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Department of Earth& Environmental Sciences

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

ContentsA Message from the Chair .................................................

Departmental Degrees Offered ........................................

Department Faculty ..........................................................

Adjunct/Emeritus Faculty ................................................

Recent Course Offerings ...................................................

Department Facilities .......................................................

Iowa City ...........................................................................

The University of Iowa Foundation ..................................

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www.uiowa.eduwww.clas.uiowa.edu

www.clas.uiowa.edu/ees

The Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences is a unit of theCollege of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Iowa

Front Cover Image - National Park Service Photo

The University of Iowa prohibits discrimination in employment, educational programs, and activities on the basis of race, creed, color, religion, national origin, age, sex, pregnancy, disability, genetic information, status as a U.S. veteran, service in the U.S. military, sexual

orientation, gender identity, associational preferences, or any other classification that deprives the person of consideration as an individual. The university also affirms its commitment to providing equal opportunities and equal access to university facilities. For additional informa-

tion on nondiscrimination policies, contact the Director, Office of Equal Opportunity and Diversity, the University of Iowa, 202 Jessup Hall, Iowa City, IA, 52242-1316, 319-335-0705 (voice), 319-335-0697 (TDD), [email protected].

1Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

A Message from the Chair of theDepartment of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Welcome to the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Iowa! We are a growing program with 17 faculty, nearly 200 undergraduate majors, and more than 40 graduate students. Our faculty includes a diverse array of geological expertise and our research areas include the entirespectrum of the Earth and Environmental Sciences. We offer undergraduatedegrees in Geoscience and Environmental Sciences in addition to graduatedegrees in Geoscience (MSc and PhD). Nearly all of our graduate studentsreceive funding for their education either as Teaching Assistants (TAs) or asResearch Assistants (RAs) and our time to degree is regularly achieved infour years for a Bachelor’s Degree (BS or BA), two years for a Master’s (MSc)or four years for a PhD. Additionally, the Geosciences and EnvironmentalSciences have some of the highest starting salaries for any degree major uponentering the job market!

Our department has a wide range of analytical tools and equipment for research including an LA-ICP-MS, Electron Microprobe, SEM, Thin-SectionLaboratory, Morphometrics Labs, Macro- and Micro-Paleontology Labs,Mineral Separation Labs, Analytical Chemistry Clean Lab, Soil Sciences Lab,Hydrogeology Labs, Geomorphology Computing Facility, Geophysics Lab,Core Analysis Lab, and one of the largest University-Based PaleontologicalRepositories in the country. The pages that follow provide more informationabout the opportunities offered by our department and we hope to see youat the University of Iowa!

Sincerely,

C. Thomas Foster - Department Executive Office (Chair)

Department of Earth &Environmental Sciences

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Department of Earth andEnvironmental Sciences Education

2 Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

The department of Earth of Environmental Sciences offers a range of degreeopportunities within Geoscience and Environmental Sciences at the B.S., M.S.,and Ph.D. levels. Additional teacher licensure opportunities are available as isa Certificate in Sustainability that can be applied to any major, including thoseoutside of the department. A brief outline of available degrees is included below,and complete details are available on the web at the addresses listed below.

GEOSCIENCEwww.registrar.uiowa.edu/registrar/catalog/liberalartsandsciences/earthandenvironmentalsciences/

B.S. in Geoscience B.S. or B.A. with Teacher Licensure B.A. in Geoscience M.S. in Geoscience Minor in Geoscience Ph.D. in Geoscience

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCESwww.registrar.uiowa.edu/registrar/catalog/liberalartsandsciences/environmentalsciences/

B.S. in Environmental Sciences B.S. or B.A. with Teacher Licensure B.A. in Environmental Science B.A./M.A.T. Science Education Subtrack Minor in Environmental Sciences Certificate in Sustainability

Environmental Sciences students enter one of four ‘tracks’ during their course ofstudy depending on their particular interests and programmatic focus.

Biosciences Track

Chemical Sciences Track

Geosciences TrackHydrosciences Track

Degrees Offered

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Faculty

Dr. Adrain’s research focuses on the systematics and evolutionary patterns ofPaleozoic trilobites and ancient marine diversity and global change events.His research group includes work on cladistics of trilobites as well as the paleo-biology of machaeridians.

