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Field Methods The Field Methods course is required of all students completing the Teachers in Geosciences Program. After completing the first ten courses of the TIG program, each student will choose one of the pre-determined destinations around the country for the Field Methods course. The student will travel to the location with approximately ten other TIG students and MSU professors to participate in planned, hands-on activities related to the earth science aspects of the area. Students will be contacted during the fall semester of the second year with information regarding the upcoming Field Methods courses including selected locations and sign-up deadlines. The on-site Field Methods course includes the "oral comprehensive" exam, which is required by all students receiving a masters degree from Mississippi State University. Click HERE to see pictures and descriptions of previous Field Methods courses. Outer Banks of North Carolina Click HERE to see pictures. Arizona Click HERE to see pictures. The Bahamas Click HERE to see pictures. Western Washington State Click HERE to see pictures. Mammoth Cave Click HERE to see pictures. Great Plains Storm Chase Click HERE to see pictures. Yellowstone National Park Click HERE to see pictures. New England Click HERE to see pictures. Sierra Nevada Mountain Range Click HERE to see pictures. Lake Superior The Lake Superior field course features one of the prettiest shorelines in North America. The largest freshwater lake in the world, bounded by the northern woods, spans across the horizon and features natural arches, scenic lakeshore cliffs, enjoyable hiking trails, seagulls, and the ever-elusive moose. The Minnesota State Parks and their respective hiking trails, including Tettegouche, Gooseberry Falls, and Grand Portage, are perhaps America’s best kept secret, easily rivaling the overly-crowded and touristy western National Parks in beauty and geologic wonder. Geologically, the region is unique as some of the oldest rocks in North America are exposed right at the surface. The greenstone belts (3 billion years old!!) and banded iron formations (1.8 billion years!), for example make this one of a few places in the world where one can study Achaean- and Proterozoic-aged rocks in situ. Click HERE to see pictures. Upstate New York The Upstate New York field course for the TIG program will take advantage of outstanding geologic exposures, convenient logistics, and superb documentation to bring students into contact with a suite of geology that will provide a enjoyable capstone event to their TIG experience. Upstate New York has rocks ranging in age from over a billion years up to the recent. We will examine pillow basalts, stromatolites, thrust faults, marbles, dikes, glacial scour, caves & karst, fossils, glacial sediments, deltaic sequences, extensional tectonics, metamorphic suites, moon-like anorthosites, limestones, turbidites, mineral springs, rivers, unconformities, and much more. July in New York usually provides delightful weather, and the landscapes are scenic. We will headquarter out of a hotel in the Albany area that will provide pedestrian access to shops and restaurants, and like spokes of a wheel, visit our many geological sites as a series of one-day excursions. Click HERE to see pictures. |
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