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What rivers can tell us about the earth's history | Liz Hajek | TEDxPSU

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    All right, let's get up
    our picture of the earth.
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    The earth is pretty awesome.
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    I'm a geologist, so I get
    pretty psyched about this,
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    but the earth is great.
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    It's powerful, it's dynamic,
    it's constantly changing.
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    It's a pretty exciting place to live.
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    But I want to share with you guys today
    my perspective as a geologist
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    in how understanding earth's past
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    can help inform and guide
    decisions that we make today
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    about how to sustainably live
    on earth's surface.
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    So there's a lot of exciting things
    that go on on the surface of the earth.
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    If we zoom in here a little bit,
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    I want to talk to you guys a little bit
    about one of the things that happens.
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    Material get shuffled around
    earth's surface all the time,
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    and one of the big thing that happens
    is material from high mountains
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    gets eroded and transported
    and deposited in the sea.
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    And this process is ongoing all the time,
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    and it has huge effects
    on how the landscape works.
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    So this example here in south India --
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    we have some of the biggest
    mountains in the world,
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    and you can see in this satellite photo
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    rivers transporting material
    from those mountains out to the sea.
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    You can think of these rivers
    like bulldozers.
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    They're basically taking these mountains
    and pushing them down towards the sea.
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    We'll give you guys an example here.
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    So we zoom in a little bit.
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    I want to talk to you guys
    specifically about a river.
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    We can see these beautiful patterns
    that the rivers make
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    as they're pushing material
    down to the sea,
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    but these patterns aren't static.
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    These rivers are wiggling
    and jumping around quite a bit,
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    and it can have big impacts on our lives.
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    So an example of this
    is this is the Kosi River.
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    So the Kosi River
    has this nice c-shaped pathway,
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    and it exits the big mountains of Nepal
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    carrying with it a ton of material,
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    a lot of sediments that's being
    eroded from the high mountains,
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    and it spreads out across India
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    and moves this material.
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    So we're going to zoom in to this area
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    and I'm going to tell you a little bit
    about what happened with the Kosi.
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    It's an example of how dynamic
    these systems can be.
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    So this is a satellite image
    from August of 2008,
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    and this satellite image is colored
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    so that vegetations or plants
    show up as green
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    and water shows up as blue.
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    So here again you can see
    that c-shaped pathway
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    that this river takes as it exits Nepal.
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    And now this is monsoon season.
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    August is monsoon season
    in this region of the world,
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    and anyone that lives near a river
    is no stranger to flooding
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    and the hazards and inconveniences
    at minimum that are associated with that.
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    But something interesting
    happened in 2008,
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    and this river moved in a way
    that's very different.
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    It flooded in a way that's very
    different than it normally does.
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    So the Kosi River is flowing down here,
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    but sometimes as these rivers
    are bulldozing sediment,
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    they kind of get clogged,
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    and these clogs can
    actually cause the rivers
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    to shift their course dramatically.
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    So this satellite image
    is from just two weeks later.
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    Here's the previous pathway,
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    that c-shaped pathway,
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    and you notice it's not blue anymore.
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    But now what we have is this blue pathway
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    that cuts down the middle
    of the field of view here.
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    What happened is
    the Kosi River jumped its banks,
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    and for reference,
    the scale bar here is 40 miles.
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    This river moved
    over 30 miles very abruptly.
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    So this river got clogged
    and it jumped its banks.
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    Here's an image from about a week later,
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    and you can see
    these are the previous pathways,
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    and you can see this process
    of river-jumping continues
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    as this river moves farther away
    from its major course.
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    So you can imagine
    in landscapes like this,
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    where rivers move around frequently,
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    it's really important to understand when,
    where and how they're going to jump.
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    But these kinds of processes
    also happen a lot closer to home as well.
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    So in the United States,
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    we have the Mississippi River
    that drains most of the continental US.
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    It pushes material
    from the Rocky Mountains
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    and from the Great Plains.
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    It drains it and moves it
    all the way across America
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    and dumps it out in the Gulf of Mexico.
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    So this is the course of the Mississippi
    that we're familiar with today,
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    but it didn't always flow
    in this direction.
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    If we use the geologic record,
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    we can reconstruct
    where it went in the past.
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    So for example, this red area here
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    is where we know the Mississippi River
    flowed and deposited material
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    about 4,600 years ago.
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    Then about 3,500 years ago it moved
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    to follow the course
    outlined here in orange.
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    And it kept moving and it keeps moving.
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    So here's about 2,000 years ago,
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    a thousand years ago,
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    700 years ago.
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    And it was only
    as recently as 500 years ago
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    that it occupied the pathway
    that we're familiar with today.
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    So these processes are really important,
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    and especially here, this delta area,
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    where these river-jumping events
    in the Mississippi
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    are building land at the interface
    of the land and the sea.
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    This is really valuable real estate,
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    and deltas like this are some of the most
    densely populated areas on our planet.
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    So understanding the dynamics
    of these landscapes,
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    how they formed and how they will
    continue to change in the future
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    is really important
    for the people that live there.
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    So rivers also wiggle.
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    These are sort of bigger jumps
    that we've been talking about.
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    I want to show you guys
    some river wiggles here.
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    So we're going to fly down
    to the Amazon River basin,
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    and here again we have a big river system
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    that is draining and moving and plowing
    material from the Andean Mountains,
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    transporting it across South America
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    and dumping it out
    into the Atlantic Ocean.
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    So if we zoom in here, you guys
    can see these nice, curvy river pathways.
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    Again, they're really beautiful,
    but again, they're not static.