William D. BarnhartAssistant Professor

Ph.D. - Cornell University (2013)

Dr. Barnhart’s research includes topics ranging from earthquake and lithosphericdeformation to the growth of geological structures and active landslide dynamicsand rheology. He studies earthquake interaction and triggering, aseismic slip andstrain, induced seismicity, remote sensing geodesy, inverse and numerical modelingand subduction zone earthquake cycles using an array of techniques and equipment.He utilizes tools such as InSAR, optical imagery pixel tracking, GPS, inverse theory,seismology and geological/geomorphic field observations to evaluate the potentialfor earthquake and seismological hazards and to understand active tectonics.

Geodesy, Geophysics, Active Tectonics

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Paleontology

Jonathan M. AdrainProfessor

Ph.D. - University of Alberta (1993)

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Faculty

Vertebrate PaleontologyDr. Brochu’s research focuses on archosaur phylogeny, systematics, and historicalbiogeography. His research group combines morphology and molecules for phylogenyreconstruction as well as divergence time estimation and evolutionary patterns. Dr.Brochu’s research frequently includes phylogenetic nomenclature, in addtion to theuse of computed tomography in paleontological applications.

Christopher A. BrochuAssociate Professor

Ph.D. - University of Texas at Austin (1997)

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E. Arthur BettisAssociate Professor

Ph.D. - University of Iowa (1995)

Dr. Bettis’ research includes the reconstruction of past landscapes and environmentsusing data gleaned from physical and geochemical studies of deposits and soils. Heuses these reconstructions in a variety of applications including documenting rates ofdust flux during the last glacial period, understanding conditions controlling thepeopling of southeast Asia by hominins, landscape-scale geoarchaeology, andrestoration strategies for rivers and streams.

Paleopedology, Quaternary Stratigraphy/Sedimentology

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Faculty

Earth History, Bio-ChemostratigraphyDr. Cramer’s research focuses on Earth System Science and investigating globalchange events in deep-time with an emphasis on pre-Mesozoic stratigraphy. Hiswork integrates biostratigraphy, stable and radiogenic isotope chemostratigraphy,sequence stratigraphy, and high-precision geochronometry to evaluate the cause-and-effect relationships within the Earth System. He specializes in lower PaleozoicEarth history but frequently works on topics ranging from the Proterozoic to thePermian in sections around the world.

Bradley D. CramerAssistant Professor

Ph.D. - The Ohio State University (2009)

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Ann F. (Nancy) BuddProfessor

Ph.D. - Johns Hopkins University (1978)

Dr. Budd works on the systematics and evolutionary patterns in reef corals from theCenozoic Era. She frequently includes morphometric analysis in her research and herstudents are actively investigating the relationships between recent global changeevents and the fate of corals in the global oceans.

Invertebrate Paleontology

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Faculty

Basin Analysis and TectonicsDr. Finzel’s research focuses on sedimentary processes in modern and ancient basins.She is particularly interested in deciphering the tectonic record contained within astratigraphic sections by applying several different tools, including sedimentologicalanalyses, geologic mapping, detrital geochronology (U-Pb and Hf isotopes), detritalgeochemistry (rare earth elements), petrographic provenance analyses, thermo-chronology (zircon fission track), and finite element numerical modeling. Dr. Finzel’swork has previously focused on forearc and backarc basins in Alaska, but she iscurrently beginning projects in the Sevier foreland basin in the western United States.

Emily S. FinzelAssistant Professor

Ph.D. - Purdue University (2010)

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Jeffrey A. DoraleAssociate Professor

Ph.D. - University of Minnesota (2001)

Geochemistry, Global ChangeDr. Dorale’s interests include Quaternary paleoclimatology and environmental geology. He uses isotopic and elemental tracers and chronometers to reconstruct past environmental conditions, with an emphasis on records preserved in caves. Recent projects have focused on terrestrial records of vegetation and precipitation dynamics during the last interglacial-glacial-interglacial cycle, regional groundwater resources, and the record of global sea level change.

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Faculty

Structural Geology and TectonicsDr. Gilotti’s research interests include the geodynamics and tectonics of collisionalorogens, especially the Caledonian-Appalachian mountain belt. She is particularlyinterested in high-pressure/ultrahigh-pressure metamorphism and subsequentexhumation of overthickened crust, deformation mechanisms, material propertiesand the rheology of rocks discerned from her studies of shear zones.

