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GEOL 100

GEOL 100
Earth Resources and Natural Hazards

1. Catalog Entry

GEOL 100
Earth Resources and Natural Hazards

Credit hours (4)

Examines the effects of geologic processes and hazards on human activities, the appraisal of human impact on the natural physical environment, and the geologic occurrence, availability and use of mineral and energy resources. GEOL 100 will satisfy half the general education laboratory science requirement. Students who have earned credit for GEOL 103 may not also earn credit for GEOL 100. General Education credit – Physical and Natural Sciences.

2. Detailed Description of Course

This course gives students an overview of environmental geology, the branch of geology that deals with man's interaction with the natural physical environment. The scope of environmental geology encompasses the recognition and amelioration of three major problems that face humans. The first is naturally occurring geologic processes and hazards such as flooding, mass wasting, volcanic activity, earthquakes, coastal erosion, and health as it relates to the geologic setting. The second deals with human-induced environmental problems such as pollution, waste disposal, and engineering as it applies to natural materials and existing topography. The third involves location, use, and conservation of geologic resources such as water, soil, minerals, and energy as well as land-use planning.

Topics addressed in this course include, but are not limited to:
    1) The philosophical basis and fundamental concepts involved in environmental geology
    2) Natural earth cycles
    3) Natural hazards
        a. River flooding
        b. Mass movement
        c. Earthquakes and related phenomena
        d. Volcanic activity
        e. Coastal hazards
    4) Water
    5) Soils
    6) Waste disposal
    7) Geologic aspects of environmental health
    8) Minerals, energy, and the environment
    9) Land-use and decision-making

The laboratory portion of this course is designed to supplement and complement the lecture portion of this course by giving students practical experience in interpreting topographic maps, examining geologic hazards, investigating the location and use of mineral, water, and soil resources, waste disposal, and land-use planning. In addition to in-class exercises, field trips may be taken. The content of the laboratory portion of the course consists of exercises that deal with the following:
    1) Topographic map interpretation
    2) River flooding
    3) Mass wasting
    4) Earthquakes
    5) Volcanic activity
    6) Coastal hazards
    7) Surface hydrology
    8) Groundwater
    9) Waste disposal
    10)Mineral resources
    11)Energy exploration
    12)Landscape evaluation
    13)Hazard evaluation

3. Detailed Description of Conduct of Course

Lectures, demonstrations, case histories, audio/video presentations, classroom discussions, laboratory exercises and reading assignments will be used.

4. Goals and Objectives of the Course

    1) Students will become acquainted with the scientific method as it applies to geology.
    2) Students will learn about the effect of geologic processes as natural hazards on human life and property.
    3) Students will learn to assess and come to appreciate human impacts on the natural environment, including artificially produced
        hazards and disruption of natural systems.
    4) Students will learn about the necessity of assessing the human need for and the use of natural geologic resources.
    5) Students will understand the fundamental need to live and work in harmony with the natural world and to minimize environmental
        impacts.
    6) Students will learn how to prudently evaluate landscapes for uses that match the intrinsic suitability of the land for a variety of uses,
        and how to manage human wastes properly.
    7) Students will apply knowledge gained in lecture to practical problems in the laboratory.
    8) Students will obtain the background knowledge they will need for some of their upper level geology courses.
    9) Students will be able to:
        a. Distinguish between findings that are based upon empirical data and those that are not;
        b. °ÄÃÅÀÏÆæÈËÂÛ̳ scientific principles within the context of a specific scientific discipline to solve real world problems

5. Assessment Measures

Lecture exams, pop quizzes, and a final examination will be used to assess the students' knowledge of geologic hazards, waste management, geologic resources, and prudent landscape evaluation and utilization. Laboratory exercises and exams will be used to assess the students' skill in reading and interpreting topographic and geologic maps, in assessing geologic hazards, resources and landscape use and analyzing geologic conditions.

6. Other Course Information

GEOL 100 is a required course for a major and minor in geology. GEOL 100 partially fulfills the general education requirement in laboratory science.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
    1) AGI/NAGT, 2006, Laboratory Manual in Physical Geology (7th edition), Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, 320 p.
    2) Blatt, Harvey, 1998, Laboratory Exercises in Environmental Geology, (2nd edition), McGraw-Hill, New York, NY, 177 p.
    3) Bloom, Arthur L., 1978, Geomorphology, Prentice-Hall Inc., Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 510 p.
    4) Bryant, Edward, 1991, Natural Hazards, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 294 p.
    5) Bullard, Fred M., 1984, Volcanoes of the Earth, University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas, 629 p.
    6) Craig, James R., Vaughan, David J., and Skinner, Brian J., 1988, Resources of the Earth, Prentice-Hall Inc., Englewood Cliffs, NJ,
        395 p.
    7) Duxbury, Alyn C. and Duxbury, Alison B., 1989, An Introduction to the World's Oceans (2nd edition), Wm C. Brown Publishers,
        Dubuque, Iowa, 408 p.
    8) Ehrlich, Paul R. and Ehrlich, Anne H., 1972, Population Resources Environment, (2nd edition), W. H. Freeman & Co., San Francisco,
         CA, 509 p.
    9) Fetteer, C. W., Jr., 1980, Applied Hydrogeology, Charles E. Merrill Publishing Co., Columbus, OH, 488 p.
    10)Hamblin, W. Kenneth, 1992, Earth's Dynamic Systems (6th edition), Macmillan Publishing Company, New York, NY, 647 p.
    11)Hatcher, Robert D., Jr., 1990, Structural Geology, Merrill Publishing Company, Columbus, Ohio, 531 p.
    12)Keller, Edward A., 1992, Environmental Geology, Macmillan Publishing Co., New York, NY, 521 p.
    13)Keller, Edward A., 2005, Introduction to Environmental Geology, (3 rd edition), Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ, 672 p.
    14)Levin, Harold L., 1991, The Earth Through Time (4th edition), Saunders College Publishing, Philadelphia, PA, 649 p.
    15)McHarg, Ian L., 1971, Design with Nature, Doubleday & Co., Inc., 197 p.
    16)Montgomery, Carla, 2003, Environmental Geology (6 th edition), McGraw-Hill, Hightstown, New Jersey, 554 p.
    17)Pipkin, Bernard W. and Cummings, David, 1983, Environmental Geology, Star Publishing Co., Belmont, CA, 212 p.
    18)Press, Frank and Siever, Raymond, 1986, Earth, W. H. Freeman and Company, New York, NY, 656 p.
    19)Rahn, Perry H., 1986, Engineering Geology, Elsevier Science Publishing Co., New York, NY, 589 p.
    20)Smith, David G. (ed.), 1981, The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences, Crown Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, 496 p.

Review and Approval

September 2005

June 20, 2015