BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91...

24
SEPTEMBER 2019 BOOKSTORE GSA Annual Meeting & Exposition 22–25 September 2019 | Phoenix, Arizona, USA View of downtown Phoenix skyline with saguaro from the South Mountain Park & Preserve. © Photo credit: Visit Phoenix / Nick Cote.

Transcript of BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91...

Page 1: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

S e p t e m b e r 2 019

BOOKSTORE

GSA Annual Meeting & Exposition22–25 September 2019 | Phoenix, Arizona, USA

S e p t e m b e r 2 019

BOOKSTORE

View

of d

ownt

own

Phoe

nix

skyl

ine

with

sag

uaro

from

the

Sout

h M

ount

ain

Park

& P

rese

rve.

© P

hoto

cre

dit:

Visi

t Pho

enix

/ Nic

k Co

te.

Page 2: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

TH

E G

EO

LO

GIC

AL

SOC

IET

Y O

F AM

ER

ICA

BU

LL

ET

IN, V

OL

UM

E 131, N

O. 7/8, P. 1057–1408

JULY

/AU

GU

ST 2019

IN THIS ISSSUE •NTHISISSU•INTHIS

SSUEE

N THIS

• INTHISSUE•ITHIS

ISSU

Stylolites decipher burial depth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p. 1239No terrane boundary along the Salt Ranges thrust . . . . . . . . . . . p. 1095Active low-angle normal faulting, SE Papua New Guinea . . . p. 1333

I S S N 0 0 1 6 - 7 6 0 6 V O L . 1 3 1 N O . 7 / 8

I S S N 0 0 1 6 - 7 6 0 6 V O L . 1 3 1 N O . 7 / 8

I S S N 0 0 1 6 - 7 6 0 6 V O L . 1 3 1 N O . 7 / 8

J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 9

J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 9

J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 9

Environmental & Engineering Geoscience

MAY 2019

VOLUME XXV, NUMBER 2

THE JOINT PUBLICATION OF THE

ASSOCIATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND ENGINEERING GEOLOGISTS

AND THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA

SERVING PROFESSIONALS IN

ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY, AND HYDROGEOLOGY

Circum-arctic Structural Events: Tecto

nic E

volu

tion

of th

e Arctic M

argin

s and

Trans-A

rctic Links w

ith A

djacen

t Oro

gen

s

Edited by Karsten Piepjohn, Justin V. Strauss, Lutz Reinhardt, and William C. McClelland

Circum-arctic Structural EventsCircum-arctic Structural EventsCircum-arctic Structural EventsTectonic Evolution of the Arctic Margins and Trans-Arctic Links

with Adjacent Orogens

Special Paper 541

Who Are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where Are We Going?

Who Are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where Are We Going?

Who Are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where Are We Going?

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Edited by Beth A. Johnson

Memoir 214

Raising Idaho with a plume 59

Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91Giddy granite in the Altai 149

I S S N 19 41- 8 2 6 4 | V O L U M E 1 1 | N U M B E R 1 | F E B R U a R y 2 0 1 9

Field Volcanology:

A Tribute to the Distinguished

Career of Don Swanson

Edited by Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia,

Victor E. Camp, and Anita Grunder

Special Paper 538

toll-free 1.888.443.4472

1.303.357.1000, option 3

[email protected]

Buy online at http://rock.geosociety.org/store/

Edited by Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia,

Victor E. Camp, and Anita Grunder

Field Volcanology:

A Tribute to the Distinguished

Career of Don Swanson

Special Paper 538

Edited by M.P. Poland, M

.O. Garcia,

V.E. Camp, and A. Grunder

Field Volcanology:

A Tribute to the Distinguished Career of Don Swanson

Don Swanson, who received the GSA Min-

eralogy, Geochemistry, Petrology, and Vol-

canology Division’s Distinguished Geologic

Career award in 2016, has adopted a detailed,

� eld-oriented approach to studying problems

of great volcanologic importance across a

range of compositions and spatio-temporal

scales. Swanson’s work has resulted in a

series of fundamental contributions that have

advanced understanding of the Columbia

River flood basalts, Cascade volcanic arc,

and Hawaiʻi, and his insights have been ap-

plied not only around the world, but across

the solar system. This volume emphasizes

the role of field volcanology as a window

into better understanding volcanic processes

past and present, and highlights, in particular,

those places and processes where Swanson’s

insights have been particularly impactful.

Field Volcanology:

A Tribute to the Distinguished

Edited by Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia,

A Tribute to the Distinguished

A Tribute to the Distinguished

SPE538, 458 p.

ISBN 9780813725383

$60.00, member price $42.00

Member Price$42.00

INSI

DE:

}} Icelandic Flutes, p. 387

}} Boiled Faults Fail to Seal, p. 461

}} Indonesian Carbon Goes Global, p. 483

ISSN 0091-7613

May 2019 ■ VOL. 47 NO. 5 ■ P. 385–496

May 2019

■ VOL. 47 N

O. 5

www.gsapubs.org rock.geosociety.org/store

TOP-RATED JOURNALS GSA Bulletin—Published since 1890 and still  going strong.

Geology—Measure your success with a paper accepted into this #1 ranked “geology” journal.

Environmental & Engineering Geoscience—Explores the interaction of people with hydrologic and geologic systems.

100% OPEN ACCESS:

Geosphere—Branch out unfettered with animations and inter activity.

Lithosphere—The voice for integrated and interdisciplinary tectonics.

GSA BOOKSSpecial Papers and Memoirs are:

• peer-reviewed• published quickly after acceptance• online ahead of print• distributed worldwide (print + online)• included in the Web of Science Book Citation Index

Details: http://tinyurl.com/GSA-book-guide Submit your proposal: [email protected]

}}}GSA publishes on all aspects of earth science.

}}}Editors at the forefront of their fields oversee a rigorous peer-review process for all manuscripts.

}}}Pre-issue publication online gets your accepted paper into circulation quickly.

Find the right

fit for your

research at GSA.

Impact Factor

JOURNAL 2019 5-YEAR SUBMIT ONLINE

Geology 5.006 5.406 geology.msubmit.net

GSA Bulletin 3.970 4.708 gsabulletin.msubmit.net

Geosphere 2.847 2.989 geosphere.msubmit.net

Lithosphere 2.486 2.961 lithosphere.msubmit.net

E&EG 0.844 0.761 http://eeg.allentrack.net

GSA members receive a US$100 discount on Open Access publication fees.

Page 3: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

TH

E G

EO

LO

GIC

AL

SOC

IET

Y O

F AM

ER

ICA

BU

LL

ET

IN, V

OL

UM

E 131, N

O. 7/8, P. 1057–1408

JULY

/AU

GU

ST 2019

IN THIS ISSSUE •NTHISISSU•INTHIS

SSUEE

N THIS

• INTHISSUE•ITHIS

ISSU

Stylolites decipher burial depth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p. 1239No terrane boundary along the Salt Ranges thrust . . . . . . . . . . . p. 1095Active low-angle normal faulting, SE Papua New Guinea . . . p. 1333

I S S N 0 0 1 6 - 7 6 0 6 V O L . 1 3 1 N O . 7 / 8

I S S N 0 0 1 6 - 7 6 0 6 V O L . 1 3 1 N O . 7 / 8

I S S N 0 0 1 6 - 7 6 0 6 V O L . 1 3 1 N O . 7 / 8

J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 9

J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 9

J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 9

Environmental & Engineering Geoscience

MAY 2019

VOLUME XXV, NUMBER 2

THE JOINT PUBLICATION OF THE

ASSOCIATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND ENGINEERING GEOLOGISTS

AND THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA

SERVING PROFESSIONALS IN

ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY, AND HYDROGEOLOGY

Circum-arctic Structural Events: Tecto

nic E

volu

tion

of th

e Arctic M

argin

s and

Trans-A

rctic Links w

ith A

djacen

t Oro

gen

s

Edited by Karsten Piepjohn, Justin V. Strauss, Lutz Reinhardt, and William C. McClelland

Circum-arctic Structural EventsCircum-arctic Structural EventsCircum-arctic Structural EventsTectonic Evolution of the Arctic Margins and Trans-Arctic Links

with Adjacent Orogens

Special Paper 541

Who are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where are We Going?

Who are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where are We Going?

Who are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where are We Going?

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Women and Geology

Edited by Beth A. Johnson

Memoir 214

Raising Idaho with a plume 59

Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91Giddy granite in the Altai 149

I S S N 19 41- 8 2 6 4 | V O L U M E 1 1 | N U M B E R 1 | F E B R U a R y 2 0 1 9

Field Volcanology:

A Tribute to the Distinguished

Career of Don Swanson

Edited by Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia,

Victor E. Camp, and Anita Grunder

Special Paper 538

toll-free 1.888.443.4472

1.303.357.1000, option 3

[email protected]

Buy online at http://rock.geosociety.org/store/

Edited by Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia,

Victor E. Camp, and Anita Grunder

Field Volcanology:

A Tribute to the Distinguished

Career of Don Swanson

Special Paper 538

Edited by M.P. Poland, M

.O. Garcia,

V.E. Camp, and A. Grunder

Field Volcanology:

A Tribute to the Distinguished Career of Don Swanson

Don Swanson, who received the GSA Min-

eralogy, Geochemistry, Petrology, and Vol-

canology Division’s Distinguished Geologic

Career award in 2016, has adopted a detailed,

� eld-oriented approach to studying problems

of great volcanologic importance across a

range of compositions and spatio-temporal

scales. Swanson’s work has resulted in a

series of fundamental contributions that have

advanced understanding of the Columbia

River flood basalts, Cascade volcanic arc,

and Hawaiʻi, and his insights have been ap-

plied not only around the world, but across

the solar system. This volume emphasizes

the role of field volcanology as a window

into better understanding volcanic processes

past and present, and highlights, in particular,

those places and processes where Swanson’s

insights have been particularly impactful.

Field Volcanology:

A Tribute to the Distinguished

Edited by Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia,

A Tribute to the Distinguished

A Tribute to the Distinguished

SPE538, 458 p.

ISBN 9780813725383

$60.00, member price $42.00

Member Price$42.00

INSI

DE:

}} Icelandic Flutes, p. 387

}} Boiled Faults Fail to Seal, p. 461

}} Indonesian Carbon Goes Global, p. 483

ISSN 0091-7613

May 2019 ■ VOL. 47 NO. 5 ■ P. 385–496

May 2019

■ VOL. 47 N

O. 5

www.gsapubs.org rock.geosociety.org/store

TOP-RATED JOURNALS GSA Bulletin—Published since 1890 and still  going strong.

Geology—Measure your success with a paper accepted into this #1 ranked “geology” journal.

Environmental & Engineering Geoscience—Explores the interaction of people with hydrologic and geologic systems.

100% OPEN ACCESS:

Geosphere—Branch out unfettered with animations and inter activity.

Lithosphere—The voice for integrated and interdisciplinary tectonics.

GSA BOOKSSpecial Papers and Memoirs are:

• peer-reviewed• published quickly after acceptance• online ahead of print• distributed worldwide (print + online)• included in the Web of Science Book Citation Index

Details: http://tinyurl.com/GSA-book-guide Submit your proposal: [email protected]

}}}GSA publishes on all aspects of earth science.

}}}Editors at the forefront of their fields oversee a rigorous peer-review process for all manuscripts.

}}}Pre-issue publication online gets your accepted paper into circulation quickly.

Find the right

fit for your

research at GSA.

Impact Factor

JOURNAL 2019 5-YEAR SUBMIT ONLINE

Geology 5.006 5.406 geology.msubmit.net

GSA Bulletin 3.970 4.708 gsabulletin.msubmit.net

Geosphere 2.847 2.989 geosphere.msubmit.net

Lithosphere 2.486 2.961 lithosphere.msubmit.net

E&EG 0.844 0.761 http://eeg.allentrack.net

GSA members receive a US$100 discount on Open Access publication fees.

Geologic ExcursionsGeologic ExcursionsGeologic Excursions

IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA

IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA

IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA

IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA

IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA

IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA

IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA

IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA

IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH AMERICA

Edited by Philip A. Pearthree

Field Guide 55

Geologic Excursions in Southwestern North Am

erica

Geologic Excursions in Southwestern North America

Edited by Philip A. Pearthree

This volume, prepared as part of the Geological Society of America Annual Meeting in Phoenix, includes � eld guides covering aspects of the spectacular geology of southwestern North America. Field guides tackle the geology of the southern Colorado Plateau, from paleoenvironments of Petri� ed Forest National Park, to Jurassic sand dunes of southern Utah, to the San Francisco Volcanic Field, to awesome Grand Canyon. Appropriately for the 50th anniversary of the � rst lunar landing, one trip visits sites in northern Arizona that helped prepare astronauts

for their missions. Several guides address aspects of the Proterozoic to Cenozoic tectonic development of the Transition Zone between the

Colorado Plateau and the Basin and Range. Exploring the Basin and Range, guides feature Laramide tectonism and ore deposit development, features associated with large-magnitude Ceno-

zoic extensional tectonism, large Miocene volcanic centers in northwestern Arizona, and tectonism and development of the lower

Colorado River. Three � eld guides explore various aspects of northwest-ern Mexico, including tectonics and ore deposits of Sonora, fauna and paleo environments of Colorado River delta deposits, and volcanism in central Baja California. Finally, a guide analyzes anthropogenic earth � ssures that have developed in the Phoenix metropolitan area.

