GEOL 1404-002
Professor Robert H. Blodgett
Spring 2008


HISTORICAL GEOLOGY


Course Description

A geological history of the Earth with emphasis on fossils, evolution, depositional environments, and plate tectonics. A field trip will be required.

Course Rationale

As the world's population grows and expands, humans are placing a greater demand on earth resources, destroying habitats, contributing to the extinction of organisms, and causing rapid changes in our climate and oceans. To make educated decisions about these changes, consumers, voters, and decision-makers must understand how the Earth and its life forms have evolved and how scientists have obtained this knowledge. Studying historical geology provides a valuable perspective for this understanding.

Course Objectives

Instructional Methodology

This course will be taught in illustrated lecture, discussion, laboratory exercise, and field investigation formats. Student learning will be assessed through examinations of lecture and field trip material, through graded laboratory exercises and a graded well-core project, and through practical quizzes on laboratory material.

 

 

Registration

Section 10704 - Lecture - 9:10-10:25 A.M. Monday and Wednesday in RGC Room 108
                                Lab - 10:35-11:50 A.M. Tuesday and Wednesday in RGC Room 108
Prerequisite - Completion of GEOL 1403 - Physical Geology, or an equivalent physical geology laboratory course at another college.

Textbooks and Materials

     Required Books

Stanley, Steven M., 2005. Earth system history (second edition): New York, W. H. Freeman and Company, 567 p. ISBN 0-7167-3907-0.

Brice, James C., Levin, Harold L., and Smith, Michael S., 2004. Laboratory studies in Earth history (eighth edition): New York, McGraw Hill, 267 p. ISBN 0-07-252806-0 (Note: If you purchase a used copy, be sure that it has 267 p. and two maps in the back)

     Supplies

Three-ring notebook (optional) Protractor (required)
Colored pencils (at lease 10 colors) (required) Hand lens (10X pocket magnifier) (optional)
Ruler with metric and English units (required) Rock pick (chisel-edge or pointed-tip) (optional)
No. 2 pencils and pencil eraser (required) Vented safety goggles (ANSI Z87.1) (optional)

Laboratory

It is very important for you to attend all laboratory sessions. You should read the assigned pages in your laboratory manual before you come to class so that you can complete the exercise in the allotted time. Completed exercises are due one week after they are assigned unless otherwise notified. Some exercises will be due on the day that they are assigned or by the end of the next open laboratory session. Students who miss a laboratory, or who need extra time, can attend open-laboratory sessions facilitated by Geology Laboratory Technician John Conners in RGC Rm. 108 from 10:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M. on Fridays. For open laboratory sessions you must bring your own copy of laboratory exercises.

Field Trip

Our mandatory class field trip is on Saturday, April 12, 2008. Transportation for the field trip will be provided by the College. Department policy states that students who do not attend the required field trip will fail the class. If you are unable to attend our class field trip on April 12 it is you responsibility to make arrangements in advance to participate in a field trip lead by Professor Ron Johns (223-6002) at the Riverside Campus. Do not assume that if you miss the field trip that you will be able to make it up.

 

 

Communication

Instructor:   Robert (Bob) H. Blodgett, Ph.D., P. G., Professor
Office Hours:    8:00 - 9:00 A.M. Monday and Wednesday, and Noon - 3:00 P.M. Monday, or by appointment, in Rio Grande Campus Room 106;  Appointments can be arranged in person, by telephone, or by e-mail.
Telephone / voice mail:   223-3892
Electronic mail:     rblodget @ austincc.edu - checked at least daily Monday through Friday
Web page:   http://www.austincc.edu/rblodget/

Assessment and Grading

     Examinations and Quizzes

Lecture examinations will be graded, in-class, closed-book tests containing multiple-choice, matching, and short- and long-answer questions drawn from lectures, handouts, reading assignments, and the field trip. A final lecture examination will be given on the last day of class and will emphasize material covered since the last mid-term examination. Three graded, in-laboratory, practical quizzes will contain questions about samples of earth materials, maps and photographs, as well as short-answer questions about terminology and methodology. No exams or quizzes will be given early. If an exam or quiz is missed, the score on the final examination or quiz will be given for the missed examination or quiz.  Scores of 70 or greater on the final examination will substitute for the lowest  mid-term examination score. Review sheets will be distributed before each exam and quiz.

     Course Grade

Your final course score will be calculated as follows:

 10% - Laboratory exercises  54% - Three mid-term lecture examinations
  4% - Well core project  20% - Final lecture examination
 12% - Three laboratory quizzes   

There is no "extra credit." The following scale will be used to determine your course grade: 90-100% = A, 80-89% = B, 70-79% = C, 60-69% = D and below 60% = F.  Students whose final course scores are 59%, 69%, 79%, and 89% will be advanced to the next higher grade if their final lecture examination shows improvement over scores on their mid-term lecture examinations.