Jane A. GilottiProfessor

Ph.D. - Johns Hopkins University (1987)

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C. Thomas FosterProfessor

Ph.D. - Johns Hopkins University (1978)

Dr. Foster’s research includes topics in metamorphic petrology, high-temperaturereaction kinetics and material transport, tectonics on the Colorado Plateau, meta-morphosed ore deposits, fossil shape analysis, and modeling of geological processes.In his research, he utilizes metamorphic petrology, igneous petrology, aqueous geo-chemistry, structural geology, field mapping, and the application of mathematicalmodels and computer techniques to evaluate geological processes.

Metamorphic Petrology

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Faculty

Geochemistry, Igneous Petrology

David W. PeateAssociate Professor

Ph.D. - The Open University, U.K. (1989)

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Dr. McClelland’s research includes the fields of geochronology, economics geology,and tectonics with a focus on tectonic processes along convergent margins and thetiming of tectonic and mineralizing events within orogenic systems. He utilizes U/Pbgeochronology to establish the interplay of transpressional and arc processes in theformation, migration, and accretion of lithospheric fragments or terranes and theexhumation of ultrahigh-pressure rocks resulting from continent-continent collistions.His work integrates U/Pb geochronology with regional tectonic synthesis, field-basedmapping, thermobarometry, thermochronology, and quantitative structural analysis.

Bill C. McClellandProfessor

Ph.D. - University of Arizona (1990)

Tectonics and Geochronology

Dr. Peate’s research focuses on igneous geochemistry. He is interested in how magmas are formed and the processes by which their compositions are modified as they move through the crust to be erupted at the Earth’s surface, particularly in continental flood basalt provinces and in mafic monogenetic eruptions. He is currently investigating melt generation and transport processes for Icelandic lavas. His research with his students includes the analysis and interpretation of elemental and isotopic compositions of volca-nic rocks and minerals, using analytical facilities available in the department (ICP-MS and electron microprobe). He is also interested in applications of geochemistry to addressing research problems in a broader range of subjects, such as environmental effects of large igneous provinces, impact cratering, sedimentary geochemistry, and geoarchaeology.

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Faculty

Dr. Reagan’s research focuses on the petrology and geochemistry of volcanic rocks.His principle research areas include the use of short-lived radionuclide abundancesto study degassing and crystalization processes in young lavas and tephras. He iscurrently investigating Kilauea, Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Erebus, Augustine, Merapi, Llaima,and several other intraplate, rift, and subduction-related volcanoes. His research alsoincludes the petrology and geochemistry of Eocene lavas erupted from the Izu-Bonin-Mariana forearc to determine the causes of subduction initiation and the evolution ofsubducting slab-mantle wedge systems.

Hallie J. SimsAssistant Professor

Ph.D. - University of Chicago (2000)

Dr. Sims’ research addresses questions concerning the evolution of plant diversity,morphology, and ecology in terrestrial ecosystems over geologic time. She isparticularly interested in the evolution of plant reproductive strategies and theeffects of environmental changes, such as climate, on biodiversity. Her researchincludes the paleoecology, morphological evolution, taxonomic diversification, andtaphonomy of land plants and other organisms.

Paleoecology, Paleobotany

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Igneous Petrology, Geochemistry

Mark K. ReaganProfessor

Ph.D. - University of California - Santa Cruz (1987)

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Faculty

Frank H. WeirichAssociate Professor

Ph.D. - University of Toronto (1982)

Dr. Weirich’s work includes research on high-energy environment sediment dynamics,fire impacts on fluvial systems, mass wasting and overall landform dynamics, dynamicprocess measurements, basin-scale experimentation, multi-dimensional sensor arrays,the use of geophysical techniques in geomorphology and GIS-based integratedwatershed studies.

Geomorphology, Hydrology

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Ingrid Ukstins PeateAssociate Professor

Ph.D. - Royal Holloway University of London (2003)

Dr. Ukstins Peate’s research involves utilizing a multi-disciplinary approach tounderstanding explosive volcanic systems - magma petrogenesis, eruption andemplacement mechanisms of both mafic and silicic pyroclastic deposits, and the holisticinterpretation of volcanic stratigraphic sequences. She is also involved in planetarygeology projects including the application of remotely operated vehicles (rovers) forstudying the geology of other planets, and utilizing Earth-based analogues to understandplanetary processes, such as the environmental conditions on early Mars and thepotential for life. She is the director of the newly installed electron microprobe laboratory.