FLD055, 553 p., ISBN 9780813700557 | IN PRESS |

You May Also Like

SPE533: Tectonosedimentary Relations of Pennsylvanian to Jurassic Strata on the Colorado Plateau

SPE489P: Grand Canyon Geology: Two Billion Years of Earth’s History

FLD011P: Field Guide to Plutons, Volcanoes, Faults, Reefs, Dinosaurs, and Possible Glaciation in Selected Areas of Arizona, California, and Nevada

MWR183P: Late Cenozoic Lava Dams in the Western Grand Canyon

Related Books

Field Guide 11

Field Guide to Plutons, Volcanoes, Faults, Reefs,

Dinosaurs, and Possible Glaciation in Selected Areas

of Arizona, California, and Nevada

edited by Ernest M. Duebendorfer and Eugene I. Smith

By William R. Dickinson

Special Paper 533

Dinosaurs, and Possible Glaciation in Selected Areas

edited by Ernest M. Duebendorfer and Eugene I. Smith

Edited by J. Michael Timmons and Karl E. Karlstrom

Special Paper 489

In Press

Page 4: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

The Edwards Aquifer: The Past, Present, and Future of a Vital Water Resource

Edited by John M. Sharp Jr., Ronald T. Green, and Geary M. Schindel, 2019

The Edwards aquifer system is one of the great karstic aquifer systems of the world. It supplies water for more than 2 million people and for agricultural, munic-ipal, industrial, and recreational uses. The Edwards (Balcones Fault Zone) Aquifer in the San Antonio, Texas, area was the first to be designated a sole source aquifer by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1975. The Edwards Aquifer also hosts unique groundwater, cave, and spring ecosystems. This 27-chapter memoir reviews the current state of knowledge, current and emerging challenges to wise use of the aquifer sys-tem, and some of the technologies that must be adopted to address these challenges.

MWR215, 312 p., ISBN 9780813712154 | $86.00 | member price $60.00 |

The Physical Geography and Geology of the Driftless Area: The Career and Contributions of James C. Knox

Edited by Eric C. Carson, J. Elmo Rawling III, J. Michael Daniels, and John W. Attig, 2019

Over the course of his 43-year career, James C. Knox conducted seminal research on the geomorphology of the Driftless Area of southwestern Wisconsin. His research covered wide-ranging topics such as long-term landscape evolution in the Driftless Area; responses of floods to climate change since the last glaciation; processes and tim-ing of floodplain sediment deposition on both small streams and on the Mississippi River; impacts of European settlement on the land-scape; and responses of stream systems to land-use changes. This volume pres-ents the state of knowledge of the physical geography and geology of this unglaciated region in the otherwise- glaciated Midwest with contributions written by Knox prior to his passing in 2012 and by a number of his former colleagues and graduate students.

SPE543, 8 chapters, ISBN 9780813725437 | IN PRESS |

250 Million Years of Earth History in Central Italy: Celebrating 25 Years of the Geological Observatory of Coldigioco

Edited by Christian Koeberl and David M. Bice, 2019

Central Italy has been a cradle of geology for centuries. For more than 100 years, studies at the Umbria and Marche Apennines have led to new ideas and a better understanding of the past, such as the Cretaceous– Paleogene (K-Pg) boundary event, or the events across the Eocene–Oligocene transition from a greenhouse to an icehouse world. The Umbria-Marche Apennines are entirely made of marine sedimentary rocks, representing a continuous record of the geotectonic evolution of an epeiric sea from the Early Triassic to the Pleistocene. The book includes reviews and original research works accomplished with the support of the Geological Observatory of Coldigioco, an independent research and educational center, which was founded in an abandoned medieval hamlet near Apiro in 1992.

SPE542, 532 p., ISBN 9780813725420 | IN PRESS |

Related Books

FLD043: Geology of the Baraboo, Wisconsin, Area

FLD024P: Archean to Anthropocene: Field Guides to the Geology of the Mid-Continent of North America

SPE337P: Glacial Processes Past and Present

More at the Store

Also of Interest

SPE524: The Stratigraphic Record of Gubbio: Integrated Stratigraphy of the Late Cretaceous–Paleogene Umbria-Marche Pelagic Basin

SPE452P: The Late Eocene Earth—Hothouse, Icehouse, and Impacts

FLD028: Deformation, Fluid Flow, and Mass Transfer in the Forearc of Convergent Margins

SPE469: Geology & Tectonic Evolution of the Central-Southern Apennines, Italy

SPE411P: The Origins of Geology in Italy

Related Books

You May Also Like

SPE516: Caves and Karst Across Time

SPE404P: Perspectives on Karst Geomorphology, Hydrology, and Geochemistry—A Tribute Volume to Derek C. Ford and William B. White

Related Books

4

Explo

re }

Disc

over

} Ac

quire

In Pr

ess

Special Paper 543

The Edwards Aquifer: The Past, Present, and Future of a Vital Water Resource

Edited by John M. Sharp Jr., Ronald T. Green, and Geary M. Schindel

Memoir 215

Memoir 215

Edited by Christian Koeberl and David M. Bice

250 Million Years of Earth History in Central Italy

250 Million Years of Earth History in Central Italy: Celebrating

25 Years of the Geological Observatory of Coldigioco

Celebrating 25 Years of the Geological Observatory of Coldigioco

Special Paper 542

Special Paper 542

Photo credit: IN PRESS

IN PRESSIN PRESS

Page 5: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

The Gigantic Markagunt and Sevier Gravity Slides Resulting from Mid-Cenozoic Catastrophic Mega-Scale Failure of the Marysvale Volcanic Field, Utah, USA

By Robert F. Biek, Peter D. Rowley, and David B. Hacker, 2019

The Markagunt and Sevier gravity slides are gigantic landslides that resulted from gravitationally induced catastrophic failure of the southern flank of the Oligocene to Miocene Marysvale volcanic field. Each is nearly 100 km long with runouts over the for-mer land surface >35 km; together they span 7000 km2 and rank among Earth’s largest terrestrial landslides. Basal cataclastic lay-ers, injectites, pseudotachylyte, deformed clasts, and a variety of kinematic indicators demonstrate catastrophic emplacement, which was preceded by slow gravitational spreading of the volcanic field. This volume offers a history of their discovery, our cur-rent understanding of the gravity slides, and a guide to particularly instructive exposures for which the authors document their con-clusions about the size, age, and significant structural features of these newly discov-ered features.

FLD056, ISBN 9780813700564 | IN PRESS |

Field Excursions in the Carolinas: Guides to the 2019 GSA Southeastern Section Meeting

Edited by John Chadwick and Steven C. Jaume’, 2019

This guidebook provides detailed itineraries of three field trips associated with the 2019 GSA Southeastern Section Meeting in Charleston, South Carolina. The first chapter outlines the fossiliferous deposits near Charleston histor-ically referred to as the “Ashley Phosphate Beds,” which include sharks, rays, sea turtles, whales, and other Oligocene to Pleistocene fossils. The second chapter explores how hydrology has shaped Charleston and how engineers, public officials, and citizens incorporate new technologies in design to increase community resiliency. The third chapter describes the variety of modern traces that can be observed in the coastal setting of Edisto Island near Charleston. These include burrows, tracks, borings, and other signs of terrestrial and marginal-marine invertebrates and vertebrates in sediments, shells, and wood.

FLD053, 32 p., ISBN 9780813700533| $26.00 | member price $18.00 |

Iceland: The Formation and Evolution of a Young, Dynamic, Volcanic Island—A Field Trip Guide

By Brennan T. Jordan, Tamara L. Carley, and Tenley J. Banik, 2019

This field trip guide contains an introduction to the geology of Iceland and an itinerary for a 10-day journey around the island. The itinerary consists of 55 stops and 15 optional stops. These stops include exposure to rep-resentative examples of most phenomena typical of the island’s geology and all of the major tectonic elements of Iceland. The pri-mary focus of this guide is on volcanic and tectonic features, but topics such as glaci-ation, geothermal energy, geomorphology, paleontology, soil loss, and geo-tourism are also addressed.

FLD054, 118 p., ISBN 9780813700540 | $40.00 | member price $28.00 |

Related Books

SPE163P: Age Relationships of the Golconda Thrust Fault, Sonoma Range, North-Central Nevada

REG020: Landslides and Engineering Geology of the Seattle, Washington, Area

Similar Topics

Related Books

FLD050: Geology at Every Scale: Field Excursions for the 2018 GSA Southeastern Section Meeting in Knoxville, Tennessee

FLD039: Diverse Excursions in the Southeast: Paleozoic to Present

FLD035: Elevating Geoscience in the Southeastern United States: New Ideas about Old Terranes

FLD029: From the Blue Ridge to the Coastal Plain: Field Excursions in the Southeastern United States

Shop Online

Also Recommended

FLD026: Neoproterozoic Glacial and Associated Facies in the Tanafjord-Varangerfjord Area, Finnmark, North Norway

MWR202P: The Greenland Caledonides: Evolution of the Northeast Margin of Laurentia

DNAGGNAK1: Quaternary Geology of Canada and Greenland

DNAGCSMS7: Neotectonics of North America

Related Books

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

5

New BooksField Guide 56

ICeLANDICeLANDICeLANDICeLANDICeLANDICeLANDICeLANDICeLANDICeLANDICeLANDICeLANDICeLAND

By Brennan T. Jordan, Tamara L. Carley, and Tenley J. Banik

The Formation and Evolution of a Young, Dynamic, Volcanic Island— A Field Trip Guide

Field Guide 54By B

.T. Jordan, T.L. Carley, and T.J. Banik

|ICeLA

ND

: The Formation and Evolution of a Young, D

ynamic, Volcanic Island—

A Field Trip G

uide

Field Guide 54

Field Excursions in the Carolinas

Edited by John Chadwick and Steven C. Jaume’

GUIDES FOR THE 2019 GSA SOUTHEASTERN SECTION MEETING

Field Guide 53Edited by J. Chadwick

and S.C. Jaume’

Field E

xcursio

ns in

the C

arolin

as: Gu

ides fo

r the 2019 G

SA

So

uth

eastern S

ection

Meetin

g

Field Guide

53

Field Guide 53

Photo credit: IN PRESS

Page 6: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Tectonics, Sedimentary Basins, and Provenance: A Celebration of the Career of William R. Dickinson

Edited by Raymond V. Ingersoll, Timothy F. Lawton, and Stephan A. Graham, 2018

Through a remarkable combination of intel-lect, self-confidence, engaging humility, and prodigious output of published work, Wil-liam R. Dickinson influenced and challenged three generations of sedimentary geolo-gists, igneous petrologists, tectonicists, sandstone petrologists, archaeologists, and other geoscientists. A key figure in the plate-tectonic revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, he explained how the distribution of sediments on Earth’s surface could be traced to tectonic processes, and is widely recognized as a founder of modern sedimen-tary basin analysis. This volume consists of 31 chapters related to Dickinson’s research interests; many of the authors are his former students, their students, and their students’ students, demonstrating his continuing pro-found influence. The papers in this volume are an impressive tribute to the depth and breadth of Bill Dickinson’s contributions to the geosciences.

SPE540, 757 p., ISBN 9780813725406 | $99.00 | member price $70.00 |

Circum-Arctic Structural Events: Tectonic Evolution of the Arctic Margins and Trans-Arctic Links with Adjacent Orogens

Edited by Karsten Piepjohn, Justin V. Strauss, Lutz Reinhardt, and William C. McClelland, 2019

The circum-Arctic region has received considerable attention over the past sev-eral decades with vigorous debate focused on topics such as mechanisms for opening the Eurasian and Amerasian basins, the importance of plume-related magmatism in the development of the Arctic Ocean, and mechanisms for ancient terrane translation along the Arctic margins. In recognition of the 25th anniversary of the Circum-Arctic Structural Events (CASE) program, an inter-national polar research effort organized and led by the Bundesanstalt für Geowissen-schaften und Rohstoffe (BGR) of Germany, this volume presents results from 18 major field expeditions involving over 100 interna-tional geoscientists from a broad spectrum of disciplines. The resulting publication focuses on the Proterozoic to Cenozoic tec-tonic evolution of the circum-Arctic region with correlations to adjacent orogens.

SPE541, 686 p., ISBN 9780813725413 | $120.00 | member price $84.00 |

Exploring Extreme and Unusual Geology in the Stable Midcontinent: Field Excursions for the 2019 GSA South-Central, North-Central, and Rocky Mountain Sections Joint Meeting

Edited by Marcia K. Schulmeister and James S. Aber, 2019

The flat-lying sedimentary strata of the North American midcontinent are typically thought of as uniform and predictable. However, midcontinent geology contains a record of exciting geologic events and pro-cesses. The papers in this volume examine four geologic phenomena associated with the continental interior: Pennsylvanian and Permian cyclothems, the origin of a massive Permian salt deposit, Cretaceous kimberlite intrusions, and Quaternary glacial geology. The guides cover processes and events that are unique to the geology of Kansas and highlight important economic and rich his-torical influences of these geologic features.

