Author Archives: gsw

GSW 1546

The Geological Society of Washington
founded 1893

WEDNESDAY, October 23, 2019
MEETING # 1546

SIOBHÁN COOKE,
The Johns Hopkins University

Primate Evolution at La Venta, Colombia

JORDEN HAYES,
Dickinson College
The Space Between: Porosity production in the critical zone

GRAHAM LEDERER & BILL BURTON,
U.S. Geological Survey
Powell 150, the Sesquicentennial Colorado River Exploring
Expedition, and the continued legacy of John Wesley Powell

TALKS WILL BE 20 MINUTES w/ QUESTIONS TO FOLLOW
___________________________________
Refreshments at 7:30 p.m. Formal program at 8:00 p.m.
John Wesley Powell Auditorium
2170 Florida Avenue NW, Washington, DC

Meeting flyer to print & post at your institution

Draft minutes of the 1544th meeting of GSW, for review by members

Members of the Society,

Please take 3.1 minutes to read through this draft set of minutes from our Sept. 11 meeting, and email any omissions or corrections or additions to Meeting Secretary Megan Holycross at holycrossm@si.edu.

Thanks for your attention to this brief but important process.

GSW 1545: 2 landslides + 1 crustal evolution

The Geological Society of Washington
founded 1893

WEDNESDAY, October 2, 2019
MEETING # 1545

DALIA KIRSCHBAUM, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Finding the Slippery Slope: Opportunities to Investigate Landslides from Space

MONG-HAN HUANG, University of Maryland
Monitoring seasonal slow-moving landslide and hazard in Aizawl, India from space

TAMARA CARLEY, Lafayette College
Investigating proto-continental crust construction using very young (Icelandic) and very old (Hadean) zircon

TALKS WILL BE 20 MINUTES w/ QUESTIONS TO FOLLOW

___________________________________

Share the news: Print & post this flyer at your institution. Thanks!

___________________________________

Refreshments at 7:30 p.m. Formal program at 8:00 p.m.

John Wesley Powell Auditorium
2170 Florida Avenue NW, Washington, DC

Two opportunities for funding to attend IGC in Delhi, India (March 2020)

At our most recent meeting, Ester Sztein noted two funding opportunities for young geoscientists who are keen to travel to Delhi for the 36th International Geological Congress next year.

  1. “GEOHOST” from the National Academy of Science
  2. IGC travel grants from a consortium of institutions including the Geological Society of America, the Geological Society of America Foundation, and the U.S. National Committee for Geological Sciences

Please share with those who are eligible.

Job Alert: Cataloging technician with the Smithsonian’s NMNH

This post describes a job opportunity that may be of interest to members of the GSW community:

Contract Position: Cataloging technician – David Clague Collection

Contractor shall provide professional, technical, non-personal services to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, Department of Mineral Sciences, Division of Petrology and Volcanology, National Rock and Ore Collections. Contractor will organize, catalog and capture specimen data for one half of the research collections of Dr. David Clague, a gift from the Monterey Bay Aquatic Research Institute (MBARI). The collection currently resides in 138 drawers at MSC, and consists of approximately 3860 specimen lots of volcanic submarine rock samples collected either as dredge samples or dive samples from Hawaii, the Hawaiian Ridge and Emperor Seamounts, Juan de Fuca Ridge, Gorda Ridge, Blanco Facture Zone, California Seamounts, Iceland, Reunion Island, Socorro Island, and the Gulf of Alaska, and includes not only hand samples but grain mounts, thin sections, and other associated preparations. The work to complete 69 drawers (the first half of the collection) is estimated to take 10 months to complete.

Desirable qualifications include:

  • a bachelor’s degree in earth science or a related physical science
  • experience working with museum specimens
  • experience working with Axiell EMu or similar collection management software
  • experience working with Microsoft Excel

The work will take place at the Museum Support Center in Suitland, Maryland. The contractor will have access to the facility between the hours of 8:00am and 5:00pm, Monday through Friday. The contract will require an estimated 10 months of work, and the period of the contract shall not exceed one year. Liability insurance through the Smithsonian Institution is required.

A copy of this announcement, including the Request For Quote, Statement Of Work, and any updates related to the announcement, is available at https://naturalhistory.si.edu/research/mineral-sciences/opportunities. To apply for this contract, please send your bid, along with a cover letter, resume/CV, and contact information for two references, to Leslie Hale (halel@si.edu) before September 30, 2019.

