[Jpjobs] FW: Boston College spring lecturer
Leanora Fraser
lfraser at whoi.edu
Mon Nov 26 09:55:57 EST 2018
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject:
Boston College spring lecturer
Date:
Sat, 17 Nov 2018 10:08:52 -0500
From:
Jeremy Shakun <jeremy.shakun at bc.edu><mailto:jeremy.shakun at bc.edu>
Reply-To:
jeremy.shakun at bc.edu<mailto:jeremy.shakun at bc.edu>
To:
eapsinfo at mit.edu<mailto:eapsinfo at mit.edu>, kelley at eps.harvard.edu<mailto:kelley at eps.harvard.edu>, moffat at eps.harvard.edu<mailto:moffat at eps.harvard.edu>, earth at bu.edu<mailto:earth at bu.edu>, DEEPS at brown.edu<mailto:DEEPS at brown.edu>, office at geo.umass.edu<mailto:office at geo.umass.edu>, earth.sciences at unh.edu<mailto:earth.sciences at unh.edu>, education at whoi.edu<mailto:education at whoi.edu>, sfe at umb.edu<mailto:sfe at umb.edu>, huce at environment.harvard.edu<mailto:huce at environment.harvard.edu>, one at mit.edu<mailto:one at mit.edu>
Dear colleagues,
Could you please pass this announcement along to any PhDs or postdocs in your department that may interested in lecturing? Boston College is looking for instructors to teach the courses below this coming spring. If interested, please contact Prof. Jeremy Shakun (jeremy.shakun at bc.edu<mailto:jeremy.shakun at bc.edu>).
Thanks,
Jeremy
EESC2264 Stratigraphy and Sedimentation
T Th 1:30-2:45 pm
Sedimentary rocks cover most of the surface of the earth and are valuable repositories for energy and information about the history of the earth. The goal of this course is to teach students how to "read" the history recorded in these rocks. This course will cover the basics of sedimentary rock description recognition and correlation over long distances in the field. We will also learn about the processes that produce sediment; transportation of sediment in streams, rivers, and bodies of standing water; and the formation of carbonate limestones. A 3-hour lab is required.
EESC2203 Environmental Systems: Water Resources
MWF 11-11:50 am, Jan 14-Feb 27
Life on Earth depends on the presence of liquid water. For humans, fresh water is a vital resource. This course explores the science of hydrology including: the water cycle, surface and ground water flow, water use by humans, and threats to water supply. This course is part of the Environmental Systems introductory sequence (EESC2201-EESC2209) for Environmental Geoscience majors.
--
Jeremy D. Shakun
Assistant Professor
Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences
Boston College
Chestnut Hill, MA 02467
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