FLD052, 70 p., ISBN 9780813700526| $38.00 | member price $26.00 |

Dickinson Volumes

SPE533: Tectonosedimentary Relations of Pennsylvanian to Jurassic Strata on the Colorado Plateau

SPE391: Net Dextral Slip, Neogene San Gregorio–Hosgri Fault Zone, Coastal California

MWR204P: Backbone of the Americas: Shallow Subduction, Plateau Uplift, and Ridge and Terrane Collision

Related Books

Related Books

MWR213: Linkages and Feedbacks in Orogenic Systems

SPE506: Reconstruction of a Late Protero-zoic to Devonian Continental Margin Sequence, N. Alaska

SPE360P: Tectonic Evolution of the Bering Shelf–Chukchi Sea–Arctic Margin

More at the Store

You May Also Like

FLD024P: Archean to Anthropocene: Field Guides to the Geology of the Mid-Continent of North America

SPE325P: Depositional Environments, Lithostratigraphy, and Biostratigraphy of the White River and Arikaree Groups (Late Eocene to Early Miocene, North America)

SPE312P: Middle Proterozoic to Cambrian Rifting, North America

Related Books

6

Explo

re }

Disc

over

} Ac

quire

New

Book

s

Circum-Arctic Structural Events: Tecto

nic E

volu

tion

of th

e Arctic M

argin

s and

Trans-A

rctic Links w

ith A

djacen

t Oro

gen

s

Edited by Karsten Piepjohn, Justin V. Strauss, Lutz Reinhardt, and William C. McClelland

Circum-Arctic Structural EventsCircum-Arctic Structural EventsCircum-Arctic Structural EventsTectonic Evolution of the Arctic Margins and Trans-Arctic Links

with Adjacent Orogens

Special Paper 541

Special Paper 541

Edited by Raymond V. Ingersoll, Timothy F. Lawton, and Stephan A. Graham

Tectonics, Sedimentary Basins, and Provenance: A Celebration of the Career of William R. Dickinson

Special Paper 540

Edited by R

.V. Ingersoll, T

.F. Law

ton, and S.A

. Graham

Tectonics, Sedim

entary Basins, and Provenance:

A C

elebration of the Career of W

illiam R

. Dickinson

Special Paper

540

Special Paper 540

Exploring Extreme and Unusual Geology in the Stable Midcontinent

Edited by Marcia K. Schulmeister and James S. Aber

Field Excursions for the 2019 GSA South-Central, North-Central, and Rocky Mountain Sections Joint Meeting

Ed

ited b

y M.K

. Sch

ulm

eister and

J.S. A

ber |

Exp

lorin

g E

xtreme an

d U

nu

sual G

eolo

gy in

the S

table M

idco

ntin

ent

Field Guide 52

Field Guide 52

Page 7: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

The Art of Finding Springs, Second Edition: A Translation of L’Art de Découvrir les Sources, Seconde Édition

By Abbé Jean-Baptiste Paramelle; transl. by Patricia Bobeck, 2019

Abbé Paramelle (1790–1875) published The Art of Finding Springs in 1856 as a how-to manual for finding groundwater. Paramelle began his field research into springs on a karst plateau in southwestern France. Between 1833 and 1854, upon request, Paramelle explored 40 of France’s depart-ments and found groundwater in 10,000 places based on his observational method, which used geology and geomorphology, at a time when these sciences were in their infancy. Paramelle’s method was used until the 1970s to find groundwater in the French Department of Lot. Although the book was translated into German and Spanish in the mid-1800s, this is the first English transla-tion. The translator has included detailed notes and an introduction providing exten-sive historical background about this largely unknown hydrogeologist.

SPE539, xvii + 127 p., ISBN 9780813725390 | $58.00 | member price $40.00 |

Chesapeake Bay Impact Structure—Development of “Brim” Sedimentation in a Multilayered Marine Target

By Henning Dypvik, Gregory S. Gohn, Lucy E. Edwards, J. Wright Horton Jr., David S. Powars, and Ronald J. Litwin, 2018

The Chesapeake Bay impact structure is perhaps the best documented example of a small group of multilayer, marine-target impacts formed in continental shelves or beneath epeiric seas. In this multi disciplinary study, new sedimentological and stratigraph-ical data and results—mainly from three Chesapeake Bay brim cores (Watkins School, Langley, and Bayside)—are compared to and compiled with key crater core data. This vol-ume provides detailed understanding of the impact-related processes and sedimentation, their interaction and relative timing, and their products in the “brim,” the target-sediment layer in the area outside the transient cavity.

SPE537, 68 p., ISBN 9780813725376 | $38.00 | member price $25.00 |

Field Volcanology: A Tribute to the Distinguished Career of Don Swanson

Edited by Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia, Victor E. Camp, and Anita Grunder, 2018

Don Swanson, who received the GSA Mineralogy, Geochemistry, Petrology, and Volcanology Division’s Distinguished Geo-logic Career award in 2016, has adopted a detailed, field-oriented approach to studying problems of great volcanologic importance across a range of compositions and spa-tio-temporal scales. Swanson’s work has resulted in a series of fundamental contri-butions that have advanced understanding of the Columbia River flood basalts, Cascade volcanic arc, and Hawai‘i, and his insights have been applied not only around the world, but across the solar system. This volume emphasizes the role of field volcanology as a window into better understanding volcanic processes past and present, and highlights, in particular, those places and processes where Swanson’s insights have been par-ticularly impactful.

SPE538, 458 p., ISBN 9780813725383 | $60.00 | member price $42.00 |

Related Books

SPE485: On the Strata of the Earth: A Translation of О Слояхъ Земныхъ

SPE449: The World in a Crucible: Laboratory Practice and Geological Theory at the Beginning of Geology

SPE535: Museums at the Forefront of the History and Philosophy of Geology: History Made, History in the Making

MWR203P: The Revolution in Geology from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment

Similar Topics

Related Books

SPE458: The ICDP-USGS Deep Drilling Project in the Chesapeake Bay Impact Structure

SPE452P: The Late Eocene Earth—Hothouse, Icehouse, and Impacts

SPE437P: The Sedimentary Record of Meteorite Impacts

SPE384P: Belt Basin: Window to Mesoproterozoic Earth

SPE356P: Catastrophic Events and Mass Extinctions: Impacts and Beyond

SPE339P: Large Meteorite Impacts and Planetary Evolution II

Shop Online

Also Recommended

SPE497P: The Columbia River Flood Basalt Province

SPE470P: What Is a Volcano?

SPE345P: Volcanic Hazards and Disasters in Human Antiquity

SPE329P: Geologic Evolution of the Barberton Greenstone Belt

Related Books

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

7

New Books

Special Paper 537

By Henning Dypvik, Gregory S. Gohn, Lucy E. Edwards, J. Wright Horton Jr., David S. Powars, and Ronald J. Litwin

Chesapeake Bay Chesapeake Bay Chesapeake Bay Impact StructureImpact StructureImpact Structure

Development of “Brim” Sedimentation in a Multilayered Marine Target

H. D

ypvik et al. | Chesapeake Bay Im

pact Structure: Developm

ent of “Brim

” Sedimentation in a M

ultilayered Marine Target

Special Paper 537

Special Paper 537

Edited by Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia, Victor E. Camp, and Anita Grunder

Field Volcanology: A Tribute to the Distinguished

Career of Don Swanson

Special Paper 538

Edited by M.P. Poland, M

.O. Garcia, V.E. Cam

p, and A. GrunderField Volcanology:

A Tribute to the Distinguished Career of D

on Swanson

Special Paper 538

Cross section of a vale whose bottom is filled

with transported material.

By Abbé Jean-Baptiste ParamelleTranslated by Patricia Bobeck

The Art of Finding Springs, Second EditionA Translation of L’Art de Découvrir les Sources, Seconde Édition

Special Paper 539

Abbé J.-B. Paramelle • Trans. by P. Bobeck

The Art of Finding Springs, Second Edition • A Translation of L’Art de Découvrir les Sources, Seconde Édition

Special Paper 539

Special Paper 539

Page 8: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Women and Geology: Who Are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where Are We Going?

Edited by Beth A. Johnson, 2018

Women have been a part of the story of geology from the beginning, but they have struggled to gain professional opportuni-ties, equal pay, and respect as scientists for decades. Some have been dismissed, some have been forced to work without pay, and some have been denied credit. This vol-ume highlights the progress of women in geology, including past struggles and how remarkable individuals were able to over-come them, current efforts to draw positive attention and perceptions to women in the science, and recruitment and mentorship efforts to attract and retain the next gener-ation of women in geology. Chapters include the first American women researchers in Antarctica, a survey of Hollywood disaster movies and the casting of women as geol-ogists, social media campaigns such as #365ScienceSelfies, and the stories of the Association for Women Geoscientists and the Earth Science Women’s Network and their work to support and mentor women in geology.

MWR214, 128 p., ISBN 9780813712147 | $60.00 | member price $42.00 |

Museums at the Forefront of the History and Philosophy of Geology: History Made, History in the Making

Edited by Gary D. Rosenberg and Renee M. Clary, 2018

Natural history museums have evolved over the past 500 years to become vanguards of science literacy and thus institutions of democracy. Curiosity about nature and distant cultures has proven to be a power-ful lure, and museums have progressively improved public engagement through increasingly immersive exhibits, partici-pation in field expeditions, and research using museum holdings, all facilitated by new technology. Natural history muse-ums have dispersed across the globe and demonstrated that public fascination with ancient life, vanished environments, exotic animals in remote habitats, cultural diver-sity, and our place in the cosmos is universal. This volume samples the story of museum development and illustrates that the histor-ical successes of natural history museums have positioned them to be preeminent facil-itators of science literacy well into the future.

SPE535, 348 p., ISBN 9780813725352 | $89.00 | member price $62.00 |

Linkages and Feedbacks in Orogenic Systems

Edited by Richard D. Law, J. Ryan Thigpen, Arthur J. Merschat, and Harold Stowell, 2017

This volume explores linkages between tec-tonic processes through field, numerical modeling, and laboratory studies, concentrat-ing on feedback mechanisms within ancient and evolving orogens by which individual or linked tectonic processes may influence or predetermine the operation of other pro-cesses in space and time. Case studies cover a wide range of ancient to modern orogens: the Svecofennian of southern Finland, the Gyeonggi Massif of Korea, the Caledonides of northern Scotland, the Variscan of the East European craton, the Appalachians of the eastern United States, the European Alps and Dinarides, north Cascades of the northwestern United States, and the Hima-laya. Emphasis is placed on integration between data sets developed from analytical approaches, including field mapping, seismic reflection profiling, strain analyses, petrol-ogy, isotopic dating, and numerical modeling studies of thermal evolution.

MWR213, 372 p. + plate, ISBN 9780813712130 | $60.00 | member price $42.00 |

Related Books

MWR212: Geodynamics of a Cordilleran Orogenic System: The Central Andes of Argentina and Northern Chile

SPE433P: Whence the Mountains? Inquiries into the Evolution of Orogenic Systems: A Volume in Honor of Raymond A. Price

SPE378P: Detrital Thermochronology—Provenance Analysis, Exhumation, and Landscape Evolution of Mountain Belts

More at the Store

You May Also Like

GSA Today: Rock Stars article on Florence Bascom: www.gsahist.org/gsat /gt98feb8_9.pdf

GSA Today: Rock Stars article on Marie Tharp: www.geosociety.org/gsatoday /archive/27/6/pdf/i1052-5173-27 -6-32.pdf

Related Articles

Also of Interest

MWR203P: The Revolution in Geology from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment

SPE355: Is the Present the Key to the Past or the Past the Key to the Present?

SPE449: The World in a Crucible: Laboratory Practice and Geological Theory at the Beginning of Geology

Related Books

8

Explo

re }

Disc

over

} Ac

quire

E d i t e d by G a r y D . R o s e n b e r g a n d R e n e e M . C l a r y

Museums at the Forefront of the History and Philosophy of GeologyH I S T O R Y M A D E , H I S T O R Y I N T H E M A K I N GMuseums at the Forefront of the History and Philosophy of Geology: History Made, History in the Making

Special Paper 535

Special Paper 535

Linkages and Feedbacks in Orogenic Systems

Edited by Richard D. Law, J. Ryan Thigpen, Arthur J. Merschat, and Harold H. Stowell

Memoir 213

Memoir 213

Who Are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where Are We Going?Who Are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where Are We Going?Who Are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where Are We Going?