Volcanology, Igneous Petrology, Planetary Geology

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Faculty

Dr. Zhang’s research focuses on subsurface hydrology, watershed hydrology, andeco-hydrology. He utilizes field observation and modeling of flow and contaminanttransport in soils and aquifers as well as analytical, numerical, geostatistical, andstochastic methods in subsurface hydrology.

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Hydrogeology

You-Kuan ZhangProfessor

Ph.D. - University of Arizona (1990)

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Adjunct/Emeritus Faculty

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Adjunct FacultyTiffany S. Adrain - Curator of the Paleontology Repository Collection

Raymond R. Anderson - Adjunct Assistant Professor - PreCambrian Midcontinent Impacts

Dale Burns - Research Scientist - Electron Microprobe Laboratory Manager

David L. Campbell - Adjunct Professor - Geophysics

Caroline Davis - Adjunct Assistant Professor - Hydrogeology

Rhawn Denniston - Adjunct Assistant Professor (Cornell College) - Paleoclimates

Mary E. Kosloski - Lecturer - Paleontology

Keith Schilling - Adjunct Assistant Professor - Hydrology

Doug Schnoebelen - Adjunct Assistant Professor - Hydrogeology and Water Chemistry

Emily Walsh - Adjunct Assistant Professor (Cornell College) - Petrology and Tectonics

Brian J. Witzke - Adjunct Associate Professor - Stratigraphy/Sedimentary Geology

Emeritus FacultyRichard D. Baker - Emertius Professor of Palynology

Robert L. Brenner - Emeritus Professor of Stratigraphy

Robert S. Carmichael - Emeritus Professor of Geophysics

Lon D. Drake - Emeritus Professor of Engineering Hydrogeology

Philip H. Heckel - Emeritus Professor of Sedimentary Geology

Gilbert Klapper - Emeritus Professor of Micropaleontology

George R. McCormick - Emeritus Professor of Mineralogy

Holmes A. Semken - Emeritus Professor of Vertebrate Paleontology

Keene Swett - Emeritus Professor of Sedimentary Petrology

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Courses Offered

003: Introduction to Earth Science004: Evolution and History of Life005: Introduction to Geology007: Age of Dinosaurs008: Introduction to Environmental Science015: History and Science of Oil017: Geology of the US National Parks018: Geological Field Trip to Selected National Parks020: Loess Hills Service Learning Trip029: First-Year Seminar041: Mineralogy046: Origins of Life in the Universe100: Geologic Training Assignment102: Earth Surface Processes104: Climatology107: Marine Ecosystems & Conservation108: Introduction to Oceanography110: Introduction to Applied Remote Sensing111: Chemical Evolution of the Oceans112: Geologic Field Methods113: Geologic Field Analysis120: Collections Care & Management121: Principles of Paleontology122: Evolution of the Vertebrates126: Wetlands: Function, Geography, & Management130: Sedimentary Geology132: Structural Geology136: Soil Genesis & Geomorphology138: Fluvial Geomorphology139: Integrated Watershed Analysis140: Natural Disasters

142: Vertebrate Osteology & Phylogeny144: Phylogenetics & Biodiversity145: Morphometrics149: Elements of Geochemistry150: Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology152: Isotope Geochemistry156: Scanning Electron Microscopy & X-ray Microanalysis159: Topics in Museum Studies160: Advanced Collection Care & Management166: Hydrogeology168: Field Methods in Hydrologic Science170: Evolution of Ecosystems172: Glacial and Pleistocene Geology175: Mineral & Petroleum Exploration Geology177: Global Stratigraphy178: Applied Geostatistics179: Engineering Geology180: Survey of Geophysical Methods185: Approaches to Geoarchaeology189: Global Change Seminar191: Tectonics and Basin Analysis193: Sustainability Project201: Geoscience Seminar215: AAPG Fall Field Trip225: Paleontology Seminar238: Process Geomorphology239: Advanced Watershed Analysis Seminar253: Geochronology257: Tectonics and Petrology Seminar293: Advanced Structural Geology

Recent Course Offerings100-level courses are combined graduate/undergraduate

200-level courses are graduate only

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Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Facilities

UI Paleontological RepositoryThe collections of the University of Iowa (UI) Paleontology Repository comprise overone million specimens, including >25,000 type and referred specimens, cited in >900publications, of which >7,000 are primary types. They consist of invertebrate, vertebrate,and plant fossils of all geological ages. The collections represent the fifth largest universitycollection in North America (Allmon and White 2000).

