14
.JAMES S. STREET ENDOWMENT FUND 2005 CUMULATIVE TOTAL GIFTS 25000 20000 $ 15000 10000 5000 re Numbers of Donors St. Lawrence University Geology Newsletter Winter, 2005 Brett Harvey ‘02’ reporting from the bush of Western Kenya!!! I have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover- ished place, unlike the Kenya that I have visited before. Tons and tons of people of the same generation (in fact the one that is usually the most active and income generating) have been wiped out due to the rapid spread of HIV/ Aids. Orphans are everywhere---literally everywhere I turn is some vulnerable child. A little overwhelming, and I know that no change will obviously occur overnight. So, ICROSS works through a number of community based organizations (CBOs), who ICROSS has trained in home based care (i.e. monitoring sick patients and diagnosing as best as possible), because there are not many roads and getting the needy to better care clinics is nearly impossible. It is a great idea, and working pretty well. I have been trying to get into the field as much as possible, and so far I have managed only a few days, mostly because when I got to this branch office, all the Kenyans working here got fired due to the misuse of resources. So now it is I, an Irishman, and a Japanese girl who are running the show here. And I have to admit that, this is a bit odd and uncomfortable. However, we hope to do some hiring a.s.a.p., and get this place running smoothly before I head onto another of many other projects that ICROSS runs here in Kenya/ Tanzania. Although the field visits were hard emotionally at first, I have found a way to make them enjoyable, mostly because it really makes their day to have someone from afar actually visiting them in person. So I bought a huge heavy bicycle and have been pedaling that around and fixing the chain every half mile, but it seems to get me there. From there a rep from the CBO has shown me the clients and I have been distributing mosquito nets (because in reality malaria is the big killer, also tuberculosis) blankets, sheets. Seems crazy, but these people lying on their death beds have some very dirty and lacking comforts. I'm even dishing out drugs from the office and am somewhat of a pharmacist now. Yikes!!! Straight from Robert G. Davis (Bob) ‘71’ I graduated from St. Lawrence University with a BS in geology in 1971. I received a Masters Degree in Geology and Geochemistry from Virginia Tech (VPI&SU) in March 1974. I worked with Dr. A.K. Sinha to build and operate a mass spectrometer at Virginia Tech and specialized in radiometric age dating of rock in the Appalachian Mountains. We used both Uranium-lead and Rubidium-Strontium methods. I began working for Amoco Production Company in New Orleans, Louisiana in April 1974 as a geologist and have worked all over the world. Most of my 26 year career was spent as a New Ventures geologist, getting Amoco involved in projects in more than a dozen countries. I worked continental margins, interior basins, rift basins, over thrust margins and foreland basins; carbonate platforms and island arc collision zones. I loved every minute of those years. I lived in Cairo, Egypt and Jakarta, Indonesia and traveled to 36 other countries. I am now extracting key geological information out of pre-stack migrated seismic gathers (a far cry from hard rock geology) to help explorationists more efficiently find and develop oil and gas reserves. I owe all that I have been able to do (geologically) to Dr. Robert O. Bloomer, Dr. Elberty, and Dr. Street. The solid geologic foundation that they instilled has served me very well! Friends: We have added $5,556.88 to the Street Fund this year through gifts from 15 alumni and friends. In the two years since we began the drive to double the Street Fund Endowment we have added $24,532. You will recall our goal is $120,000, and we presently have $92,000+ in the endowment. Every gift continues to grow the endowment when you designate your contribution to do so. The Geology Department recognizes your foresight to ensure the growth and continued success of our program. Thank you, and HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

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Page 1: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

JAMES S STREET ENDOWMENT FUND 2005 CUMULATIVE TOTAL GIFTS

25000

20000

$ 15000

10000

5000

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ re ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Numbers of Donors

St Lawrence University Geology Newsletter

Winter 2005

Brett Harvey lsquo02rsquo reporting from the bush of Western Kenya I have mostly been in Bondo Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program It is a very wild impover-ished place unlike the Kenya that I have visited before Tons and tons of people of the same generation (in fact the one that is usually the most active and income generating) have been wiped out due to the rapid spread of HIV Aids Orphans are everywhere---literally everywhere I turn is some vulnerable child A little overwhelming and I know that no change will obviously occur overnight So ICROSS works through a number of community based organizations (CBOs) who ICROSS has trained in home based care (ie monitoring sick patients and diagnosing as best as possible) because there are not many roads and getting the needy to better care clinics is nearly impossible It is a great idea and working pretty well I have been trying to get into the field as much as possible and so far I have managed only a few days mostly because when I got to this branch office all the Kenyans working here got fired due to the misuse of resources So now it is I an Irishman and a Japanese girl who are running the show here And I have to admit that this is a bit odd and uncomfortable However we hope to do some hiring asap and get this place running smoothly before I head onto another of many other projects that ICROSS runs here in Kenya Tanzania Although the field visits were hard emotionally at first I have found a way to make them enjoyable mostly because it really makes their day to have someone from afar actually visiting them in person So I bought a huge heavy bicycle and have been pedaling that around and fixing the chain every half mile but it seems to get me there From there a rep from the CBO has shown me the clients and I have been distributing mosquito nets (because in reality malaria is the big killer also tuberculosis) blankets sheets Seems crazy but these people lying on their death beds have some very dirty and lacking comforts Im even dishing out drugs from the office and am somewhat of a pharmacist now Yikes

Straight from Robert G Davis (Bob) lsquo71rsquo

I graduated from St Lawrence University with a BS in geology in 1971 I received a Masters Degree in Geology and Geochemistry from Virginia Tech (VPIampSU) in March 1974 I worked with Dr AK Sinha to build and operate a mass spectrometer at Virginia Tech and specialized in radiometric age dating of rock in the Appalachian Mountains We used both Uranium-lead and Rubidium-Strontium methods I began working for Amoco Production Company in New Orleans Louisiana in April 1974 as a geologist and have worked all over the world Most of my 26 year career was spent as a New Ventures geologist getting Amoco involved in projects in more than a dozen countries I worked continental margins interior basins rift basins over thrust margins and foreland basins carbonate platforms and island arc collision zones I loved every minute of those years I lived in Cairo Egypt and Jakarta Indonesia and traveled to 36 other countries

I am now extracting key geological information out of pre-stack migrated seismic gathers (a far cry from hard rock geology) to help explorationists more efficiently find and develop oil and gas reserves I owe all that I have been able to do (geologically) to Dr Robert O Bloomer Dr Elberty and Dr Street The solid geologic foundation that they instilled has served me very well

Friends We have added $555688 to the Street Fund this year through gifts from 15 alumni and friends In the two years since we began the drive to double the Street Fund Endowment we have added $24532 You will recall our goal is $120000 and we presently have $92000+ in the endowment Every gift continues to grow the endowment when you designate your contribution to do so

The Geology Department recognizes your foresight to ensure the growth and continued success of our program

Thank you and HAPPY NEW YEAR

Hello all

It has been a great year so farI have had the pleasure of teaching a new course Volcanology in which we did a fabulous experiment to mimic a silicic eruption It involved liquid nitrogen and bricks so you cannot go wrong

Here was the result

active volcanoes in the world More than

half of these volcanoes are part of the ldquoRing of Fire a region

that encircles the Pacific Ocean httpwwwfemagovkidsvolfactshtm

In October I was one of the many Geology Department folks who migrated westward to attend the GSA conference in Salt Lake City Utah It was a wonderful time not only to present my research but to also renew friendships and help the students who attended with us network I especially enjoyed seeing the alumni who made it out for the conference as well - good to see you all again On top of all of the socializing we

httpwwwchestoncompbfarchivehtml

managed to squeeze in a trip to the Great Salt Lake with several students an alum (hi Diana) and fellow faculty Not only was it fantastic to see the lake but I was able to nab a bagful of ooids and several bottles of water I will have my Sedimentology class work on a viscosity analysis of the water later this semester as a lab exercise

Currently I am enjoying an extended Fall in Canton ndash would you believe it is November 4th and the outside temperature is 60 degrees (F) Makes

you all want to move back I am sure I hope this newsletter finds all of you happy and healthy

There are more than 500

Diane Burns

LETrsquoS HEAR FROM CHRIS PLOPPER lsquo71rsquo

It HAS been quite a while and I dont recall what information I have provided to the department in the past so here is a brief recap

Sue (Whitnall 71) and I were married the day before graduation and are still happily married after nearly 35 years We have a son (Ben-a writer) who is married and living in Fort Worth and a daughter (Amy - Classical Archaeology) who is a senior at the University of Texas Ben is also a University Texas grad

After my Ph D from Syracuse in 1978 (where we lived in John Bursnalls attic for several months - Hi John) we moved to New Orleans and I started my career with Chevron After New Orleans we have lived in La Habra CA Lafayette LA Hobbs NM and now Houston TX for the past 17+ years When Amy graduates next May we plan to move back to NYS and buy a house on Canandaigua Lake After 28+ years in the oil industry (all with Chevron) I intend to earn a modest paycheck by working at Home Depot or driving a UPS truck (or something to that effect) We cant wait to get back to having 4 different seasons although most of our friends think were nuts to willingly face hard winters again

Class of 49rsquo

Francis G Stehli

Retired geologist former Dean of Science and Engineering Case Western Reserves Former Dean of Graduate Studies and Research University of Florida Former Dean College of Geoscience University of Oklahoma Former AAPG Distinguished lecturer former member of Energy Research Advisory Board to US Secretary of Energy former President Paleo Soc Former Chairman NSF Geology Advisory Committee

Dr Stehli has seen Dr Richard Rezak several times lately-former SLU Professor now retired from Texas AampM Dr Stehli has also corresponded with Dr Robert Wright former SLU Professor and NRC Official now retired in Bethlehem PA Both from early Bloomer era

We all know about volcanoesmdashthey erupt red-hot lava but one volcano does not Oldoinyo Lengai in Tanzania spews black lava as liquid as fresh roofing tar and not really much hotter You can Google search carbonate volcano or Oldoinyo Lengai if you would like to see it

Cathy and some of our majors have visited this spot

httpgeologyaboutcomcsvolcanoesaaa031499htm

Greetings from Canton (with winter rapidly approaching)

Itrsquos been almost 5 years since I arrived at St Lawrence as the new guy on faculty The campus stu-dents and alumni have made me feel very welcome so I thank all of you As each year passes I meet more of you at events like SLUGAC and GSA Irsquom really starting to feel as a long term member of this community and must say that tenure pending Irsquom here to stay

Again itrsquos been a very busy year on campus Taking students into the field to see the landforms and features that they hear about in the lectures is my passion Once again this past August I had the opportunity to take a group of 10 students to Alaska for 12 days Our departmental technician Matt VanBrocklin came along as medical guy and cook Starting in the Anchorage area we spent several days at the Matanuska Glacier examining contemporary glacial processes We then moved our camp eastward to the small town of Chitina where we looked at fluvial processes lahars permafrost and even visited the ghost town of McCarthy in Wrangel-St Elias National Park I suppose that I should inform everyone that Uncle Tom the proprietor of Uncle Tomrsquos Cabin in Chitina has been made an honorary member of the St Lawrence Geology community for making us feel so at home in his establishment (ok we took the place over) and presenting us with some fantastic Pacific salmon Just a warning to watch

out if he ever appears at a SLUGAC conference We also spent some time in Valdez and the Thompson Pass area looking at contemporary glaciation and the impacts of the 1964 earthquake I hope to run this course every two years from now on as the students really get a great opportunity to make the link between contemporary glacial processes and the older evidence that we see on a regular basis in Northern New York

I also had a great opportunity to travel to China this past summer on a research project with two students Camille Partin rsquo05 and Ben Meade rsquo05 Funded by the Asian Studies Initiative we traveled to two World Geoparks and two National Geological Parks to evaluate the preservation of geological heritage in China as well as educational initiatives within the parks We spanned the country from Beijing to Hunan Province and the Three Gorges to Yunnan and Jiangxi Provinces meeting park managers employees and local people that have all benefited from the development of these unique geological parks The results of our study were presented at the Geological Society of America conference in Salt Lake City and we are working on an article for the magazine Focus on Geography I couldnrsquot have asked for better travel companions than Ben and Camille who put up with stinking hot temperatures strange food and disgruntled guides along the way Theyrsquore both off to graduate school next year so I wish them the best of luck

You may or not know that John Bursnallrsquos retirement is imminent I would just like to express my appreciation to John for hiring me mentoring me and being a fantastic colleague over the past few years He has been a major force in the success of the Geology Department John I wish you well in retirement and future endeavors Cheers

Stephen Robinson

Meet A Future GeologistmdashmdashJack

Class of 95rsquo Recently moved to Marlene Egan David Egan Houston TX

Matt VanBrocklin

Hello folks

We are well into fall semester 2005 with lots happening here on campus and within the Geology Department We here in Brown Hall have a front row seat to the raising of the new Science Complex What a process Steel beams floating ghostly at the end of a thin cable suspended high into the air with the aid of a crane One half of the structure is now framed with a roof going on while the other half is now well under way The structure is taking shape and is not unlike a huge skeleton of a beast rising from the large pit where it was born Has been interesting watching this building taking shape realizing this very structure will shape the sciences for the foreseeable future here at SLU

The department is enjoying some new faces this year with Dr Erickson Dr Bursnall and Dr Shrady all on sabbatical Enter stage left Diane Burns Matty Strine and Sean Cornell Diane was with us last semester at that time filling in for Dr Owen while he was on sabbatical and has graciously returned to help us out for another year Matty is doing the structure thing while Cathy is away and Sean is stepping into the well worn field boots of Dr Erickson while he is busy with his sabbatical These folks have been fantastic and enjoyable to work with It is a uniquely interesting experience interacting with new folks while the usual gang is away The differing personalities styles and techniques of teaching the new folks bring ultimately influences my department experience Keeps me busy and out of trouble for sure Job security I call ithellip aiding the new folks with everything from where to find and how to use equipment to ordering needed materials for their work Sabbaticals might be intended for the fac-ulty but the change is good for me too I think

And speaking of changehellip Last year Dr Robinson asked me to help him out with the Alaska field trip this past August My dual duties of camp medic and camp cook in the wilds of Alaska for a crew of lucky 13 kept me on my toes To be camp medic required that I attend and pass a Wilderness First Responder course that is offered annually here at SLU through the Outdoor Program If you enjoy the back country and often find yourself in a position of being away from any sort of medical attention I highly recommend this course Phil Royce of the Outdoor Program along with a fellow by the name of Cabet Stone do a first rate job teaching wilderness first aid skills We are very fortunate here at SLU to have this and many other opportunities As for camp cook wellhellip being raised here in the woods of the North Country has given me plenty of opportunity to hone my camp fire cooking skills Irsquod like to think most of the gang ate better out in the woods than they might eat in the comfort of their own kitchenhellip In any event the trip was a success with daily field trips and nightly camp fires in the raw and rugged country of the Talkeetna Chugach and Wrangell Mountains with their accompanying glaciers In a wordhellip awesome Dr Robinson really shines out in that country and seems as at home walking glaciers Matanuska and Worthington to name but a few passes and peaks as he does walking the streets here in the city of Canton

As I finish jotting down my thoughts Dr Bursnall has just come in on his motorcycle Not bad for the 4th of Novemberhellip So far beats my late date riding for the yearhellip Well folks other than that it is pretty much business as usual in our little corner of SLU Hope this finds you all well and in good spirits Wishing for you all the best over the soon to be here holiday season and the up coming new year

WErsquoVE HEARD FROM TORI KOHN lsquo05rsquo

Well I thought I would update you on my life Things are ok nothing as grand as Yellowstone or as hot as the badlands but lying somewhere in the middle Currently I am still in ArkanSASsssss working for the US forest service

Ouachita National Forest and not hating it but not loving it either I am getting training though and experience on an engine I recently adopted a dog and named him Glacier He is a great companion Life is different now as a wild land firefighter I dont have to work with the public very much I find myself giving interpretive programs to my coworkers though (God only knows what they think of me) I am the junior here between 10-30 years-so I am definitely the baby I miss the park service a bit and I miss the flat hat (I know can you believe it) Hey did you know the forest service cuts trees down for lumber --- man where have I been - hahhhaha It has been a tough adjustment but I said ldquoYallrdquo for the 1st time yesterday and it felt normal

I went on a detail to the Black Hills of South Dakota and got some action on fires there and we have been busy here as well Driest part of the country

I have recently tallied my states and I need 11 to hit all 50-=not bad for being 23 (Yes Liz I just gave myself props)

There is still some gypsy in me and I am feeling the urge to move---gt but I am fighting it I must say it feels good to get a pay-

Straight from Sean Cornell

What a legacy you have left

Please allow me to introduce myself my name is Sean Cornell and I am a PhD candidate at the University of Cincinnati and Dr Ericksonrsquos sabbatical replacement for this academic year Yes he is still here and working very hard on several projects that I am sure he will talk about himself Maybe he will decide he can get more work done in retirement Hint Mark Hint

A little bit about me although having lived in the Midwest for the past 6 years the move in August to Canton has brought me home so to speak I was born and raised in the North Country and spent my youth between Chaumont NY on Lake Ontario and North Bangor NY on my grandparentrsquos dairy farm Canton of coursehellip is half way between so it was a strategic move

I think it is quite remarkable to have this opportunity to come back to northern New York to study some old rocks and work with a remarkable set of students My interests in geology were not with me when I was traipsing around the Adirondacks as a child and it took me a couple of years at the University of Rochester to figure out that my interests in history (Native American and early American) and wildlife (biology and ecology) might be combined through geologyhellip Hmmm how are these connected Well here I am anyway an echinoderm wannabe paleontologist (Edrioasteroids are cool) a carbonate sedimentologist and sequence stratigrapher Of course Canton and the Adirondacks are great for all of these things Well actually I see Canton as a strategic half-way point here too half way to my rocks Straddling the Frontenac Arch (almost) SLU sits in a location where the Ordovician-aged carbonates (MS and PhD work) are relatively close in both the eastnortheast and westerly directions For my research I have been working on a sequence stratigraphic model for the response of the carbonate platform to the Taconic Orogeny during the Late Ordovician

Although time is limited for continued field work (there is a good reason for 4rsquo of snow ndash I am trying to finish my disserta-tion) I have had the opportunity this fall to get a few days of field work in and participate on some field trips In September I co-led 2 field trips to see Ordovician rocks for the New York State Geological Association hosted by SUNY Oswego and spent a day showing new colleague Matty Strine some of the structural complexities of these Ordovician rocks Ok so they are not ldquoThe Snakerdquo or the ldquoTrain Wreckrdquo Matty but they are faulted and dipping some

Other activities this fall As I am teaching Invert Paleo and since I studied in Cincinnati I have upheld the annual pilgrim-age to the ldquoMecca of Paleozoic Paleontologyrdquo On a marathon 4-day trip to Cincinnati 13 students and myself enjoyed a remarkable trip to study the stratigraphy and paleontology of the Upper Ordovician of northern Kentucky and southwestern Ohio Yes we also found 7 complete Edrioasteroids the first to be added to the SLU geology teaching collection Almost had one casualty thoughhellip A priceless slab of the Cambrian Burgess Shale with a nearly complete specimen of Ottoia (A priapulid worm) was dropped at the Cincinnati Museum Center Collections Facility by one of our students No worries though Thankfully the slab slammed into the studentrsquos foot thus breaking the fall No casualties to the fossil or the student