Women and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and GeologyWomen and Geology

Edited by Beth A. Johnson

Memoir 214

Memoir 214

Page 9: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

The Tectonic Setting and Origin of Cretaceous Batholiths within the North American Cordillera: The Case for Slab Failure Magmatism and Its Significance for Crustal Growth

By Robert S. Hildebrand and Joseph B. Whalen, 2017

In this Special Paper, Hildebrand and Wha-len present a big-picture, paradigm-busting synthesis that examines the tectonic setting, temporal relations, and geochemistry of many plutons within Cretaceous batholithic terranes of the North American Cordillera. In addition to their compelling tectonic syn-thesis, they argue that most of the batholiths are not products of arc magmatism as com-monly believed, but instead were formed by slab failure during and after collision. They show that slab window and Precambrian TTG suites share many geochemical simi-larities with Cretaceous slab failure rocks. Geochemical and isotopic data indicate that the slab failure magmas were derived dom-inantly from the mantle and thus have been one of the largest contributors to growth of continental crust. The authors also note that slab failure plutons emplaced into the epi-zone are commonly associated with Cu-Au porphyries, as well as Li-Cs-Ta pegmatites.

SPE532, 113 p. + insert, ISBN 97808137253211| $42.00 | member price $30.00 |

Tectonosedimentary Relations of Pennsylvanian to Jurassic Strata on the Colorado Plateau

By William R. Dickinson, 2018

William R. Dickinson (1931–2015) formally retired in 1991, but he didn’t stop working, researching, and writing. His work with University of Arizona professor George Geh-rels on identifying sandstone provenance using detrital-zircon U-Pb geochronology led to the determination that much of the Pennsylvanian to Jurassic sandstone of the Colorado Plateau was derived from the orogenic belt now associated with the Appalachian Mountains. Further detrital-zir-con studies led to Dickinson preparing this publication in order to identify key aspects of the sedimentary and tectonic history of Mesozoic strata of the Colorado Plateau and directly adjacent areas. Dickinson divided the strata into seven depositional systems, but completed writing on only the lower five (Moenkopi, Chinle, Glen Canyon, San Rafael, Morrison) before his death in July 2015. The manuscript, however, was comprehensive in its treatment of upper Paleozoic strata and the lower five Mesozoic “deposystems,” and an abstract and concluding text by Jon Spencer helped to complete the work.

SPE533, 184 p., ISBN 9780813725338| $60.00 | member price $42.00 |

Geology and Tectonics of Subduction Zones: A Tribute to Gaku Kimura

Edited by Timothy Byrne, Michael B. Underwood, Donald Fisher, Lisa McNeill, Demian Saffer, Kohtaro Ujiie, and Asuka Yamaguchi, 2018

This volume highlights the career of Dr. Gaku Kimura, professor emeritus of geosciences at the University of Tokyo, by showing the range of research he has inspired. The first three chapters provide context for the growth of accretionary prisms by examin-ing the thermal structure of the ocean crust, and the sedimentary facies and potential fluid pathways in the Shikoku Basin. Next, two chapters look at the regional-scale structure of the plate boundary and the rheology and hysteresis of the hanging wall of the subduction zone in SW Japan. The following five chapters discuss the progres-sive deformation and thermal maturation of sediments along accretionary margins from Japan to New Zealand to western North America. The final two chapters look at the deformation processes near the subduct-ing plate interface, with the last chapter proposing a link between outcrop-scale observations and seismic slip.

SPE534, 215 p., ISBN 9780813725345| $40.00 | member price $28.00 |

Related Books

SPE495P: Mesozoic Assembly of the North American Cordillera

SPE457P: Did Westward Subduction Cause Cretaceous–Tertiary Orogeny in the North American Cordillera?

SPE442: The Terrane Puzzle: New Perspectives on Paleontology and Stratigraphy from the North American Cordillera

Shop Online

Also Recommended

MWR204P: Backbone of the Americas: Shallow Subduction, Plateau Uplift, and Ridge and Terrane Collision

SPE391: Net Dextral Slip, Neogene San Gregorio–Hosgri Fault Zone

SPE305P: Kinematics of Transrotational Tectonism in the California Transverse Ranges and Its Contribution to Cumulative Slip

Related Books

Related Books

SPE436: Formation and Applications of the Sedimentary Record in Arc Collision Zones

SPE419P: Convergent Margin Terranes and Associated Regions: A Tribute to W.G. Ernst

SPE349P: Ophiolites and Oceanic Crust: New Insights from Field Studies and the Ocean Drilling Program

Similar Topics

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

9

Edited by Timothy Byrne, Michael B. Underwood, Donald Fisher, Lisa McNeill, Demian Saffer, Kohtaro Ujiie, and Asuka Yamaguchi

Geology and Tectonics of Subduction Zones:

A Tribute to Gaku Kimura

Special Paper 534

Edited by Timothy Byrne, M

ichael B. Underwood, Donald Fisher,

Lisa McNeill, Dem

ian Saffer, Kohtaro Ujiie, and Asuka Yamaguchi

Geology and Tectonics of S

ubduction Zones: A Tribute to G

aku Kim

ura

Special Paper 534

By William R. Dickinson

Tectonosedimentary Relations of Tectonosedimentary Relations of Tectonosedimentary Relations of Pennsylvanian to Jurassic Strata Pennsylvanian to Jurassic Strata Pennsylvanian to Jurassic Strata

on the Colorado Plateauon the Colorado Plateauon the Colorado Plateau

Special Paper 533

Special Paper 533

By Robert S. Hildebrand and Joseph B. Whalen

The Tectonic Setting and Origin of Cretaceous Batholiths within the North American CordilleraThe Case for Slab Failure Magmatism and Its Significance for Crustal Growth

Special Paper 532

By R.S. Hildebrand and J.B. W

halenThe Tectonic Setting and O

rigin of Cretaceous Batholiths within the N

orth American Cordillera

Special Paper 532

Page 10: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

From the Puget Lowland to East of the Cascade Range: Geologic Excursions in the Pacific Northwest

Edited by Ralph A. Haugerud and Harvey M. Kelsey, 2017

Prepared in conjunction with the 129th annual meeting of the Geological Society of America, this compelling volume con-tains guides that geographically focus on the Seattle, Washington, area within the Puget lowland, and also includes descrip-tions of trips in the Cascade Range and the region east of the Cascades. Highlights of the guides include a journey through the region that was affected by an earthquake on the Seattle fault 1100 years ago, a trip to the coast to look at tsunami deposits, trips that show evidence of past glaciations that inundated the Puget lowland, and trips that highlight catastrophic flooding and blankets of wind-blown silt, both of which covered the area east of the Cascades due to con-tinental glaciations. Multiple trips help unravel the complex but fascinating geo-logical history of the Cascade Range.

FLD049, 254 p., ISBN 9780813700496 | $42.00 | member price $30.00 |

Geology at Every Scale: Field Excursions for the 2018 GSA Southeastern Section Meeting in Knoxville, Tennessee

Edited by Annette Summers Engel and Robert D. Hatcher Jr., 2018

This guidebook contains nine field trips that highlight the spectacular sedimentary and structural geology within, and surrounding, Knoxville, Tennessee. One guide focuses on the East Tennessee marble industry from the vantage point of the Three Rivers Rambler excursion train in Knoxville, and another guide features limestone-centric lessons for STEM educators. Three guides explore the region’s karst landscape and geological curiosities in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and Tuckaleechee Cove, the Flynn Creek impact structure, and the Gray Fossil Site, for which that guide also provides training in nutrient hotspots at the Body Farm—the University of Tennes-see Anthropological Research Facility. The last four guides examine regional structural geology and tectonics, including of the East-ern Tennessee seismic zone, the Nashville dome in central Tennessee, and the Blue Ridge and Inner Piedmont belts of the Car-olinas and Georgia.

FLD050, 209 p., ISBN 9780813700502 | $60.00 | member price $42.00 |

Ancient Oceans, Orogenic Uplifts, and Glacial Ice: Geologic Crossroads in America’s Heartland

Edited by Lee J. Florea, 2018

This volume, prepared for the 2018 GSA Annual Meeting in Indianapolis, includes compelling science and field trips in Indi-ana, Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan, and Ohio. A wealth of geologic and human history col-lides in the Midwest, a confluence that led to the growth of America’s industry over the past two centuries. Guides in this volume depict this development from the estab-lishment of New Harmony, the birthplace of American geology, through the construction of Indianapolis’s modern skyline. Underpin-ning this growth were the widespread natural resources—limestone, coal, and water—that built, powered, and connected a growing nation. Take a journey through the Heartland to sand dunes, outcrops, quarries, rivers, caves, and springs that connect Paleozoic stratigraphy with the assembly of Gondwana, continental glaciation with Quaternary geo-morphology and hydrology, and landscape with the human environment.

FLD051, 434 p., ISBN 9780813700519 | $64.00 | member price $45.00 |

Also of Interest

FLD041: Exploring the Geology of the Inland Northwest

SPE490: Mima Mounds: The Case for Polygenesis and Bioturbation

SPE497P: The Columbia River Flood Basalt Province

REG020: Landslides and Engineering Geology of the Seattle, Washington, Area

DNAGCFG1P: DNAG Centennial Field Guide 1—Cordilleran Section

Related Books

Related Books

FLD039: Diverse Excursions in the Southeast: Paleozoic to Present

FLD035: Elevating Geoscience in the Southeastern United States

DNAGCFG6P: DNAG Centennial Field Guide 6—Southeastern Section

More at the Store

You May Also Like

SPE531: Paleozoic Stratigraphy and Resources of the Michigan Basin

SPE530: Quaternary Glaciation of the Great Lakes Region

FLD031P: Insights into the Michigan Basin

FLD012P: From the Cincinnati Arch to the Illinois Basin: Field Excursions along the Ohio River Valley

SPE258P: Geology and Hydrogeology of the Teays-Mahomet Bedrock Valley System

Related Books

10

Explo

re }

Disc

over

} Ac

quire

Ancient Oceans, Orogenic Uplifts, and Glacial Ice

Ancient Oceans, Orogenic Uplifts, and Glacial Ice: Geologic Crossroads in America’s Heartland

Edited by Lee J. Florea

G E O L O G I C C R O S S R O A D S I N A M E R I C A ’ S H E A R T L A N D

Field Guide 51

Field Guide 51

Geology at Every Scale

E D I T E D B Y A N N E T T E S U M M E R S E N G E L A N D R O B E R T D . H A T C H E R J R .

Geology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleGeology at Every ScaleField Excursions for the 2018 GSA Southeastern Section Meeting in Knoxville, Tennessee

GEOLOGY AT EVERY SCALE: Field Excursions for the 2018 GSA Southeastern Section Meeting in Knoxville, Tennessee

Field Guide 50

Field Guide 50

Field Guide 49

Edited by Ralph A. Haugerud and Harvey M. Kelsey

From the Puget Lowland From the Puget Lowland From the Puget Lowland to East of the Cascade Rangeto East of the Cascade Rangeto East of the Cascade Rangeto East of the Cascade Rangeto East of the Cascade Rangeto East of the Cascade RangeG E O L O G I C E X C U R S I O N S I N T H E PA C I F I C N O R T H W E S T

Field Guide 49

Page 11: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Forts, Floods, and Periglacial Features: Exploring the Pittsburgh Low Plateau and Upper Youghiogheny Basin

Edited by Joseph T. Hannibal and Kyle C. Fredrick, 2017

This guidebook provides detailed itinerar-ies of three geological field trips associated with the joint 2017 meeting of the GSA Northeastern and North-Central Sections in Pittsburgh. The first chapter outlines a walking trip of downtown Pittsburgh and the escarpment to its south, consisting of seven

“Pitt stops” providing an introduction and overview of the geological, archaeological, and historical aspects of the first Gateway to the West. The second chapter describes a trip that explores periglacial features, including glacial Lake Monongahela and a rock maze formed by frost wedging, of the Pittsburgh Low Plateau and Upper Youghiogheny River basin in West Virginia, Maryland, and southern Pennsylvania. The third chapter investigates hydrologic aspects of the 1889 Johnstown, Pennsylva-nia, flood, largely following the progress of the flood from its point of origin to the city of Johnstown. Each trip is designed so that it can be done in one day or less.

FLD046, 63 p., ISBN 9780813700465 | $30.00 | member price $20.00 |

Geologic Field Trips of the Canadian Rockies: 2017 Meeting of the GSA Rocky Mountain Section

Edited by Jean C.C. Hsieh, 2017

This field guide volume includes five trips that explore the structural geology, sedi-mentology, and paleontology of the region, as well as exploring the relationship of the geology to the regional petroleum and mining industries. The guides describe the geology of a classic E-W transect through the Canadian Rockies, the stratigraphy of the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Dino-saur Provincial Park, the unique fossils of the Burgess Shale, the Mesoproterozoic Belt Supergroup of the National Parks on both sides of the border, and the sed-imentology of an analog for the prolific petroleum-producing Montney Formation. Grab a copy and head out to the Canadian Rockies!