 

 

 

 

 

Course Policies

     Participation and Assignments

You are expected to attend lectures and participate in class discussion. Students who do not attend class during the first two weeks of the semester may be administratively withdrawn. You are expected to work with the professor and your classmates. This may include distributing and collecting course materials in the classroom, setting up and logging off of computers, participating in class demonstrations, and cleaning up the classroom. Assignments turned in late will be penalized four percentage points each calendar day; however, it is better to turn an assignment in late than to receive no points for the work. Late assignments placed in Professor Blodgett's mailbox in RGC Rm. 204 must have the date they are turned in stamped on them by the administrative assistant in the mail room. Late work will not be accepted after an assignment has been returned to the class.

     Withdrawals

If you decide to drop this class, it is your responsibility to protect your academic record by withdrawing no later than Monday, April 21, 2008. The professor, however, reserves the right to withdraw a student for not meeting course objectives. Departmental policy forbids the professor from withdrawing you from this class after the withdrawal date. It is your responsibility to verify that you have successfully withdrawn from the class. You are strongly encouraged to keep copies of paperwork should there be a problem in the computer records.

     Incompletes

An incomplete (grade of "I") will be given only if extenuating circumstances, such as illness or death of a loved one, keep a student from completing the final examination. Incompletes must be requested in writing with documentation of the extenuating circumstances. If a grade of I is given, the final examination must be taken by a date set by the student and professor. This date may not be later than two weeks prior to the end of the 2008 Summer Semester.

     Freedom of Expression, Scholastic Dishonesty, and Student Discipline - see Attachment 1

     Special Needs

Each ACC campus offers support services for students with documented physical or psychological disabilities. Students with disabilities must request reasonable accommodations through the Office for Students With Disabilities (RGC Annex Rm. 150 / 223-3142) on the campus where they expect to take the majority of their classes. Students are encouraged to do this three weeks before the start of the semester. Students who are requesting accommodations must provide the professor with an Approved Accommodations and Academic Adjustments form before any accommodations can be made. Both ACC and your professor are committed to making accommodations and adjustments for qualified students. All information regarding your medical condition and special needs is confidential.

 

 

Studying

Science courses, especially those with laboratory and field exercises, may require a different approach to studying than other courses. In this course you will be asked to conceptualize things in three dimensions, understand complex concepts, conceptualize billions of years of geologic time, and learn a whole new vocabulary for describing your planet. You will improve your performance if you take notes from both the textbook and the lecture, answer the review questions in each chapter, and learn the key terms shown with bold type in the text. Many students find it useful to make flash cards for key terms and their definitions, just as your might for vocabulary in a foreign language course, and to study in groups with their classmates. Visual learners may find it useful to study the Visual Overviews at the beginning of each textbook chapter. The textbook publisher's Web site, http://bcs.whfreeman.com/esh2e/. contains an on-line study guide with self-corrected quizzes, animations, interactive exercises, and Web links for each chapter. Many students underestimate the amount of time needed to do well in this course. At a minimum, you should expect to spend at least one hour outside of class studying for every hour you spend in class. A free geology tutor is also available in several of the ACC Learning Labs; check http://www.austincc.edu/tutor/ for locations and hours.