Also teaching a special topics course on Dinosaurs and spending a great deal of time trying to keep up with the many new discoveries in recent years (T Rex may have had feathers) This course led me to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City with 11 students where we met up with one of our SLU alums Mr Glenn Kays rsquo96 Glenn worked on his MS at North Dakota and now is a Project Hydrogeologist with GSC|Kleinfelder It was great to meet him and have the opportunity to learn about some of his research interests on fossil turtles

Looking forward to the end of the semester ndash I am teaching Regional Field Studies and will be taking 10 students to Curacao in January In addition to RFS and Stratigraphy I will also be offering Ocean Science as well So of course I am looking forward to the end of the semester so I can work diligently on my dissertation and certainly NOT because I am going to the Caribbean before the ice pack sets in

Well I think I have bantered on long enough so I will close I do however want to express my gratitude to the several alums I met at GSA in Salt Lake City and thank the rest of you for your support of the St Lawrence Geology program Your legacy has provided an extremely rich and rewarding environment with which I am blessed to be a participant however abbrevi-ated Most of all thanks for providing continued opportunities to support the studies and futures of our current students ndash they are outstanding and they make my effort so worth it Paleontology in the News Discover Magazine has ranked a recent discovery by paleontologists as the num-ber 6th most important science discovery out of 100 this year The research by Dr Mary Schweitzer and Dr Jack Horner investigated bone microstructure of a T rex specimen and they have been able to recognize female tissue types This is the first direct evidence for sexual differentiation in these groups If you are interested in the original research article please see Schweitzer MH Wittmeyer JL Horner JR 2005 Gender-specific reproductive tissue in ratites and Tyrannosaurus rex Science 3081456-1460 Otherwise see the top 100 science stories for 2005 at httpwwwdiscovercomissuesjan-06cover

Michael Owen We are going to miss you

Dear friends

I canrsquot recall the last time I contributed to the newsletter but the current edition is my last chance as a member of the Geology Department faculty After 22 years at St Lawrence I have decided to start a new career I will be leaving Canton at the end of this semester moving to Syracuse to live with my family

I interviewed with Mark Erickson at the GSA annual meeting in New Orleans in the fall of 1982 even though my dissertation was not yet complete Over stuffed baked potatoes he described the culture of St Lawrence his vision of undergraduate geology education and the then-recent bifurcation of Geology and Geography I must have said something intelligible because I was invited for an on-campus interview shortly thereafter The interview itself was mostly a blur but I do recall the interminable drive back to the Syracuse airport through foot-deep blowing snow in the darkness Undeterred by the minor inconvenience of a nine-month winter I joined Mark Jim Street and Russ Jacoby in the fall of 1983 With Mark and Jimrsquos ldquoencouragementrdquo I completed that darned dissertation promptly

The courses in which I met most geology students were 101103 104 Sedimentology and Sed Pet I taught a 100-level geology course for more than 35 semesters during my career By the end I had discovered PowerPoint so that I no longer had to rely on my weak artistic ability and arm-waving to illustrate lectures

Remarriage shifted my focus away from Canton because my new wife Deborah Bradshaw MD has a thriving medical practice at Upstate hospital in Syracuse I commuted on weekends for nearly seven years a less-than-optimum configuration for being a husband and father This fall I received an offer of employment an offer that I couldnrsquot refuse Beginning in January I will be a senior system engineer with Sensis Corp a firm that designs and builds air traffic control systems The job will involve no geology but rather my background skills in satellite communications electronics and computer programming As Monty Python says ldquohellipand now for something completely differentrdquo

The years with students and faculty of the Geology Department have been challenging satisfying and above all fun Itrsquos an indescribable joy to watch students mature through their four years becoming self confident and capable adults whether they end up in geology or not Having had a role in that development and growth has been a great privilege for which I am sincerely thankful

Leaving the Geology Department would always be difficult but it especially hard now I perceive a stronger sense of enthusiastic healthy purpose among both faculty and students than ever be-fore Morale is higher the number of majors is greater and the sense of joy in learning is more pervasive than at any time I can recall The combined efforts of the geology faculty and alumni are having a marvelous effect and I am confident that they will continue

Heather Scott Cunningham lsquo98rsquo

I just wanted to update you on my latest adventure to Tasmania Work What is that I went with some friends who are post-doc researchers here It was nice to get away and Tasmania is a wild and beautiful country And very laid back - most stores closed at 3 on Saturday and did not open again until Monday I was suffering from lack of a 24 hr Wal-Mart fix (right) So among the exciting things I did in Tasmania hiked Mt Wellington (basalt volcano in the backdrop of Hobart) hiked around Cradle Mt in the snow sleet rain and wind hiked to Wineglass Bay - one of the most beautiful beaches in the world visited the penal colony of Port Arthur and cruised around some of the southern islands We saw small kangaroos (pantemellons) and wombats and a scorpion who greeted me in the shower I am already planning for my next adventure over Christmas Then I think I will have to take it easy after that since I am only on a graduate student budget

School is busy The graduate students are required to present at a one day seminar that is sched-uled for next Tuesday In addition to a 15 min presentation I have to create a poster The presen-tation was cake but this poster is going to require a few late nights this week for drafting and yelling at the computer and cursing Bill Gates for not making Word Illustrator compatible I have meas-ured my first Nd isotopes using the TIMS The processes is long and boring but I am told much shorter and more enjoyable than in the past I have crushed 27 rocks from the PNG trip I was sup-posed to go on but the visa fell through on This week I am hoping to make some XRF pellets and begin rock digestion for ICP analysis How scary I am already sounding like a geochemist

Glacier speed varies but they generally move less than three feet per day However in 1936-37 the Black Rapids Glacier in Alaska averaged more than 100 feet a day mdash the swiftest ever recorded

httpwwwcourier-journalcom foryourinfo080904080904html

Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson Greetings to all Another summer and autumn have marched by but this has been one of those most special occasions when I can contemplate their passage without the angst for preparing for classes Sabbatical years allow catch up and that is just what I am doing I taught my mussel course in June but only a single student had the fortitude for it We did make some new discov-eries however so it was not time misspent GSA abstracts went in in mid July and then I took some fishing breaks in Vermont with family Fishing was mixed but when good it was very

good A new Vermont state record Muskie (36 lbs) was caught only a stonersquos throw from one of my fishing spots ndash sadly not by me Late in August I visited the Heritage Center in Bismarck ND where John Hoganson and Bud Holland and I spent two weeks together identifying and photographing the fossil fishes of the Fox Hills Fm which will be the basis for a major monograph on this important group Although we are still finding the occasional additional species I think we have a good handle on the fauna after working on the project together since the early 1990s Lots of former students will be acknowl-edged in that work you may be certain

Sometime in the summer my paper with John H came out describing a new ratfish from the Fox Hills named in honor of Ray Haas who has helped us in our vertebrate studies for many years Ray and wife Katherine have put up or fed SLU geology field parties on lots of occasions so this was a small repayment of those courtesies A byrozoan paper with David Waugh and Rob Crawford at Kent appeared in the summer also so those studies are continuing I have several papers in the works with various colleagues and every now and then I have to meet one deadline or another for editing them but it remains fun to col-laborate with so many researchers

It seemed as though October flew by while I was working on the shark plates so that preparation of my GSA poster almost took me by surprise and the meeting was early this year I was one of a group of faculty and students who traveled to Salt Lake City for the annual meeting Senior major Trisha Smrecak presented new results of her two-year investigation of botani-cal change at the K-T boundary in North Dakota In Summer of 2004 Trisha and I were in the field together this summer Trisha supported her own research expenses and the Jim Street Fund of the Geology Department assisted with support for Matt Burton-Kelly rsquo05 as a field assistant in North Dakota Their GSA poster was visited by most of the paleobotanical ex-perts present at the meeting including Dan Peppe rsquo03 who is in his 3rd year of graduate work in Paleobotany at Yale Two of Steve Robinsonrsquos students reported with him on ecotourism in Chinarsquos national parks based on their observations during a trip to China last summer The five students attended talks and visited with graduate schools to learn of programs to which they may want to apply Students made good use of their time meeting researchers from around the world

Geology faculty too had a significant presence at the meeting Matt Strine and Sean Cornell who replace Drs Shrady and Erickson while on sabbatical presented a research poster and paper respectively Diane Burns and Dr Robinson also pre-sented research papers and Robinson and Dr Bursnall began the search for Bursnallrsquos replacement who will follow his retire-ment in 2006 As part of my sabbatical studies I presented a poster with co-author David Waugh rsquo99 which was a continua-tion of research on fossil Bryozoa that they began together as part of Waughrsquos BS thesis at St Lawrence That research will continue during the sabbatical leave

I was pleased to host a reception for St Lawrence alumni held on the first evening of the meeting Seventeen alumni joined faculty students and friends of the university including Emeritus Professor of Geography Bill Romey to share information and hear news of the department and the university Dr Robinson reported on progress of the science complex planning as it affects the Geology Program Dr Barbara Tewksbury rsquo74 Kirner Professor of Geology at Hamilton discussed the qualities of the new Geology building at Hamilton which is just now being occupied It was revealing to hear what institutions like ours are doing West Coast and Gulf Coast alums like Andrew Fountain rsquo76 and Charlie Kerans rsquo77 who donrsquot often get to Canton enjoyed visits with students who learned about graduate programs and industry directions from these leaders in their fields Charlie gave a very interesting presentation at a symposium honoring sedimentologists Bob Ginsburg and Bob Folk Recent graduate Chris Stevens presented some of his really interesting GPR data from the MacKenzie Delta in the Canadian Arctic and Dan Peppe documented the Paleocene paleomagnetic stratigraphy of western North Dakota All and all the meet-ing was an exceptionally productive one for all St Lawrence participants As you can imagine I enjoyed it a great deal

Since my return I have worked steadily preparing plates for the shark study I mentioned above As well I am responsible for a chapter on Oribatid Mite Studies for a new Elsevier Series on Quaternary Geology Booth Platt a MS student in Roy Nor-tonrsquos lab at SUNY-ESF is co-authoring this with me and we have an early December due date

Thereafter I will be working further on the shark paper and on some unionid mussel study Several projects are waiting in the wings

(Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson cont)

On the home front Mother continues to live at Church Street and though she struggles with the stairs she is doing very well for her ninety-eight years I am not very good company but she tolerates me pretty well Skootie too is doing well and keeps us good company I hear from Lance once in a blue moon He sounds like he is enjoying being out on his own He is still working at the home brew supply store in St Paul ndash they also do a big web business ndash and still enjoys the thought of opening a brew pub one day He rarely thinks of graduate study in Geology but it remains a possibility at least to humor the old man I look forward to shooting some pool with him again one of these days

This year we are especially mindful of all of you who have been through the tragic hurricanes of the Gulf Coast and Florida We have now heard from most but not all who may have been in the path of one or more storms I know that all who lived in Louisiana were deeply affected and many lost homes and businesses I hope you can rise from the difficulties with the strengths that you all showed us so many times at St Lawrence If there is yet anything that we can do please let us hear from you As the Holidays approach please know that our thoughts are indeed with you

Seasons Greetings from me and from all the SLU Geology Family

GULF COAST ALUMNI

The path of a category 5 hurricane is a sight one should never have to see in a lifetime A number of you have seen Katrinarsquos path however and we had great concern for our alums on the Gulf Coast Many of course are located in New Orleans because of industry headquaters Gradually we have heard from all of you that we know were in the area and we know you are safe That is not to say that you have not suffered great loss quite the contrary We know better If you know of something we can do for you please let us know We would love to hear from you

Future Geologist Elias

Jeannine Fiore (Mansfield) rsquo97rsquo would like to share

Jeannine and Ray have sold there house and moved to Bloomfield NY to live near Jeanninersquos parents

Their hands will be full with Elias learning how to crawl and explore (Must be the geologist in him)

GOOD LUCK IN YOUR NEW HOME

Andrew ldquoDogrdquo Owens lsquo99rsquo

Working as environmental consultant based in DC and Baltimore

I recently married (March 2005) to Christin Miller have a 100+ year old farmhouse and forest (very small) a groundhog family that we get to watch from our windows

I have recently started investigating the ready-mix concrete and storm water management industries to expand clients

Congratulations to Carrie Denesha lsquo00rsquoon passing the ASBOG

exam and becoming Professional Geologist II We always knew you

could do it Carrierdquo

David Waugh (99) presents Erickson and Waugh bryozoan poster at GSA Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City

JME photo

Trisha Smrecak with the Cretaceous leaf peepers Dan Peppe 03 and Kirk Johnson of the Denver Museum

JME photo

Stephanie Peek in front folded limestone layers outside of Pinto MD Stephanie is currently doing a senior the-sis project investigating the kinematics of the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium advised by Matty Strine

Professor Strine and students look-ing at some Adiron-dack deformation during Structural Geology lab

Students on the Structural Geology field trip to the Catskill Mountains looking at synorogenic Acadian sediments

Hello all

I am at St Lawrence for the academic year replacing Cathy Shrady while she is on sabbatical I taught Structural Geology and Introduction to Geological Maps during the Fall semester and will be teaching Geophysics and Mineralogy in the Spring In addition I am advising a senior thesis project with a field component in the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium

Last year I taught at Bryn Mawr College This summer I successfully defended my PhD thesis advised by Gautam Mitra at the University of Rochester For my dissertation I studied the kinematics of the Moine Thrust zone in NW Scotland More recently I have been collaborating with Christian Teyssier and Donna Whitney at the University of Minnesota investigating the thermal and kinematic evolution of metamorphic core complexes in the North American Cordillera I am also collaborating with Sean Cornell (also a faculty in the St Lawrence Geology Dept) on a project to document the most useful teaching outcrops within the United States and assemble a user-friendly website-database

In October a slew (no pun intended) of St Lawrence faculty and students made our way to Salt Lake City UT for the national GSA conference I presented some data that I collected in South Korea in collaboration with Dr Youngdo Park While some of our students were presenting andor co-authors other students came to check out graduate schools and do some ldquonetworkingrdquo I think it was a great experience for us all

I hope this newsletter finds you well

Take care

Matty Strine (Visiting Assistant Professor)

Matty Strine

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 2: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Hello all

It has been a great year so farI have had the pleasure of teaching a new course Volcanology in which we did a fabulous experiment to mimic a silicic eruption It involved liquid nitrogen and bricks so you cannot go wrong

Here was the result

active volcanoes in the world More than

half of these volcanoes are part of the ldquoRing of Fire a region

that encircles the Pacific Ocean httpwwwfemagovkidsvolfactshtm

In October I was one of the many Geology Department folks who migrated westward to attend the GSA conference in Salt Lake City Utah It was a wonderful time not only to present my research but to also renew friendships and help the students who attended with us network I especially enjoyed seeing the alumni who made it out for the conference as well - good to see you all again On top of all of the socializing we

httpwwwchestoncompbfarchivehtml

managed to squeeze in a trip to the Great Salt Lake with several students an alum (hi Diana) and fellow faculty Not only was it fantastic to see the lake but I was able to nab a bagful of ooids and several bottles of water I will have my Sedimentology class work on a viscosity analysis of the water later this semester as a lab exercise

Currently I am enjoying an extended Fall in Canton ndash would you believe it is November 4th and the outside temperature is 60 degrees (F) Makes

you all want to move back I am sure I hope this newsletter finds all of you happy and healthy

There are more than 500

Diane Burns

LETrsquoS HEAR FROM CHRIS PLOPPER lsquo71rsquo

It HAS been quite a while and I dont recall what information I have provided to the department in the past so here is a brief recap

Sue (Whitnall 71) and I were married the day before graduation and are still happily married after nearly 35 years We have a son (Ben-a writer) who is married and living in Fort Worth and a daughter (Amy - Classical Archaeology) who is a senior at the University of Texas Ben is also a University Texas grad

After my Ph D from Syracuse in 1978 (where we lived in John Bursnalls attic for several months - Hi John) we moved to New Orleans and I started my career with Chevron After New Orleans we have lived in La Habra CA Lafayette LA Hobbs NM and now Houston TX for the past 17+ years When Amy graduates next May we plan to move back to NYS and buy a house on Canandaigua Lake After 28+ years in the oil industry (all with Chevron) I intend to earn a modest paycheck by working at Home Depot or driving a UPS truck (or something to that effect) We cant wait to get back to having 4 different seasons although most of our friends think were nuts to willingly face hard winters again

Class of 49rsquo

Francis G Stehli

Retired geologist former Dean of Science and Engineering Case Western Reserves Former Dean of Graduate Studies and Research University of Florida Former Dean College of Geoscience University of Oklahoma Former AAPG Distinguished lecturer former member of Energy Research Advisory Board to US Secretary of Energy former President Paleo Soc Former Chairman NSF Geology Advisory Committee

Dr Stehli has seen Dr Richard Rezak several times lately-former SLU Professor now retired from Texas AampM Dr Stehli has also corresponded with Dr Robert Wright former SLU Professor and NRC Official now retired in Bethlehem PA Both from early Bloomer era

We all know about volcanoesmdashthey erupt red-hot lava but one volcano does not Oldoinyo Lengai in Tanzania spews black lava as liquid as fresh roofing tar and not really much hotter You can Google search carbonate volcano or Oldoinyo Lengai if you would like to see it

Cathy and some of our majors have visited this spot

httpgeologyaboutcomcsvolcanoesaaa031499htm

Greetings from Canton (with winter rapidly approaching)

Itrsquos been almost 5 years since I arrived at St Lawrence as the new guy on faculty The campus stu-dents and alumni have made me feel very welcome so I thank all of you As each year passes I meet more of you at events like SLUGAC and GSA Irsquom really starting to feel as a long term member of this community and must say that tenure pending Irsquom here to stay

Again itrsquos been a very busy year on campus Taking students into the field to see the landforms and features that they hear about in the lectures is my passion Once again this past August I had the opportunity to take a group of 10 students to Alaska for 12 days Our departmental technician Matt VanBrocklin came along as medical guy and cook Starting in the Anchorage area we spent several days at the Matanuska Glacier examining contemporary glacial processes We then moved our camp eastward to the small town of Chitina where we looked at fluvial processes lahars permafrost and even visited the ghost town of McCarthy in Wrangel-St Elias National Park I suppose that I should inform everyone that Uncle Tom the proprietor of Uncle Tomrsquos Cabin in Chitina has been made an honorary member of the St Lawrence Geology community for making us feel so at home in his establishment (ok we took the place over) and presenting us with some fantastic Pacific salmon Just a warning to watch

out if he ever appears at a SLUGAC conference We also spent some time in Valdez and the Thompson Pass area looking at contemporary glaciation and the impacts of the 1964 earthquake I hope to run this course every two years from now on as the students really get a great opportunity to make the link between contemporary glacial processes and the older evidence that we see on a regular basis in Northern New York

I also had a great opportunity to travel to China this past summer on a research project with two students Camille Partin rsquo05 and Ben Meade rsquo05 Funded by the Asian Studies Initiative we traveled to two World Geoparks and two National Geological Parks to evaluate the preservation of geological heritage in China as well as educational initiatives within the parks We spanned the country from Beijing to Hunan Province and the Three Gorges to Yunnan and Jiangxi Provinces meeting park managers employees and local people that have all benefited from the development of these unique geological parks The results of our study were presented at the Geological Society of America conference in Salt Lake City and we are working on an article for the magazine Focus on Geography I couldnrsquot have asked for better travel companions than Ben and Camille who put up with stinking hot temperatures strange food and disgruntled guides along the way Theyrsquore both off to graduate school next year so I wish them the best of luck

