Description
Learn Pacific Northwest geology and geologic history by studying rocks, sediments, landforms, fossils, geologic maps and geologic structures. Examine how plate tectonics, volcanoes, faulting, folding, rock formations, geologic time, mountain building, terrain accretion, earthquakes, glaciers, rivers and floods have created our land and resources. May require field trip(s). Includes laboratory.
Grading Basis
Graded
Course Learning Outcomes
Core Topics
- the geologic time scale
- relative and absolute geologic time
- the rock cycle
- identifying and understanding the origins of common rocks and minerals
- plate tectonics
- plate subduction
- orogeny (mountain-building episodes)
- terrane accretion
- basic types of faults and folds
- major faults in the Pacific Northwest, active and inactive
- association of active faults with earthquakes
- earthquake hazard zones in the Pacific Northwest relative to location and plate boundaries
- tsunami, and history of tsunami on PNW coast
- major folds, grabens, and metamorphic core complexes in the Pacific Northwest
- continental and alpine glaciers
- glacial erosional features
- glacial depositional features
- glaciation history of the Pacific Northwest
- Channeled Scablands and glacial Lake Missoula outburst floods
- geologic history of the Pacific Northwest over the course of geologic time
- fossils of the Pacific Northwest
- the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary in the Pacific Northwest
- volcanoes (types of volcanoes, types of eruptions, volcanic arcs at subduction zones, flood basalts)
- basic geologic structures (faults, folds, grabens, metamorphic core complexes)
- reading geologic maps and geologic map keys
- reading geologic cross-sections
- drawing geologic cross-sections (optional)
- drawing geologic maps (optional)
- paleomagnetism (optional)