Geology 406 Petrology - Winter 2004

Geology 406, "Petrology", is an intensive course devoted to teaching identification, nomenclature, and processes of formation of igneous and metamorphic rocks found in the Earth's crust and upper mantle. The lab portion will focus on examining rocks in hand sample. The first half of the course is devoted to the study of igneous rocks whereas the second half is devoted to study of metamorphic rocks. We will emphasize the close relationship between igneous and metamorphic processes and plate tectonic setting.

Times & Locations

Lectures will be held on MWF 3:00 - 3:50 p.m. in ES218. Lab sessions will be Tuesday 9-10:50, but these will not be sufficient to complete the labs - you will need to spend time outside of class. There may well be some mixing of lab time and lecture time.

People

 Instructor: David Hirsch
Office hours: MWF 10:00-11:00 (or by appointment) in ES439/ES110.
Office phone: 650-2166
     *please do not phone at home
email: hirschd@cc.wwu.edu
Teaching Fellow: none

Texts

Research Paper and Presentation

Geology 406 has been designated as a "writing intensive" course. This means that a large part of your grading is based on how well you can communicate the results of an individual research project in petrology or petrography. This involves writing and rewriting a term paper. The complete term paper due on February 20 should be your best effort. It is not meant to be a draft. If it is satisfactory, this can be your final version. If it isn't, you will need to turn in a revised version. The deadlines for doing this work are as follows:

Friday, January 22 Term paper introduction & outline due
Friday, February 20 Complete term paper due
Monday, March 15 Revised version of term paper due

Field Trips

There will be one required field trip for the class. Details will be announced. There may be other field trips as well.

Online resources

This document is available online, as are many others revelant to the course (linked below, in part). You can get to the course's home page by going to http://www.davehirsch.com (click Geol 406 in lower-left), and it is also linked from the "Courses Online" section of the Geology Department's site (http://geology.wwu.edu)

Email

I must be able to contact you through email. You can make this happen in one of three ways:

  1. Use your WWU email address on a regular basis. For those of you who require web access, there is a web email interface that is part of MyWestern. However, I realize that many of you prefer to stick with your old email addresses, or just don't like the MyWestern email.
  2. Forward your non-WWU email to your WWU email account. This will re-send all email received at your current address instantly and automatically to your WWU email address. You will need to check with your current email provider to see how to do this; not all providers will allow it.
  3. Forward your WWU email to your current email account. This will probably be the best option for most of you. There is an easy way to do this, in the email section of MyWestern. I've made a brief guide to help you with this.

There may be important announcements sent out over email this way. I strongly encourage you to be sure that you actually get mail sent to your official email address!

Lab

Grades

Late assignments will be docked 2% for each day late. All exams will be taken at the assigned times (no early exams). Make-up exams will not be offered except by prior arrangement with the instructor and must include an official excused absence from Student Support Services (OM 100, x3844), the Health Center (x3400), or your coach.
There will be two exams, one covering igneous rocks, and the other covering metamorphic rocks.
There will be a midterm and a final. The final exam will be non-cumulative.
This portion of the grade is calculated from your scores on the research paper (300 pts), your lab assignments, as well as any quizzes, homework assignments, or other work, such as a field trip writeup.
Based on the above distribution, the maximum number of points possible will be (1000). Letter grades will be assigned by reference to the scale below. In unusual circumstances, the scale can, at my discretion, be made more generous.

Important Dates

Other Important Notes


David M. Hirsch
Modified on Mon, Jul 12, 2004 at 11:13 PM