Category Archives: ScotBlogs Contributed

Wooster’s Fossil of the Week: an encrusted nautiloid (Upper Ordovician of Kentucky)

Two fossils this week in our series. The large segmented cone is a bisected nautiloid cephalopod from the Upper Ordovician of northern Kentucky. The original shell (made of the mineral aragonite) has been dissolved away, leaving the sediment that fille… Continue reading

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Vive la Biodiversite!

Last month I was fortunate to visit the  French Museum of Natural History in Paris (the Musee Nationale d’Histoire Naturelle, MNHN), where there is a great deal of  interesting work going on. At the lab I visited, a number of … Continue r… Continue reading

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A Wooster Geologist … on TV?

The irony of me appearing for brief moments as a commentator on last night’s episode of Ancient Aliens (“Aliens and Mega-Disasters“) is that I teach a course at Wooster entitled “Nonsense! And Why It’s So Popular“. O… Continue reading

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Social Venture Capital Clinic

Last month, I returned from USASBE where the Social Venture Clinic, a day-long exposure to raising funds through hands-on workshops was chosen as the finalist in the 3E Learning Competition. What is 3E Learning? This is a community of entrepreneurship… Continue reading

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Amsterdam!

I won’t start off with cheers, because they don’t say that in Amsterdam… I spent this past weekend in Amsterdam, which was a great experience. Of course Amsterdam is famous for the Red Light District, the Heineken Factory, as well &#8… Continue reading

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Accretionary Wedge #43: Fun with Chemographic Projections

This month’s Accretionary Wedge calls for posts on our favorite geological illustrations. Some of my personal favorites are drawn by Dr. Kurt Hollocher from Union College. His collection of hand-drawn thin sections is enough to make any petrolo… Continue reading

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As It Happens

Join us at the College of Wooster CoRE on Monday February 27, 2012. President Cornwell will reflect with Robin Wright, and Rami Khouri (live from Lebanon via video conference) on the topic “One Year After the Arab Spring”. This event is a c… Continue reading

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Wooster’s Fossil of the Week: A holey brachiopod (Lower Cretaceous of southeastern Spain)

This striking and unusual brachiopod is Pygites diphyoides (d’Orbigny, 1847) from Hauterivian (Lower Cretaceous) of Cehegin, Murcia, Spain. Wooster acquired it through a recent generous exchange of brachiopods with Mr. Clive Champion in England. … Continue reading

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Editor Tip: Use PDFs

The Portable Document Format (PDF) is a computer file format for publishing and distributing electronic documents (text, image, or multimedia) with the same layout, formatting, and font attributes as in the original. So, why is using PDFs on the web s… Continue reading

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Research on Global Engagement

While a community of faculty and staff have been having “conversations in global engagement” for close to a year now, two of our students, Mitik Zegeye and Andrea Patton have been researching what global engagement means. Here are some yout… Continue reading

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