Tim Demko's latest activity
- 2y ·
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Public·
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sciencemastodon.com
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@65dBnoise My first impression of the Fediverse: MY GOD...IT"S FULL OF STARS!
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@65dBnoise My first impression of the Fediverse: MY GOD...IT"S FULL OF STARS!
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@65dBnoise My first impression of the Fediverse: MY GOD...IT"S FULL OF STARS!
@65dBnoise My first impression of the Fediverse: MY GOD...IT"S FULL OF STARS!
- 2y ·
-
Public·
-
sciencemastodon.com
{"p":"","h":{"iv":"ROXSYW+cfvEbFHu5","at":"ocxplSQjdRC3tXEtB/9/wg=="}}
@65dBnoise That looks like it is a cobble reworked from that distinctive boulder conglomerate immediately below it. The crazy angle is evidence of rapid deposition and burial. You can also see that it affected deposition for a while after it was moved and buried, creating a bump that persisted like a standing wave, resulting in a succession of vertically-climbing wavy cross stratification. #SedimentologySunday
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@65dBnoise That looks like it is a cobble reworked from that distinctive boulder conglomerate immediately below it. The crazy angle is evidence of rapid deposition and burial. You can also see that it affected deposition for a while after it was moved and buried, creating a bump that persisted like a standing wave, resulting in a succession of vertically-climbing wavy cross stratification. #SedimentologySunday
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@65dBnoise That looks like it is a cobble reworked from that distinctive boulder conglomerate immediately below it. The crazy angle is evidence of rapid deposition and burial. You can also see that it affected deposition for a while after it was moved and buried, creating a bump that persisted like a standing wave, resulting in a succession of vertically-climbing wavy cross stratification. #SedimentologySunday
@65dBnoise That looks like it is a cobble reworked from that distinctive boulder conglomerate immediately below it. The crazy angle is evidence of rapid deposition and burial. You can also see that it affected deposition for a while after it was moved and buried, creating a bump that persisted like a standing wave, resulting in a succession of vertically-climbing wavy cross stratification. #SedimentologySunday