Local contact information: Sections/se/2015mtg/contact. Our December monthly meeting is our annual. Click on session titles for a list of presentations, and click on presentations for the individual abstracts.Ĭomplete meeting information: Sections/se/2015mtg/index.htm. Each meeting features door prizes, a guest lecture by an expert in their field, plus coffee, tea, and snacks. Hooks, Geological Survey of Alabama, the complete session schedule by day or search the program by keywords at 2015SE/webprogram/start.html. Presentation of interest: The oil sands of Alabama: An untapped resource: 2015SE/webprogram/Paper252172. Witherspoon,, Gas Shale and Oil Sands Resources of the Southeastern United StatesĪbstracts: 2015SE/webprogram/ Session36802.html Presentation of interest: Lessons of the Scopes trial in the fight for science education: 2015SE/webprogram/Paper252992. Sessions: Teaching Evolution in the Southeast I and IIĪbstracts: 2015SE/webprogram/ Session36813.html and 2015SE/webprogram/ Session37258.html Carpenter, Kentucky Geological Survey, 20 MARCH Presentation of interest: The Mw 4.2 Perry County earthquake of 10 November 2012: Evidence of the Eastern Tennessee Seismic Zone in southeastern Kentucky: 2015SE/webprogram/Paper252585. Session: Eastern Tennessee Seismic Zone and Paleoseismology in the Southeastern United StatesĪbstracts: 2015SE/webprogram/ Session36812.html The scientific program is composed of oral and poster presentations organized into three symposia and 14 themed sessions plus an array of research in general discipline areas. Selected Highlights of the Scientific Program: This volume’s nine field trips explore geological history and visit four regional geologic provinces - Blue Ridge, Valley and Ridge, Cumberland Plateau, and the Nashville dome. Holmes of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Army Corps of Engineers.Ī dedicated field guide has been written for this meeting: Diverse Excursions in the Southeast: Paleozoic to Present, edited by Ann E. Its name derives from “cató,” the Muskogean word for “rock,” giving due emphasis to the geology of the area and the ideal setting it provides for this meeting.Ĭonsidering that Chattanooga is prone to rockslides, sinkholes, and flooding, the keynote address for this meeting will be: “Rockslides, Sinkholes and Flooding, Oh My! The Geologist’s Role in Protecting Infrastructure” and will be delivered by Vanessa Bateman, chief, Geology Section, Nashville District, U.S. The city lies along the Tennessee River, among the valleys and ridges of the southern Appalachian fold-and-thrust belt, and within view of the Cumberland Plateau and Blue Ridge. Widely known as “The Scenic City,” Chattanooga owes this distinction to its geologic setting. Meeting conveners are anticipating a relatively large meeting, with 389 oral and poster presentations and nine field trips. Topics include the Eastern Tennessee Seismic Zone, teaching evolution in the southeastern U.S., energy geology, and geology’s role in protecting infrastructure. Geoscientists from the southeastern United States and beyond will convene in Chattanooga on March 19-20 to discuss new science, expand on existing science, and explore the unique geologic features of the region.
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