Geology 306 Mineralogy - Winter 2002

Geology 306, "Mineralogy", is intended as an introduction to minerals, in terms of their structure, composition, occurrence, and (to some extent) formation. The course serves as a springboard to more in-depth study of mineral and rock formation for those continuing on to 406, Optical Mineralogy, and 407, Petrology, and concepts and techniques required for courses as diverse as Paleomagnetism and Structural Geology will be covered.

Times & Locations

Lectures will be held on MWF 9:00 - 9:50 am, and a lab section will be held Tuesdays from 9:00 - 10:50 am, both in in ES223.

People

 Instructor: David Hirsch
Office hours: MWF 10-11 or by appointment in ES439.
Office phone: 650-2166
     *please do not phone at home
email: hirschd@cc.wwu.edu
Teaching Fellow: None

Texts

Other resources

Lab

Grades

This portion of the grade is calculated from the results of two half-period class exams (closed book), each worth 100 points, and also of some very short quizzes in lecture and labs (collectively worth 100 points). The full-period exam dates are listed below; attendance at these exams is required. In general, a missed exam will be cause for a grade of 0, unless an acceptable medical excuse is is presented, or a leave of absence from the Office of Student Life. In general, make-up exams will not be given, and your grade for an excused absence on a full-period exam will be calculated as the average of your final exam and the full-period exam you do take. The short quizzes mentioned above may not be announced in advance, and they cannot be made up if missed (although the lowest one will be dropped).
This portion of the grade is calculated from the results of the lecture and lab final exams - each is worth 200 points. The lecture final will be held as scheduled by the registrar (Monday, December 10th, 8:00 am to 10:00 am). It will be comprehensive and closed-book, and it will cover primarily lecture material. There will also be a lab practical exam, held during the last lab session, Tuesday, December 4th (during the normal lab time, 9:00 - 10:50 am). It will focus on lab topics, and emphasize mineral identification in hand specimen and other techniques covered in lab.
This portion of the grade is calculated from your laboratory work (150 pts.) and any course homework and projects (150 pts.).
Based on the above distribution, the maximum number of points possible will be (1000). The curve will be calculated and grades assigned in the following manner:

Prerequisites

Important Dates

Other Important Notes