From the San Francisco Chronicle:
Thanks for the link!
I’m distibuting it widely…
Gosh, what a bunch of geeks, those geologists! :rolleyes: I bet we chemists could whip any day!
Actually, I find this really interesting. I never really thought about doing such a thing - analyzing the rock formations etc. Really cool applications of science!
Now if someone could cause a limited area earthquake (or even re-direct a small meteor strike)…
Damn skippy we are. And proud of it.
So Geobabe, are you going to tell us where he is hiding?
If he decides to hole up anywhere in western New England, you can count on me.
Everyone’s got a way they can help, no matter how small…
Har! That’s what chemists, physicists, and mathematicians are for–to provide us Geologists (Los Mas Machos de Todas las Sciencias!) someone to beat up on. We’d go after Biologists, too, but picking on them is just too easy…
Well, this mathematician has groped a geologist!
I’ll have to remember that one for the next time I change my sig.
We Civil Engineers use Geology, Physics, Mathematics, Chemistry (Metallurgy anyway), AND freakin Biology before BREAKFAST and spit out Golden Gate Bridges like a piece of chicken stuck in our teeth!
ME’s make bombs.
CE’s make targets.
UncleBill, you’re so cute when you’re posturing.
Engineers? Puh-Leeze! So you guys can follow a cookbook, big deal; we WRITE the cookbook!
Just spell “Ciencias” correctly, and don’t forget the accent over the “a” in “mas”!
*Originally posted by UncleBill *
We Civil Engineers…make targets.
Indeed - but are you sure you want to boast about that in a terrorism-related thread?! :eek:
All Your Sciences Are Belong To Us (Geographers, that is…)
Just remember who it is around here who makes his living killing unwanted organisms!
Here are some more geoscintists on the forefront of anti-terrorism.
Sheesh! Delta Force has nothin’ on you guys.
Oh wow, I never even thought of that angle. Hella cool! I realize what a geek I am when I find myself trying to classify the rocks I see on TV shows and when on long trips.
I also have to give mad props to anyone that manages to get their degree in geology. I had to take a lot of geology/earth science courses for my archaeology degree, and they were the most difficult courses I took!
*Originally posted by Rasa *
** I also have to give mad props to anyone that manages to get their degree in geology. I had to take a lot of geology/earth science courses for my archaeology degree, and they were the most difficult courses I took! **
You also have to have a certain mindset to be a geologist, to be able to get excited over stuff like this:
Carbonatites typically contain >50% carbonate minerals by volume and are undersaturated in silica (Barker, 1996). They are useful in studying mantle source because they are not prone to crustal contamination. They are associated with highly undersaturated silicate rocks rich in nepheline: nephelinite-ijolite, nepheline syenite and kimberlite (Jessey). They occur in formations of small areal extent, a few tens of square kilometers to a maximum of perhaps 1000 square km. They are mostly of Mesozoic age or younger, although a few Precambrian carbonatites are known. The formations are usually plug-like in shape, suggesting a subvolcanic origin. They always have associated alkali metasomatism, addition of Na and K to wall rocks. Alteration forms an envelope around the carbonatite. Rocks of the carbonatite complex are highly brecciated with multiple intrusive phases present, and are found in stable craton or continental rift environments.
That’s from a paper I wrote for my Tectonics and Earth History class. I started reading about carbonatites and went, “Man, this is fookin’ COOL!” I’m a geek, baby.