FLD048, 152 p., ISBN 9780813700489 | $30.00 | member price $20.00 |

From the Blue Ridge to the Beach: Geological Field Excursions across Virginia

Edited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley Jaye, 2017

This volume includes seven field guides that explore the diverse geology of Virginia from its Appalachian highlands to the Atlantic shore. The guides cover an array of topics ranging from cave and karst development in the Valley and Ridge to the exceptional fossil localities at the Carmel Church Quarry and the cliffs near Stratford Hall to Precambrian rocks in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Three guides focus on the Paleozoic to Protero-zoic tectonic history of the Blue Ridge and Piedmont provinces, two guides discuss the stratigraphy and fossil assemblages pre-served in Cenozoic deposits on the Atlantic Coastal Plain, one guide examines Paleozoic stratigraphy and cave formation in western Virginia, and the final guide explores the relationship between the geology of the Fall Zone and the Civil War during the Peters-burg Campaign in 1864–1865.

FLD047, 174 p., ISBN 9780813700472| $42.00 | member price $30.00 |

Related Books

FLD036P: Geologic Field Trips along the Boundary between the Central Lowlands and Great Plains: 2014 Meeting of the GSA North-Central Section

FLD027P: On and around the Cincinnati Arch and Niagara Escarpment: Geological Field Trips in Ohio and Kentucky for the GSA North-Central Section Meeting, Dayton, Ohio, 2012

Shop Online

Also Recommended

FLD042: Gold, Structures, and Landforms in Central South Carolina

SPE509: The 2011 Mineral, Virginia, Earthquake, and Its Significance for Seismic Hazards in Eastern North America

FLD035: Elevating Geoscience in the Southeastern United States: New Ideas about Old Terranes

FLD029: From the Blue Ridge to the Coastal Plain: Field Excursions in the Southeastern United States

Related Books

Related Books

FLD044P: Unfolding the Geology of the West

FLD037: Exploring the Northern Rocky Mountains

SPE434P: Exhumation Associated with Continental Strike-Slip Fault Systems

Similar Topics

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

11

Field Guide 48Field Guide 48Field Guide 48

Edited by Jean C.C. HsiehEdited by Jean C.C. HsiehEdited by Jean C.C. HsiehEdited by Jean C.C. HsiehEdited by Jean C.C. HsiehEdited by Jean C.C. Hsieh

Geologic Field Trips of the Canadian RockiesGeologic Field Trips of the Canadian RockiesGeologic Field Trips of the Canadian Rockies2 0 1 7 M E E T I N G O F T H E G S A R O C K Y M O U N T A I N S E C T I O N2 0 1 7 M E E T I N G O F T H E G S A R O C K Y M O U N T A I N S E C T I O N2 0 1 7 M E E T I N G O F T H E G S A R O C K Y M O U N T A I N S E C T I O N

Field Guide 48

Field Guide 47Field Guide 47Field Guide 47

Edited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley JayeEdited by Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley Jaye

From the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachFrom the Blue Ridge to the BeachG E O L O G I C A L F I E L D E X C U R S I O N S A C R O S S V I R G I N I AG E O L O G I C A L F I E L D E X C U R S I O N S A C R O S S V I R G I N I AG E O L O G I C A L F I E L D E X C U R S I O N S A C R O S S V I R G I N I A

Field Guide 47

Field Guide 46

Field Guide

46

FOR

TS, FLO

OD

S, A

ND

PE

RIG

LAC

IAL FE

ATUR

ES

: FO

RTS

, FLOO

DS

, AN

D P

ER

IGLA

CIA

L FEATU

RE

S:

FOR

TS, FLO

OD

S, A

ND

PE

RIG

LAC

IAL FE

ATUR

ES

: FO

RTS

, FLOO

DS

, AN

D P

ER

IGLA

CIA

L FEATU

RE

S:

Explo

rin

g th

e Pittsb

ur

gh

Low

Plateau

and

Upper

You

gh

iog

hen

y Basin

Explo

rin

g th

e Pittsb

ur

gh

Low

Plateau

and

Upper

You

gh

iog

hen

y Basin

Explo

rin

g th

e Pittsb

ur

gh

Low

Plateau

and

Upper

You

gh

iog

hen

y Basin

Explo

rin

g th

e Pittsb

ur

gh

Low

Plateau

and

Upper

You

gh

iog

hen

y Basin

Edited by

J.T. Hannibal J.T. Hannibal and

K.C. FredrickK.C. Fredrick

Field Guide 46

Page 12: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

The Geoscience Handbook 2016: AGI Data Sheets, 5th Edition

Edited and compiled by Mark B. Carpenter and Christopher M. Keane Graphics by Kat Cantne

Featuring the contributions of over 240 experts worldwide in their respective fields, this expanded edition has more than 470 full-color

pages. Three years of work went into the Handbook to broaden its scope across the disciplines. With more than 170 complete new data sheets, and full revisions of prior data sheets, over 85% of the content is either new or revised. The Geoscience Handbook is the quick reference tool for key metrics and

concepts, a guide to cornerstone papers and recent devel-opments, as well as short tutorials on relevant topics. Published by the American Geosciences Institute.

DATASHEETS, 478 p., 5"× 8" spiral bound, ISBN 9780913312476 | $59.99 | GSA member price $49.99 |

DoohicKey 6x Key ToolNITEDOO, Size: 2.6" × 0.7" × 0.1" (64.8 mm × 17.2 mm × 2.5 mm); Weight: 0.4 oz (12 g) | $4.99 |

Gear Tie Key Ring in BlueNITEKEYB | $3.99 |

Gear Tie Key Ring in Yellow NITEKEYY | $3.99 |

S-Biner Ahhh NITEAHHH | $3.99 |

S-Biner Dual Carabiner Aluminum (Lime Green)

NITESBINL | $3.99 |

S-Biner Dual Carabiner Aluminum (Orange) NITESBINO | $3.99 |

Nite Ize®

12

Explo

re }

Disc

over

} Ac

quire

THE GEOSCIENCE

HANDBOOK 2016

AGI Data Sheets, Fifth Edition

Compiled by

Mark B. Carpenter

Christopher M. Keane

Graphics by Kat Cantner

The American Geosciences Institute

The GSA Store offers hundreds of e‑books, most of which are only $9.99.

This searchable selection includes:

} popular field guides and maps;

} out‑of‑print titles on prominent topics; and

} discontinued series, such as Engineering Geology Case Histories and the Decade of North American Geology.

Each book is available as a downloadable and print‑able PDF, including all plates and supplemental material. Popular topics include the Hell Creek Formation, ophiolites, mass extinctions, and plates and plumes.

EXPAND YOUR LIBRARY with GSA E-books

BROWSE

PURCHASE

DOWNLOAD

START YOUR SEARCH

edited byGian Battista Vai and W. Glen E. Caldwell

The Origins of Geology in

Special Paper 411

Field Guide 11

Field Guide to Plutons, Volcanoes, Faults, Reefs, Dinosaurs, and Possible Glaciation in Selected Areas

of Arizona, California, and Nevada

edited by Ernest M. Duebendorfer and Eugene I. Smith

Field Guide 15

edited by Jim E. O’Connor, Rebecca J. Dorsey, and Ian P. Madin

Special Paper 399

dsdsdsdsdddssdssdddddddddh Timeh Timeimeimeimmeemmmemeeeeh Th TThh ih Thhhhhhhh

Edited by Stephen F. Greb and William A. DiMichele

http://rock.geosociety.org/store/

Note CardsGSA publications

have sported stunning cover images over

the years, and we have chosen ten of them for

these note cards. Blank inside for your personal message.

(box of 10 cards4.25" × 5.5")

Product Code: CRD004

5th

Edition

Page 13: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Rite in the Rain notebooks contain all-weather writing paper that sheds water, enabling you to write in any weather using a pencil or an all-weather pen. Our paper is totally recyclable.

Rite in the Rain ProductsProduct

Code PricePocket Organizer Pouch RITRP835 US $ 24.95Shirt Pocket Spiral Notebook in blue RITR235 US $ 3.95Shirt Pocket Spiral Notebook, 3" × 5" RITR135 US $ 3.95Side Spiral Metric Notebook, 45⁄8" × 7"NOW IN BLAZE ORANGE RITROR73 US $ 6.95

Side Spiral Metric Notebook, 45⁄8" × 7" RITR363 US $ 6.95Geology Field Bound Book, 43⁄4" × 71⁄2" RITR540F US $ 21.95Field Book Pouch for 540F Book RITRC540F US $ 28.25Black Field-Flex Memo Book, 31⁄2" × 5" RITR754 US $ 5.45

In the FieldPocket-Sized Sand Grain Sizing FolderThis pocket-sized folder consists of a sphericity/roundness measuring chart; printed examples of well-sorted and poorly sorted grain samples in the fine, medium, and coarse ranges; four actual grain samples illustrating angular, sub-angular, subrounded, and rounded shapes; and six grain size samples (silt, very fine sand, fine sand, medium sand, coarse sand, and very coarse sand). Measurement limits for granules, pebbles, cobbles, and boulders are indicated.

GRN001, single copy | $7.50 | member price $5.95 |

GSA Photo Scale / Time Scale This versatile field tool combines GSA’s popular photo scale and time scale. On one side is our Author’s Photo Scale, cal-ibrated boldly in centimeters (10) and inches (4). Includes a GSA seal for fine focus and an evaluation scale for granular material from 1 to 5 millimeters diameter. The reverse side includes the complete Geologic Time Scale. Sturdy 20-mil × 2.5" × 6.5" tan vinyl printed in blue.

PTS002, pack of 10 | $9.00 | member price $7.50 |

750

1000

1250

1500

1750

2000

2250

2500

2750

3000

3250

3500

3750

260

280

300

320

340

380

360

400

420

440

460

480

500

520

540

4000

PALEOZOIC

PE

RM

IAN

DE

VO

NIA

N

OR

DO

VIC

IAN

SIL

UR

IAN

MIS

SIS

-S

IPP

IAN

PE

NN

SY

L-VA

NIA

N

CA

MB

RIA

N

CA

RB

ON

IFE

RO

US

AGE(Ma)

EPOCHAGE

PICKS(Ma)

PERIOD

252

260

254

265269

272279

290296

304307

299

323

331

347

359

372

383388

393

408411

419423426

433430

439441

427

444445

453458

470467

478

485

494497501

505

490

509 514

521

529

541

GZHELIANKASIMOVIANMOSCOVIANBASHKIRIANSERPUKHOVIANVISEAN

TOURNAISIANFAMENNIAN

FRASNIANGIVETIANEIFELIAN

EMSIANPRAGIANLOCHKOVIAN

315

PRECAMBRIAN

PR

OTE

RO

ZOIC

AR

CH

EA

N

AGE(Ma) EON

ERA

BDY.AGES(Ma)

1000

1200

1800

2050

2300

1400

1600

2500

2800

3200

3600

4000

Lopin-gian

MIDDLE

Guada-lupian

Cisura-lian

LLANDO-VERY

EARLY

EARLY

FURON-GIAN

Epoch 3

Epoch 2

TERRE-NEUVIAN

LATE

LUDLOW

LATE

MIDDLE

WENLOCK

541

635

850

PERIOD

CHANGHSINGIAN

WORDIANROADIAN

WUCHIAPINGIANCAPITANIAN

KUNGURIAN

ASSELIAN

SAKMARIAN

ARTINSKIAN

PRIDOLI

LUDFORDIANGORSTIANHOMERIAN

RHUDDANIAN

TELYCHIANAERONIAN

SHEINWOODIAN

HIRNANTIAN

SANDBIAN

KATIAN

DARRIWILIANDAPINGIAN

AGE 10JIANGSHANIANPAIBIANGUZHANGIANDRUMIANAGE 5AGE 4AGE 3

AGE 2FORTUNIAN

FLOIANTREMADOCIAN

EDIACARANCRYOGENIAN

TONIAN

STENIAN

ECTASIAN

CALYMMIAN

STATHERIAN

OROSIRIAN

RHYACIAN

SIDERIAN

NEOPRO-TEROZOIC

MESOPRO-TEROZOIC

PALEOPRO-TEROZOIC

NEOARCHEAN

MESO-ARCHEAN

PALEO-ARCHEAN

EOARCHEAN

HADEAN

EARLY

EARLY

MIDDLE

MIDDLE

LATE

LATE

3300 Penrose Place • P.O. Box 9140 • Boulder, CO 80301-9140

1-888-443-4472 • 1-303-357-1000 • www.geosociety.org

© 2

015

237

70

80

90

100

110

120

130

140

150

160

170

180

190

210

200

220

230

240

250

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

55

60

65

HIS

T

AN

OM

.

CH

RO

N.

