Geology 407 Advanced Petrography - Winter 2008 - CRN 11431

The goal of Advanced Petrography, is to learn how to identify minerals and understand petrologic processes using the petrographic microscope, one of the most important tools of geology. By looking at rocks and minerals in this fashion, a more detailed understanding of the physical and chemical processes involved in the macroscopic geologic processes of the earth can be obtained than is otherwise possible.

Times & Locations

Lectures and labs will be mixed, but generally lectures will be held on MWF 2:00 - 2:50 pm, and labs Tuesdays 2:00 - 3:50 pm, both in ES218.

People

 Instructor: David Hirsch
Office hours: MWF 11-12 or by appointment in ES439/ES110.
Office phone: 650-2166
email: hirschd@cc.wwu.edu
Teaching Assistant: Jen Wright

Texts

Online resources

This document is available online, as are many others revelant 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).

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:

  1. 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.
  2. 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 I've made a brief guide (now outdated) to help you with this.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

Course Objectives

  1. Understand the generation of observed features in the petrographic microscope.
  2. Learn the techniques of conoscopic analysis in the petrographic microscope.
  3. Identify igneous and metamorphic microstructures in thin section.
  4. Perform, present, and review petrologic research on local rock suites.

Expected Outcomes & Assessment

Grades

The exam grades will be curved if necessary, by multiplying all grades by a value necessary to raise the mean grade to 72%. If the mean grade is greater then 72%, then the grade for that exam will not be curved.
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. Although the cutoffs for each letter grade will not be assigned until the end of the course, they will be no harsher than the list below. For example: If your curved score is 86.5%, then the lowest grade you could get is a B, but you could get any higher grade as well).

Prerequisites

Other Important Notes


David M. Hirsch
Modified on Mon, Jan 07, 2008 at 9:46 AM