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    These rivers wiggle around.
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    We can use satellite imagery
    over the last 30 or so years
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    to actually monitor how these change.
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    So take a minute and just watch
    any bend or curve in this river,
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    and you'll see it doesn't stay
    in the same place for very long.
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    It changes and evolves
    and warps its pattern.
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    If you look in this area in particular,
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    I want you guys to notice
    there's a sort of a loop in the river
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    that gets completely cut off.
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    It's almost like a whip cracking
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    and snaps off the pathway
    of the river at a certain spot.
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    So just for reference, again,
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    in this location, that river
    changed its course over four miles
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    over the course of a season or two.
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    So the landscapes
    that we live in on earth,
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    as this material
    is being eroded from the mountains
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    and transported to the sea,
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    are wiggling around all the time.
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    They're changing all the time,
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    and we need to be able
    to understand these processes
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    so we can manage and live
    sustainably on these landscapes.
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    But it's hard to do
    if the only information we have
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    is what's going on today
    at earth's surface.
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    Right? We don't have
    a lot of observations.
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    We only have 30 years' worth
    of satellite photos, for example.
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    We need more observations
    to understand these processes more.
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    And additionally, we need to know
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    how these landscapes are going
    to respond to changing climate
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    and to changing land use
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    as we continue to occupy
    and modify earth's surface.
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    So this is where the rocks come in.
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    So as rivers flow,
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    as they're bulldozing material
    from the mountains to the sea,
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    sometimes bits of sand and clay
    and rock get stuck in the ground.
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    And that stuff that gets stuck
    in the ground gets buried,
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    and through time, we get
    big, thick accumulations of sediments
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    that eventually turn into rocks.
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    What this means is that we can
    go to places like this,
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    where we see big, thick stacks
    of sedimentary rocks,
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    and go back in time
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    and see what the landscapes
    looked like in the past.
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    We can do this to help reconstruct
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    and understand
    how earth landscapes evolve.
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    This is pretty convenient, too,
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    because the earth has had
    sort of an epic history. Right?
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    So this video here
    is a reconstruction of paleogeography
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    for just the first
    600 million years of earth's history.
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    So just a little bit of time here.
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    So as the plates move around,
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    we know climate has changed,
    sea level has changed,
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    we have a lot of different
    types of landscapes
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    and different types of environments
    that we can go back --
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    if we have a time machine --
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    we can go back and look at,
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    and we do indeed have a time machine
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    because we can look at the rocks
    that were deposited at these times.
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    So I'm going to give you
    an example of this
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    and take you to a special
    time in earth's past.
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    About 55 million years ago,
    there was a really abrupt warming event,
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    and what happened was
    a whole bunch of carbon dioxide
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    was released into earth's atmosphere,
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    and it caused a rapid
    and pretty extreme global warming event.
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    And when I say warm, I mean pretty warm,
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    that there were things
    like crocodiles and palm trees
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    as far north as Canada
    and as far south as Patagonia.
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    So this was a pretty warm time
    and it happened really abruptly.
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    So what we can do
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    is we can go back and find rocks
    that were deposited at this time
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    and reconstruct how the landscape changed
    in response to this warming event.
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    So here, yay, rocks.
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    (Laughter)
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    Here's a pile of rocks.
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    This yellow blob here,
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    this is actually a fossil river,
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    so just like this cartoon I showed,
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    these are deposits that were
    laid down 55 million years ago.
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    As geologists, we can go
    and look at these up close
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    and reconstruct the landscape.
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    So here's another example.
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    The yellow blob here is a fossil river.
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    Here's another one above it.
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    We can go and look in detail
    and make measurements and observations,
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    and we can measure features.
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    For example, the features
    I just highlighted there
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    tell us that this particular river
    was probably about three feet deep.
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    You could wade
    across this cute little stream
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    if you were walking around
    55 million years ago.
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    The reddish stuff that's above
    and below those channels,
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    those are ancient soil deposits.
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    So we can look at those to tell us
    what lived and grew on the landscape
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    and to understand how these rivers
    were interacting with their floodplains.
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    So we can look in detail
    and reconstruct with some specificity
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    how these rivers flowed
    and what the landscapes looked like.
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    So when we do this
    for this particular place
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    at this time,
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    if we look what happened
    before this abrupt warming event,
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    the rivers kind of carved their way
    down from the mountains to the sea,
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    and they looked maybe similar to what
    I showed you in the Amazon River basin.
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    But right at the onset
    of this climate change event,
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    the rivers change dramatically.
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    All of a sudden they got much broader,
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    and they started to slide back and forth
    across the landscape more readily.
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    Eventually, the rivers reverted
    back to a state that was more similar
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    to what they would have looked like
    before this climate event,
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    but it took a long, long time.
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    So we can go back in earth's time
    and do these kinds of reconstructions
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    and understand how
    earth's landscape has changed
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    in response to a climate event like this
    or a land use event.
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    So some of the ways that rivers change
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    or the reasons that rivers change
    their pattern and their movements
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    is because of things like with extra water
    falling on the land's surface
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    when climate is hotter,
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    we can move more sediment
    and erode more sediment,
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    and that changes how rivers behave.
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    So ultimately,
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    as long as earth's surface is our home,
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    we need to carefully manage
    the resources and risks
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    associated with living
    in dynamic environments.
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    And I think the only way
    we can really do that sustainably
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    is if we include information
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    about how landscapes evolved
    and behaved in earth's past.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
What rivers can tell us about the earth's history | Liz Hajek | TEDxPSU
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Video Language:
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Team:
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Duration:
11:12

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