You may or not know that John Bursnallrsquos retirement is imminent I would just like to express my appreciation to John for hiring me mentoring me and being a fantastic colleague over the past few years He has been a major force in the success of the Geology Department John I wish you well in retirement and future endeavors Cheers

Stephen Robinson

Meet A Future GeologistmdashmdashJack

Class of 95rsquo Recently moved to Marlene Egan David Egan Houston TX

Matt VanBrocklin

Hello folks

We are well into fall semester 2005 with lots happening here on campus and within the Geology Department We here in Brown Hall have a front row seat to the raising of the new Science Complex What a process Steel beams floating ghostly at the end of a thin cable suspended high into the air with the aid of a crane One half of the structure is now framed with a roof going on while the other half is now well under way The structure is taking shape and is not unlike a huge skeleton of a beast rising from the large pit where it was born Has been interesting watching this building taking shape realizing this very structure will shape the sciences for the foreseeable future here at SLU

The department is enjoying some new faces this year with Dr Erickson Dr Bursnall and Dr Shrady all on sabbatical Enter stage left Diane Burns Matty Strine and Sean Cornell Diane was with us last semester at that time filling in for Dr Owen while he was on sabbatical and has graciously returned to help us out for another year Matty is doing the structure thing while Cathy is away and Sean is stepping into the well worn field boots of Dr Erickson while he is busy with his sabbatical These folks have been fantastic and enjoyable to work with It is a uniquely interesting experience interacting with new folks while the usual gang is away The differing personalities styles and techniques of teaching the new folks bring ultimately influences my department experience Keeps me busy and out of trouble for sure Job security I call ithellip aiding the new folks with everything from where to find and how to use equipment to ordering needed materials for their work Sabbaticals might be intended for the fac-ulty but the change is good for me too I think

And speaking of changehellip Last year Dr Robinson asked me to help him out with the Alaska field trip this past August My dual duties of camp medic and camp cook in the wilds of Alaska for a crew of lucky 13 kept me on my toes To be camp medic required that I attend and pass a Wilderness First Responder course that is offered annually here at SLU through the Outdoor Program If you enjoy the back country and often find yourself in a position of being away from any sort of medical attention I highly recommend this course Phil Royce of the Outdoor Program along with a fellow by the name of Cabet Stone do a first rate job teaching wilderness first aid skills We are very fortunate here at SLU to have this and many other opportunities As for camp cook wellhellip being raised here in the woods of the North Country has given me plenty of opportunity to hone my camp fire cooking skills Irsquod like to think most of the gang ate better out in the woods than they might eat in the comfort of their own kitchenhellip In any event the trip was a success with daily field trips and nightly camp fires in the raw and rugged country of the Talkeetna Chugach and Wrangell Mountains with their accompanying glaciers In a wordhellip awesome Dr Robinson really shines out in that country and seems as at home walking glaciers Matanuska and Worthington to name but a few passes and peaks as he does walking the streets here in the city of Canton

As I finish jotting down my thoughts Dr Bursnall has just come in on his motorcycle Not bad for the 4th of Novemberhellip So far beats my late date riding for the yearhellip Well folks other than that it is pretty much business as usual in our little corner of SLU Hope this finds you all well and in good spirits Wishing for you all the best over the soon to be here holiday season and the up coming new year

WErsquoVE HEARD FROM TORI KOHN lsquo05rsquo

Well I thought I would update you on my life Things are ok nothing as grand as Yellowstone or as hot as the badlands but lying somewhere in the middle Currently I am still in ArkanSASsssss working for the US forest service

Ouachita National Forest and not hating it but not loving it either I am getting training though and experience on an engine I recently adopted a dog and named him Glacier He is a great companion Life is different now as a wild land firefighter I dont have to work with the public very much I find myself giving interpretive programs to my coworkers though (God only knows what they think of me) I am the junior here between 10-30 years-so I am definitely the baby I miss the park service a bit and I miss the flat hat (I know can you believe it) Hey did you know the forest service cuts trees down for lumber --- man where have I been - hahhhaha It has been a tough adjustment but I said ldquoYallrdquo for the 1st time yesterday and it felt normal

I went on a detail to the Black Hills of South Dakota and got some action on fires there and we have been busy here as well Driest part of the country

I have recently tallied my states and I need 11 to hit all 50-=not bad for being 23 (Yes Liz I just gave myself props)

There is still some gypsy in me and I am feeling the urge to move---gt but I am fighting it I must say it feels good to get a pay-

Straight from Sean Cornell

What a legacy you have left

Please allow me to introduce myself my name is Sean Cornell and I am a PhD candidate at the University of Cincinnati and Dr Ericksonrsquos sabbatical replacement for this academic year Yes he is still here and working very hard on several projects that I am sure he will talk about himself Maybe he will decide he can get more work done in retirement Hint Mark Hint

A little bit about me although having lived in the Midwest for the past 6 years the move in August to Canton has brought me home so to speak I was born and raised in the North Country and spent my youth between Chaumont NY on Lake Ontario and North Bangor NY on my grandparentrsquos dairy farm Canton of coursehellip is half way between so it was a strategic move

I think it is quite remarkable to have this opportunity to come back to northern New York to study some old rocks and work with a remarkable set of students My interests in geology were not with me when I was traipsing around the Adirondacks as a child and it took me a couple of years at the University of Rochester to figure out that my interests in history (Native American and early American) and wildlife (biology and ecology) might be combined through geologyhellip Hmmm how are these connected Well here I am anyway an echinoderm wannabe paleontologist (Edrioasteroids are cool) a carbonate sedimentologist and sequence stratigrapher Of course Canton and the Adirondacks are great for all of these things Well actually I see Canton as a strategic half-way point here too half way to my rocks Straddling the Frontenac Arch (almost) SLU sits in a location where the Ordovician-aged carbonates (MS and PhD work) are relatively close in both the eastnortheast and westerly directions For my research I have been working on a sequence stratigraphic model for the response of the carbonate platform to the Taconic Orogeny during the Late Ordovician

Although time is limited for continued field work (there is a good reason for 4rsquo of snow ndash I am trying to finish my disserta-tion) I have had the opportunity this fall to get a few days of field work in and participate on some field trips In September I co-led 2 field trips to see Ordovician rocks for the New York State Geological Association hosted by SUNY Oswego and spent a day showing new colleague Matty Strine some of the structural complexities of these Ordovician rocks Ok so they are not ldquoThe Snakerdquo or the ldquoTrain Wreckrdquo Matty but they are faulted and dipping some

Other activities this fall As I am teaching Invert Paleo and since I studied in Cincinnati I have upheld the annual pilgrim-age to the ldquoMecca of Paleozoic Paleontologyrdquo On a marathon 4-day trip to Cincinnati 13 students and myself enjoyed a remarkable trip to study the stratigraphy and paleontology of the Upper Ordovician of northern Kentucky and southwestern Ohio Yes we also found 7 complete Edrioasteroids the first to be added to the SLU geology teaching collection Almost had one casualty thoughhellip A priceless slab of the Cambrian Burgess Shale with a nearly complete specimen of Ottoia (A priapulid worm) was dropped at the Cincinnati Museum Center Collections Facility by one of our students No worries though Thankfully the slab slammed into the studentrsquos foot thus breaking the fall No casualties to the fossil or the student

Also teaching a special topics course on Dinosaurs and spending a great deal of time trying to keep up with the many new discoveries in recent years (T Rex may have had feathers) This course led me to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City with 11 students where we met up with one of our SLU alums Mr Glenn Kays rsquo96 Glenn worked on his MS at North Dakota and now is a Project Hydrogeologist with GSC|Kleinfelder It was great to meet him and have the opportunity to learn about some of his research interests on fossil turtles

Looking forward to the end of the semester ndash I am teaching Regional Field Studies and will be taking 10 students to Curacao in January In addition to RFS and Stratigraphy I will also be offering Ocean Science as well So of course I am looking forward to the end of the semester so I can work diligently on my dissertation and certainly NOT because I am going to the Caribbean before the ice pack sets in

Well I think I have bantered on long enough so I will close I do however want to express my gratitude to the several alums I met at GSA in Salt Lake City and thank the rest of you for your support of the St Lawrence Geology program Your legacy has provided an extremely rich and rewarding environment with which I am blessed to be a participant however abbrevi-ated Most of all thanks for providing continued opportunities to support the studies and futures of our current students ndash they are outstanding and they make my effort so worth it Paleontology in the News Discover Magazine has ranked a recent discovery by paleontologists as the num-ber 6th most important science discovery out of 100 this year The research by Dr Mary Schweitzer and Dr Jack Horner investigated bone microstructure of a T rex specimen and they have been able to recognize female tissue types This is the first direct evidence for sexual differentiation in these groups If you are interested in the original research article please see Schweitzer MH Wittmeyer JL Horner JR 2005 Gender-specific reproductive tissue in ratites and Tyrannosaurus rex Science 3081456-1460 Otherwise see the top 100 science stories for 2005 at httpwwwdiscovercomissuesjan-06cover

Michael Owen We are going to miss you

Dear friends

I canrsquot recall the last time I contributed to the newsletter but the current edition is my last chance as a member of the Geology Department faculty After 22 years at St Lawrence I have decided to start a new career I will be leaving Canton at the end of this semester moving to Syracuse to live with my family

I interviewed with Mark Erickson at the GSA annual meeting in New Orleans in the fall of 1982 even though my dissertation was not yet complete Over stuffed baked potatoes he described the culture of St Lawrence his vision of undergraduate geology education and the then-recent bifurcation of Geology and Geography I must have said something intelligible because I was invited for an on-campus interview shortly thereafter The interview itself was mostly a blur but I do recall the interminable drive back to the Syracuse airport through foot-deep blowing snow in the darkness Undeterred by the minor inconvenience of a nine-month winter I joined Mark Jim Street and Russ Jacoby in the fall of 1983 With Mark and Jimrsquos ldquoencouragementrdquo I completed that darned dissertation promptly

The courses in which I met most geology students were 101103 104 Sedimentology and Sed Pet I taught a 100-level geology course for more than 35 semesters during my career By the end I had discovered PowerPoint so that I no longer had to rely on my weak artistic ability and arm-waving to illustrate lectures

Remarriage shifted my focus away from Canton because my new wife Deborah Bradshaw MD has a thriving medical practice at Upstate hospital in Syracuse I commuted on weekends for nearly seven years a less-than-optimum configuration for being a husband and father This fall I received an offer of employment an offer that I couldnrsquot refuse Beginning in January I will be a senior system engineer with Sensis Corp a firm that designs and builds air traffic control systems The job will involve no geology but rather my background skills in satellite communications electronics and computer programming As Monty Python says ldquohellipand now for something completely differentrdquo

The years with students and faculty of the Geology Department have been challenging satisfying and above all fun Itrsquos an indescribable joy to watch students mature through their four years becoming self confident and capable adults whether they end up in geology or not Having had a role in that development and growth has been a great privilege for which I am sincerely thankful

Leaving the Geology Department would always be difficult but it especially hard now I perceive a stronger sense of enthusiastic healthy purpose among both faculty and students than ever be-fore Morale is higher the number of majors is greater and the sense of joy in learning is more pervasive than at any time I can recall The combined efforts of the geology faculty and alumni are having a marvelous effect and I am confident that they will continue

Heather Scott Cunningham lsquo98rsquo

I just wanted to update you on my latest adventure to Tasmania Work What is that I went with some friends who are post-doc researchers here It was nice to get away and Tasmania is a wild and beautiful country And very laid back - most stores closed at 3 on Saturday and did not open again until Monday I was suffering from lack of a 24 hr Wal-Mart fix (right) So among the exciting things I did in Tasmania hiked Mt Wellington (basalt volcano in the backdrop of Hobart) hiked around Cradle Mt in the snow sleet rain and wind hiked to Wineglass Bay - one of the most beautiful beaches in the world visited the penal colony of Port Arthur and cruised around some of the southern islands We saw small kangaroos (pantemellons) and wombats and a scorpion who greeted me in the shower I am already planning for my next adventure over Christmas Then I think I will have to take it easy after that since I am only on a graduate student budget

School is busy The graduate students are required to present at a one day seminar that is sched-uled for next Tuesday In addition to a 15 min presentation I have to create a poster The presen-tation was cake but this poster is going to require a few late nights this week for drafting and yelling at the computer and cursing Bill Gates for not making Word Illustrator compatible I have meas-ured my first Nd isotopes using the TIMS The processes is long and boring but I am told much shorter and more enjoyable than in the past I have crushed 27 rocks from the PNG trip I was sup-posed to go on but the visa fell through on This week I am hoping to make some XRF pellets and begin rock digestion for ICP analysis How scary I am already sounding like a geochemist

Glacier speed varies but they generally move less than three feet per day However in 1936-37 the Black Rapids Glacier in Alaska averaged more than 100 feet a day mdash the swiftest ever recorded

httpwwwcourier-journalcom foryourinfo080904080904html

Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson Greetings to all Another summer and autumn have marched by but this has been one of those most special occasions when I can contemplate their passage without the angst for preparing for classes Sabbatical years allow catch up and that is just what I am doing I taught my mussel course in June but only a single student had the fortitude for it We did make some new discov-eries however so it was not time misspent GSA abstracts went in in mid July and then I took some fishing breaks in Vermont with family Fishing was mixed but when good it was very

good A new Vermont state record Muskie (36 lbs) was caught only a stonersquos throw from one of my fishing spots ndash sadly not by me Late in August I visited the Heritage Center in Bismarck ND where John Hoganson and Bud Holland and I spent two weeks together identifying and photographing the fossil fishes of the Fox Hills Fm which will be the basis for a major monograph on this important group Although we are still finding the occasional additional species I think we have a good handle on the fauna after working on the project together since the early 1990s Lots of former students will be acknowl-edged in that work you may be certain

Sometime in the summer my paper with John H came out describing a new ratfish from the Fox Hills named in honor of Ray Haas who has helped us in our vertebrate studies for many years Ray and wife Katherine have put up or fed SLU geology field parties on lots of occasions so this was a small repayment of those courtesies A byrozoan paper with David Waugh and Rob Crawford at Kent appeared in the summer also so those studies are continuing I have several papers in the works with various colleagues and every now and then I have to meet one deadline or another for editing them but it remains fun to col-laborate with so many researchers

It seemed as though October flew by while I was working on the shark plates so that preparation of my GSA poster almost took me by surprise and the meeting was early this year I was one of a group of faculty and students who traveled to Salt Lake City for the annual meeting Senior major Trisha Smrecak presented new results of her two-year investigation of botani-cal change at the K-T boundary in North Dakota In Summer of 2004 Trisha and I were in the field together this summer Trisha supported her own research expenses and the Jim Street Fund of the Geology Department assisted with support for Matt Burton-Kelly rsquo05 as a field assistant in North Dakota Their GSA poster was visited by most of the paleobotanical ex-perts present at the meeting including Dan Peppe rsquo03 who is in his 3rd year of graduate work in Paleobotany at Yale Two of Steve Robinsonrsquos students reported with him on ecotourism in Chinarsquos national parks based on their observations during a trip to China last summer The five students attended talks and visited with graduate schools to learn of programs to which they may want to apply Students made good use of their time meeting researchers from around the world

Geology faculty too had a significant presence at the meeting Matt Strine and Sean Cornell who replace Drs Shrady and Erickson while on sabbatical presented a research poster and paper respectively Diane Burns and Dr Robinson also pre-sented research papers and Robinson and Dr Bursnall began the search for Bursnallrsquos replacement who will follow his retire-ment in 2006 As part of my sabbatical studies I presented a poster with co-author David Waugh rsquo99 which was a continua-tion of research on fossil Bryozoa that they began together as part of Waughrsquos BS thesis at St Lawrence That research will continue during the sabbatical leave

I was pleased to host a reception for St Lawrence alumni held on the first evening of the meeting Seventeen alumni joined faculty students and friends of the university including Emeritus Professor of Geography Bill Romey to share information and hear news of the department and the university Dr Robinson reported on progress of the science complex planning as it affects the Geology Program Dr Barbara Tewksbury rsquo74 Kirner Professor of Geology at Hamilton discussed the qualities of the new Geology building at Hamilton which is just now being occupied It was revealing to hear what institutions like ours are doing West Coast and Gulf Coast alums like Andrew Fountain rsquo76 and Charlie Kerans rsquo77 who donrsquot often get to Canton enjoyed visits with students who learned about graduate programs and industry directions from these leaders in their fields Charlie gave a very interesting presentation at a symposium honoring sedimentologists Bob Ginsburg and Bob Folk Recent graduate Chris Stevens presented some of his really interesting GPR data from the MacKenzie Delta in the Canadian Arctic and Dan Peppe documented the Paleocene paleomagnetic stratigraphy of western North Dakota All and all the meet-ing was an exceptionally productive one for all St Lawrence participants As you can imagine I enjoyed it a great deal

Since my return I have worked steadily preparing plates for the shark study I mentioned above As well I am responsible for a chapter on Oribatid Mite Studies for a new Elsevier Series on Quaternary Geology Booth Platt a MS student in Roy Nor-tonrsquos lab at SUNY-ESF is co-authoring this with me and we have an early December due date

Thereafter I will be working further on the shark paper and on some unionid mussel study Several projects are waiting in the wings

(Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson cont)

On the home front Mother continues to live at Church Street and though she struggles with the stairs she is doing very well for her ninety-eight years I am not very good company but she tolerates me pretty well Skootie too is doing well and keeps us good company I hear from Lance once in a blue moon He sounds like he is enjoying being out on his own He is still working at the home brew supply store in St Paul ndash they also do a big web business ndash and still enjoys the thought of opening a brew pub one day He rarely thinks of graduate study in Geology but it remains a possibility at least to humor the old man I look forward to shooting some pool with him again one of these days

This year we are especially mindful of all of you who have been through the tragic hurricanes of the Gulf Coast and Florida We have now heard from most but not all who may have been in the path of one or more storms I know that all who lived in Louisiana were deeply affected and many lost homes and businesses I hope you can rise from the difficulties with the strengths that you all showed us so many times at St Lawrence If there is yet anything that we can do please let us hear from you As the Holidays approach please know that our thoughts are indeed with you

Seasons Greetings from me and from all the SLU Geology Family

GULF COAST ALUMNI

The path of a category 5 hurricane is a sight one should never have to see in a lifetime A number of you have seen Katrinarsquos path however and we had great concern for our alums on the Gulf Coast Many of course are located in New Orleans because of industry headquaters Gradually we have heard from all of you that we know were in the area and we know you are safe That is not to say that you have not suffered great loss quite the contrary We know better If you know of something we can do for you please let us know We would love to hear from you

Future Geologist Elias

Jeannine Fiore (Mansfield) rsquo97rsquo would like to share

Jeannine and Ray have sold there house and moved to Bloomfield NY to live near Jeanninersquos parents

Their hands will be full with Elias learning how to crawl and explore (Must be the geologist in him)

GOOD LUCK IN YOUR NEW HOME

Andrew ldquoDogrdquo Owens lsquo99rsquo

Working as environmental consultant based in DC and Baltimore

I recently married (March 2005) to Christin Miller have a 100+ year old farmhouse and forest (very small) a groundhog family that we get to watch from our windows

I have recently started investigating the ready-mix concrete and storm water management industries to expand clients

Congratulations to Carrie Denesha lsquo00rsquoon passing the ASBOG

exam and becoming Professional Geologist II We always knew you

could do it Carrierdquo

David Waugh (99) presents Erickson and Waugh bryozoan poster at GSA Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City

