read on fb comments .
Humans enjoy being unkind,rude
Even on geology .Bizarre
Cleveland Rocks! Sorry wrong show.
Ha! that's funny!
The question is does Ohio have gold with the glacier movement
Yes everywhere really
The information given in the body of this video suggests it was produced for high schoolers but the host’s demeanor is well below that. It’s like he’s talking to 10 year olds.
Jimmy Hoffa is down under.
Who was it that said :
Anyone who states a date before an observer as a fact of science is a fool, Or something like that?
Reincarnate the giant ground sloth
Glaciers don't leave. They melt away.
I'm more inclined to think it was a climate disaster. That makes the most sense, given the glacial floods and such.
...why are there so many creationists in the comments???
Obsessive compulsive nutters with nothing better to do. That guy with a beard and wearing sandals made everything .😄🤣
Yeah, why? I think because science is compelling....even to them, but they can't accept changing their opinion....so they try to tear down other people.
@@bradweir6993 I thought it was his dad....oh maybe dad wore sandals too.....but geez, imagine making a star while wearing sandals....that's harder than frying chicken in the nude!
@@johnthomas1689 Imagine. That's the key word in these stories.
Cognitive dissonance.
Completly Proves Al Gore deserved the Nobel Peace Prize for proving the world is not flat & that the world is warming up!!! Well done Al Gore sir!!!
Mother Teresa & I are proud of your genius contribution to humanity.
Remember, Al invented the internet...😂
How do you distinguish ice age glacial erosion from a worldwide flood eroding the land as the water drains rapidly away? How do you distinguish glacially scooped rocks from asteroid impact splashing?
A glacier, acting like a bulldozer, will produce moraines. A moraine is the rock and dirt deposit that the glacier will push up as it moves forward. A flood will cut and deposit the dirt and rocks in a different manner. An asteroid will deposit debris in a wide, scattered way. The glacial moraines will plow the earth into an organized U shaped fashion.
The first question is easy: there was no worldwide flood.
Easy to distinguish between all those. Simply look at the astounding amount of evidence compiled by thousands of different people. None of this was proven by one person with a simple opinion.
For that you would need a thing you probably don’t believe in. Science. Science based on evidence. You’re probably not happy here , maybe you should move on.
@@mikehorton6195 I believe real science. Not nonsense that is falsely called science, when all you have is hypothesis with zero demonstrable science to back it up. Perhaps you could point out some actual science to confirm your statements, something more than a bare pronouncement with no evidence to support it.
Answer: 0-Hi-0
This is
I also know where prehistory can be found ,I. The form of gaint bones of a man like creature!!! I can take you there just say when folks just say when!!!
Bring it dude
I'd love too my dad found ancient fire pits around brookville lake indiana and tools but the outer layer crumbles when you touch it I found a perfect double blade curved opposite ways behind an ancient waterfall the curtain crumbled and the limestone showed through I never would believe but it happened to me
Just don’t let the government know about it. They will come and take it never to be seen again.
What part of the state, I would love to see something like that
horses to all died
so true bestie
@@fossilfighters101 ok donkey
This quote got me in my feels😥😥😥😭😭😭
I know of a missing link in the education of geologists. When we look at the many horizontal layers that we find throughout our planet, we clearly see the effect of a repeating cataclysm. These disasters are mentioned in ancient books like the Mahabharata of India and the Popol Vuh of the Mayans and others. They tell us about a cycle of seven disasters that separate the eras from the world. Certainly, regularly recurring global disasters cannot be caused by asteroid impacts or volcanic eruptions. The only possible cause is another celestial body, a planet, orbiting our sun in an eccentric orbit. Then it is close to the sun for a short period and after the crossing at a very high speed it disappears into the universe for a long time. Planet 9 exists, but it seems invisible. These disasters cause a huge tidal wave of seawater that washes over land "above the highest mountains." At the end it covers the earth with a layer of mud, a mixture of sand, clay, lime, fossils of marine and terrestrial animals, gravel and meteorites. They also create a cycle of civilizations. To learn much more about the recurring flood cycle and its chronology, the re-creation of civilizations and ancient high technology, read the e-book: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". It can be read on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: invisible nibiru 9
All i can say is wow....that's deep...tks for the tips....very cool comment....
Billions trillions millions gagillions
Hey Rick Sowash, curb your enthusiasm. Your creeping me out with those eye balls.
Tough to watch although I'm sure he means well.
*It's a crime to be exciting and use your body to show emotion*
Somebody needs to tell the presenter that speed kills.
They had to put alot into a time frame...I appreciated it...
4400 years of sediment load in all river deltas of the world! This was the first time it had rained! No millions of years, you can only get a fossil if it’s covered up rapidly in the flood.
Bruh lay off the blow
No shit
Everybody knows that the climate never got warmer until the industrial revolution ended the ice age
Nope the glaciers were melted by volcanic activity
The industrial revolution didn't happen before the glaciers melted..... Definitely couldn't have caused it
I figured out where my parochial school teachers found their materials. Bahahaha then they tried to push creationism after showing us these videos. What a joke creationism is.
-you sure about that million , billion years old
All from the flood not millions of years
Pfffft, ignorance abides.
Good video...i do want to say I think it’s funny that scientists state things as fact that happened “millions of years ago” that yea you can make a guess but guess isn’t fact and your crazy if you don’t believe it lol
The hyperactive old man with the beard ruins the entire footage. I hate how his jaw swings around over exaggerated along with his tone
He made me feel like this was for 2nd graders until the others talked.
I really enjoyed this video..
best one I've seen amonst many....surely you haters could look better on camera, would love to see you do this...isn't as easy as it looks...everyones a critic...until they do it themselves...until you carry the bucket of water and don't spill one drop, only then will you understand...
Come on... Remember your just
guessing the millions and millions .... drinking the coolaid so to keep your job... sad.
I think it's usually religious extremists who drink the Kool-Aid. But hey, they move on to a better place right?
You are doing so great oh, you are courteous you were accepted to courtesy and then you had to go and add the million years thing that you have no idea what you're talkin about.
Lmao...try only about 10,000 to 6,000 years old....earth isn't that old...omg!!!
stop it.
You think the s planet is that simple do you. It takes 10,000 yrs for a simple evolutionary change.
Show us your evidence and dont use the Bible?
Stating the age of the earth is 10000 years old is an opinion that has no evidence behind it. Stating the earth is 4.5 billion years old has a mountain of evidence compiled by thousands of different scientists. You know, the scientist that used chemistry create your medications, or develop your phone or computer you use. Your science created car, using fuels made by scientist. Those people.
It's all a guess
This was a lie everyone put a not like
Idiot x2
Ohio is so boring and ugly. One of the most landslide prone states 😂 ok sure.
It's obvious you've never been to southwest Ohio. There's landslides/slippages all the time. They're not massive landslides, but landslides nonetheless. Plenty of retaining walls to keep things stable.
I live in southwest Ohio