C31

C32

C33

31

32

33

M0rM1

M5

M10

M12M14M16M18

M20

M22

M25

M29

M3

RA

PID

PO

LAR

ITY

CH

AN

GE

S

30 C30

C3434

1 C1

C2

C2A

C3

C3A

C4

C4A

C6

C6A

C6B

C6C

C7

C8

C9

C10

C11

C12

C13

C15

C16

C17

C18

C19

C20

C21

C22

C23

C24

C25

C26

C27

C28

C29

C7A

C5

C5A

C5B

C5C

C5D

C5E

2

2A

3

3A

4

4A

5

5B

5A

5C

6

6A

6B

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

28

29

26

27

7A

6C

5D

5E

30 C30

MESOZOIC

TR

IAS

SIC

JUR

AS

SIC

CR

ETA

CE

OU

S

AGE(Ma)

EPOCHAGE

PICKS

(Ma)

MAGNETIC

POLARITY PERIOD

LATE

EARLY

LATE

EARLY

MIDDLE

LATE

EARLY

MIDDLE

MAASTRICHTIAN

66.0

72.1

83.6

86.3

89.8

93.9

100

113

126

131

134

139

145

152

157

166164

CAMPANIAN

SANTONIAN

CONIACIAN

TURONIAN

CENOMANIAN

ALBIAN

APTIAN

BARREMIAN

HAUTERIVIAN

VALANGINIAN

BERRIASIAN

TITHONIAN

KIMMERIDGIAN

OXFORDIAN

CALLOVIAN

BATHONIAN

BAJOCIAN

AALENIAN

TOARCIAN

PLIENSBACHIAN

SINEMURIAN

HETTANGIAN

NORIAN

RHAETIAN

CARNIAN

LADINIAN

ANISIAN

OLENEKIAN

INDUAN

168170

174

199

191

201

209

241

228

252250247

RA

PID

PO

LAR

ITY

CH

AN

GE

S

CENOZOIC

AGE(Ma)

EPOCHAGE

PICKS

(Ma)

MAGNETIC

POLARITY PERIOD

HIS

T.

AN

OM

.

CH

RO

N.

QUATER-NARY PLEISTOCENE*

MIO

CE

NE

OLI

GO

CE

NE

EO

CE

NE

PA

LEO

CE

NE

PLIOCENE

PIACENZIAN

0.011.8

3.6

5.3

7.2

11.6

13.8

16.0

20.4

23.0

28.1

33.9

37.8

41.2

47.8

56.0

59.2

61.6

66.0

ZANCLEAN

MESSINIAN

TORTONIAN

SERRAVALLIAN

LANGHIAN

BURDIGALIAN

AQUITANIAN

CHATTIAN

RUPELIAN

PRIABONIAN

BARTONIAN

LUTETIAN

YPRESIAN

DANIAN

THANETIAN

SELANDIAN

CALABRIAN

HOLOCENE

PA

LEO

GE

NE

NE

OG

EN

E

GELASIAN2.6

183

GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA

GEOLOGIC TIME SCALE

Get full-size chart: www.gsapubs.org

v. 4.0

Wallet-Size Geologic Time ScaleGreat for handouts or as a portable reference.

CTS003, pack of 25 | $7.00 | member price $5.00 |

Geology Terms in English and Spanish / Terminología Geológica en Español e Inglés

By Henry Aurand, 2000

Sunbelt Pocket Guide, published by Sunbelt Publications.

OPB010, 118 p., 3 5⁄8" × 5" softcover, perfect bound, ISBN 9780932653291 | $9.95 |

DoohicKey 6x Key Tool by Nite Ize®Made of durable stainless steel with a carabiner clip for easy attachment, one end works as a scraper, tape cutter, and scorer; the other end serves as a flat-head screwdriver and pry tool. The outer edge is scored as a ruler in both inches and cen-timeters, the opposite edge features a bottle opener, and the interior is ridged to provide 3 wrench sizes. This tool is airport friendly, so you can take it with you and keep it close at hand.

NITEDOO, Size: 2.6" × 0.7" × 0.1" (64.8 mm × 17.2 mm × 2.5 mm); Weight: 0.4 oz (12 g) | $4.99 |

Drawing Geological Structures

By Jorn H. Kruhl, 2017DRAWGEO, 232 p., 4 ½" x 7" softcover,

ISBN 9781405182324| $40.00 | member price $35.00 |

Field Hydrogeology, 4th Edition

By Rick Brassington, 2017HYDRO, 312 p., 4 ½" x 7" softcover,

ISBN 9781118397398| $55.00 | member price $50.00 |

Basic Geological Mapping, 5th Edition

By Richard J. Lisle, Peter Brabham, and John W. Barnes, 2011

MAPPING, 230 p., 4 1⁄2" × 7" softcover, ISBN 9780470686348

| $50.00 | member price $45.00 |

Sedimentary Rocks in the Field: A Practical Guide, 4th Edition

By Maurice E. Tucker, 2011SEDROCK, 288 p., 4 ½" × 7" softcover,

ISBN 9780470689165 | $67.00 | member price $62.00 |

The Field Description of Igneous Rocks, 2nd Edition

By Dougal Jerram and Nick Petford, 2011

ROCKS, 256 p., 4 1⁄2" × 7" softcover, ISBN 9780470022368

| $49.00 | member price $44.00 |

Field Geophysics, 4th Edition

By John J. Milsom and Asger Eriksen, 2011

GEOPHYS, 304 p., 4 1⁄2" × 7" softcover, ISBN 9780470749845

| $48.00 | member price $43.00 |

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

13

In the Field

for everyday use

Portable POCKET GUIDES

Page 14: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

edited by Rob Young and Lisa Norby

Geological Monitoring

Edited by Rob Young and Lisa Norby, 2009

Previously sold out and now available as a PDF, Geological Monitoring is a practical, nontechnical guide for land manag-ers, educators, and the public that synthesizes representative methods for monitoring short-term and long-term change in geologic features and landscapes.GEOMONP, 305 p., ISBN 9780813760322 | original list $80.00 | now $9.99 |

Walker, J.D., Geissman, J.W., Bowring, S.A., and Babcock, L.E., compilers, 2018, Geologic Time Scale v. 5.0: Geological Society of America, https://doi.org/10.1130/2018.CTS005R3C. ©2018 The Geological Society of America

HIS

T

AN

OM

.

CH

RO

N.

C31

C32

C33

31

32

33

M0rM1

M5

M10

M12M14M16M18M20

M22

M25

M29

M3

RA

PID

PO

LAR

ITY

CH

AN

GE

S

30 C30

C3434

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

55

60

65

1 C1

C2

C2A

C3

C3A

C4

C4A

C6

C6A

C6B

C6C

C7

C8

C9

C10

C11

C12

C13

C15

C16

C17

C18

C19

C20

C21

C22

C23

C24

C25

C26

C27

C28

C29

C7A

C5

C5A

C5B

C5CC5D

C5E

2

2A

3

3A

4

4A

5

5B

5A

5C

6

6A

6B

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

1516

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

28

29

26

27

7A

6C

5D

5E

30 C30

70

80

90

100

110

120

130

140

150

160

170

180

190

210

200

220

230

240

250

MESOZOIC

TR

IAS

SIC

JUR

AS

SIC

CR

ETA

CE

OU

S

AGE(Ma)

EPOCH AGEPICKS(Ma)

MAGNETICPOLARITY

PERIOD

LATE

EARLY

LATE

EARLY

MIDDLE

LATE

EARLY

MIDDLE

MAASTRICHTIAN

CAMPANIAN

SANTONIANCONIACIAN

TURONIAN

CENOMANIAN

ALBIAN

APTIAN

BARREMIAN

HAUTERIVIAN

VALANGINIAN

BERRIASIAN

TITHONIAN

KIMMERIDGIAN

OXFORDIAN

CALLOVIANBATHONIANBAJOCIANAALENIAN

TOARCIAN

PLIENSBACHIAN

SINEMURIAN

HETTANGIAN

NORIAN

RHAETIAN

CARNIAN

LADINIAN

ANISIAN

OLENEKIANINDUAN

66.0

72.1

83.686.389.8

93.9

100.5

~113

~125

~129.4~132.9

~139.8

~145.0

~152.1

~157.3

~166.1~163.5

~168.3~170.3~174.1

~199.3

~190.8

~208.5

~242

~227

251.90251.2247.2

~182.7

~237

~201.3

750

1000

1250

1500

1750

2000

2250

2500

2750

3000

3250

3500

3750

4000

PRECAMBRIAN

PR

OT

ER

OZ

OIC

AR

CH

EA

N

AGE(Ma)

EON ERABDY.

AGES(Ma)

1000

1200

1800

2050

2300

1400

1600

2500

2800

3200

3600

4000

541

635

720

PERIOD

EDIACARAN

CRYOGENIAN

TONIAN

STENIAN

ECTASIAN

CALYMMIAN

STATHERIAN

OROSIRIAN

RHYACIAN

SIDERIAN

NEOPRO-TEROZOIC

MESOPRO-TEROZOIC

PALEOPRO-TEROZOIC

NEOARCHEAN

MESO-ARCHEAN

PALEO-ARCHEAN

EOARCHEAN

HADEAN

260

280

300

320

340

380

360

400

420

440

460

480

500

520

540

PALEOZOIC

PE

RM

IAN

DE

VON

IAN

OR

DO

VIC

IAN

SIL

UR

IAN

MIS

SIS

-S

IPP

IAN

PE

NN

SYL-

VAN

IAN

CA

MB

RIA

NC

AR

BO

NIF

ER

OU

S

AGE(Ma) EPOCH AGE

PICKS(Ma)PERIOD

GZHELIANKASIMOVIAN

MOSCOVIAN

BASHKIRIAN

SERPUKHOVIAN

VISEAN

TOURNAISIAN

FAMENNIAN

FRASNIAN

GIVETIANEIFELIAN

EMSIAN

PRAGIANLOCHKOVIAN

Lopin-gian

MIDDLE

Guada-lupian

Cisura-lian

LLANDO-VERY

EARLY

EARLY

FURON-GIAN

Epoch 3

Epoch 2

TERRE-NEUVIAN

LATE

LUDLOW

LATE

MIDDLE

WENLOCK

CHANGHSINGIAN

WORDIANROADIAN

WUCHIAPINGIAN

CAPITANIAN

KUNGURIAN

ASSELIANSAKMARIAN

ARTINSKIAN

PRIDOLILUDFORDIAN

GORSTIANHOMERIAN

RHUDDANIAN

TELYCHIANAERONIAN

SHEINWOODIAN

HIRNANTIAN

SANDBIANKATIAN

DARRIWILIANDAPINGIAN

AGE 10JIANGSHANIAN

PAIBIANGUZHANGIAN

DRUMIANAGE 5AGE 4

AGE 3

AGE 2

FORTUNIAN

FLOIAN

TREMADOCIAN

EARLY

EARLY

MIDDLE

MIDDLE

LATE

LATE

251.90

259.1

254.14

265.1268.8272.95~283.5

290.1295.0

303.7307.0

298.9

323.2

330.9

346.7

358.9

~372.2

~382.7

~387.7

~393.3

~407.6~410.8

~419.2~423.0~425.6

~433.4~430.5

~438.5~440.8

~427.4

~443.8~445.2

~453.0~458.4

~470.0~467.3

~477.7

~485.4

~494~497~500.5~504.5

~489.5

~509 ~514

~521

~529

541.0

315.2

GSA GEOLOGIC TIME SCALE v. 5.0CENOZOIC

AGE(Ma)

EPOCH AGEPICKS(Ma)

MAGNETICPOLARITY

PERIOD

HIS

T.

AN

OM

.

CH

RO

N.

QUATER-NARY PLEISTOCENE*

MIO

CE

NE

OLI

GO

CE

NE

EO

CE

NE

PALE

OC

EN

E

PLIOCENEPIACENZIAN

ZANCLEAN

MESSINIAN

TORTONIAN

SERRAVALLIAN

LANGHIAN

BURDIGALIAN

AQUITANIAN

CHATTIAN

RUPELIAN

PRIABONIAN

BARTONIAN

LUTETIAN

YPRESIAN

DANIAN

THANETIAN

SELANDIAN

CALABRIANHOLOCENE

PALE

OG

EN

EN

EO

GE

NE

GELASIAN

TE

RT

IAR

Y

0.0121.8

3.600

5.333

7.246

11.63

13.82

15.97

20.44

23.03

27.82

33.9

37.8

41.2

47.8

56.0

59.2

61.6

66.0

2.58

*The Pleistocene is divided into four ages, but only two are shown here. What is shown as Calabrian is actually three ages—Calabrian from 1.80 to 0.781 Ma, Middle from 0.781 to 0.126 Ma, and Late from 0.126 to 0.0117 Ma. The Cenozoic, Mesozoic, and Paleozoic are the Eras of the Phanerozoic Eon. Names of units and age boundaries usually follow the Gradstein et al. (2012), Cohen et al. (2012) , and Cohen et al. (2013, updated) compilations. Numerical age estimates and picks of boundaries usually follow the Cohen et al. (2013, updated) compilation. The numbered epochs and ages of the Cambrian are provisional. A “~” before a numerical age estimate typically indicates an associated error of ±0.4 to over 1.6 Ma. REFERENCES CITEDCohen, K.M., Finney, S., and Gibbard, P.L., 2012, International Chronostratigraphic Chart: International Commission on Stratigraphy, www.stratigraphy.org (accessed May 2012). (Chart reproduced for the 34th International Geological Congress, Brisbane,

Australia, 5–10 August 2012.) Cohen, K.M., Finney, S.C., Gibbard, P.L., and Fan, J.-X., 2013, The ICS International Chronostratigraphic Chart: Episodes v. 36, no. 3, p. 199–204 (updated 2017, v. 2, http://www.stratigraphy.org/index.php/ics-chart-timescale; accessed May 2018).Gradstein, F.M, Ogg, J.G., Schmitz, M.D., et al., 2012, The Geologic Time Scale 2012: Boston, USA, Elsevier, https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-444-59425-9.00004-4. Previous versions of the time scale and previously published papers about the time scale and its evolution are posted to http://www.geosociety.org/timescale.

