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Keystone Second Level Summer Workshop Agendas
Pioneering Discoveries Program and Dinosaur Dig
Itinerary for Pioneering Discoveries Teacher Trainings
Also available is a bibliography of readings used in this workshop.
Keystone runs this 3-day workshop for teachers consecutively. The first workshop starts on Sunday afternnon and ends on Wednesday morning, and the second begins that Wednesday afternoon and ends on Saturday morning.
Sunday: (or Wednesday) |
4:00 |
Course and Credit Registration Settle into cabins |
|
5:30 |
Dinner (upstairs Bender Center) |
|
7:00 |
Welcome, Introductions, Curriculum and Background Safety, Environmental Education (Amphitheater) |
|
8:00 |
Site Orientation |
Monday (or Thursday) |
7:30 |
Breakfast |
|
8:30 |
Morning Discovery Sessions (convene at Campfire Ring) Discovery Hike - Group 1 Discovering Ponds - Group 2 |
|
11:30 |
Small Group Evaluations/Adaptations/Discussion |
|
12:00 |
Lunch |
|
1:00 |
Group 1 & 2 Switch |
|
4:00 |
Small Group Evaluations/Adaptations/Discussion |
|
4:30 |
Free Time |
|
5:30 |
Dinner |
|
7:00 |
Word Session -- Prep Time for Night Life Optional Discussion - Making a Residential Experience Happen: Planning, Preparation, Implementation |
|
9:00 |
Campfire (Amphitheater) Night Life - Night Stations (Participant Led) |
Tuesday (or Friday) |
7:30 |
Breakfast |
|
8:30 |
Forest Discoveries - Group 1 Studying Streams - Group 2
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11:30 |
Small Group Evaluations/Adaptations/Discussion |
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12:00 |
Lunch |
|
1:00 |
Group 1 & 2 Switch |
|
4:00 |
Small Group Evaluations/Adaptations/Discussion |
|
4:30 |
Free Time |
|
5:30 |
Dinner |
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7:30-8:30 |
Geodiscoveries - Pre-field Activities (Participant Led) |
Wednesday (or Saturday) |
7:30 |
Breakfast Move Out of Cabins |
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8:30 |
Geodiscoveries at Farlin |
|
10:30 |
Small Group Evaluations/Adaptations/Discussion |
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11:00 |
Wrap Up/Evaluation/Credit Requirements |
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12:00 |
Lunch |
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1:00 |
Head for Home! |
TEACHERS SESSION
July 19 to July 22, 1998
CAMP MAKELA
SUNDAY: |
5:00 |
Camp Orientation Historic Tour of Willow Creek Anticline |
|
7:30 |
Dinner |
|
9:00 |
Taphonomy Slide Show |
MONDAY/TUESDAY:
|
7:30 |
Breakfast |
7:30 |
Breakfast |
|
8:30 |
Bonebed digging |
8:30 |
Geology Walk |
|
12:30 |
Lunch |
12:30 |
Lunch |
|
1:30 |
Bone Lab |
1:30 |
Invertebrate Site |
|
6:30 |
Dinner |
6:30 |
Dinner |
|
7:30 |
Bonnie Sawyer exercises |
7:30 |
Bonnie Sawyer exercises |
|
9:00 |
Slide Show |
9:00 |
Slide Show |
WEDNESDAY: |
7:30 |
Breakfast |
|
8:30 |
One of three options: Bonebed Digging Prospecting Collecting Fossil Insect Cases |
|
11:30 |
Departure |
OBJECTIVES:
To gain a basic understanding of
- Paleontology methods and concepts.
- Significance of the Egg Mountain finds for dinosaur paleontology.
- Sedimentary rocks, the various types and origins.
- Regional geologic history of Montana.
Concepts that will be covered during the course of Camp Makela
- Sedimentology
- What to look for:
- identify rock type
- look at grain shape, color, fossils
- look at sedimentary structures on, beneath and within beds
- note shape of beds
- Sedimentary Rock Types (*found in Willow Creek Anticline):
- clastic
- conglomerate*
- sandstone*
- siltstone*
- mudstone*
- shale
- biogenic
- limestone*
- chert
- coal
- chemical
- ironstone
- evaporites
- caliche*
- volcaniclastic
- bentonite*
- tuffs
- Important Features:
- grain size
- pebble
- sand
- silt
- clay
- grain composition
- source area
- mature vs. immature
- Grain shape
- angular vs. rounded
- color
- green vs. red or yellow
-
- fossils
- invertebrates
- sedimentary structures
- erosional
- flute casts
- scour marks
- channels
- depositional
- bedding
- ripples
- dunes
- cross-stratification
- massive bedding
- flaser bedding?
- mudcracks
- post-depositional
- slumps
- deformed bedding
- trace fossils
- includes tracks, burrows, etc.
- reflect behavior
- in place (in situ) and so good environmental indicators
- paleocurrent directions
- measured from scour marks, channels, cross-stratification, bones
- Facies
- defined by a particular set of sedimentary attributes, including rock types, sedimentary structures, body and trace fossils, color, etc. -3 facies of Willow Creek Anticline lower - river channels and floodplain middle - lake w/some rivers and floodplain upper - river channels and floodplain
- Stratigraphy
- using rocks
- using fossils
its relationship to evolution
- using dates
- time units (e.g. Cretaceous Period)
- rock units (e.g. Two Medicine Formation)
- rock-time units (e.g. Upper Cretaceous)
- Taphonomy
- Study of burial process; what happens between death and discovery - How things arc preserved and how it affects information in the fossil record.
- Death
- attritional
- catastrophic
- Post-death processes
- decomposition
- scavenger activity
- weathering
- transport
- by water vs. by predators-scavengers
- sorting
- abrasion
- concentration
- mixing
- reworking
- dissolution
- diagenesis
- Taphonomic loss vs. taphonomic gain
What information is lost in the fossil record vs. what can we learn from how fossils are preserved.
- Methods
- experiments
- the affect of currents on bones
- the affect of trampling on bones
- observation
- bone weathering
- size bias
- how scavengers work
- site interpretation
- sedimentology
- bone condition
- bone orientation
- skeletons
- articulated vs. disarticulated
- associated vs. isolated bones
- age-class distributions
- Anatomy
- Species description
- type specimen
- diversity
- Evolution
- shared derived feature (synapomorphy)
- geologic vs. ecologic time scale
- Biogeography
- Why are animals found where they are?
- Form and Function
- comparative anatomy
- experiments
- adaptation vs. historical constraints
- One can't ask a good biological question unless we know past.
- Pathology
- Bone Histology
NOTE:
You should have a good understanding of this region during the Cretaceous, for example the types of dinosaurs and fossils found, the types of environments.
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