JME photo

Trisha Smrecak with the Cretaceous leaf peepers Dan Peppe 03 and Kirk Johnson of the Denver Museum

JME photo

Stephanie Peek in front folded limestone layers outside of Pinto MD Stephanie is currently doing a senior the-sis project investigating the kinematics of the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium advised by Matty Strine

Professor Strine and students look-ing at some Adiron-dack deformation during Structural Geology lab

Students on the Structural Geology field trip to the Catskill Mountains looking at synorogenic Acadian sediments

Hello all

I am at St Lawrence for the academic year replacing Cathy Shrady while she is on sabbatical I taught Structural Geology and Introduction to Geological Maps during the Fall semester and will be teaching Geophysics and Mineralogy in the Spring In addition I am advising a senior thesis project with a field component in the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium

Last year I taught at Bryn Mawr College This summer I successfully defended my PhD thesis advised by Gautam Mitra at the University of Rochester For my dissertation I studied the kinematics of the Moine Thrust zone in NW Scotland More recently I have been collaborating with Christian Teyssier and Donna Whitney at the University of Minnesota investigating the thermal and kinematic evolution of metamorphic core complexes in the North American Cordillera I am also collaborating with Sean Cornell (also a faculty in the St Lawrence Geology Dept) on a project to document the most useful teaching outcrops within the United States and assemble a user-friendly website-database

In October a slew (no pun intended) of St Lawrence faculty and students made our way to Salt Lake City UT for the national GSA conference I presented some data that I collected in South Korea in collaboration with Dr Youngdo Park While some of our students were presenting andor co-authors other students came to check out graduate schools and do some ldquonetworkingrdquo I think it was a great experience for us all

I hope this newsletter finds you well

Take care

Matty Strine (Visiting Assistant Professor)

Matty Strine

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 3: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Greetings from Canton (with winter rapidly approaching)

Itrsquos been almost 5 years since I arrived at St Lawrence as the new guy on faculty The campus stu-dents and alumni have made me feel very welcome so I thank all of you As each year passes I meet more of you at events like SLUGAC and GSA Irsquom really starting to feel as a long term member of this community and must say that tenure pending Irsquom here to stay

Again itrsquos been a very busy year on campus Taking students into the field to see the landforms and features that they hear about in the lectures is my passion Once again this past August I had the opportunity to take a group of 10 students to Alaska for 12 days Our departmental technician Matt VanBrocklin came along as medical guy and cook Starting in the Anchorage area we spent several days at the Matanuska Glacier examining contemporary glacial processes We then moved our camp eastward to the small town of Chitina where we looked at fluvial processes lahars permafrost and even visited the ghost town of McCarthy in Wrangel-St Elias National Park I suppose that I should inform everyone that Uncle Tom the proprietor of Uncle Tomrsquos Cabin in Chitina has been made an honorary member of the St Lawrence Geology community for making us feel so at home in his establishment (ok we took the place over) and presenting us with some fantastic Pacific salmon Just a warning to watch

out if he ever appears at a SLUGAC conference We also spent some time in Valdez and the Thompson Pass area looking at contemporary glaciation and the impacts of the 1964 earthquake I hope to run this course every two years from now on as the students really get a great opportunity to make the link between contemporary glacial processes and the older evidence that we see on a regular basis in Northern New York

I also had a great opportunity to travel to China this past summer on a research project with two students Camille Partin rsquo05 and Ben Meade rsquo05 Funded by the Asian Studies Initiative we traveled to two World Geoparks and two National Geological Parks to evaluate the preservation of geological heritage in China as well as educational initiatives within the parks We spanned the country from Beijing to Hunan Province and the Three Gorges to Yunnan and Jiangxi Provinces meeting park managers employees and local people that have all benefited from the development of these unique geological parks The results of our study were presented at the Geological Society of America conference in Salt Lake City and we are working on an article for the magazine Focus on Geography I couldnrsquot have asked for better travel companions than Ben and Camille who put up with stinking hot temperatures strange food and disgruntled guides along the way Theyrsquore both off to graduate school next year so I wish them the best of luck

You may or not know that John Bursnallrsquos retirement is imminent I would just like to express my appreciation to John for hiring me mentoring me and being a fantastic colleague over the past few years He has been a major force in the success of the Geology Department John I wish you well in retirement and future endeavors Cheers

Stephen Robinson

Meet A Future GeologistmdashmdashJack

Class of 95rsquo Recently moved to Marlene Egan David Egan Houston TX

Matt VanBrocklin

Hello folks

We are well into fall semester 2005 with lots happening here on campus and within the Geology Department We here in Brown Hall have a front row seat to the raising of the new Science Complex What a process Steel beams floating ghostly at the end of a thin cable suspended high into the air with the aid of a crane One half of the structure is now framed with a roof going on while the other half is now well under way The structure is taking shape and is not unlike a huge skeleton of a beast rising from the large pit where it was born Has been interesting watching this building taking shape realizing this very structure will shape the sciences for the foreseeable future here at SLU

The department is enjoying some new faces this year with Dr Erickson Dr Bursnall and Dr Shrady all on sabbatical Enter stage left Diane Burns Matty Strine and Sean Cornell Diane was with us last semester at that time filling in for Dr Owen while he was on sabbatical and has graciously returned to help us out for another year Matty is doing the structure thing while Cathy is away and Sean is stepping into the well worn field boots of Dr Erickson while he is busy with his sabbatical These folks have been fantastic and enjoyable to work with It is a uniquely interesting experience interacting with new folks while the usual gang is away The differing personalities styles and techniques of teaching the new folks bring ultimately influences my department experience Keeps me busy and out of trouble for sure Job security I call ithellip aiding the new folks with everything from where to find and how to use equipment to ordering needed materials for their work Sabbaticals might be intended for the fac-ulty but the change is good for me too I think

And speaking of changehellip Last year Dr Robinson asked me to help him out with the Alaska field trip this past August My dual duties of camp medic and camp cook in the wilds of Alaska for a crew of lucky 13 kept me on my toes To be camp medic required that I attend and pass a Wilderness First Responder course that is offered annually here at SLU through the Outdoor Program If you enjoy the back country and often find yourself in a position of being away from any sort of medical attention I highly recommend this course Phil Royce of the Outdoor Program along with a fellow by the name of Cabet Stone do a first rate job teaching wilderness first aid skills We are very fortunate here at SLU to have this and many other opportunities As for camp cook wellhellip being raised here in the woods of the North Country has given me plenty of opportunity to hone my camp fire cooking skills Irsquod like to think most of the gang ate better out in the woods than they might eat in the comfort of their own kitchenhellip In any event the trip was a success with daily field trips and nightly camp fires in the raw and rugged country of the Talkeetna Chugach and Wrangell Mountains with their accompanying glaciers In a wordhellip awesome Dr Robinson really shines out in that country and seems as at home walking glaciers Matanuska and Worthington to name but a few passes and peaks as he does walking the streets here in the city of Canton

As I finish jotting down my thoughts Dr Bursnall has just come in on his motorcycle Not bad for the 4th of Novemberhellip So far beats my late date riding for the yearhellip Well folks other than that it is pretty much business as usual in our little corner of SLU Hope this finds you all well and in good spirits Wishing for you all the best over the soon to be here holiday season and the up coming new year

WErsquoVE HEARD FROM TORI KOHN lsquo05rsquo

Well I thought I would update you on my life Things are ok nothing as grand as Yellowstone or as hot as the badlands but lying somewhere in the middle Currently I am still in ArkanSASsssss working for the US forest service

Ouachita National Forest and not hating it but not loving it either I am getting training though and experience on an engine I recently adopted a dog and named him Glacier He is a great companion Life is different now as a wild land firefighter I dont have to work with the public very much I find myself giving interpretive programs to my coworkers though (God only knows what they think of me) I am the junior here between 10-30 years-so I am definitely the baby I miss the park service a bit and I miss the flat hat (I know can you believe it) Hey did you know the forest service cuts trees down for lumber --- man where have I been - hahhhaha It has been a tough adjustment but I said ldquoYallrdquo for the 1st time yesterday and it felt normal

I went on a detail to the Black Hills of South Dakota and got some action on fires there and we have been busy here as well Driest part of the country

I have recently tallied my states and I need 11 to hit all 50-=not bad for being 23 (Yes Liz I just gave myself props)

There is still some gypsy in me and I am feeling the urge to move---gt but I am fighting it I must say it feels good to get a pay-

Straight from Sean Cornell

What a legacy you have left

Please allow me to introduce myself my name is Sean Cornell and I am a PhD candidate at the University of Cincinnati and Dr Ericksonrsquos sabbatical replacement for this academic year Yes he is still here and working very hard on several projects that I am sure he will talk about himself Maybe he will decide he can get more work done in retirement Hint Mark Hint

A little bit about me although having lived in the Midwest for the past 6 years the move in August to Canton has brought me home so to speak I was born and raised in the North Country and spent my youth between Chaumont NY on Lake Ontario and North Bangor NY on my grandparentrsquos dairy farm Canton of coursehellip is half way between so it was a strategic move

I think it is quite remarkable to have this opportunity to come back to northern New York to study some old rocks and work with a remarkable set of students My interests in geology were not with me when I was traipsing around the Adirondacks as a child and it took me a couple of years at the University of Rochester to figure out that my interests in history (Native American and early American) and wildlife (biology and ecology) might be combined through geologyhellip Hmmm how are these connected Well here I am anyway an echinoderm wannabe paleontologist (Edrioasteroids are cool) a carbonate sedimentologist and sequence stratigrapher Of course Canton and the Adirondacks are great for all of these things Well actually I see Canton as a strategic half-way point here too half way to my rocks Straddling the Frontenac Arch (almost) SLU sits in a location where the Ordovician-aged carbonates (MS and PhD work) are relatively close in both the eastnortheast and westerly directions For my research I have been working on a sequence stratigraphic model for the response of the carbonate platform to the Taconic Orogeny during the Late Ordovician

Although time is limited for continued field work (there is a good reason for 4rsquo of snow ndash I am trying to finish my disserta-tion) I have had the opportunity this fall to get a few days of field work in and participate on some field trips In September I co-led 2 field trips to see Ordovician rocks for the New York State Geological Association hosted by SUNY Oswego and spent a day showing new colleague Matty Strine some of the structural complexities of these Ordovician rocks Ok so they are not ldquoThe Snakerdquo or the ldquoTrain Wreckrdquo Matty but they are faulted and dipping some

Other activities this fall As I am teaching Invert Paleo and since I studied in Cincinnati I have upheld the annual pilgrim-age to the ldquoMecca of Paleozoic Paleontologyrdquo On a marathon 4-day trip to Cincinnati 13 students and myself enjoyed a remarkable trip to study the stratigraphy and paleontology of the Upper Ordovician of northern Kentucky and southwestern Ohio Yes we also found 7 complete Edrioasteroids the first to be added to the SLU geology teaching collection Almost had one casualty thoughhellip A priceless slab of the Cambrian Burgess Shale with a nearly complete specimen of Ottoia (A priapulid worm) was dropped at the Cincinnati Museum Center Collections Facility by one of our students No worries though Thankfully the slab slammed into the studentrsquos foot thus breaking the fall No casualties to the fossil or the student

Also teaching a special topics course on Dinosaurs and spending a great deal of time trying to keep up with the many new discoveries in recent years (T Rex may have had feathers) This course led me to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City with 11 students where we met up with one of our SLU alums Mr Glenn Kays rsquo96 Glenn worked on his MS at North Dakota and now is a Project Hydrogeologist with GSC|Kleinfelder It was great to meet him and have the opportunity to learn about some of his research interests on fossil turtles

Looking forward to the end of the semester ndash I am teaching Regional Field Studies and will be taking 10 students to Curacao in January In addition to RFS and Stratigraphy I will also be offering Ocean Science as well So of course I am looking forward to the end of the semester so I can work diligently on my dissertation and certainly NOT because I am going to the Caribbean before the ice pack sets in

Well I think I have bantered on long enough so I will close I do however want to express my gratitude to the several alums I met at GSA in Salt Lake City and thank the rest of you for your support of the St Lawrence Geology program Your legacy has provided an extremely rich and rewarding environment with which I am blessed to be a participant however abbrevi-ated Most of all thanks for providing continued opportunities to support the studies and futures of our current students ndash they are outstanding and they make my effort so worth it Paleontology in the News Discover Magazine has ranked a recent discovery by paleontologists as the num-ber 6th most important science discovery out of 100 this year The research by Dr Mary Schweitzer and Dr Jack Horner investigated bone microstructure of a T rex specimen and they have been able to recognize female tissue types This is the first direct evidence for sexual differentiation in these groups If you are interested in the original research article please see Schweitzer MH Wittmeyer JL Horner JR 2005 Gender-specific reproductive tissue in ratites and Tyrannosaurus rex Science 3081456-1460 Otherwise see the top 100 science stories for 2005 at httpwwwdiscovercomissuesjan-06cover

Michael Owen We are going to miss you

Dear friends

I canrsquot recall the last time I contributed to the newsletter but the current edition is my last chance as a member of the Geology Department faculty After 22 years at St Lawrence I have decided to start a new career I will be leaving Canton at the end of this semester moving to Syracuse to live with my family

I interviewed with Mark Erickson at the GSA annual meeting in New Orleans in the fall of 1982 even though my dissertation was not yet complete Over stuffed baked potatoes he described the culture of St Lawrence his vision of undergraduate geology education and the then-recent bifurcation of Geology and Geography I must have said something intelligible because I was invited for an on-campus interview shortly thereafter The interview itself was mostly a blur but I do recall the interminable drive back to the Syracuse airport through foot-deep blowing snow in the darkness Undeterred by the minor inconvenience of a nine-month winter I joined Mark Jim Street and Russ Jacoby in the fall of 1983 With Mark and Jimrsquos ldquoencouragementrdquo I completed that darned dissertation promptly

The courses in which I met most geology students were 101103 104 Sedimentology and Sed Pet I taught a 100-level geology course for more than 35 semesters during my career By the end I had discovered PowerPoint so that I no longer had to rely on my weak artistic ability and arm-waving to illustrate lectures

Remarriage shifted my focus away from Canton because my new wife Deborah Bradshaw MD has a thriving medical practice at Upstate hospital in Syracuse I commuted on weekends for nearly seven years a less-than-optimum configuration for being a husband and father This fall I received an offer of employment an offer that I couldnrsquot refuse Beginning in January I will be a senior system engineer with Sensis Corp a firm that designs and builds air traffic control systems The job will involve no geology but rather my background skills in satellite communications electronics and computer programming As Monty Python says ldquohellipand now for something completely differentrdquo

The years with students and faculty of the Geology Department have been challenging satisfying and above all fun Itrsquos an indescribable joy to watch students mature through their four years becoming self confident and capable adults whether they end up in geology or not Having had a role in that development and growth has been a great privilege for which I am sincerely thankful

Leaving the Geology Department would always be difficult but it especially hard now I perceive a stronger sense of enthusiastic healthy purpose among both faculty and students than ever be-fore Morale is higher the number of majors is greater and the sense of joy in learning is more pervasive than at any time I can recall The combined efforts of the geology faculty and alumni are having a marvelous effect and I am confident that they will continue

Heather Scott Cunningham lsquo98rsquo

I just wanted to update you on my latest adventure to Tasmania Work What is that I went with some friends who are post-doc researchers here It was nice to get away and Tasmania is a wild and beautiful country And very laid back - most stores closed at 3 on Saturday and did not open again until Monday I was suffering from lack of a 24 hr Wal-Mart fix (right) So among the exciting things I did in Tasmania hiked Mt Wellington (basalt volcano in the backdrop of Hobart) hiked around Cradle Mt in the snow sleet rain and wind hiked to Wineglass Bay - one of the most beautiful beaches in the world visited the penal colony of Port Arthur and cruised around some of the southern islands We saw small kangaroos (pantemellons) and wombats and a scorpion who greeted me in the shower I am already planning for my next adventure over Christmas Then I think I will have to take it easy after that since I am only on a graduate student budget

School is busy The graduate students are required to present at a one day seminar that is sched-uled for next Tuesday In addition to a 15 min presentation I have to create a poster The presen-tation was cake but this poster is going to require a few late nights this week for drafting and yelling at the computer and cursing Bill Gates for not making Word Illustrator compatible I have meas-ured my first Nd isotopes using the TIMS The processes is long and boring but I am told much shorter and more enjoyable than in the past I have crushed 27 rocks from the PNG trip I was sup-posed to go on but the visa fell through on This week I am hoping to make some XRF pellets and begin rock digestion for ICP analysis How scary I am already sounding like a geochemist

Glacier speed varies but they generally move less than three feet per day However in 1936-37 the Black Rapids Glacier in Alaska averaged more than 100 feet a day mdash the swiftest ever recorded

httpwwwcourier-journalcom foryourinfo080904080904html

Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson Greetings to all Another summer and autumn have marched by but this has been one of those most special occasions when I can contemplate their passage without the angst for preparing for classes Sabbatical years allow catch up and that is just what I am doing I taught my mussel course in June but only a single student had the fortitude for it We did make some new discov-eries however so it was not time misspent GSA abstracts went in in mid July and then I took some fishing breaks in Vermont with family Fishing was mixed but when good it was very

good A new Vermont state record Muskie (36 lbs) was caught only a stonersquos throw from one of my fishing spots ndash sadly not by me Late in August I visited the Heritage Center in Bismarck ND where John Hoganson and Bud Holland and I spent two weeks together identifying and photographing the fossil fishes of the Fox Hills Fm which will be the basis for a major monograph on this important group Although we are still finding the occasional additional species I think we have a good handle on the fauna after working on the project together since the early 1990s Lots of former students will be acknowl-edged in that work you may be certain

Sometime in the summer my paper with John H came out describing a new ratfish from the Fox Hills named in honor of Ray Haas who has helped us in our vertebrate studies for many years Ray and wife Katherine have put up or fed SLU geology field parties on lots of occasions so this was a small repayment of those courtesies A byrozoan paper with David Waugh and Rob Crawford at Kent appeared in the summer also so those studies are continuing I have several papers in the works with various colleagues and every now and then I have to meet one deadline or another for editing them but it remains fun to col-laborate with so many researchers

It seemed as though October flew by while I was working on the shark plates so that preparation of my GSA poster almost took me by surprise and the meeting was early this year I was one of a group of faculty and students who traveled to Salt Lake City for the annual meeting Senior major Trisha Smrecak presented new results of her two-year investigation of botani-cal change at the K-T boundary in North Dakota In Summer of 2004 Trisha and I were in the field together this summer Trisha supported her own research expenses and the Jim Street Fund of the Geology Department assisted with support for Matt Burton-Kelly rsquo05 as a field assistant in North Dakota Their GSA poster was visited by most of the paleobotanical ex-perts present at the meeting including Dan Peppe rsquo03 who is in his 3rd year of graduate work in Paleobotany at Yale Two of Steve Robinsonrsquos students reported with him on ecotourism in Chinarsquos national parks based on their observations during a trip to China last summer The five students attended talks and visited with graduate schools to learn of programs to which they may want to apply Students made good use of their time meeting researchers from around the world

