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Jan 02, 2025
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GEOL 5541 - Carbonate Depositional Systems II Field study of modern and Pleistocene carbonate rocks and depositional environments of the Bahamas. Involves a week long field trip during spring break and a post-field project.
Requisites: Credit Hours: 2 Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken. Lecture/Lab Hours: 40.0 laboratory Grades: Eligible Grades: A-F,WP,WF,WN,FN,AU,I Learning Outcomes: - Fifteen percent of the grade for graduate students will be based on the following additional work: Each graduate student will write a 5 page paper and present a 20 minute presentation to the class on an assigned topic.
- Apply knowledge gained in the classroom setting to the field setting.
- Apply sequence stratigraphic principles to determine geologic and climatic history preserved in the rock record.
- Create a field guide to the geology and carbonate sedimentology of the field sites visited to synthesize information learned in the field.
- Gain a detailed appreciation for carbonate deposition and the ability to use scientific observation to analyze and interpret ancient depositional environments.
- Graduate students should perform at a higher level than undergraduates. Written exercises and exam questions should display additional depth of understanding and analysis documented by higher degree of detail and strongly supported arguments.
- Learn to interpret depositional setting of Pleistocene and Holocene carbonate rocks based on skeletal and non-skeletal constituents.
- Learn to take detailed field data of observations
- Observe modern and ancient karst processes due to both mixing zone and surface hydrologic conditions
- Observe modern carbonate depositional systems and critically consider the sedimentary and diagenetic processes involved in the transition from sediment to carbonate rock.
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