Iowa Geological Survey Core Library

iTEA Lab - Iowa Trace Element Analysis LaboratoryThermo X-series II ICP-MS + collision cell NewWave 213nm laser + He ablation gas Cetacautosampler in clean housing. The ICP-MS facility allows determination of trace elementconcentrations down to sub-ppb levels (ng/mL) in a wide variety of sample types (rocks,minerals, metals, glasses, solutions, waters, digested samples) as either solutions or solidmaterials. iTEA also includes a metal-free clean analytical lab for wet chemistry.

Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) Laboratory

The library includes rock samples from over 38,000 sites around the state, including stratafrom nearly every geological period of Earth history. Additionally, the library contains almost465,000 feet of drill "core" (cylinders of rock drilled for research programs) and rock samplesand is located at the Oakdale Facility ten minutes from Trowbridge Hall. It would cost over$185 million to commercially drill and recollect the samples reposited in the library today.

Petrographic and Rock Preparation LaboratoryThe petrographic and rock preparation laboratory is a full-service laboratory for internaland external customers offering a variety of rock and specimen preparation options, includingthe production of high-quality research thin sections and preparation for other analyticalmethods. The laboratory is also used as a teaching and training facility to offer instruction tostudents in preparation methods for their own research.

Hitachi S-3400N, variable-pressure scanning electron microscope (SEM) capable of imagingspecimens with no metal coating, or specimens that are slightly hydrated or porous, as wellas conventionally processed specimens; equipped with a Bruker AXS Quantax 400 X-raymicroanalysis system; XFlash silicon drift detector with excellent energy resolution and lightelement detection, providing ultra-fast acquisition of line scans and elemental maps.

Quaternary Materials LaboratoryThe University of Iowa Quaternary Materials Laboratory is fully equipped to carry out soilsand sediment grain-size (pipette and SediGraph) and sand fraction sieve analysis. The labalso has wet-chemistry facilities, a C-H-N elemental analyzer, a Flotech flotation system,and owns and operates a heavy duty Giddings soil coring rig for collecting intact core ofunlithified sediments and soils.

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Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences 15

Facilities

The new JEOL JXA-8230 electron microprobe has a WDS system with 5 wavelength dispersive spectrometers with large PETL/LIFL/TAPL and LDE1, LDE2, LDEB and TAPJ crystals for detection of light to heavy elements from Be through Au. The EPMA also includes a panchromatic cathodoluminescence system, optical microscope, EDS, and LAB6 electron gun.

Electron Microprobe (EM) Laboratory

Environmental and Hydrogeology Research Laboratories

Core Analysis and Biostratigraphy Laboratories

The Sedimentary Geology Lab is equipped with state of the art hardware and software for petrographic thin section and mineral separate data capture and analysis. Specific equipment includes a Nikon Eclipse 50iPOL polarizing microscope for petrographic studies including a digital microscope camera with a separate teaching head for two-person simultaneous view-ing, a Petrog digital stepping stage with accompanying software for petrographic analysis, and a Nikon SMZ18 research stereomicroscope.

Sedimentary Geology Laboratory

Morphometrics Laboratory

Environmental Instrumentation & GeomorphicComputation Laboratories

The E&HR Labs include permeameters and tensionometers; pumping and slug/bail test units with transducers and data-loggers; water-quality analysis facility; advanced groundwater modeling and geostatistics software; advanced data logging systems for field research; 3-D sensor arrays (wind and water systems); and facilities for field instrumentation design and construction. The University of Iowa is also home to the Iowa Institute for Hydrologic Research, which contains the Iowa Geological Survey as a research unit and partner.

The Instrumentation Lab include storage, testing, and teaching facility focusing on field instru-mentation; assembly, housing, and testing of climatic, meteorological, fluvial, water quality and associated environmental instrumentation data recording systems and sampling systems. The Geomorphic Computing Lab includes high-end visualization, digitizing, remote sensing, and GIS systems as well as high-end multiprocessor workstations.