Geology faculty too had a significant presence at the meeting Matt Strine and Sean Cornell who replace Drs Shrady and Erickson while on sabbatical presented a research poster and paper respectively Diane Burns and Dr Robinson also pre-sented research papers and Robinson and Dr Bursnall began the search for Bursnallrsquos replacement who will follow his retire-ment in 2006 As part of my sabbatical studies I presented a poster with co-author David Waugh rsquo99 which was a continua-tion of research on fossil Bryozoa that they began together as part of Waughrsquos BS thesis at St Lawrence That research will continue during the sabbatical leave

I was pleased to host a reception for St Lawrence alumni held on the first evening of the meeting Seventeen alumni joined faculty students and friends of the university including Emeritus Professor of Geography Bill Romey to share information and hear news of the department and the university Dr Robinson reported on progress of the science complex planning as it affects the Geology Program Dr Barbara Tewksbury rsquo74 Kirner Professor of Geology at Hamilton discussed the qualities of the new Geology building at Hamilton which is just now being occupied It was revealing to hear what institutions like ours are doing West Coast and Gulf Coast alums like Andrew Fountain rsquo76 and Charlie Kerans rsquo77 who donrsquot often get to Canton enjoyed visits with students who learned about graduate programs and industry directions from these leaders in their fields Charlie gave a very interesting presentation at a symposium honoring sedimentologists Bob Ginsburg and Bob Folk Recent graduate Chris Stevens presented some of his really interesting GPR data from the MacKenzie Delta in the Canadian Arctic and Dan Peppe documented the Paleocene paleomagnetic stratigraphy of western North Dakota All and all the meet-ing was an exceptionally productive one for all St Lawrence participants As you can imagine I enjoyed it a great deal

Since my return I have worked steadily preparing plates for the shark study I mentioned above As well I am responsible for a chapter on Oribatid Mite Studies for a new Elsevier Series on Quaternary Geology Booth Platt a MS student in Roy Nor-tonrsquos lab at SUNY-ESF is co-authoring this with me and we have an early December due date

Thereafter I will be working further on the shark paper and on some unionid mussel study Several projects are waiting in the wings

(Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson cont)

On the home front Mother continues to live at Church Street and though she struggles with the stairs she is doing very well for her ninety-eight years I am not very good company but she tolerates me pretty well Skootie too is doing well and keeps us good company I hear from Lance once in a blue moon He sounds like he is enjoying being out on his own He is still working at the home brew supply store in St Paul ndash they also do a big web business ndash and still enjoys the thought of opening a brew pub one day He rarely thinks of graduate study in Geology but it remains a possibility at least to humor the old man I look forward to shooting some pool with him again one of these days

This year we are especially mindful of all of you who have been through the tragic hurricanes of the Gulf Coast and Florida We have now heard from most but not all who may have been in the path of one or more storms I know that all who lived in Louisiana were deeply affected and many lost homes and businesses I hope you can rise from the difficulties with the strengths that you all showed us so many times at St Lawrence If there is yet anything that we can do please let us hear from you As the Holidays approach please know that our thoughts are indeed with you

Seasons Greetings from me and from all the SLU Geology Family

GULF COAST ALUMNI

The path of a category 5 hurricane is a sight one should never have to see in a lifetime A number of you have seen Katrinarsquos path however and we had great concern for our alums on the Gulf Coast Many of course are located in New Orleans because of industry headquaters Gradually we have heard from all of you that we know were in the area and we know you are safe That is not to say that you have not suffered great loss quite the contrary We know better If you know of something we can do for you please let us know We would love to hear from you

Future Geologist Elias

Jeannine Fiore (Mansfield) rsquo97rsquo would like to share

Jeannine and Ray have sold there house and moved to Bloomfield NY to live near Jeanninersquos parents

Their hands will be full with Elias learning how to crawl and explore (Must be the geologist in him)

GOOD LUCK IN YOUR NEW HOME

Andrew ldquoDogrdquo Owens lsquo99rsquo

Working as environmental consultant based in DC and Baltimore

I recently married (March 2005) to Christin Miller have a 100+ year old farmhouse and forest (very small) a groundhog family that we get to watch from our windows

I have recently started investigating the ready-mix concrete and storm water management industries to expand clients

Congratulations to Carrie Denesha lsquo00rsquoon passing the ASBOG

exam and becoming Professional Geologist II We always knew you

could do it Carrierdquo

David Waugh (99) presents Erickson and Waugh bryozoan poster at GSA Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City

JME photo

Trisha Smrecak with the Cretaceous leaf peepers Dan Peppe 03 and Kirk Johnson of the Denver Museum

JME photo

Stephanie Peek in front folded limestone layers outside of Pinto MD Stephanie is currently doing a senior the-sis project investigating the kinematics of the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium advised by Matty Strine

Professor Strine and students look-ing at some Adiron-dack deformation during Structural Geology lab

Students on the Structural Geology field trip to the Catskill Mountains looking at synorogenic Acadian sediments

Hello all

I am at St Lawrence for the academic year replacing Cathy Shrady while she is on sabbatical I taught Structural Geology and Introduction to Geological Maps during the Fall semester and will be teaching Geophysics and Mineralogy in the Spring In addition I am advising a senior thesis project with a field component in the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium

Last year I taught at Bryn Mawr College This summer I successfully defended my PhD thesis advised by Gautam Mitra at the University of Rochester For my dissertation I studied the kinematics of the Moine Thrust zone in NW Scotland More recently I have been collaborating with Christian Teyssier and Donna Whitney at the University of Minnesota investigating the thermal and kinematic evolution of metamorphic core complexes in the North American Cordillera I am also collaborating with Sean Cornell (also a faculty in the St Lawrence Geology Dept) on a project to document the most useful teaching outcrops within the United States and assemble a user-friendly website-database

In October a slew (no pun intended) of St Lawrence faculty and students made our way to Salt Lake City UT for the national GSA conference I presented some data that I collected in South Korea in collaboration with Dr Youngdo Park While some of our students were presenting andor co-authors other students came to check out graduate schools and do some ldquonetworkingrdquo I think it was a great experience for us all

I hope this newsletter finds you well

Take care

Matty Strine (Visiting Assistant Professor)

Matty Strine

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 4: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Matt VanBrocklin

Hello folks

We are well into fall semester 2005 with lots happening here on campus and within the Geology Department We here in Brown Hall have a front row seat to the raising of the new Science Complex What a process Steel beams floating ghostly at the end of a thin cable suspended high into the air with the aid of a crane One half of the structure is now framed with a roof going on while the other half is now well under way The structure is taking shape and is not unlike a huge skeleton of a beast rising from the large pit where it was born Has been interesting watching this building taking shape realizing this very structure will shape the sciences for the foreseeable future here at SLU

The department is enjoying some new faces this year with Dr Erickson Dr Bursnall and Dr Shrady all on sabbatical Enter stage left Diane Burns Matty Strine and Sean Cornell Diane was with us last semester at that time filling in for Dr Owen while he was on sabbatical and has graciously returned to help us out for another year Matty is doing the structure thing while Cathy is away and Sean is stepping into the well worn field boots of Dr Erickson while he is busy with his sabbatical These folks have been fantastic and enjoyable to work with It is a uniquely interesting experience interacting with new folks while the usual gang is away The differing personalities styles and techniques of teaching the new folks bring ultimately influences my department experience Keeps me busy and out of trouble for sure Job security I call ithellip aiding the new folks with everything from where to find and how to use equipment to ordering needed materials for their work Sabbaticals might be intended for the fac-ulty but the change is good for me too I think

And speaking of changehellip Last year Dr Robinson asked me to help him out with the Alaska field trip this past August My dual duties of camp medic and camp cook in the wilds of Alaska for a crew of lucky 13 kept me on my toes To be camp medic required that I attend and pass a Wilderness First Responder course that is offered annually here at SLU through the Outdoor Program If you enjoy the back country and often find yourself in a position of being away from any sort of medical attention I highly recommend this course Phil Royce of the Outdoor Program along with a fellow by the name of Cabet Stone do a first rate job teaching wilderness first aid skills We are very fortunate here at SLU to have this and many other opportunities As for camp cook wellhellip being raised here in the woods of the North Country has given me plenty of opportunity to hone my camp fire cooking skills Irsquod like to think most of the gang ate better out in the woods than they might eat in the comfort of their own kitchenhellip In any event the trip was a success with daily field trips and nightly camp fires in the raw and rugged country of the Talkeetna Chugach and Wrangell Mountains with their accompanying glaciers In a wordhellip awesome Dr Robinson really shines out in that country and seems as at home walking glaciers Matanuska and Worthington to name but a few passes and peaks as he does walking the streets here in the city of Canton

As I finish jotting down my thoughts Dr Bursnall has just come in on his motorcycle Not bad for the 4th of Novemberhellip So far beats my late date riding for the yearhellip Well folks other than that it is pretty much business as usual in our little corner of SLU Hope this finds you all well and in good spirits Wishing for you all the best over the soon to be here holiday season and the up coming new year

WErsquoVE HEARD FROM TORI KOHN lsquo05rsquo

Well I thought I would update you on my life Things are ok nothing as grand as Yellowstone or as hot as the badlands but lying somewhere in the middle Currently I am still in ArkanSASsssss working for the US forest service

Ouachita National Forest and not hating it but not loving it either I am getting training though and experience on an engine I recently adopted a dog and named him Glacier He is a great companion Life is different now as a wild land firefighter I dont have to work with the public very much I find myself giving interpretive programs to my coworkers though (God only knows what they think of me) I am the junior here between 10-30 years-so I am definitely the baby I miss the park service a bit and I miss the flat hat (I know can you believe it) Hey did you know the forest service cuts trees down for lumber --- man where have I been - hahhhaha It has been a tough adjustment but I said ldquoYallrdquo for the 1st time yesterday and it felt normal

I went on a detail to the Black Hills of South Dakota and got some action on fires there and we have been busy here as well Driest part of the country

I have recently tallied my states and I need 11 to hit all 50-=not bad for being 23 (Yes Liz I just gave myself props)

There is still some gypsy in me and I am feeling the urge to move---gt but I am fighting it I must say it feels good to get a pay-

Straight from Sean Cornell

What a legacy you have left

Please allow me to introduce myself my name is Sean Cornell and I am a PhD candidate at the University of Cincinnati and Dr Ericksonrsquos sabbatical replacement for this academic year Yes he is still here and working very hard on several projects that I am sure he will talk about himself Maybe he will decide he can get more work done in retirement Hint Mark Hint

A little bit about me although having lived in the Midwest for the past 6 years the move in August to Canton has brought me home so to speak I was born and raised in the North Country and spent my youth between Chaumont NY on Lake Ontario and North Bangor NY on my grandparentrsquos dairy farm Canton of coursehellip is half way between so it was a strategic move

I think it is quite remarkable to have this opportunity to come back to northern New York to study some old rocks and work with a remarkable set of students My interests in geology were not with me when I was traipsing around the Adirondacks as a child and it took me a couple of years at the University of Rochester to figure out that my interests in history (Native American and early American) and wildlife (biology and ecology) might be combined through geologyhellip Hmmm how are these connected Well here I am anyway an echinoderm wannabe paleontologist (Edrioasteroids are cool) a carbonate sedimentologist and sequence stratigrapher Of course Canton and the Adirondacks are great for all of these things Well actually I see Canton as a strategic half-way point here too half way to my rocks Straddling the Frontenac Arch (almost) SLU sits in a location where the Ordovician-aged carbonates (MS and PhD work) are relatively close in both the eastnortheast and westerly directions For my research I have been working on a sequence stratigraphic model for the response of the carbonate platform to the Taconic Orogeny during the Late Ordovician

Although time is limited for continued field work (there is a good reason for 4rsquo of snow ndash I am trying to finish my disserta-tion) I have had the opportunity this fall to get a few days of field work in and participate on some field trips In September I co-led 2 field trips to see Ordovician rocks for the New York State Geological Association hosted by SUNY Oswego and spent a day showing new colleague Matty Strine some of the structural complexities of these Ordovician rocks Ok so they are not ldquoThe Snakerdquo or the ldquoTrain Wreckrdquo Matty but they are faulted and dipping some

Other activities this fall As I am teaching Invert Paleo and since I studied in Cincinnati I have upheld the annual pilgrim-age to the ldquoMecca of Paleozoic Paleontologyrdquo On a marathon 4-day trip to Cincinnati 13 students and myself enjoyed a remarkable trip to study the stratigraphy and paleontology of the Upper Ordovician of northern Kentucky and southwestern Ohio Yes we also found 7 complete Edrioasteroids the first to be added to the SLU geology teaching collection Almost had one casualty thoughhellip A priceless slab of the Cambrian Burgess Shale with a nearly complete specimen of Ottoia (A priapulid worm) was dropped at the Cincinnati Museum Center Collections Facility by one of our students No worries though Thankfully the slab slammed into the studentrsquos foot thus breaking the fall No casualties to the fossil or the student

Also teaching a special topics course on Dinosaurs and spending a great deal of time trying to keep up with the many new discoveries in recent years (T Rex may have had feathers) This course led me to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City with 11 students where we met up with one of our SLU alums Mr Glenn Kays rsquo96 Glenn worked on his MS at North Dakota and now is a Project Hydrogeologist with GSC|Kleinfelder It was great to meet him and have the opportunity to learn about some of his research interests on fossil turtles

Looking forward to the end of the semester ndash I am teaching Regional Field Studies and will be taking 10 students to Curacao in January In addition to RFS and Stratigraphy I will also be offering Ocean Science as well So of course I am looking forward to the end of the semester so I can work diligently on my dissertation and certainly NOT because I am going to the Caribbean before the ice pack sets in

Well I think I have bantered on long enough so I will close I do however want to express my gratitude to the several alums I met at GSA in Salt Lake City and thank the rest of you for your support of the St Lawrence Geology program Your legacy has provided an extremely rich and rewarding environment with which I am blessed to be a participant however abbrevi-ated Most of all thanks for providing continued opportunities to support the studies and futures of our current students ndash they are outstanding and they make my effort so worth it Paleontology in the News Discover Magazine has ranked a recent discovery by paleontologists as the num-ber 6th most important science discovery out of 100 this year The research by Dr Mary Schweitzer and Dr Jack Horner investigated bone microstructure of a T rex specimen and they have been able to recognize female tissue types This is the first direct evidence for sexual differentiation in these groups If you are interested in the original research article please see Schweitzer MH Wittmeyer JL Horner JR 2005 Gender-specific reproductive tissue in ratites and Tyrannosaurus rex Science 3081456-1460 Otherwise see the top 100 science stories for 2005 at httpwwwdiscovercomissuesjan-06cover

Michael Owen We are going to miss you

Dear friends

I canrsquot recall the last time I contributed to the newsletter but the current edition is my last chance as a member of the Geology Department faculty After 22 years at St Lawrence I have decided to start a new career I will be leaving Canton at the end of this semester moving to Syracuse to live with my family

I interviewed with Mark Erickson at the GSA annual meeting in New Orleans in the fall of 1982 even though my dissertation was not yet complete Over stuffed baked potatoes he described the culture of St Lawrence his vision of undergraduate geology education and the then-recent bifurcation of Geology and Geography I must have said something intelligible because I was invited for an on-campus interview shortly thereafter The interview itself was mostly a blur but I do recall the interminable drive back to the Syracuse airport through foot-deep blowing snow in the darkness Undeterred by the minor inconvenience of a nine-month winter I joined Mark Jim Street and Russ Jacoby in the fall of 1983 With Mark and Jimrsquos ldquoencouragementrdquo I completed that darned dissertation promptly

The courses in which I met most geology students were 101103 104 Sedimentology and Sed Pet I taught a 100-level geology course for more than 35 semesters during my career By the end I had discovered PowerPoint so that I no longer had to rely on my weak artistic ability and arm-waving to illustrate lectures

Remarriage shifted my focus away from Canton because my new wife Deborah Bradshaw MD has a thriving medical practice at Upstate hospital in Syracuse I commuted on weekends for nearly seven years a less-than-optimum configuration for being a husband and father This fall I received an offer of employment an offer that I couldnrsquot refuse Beginning in January I will be a senior system engineer with Sensis Corp a firm that designs and builds air traffic control systems The job will involve no geology but rather my background skills in satellite communications electronics and computer programming As Monty Python says ldquohellipand now for something completely differentrdquo

The years with students and faculty of the Geology Department have been challenging satisfying and above all fun Itrsquos an indescribable joy to watch students mature through their four years becoming self confident and capable adults whether they end up in geology or not Having had a role in that development and growth has been a great privilege for which I am sincerely thankful

Leaving the Geology Department would always be difficult but it especially hard now I perceive a stronger sense of enthusiastic healthy purpose among both faculty and students than ever be-fore Morale is higher the number of majors is greater and the sense of joy in learning is more pervasive than at any time I can recall The combined efforts of the geology faculty and alumni are having a marvelous effect and I am confident that they will continue

Heather Scott Cunningham lsquo98rsquo

I just wanted to update you on my latest adventure to Tasmania Work What is that I went with some friends who are post-doc researchers here It was nice to get away and Tasmania is a wild and beautiful country And very laid back - most stores closed at 3 on Saturday and did not open again until Monday I was suffering from lack of a 24 hr Wal-Mart fix (right) So among the exciting things I did in Tasmania hiked Mt Wellington (basalt volcano in the backdrop of Hobart) hiked around Cradle Mt in the snow sleet rain and wind hiked to Wineglass Bay - one of the most beautiful beaches in the world visited the penal colony of Port Arthur and cruised around some of the southern islands We saw small kangaroos (pantemellons) and wombats and a scorpion who greeted me in the shower I am already planning for my next adventure over Christmas Then I think I will have to take it easy after that since I am only on a graduate student budget

School is busy The graduate students are required to present at a one day seminar that is sched-uled for next Tuesday In addition to a 15 min presentation I have to create a poster The presen-tation was cake but this poster is going to require a few late nights this week for drafting and yelling at the computer and cursing Bill Gates for not making Word Illustrator compatible I have meas-ured my first Nd isotopes using the TIMS The processes is long and boring but I am told much shorter and more enjoyable than in the past I have crushed 27 rocks from the PNG trip I was sup-posed to go on but the visa fell through on This week I am hoping to make some XRF pellets and begin rock digestion for ICP analysis How scary I am already sounding like a geochemist

Glacier speed varies but they generally move less than three feet per day However in 1936-37 the Black Rapids Glacier in Alaska averaged more than 100 feet a day mdash the swiftest ever recorded

httpwwwcourier-journalcom foryourinfo080904080904html

Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson Greetings to all Another summer and autumn have marched by but this has been one of those most special occasions when I can contemplate their passage without the angst for preparing for classes Sabbatical years allow catch up and that is just what I am doing I taught my mussel course in June but only a single student had the fortitude for it We did make some new discov-eries however so it was not time misspent GSA abstracts went in in mid July and then I took some fishing breaks in Vermont with family Fishing was mixed but when good it was very

good A new Vermont state record Muskie (36 lbs) was caught only a stonersquos throw from one of my fishing spots ndash sadly not by me Late in August I visited the Heritage Center in Bismarck ND where John Hoganson and Bud Holland and I spent two weeks together identifying and photographing the fossil fishes of the Fox Hills Fm which will be the basis for a major monograph on this important group Although we are still finding the occasional additional species I think we have a good handle on the fauna after working on the project together since the early 1990s Lots of former students will be acknowl-edged in that work you may be certain