Geologic Time Scale Poster v. 5.0

Compiled by J.D. Walker, J.W. Geissman, S.A. Bowring, and L.E. Babcock, 2018

Use this colorful, poster-size version of GSA’s Geologic Time Scale to decorate your office or classroom. GTSPOS | 20" × 26" | $9.95 |

Managing the Gulf Coast Using Geology and Engineering

By Richard A. Davis Jr., Nicole Elko, and Ping Wang, 2018

The Gulf of Mexico is an excellent region for considering coastal management as it applies to the physical barrier/inlet system because of the coast’s varied environments, from remote areas to huge urban popula-tions, and its tidal inlets—some natural, some dredged, and others that have been structured for more than a century. In discussing options for managing and pro-tecting the various elements of the barrier/inlet system, the authors consider each approach in terms of cost, logistics, and past successes or failures. Anthropogenic impact as well as the problems generated by natural processes (from hurricanes to seaweed invasions) are covered, as is the impact of management decisions, providing decision makers with a valuable resource filled with examples and information.

GULFMAN, 102 p., ISBN 9780813741239| $28.00 | member price $20.00 |

14

Explo

re }

Disc

over

} Ac

quire

By Richard A. Davis Jr., Nicole Elko, and Ping Wang

Managing the Gulf Coast Using Geology and Engineering

By R

ichard A. D

avis Jr., Nicole Elko, and Ping W

angM

anaging the Gulf C

oast Using G

eology and Engineering

Explore the wonders of geoscience using these teaching resources.

Eteach Resources Product NameProduct

CodeList

PriceMember

Price

Geoscience Teaching Materials} Our Explore Geoscience materials

are available as downloads.} Resources include up-to-date back-

ground information, numerous hands-on/minds-on activities, images, and 3D models.

} Each product was written by geo-science teachers for geoscience teachers … so you know it works!

EarthCaching: An Educator’s Guide ET0013 FREEExplore Deep Time ET0011 $8.95 $6.95Explore Earth Cycles ET0009 $8.95 $6.95Explore Fossils ET0008 $8.95 $6.95Explore Silicate Chemistry ET0010 $8.95 $6.95The Science and Technology of Gold ET0012 $8.95 $6.95Explore Energy ET0004 $8.95 $6.95Explore Plate Tectonics ET0003 $8.95 $6.95Explore Tsunami ET0007 $8.95 $6.95Explore Volcanoes - Elementary ET0005 $8.95 $6.95Explore Volcanoes - Secondary ET0006 $8.95 $6.95Explore Cross Sections ET0002 $8.95 $6.95Explore Geoscience Models ET0001 $29.99 $23.99

In and Out of the ClassroomCoastal Management

v. 5.0

Page 15: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Facies Models 4

Edited by Noel P. James and Robert W. Dalrymple, 2010

The essential volume on sedimentary succession interpretation, this full-color textbook by the Geological Association of Canada incorpo-rates the enormous advances in our understanding of depositional environments since the last edition (1992). Written for the advanced undergraduate- to graduate-student level, this book is accessible to anyone with an interest in sedimentary environments.

GACGT6, 575 p. plus index, ISBN 9781897095508 | $100.00 | member price $85.00 |

N 7m=14.007

14 15

r=1.71

Reduced nitrogen

3–

(as NH4+)

S 16

32 33 34 36

r=1.84m=32.066Sulfur as sulfide

2–

78 80 82

Se

m=78.96

74 76 77r=1.98

Selenium342–

as selenide

Br 35

m=79.904

79 81 (82)

r=1.95(7+ r=0.39)

Bromine

as bromide

Cl 17

m=35.453

35 37

r=1.81

Chlorineas chloride

C 6m=12.011

12 13 14

r=2.60

Reduced carbon

4–

15

m=30.974r=2.12

Phosphorus

3–

as phosphide

P

51

r=2.45

121 123

Sb

m=121.760

Antimony

3–

as antimonide

Noble Gases

Ani

ons

with

w

hich

har

d ca

tions

pr

efer

entia

lly

coor

dina

te

Anions

(No ionization)

Ani

ons

with

w

hich

sof

t cat

ions

pr

efer

entia

lly

coor

dina

te

Inte

rmed

iate

Anions that commonly coordinate with H+

(e.g., as CH4, NH3, H2S, H2O, etc.)

At 85

215 218 219

AstatineRn 86

(222)

220 222218 219

Radon

Si 14

m=28.086r=2.71

Silicon as silicide

4–

Most known natural occurrences of phosphides and silicides are in metorites

and cosmic dust.

Most natural occurrences of carbides and nitrides are in meteorites or mantle phases.

He 2

3 4

Helium

m=4.0026r=1.2

Ne 10

20 21 22

Neon

m=20.180r=1.5

Ar 18

36 38 40

Argon

m=39.948r=1.8

Kr 36

78 80 8283 84 86

Kryptonm=83.80

r=1.9

Xe 54

129 130 131132 134 136

124 126 128

Xenonm=131.29

r=2.1

As 33m=74.922

75

r=2.22

Arsenic as arsenide

3–

Cations that coordinate with H2O(or CO3

2– or SO42–)

in solution

Cations that coordinate with O2– in solution (e.g., as

NO3–, PO4

3–, SO42–, etc.)

Noble Gases(No ionization)

z/r = 1

Rn 86(222)

219 220 222

Radon

z/r = 4z/r = 2

"Hard" or "Type A" Cations(All electrons removed from outer shell)

(Thus a noble-gas-like configuration of the outer shell)

Coordinate F>O>N=Cl>Br>I>S

Where Fe2+

and Fe3+ would fall if they were

hard cations

He 2m=4.0026

3 4

Helium

r=1.2

Ne 10m=20.180

20 21 22

Neon

r=1.5

Ar 18

m=39.948

36 38 40

Argon

r=1.8

Kr 36m=83.80

78 80 8283 84 86

Krypton

r=1.9

Xe 54m=131.29

129 130 131132 134 136

124 126 128

Xenon

r=2.1

ionic charge ÷ionic radius

= 32 =zr

Cs 55m=132.905

133

r=1.69

Cesium ion

+

Fr 87(223)

223

r=1.76

Francium ion

(<30 g in crust)very rare

+137 138

Ba 56m=137.327

130 132r=1.35

134 135 136

Barium ion

2+

Ra 88(226)

223 224

r=1.40

226 228

Radium ion

2+

Cations that coordinate with OH–

or O2– in solution

z / r= 16

?

Ac 89m=227.03

r=1.18

227 228

?Actinium ion

3+ Pu 94Plutonium

Very limitednatural

on Earthoccurrence

239

Np 93Neptunium

237 ?

Very limitednatural

on Earthoccurrence

Pa 91(231)

(+4 r=0.98)

231 234

Protactinium ion

5+

Cations that coordinate

with OH– (orH2O) in solution

+Li 3m=6.941

6 7

r=0.60

Lithium ion

Na 11m=22.990

23

Sodium ion

r=0.95

+

+

Rb 37m=85.468

85 87

r=1.48

Rubidium ion

+

Be 4m=9.012

9

r=0.31

Beryllium ion

2+

Sr 38m=87.62

87 8884 86

r=1.13

Strontium ion

2+

B 5

m=10.811

10 11

r=0.20

Boron as borate (B(OH)3

3+

or B(OH)4–)

C 6

12 13 14

m=12.011

Carbon, as CO2,

2-& carbonate (CO3 )

4+

bicarbonate (HCO3)-

15r=0.

r=0.46

Mn7+

(MnO4– )

Cr 24

m=51.996

50 52 53 54

r=0.52

Chromium as chromate (CrO42–)

6+V 23

m=50.942

50 51r=0.59

Vanadium ione.g., as vanadate

5+

96 98 100

Mo 42

m=95.94

92 94 95 97r=0.62

Molybdenum as molybdate

6+

Re 75

m=186.207r=0.56

185 187

Rhenium ion

7+

r=0.68

W 74

180 182 183184 186

m=183.84

Tungsten (Wolfram) as tungstate

6+

Tc 43

(100)

TechnetiumVery limited

natural

on Earthoccurrence

99

Elements 95 and beyond do not occur naturally: 95: Americium 96: Curium 97:Berkelium 98 Californium 99: Einsteinium100: Fermium

101: Mendelevium102: Nobelium103: Lawrencium104: Rutherfordium105: Hahnium "Soft" ("Type B") Cations

(Many electrons remain in outer shell)Coordinate I>Br>S>Cl=N>O>F

z r/= 4

Intermediate Cations(Some electrons remain in outer shell)Coordination with S or O likely

z/r = 16

Po

210 211 212

216 218214 215

84Polonium

zr/ = 8

coordinate with O2– (± OH–) in solutionCations that

3+ r= 0.64

Mn 25

4+ r=0.53

Manganese ion

3,4+ Fe 26

r=0.64

Ferric iron

3+ Co 27

r=0.63

Cobaltic cobalt

3+ Sn 50r=0.71

Stannic tin4+

Sn 50m=118.710

112 114 115 116r=1.12

120 122 124117 118 119

Stannous tin

2+

102 104

Ru 44m=101.07

96 98 99

3+ r=0.694+ r=0.67

100 101

Ruthenium ion3,4+

Pd 46m=106.42

102 104 105106 108 110

r=0.86

Palladium ion

2+

Re 75m=186.207

185 187

r=0.65

Rhenium ion

4+

212 214

Pb 82m=207.2

204 206 207

r=1.20

208 210 211

Plumbous lead

2+

Pb 82r=0.84Plumbic lead

4+

Bi 83m=208.980

r=1.20

212 214 215209 210 211

Bismuth ion

3+

Bi 83r=0.74

Bismuth ion5+

z/r =

8

As 33r=0.47

arsenate (AsO43–)

5+

As 33m=74.922

75

Arsenic,

r=0.69

as in arsenites

3+r=0.62

Sb 51antimonate5+

Sb 51

m=121.760r=0.90

121 123

Antimony ion,

3+

as in antimonites

S 16r=0.37

4+as sulfite (SO32–)

Sulfur Se 34r=0.42

selenate (SeO42–)

6+

52r=0.56

Te tellurate6+

128 130

52

m=127.60

120 122 123r=0.89

124 125 126

TeTellurium ion,

4+

as in tellurites

53

r=0.44

IodineI5+

as iodate (IO3 )–

m=126.904

Rare earth elements (REEs)(effectively "Hard" or "Type A" cations in their 3+ state)

176Hf?

No natural occurrence

on Earth

Pm 61

(150)?

Promethium

z/r = 2

138Ba

Lantha-nides:

z/r =

4

*For the sake of simplicity,

232Th-208Pb series are omitted.the 235U-207Pb and

z/r =

2

= ionic charge ÷

ionic radius

z/r=

1

La 57

m=138.906r=1.15

138 139

Lanthanum ion

3+

142

Ce 58m=140.116

136 138 140r=1.11

Cerium ion

3+

148 150

Nd 60m=144.24

142 143 144r=1.08

146 145?

Neodymium ion

3+

Eu 63m=151.964

151 153r=1.03

Europium ion

3+

Gd 64m=157.25

152 154 155r=1.02

158 160156 157

Gadolinium ion

3+Tb 65

m=158.925r=1.00

159

Terbium ion

3+ Dy 66m=162.50

156 158r=0.99

163 164160 161 162

Dysprosium ion

3+Ho 67

m=164.930

165

r=0.97

Holmium ion

3+ Er 68m=167.26

162 164 166

r=0.96

167 168 170

Erbium ion

3+Tm 69

m=168.934

169

r=0.95

Thulium ion

3+ Yb 70m=173.04

168 170 171

r=0.94(2+ r= 1.13)

174 176172 173

Ytterbium ion

3+

Lu 71m=174.967

175 176r=0.93

Lutetium ion

3+Pr 59m=140.908

141

r=1.09(4+ r=0.92)

Praseodymium ion3+r=1.01

Ce 58Cerium ion

4+

152 154

Sm 62m=150.36

144 147 148r=1.04

149 150

Samarium ion

3+

Eu 63

r=1.12Europium ion

Substitutes for Ca2+

2+

C6

Diamond

r=0.77& graphite

S16

SulfurSi14

r=1.34Silicon

Se34

Selenium

r=1.6

Cd48

Cadmium

r=1.56

In49

Indium

r=1.66

52Te

Tellurium

r=1.7

Re75

Rhenium

r=1.37

Ta73

Tantalum

r=1.46

Gases

Non-metals

Metals

O8

2oxygen

Molecular

Bi83

Bismuth

r=1.82

Pb82Lead

r=1.75

Cr24

Chromium

r=1.27

Co27

Cobalt

r=1.25

Ni28

Nickel

r=1.24

Fe26

Ironr=1.26

Pd46

Palladium

r=1.37

Rh45

Rhodium

r=1.34

Ru44

Ruthenium

r=1.34

Os76

Osmium

r=1.35

Ir77

Iridium

r=1.35

Zn30Zinc

r=1.39

Al13

Aluminumr=1.43

As33

Arsenic

r=1.48

Sb51

Antimony

r=1.61

Sn50Tin

r=1.58

Au79

Gold

r=1.44

Ag47Silver

r=1.44

Pt78

Platinum

r=1.38

Cu29

Copper

r=1.28

Hg80

Mercury

r=1.60

Tl81

Thallium

r=1.71

Elemental Forms

other than noble gases(uncharged)

Principal elements in iron meteorites (Fe>>Ni>>Co) and, with S or O, presumably domi-nant elements in Earth's core

and isotopic

are omitted toconserve space)

(Atomic masses

information

FeZrLiLu

10 most abundant elements in Earth's crust11th to 20th most abundant elements in Earth's crust21st to 40th most abundant elements in Earth's crust41st to 92nd most abundant elements in Earth's crust

Elements that are thought to make up most of the Earth's core (Fe>Ni>Co), along with possibly S or O

Elements that occur as native minerals, recognized in antiquity ( recognized from Middle Ages to 1862; recognized after 1963.)

