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Geobiology >> Content Detail



Syllabus



Syllabus

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Course Description


The interactive Earth system: Biology in geologic, environmental and climate change throughout Earth history.

Since life began it has continually shaped and re-shaped the atmosphere, hydrosphere, cryosphere and the solid earth. This course introduces the concept of life as a geological agent and examines the interaction between biology and the earth system during the roughly 4 billion years since life first appeared.



Grading



ACTIVITIESPERCENTAGES
Participation in class discussions15%
Problem sets/assignments20%
Final paper and oral presentation20%
Midterm exam20%
Final exam25%



Textbook


Amazon logo Stanley, Steven M. Earth System History. New York, NY: W.H. Freeman & Co., 2006. ISBN: 9780716778271. Available at the class Web site and on reserve in Lindgren Library. (Note: The 1st edition, published in 1999, is very similar and is fine to use. I will post the page #'s for both editions in the reading lists on the class Web site. The pages listed below refer to those in the 1st edition.)



Recommended Reading


Amazon logo Wills, Christopher, and Jeffrey Bada. The Spark of Life. Cambridge, MA: Perseus Publishing, 2000. ISBN: 9780738201962.

Amazon logo Kump, Lee R., James F. Kasting, and Robert G. Crane. The Earth System. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2004. ISBN: 9780131420595.

Amazon logo Cesare, Emiliani. Planet Earth: Cosmology, Geology and the Evolution of Life and Environment. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1992. ISBN: 9780521401234.

Amazon logo Broecker, Wallace S. How to Build a Habitable Planet. New York, NY: Eldigio Press, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory, 1985 (3rd printing 1998). ISBN: 9780961751111.

Additional readings provided for most lectures.



Calendar



LEC #TOPICSKEY DATES
1Overview of course; time scales; formation of matter by nucleosynthesis; introduction to geological processes
2

How stars and planets form; Earth segregation; formation and composition of early atmosphere; characteristics of the habitable zone

Guest lecture: Professor Richard Binzel

3Theories about the origin of lifePaper 1 due
4Evidence for antiquity of life
5

Antiquity and origin of life (cont.)

Subsurface biosphere

6Redox chemistry; anaerobic metabolism, energy yields, deep subsurface biosphere
7Oxygenic photosynthesis; the rise of atmospheric O2Paper 2 due
8Techniques in geobiology 1: Fractionated isotopes
9Techniques in geobiology 2: More about fractionated isotopesHomework 3 due
10Biogeochemical carbon cycle
11Long-term climate cycles 1: Faint young sun paradox; CO2 climate connection; snowball earth
12Evolution and radiation of animals (and plants???)Paper 4 due
Mid-term exam
13Mass extinctions and re-radiation 1; PC-C boundary, P-T boundary
14

Mass extinctions and re-radiation 2; K-T boundary, LPTM

Volcanism, carbon cycle perturbation or impact?

15

Techniques in Geobiology 3

Genomics

DNA, sequencing, trees, environmental shotguns

16

Techniques in Geobiology 4

Lipid biomarkers; life's three domains; fossil and biogeochemical evidence for their presence and evolution through geological time

Paper 5 due five days after Lec #16
17Sedimentary records of life and environment; fossils and their preservation
18Sedimentary records of microbes and their environmental preferences; marine crenarchaeota and tex 86; AOM; anammox
19Microbially-dominated ecosystems: Extreme environments
20

Fossil fuels: Fate of buried organic carbon; petroleum and natural gas occurrence and distribution

Methane hydrates

21

Climate change: Mesozoic warming, Cenozoic cooling; Pleistocene glaciations

Guest lecture: Ed Boyle

22

Holocene climate; abrupt climate change; anthropogenic forcing

Guest lecture: Ed Boyle

23-24Student presentations
Exam review

 








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