The Core Analysis Lab offers ample lay-out space for drill cores to be photographed and sampled. Nearly 400 feet of core can be laid out at a single time. The facility includes micro-drilling equipment for geochemical sampling. Biostratigraphic Laboratories in the Depart-ment include acid digestion fume hoods for micropaleontological and macropaleontological biostratigraphic analysis using HCl and Formic Acid digestion methods.

The Morphometrics Lab includes a variety of state of the art software and hardware for morphometric analyses including a NextEngine 3D Scanner HD, a Microscribe G2X that can take three dimensional X-Y-Z landmark coordinates, taking measurements every two mm, and a Reflex Microscope for 3D measurements on a much smaller scale than the Microscribe. The lab also contains several additional digital stereomicroscopes.

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Iowa City

Iowa City is the fifth largest city in the state of Iowa and the U.S. Census Bureau reported a 2012population of 70,133 residents within the city limits. Located within downtown, the campus of theUniversity of Iowa is conveniently located for either walking or biking to and from campus. Weeklydowntown events, numerous art galleries and museums, and a thriving farmers’ market all add tothe charm of Iowa City. A brief list of city accolades include:

UNESCO City of LiteratureCity High and West High named Best High Schools by Newsweek (2012)4th Best U.S. College Destination, American Institute for Economic Research (2012)#8 Up and Coming Tech Cities, Forbes (2008) Healthiest Town in the United States, Men’s Journal (2010)

City of Iowa City

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Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

www.uifoundation.orgwww.uiowa.edu

www.clas.uiowa.eduwww.clas.uiowa.edu/ees

For more information about private or corporate support for the Departmentof Earth and Environmental Sciences, or to update alumni location information,please contact the University of Iowa Foundation. The address, phone number,and web address are provided below. Your inquiry will be treated confidentially.

Adam BlindThe University of Iowa Foundation

Levitt Center for University AdvancementP.O. Box 4550

Iowa City, Iowa 52244-4550+1 (319) 335-3305 or +1 (800) 648-6973

email address: [email protected]

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Department of Earth and Environmental SciencesResearch and Teaching - International, National and Statewide Impact

(2008-2014)

University of Iowa - Department of Earth and Environmental SciencesStudents and Faculty Worked in 56 Countries and Territories, 46 States, and 58 Iowa Counties

Antarctica - Argentina - Australia - Austria - Belgium - Belize - Brazil - Canada - Canary Islands - Chile - China - Costa Rica -Cuba - Czech Republic - Denmark - Dominican Republic - Ecuador - England - Estonia - Faroe Islands - France - Germany -

Grand Cayman - Greenland - Guam - Iceland - India - Indonesia - Iraq - Italy - Japan - Kenya - Mexico - Namibia - Netherlands -New Zealand - Norway - Panama - Portugal - Puerto Rico - Romania - Saipan - Somalia - South Africa - South Korea - Spain -

Sweden - Switzerland - Taiwan - Tanzania - Thailand - United States - Uruguay - Venezuela - Wales - Yemen

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences121 Trowbridge Hall, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA

(Phone): +1-319-335-1818 (Fax): +1-319-335-1821www.clas.uiowa.edu/ees

Countries, states and counties visited by University of Iowa -Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Students and Facultyto conduct research, present research, for field trips, or public outreach

CerroGordo Floyd Chick-

asaw

ClaytonHumboldt

Freemont

Lyon

Sioux

Plymouth

Woodbury

Monona

Harrison

Pottawattamie

Mills

Page

Mont-gomery

Cass

Shelby

Crawford

Ida

Cherokee

O’Brien

Osceola Dickinson

Clay

BuenaVista

Sac

Carroll

Audo-bon

Adair

Adams

Taylor Ringgold

Madison

Union Clarke

Decatur Wayne Appa-noose Davis Van Buren

Lee

Henry DesMoines

Lucas Monroe Wapello Jefferson

Warren Marion Mahaska Keokuk Wash-ington

Louisa

Guthrie Dallas Polk Jasper Powe-shiek Iowa

Muscatine

Scott

Cedar

Clinton

Greene Boone Story MarshallTama Benton Linn

Jones Jackson

Calhoun WebsterHamilton Hardin

GrundyBlackHawk

Buch-anan Delaware Dubuque

FayetteBremer

ButlerFranklinWrightPoca-hontas

PaloAlto

Emmet

Kossuth

Winne-bago

Hancock

AllamakeeWinne-shiek

Worth Mitchell Howard