The Smithsonian Institution is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

AAPG Eastern Section meeting in Columbus, Ohio

Registration is open for the Eastern Section AAPG 2019 Annual Meeting. The meeting will be held in Columbus, Ohio, October 12-16, 2019 at the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Columbus – Worthington (https://www.esaapg.org/annual-meeting/).
There are over 100 talks and posters that will be presented in the following sessions:
  • Hydrocarbon Exploration and Development from Unconventional Reservoirs
  • Utilizing Technology in Modern Exploration and Production
  • Horizontal Wells: Design, Drilling, Completion, Hydraulic Fracturing, and Production Techniques
  • Reservoir Characterization, Case Studies/Histories
  • Recent Advances and Case Studies in Enhanced Recovery of Oil and Gas
  • Conventional Petroleum Exploration and Production in the Eastern USA
  • Energy Sustainability and the Environment
  • Regional Geology of the Eastern USA
  • Environmental Impacts from Hydraulic Fracturing, Wastewater Disposal, and Minerals Extraction
  • Historical Perspectives on Energy Development in the Eastern USA
In addition, there are three pre-meeting field trips, two short courses, two luncheons, and the Student Job Expo.
Early Bird Registration deadline is September 30th.
GSW is an AAPG affiliate society.

GSW 1544: Diversity, funding, & light stable isotopes

The Geological Society of Washington
founded 1893

WEDNESDAY, September 11, 2019
MEETING # 1544

Deborah Green, Richard H. Jahns Distinguished Lecturer in Applied Geology

You Don’t Look Like a Geologist –
Why are the Geosciences the Least Diverse of the STEM Fields?

Laura Szymanski, Geological Society of America

Funding to Fly High: How the appropriation process works for NASA projects

Scott Wieman, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Light stable isotope research in support of ongoing and future NASA flight missions

Help spread the word: Print and display this meeting flyer at your institution.

 

TALKS WILL BE 20 MINUTES w/ QUESTIONS TO FOLLOW

Refreshments at 7:30 p.m. Formal program at 8:00 p.m.

John Wesley Powell Auditorium
2170 Florida Avenue NW, Washington, DC

www.gswweb.org

Draft minutes: Meeting 1543 (for review by members)

Greetings GSW members! Your keen eyes are needed to review these draft minutes from the 1543rd meeting. There’s at least one missing last name in there – help us fill it in! Please send corrections or additions to Meeting Secretary Megan Holycross at holycrossm@si.edu. Thanks in advance for giving this a few moments of your attention.

GSW 1543: Mineralogy and oceans, Icelandic coring, and bonebeds

The Geological Society of Washington
founded 1893

WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 2019
MEETING 1543

GABRIELA FARFAN
Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History
“A mineral perspective on coral skeletons in a changing ocean”

EMILY MARTIN
Smithsonian Institution’s National Air & Space Museum
“Holes in the ground are cool: Using pit chains in Iceland to
measure snow on Saturn’s moon Enceladus”

MATTHEW T. CARRANO
Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History
“Challenges and benefits of using vertebrate microfossil bonebeds
for understanding terrestrial paleoecosystems”

TALKS WILL BE 20 MINUTES w/ QUESTIONS TO FOLLOW

Meeting flyer to print and post – Help spread the word!
___________________________________
Refreshments at 7:30 p.m. Formal program at 8:00 p.m.
John Wesley Powell Auditorium
2170 Florida Avenue NW, Washington, DC
www.gswweb.org

Upcoming field trip options for GSW members

Hi everyone,

I welcome your participation in a field trip I’m running Saturday, May 11, to Corridor H, West Virginia, for the “Royal Rockhounds” of Front Royal. Corridor H is a highway that cuts through the folded and faulted Paleozoic sedimentary rocks of the Valley & Ridge geological province. It’s an excellent place to see primary sedimentary structures, fossils, unconformities, contacts, and anticlines & synclines. If you’re available and interested, we’re going to meet up at 9am sharp at the McDonald’s + Exxon in Strasburg, VA on route 11, real close to I-81:

https://www.google.com/maps/@39.005957,-78.3390373,180m/data=!3m1!1e3

This is not an official GSW trip, but it’s open to all. If you think you’re going to do this, please let me know (cbentley@nvcc.edu), so I know whether to look for you there on that morning. It’ll conclude mid-to-late afternoon.

Also, as mentioned at the last meeting, on June 1, Caitlin Chazen, Marla Morales, and I will be running a “field workshop” (a field trip about field trips) in Rock Creek Park, DC, using DC’s bedrock geology as a platform to discuss how geoscience instructors can most effectively run field trips. This trip is intended for geoscience educators at the high school, college, or university level. It’s free, and lunch is provided, but advance registration is required. More information is online at:

https://serc.carleton.edu/sage2yc/teams/dc_metro/workshop18-19/index.html

-Callan Bentley