Environmental Geology 110 at Columbia Basin College  updated 3/21/09

Link to Lab –click here

Instructor:  Cassandra Strickland

Photo: Columbia River Basalts, Oregon Coast, Newport, OR

 

Prerequisites/

Concurrent Enrollment: Environmental Geology LABORATORY

Lecture Textbook: Environmental Geology by Carla Montgomery.  Any addition is fine.  Don’t forget to check eBay or Amazon.com for cheap texts!  Click on title of book to take you to the accompanying website from the publisher.

 

Lecture Schedule. We may cover material more quickly/slowly.

Week of:

Tentative Topic Schedule

Chapter

January

5th  

 

Syllabi review

Introduction to Environmental Geology

Review of Basic Earth Principles: Layered Earth, Plate Tectonics

Review of Basic Earth Principles:  Minerals & Rocks

 

1, 2, 3

12th

Out sick most of week- finished review, began streams

 

19th

No class, 19th

Surface Processes: Streams & Flooding

6, 7

 

26th

Test 1.  Tuesday

Surface Processes: Coastal Zones

Surface Processes: Mass Movement

 

8, 9

 

February

2nd

Surface Processes: Subsidence & Karst

 

9th

Internal Processes: Earthquakes

4

 

 

16th 

No class on the 16th

Internal Processes: Earthquakes

4

 

23rd 

Test 2.

Internal Processes: Volcanoes

 

5

March

2nd

Finish volcanoes

 

 

9th 

Water Resources & Pollution

 

11, 17

 

16th 

Water Resources & Pollution

 

11, 17

 

24rd 

 Final: March 24th- 2:30 to 4:30

Study Sheet Click here

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                      

 

Learning links:

*        Plate Tectonic Animations

*        Missoula Floods

*        All about Magmas

*       Volcano World

*       USGS Cascade Volcano Observatory

*        Mt. St. Helens National Volcanic Monument

 

Extra Credit: tba

Tests:  3@75 points each. Multiple Choice.

Homework: 4 at 25 points each. Assigned randomly throughout quarter.

Term Paper: 50 points. ~6-8 page paper that involves an environmental geology concern of your choice in the Pacific Northwest.

 

Ideas for Geology/Scenic Day Trips in Our Area (hiking, picnic, camping, scenic views, etc)

*         Mt. Rainier National Park (~2-~2.5 hour drive). SUMMER/FALL-  Go to the visitor’s center at Paradise.  Lots of paved paths, easy to access scenic views, picnic areas. Take Highway 12 (White Pass) for the faster trip; take Chinook Pass (highway 410) for the more scenic trip. (east entrance may be closed still…check the website!)

*         Boulder Cave (~1.5 hour drive).  SUMMER/FALL-  Is ¾ of the way up towards Chinook Pass on highway 410. This is a shortish, easy to walk path to a cave created by mass wasting.  Bring a lantern or flashlight!  Stop at Whistlin’Jack’s Lodge for lunch or dinner for a beautiful view of the river along the way (and good cheesecake); follow the highway another 15-20 minutes past Boulder Cave for a gorgeous view from the top of Chinook Pass.  Good fall colors!  This link gives a nice description…but beware, the driving instructions are for people coming from Seattle!  Boulder Cave, Post-intelligencer.

*        Gingko Petrified Forest State Park (~45 minutes).YEAR-ROUND.  Take highway 240 out of Sunnyside, to Vantage, WA..  This state park has 2 parts:  a small interpretive museum and a great hiking trail.  Along the trail (and at the museum) are several excavated fossil trees.  Great views of the Columbia River and hills.  Nice picnic area at the museum, with shade trees and bathrooms.

*        Hood River, Oregon.  (~1 hr, 15 minute drive).  YEAR-ROUND. This trip to the small town of Hood River takes you through the national scenic area of the Columbia Gorge.  Take highway 97 south out of Toppenish, towards Goldendale.  After Goldendale, continue south, take highway 14 along the Washington side of the Gorge.  View the great geology and breath-taking views of the Gorge.  At Hood River, cross the toll bridge over to Oregon.  There are many good shops and restaurants in Hood River, and a train to ride (Mt. Hood Railroad).  Check out Gorge Dog, one of my favorite stores there!  A plethora of side trips present themselves, if you have time (e.g. visit Multnomah Falls, Mt. Hood, museums in the Dalles and Stevenson and more).

*        White River Falls State Park, Oregon.  (~2 hour drive). YEAR-ROUND. This state park is a bit out of the way, but the views are gorgeous.  A large waterfall crashes over 2 separate ledges of Columbia River Basalt.  There is a nice picnic area, and a short hike to the lower plunge pool. 

 

Sources:  The material contained on this website has either been created by myself or borrowed from a variety of educational, governmental and private sources.  For material not originally my own, thank you for allowing me to use this material. Earth science instructors, please feel free to use any of my original material for educational purposes.

 

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