Sometime in the summer my paper with John H came out describing a new ratfish from the Fox Hills named in honor of Ray Haas who has helped us in our vertebrate studies for many years Ray and wife Katherine have put up or fed SLU geology field parties on lots of occasions so this was a small repayment of those courtesies A byrozoan paper with David Waugh and Rob Crawford at Kent appeared in the summer also so those studies are continuing I have several papers in the works with various colleagues and every now and then I have to meet one deadline or another for editing them but it remains fun to col-laborate with so many researchers

It seemed as though October flew by while I was working on the shark plates so that preparation of my GSA poster almost took me by surprise and the meeting was early this year I was one of a group of faculty and students who traveled to Salt Lake City for the annual meeting Senior major Trisha Smrecak presented new results of her two-year investigation of botani-cal change at the K-T boundary in North Dakota In Summer of 2004 Trisha and I were in the field together this summer Trisha supported her own research expenses and the Jim Street Fund of the Geology Department assisted with support for Matt Burton-Kelly rsquo05 as a field assistant in North Dakota Their GSA poster was visited by most of the paleobotanical ex-perts present at the meeting including Dan Peppe rsquo03 who is in his 3rd year of graduate work in Paleobotany at Yale Two of Steve Robinsonrsquos students reported with him on ecotourism in Chinarsquos national parks based on their observations during a trip to China last summer The five students attended talks and visited with graduate schools to learn of programs to which they may want to apply Students made good use of their time meeting researchers from around the world

Geology faculty too had a significant presence at the meeting Matt Strine and Sean Cornell who replace Drs Shrady and Erickson while on sabbatical presented a research poster and paper respectively Diane Burns and Dr Robinson also pre-sented research papers and Robinson and Dr Bursnall began the search for Bursnallrsquos replacement who will follow his retire-ment in 2006 As part of my sabbatical studies I presented a poster with co-author David Waugh rsquo99 which was a continua-tion of research on fossil Bryozoa that they began together as part of Waughrsquos BS thesis at St Lawrence That research will continue during the sabbatical leave

I was pleased to host a reception for St Lawrence alumni held on the first evening of the meeting Seventeen alumni joined faculty students and friends of the university including Emeritus Professor of Geography Bill Romey to share information and hear news of the department and the university Dr Robinson reported on progress of the science complex planning as it affects the Geology Program Dr Barbara Tewksbury rsquo74 Kirner Professor of Geology at Hamilton discussed the qualities of the new Geology building at Hamilton which is just now being occupied It was revealing to hear what institutions like ours are doing West Coast and Gulf Coast alums like Andrew Fountain rsquo76 and Charlie Kerans rsquo77 who donrsquot often get to Canton enjoyed visits with students who learned about graduate programs and industry directions from these leaders in their fields Charlie gave a very interesting presentation at a symposium honoring sedimentologists Bob Ginsburg and Bob Folk Recent graduate Chris Stevens presented some of his really interesting GPR data from the MacKenzie Delta in the Canadian Arctic and Dan Peppe documented the Paleocene paleomagnetic stratigraphy of western North Dakota All and all the meet-ing was an exceptionally productive one for all St Lawrence participants As you can imagine I enjoyed it a great deal

Since my return I have worked steadily preparing plates for the shark study I mentioned above As well I am responsible for a chapter on Oribatid Mite Studies for a new Elsevier Series on Quaternary Geology Booth Platt a MS student in Roy Nor-tonrsquos lab at SUNY-ESF is co-authoring this with me and we have an early December due date

Thereafter I will be working further on the shark paper and on some unionid mussel study Several projects are waiting in the wings

(Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson cont)

On the home front Mother continues to live at Church Street and though she struggles with the stairs she is doing very well for her ninety-eight years I am not very good company but she tolerates me pretty well Skootie too is doing well and keeps us good company I hear from Lance once in a blue moon He sounds like he is enjoying being out on his own He is still working at the home brew supply store in St Paul ndash they also do a big web business ndash and still enjoys the thought of opening a brew pub one day He rarely thinks of graduate study in Geology but it remains a possibility at least to humor the old man I look forward to shooting some pool with him again one of these days

This year we are especially mindful of all of you who have been through the tragic hurricanes of the Gulf Coast and Florida We have now heard from most but not all who may have been in the path of one or more storms I know that all who lived in Louisiana were deeply affected and many lost homes and businesses I hope you can rise from the difficulties with the strengths that you all showed us so many times at St Lawrence If there is yet anything that we can do please let us hear from you As the Holidays approach please know that our thoughts are indeed with you

Seasons Greetings from me and from all the SLU Geology Family

GULF COAST ALUMNI

The path of a category 5 hurricane is a sight one should never have to see in a lifetime A number of you have seen Katrinarsquos path however and we had great concern for our alums on the Gulf Coast Many of course are located in New Orleans because of industry headquaters Gradually we have heard from all of you that we know were in the area and we know you are safe That is not to say that you have not suffered great loss quite the contrary We know better If you know of something we can do for you please let us know We would love to hear from you

Future Geologist Elias

Jeannine Fiore (Mansfield) rsquo97rsquo would like to share

Jeannine and Ray have sold there house and moved to Bloomfield NY to live near Jeanninersquos parents

Their hands will be full with Elias learning how to crawl and explore (Must be the geologist in him)

GOOD LUCK IN YOUR NEW HOME

Andrew ldquoDogrdquo Owens lsquo99rsquo

Working as environmental consultant based in DC and Baltimore

I recently married (March 2005) to Christin Miller have a 100+ year old farmhouse and forest (very small) a groundhog family that we get to watch from our windows

I have recently started investigating the ready-mix concrete and storm water management industries to expand clients

Congratulations to Carrie Denesha lsquo00rsquoon passing the ASBOG

exam and becoming Professional Geologist II We always knew you

could do it Carrierdquo

David Waugh (99) presents Erickson and Waugh bryozoan poster at GSA Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City

JME photo

Trisha Smrecak with the Cretaceous leaf peepers Dan Peppe 03 and Kirk Johnson of the Denver Museum

JME photo

Stephanie Peek in front folded limestone layers outside of Pinto MD Stephanie is currently doing a senior the-sis project investigating the kinematics of the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium advised by Matty Strine

Professor Strine and students look-ing at some Adiron-dack deformation during Structural Geology lab

Students on the Structural Geology field trip to the Catskill Mountains looking at synorogenic Acadian sediments

Hello all

I am at St Lawrence for the academic year replacing Cathy Shrady while she is on sabbatical I taught Structural Geology and Introduction to Geological Maps during the Fall semester and will be teaching Geophysics and Mineralogy in the Spring In addition I am advising a senior thesis project with a field component in the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium

Last year I taught at Bryn Mawr College This summer I successfully defended my PhD thesis advised by Gautam Mitra at the University of Rochester For my dissertation I studied the kinematics of the Moine Thrust zone in NW Scotland More recently I have been collaborating with Christian Teyssier and Donna Whitney at the University of Minnesota investigating the thermal and kinematic evolution of metamorphic core complexes in the North American Cordillera I am also collaborating with Sean Cornell (also a faculty in the St Lawrence Geology Dept) on a project to document the most useful teaching outcrops within the United States and assemble a user-friendly website-database

In October a slew (no pun intended) of St Lawrence faculty and students made our way to Salt Lake City UT for the national GSA conference I presented some data that I collected in South Korea in collaboration with Dr Youngdo Park While some of our students were presenting andor co-authors other students came to check out graduate schools and do some ldquonetworkingrdquo I think it was a great experience for us all

I hope this newsletter finds you well

Take care

Matty Strine (Visiting Assistant Professor)

Matty Strine

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 5: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Straight from Sean Cornell

What a legacy you have left

Please allow me to introduce myself my name is Sean Cornell and I am a PhD candidate at the University of Cincinnati and Dr Ericksonrsquos sabbatical replacement for this academic year Yes he is still here and working very hard on several projects that I am sure he will talk about himself Maybe he will decide he can get more work done in retirement Hint Mark Hint

A little bit about me although having lived in the Midwest for the past 6 years the move in August to Canton has brought me home so to speak I was born and raised in the North Country and spent my youth between Chaumont NY on Lake Ontario and North Bangor NY on my grandparentrsquos dairy farm Canton of coursehellip is half way between so it was a strategic move

I think it is quite remarkable to have this opportunity to come back to northern New York to study some old rocks and work with a remarkable set of students My interests in geology were not with me when I was traipsing around the Adirondacks as a child and it took me a couple of years at the University of Rochester to figure out that my interests in history (Native American and early American) and wildlife (biology and ecology) might be combined through geologyhellip Hmmm how are these connected Well here I am anyway an echinoderm wannabe paleontologist (Edrioasteroids are cool) a carbonate sedimentologist and sequence stratigrapher Of course Canton and the Adirondacks are great for all of these things Well actually I see Canton as a strategic half-way point here too half way to my rocks Straddling the Frontenac Arch (almost) SLU sits in a location where the Ordovician-aged carbonates (MS and PhD work) are relatively close in both the eastnortheast and westerly directions For my research I have been working on a sequence stratigraphic model for the response of the carbonate platform to the Taconic Orogeny during the Late Ordovician

Although time is limited for continued field work (there is a good reason for 4rsquo of snow ndash I am trying to finish my disserta-tion) I have had the opportunity this fall to get a few days of field work in and participate on some field trips In September I co-led 2 field trips to see Ordovician rocks for the New York State Geological Association hosted by SUNY Oswego and spent a day showing new colleague Matty Strine some of the structural complexities of these Ordovician rocks Ok so they are not ldquoThe Snakerdquo or the ldquoTrain Wreckrdquo Matty but they are faulted and dipping some

Other activities this fall As I am teaching Invert Paleo and since I studied in Cincinnati I have upheld the annual pilgrim-age to the ldquoMecca of Paleozoic Paleontologyrdquo On a marathon 4-day trip to Cincinnati 13 students and myself enjoyed a remarkable trip to study the stratigraphy and paleontology of the Upper Ordovician of northern Kentucky and southwestern Ohio Yes we also found 7 complete Edrioasteroids the first to be added to the SLU geology teaching collection Almost had one casualty thoughhellip A priceless slab of the Cambrian Burgess Shale with a nearly complete specimen of Ottoia (A priapulid worm) was dropped at the Cincinnati Museum Center Collections Facility by one of our students No worries though Thankfully the slab slammed into the studentrsquos foot thus breaking the fall No casualties to the fossil or the student

Also teaching a special topics course on Dinosaurs and spending a great deal of time trying to keep up with the many new discoveries in recent years (T Rex may have had feathers) This course led me to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City with 11 students where we met up with one of our SLU alums Mr Glenn Kays rsquo96 Glenn worked on his MS at North Dakota and now is a Project Hydrogeologist with GSC|Kleinfelder It was great to meet him and have the opportunity to learn about some of his research interests on fossil turtles

Looking forward to the end of the semester ndash I am teaching Regional Field Studies and will be taking 10 students to Curacao in January In addition to RFS and Stratigraphy I will also be offering Ocean Science as well So of course I am looking forward to the end of the semester so I can work diligently on my dissertation and certainly NOT because I am going to the Caribbean before the ice pack sets in

Well I think I have bantered on long enough so I will close I do however want to express my gratitude to the several alums I met at GSA in Salt Lake City and thank the rest of you for your support of the St Lawrence Geology program Your legacy has provided an extremely rich and rewarding environment with which I am blessed to be a participant however abbrevi-ated Most of all thanks for providing continued opportunities to support the studies and futures of our current students ndash they are outstanding and they make my effort so worth it Paleontology in the News Discover Magazine has ranked a recent discovery by paleontologists as the num-ber 6th most important science discovery out of 100 this year The research by Dr Mary Schweitzer and Dr Jack Horner investigated bone microstructure of a T rex specimen and they have been able to recognize female tissue types This is the first direct evidence for sexual differentiation in these groups If you are interested in the original research article please see Schweitzer MH Wittmeyer JL Horner JR 2005 Gender-specific reproductive tissue in ratites and Tyrannosaurus rex Science 3081456-1460 Otherwise see the top 100 science stories for 2005 at httpwwwdiscovercomissuesjan-06cover

Michael Owen We are going to miss you

Dear friends

I canrsquot recall the last time I contributed to the newsletter but the current edition is my last chance as a member of the Geology Department faculty After 22 years at St Lawrence I have decided to start a new career I will be leaving Canton at the end of this semester moving to Syracuse to live with my family

I interviewed with Mark Erickson at the GSA annual meeting in New Orleans in the fall of 1982 even though my dissertation was not yet complete Over stuffed baked potatoes he described the culture of St Lawrence his vision of undergraduate geology education and the then-recent bifurcation of Geology and Geography I must have said something intelligible because I was invited for an on-campus interview shortly thereafter The interview itself was mostly a blur but I do recall the interminable drive back to the Syracuse airport through foot-deep blowing snow in the darkness Undeterred by the minor inconvenience of a nine-month winter I joined Mark Jim Street and Russ Jacoby in the fall of 1983 With Mark and Jimrsquos ldquoencouragementrdquo I completed that darned dissertation promptly

The courses in which I met most geology students were 101103 104 Sedimentology and Sed Pet I taught a 100-level geology course for more than 35 semesters during my career By the end I had discovered PowerPoint so that I no longer had to rely on my weak artistic ability and arm-waving to illustrate lectures

Remarriage shifted my focus away from Canton because my new wife Deborah Bradshaw MD has a thriving medical practice at Upstate hospital in Syracuse I commuted on weekends for nearly seven years a less-than-optimum configuration for being a husband and father This fall I received an offer of employment an offer that I couldnrsquot refuse Beginning in January I will be a senior system engineer with Sensis Corp a firm that designs and builds air traffic control systems The job will involve no geology but rather my background skills in satellite communications electronics and computer programming As Monty Python says ldquohellipand now for something completely differentrdquo

The years with students and faculty of the Geology Department have been challenging satisfying and above all fun Itrsquos an indescribable joy to watch students mature through their four years becoming self confident and capable adults whether they end up in geology or not Having had a role in that development and growth has been a great privilege for which I am sincerely thankful

Leaving the Geology Department would always be difficult but it especially hard now I perceive a stronger sense of enthusiastic healthy purpose among both faculty and students than ever be-fore Morale is higher the number of majors is greater and the sense of joy in learning is more pervasive than at any time I can recall The combined efforts of the geology faculty and alumni are having a marvelous effect and I am confident that they will continue

Heather Scott Cunningham lsquo98rsquo

I just wanted to update you on my latest adventure to Tasmania Work What is that I went with some friends who are post-doc researchers here It was nice to get away and Tasmania is a wild and beautiful country And very laid back - most stores closed at 3 on Saturday and did not open again until Monday I was suffering from lack of a 24 hr Wal-Mart fix (right) So among the exciting things I did in Tasmania hiked Mt Wellington (basalt volcano in the backdrop of Hobart) hiked around Cradle Mt in the snow sleet rain and wind hiked to Wineglass Bay - one of the most beautiful beaches in the world visited the penal colony of Port Arthur and cruised around some of the southern islands We saw small kangaroos (pantemellons) and wombats and a scorpion who greeted me in the shower I am already planning for my next adventure over Christmas Then I think I will have to take it easy after that since I am only on a graduate student budget

School is busy The graduate students are required to present at a one day seminar that is sched-uled for next Tuesday In addition to a 15 min presentation I have to create a poster The presen-tation was cake but this poster is going to require a few late nights this week for drafting and yelling at the computer and cursing Bill Gates for not making Word Illustrator compatible I have meas-ured my first Nd isotopes using the TIMS The processes is long and boring but I am told much shorter and more enjoyable than in the past I have crushed 27 rocks from the PNG trip I was sup-posed to go on but the visa fell through on This week I am hoping to make some XRF pellets and begin rock digestion for ICP analysis How scary I am already sounding like a geochemist

Glacier speed varies but they generally move less than three feet per day However in 1936-37 the Black Rapids Glacier in Alaska averaged more than 100 feet a day mdash the swiftest ever recorded

httpwwwcourier-journalcom foryourinfo080904080904html

Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson Greetings to all Another summer and autumn have marched by but this has been one of those most special occasions when I can contemplate their passage without the angst for preparing for classes Sabbatical years allow catch up and that is just what I am doing I taught my mussel course in June but only a single student had the fortitude for it We did make some new discov-eries however so it was not time misspent GSA abstracts went in in mid July and then I took some fishing breaks in Vermont with family Fishing was mixed but when good it was very

good A new Vermont state record Muskie (36 lbs) was caught only a stonersquos throw from one of my fishing spots ndash sadly not by me Late in August I visited the Heritage Center in Bismarck ND where John Hoganson and Bud Holland and I spent two weeks together identifying and photographing the fossil fishes of the Fox Hills Fm which will be the basis for a major monograph on this important group Although we are still finding the occasional additional species I think we have a good handle on the fauna after working on the project together since the early 1990s Lots of former students will be acknowl-edged in that work you may be certain

Sometime in the summer my paper with John H came out describing a new ratfish from the Fox Hills named in honor of Ray Haas who has helped us in our vertebrate studies for many years Ray and wife Katherine have put up or fed SLU geology field parties on lots of occasions so this was a small repayment of those courtesies A byrozoan paper with David Waugh and Rob Crawford at Kent appeared in the summer also so those studies are continuing I have several papers in the works with various colleagues and every now and then I have to meet one deadline or another for editing them but it remains fun to col-laborate with so many researchers

It seemed as though October flew by while I was working on the shark plates so that preparation of my GSA poster almost took me by surprise and the meeting was early this year I was one of a group of faculty and students who traveled to Salt Lake City for the annual meeting Senior major Trisha Smrecak presented new results of her two-year investigation of botani-cal change at the K-T boundary in North Dakota In Summer of 2004 Trisha and I were in the field together this summer Trisha supported her own research expenses and the Jim Street Fund of the Geology Department assisted with support for Matt Burton-Kelly rsquo05 as a field assistant in North Dakota Their GSA poster was visited by most of the paleobotanical ex-perts present at the meeting including Dan Peppe rsquo03 who is in his 3rd year of graduate work in Paleobotany at Yale Two of Steve Robinsonrsquos students reported with him on ecotourism in Chinarsquos national parks based on their observations during a trip to China last summer The five students attended talks and visited with graduate schools to learn of programs to which they may want to apply Students made good use of their time meeting researchers from around the world

Geology faculty too had a significant presence at the meeting Matt Strine and Sean Cornell who replace Drs Shrady and Erickson while on sabbatical presented a research poster and paper respectively Diane Burns and Dr Robinson also pre-sented research papers and Robinson and Dr Bursnall began the search for Bursnallrsquos replacement who will follow his retire-ment in 2006 As part of my sabbatical studies I presented a poster with co-author David Waugh rsquo99 which was a continua-tion of research on fossil Bryozoa that they began together as part of Waughrsquos BS thesis at St Lawrence That research will continue during the sabbatical leave

I was pleased to host a reception for St Lawrence alumni held on the first evening of the meeting Seventeen alumni joined faculty students and friends of the university including Emeritus Professor of Geography Bill Romey to share information and hear news of the department and the university Dr Robinson reported on progress of the science complex planning as it affects the Geology Program Dr Barbara Tewksbury rsquo74 Kirner Professor of Geology at Hamilton discussed the qualities of the new Geology building at Hamilton which is just now being occupied It was revealing to hear what institutions like ours are doing West Coast and Gulf Coast alums like Andrew Fountain rsquo76 and Charlie Kerans rsquo77 who donrsquot often get to Canton enjoyed visits with students who learned about graduate programs and industry directions from these leaders in their fields Charlie gave a very interesting presentation at a symposium honoring sedimentologists Bob Ginsburg and Bob Folk Recent graduate Chris Stevens presented some of his really interesting GPR data from the MacKenzie Delta in the Canadian Arctic and Dan Peppe documented the Paleocene paleomagnetic stratigraphy of western North Dakota All and all the meet-ing was an exceptionally productive one for all St Lawrence participants As you can imagine I enjoyed it a great deal