Classroom Etiquette

You are expected to be seated and ready for class on time. If you arrive late or need to leave early, please sit near a door. Please notify the professor if you have to arrive late or leave early on a regular basis. As a common courtesy, do not interrupt the professor or classmates when they are speaking, do not carry on conversations during lectures, and please turn off audible rings on your cell phone, pager, and computer before you come to class. Note taking with computers will be restricted if elevated computer screens are distracting to others. In the classroom, and in field activities, you are expected to focus on course content and not engage in other electronic communication.
GEOL 1404 COURSE SCHEDULE*
Date
Lecture Topic
Text
Laboratory Exercise
Manual
Jan 14
Introduction 
1, 2
 Continuation of  lecture
-
Jan 16
Diversity of Life
3
Geography/Chemistry Review
-
Jan 21
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
-
No Class
-
Jan 23
Fossils and Fossilization
3
Biological Classification
 p.93-95
Jan 28
Environments and Life
4
Fossils and Fossilization
p.92-93
Jan 30
Sediment and Sedimentary Rocks
5
 Sediment & Sedimentary Rocks
  p.1-18
Feb 4
 Sedimentary Environments - II
5
Sedimentary Environments
p.28-39
Feb 6
 Relative Dating and Correlation
6
  Time/Ordering of Geologic Events
 p.60-70
Feb 11
 Absolute Dating
6
  Rock and Time-Rock Units
p 71-84 
Feb 13
 Exam 1 (Chap.1 - 5)
-
Rock and Time-Rock Units  
p.71-84 
Feb 18
 Evolution and the Fossil Record
7
Ancient Shorelines
p.85-91 
Feb 20
 Plate Tectonics
8
Tectonics and Earth Materials
p.248-266
Feb 25
Tectonics and Mountain Building
9
Quiz 1 
-
Feb 27
The Hadean World 
11
 Invertebrate Fossils
p.105-154
Mar 3
 The Archean World
11
 Invertebrate Fossils
p.105-154
Mar 5
 Exam 2 (Chap. 6 - 9)
-
 Microfossils and Plant Fossils
p.96-104
p.148-154
Mar 10-16
Spring Break
-
No Class
-
Mar 17
 The Proterozoic World
12
Fossils and Age Determination
p.155-170
Mar 19
 Early Paleozoic Life
13
 Paleoecology
 p.155-170
Mar 24
 Early Paleozoic Tectonics/Sedimentation
13
 Geologic Structures
 p.184-210
Mar 26
 Middle Paleozoic Life
14
 Quiz 2
 -
Mar 31
Mid-Paleozoic Tectonics/Sedimentation
14
 Geologic Structures
 p.184-210
Apr 2
 Late Paleozoic Life
15
 Introduction to Geologic Maps
 p.184-210
Apr 7
 Late Paleozoic Tectonics/Sedimentation
15
Geologic Map Interpretation
 -
Apr 9
 Early Mesozoic Life
16
Geologic Map Interpretation
-
Apr 12
Field Trip
-
-
-
Apr 14
 Exam 3 (Chap. 11 - 15)
-
Geologic Map Interpretation
 -
Apr 16
 Early Mesozoic Tectonics/Sedimentation
16
Subsurface Methods
-
Apr 21
 The Cretaceous World
17
Final Lab Quiz
 -
Apr 23
 Tertiary Tectonics
18-19
Well Core Project
-
Apr 28
Tertiary Sedimentation and Life
18-19
Well Core Project
-
Apr 30
 Tertiary Life
18-19
Well Core Project Presentations
-
May 5
The Quaternary
20
Review
-
May 7
Final Exam (Chap.16-20,field trip,review)
-
Course Evaluation
-

*Schedule changes may occur during the semester.  Any changes will be announced in class.

 

Attachment 1

                   ACC Academic Policies and Services

     Freedom of Expression

          Each student is strongly encouraged to participate in class.  In any classroom situation
          that includes discussion and critical thinking, there are bound to be many differing
          viewpoints.  These differences enhance the learning experience and create an
          atmosphere where students and professors alike will be encouraged to think and learn.
          On sensitive and volatile topics, students may sometimes disagree not only with each
          other but also with the professor.  It is expected that faculty and students will respect
          the views of others expressed in classroom discussions.

     Scholastic Dishonesty

          Acts prohibited by the College for which discipline may be administered include
          scholastic dishonesty, including but not limited to cheating on an exam or quiz,
          plagiarizing, and unauthorized collaboration with another in preparing outside work.
          Academic work submitted by students shall be the result of their thought, research, or
          self-expression.  Academic work is defined as, but not limited to tests, quizzes, whether
          taken electronically or on paper; projects, either individual or group; classroom
          presentations, and homework.

     Student Discipline

          Students enrolled in this course are expected to comply with the provisions of this
          syllabus and the Student Code of Conduct.  With the exception of scholastic
          dishonesty, violations of the Student Code of Conduct will be reported to the
          Rio Grande Campus Dean of Student Services for disciplinary action.  Any student
          suspected of scholastic dishonesty will meet in private with the professor to discuss the
          alleged offense(s) and review the evidence that supports the charge.  After conferring
          with the student, the professor will dismiss the allegation or assess an academic
          penalty.  A student will be informed in writing if an academic penalty is assessed and he
          or she should consult the current Student Handbook for their rights and responsibilities.

     Services

          Student Handbook: http://www.austincc.edu/handbook/
          Student Resources: http://www.austincc.edu/resources_students/
          Rio Grande Campus Directory:  http://www.austincc.edu/RGC/directory.php
          Testing Center Policies & Procedures: http://www.austincc.edu/testctr/studentarea.php
          ACC Bookstore: http://austincc.bkstore.com/