GEOLOGY
- Define geology. Discuss how geologists learn about rock formations.
In geology, explain why the study of the present is important to
understanding the past.
- Pick three resources that can be extracted or mined from Earth for
commercial use. Discuss with your counselor how each product is
discovered and processed.
- Review a geologic map of your area with your counselor and discuss
the different rock types and estimated ages of rocks represented.
Determine whether the rocks are horizontal, folded, or faulted, and
explain how you arrived at your conclusion.
- Do ONE of the following:
- With your parent's and counselor's approval, visit with a
geologist, land use planner, or civil engineer. Discuss this
professional's work and the tools required in this line of work. Learn
about a project that this person is now working on, and ask to see
reports and maps created for this project. Discuss with your counselor
what you have learned.
- Learn about the career opportunities available in geology. Pick
one that interests you and explain how to prepare for such a career.
Discuss what courses might be useful for such a career. You may use
resources found on the Internet (with your parent's permission), at
the library, in books and articles from periodicals, from television
programs, and at school.
- Complete ONE of the options listed below A, B, C, or D.
- Surface and Sedimentary Processes Option
- Conduct an experiment approved by your counselor that
demonstrates how sediments settle from suspension in water. Explain
to your counselor what the exercise shows and why it is important.
- Using topographical maps provided by your counselor, plot the
stream gradients (different elevations divided by distance) for four
different stream types (straight, meandering, dendritic, trellis).
Explain which ones flow fastest and why, and which ones will carry
larger grains of sediment and why.
- On a stream diagram, show areas where you will ,find the
following features: cut bank, fill bank, point bar, medial channel
bars, lake delta. Describe the relative sediment grain size found in
each feature.
- Conduct an experiment approved by your counselor that shows how
some sedimentary material carried by water may be too small for you
to see without a magnifier.
- Visit a nearby stream. Find clues that show the direction of
water flow, even if the water is missing. Record your observations
in a notebook, and sketch those clues you observe. Discuss your
observations with your counselor.
- Energy Resources Option
- List the top five Earth resources used to generate electricity
in the United States.
- Discuss source rock, trap, and reservoir rock - the three
components necessary for the occurrence of oil and gas underground.
- Explain how each of the following items is used in subsurface
exploration to locate oil or gas: reflection seismic, electric well
logs, stratigraphic correlation, offshore platform, geologic map,
subsurface structure map, subsurface isopach map, and core samples
and cutting samples.
- Using at least 20 data points provided by your counselor, create
a subsurface structure map and use it to explain how subsurface
geology maps are used to find oil, gas, or coal resources.
- Do ONE of the following activities:
- Make a tabletop display showing how oil and gas or coal is
found, extracted, and processed. You may use maps, books, articles
from periodicals, and research found on the Internet (with your
parent's permission). Share the display with your counselor or a
small group (such as your class at school) in a five minute
presentation.
- With your parent's and counselor's permission and assistance,
arrange for a visit to an operating drilling rig. While there,
talk with a geologist and ask to see what the geologist does
onsite. Ask to see cutting samples taken at the site.
- Mineral Resources Option
- Define rock. Discuss the three classes of rocks including their
origin and characteristics.
- Define mineral. Discuss the origin of minerals and their
chemical composition and identification properties, including
hardness, specific gravity, color, streak, cleavage, luster, and
crystal form.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Collect 10 different rocks or minerals. Record in a notebook
where you obtained (found, bought, traded) each one. Label each
specimen, identify its class and origin, determine its chemical
composition, and list its physical properties. Share your
collection with your counselor.
- With your counselor's assistance, identify 15 different rocks
and minerals. List the name of each specimen, tell whether it is a
rock or mineral, and give the name of its class (if it is a rock)
or list its identifying physical properties (if it is a mineral).
- List three of the most common road building materials used in
your area. Explain how each material is produced and how each is
used in road building.
- Do ONE of the following activities:
- With your parent's and counselor's approval, visit an active
mining site, quarry, or sand and gravel pit. Tell your counselor
what you learned about the resources extracted from this location
and how these resources are used by society.
- With your counselor, choose two examples of rocks and two
examples of minerals. Discuss the mining of these materials and
describe how each is used by society.
- With your parent's and counselor's approval, visit the office
of a civil engineer and learn how geology is used in construction.
Discuss what you learned with your counselor.
- Earth History Option
- Create a chart showing suggested geological eras and periods.
Determine which period the rocks in your region might have been
formed.
- Explain to your counselor the processes of burial and
fossilization, and discuss the concept of extinction. Identify three
plants or animals on the threatened or endangered list of the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service.
- Explain to your counselor how fossils provide information about
ancient life, environment, climate, and geography. Discuss the
following terms and explain how animals from each habitat obtain
food: benthonic, pelagic, littoral, lacustrine, open marine,
brackish, fluvial, eolian, protected reef.
- Collect 10 different fossil plants or animals. Record in a
notebook where you obtained (found, bought, traded) each one.
Classify each specimen to the best of your ability, and explain how
each one might have survived and obtained food. Tell what else you
can learn from these fossils.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Visit a science museum or the geology department of a local
university that has fossils on display. With your parent's and
counselor's approval, before you go, make an appointment with a
curator or guide who can show you how the fossils are preserved
and prepared for display.
- Visit a structure in your area that was built using
fossiliferous rocks. Determine what kind of rock was used and tell
your counselor the kinds of fossil evidence you found there.
BSA Advancement ID#: 58
Pamphlet Revision Date: 2005
Requirements last updated in 2005
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