Since my return I have worked steadily preparing plates for the shark study I mentioned above As well I am responsible for a chapter on Oribatid Mite Studies for a new Elsevier Series on Quaternary Geology Booth Platt a MS student in Roy Nor-tonrsquos lab at SUNY-ESF is co-authoring this with me and we have an early December due date

Thereafter I will be working further on the shark paper and on some unionid mussel study Several projects are waiting in the wings

(Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson cont)

On the home front Mother continues to live at Church Street and though she struggles with the stairs she is doing very well for her ninety-eight years I am not very good company but she tolerates me pretty well Skootie too is doing well and keeps us good company I hear from Lance once in a blue moon He sounds like he is enjoying being out on his own He is still working at the home brew supply store in St Paul ndash they also do a big web business ndash and still enjoys the thought of opening a brew pub one day He rarely thinks of graduate study in Geology but it remains a possibility at least to humor the old man I look forward to shooting some pool with him again one of these days

This year we are especially mindful of all of you who have been through the tragic hurricanes of the Gulf Coast and Florida We have now heard from most but not all who may have been in the path of one or more storms I know that all who lived in Louisiana were deeply affected and many lost homes and businesses I hope you can rise from the difficulties with the strengths that you all showed us so many times at St Lawrence If there is yet anything that we can do please let us hear from you As the Holidays approach please know that our thoughts are indeed with you

Seasons Greetings from me and from all the SLU Geology Family

GULF COAST ALUMNI

The path of a category 5 hurricane is a sight one should never have to see in a lifetime A number of you have seen Katrinarsquos path however and we had great concern for our alums on the Gulf Coast Many of course are located in New Orleans because of industry headquaters Gradually we have heard from all of you that we know were in the area and we know you are safe That is not to say that you have not suffered great loss quite the contrary We know better If you know of something we can do for you please let us know We would love to hear from you

Future Geologist Elias

Jeannine Fiore (Mansfield) rsquo97rsquo would like to share

Jeannine and Ray have sold there house and moved to Bloomfield NY to live near Jeanninersquos parents

Their hands will be full with Elias learning how to crawl and explore (Must be the geologist in him)

GOOD LUCK IN YOUR NEW HOME

Andrew ldquoDogrdquo Owens lsquo99rsquo

Working as environmental consultant based in DC and Baltimore

I recently married (March 2005) to Christin Miller have a 100+ year old farmhouse and forest (very small) a groundhog family that we get to watch from our windows

I have recently started investigating the ready-mix concrete and storm water management industries to expand clients

Congratulations to Carrie Denesha lsquo00rsquoon passing the ASBOG

exam and becoming Professional Geologist II We always knew you

could do it Carrierdquo

David Waugh (99) presents Erickson and Waugh bryozoan poster at GSA Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City

JME photo

Trisha Smrecak with the Cretaceous leaf peepers Dan Peppe 03 and Kirk Johnson of the Denver Museum

JME photo

Stephanie Peek in front folded limestone layers outside of Pinto MD Stephanie is currently doing a senior the-sis project investigating the kinematics of the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium advised by Matty Strine

Professor Strine and students look-ing at some Adiron-dack deformation during Structural Geology lab

Students on the Structural Geology field trip to the Catskill Mountains looking at synorogenic Acadian sediments

Hello all

I am at St Lawrence for the academic year replacing Cathy Shrady while she is on sabbatical I taught Structural Geology and Introduction to Geological Maps during the Fall semester and will be teaching Geophysics and Mineralogy in the Spring In addition I am advising a senior thesis project with a field component in the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium

Last year I taught at Bryn Mawr College This summer I successfully defended my PhD thesis advised by Gautam Mitra at the University of Rochester For my dissertation I studied the kinematics of the Moine Thrust zone in NW Scotland More recently I have been collaborating with Christian Teyssier and Donna Whitney at the University of Minnesota investigating the thermal and kinematic evolution of metamorphic core complexes in the North American Cordillera I am also collaborating with Sean Cornell (also a faculty in the St Lawrence Geology Dept) on a project to document the most useful teaching outcrops within the United States and assemble a user-friendly website-database

In October a slew (no pun intended) of St Lawrence faculty and students made our way to Salt Lake City UT for the national GSA conference I presented some data that I collected in South Korea in collaboration with Dr Youngdo Park While some of our students were presenting andor co-authors other students came to check out graduate schools and do some ldquonetworkingrdquo I think it was a great experience for us all

I hope this newsletter finds you well

Take care

Matty Strine (Visiting Assistant Professor)

Matty Strine

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 6: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Michael Owen We are going to miss you

Dear friends

I canrsquot recall the last time I contributed to the newsletter but the current edition is my last chance as a member of the Geology Department faculty After 22 years at St Lawrence I have decided to start a new career I will be leaving Canton at the end of this semester moving to Syracuse to live with my family

I interviewed with Mark Erickson at the GSA annual meeting in New Orleans in the fall of 1982 even though my dissertation was not yet complete Over stuffed baked potatoes he described the culture of St Lawrence his vision of undergraduate geology education and the then-recent bifurcation of Geology and Geography I must have said something intelligible because I was invited for an on-campus interview shortly thereafter The interview itself was mostly a blur but I do recall the interminable drive back to the Syracuse airport through foot-deep blowing snow in the darkness Undeterred by the minor inconvenience of a nine-month winter I joined Mark Jim Street and Russ Jacoby in the fall of 1983 With Mark and Jimrsquos ldquoencouragementrdquo I completed that darned dissertation promptly

The courses in which I met most geology students were 101103 104 Sedimentology and Sed Pet I taught a 100-level geology course for more than 35 semesters during my career By the end I had discovered PowerPoint so that I no longer had to rely on my weak artistic ability and arm-waving to illustrate lectures

Remarriage shifted my focus away from Canton because my new wife Deborah Bradshaw MD has a thriving medical practice at Upstate hospital in Syracuse I commuted on weekends for nearly seven years a less-than-optimum configuration for being a husband and father This fall I received an offer of employment an offer that I couldnrsquot refuse Beginning in January I will be a senior system engineer with Sensis Corp a firm that designs and builds air traffic control systems The job will involve no geology but rather my background skills in satellite communications electronics and computer programming As Monty Python says ldquohellipand now for something completely differentrdquo

The years with students and faculty of the Geology Department have been challenging satisfying and above all fun Itrsquos an indescribable joy to watch students mature through their four years becoming self confident and capable adults whether they end up in geology or not Having had a role in that development and growth has been a great privilege for which I am sincerely thankful

Leaving the Geology Department would always be difficult but it especially hard now I perceive a stronger sense of enthusiastic healthy purpose among both faculty and students than ever be-fore Morale is higher the number of majors is greater and the sense of joy in learning is more pervasive than at any time I can recall The combined efforts of the geology faculty and alumni are having a marvelous effect and I am confident that they will continue

Heather Scott Cunningham lsquo98rsquo

I just wanted to update you on my latest adventure to Tasmania Work What is that I went with some friends who are post-doc researchers here It was nice to get away and Tasmania is a wild and beautiful country And very laid back - most stores closed at 3 on Saturday and did not open again until Monday I was suffering from lack of a 24 hr Wal-Mart fix (right) So among the exciting things I did in Tasmania hiked Mt Wellington (basalt volcano in the backdrop of Hobart) hiked around Cradle Mt in the snow sleet rain and wind hiked to Wineglass Bay - one of the most beautiful beaches in the world visited the penal colony of Port Arthur and cruised around some of the southern islands We saw small kangaroos (pantemellons) and wombats and a scorpion who greeted me in the shower I am already planning for my next adventure over Christmas Then I think I will have to take it easy after that since I am only on a graduate student budget

School is busy The graduate students are required to present at a one day seminar that is sched-uled for next Tuesday In addition to a 15 min presentation I have to create a poster The presen-tation was cake but this poster is going to require a few late nights this week for drafting and yelling at the computer and cursing Bill Gates for not making Word Illustrator compatible I have meas-ured my first Nd isotopes using the TIMS The processes is long and boring but I am told much shorter and more enjoyable than in the past I have crushed 27 rocks from the PNG trip I was sup-posed to go on but the visa fell through on This week I am hoping to make some XRF pellets and begin rock digestion for ICP analysis How scary I am already sounding like a geochemist

Glacier speed varies but they generally move less than three feet per day However in 1936-37 the Black Rapids Glacier in Alaska averaged more than 100 feet a day mdash the swiftest ever recorded

httpwwwcourier-journalcom foryourinfo080904080904html

Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson Greetings to all Another summer and autumn have marched by but this has been one of those most special occasions when I can contemplate their passage without the angst for preparing for classes Sabbatical years allow catch up and that is just what I am doing I taught my mussel course in June but only a single student had the fortitude for it We did make some new discov-eries however so it was not time misspent GSA abstracts went in in mid July and then I took some fishing breaks in Vermont with family Fishing was mixed but when good it was very

good A new Vermont state record Muskie (36 lbs) was caught only a stonersquos throw from one of my fishing spots ndash sadly not by me Late in August I visited the Heritage Center in Bismarck ND where John Hoganson and Bud Holland and I spent two weeks together identifying and photographing the fossil fishes of the Fox Hills Fm which will be the basis for a major monograph on this important group Although we are still finding the occasional additional species I think we have a good handle on the fauna after working on the project together since the early 1990s Lots of former students will be acknowl-edged in that work you may be certain

Sometime in the summer my paper with John H came out describing a new ratfish from the Fox Hills named in honor of Ray Haas who has helped us in our vertebrate studies for many years Ray and wife Katherine have put up or fed SLU geology field parties on lots of occasions so this was a small repayment of those courtesies A byrozoan paper with David Waugh and Rob Crawford at Kent appeared in the summer also so those studies are continuing I have several papers in the works with various colleagues and every now and then I have to meet one deadline or another for editing them but it remains fun to col-laborate with so many researchers

It seemed as though October flew by while I was working on the shark plates so that preparation of my GSA poster almost took me by surprise and the meeting was early this year I was one of a group of faculty and students who traveled to Salt Lake City for the annual meeting Senior major Trisha Smrecak presented new results of her two-year investigation of botani-cal change at the K-T boundary in North Dakota In Summer of 2004 Trisha and I were in the field together this summer Trisha supported her own research expenses and the Jim Street Fund of the Geology Department assisted with support for Matt Burton-Kelly rsquo05 as a field assistant in North Dakota Their GSA poster was visited by most of the paleobotanical ex-perts present at the meeting including Dan Peppe rsquo03 who is in his 3rd year of graduate work in Paleobotany at Yale Two of Steve Robinsonrsquos students reported with him on ecotourism in Chinarsquos national parks based on their observations during a trip to China last summer The five students attended talks and visited with graduate schools to learn of programs to which they may want to apply Students made good use of their time meeting researchers from around the world

Geology faculty too had a significant presence at the meeting Matt Strine and Sean Cornell who replace Drs Shrady and Erickson while on sabbatical presented a research poster and paper respectively Diane Burns and Dr Robinson also pre-sented research papers and Robinson and Dr Bursnall began the search for Bursnallrsquos replacement who will follow his retire-ment in 2006 As part of my sabbatical studies I presented a poster with co-author David Waugh rsquo99 which was a continua-tion of research on fossil Bryozoa that they began together as part of Waughrsquos BS thesis at St Lawrence That research will continue during the sabbatical leave

I was pleased to host a reception for St Lawrence alumni held on the first evening of the meeting Seventeen alumni joined faculty students and friends of the university including Emeritus Professor of Geography Bill Romey to share information and hear news of the department and the university Dr Robinson reported on progress of the science complex planning as it affects the Geology Program Dr Barbara Tewksbury rsquo74 Kirner Professor of Geology at Hamilton discussed the qualities of the new Geology building at Hamilton which is just now being occupied It was revealing to hear what institutions like ours are doing West Coast and Gulf Coast alums like Andrew Fountain rsquo76 and Charlie Kerans rsquo77 who donrsquot often get to Canton enjoyed visits with students who learned about graduate programs and industry directions from these leaders in their fields Charlie gave a very interesting presentation at a symposium honoring sedimentologists Bob Ginsburg and Bob Folk Recent graduate Chris Stevens presented some of his really interesting GPR data from the MacKenzie Delta in the Canadian Arctic and Dan Peppe documented the Paleocene paleomagnetic stratigraphy of western North Dakota All and all the meet-ing was an exceptionally productive one for all St Lawrence participants As you can imagine I enjoyed it a great deal

Since my return I have worked steadily preparing plates for the shark study I mentioned above As well I am responsible for a chapter on Oribatid Mite Studies for a new Elsevier Series on Quaternary Geology Booth Platt a MS student in Roy Nor-tonrsquos lab at SUNY-ESF is co-authoring this with me and we have an early December due date

Thereafter I will be working further on the shark paper and on some unionid mussel study Several projects are waiting in the wings

(Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson cont)

On the home front Mother continues to live at Church Street and though she struggles with the stairs she is doing very well for her ninety-eight years I am not very good company but she tolerates me pretty well Skootie too is doing well and keeps us good company I hear from Lance once in a blue moon He sounds like he is enjoying being out on his own He is still working at the home brew supply store in St Paul ndash they also do a big web business ndash and still enjoys the thought of opening a brew pub one day He rarely thinks of graduate study in Geology but it remains a possibility at least to humor the old man I look forward to shooting some pool with him again one of these days

This year we are especially mindful of all of you who have been through the tragic hurricanes of the Gulf Coast and Florida We have now heard from most but not all who may have been in the path of one or more storms I know that all who lived in Louisiana were deeply affected and many lost homes and businesses I hope you can rise from the difficulties with the strengths that you all showed us so many times at St Lawrence If there is yet anything that we can do please let us hear from you As the Holidays approach please know that our thoughts are indeed with you

Seasons Greetings from me and from all the SLU Geology Family

GULF COAST ALUMNI

The path of a category 5 hurricane is a sight one should never have to see in a lifetime A number of you have seen Katrinarsquos path however and we had great concern for our alums on the Gulf Coast Many of course are located in New Orleans because of industry headquaters Gradually we have heard from all of you that we know were in the area and we know you are safe That is not to say that you have not suffered great loss quite the contrary We know better If you know of something we can do for you please let us know We would love to hear from you

Future Geologist Elias

Jeannine Fiore (Mansfield) rsquo97rsquo would like to share

Jeannine and Ray have sold there house and moved to Bloomfield NY to live near Jeanninersquos parents

Their hands will be full with Elias learning how to crawl and explore (Must be the geologist in him)

GOOD LUCK IN YOUR NEW HOME

Andrew ldquoDogrdquo Owens lsquo99rsquo

Working as environmental consultant based in DC and Baltimore

I recently married (March 2005) to Christin Miller have a 100+ year old farmhouse and forest (very small) a groundhog family that we get to watch from our windows

I have recently started investigating the ready-mix concrete and storm water management industries to expand clients

Congratulations to Carrie Denesha lsquo00rsquoon passing the ASBOG

exam and becoming Professional Geologist II We always knew you

could do it Carrierdquo

David Waugh (99) presents Erickson and Waugh bryozoan poster at GSA Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City

JME photo

Trisha Smrecak with the Cretaceous leaf peepers Dan Peppe 03 and Kirk Johnson of the Denver Museum

JME photo

Stephanie Peek in front folded limestone layers outside of Pinto MD Stephanie is currently doing a senior the-sis project investigating the kinematics of the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium advised by Matty Strine

Professor Strine and students look-ing at some Adiron-dack deformation during Structural Geology lab

Students on the Structural Geology field trip to the Catskill Mountains looking at synorogenic Acadian sediments

Hello all

I am at St Lawrence for the academic year replacing Cathy Shrady while she is on sabbatical I taught Structural Geology and Introduction to Geological Maps during the Fall semester and will be teaching Geophysics and Mineralogy in the Spring In addition I am advising a senior thesis project with a field component in the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium

Last year I taught at Bryn Mawr College This summer I successfully defended my PhD thesis advised by Gautam Mitra at the University of Rochester For my dissertation I studied the kinematics of the Moine Thrust zone in NW Scotland More recently I have been collaborating with Christian Teyssier and Donna Whitney at the University of Minnesota investigating the thermal and kinematic evolution of metamorphic core complexes in the North American Cordillera I am also collaborating with Sean Cornell (also a faculty in the St Lawrence Geology Dept) on a project to document the most useful teaching outcrops within the United States and assemble a user-friendly website-database

In October a slew (no pun intended) of St Lawrence faculty and students made our way to Salt Lake City UT for the national GSA conference I presented some data that I collected in South Korea in collaboration with Dr Youngdo Park While some of our students were presenting andor co-authors other students came to check out graduate schools and do some ldquonetworkingrdquo I think it was a great experience for us all

I hope this newsletter finds you well

Take care

Matty Strine (Visiting Assistant Professor)

Matty Strine

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 7: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson Greetings to all Another summer and autumn have marched by but this has been one of those most special occasions when I can contemplate their passage without the angst for preparing for classes Sabbatical years allow catch up and that is just what I am doing I taught my mussel course in June but only a single student had the fortitude for it We did make some new discov-eries however so it was not time misspent GSA abstracts went in in mid July and then I took some fishing breaks in Vermont with family Fishing was mixed but when good it was very

good A new Vermont state record Muskie (36 lbs) was caught only a stonersquos throw from one of my fishing spots ndash sadly not by me Late in August I visited the Heritage Center in Bismarck ND where John Hoganson and Bud Holland and I spent two weeks together identifying and photographing the fossil fishes of the Fox Hills Fm which will be the basis for a major monograph on this important group Although we are still finding the occasional additional species I think we have a good handle on the fauna after working on the project together since the early 1990s Lots of former students will be acknowl-edged in that work you may be certain

Sometime in the summer my paper with John H came out describing a new ratfish from the Fox Hills named in honor of Ray Haas who has helped us in our vertebrate studies for many years Ray and wife Katherine have put up or fed SLU geology field parties on lots of occasions so this was a small repayment of those courtesies A byrozoan paper with David Waugh and Rob Crawford at Kent appeared in the summer also so those studies are continuing I have several papers in the works with various colleagues and every now and then I have to meet one deadline or another for editing them but it remains fun to col-laborate with so many researchers

It seemed as though October flew by while I was working on the shark plates so that preparation of my GSA poster almost took me by surprise and the meeting was early this year I was one of a group of faculty and students who traveled to Salt Lake City for the annual meeting Senior major Trisha Smrecak presented new results of her two-year investigation of botani-cal change at the K-T boundary in North Dakota In Summer of 2004 Trisha and I were in the field together this summer Trisha supported her own research expenses and the Jim Street Fund of the Geology Department assisted with support for Matt Burton-Kelly rsquo05 as a field assistant in North Dakota Their GSA poster was visited by most of the paleobotanical ex-perts present at the meeting including Dan Peppe rsquo03 who is in his 3rd year of graduate work in Paleobotany at Yale Two of Steve Robinsonrsquos students reported with him on ecotourism in Chinarsquos national parks based on their observations during a trip to China last summer The five students attended talks and visited with graduate schools to learn of programs to which they may want to apply Students made good use of their time meeting researchers from around the world

