"New Mexico's Dynamic Geology" – W. Scott Baldridge

"New Mexico's Dynamic Geology" – W. Scott Baldridge

The Santa Fe Science Café for Young Thinkers presents Scott Baldridge, guest scientist at LANL, discussing “New Mexico’s Dynamic Geology” Date: February 23, 2017. The Café is sponsored by the Santa Fe Alliance for Science, the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum and the Santa Fe Public Schools.

11 Comments

  1. The Dancing Hyena on January 27, 2021 at 6:12 am

    I don’t understand why this gets so many downvotes…

  2. jwar725 on January 27, 2021 at 6:18 am

    At 20:06, Can anybody tell me the specific name and location of the tabletop rocks that are just sitting on top of the vertical column rock?

  3. Cowboy Geologist on January 27, 2021 at 6:24 am

    Very fascinating presentation. Retired Geologist here. When I was a kid, we drove by Capulin Volcano all the time but Dad would never turn off the highway for us to go look at it. BTW, Nevada is pronounced just like you spell it with "ad" in the middle, not Nev-Odd-Uh. Thanks for posting; loved it.

  4. Jennifer Bringman on January 27, 2021 at 6:26 am

    Are any of these volcanos dangerous? If the Yellowstone or Mt. Rainer blows will they cause other volcano to blow by pushing the tectonic plates?

  5. Two Tone on January 27, 2021 at 6:27 am

    I think Nick Zetner has ruined me on Geology lectures. This is interesting on what’s said, not however the presentation, and that’s a opinion. Another Opinion is this guy needs a red bull or two.

  6. Pope Anthony on January 27, 2021 at 6:31 am

    To those that might design a geology curriculum in the future: the geology course I took in college was MWF-classwork and labs on Tuesday. I will never forget that my first lab assignment was to find the weight of the earth. Seriously? How is this supposed to get me interested in geology? That kind of thing sounds like something geo majors with nothing better to do would do as a dare.

    For clarification: As a kid I was into dinosaurs, but I took it to the nexr level, studying geology, oceanology and meteorology because all three overlap. If there had been geology in high school and junior high-I would have taken it, but instead I had biology forced on me. Do you think that I care that there are 5 million species of butterfly with orange wings? A butterfly is a butterfly is a butterfly. Yawn. Biology did teach me that a lot of today’s "science" is way overblown. The media will blast headlines that a species of butterfly is about to die out. Really? That will leave 4,999,999 species of butterfly. Is there a shortage? By no means. Nature abhors a vacuum. Also, science seems to discover new species all the time. About ten years ago I read a press release that science "discovered" a new species of bug, but they’ve been around since the age of dinosaurs. Well, no shit Sherlock. I played with that same type of bug 55 years ago and you’re just now figuring it out?

  7. torputube on January 27, 2021 at 6:42 am

    at 19:29, where the heck did ALL that soil that eroded from around Ship Rock go? 🙂

  8. GeO BeTa on January 27, 2021 at 6:44 am

    Such a great presentation for people interested in know the whole picture of the geology and physiography of the NM State. Interesting the fact that there is lot to cover in terms of geologic research. Thanks a lot!

  9. Captain Ron on January 27, 2021 at 6:46 am

    This man is an excellent speaker. Sure taught me a bunch of interesting idea’s and concepts about the geology of our great state…. Thank you.

  10. Katharine Carmichael on January 27, 2021 at 6:49 am

    New Mexico’s Volcanoes aren’t done yet! That you can count on.. More will likely also be born. Its really gonna be Something.

  11. Pat Kelley on January 27, 2021 at 6:58 am

    Thank you w Scott baldridge.

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