| Links of related interest |
Home Page of J. W. Mies
Costa Rica photos
Southern Appalachians
UTC links
UTC Home Page
Geology
Home Page
Physics, Geology
and Astron.
UTC Catalogs
Lupton Library
Geobase
(electronic index)
Blackboard
Desert southwest links
Aerial
photos of Death Valley (A. Glazner and S. Hetzler)
Geology
of Death Valley
Geology of the Nat'l Parks

A scorpion at Warm Springs, Death Valley. Spring 2000

Around the campfire, Boulder Mountain, Utah. Spring 2000
Comments are welcome.
E-mail me at
Jonathan-Mies@utc.edu
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Geology Field Experience (Geology 496) culminates
with a 10-day field trip. In 1994, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, and
2006, the focus of the course (and the destination of the trip)
was the Basin and Range and the Colorado Plateau of northern
Arizona, southern California, southern Nevada, and Utah. Other
years, the course focused on Costa
Rica.
| 2008
Syllabus |
Inlcudes a description of the course, a tentative
schedule, grading policies, etc. for Spring 2008. |
Some aspects of Geology 496 are available to enrolled
students through UTC's online course delivery system, Blackboard
(requires UTCID and password).
Photos of the
Spring 2006 trip
Photos of the
Spring 2004 trip
Photos from 2002 and earlier trips (below)
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Nighttime geology along I-40.
A several-minute exposure of the outcrop across from Cholla
Lake County Park, Joseph City, AZ.
Illumination of the outcrop is from a nearby power plant.
Note the star tracks and the band of light in the foreground
from vehicles on the interstate.
Spring 2002
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| The 2002 group at Warm Springs, southern Death
Valley. |
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A group photo at Badwater, Death Valley, California. (Photo
by S. Howell.)
Spring 2000

The group studies Ubehebe, a large phreatic explosion crater
in northern Death Valley. This partial panorama is a mosic of
10 photographs.
Spring 2000
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Habte Churnet points out the cross bedding in the Triassic
Chinle Formation, Petrified Forest, Arizona.
Spring 2000
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Habte Churnet and I stand on the rim of SP crater, San Francisco
volcanic field, north of Flagstaff, Arizona.
SP cinder cone is a 71,000-year-old volcano. The basaltic
cone is approximately 800 feet high; the crater is 400 feet deep.
Spring 2000
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Students study layers of tuff in the footwall of a normal
fault near Shoshone, California. The dark layer in the upper-left
corner of the photo is a remarkable black vitrophyre (glass)
that grades upward and downward into progressively less welded
tuff.
Spring '98
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Students on the dunes near Stovepipe Wells, Death Valley,
California.
Spring '94
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Part of the group on top of SP Mountain (crater
rim).
Note the basaltic lava flow in the background.
Spring '94
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A group photo (a motly bunch) at Badwater, Death Valley, California,
282 feet below sea level. This is the lowest point in the western
hemisphere.
Spring '94

Schematic cross section of the western Colorado Plateau in
Arizona and Utah, from Meteor Crater to the Henry Mountains,
through the Grand Canyon. Click
here for a full-size version of this graphic (6944x1308,
110k gif file).
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