Geology faculty too had a significant presence at the meeting Matt Strine and Sean Cornell who replace Drs Shrady and Erickson while on sabbatical presented a research poster and paper respectively Diane Burns and Dr Robinson also pre-sented research papers and Robinson and Dr Bursnall began the search for Bursnallrsquos replacement who will follow his retire-ment in 2006 As part of my sabbatical studies I presented a poster with co-author David Waugh rsquo99 which was a continua-tion of research on fossil Bryozoa that they began together as part of Waughrsquos BS thesis at St Lawrence That research will continue during the sabbatical leave

I was pleased to host a reception for St Lawrence alumni held on the first evening of the meeting Seventeen alumni joined faculty students and friends of the university including Emeritus Professor of Geography Bill Romey to share information and hear news of the department and the university Dr Robinson reported on progress of the science complex planning as it affects the Geology Program Dr Barbara Tewksbury rsquo74 Kirner Professor of Geology at Hamilton discussed the qualities of the new Geology building at Hamilton which is just now being occupied It was revealing to hear what institutions like ours are doing West Coast and Gulf Coast alums like Andrew Fountain rsquo76 and Charlie Kerans rsquo77 who donrsquot often get to Canton enjoyed visits with students who learned about graduate programs and industry directions from these leaders in their fields Charlie gave a very interesting presentation at a symposium honoring sedimentologists Bob Ginsburg and Bob Folk Recent graduate Chris Stevens presented some of his really interesting GPR data from the MacKenzie Delta in the Canadian Arctic and Dan Peppe documented the Paleocene paleomagnetic stratigraphy of western North Dakota All and all the meet-ing was an exceptionally productive one for all St Lawrence participants As you can imagine I enjoyed it a great deal

Since my return I have worked steadily preparing plates for the shark study I mentioned above As well I am responsible for a chapter on Oribatid Mite Studies for a new Elsevier Series on Quaternary Geology Booth Platt a MS student in Roy Nor-tonrsquos lab at SUNY-ESF is co-authoring this with me and we have an early December due date

Thereafter I will be working further on the shark paper and on some unionid mussel study Several projects are waiting in the wings

(Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson cont)

On the home front Mother continues to live at Church Street and though she struggles with the stairs she is doing very well for her ninety-eight years I am not very good company but she tolerates me pretty well Skootie too is doing well and keeps us good company I hear from Lance once in a blue moon He sounds like he is enjoying being out on his own He is still working at the home brew supply store in St Paul ndash they also do a big web business ndash and still enjoys the thought of opening a brew pub one day He rarely thinks of graduate study in Geology but it remains a possibility at least to humor the old man I look forward to shooting some pool with him again one of these days

This year we are especially mindful of all of you who have been through the tragic hurricanes of the Gulf Coast and Florida We have now heard from most but not all who may have been in the path of one or more storms I know that all who lived in Louisiana were deeply affected and many lost homes and businesses I hope you can rise from the difficulties with the strengths that you all showed us so many times at St Lawrence If there is yet anything that we can do please let us hear from you As the Holidays approach please know that our thoughts are indeed with you

Seasons Greetings from me and from all the SLU Geology Family

GULF COAST ALUMNI

The path of a category 5 hurricane is a sight one should never have to see in a lifetime A number of you have seen Katrinarsquos path however and we had great concern for our alums on the Gulf Coast Many of course are located in New Orleans because of industry headquaters Gradually we have heard from all of you that we know were in the area and we know you are safe That is not to say that you have not suffered great loss quite the contrary We know better If you know of something we can do for you please let us know We would love to hear from you

Future Geologist Elias

Jeannine Fiore (Mansfield) rsquo97rsquo would like to share

Jeannine and Ray have sold there house and moved to Bloomfield NY to live near Jeanninersquos parents

Their hands will be full with Elias learning how to crawl and explore (Must be the geologist in him)

GOOD LUCK IN YOUR NEW HOME

Andrew ldquoDogrdquo Owens lsquo99rsquo

Working as environmental consultant based in DC and Baltimore

I recently married (March 2005) to Christin Miller have a 100+ year old farmhouse and forest (very small) a groundhog family that we get to watch from our windows

I have recently started investigating the ready-mix concrete and storm water management industries to expand clients

Congratulations to Carrie Denesha lsquo00rsquoon passing the ASBOG

exam and becoming Professional Geologist II We always knew you

could do it Carrierdquo

David Waugh (99) presents Erickson and Waugh bryozoan poster at GSA Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City

JME photo

Trisha Smrecak with the Cretaceous leaf peepers Dan Peppe 03 and Kirk Johnson of the Denver Museum

JME photo

Stephanie Peek in front folded limestone layers outside of Pinto MD Stephanie is currently doing a senior the-sis project investigating the kinematics of the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium advised by Matty Strine

Professor Strine and students look-ing at some Adiron-dack deformation during Structural Geology lab

Students on the Structural Geology field trip to the Catskill Mountains looking at synorogenic Acadian sediments

Hello all

I am at St Lawrence for the academic year replacing Cathy Shrady while she is on sabbatical I taught Structural Geology and Introduction to Geological Maps during the Fall semester and will be teaching Geophysics and Mineralogy in the Spring In addition I am advising a senior thesis project with a field component in the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium

Last year I taught at Bryn Mawr College This summer I successfully defended my PhD thesis advised by Gautam Mitra at the University of Rochester For my dissertation I studied the kinematics of the Moine Thrust zone in NW Scotland More recently I have been collaborating with Christian Teyssier and Donna Whitney at the University of Minnesota investigating the thermal and kinematic evolution of metamorphic core complexes in the North American Cordillera I am also collaborating with Sean Cornell (also a faculty in the St Lawrence Geology Dept) on a project to document the most useful teaching outcrops within the United States and assemble a user-friendly website-database

In October a slew (no pun intended) of St Lawrence faculty and students made our way to Salt Lake City UT for the national GSA conference I presented some data that I collected in South Korea in collaboration with Dr Youngdo Park While some of our students were presenting andor co-authors other students came to check out graduate schools and do some ldquonetworkingrdquo I think it was a great experience for us all

I hope this newsletter finds you well

Take care

Matty Strine (Visiting Assistant Professor)

Matty Strine

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 8: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

(Letrsquos hear from Mark Erickson cont)

On the home front Mother continues to live at Church Street and though she struggles with the stairs she is doing very well for her ninety-eight years I am not very good company but she tolerates me pretty well Skootie too is doing well and keeps us good company I hear from Lance once in a blue moon He sounds like he is enjoying being out on his own He is still working at the home brew supply store in St Paul ndash they also do a big web business ndash and still enjoys the thought of opening a brew pub one day He rarely thinks of graduate study in Geology but it remains a possibility at least to humor the old man I look forward to shooting some pool with him again one of these days

This year we are especially mindful of all of you who have been through the tragic hurricanes of the Gulf Coast and Florida We have now heard from most but not all who may have been in the path of one or more storms I know that all who lived in Louisiana were deeply affected and many lost homes and businesses I hope you can rise from the difficulties with the strengths that you all showed us so many times at St Lawrence If there is yet anything that we can do please let us hear from you As the Holidays approach please know that our thoughts are indeed with you

Seasons Greetings from me and from all the SLU Geology Family

GULF COAST ALUMNI

The path of a category 5 hurricane is a sight one should never have to see in a lifetime A number of you have seen Katrinarsquos path however and we had great concern for our alums on the Gulf Coast Many of course are located in New Orleans because of industry headquaters Gradually we have heard from all of you that we know were in the area and we know you are safe That is not to say that you have not suffered great loss quite the contrary We know better If you know of something we can do for you please let us know We would love to hear from you

Future Geologist Elias

Jeannine Fiore (Mansfield) rsquo97rsquo would like to share

Jeannine and Ray have sold there house and moved to Bloomfield NY to live near Jeanninersquos parents

Their hands will be full with Elias learning how to crawl and explore (Must be the geologist in him)

GOOD LUCK IN YOUR NEW HOME

Andrew ldquoDogrdquo Owens lsquo99rsquo

Working as environmental consultant based in DC and Baltimore

I recently married (March 2005) to Christin Miller have a 100+ year old farmhouse and forest (very small) a groundhog family that we get to watch from our windows

I have recently started investigating the ready-mix concrete and storm water management industries to expand clients

Congratulations to Carrie Denesha lsquo00rsquoon passing the ASBOG

exam and becoming Professional Geologist II We always knew you

could do it Carrierdquo

David Waugh (99) presents Erickson and Waugh bryozoan poster at GSA Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City

JME photo

Trisha Smrecak with the Cretaceous leaf peepers Dan Peppe 03 and Kirk Johnson of the Denver Museum

JME photo

Stephanie Peek in front folded limestone layers outside of Pinto MD Stephanie is currently doing a senior the-sis project investigating the kinematics of the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium advised by Matty Strine

Professor Strine and students look-ing at some Adiron-dack deformation during Structural Geology lab

Students on the Structural Geology field trip to the Catskill Mountains looking at synorogenic Acadian sediments

Hello all

I am at St Lawrence for the academic year replacing Cathy Shrady while she is on sabbatical I taught Structural Geology and Introduction to Geological Maps during the Fall semester and will be teaching Geophysics and Mineralogy in the Spring In addition I am advising a senior thesis project with a field component in the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium

Last year I taught at Bryn Mawr College This summer I successfully defended my PhD thesis advised by Gautam Mitra at the University of Rochester For my dissertation I studied the kinematics of the Moine Thrust zone in NW Scotland More recently I have been collaborating with Christian Teyssier and Donna Whitney at the University of Minnesota investigating the thermal and kinematic evolution of metamorphic core complexes in the North American Cordillera I am also collaborating with Sean Cornell (also a faculty in the St Lawrence Geology Dept) on a project to document the most useful teaching outcrops within the United States and assemble a user-friendly website-database

In October a slew (no pun intended) of St Lawrence faculty and students made our way to Salt Lake City UT for the national GSA conference I presented some data that I collected in South Korea in collaboration with Dr Youngdo Park While some of our students were presenting andor co-authors other students came to check out graduate schools and do some ldquonetworkingrdquo I think it was a great experience for us all

I hope this newsletter finds you well

Take care

Matty Strine (Visiting Assistant Professor)

Matty Strine

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 9: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Stephanie Peek in front folded limestone layers outside of Pinto MD Stephanie is currently doing a senior the-sis project investigating the kinematics of the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium advised by Matty Strine

Professor Strine and students look-ing at some Adiron-dack deformation during Structural Geology lab

Students on the Structural Geology field trip to the Catskill Mountains looking at synorogenic Acadian sediments

Hello all

I am at St Lawrence for the academic year replacing Cathy Shrady while she is on sabbatical I taught Structural Geology and Introduction to Geological Maps during the Fall semester and will be teaching Geophysics and Mineralogy in the Spring In addition I am advising a senior thesis project with a field component in the Blue Ridge Anticlinorium

Last year I taught at Bryn Mawr College This summer I successfully defended my PhD thesis advised by Gautam Mitra at the University of Rochester For my dissertation I studied the kinematics of the Moine Thrust zone in NW Scotland More recently I have been collaborating with Christian Teyssier and Donna Whitney at the University of Minnesota investigating the thermal and kinematic evolution of metamorphic core complexes in the North American Cordillera I am also collaborating with Sean Cornell (also a faculty in the St Lawrence Geology Dept) on a project to document the most useful teaching outcrops within the United States and assemble a user-friendly website-database

In October a slew (no pun intended) of St Lawrence faculty and students made our way to Salt Lake City UT for the national GSA conference I presented some data that I collected in South Korea in collaboration with Dr Youngdo Park While some of our students were presenting andor co-authors other students came to check out graduate schools and do some ldquonetworkingrdquo I think it was a great experience for us all

I hope this newsletter finds you well

Take care

Matty Strine (Visiting Assistant Professor)

Matty Strine

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 10: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

At the Museum of Natural History in NY with SLU Dinosaur class

Hey Glenn thatrsquos not a dinosaur

Close friends all through college and now they are moms We would like to

congratulate Megan Mazzarino lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son and we would like to congratulate Stefanie Hooe lsquo97rsquo on the birth of her son

Cathy Shrady

Greetings to you all and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season I have been enjoying my sabbatical focusing on writing up the Peruvian research Irsquove been involved in for the past 5 years or so I made a trip to Peru in July and plan another trip this March with a student who is doing her senior thesis on a topic related to my interests

In September I was able to attend an environmental justice conference in Talkeetna Alaska to help prepare for a project I am becoming involved in looking at contaminants from Formerly Used Defense sites on St Lawrence Island Alaska and their impacts on native communities This year two of our students will be applying for summer fellowships to work on this project and travel to Alaska with me

In May I will be joining with Mark MacWilliams of the Religious Stud-ies dept to take a group of 8 students to Kyoto Japan to study Japanese gardens The plan is for these students to then help design and build a Japanese garden on the SLU campus and coordinate the use of rock a key element in Japanese gardens with some of the rocks for the Dolan outdoor laboratory project One of our geo majors is a part of this trip and project and she will be applying for a summer fellowship to research the geological materials that will be a part of the campus garden

Not much news to report on the home front We still own 1 rooster and 7 hens (who have stopped laying for the winter so are entirely useless as far as I can tell) 2 cats and Petra the dog The university has gotten very strict about dogs in campus buildings these days and we canrsquot have them in the dept anymore a real loss but what can you do Teya is 9 and soon will be up to my shoulder She continues to enjoy her Appaloosa pony Dottie and contribute to the graying of my hair by now jumping in competitions

May the new year bring you all health happiness and peace Please continue to keep in touch with us

Future geologists

all of our majors for well over the past decade His efforts have ensured that our enrollments have remained strong and his enthusiasm for the subject ability to hold the crowd without losing sight of aca-demic rigor and genuine care for the students in these distribution courses will be a very difficult act to fol-low We will miss him and wish him well in his new venture However we just might be looking forwards (hint hint Michael) to using his property in Jamesville as a base for some future field trips if thatrsquos a possibil-ity (one of the largest barns I have ever seen)

My newly found lsquofree timersquo over the past few months has allowed me to concentrate on the Dolan Outdoor Geological Laboratory project as well as relocate my office in the X-ray lab (and to trash large volumes of redundant paperwork - FYP papers from the early 90s Sorry folks - theyrsquore gone) We are about halfway through the acquisition of samples but have at least three more large installations to collect and these will be composite arrays with estimated total weights of 30 to 40 tons each at a rough guess Itrsquos been a slow process but well worth it The outdoor lab will be a wonderful and unique teaching tool when complete ndash as indeed the existing lsquooutcropsrsquo already have been Our thanks go to Brent LeClerc and Gary Eno of Hansonrsquos quarry in Jamesville and to Dave Gordon of Graymont in Potsdam for their enthusiasm and assis-tance ndash and for willingly donating about sixty tons of limestone and sandstone Thanks are also due to Jim Gibson for trucking and placement of all of the samples so far (no more rsquo45-tonnersrsquo Jim ndash and I promise not to get lost again)

My thanks also go to all of you who donated so much to the department this past year You are a very special group Itrsquos this enthusiastic support and concern for the well-being of the department that goes such a long way to make this department stand out and to be so special Thank you

Happy Holidays and all the very best for the New Year

Cheers

John Bursnall

Hello All

Well life is certainly full of surprises Surgery (successful I might add) in March and general ill health at that time suggested that I should take medical leave and retire at the end of that semester My sincere thanks to Mark for so willingly taking over the chair mid-stream last spring and to Michael for agreeing to chair the department on his return from sabbatical this past fall However as of three weeks ago (but somewhat anticipated) I shall be tak-

ing over the chair again for the coming spring as well as teaching a com-bined petrology course I must say I am truly delighted to be able to do this (and have to thank Michael for the opportunity) On the other hand I am very sorry to see Michael leave us in order to start his new job in Syracuse (check his entry for details) As most of you know he has been the introducer to geology (through Geol 101 and 103) for virtually

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 11: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Pilgrimage to Cincinnati in Invertebrate Paleontology

Front Emilee Mroz Chris Nichols Middle Hillary Siener Mike Como Matt Zabik Brian Congiu Jessica Klauzenberg Kate Zubin-Stathopoulus Emilia Stanfill Sarah Fuller Back Wade Jones Will Jeffrey Trisha Smrecak (TA) at Maysville Kentucky

Geier Collection Center looking at the Flexicalymene drawer

Isorophus cincinnatiensis Sharonville Ohio

Looking over a juvenile Diplodocus at the Cincinnati Museum Geier Collections Center Okaymdashitrsquos not an invertebrate but we were there

They are all winners at our Paleo Pumpkin carving contest

Eliza Wade Emilee Sarah and their 10 lb Horseshoe Crab is it Limulus Emilia Kate Jessica and Hillary

showing their seaweed() background on their decapod pumpkin

Kope Formation Cincinnati Ohio

Brian Chris and Matt show off their 15 lb Olenellid beauty

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 12: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Geology Club Party When you look quick it looks like Steve Robinson but if you look real close you will see that it is Brian Congiu

Can anyone tell me who the man is with the white beard or who hersquos supposed to be

GSA 2005

The white bison at Antelope Island Visitors Center

Brad Barton and Professor Strine swap identities at the Geology club sponsored department get together Can you tell who is who

To us in Geology they are Professorsrsquo Sean Cornell and Steve Robinson to the outside world they are professional go kart driversor food service experts

Is that U2

Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville Terraces Great Salt Lake UT

Standing atop Precambrian quartzitesmdash What a view

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 13: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Evolving Earth Vermont Field Trip

Fall 2005

Professor Strine and students examining fossils Professor Owen

Professor Owen pointing out a Taconic Thrust Faultto a group of students

Okay can anyone tell me what this is

Chazy fossils anyone

Hey Rob Menard lsquo06rsquo arenrsquot you from Chazy

Professorrsquos Strine and Burns wrapping up one of the outcrops on the 103 field trip

Rob (TA)

Students hard at work Claire Plagge and Professor Burns

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes

Page 14: St. Lawrence University Geology NewsletterI have mostly been in Bondo, Kenya working with the ICROSS home based care program. It is a very wild, impover-ished place, unlike the Kenya

Well last but certainly not least I thought I would take a moment to introduce myself My name is Sherrie Kelly and I am the new departmental office assistant here in Geology I live in Ogdensburg and have 3 children of my own 2 stepchildren and 2 grandsons

Although I have been at St Lawrence for several years working in the Deanrsquos Office I am new to this position I currently wear two hats one in the Outdoor Program and the other here in Geology Working in both places keeps me busy but I feel that the faculty have welcomed me with open arms and have been very helpful in making my transition

It has been a great semester working in the Geology Department and I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the students and the faculty here ndash they are certainly an exciting bunch to work with By the way did you know that Diane makes some of the best cookies ndash especially her Lime Meltaways The Geology Department has offered me a very up-beat and laid-back environment to work in and the range of challenges given to me makes every day a different one I have especially enjoyed working on this newsletter it has given me a chance to be creative with design and lay-out Moreover I feel it has allowed me the opportunity to learn about the alumni of this program the wonderful things they do and the amazing places they have traveled and worked Just imagine what the current students think when they read about all of your successesndash very inspiring

I will say good by now but please take the time to contact me in the department via phone or email if you have any questions or to pass along comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter I am of course also hoping that you will send along notice of activities in your life that you would like to contribute to upcoming newsletters or if you have any opportunities that you would like passed along to our students

Again although it has been said many times many wayshellip Warmest Wishes