Ever since our ancestors ventured onto the African savanna, human beings have searched, explored, and wondered about the world. Nowadays, and certainly for most, science is the vehicle that takes us along a path towards understanding nature. It can bring us from sub-atomic realms to the most distant galaxies. Largely through the discipline of geology, science allows us to push back the mists of time and peer into a past measured in billions of years, and aptly referred to as “Deep Time.”
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This is a journey of discovery—we'll learn about the origins of science and geology itself, to our planet’s oceans, atmosphere, and crust. The focus then turns to how geologists have probed the rise and fall of the Rocky Mountains, and we conclude by considering not only the power of science but also acknowledging its inherent price and responsibility.
Certificate earners demonstrate proficiency through a few short assessments and discussion prompts and are prepared to teach or apply the material.
We might well be the first species to ask, and even begin to answer, some big questions about the world around us: Who are we? Where are we? and When are we? Geology joins some heavy hitters, like evolutionary biology and cosmology, when it comes to providing major insights, particularly into the latter question.This first module begins with a look at science in general, how it works and where it came from. We then address the historical beginnings of a “science of the earth” (geology) and how, from its very inception, it pointed towards an earth of immense age, the business of Deep Time. The module wraps up with an introduction to the assessment of rock and mineral age determination using both qualitative and isotopic methods.
What's included
6 videos1 reading1 assignment2 discussion prompts
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6 videos•Total 55 minutes
Course Introduction •3 minutes
What is Science? •9 minutes
One of the Big Questions - How Old? •11 minutes
Birth of a Science - The Beginnings of Geology •11 minutes
Discovering Deep Time•10 minutes
Putting Numbers on Deep Time •11 minutes
1 reading•Total 1 minute
Course Updates and Accessibility Support•1 minute
1 assignment•Total 60 minutes
Science and Geology in Search of Deep Time•60 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 60 minutes
Introduce Yourself!•30 minutes
End of Week 1•30 minutes
Origins: Stars to Planets, Continents, Oceans, and Atmospheres
Module 2•2 hours to complete
Module details
The power of science is no better exemplified than through its ability to peer into the most remote depths of Deep Time. In this second module we take a cursory “highlight trip” through a host of very ancient and key origins, from the universe itself to stars and planets, and then to Earth’s first oceans, atmosphere, crust, and life. We take a literal deep dive into the underpinnings of the North American continent, the so-called Precambrian basement. Using rock and mineral analysis, radiometric dating, seismology, and the treasure trove of deep-earth materials brought to the surface by kimberlitic “diamond-pipe” eruptions, geologists have put together an understanding of how North America, and continents in general, grow through time.
What's included
5 videos1 assignment
Show info about module content
5 videos•Total 57 minutes
Origins - From Star Stuff to Planets•12 minutes
The Early Earth - First Oceans, Atmosphere, and Life•15 minutes
The Early Earth - Formation of Continents and Plate Tectonics•11 minutes
Building North America•9 minutes
Probing the Deep Crust in the Rocky Mountains •10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 60 minutes
Origins: Stars to Planets, Continents, Oceans, and Atmospheres•60 minutes
Seas and Ancient Mountains of North America
Module 3•3 hours to complete
Module details
We tackle the story of North America, as it emerges from the Precambrian into the Phanerozoic Eon (i.e., Paleozoic, Mesozoic, Cenozoic Eras). The story is read from the book of rock layers, and as such we review some of the language of geology—rocks and the rock-cycle. We VISIT (via both lecture and virtual-video-field trip) the puzzling yet pervasive Great Unconformity, an enormous gap in the rock record that sits directly below the first strata with shell fossils. We consider the marine waters that washed onto and off the land, as climate and tectonics drove changes in sea-level. Lastly, as the Pangea Super-Continent coalesced in the Late Paleozoic, we see the rise of the Ancestral Rocky Mountains. Note: This module contains the first two of three Video Field Trip Outings to Flagstaff Mountain, near Boulder, Colorado.
What's included
6 videos1 assignment1 discussion prompt
Show info about module content
6 videos•Total 62 minutes
Reading Rock Layers - A Primer on Rocks and the Rock Cycle•13 minutes
Brave New World - Precambrian Ends and Modern Earth Begins •10 minutes
The Great Unconformity And Phanerozoic Seas•12 minutes
Field Trip to Flagstaff Mountain: Uplifted Roots of the Rockies and the Great Unconformity•8 minutes
Pangea Forms and the Ancestral Rocky Mountains Rise•9 minutes
Field Trip to Flagstaff Mountain: The Fountain Formation and the Ancestral Rockies•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 60 minutes
Seas and Ancient Mountains of North America•60 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 30 minutes
End of Week 3•30 minutes
The Rise of the Modern Rocky Mountains
Module 4•3 hours to complete
Module details
Moving into the final phase of Earth history in the Rocky Mountains, the Mesozoic and Cenozoic Eras, the geological record provides greater resolution and reveals, with rather exceptional detail, the location and timing of mountain uplifts, ocean incursions, changing climate, and the fossil record. The modern Rocky Mountains turn out to be a consequence of uplift, erosion, and then renewed uplift with a final sculpting via glacial ice. We conclude by coming full circle, back to science itself— recognizing it as more than simply a tool for reconstructing nature and the past, but also carrying a charge of responsibility for assessing truth and evaluating claims within our own lives and the present world. Note: This module begins with the third and final Video Field Trip Outing to Flagstaff Mountain, near Boulder, Colorado.
What's included
5 videos1 assignment1 discussion prompt
Show info about module content
5 videos•Total 66 minutes
Field Trip to Flagstaff Mountain: Laramide Orogeny and the Tilting of the Flatirons•9 minutes
"How Many Years Must a Mountain Exist" - The Wash of Mesozoic Seas, Rocks, and Fossils•11 minutes
The Rise of the Modern Rockies•14 minutes
Cenozoic Extension, Uplift, and the Final Touches•17 minutes
Opportunity & Responsibility: The Price of Science•15 minutes
1 assignment•Total 60 minutes
The Rise of the Modern Rocky Mountains•60 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 30 minutes
End of Week 4•30 minutes
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