Lectures will be held on MWF 11:00 - 11:50 am, and a lab section will be held Tuesdays from 10:00 - 11:50 am, both in ES223.
Instructor: David Hirsch
- Office hours: M12-1, WF 10-11 or by appointment in ES439/ES110.
- Office phone: 650-2166
- email: hirschd@cc.wwu.edu
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Teaching Fellow: Nigel
Davies
- email: daviesn@cc.wwu.edu
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Texts
- Nesse: Introduction to Mineralogy. This text has good coverage of mineralogical topics, and serves as a reference for physical and optical mineralogy. For some minerals, you will likely need to use The Manual of Mineralogy by Deer, Howie, and Zussman, which is available in ES223. Also, for those of you going on to take Advanced Petrography, Geo 407, our text (Nesse) will be very useful for that course as well.
- We will use the text extensively - bring it to lecture and (especially) lab.
Online resources
This document is available online, as are many others relevant to the course (listed below, in part). You can get to the course's home page by a number of routes, the easiest of which is probably http://www.davehirsch.com. The page is also linked from the "Courses Online" section of the Geology Department's site (http://geology.wwu.edu).
- The tentative schedule of labs and lectures is available.
- The web contains superb resources for this course and for general earth science. Check out these links and others.
- I have posted a couple of anonymous comments forms. In this way you can give me feedback on my teaching. If you don't want to fill out the whole survey, you can just skip to the end of the form and write a comment in the space provided.
- You can check your course scores online, interactively!
Email
The University expects you to be able to receive email sent to your official wwu.edu email address. Official notices will get sent there. I must be able to contact you at that email address as well. You can make this happen in one of two ways:
- Check 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.
- Forward your WWU email to your current email non-WWU account. This will probably be the best option for some of you. There is an easy way to do this, in the email section of MyWestern. I've made a brief guide (now outdated) to help you with this.
Note that "there is a technical problem" is not an acceptable excuse. If there is a problem, go to the ATUS help desk in Haggard Hall and get it straightened out. I have learned over the past few years that many of you will not check this email address voluntarily. In order to force you to comply with this, I will be sending out some quizzes over email.
Lab
- You should obtain a small (3/4" - 1" wide) three-ring binder in which you will compile reference sheets you create for each mineral we study in hand specimen and thin section. You will turn this notebook in to be checked each Friday, and it will be returned each Monday.
- Most of your lab work will be in small groups. Each student is responsible for turning in his or her own work.
- Because labs are for learning, not evaluation, they will not be graded. You may turn in your labs for comments. You lab grade will be determined on the basis of numerous quizzes and a lab final.
- Most labs will require use of the petrographic microscopes. There are eight microscopes stored in room 223, and they require a key for access. These keys are in the wooden lock box outside the main office (ES 240).
- You will need a hand lens for all labs including the first one. (10x or 12x magnification is best, 18x or 20x is too much). These (10x) can be obtained cheaply at the WWU Bookstore (the black ones are best). Also, there are numerous Geological Supply catalogs that carry excellent hand lenses - ask me.
- Exam - There will be a lab practical exam during the final lab session, which will focus on techniques covered in the lab sessions.
- Although we don't anticipate any trouble, WWU recommends that all students in labs obtain cheap ($1) lab insurance.
Course Objectives