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Paleo Lab

  • Christopher McRoberts
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    • Historical Geology (GLY 262)
    • Invertebrate Paleontology (GLY 363)
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Invertebrate Paleontology (GLY 363)

Paleontology is the study of ancient organisms, their biology, evolution, and ecology. Paleontology plays a central role in geology because the creatures of the past provide so much information on ancient environments, climates, ecology, and geologic time. Being a paleontologist is like being a detective–observational skills, intuition and sheer hard work are need to be succeed.


Instructor

Christopher A. McRoberts 1010 Bowers Hall
voice: x2925
e-mail: mcroberts@cortland.edu

 


General Course Information

Upon completing this course students will be able to use the fossil record to make inferences about paleoenvironments and as a means of dating the relative age of fossil-bearing rocks. Hence it will be required that students demonstrate a general understanding of the various groups of fossil organisms and their stratigraphic occurrence, as well as the principles and theories of paleontological techniques and scientific reasoning.

 


The online content for this course have been moved over to Blackboard and can be accessed through MyRedDragon for enrolled students.

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