Elements that make natural mineral alloys with FeElements that make natural mineral alloys with CuElements that make natural mineral alloys with OsElements that make natural mineral alloys with PtElements that make natural mineral alloys with Au

See also Insets 1 to 5 and 7.

Inset 7: Conceptual model of the behavior of oxides of hard (and intermediate) cations

Li NCations

Rb O2–

Low z/r

High z/r

Weak cation-oxygen bonds

Strong cation-oxygen bonds

cation-cation

Strongbonds, but

repulsion

H+

Intermediate z/r

Si 14

m=28.086

28 29 30

r=0.41

as silicate (SiO44–)

4+

or Si(OH)40

Cr 24m=51.996

50 52 53 54

r=0.69

chromium

3+Chromic

54 56 57 58

Ions concentrated in deep-sea ferromanganese nodules relative to seawater

Ions commonly concentrated in residual soils and residual sediments. Small symbol ( ) indicates less certainty.

with full outer electron shells

La 3+Ba2+ Hf 4+Cs +

Y 3+Sr 2+ Zr 4+ Nb5+Rb+

Ca2+ Ti 4+ V 5+K +

AlMg2+ Si 4+ P5+Na +

B 3+Be2+ C4+Li +

3+

251BromelliteChrysoberyl

240

Periclase160

254Corundum

198

Spinel

38Quartz

210

Perovskite

216Rutile

115Lime

87

71

3

145

152*

175

Tausonite

38Quartz

Mineral of one cation:

71Nonmineral:

210Perovskite

Mineral of two cations:

200

150100

50

Inset 1: Bulk modulus (Ks in GPa) of oxide minerals of hard cations

*Baddeleyite has

at ambient condi-

Ks = 95 GPa but

stable ZrO2 phase

is for the latter.

is not the most

tions; value shown

z / r=

1

z / r=

1

z / r= 4

Cd 48

114 116111 112 113

r=0.97106 108 110

m=112.411Cadmium ion

2+In 49

m=114.818

1+ r=1.32

113 115

3+ r=0.81

Indium ion

1,3+

Au 79m=196.967

r=1.37

197

Gold ion

(3+ r=0.85)

+ Tl 81m=204.383

r=1.40

207 208 210203 205 206

Thallous thallium

+

Tl 81r=0.95

Thallic thallium

3+202 204 206

Hg 80m=200.59

196 198 199r=1.19

200 201

Mercurous ion

+

Ag 47m=107.868

r=1.26

107 109

Silver ion

+

+

63 65

Cu 29m=63.546

r=0.96

Cuprous copper

Cr 24r=0.90

chromium

2+Chromous

H 1

1 2 3

Hydrogen ion

m=1.0079r=10-5

+

Ni 28

r=0.73

Nickel ion

3+

61 62 64

Ni 28m=58.693

58 60r=0.72

Nickel ion2+

r=0.62

Ga 31m=69.723

69 71

(1+ r=1.13)

Gallium ion

3+

70 72 73 74 76

Ge 32m=72.61

(2+ r=0.93)r=0.53

Germanium ion4+

because it speciates both as I– (to right)

Iodine is shown twice as a solute in seawater

and IO3 (here).–

H 1m=1.0079

1 2 3r=2.08

Hydrogen–

as hydride

O 8m=15.999

16 17 18

r=1.40

2–Oxygen as oxide

Hg 80r=1.10

Mercuric ion2+

zr = 8/

zr =

8/

z/r =

4

z / r=

2

CrMn

2+

Fe 3+

Fe2+

Co2+

Ni2+

Cu+ Zn2+

Sn4+

Pb2+

Bi3+

2603

2054 1652

1838

2078 2228 15092242

1903

10981170

BismiteMassicot

Cassiterite

Bunsenite Cuprite

Zincite

Hematite

Manga-nosite Sb

928

As547

Cd2+

>1773

Cu2+

1719

Tenorite

Ga3+

2079Ge

4+

1388

Ag~473(d)

+

Tl852

+

Tl3+

1107

Sn2+

1353(d)

Hg2+

773(d)Montroydite

Valentinite

Auno stable

oxide

+

2400

2000

1600

1200

800

Inset 6: Melting and decomposition (d) temperatures (K) of oxides of intermediate and soft cations

Co3+

1168 (d)V

4+

2240

Mn3+

1353(d)

As5+

588

In3+

2185Pd

2+

1023(d)Rh

2+

1373(d)Mo

4+

1373(d)

W4+

~1773(d)Re

4+

1173(d)Pt

2+

598(d)

Au3+

423(d)Hg+

373(d)

Arsenolite

3+1600

2000

Avicennite

Ir4+

1273 (d)

1200Eskolaite

3+

Wüstite

Tugarinovite

Paramont-roseite

Argutite3+

RomarchiteMonteponite

400

See also Inset 3.

Commonly coordinate with O of carboxyl groups of organic ligands

Commonly coordinate with C of organic ligands, as in methylmercury

Sc 21m=44.956

45

r=0.81

(48)

Scandium ion

3+

Al 13

m=26.982

27

r=0.50

3+Aluminum ion asAl3+ or Al(OH)n3–n

Fe3+

49 50

Ti 22m=47.867

46 47 48

r=0.68

Titanic titanium

4+

Zr 40m=91.224

90 91

r=0.80

92 94 96 ?

Zirconium ion

4+

La & 57-REEs 71

170Yb

See below

3+ Hf 72m=178.49

174 176 177

r=0.81

178 179 180

Hafnium ion

4+Ta 73

m=180.948

180 181

r=0.73

Tantalum ion

5+

as tantalate

Th 90m=232.038

227 228 230

r=0.95(+3 r=1.14)

231 234

Thorium ion

232*

4+ 92Uranium ionr=0.97

U4+

74

m=183.84

180 182 183

r=0.64

184 186

WTungsten (Wolfram)

ion

4+

190 192

Os 76m=190.23

184 186

r=0.69

187 188 189

Osmium ion

4+ Ir 77m=192.217

r=0.66

191 193

Iridium ion

4+97 98 100

42m=95.94

92 94 95 96r=0.68

MoMolybdenum ion

4+

r=0.61

V 23Vanadium ion

4+

V 23m=50.942

50 51r=0.74

vanadium

3+Vanadous

Ti 22r=0.90Titanium ion

2+

Ti 22r=0.75Titanium ion

3+

4 most abundant constituents in atmosphere

5th to 8th most abundant

Anions that form minerals with K+ and Na+

Anions that form minerals with Al3+, Ti4+, and Zr4+

Anions that form minerals with Si4+

Anions that form minerals with Mg2+

Cations that form simple oxide minerals Cations that form simple sulfide minerals

Cations that form simple fluoride minerals

Cations that form oxysalt minerals (e.g., S6+ in sulfates, As5+ in arsenates)

Cations that form simple bromide or iodide minerals

Anions that form minerals with Au+Anions that form minerals with Ag+Anions that form minerals with Cu+

128 130

52

m=127.60

120 122 123r=2.21

124 125 126

TeTellurium

2–

as telluride

Bi 83

m=208.980

Bismuth as

2–,3–

bismuthide

The only bismuthide minerals are of

Pd, Ag, Pt, Au, and Pb

Y 39m=88.906

89

Yttrium ion

r=0.93

3+ Nb 41

m=92.906r=0.70

Niobium (orColumbium) ion

(96)93

5+ Rh 45m=102.906

r=0.86

103

Rhodium ion

2+

Pt 78m=195.078

190 192 193

r=0.96

196 198194 195

?

Platinum ion

2+

z r/=

1 2

z r/=

1–

z r/=

2–

78 80 82

Se 34m=78.96

74 76 77r=0.50

4+

as selenite(SeO32–)Selenium

F 9m=18.998

19

r=1.36

Fluorineas fluoride

Periclase

La 3+ Hf 4+ Ta5+ W6+

Y 3+Sr2+ Zr 4+ Nb5+ Mo6+

Ca2+ Ti 4+ V 5+K + Cr 6+

AlMg2+Si 4+ P5+Na + S6+

B 3+Be2+ C4+ N5+Li +

Th4+

3+

Corundum

Lime

Quartz

Shcherbinaite

Molybdite

Tantite

Baddeleyite

Inset 4: Solubility of oxide minerals of hard cations

4.4Bromellite

–7.4 2.77

9.9–2.4 –8.1 –3.9 –1.37

14.01.4

Sc3+

–9.7 –7.6

Rb+

28.94.3

Ba2+6.7

Log of activity of cation species in distilled water at 25 °C

–9.7

Mineral

Thorianite

Rutile

La 3+ Hf 4+ Ta5+ W6+

Y 3+Sr2+ Zr 4+ Nb5+ Mo6+

Ti 4+ V 5+ Cr 6+

Al Si 4+ P5+ S6+

B 3+Be2+ C 4+ N5+Li +

Th4+

3+

9

PericlaseMg2+

Na +

5.5-67.5-8 9 7

3-3.55.5

Perovskite

3-4

7

6

Spinel

Corundum

Bromellite

Ca2+K +3.5Lime

Quartz

Shcherbinaite

Molybdite

Tantite

Thorianite

Baddeleyite

6.5Srilankite

>9(Ru=6-6.5)

Chrysoberyl8.5

*A non-rutile synthetic TiO2is the hardest known oxide

Inset 2: Hardness of oxide minerals of hard cations

7Quartz

Mineral of one cation:

5.5

Perovskite

Mineral of two cations

H=4

H=4

H=6

H=8

H=6

Hardness (Mohs scale)

*

6.5

3000

La 3+Ba2+ Hf 4+ Ta5+Cs + W6+

Y 3+Sr 2+ Zr 4+ Nb5+Rb+ Mo6+

Sc3+Ca2+ Ti 4+ V 5+K+ Cr 6+

AlMg2+ Si 4+ P5+Na + S6+

B 3+Be2+ C4+ N5+Li +

Th4+

1700

1193

2681 723 216

3125 1996 855 290

3200 2103 943

673 2938 3123 1785 1074

2286 25802500

3173 2058 1745

3493

25002000

1000

500

3000

2000

1500 1500

2345

3+

Inset 3: Melting T(K) of oxides of hard cations

See also Inset 6.

v. 4.8e 02 22 October 2012

92

234 235 238

Uranium

*r=0.7

m=238.029

U

as uranyl (UO22+)

6+

F–

Cl–

Br–

I–

Anion:

Na+( )-, and Mg2+( )-bearing halides (mol/L)

HgI2

Villiaumite

Halite

100110-210-410-610-8

Sellaite

Chlorargyrite

Bromargyrite

Iodargyrite

NaBr

NaI

AgF

MgBr2

MgI2

MineralNonmineral

HgBr2

HgCl2

Solubility of Ag+( )-, Hg2+( )-,

(AgCl)

(AgBr)

(AgI)

(MgF2)(NaF)

(NaCl)

MgCl2

of hard and soft cationsInset 8: Solubility of halides

I 53

r=2.16(7+ r=0.50)

(124) 127(128) (130)

Iodine as iodidem=126.904

r=0.25

Fe 26as ferrate or

6+

perferrate (FeO42–)

= ionic potentialor charge density

zr = ionic charge ÷

ionic radius

Ge 54m=72.59

2 3 4

r=1.05

Ionic Radius (r) (Å)

Atomic MassMost abundant (bold)Radioactive (italicized)

β-β+EC,

α

Naturally occurring isotopes

Radioactivedecay pathways

Outline solid for naturally occurring elements or ions;dashed for ones that rarely or never occur in nature.

ActiniumElement Name

Atomic Number(number of protons)

Symbol(see scale at far right) 3+

(or elemental radius for elemental forms)

Permanganate (MnO4–) is a hard cation

shown to leftChromate

(CrO42–) is a

hard cation shown to left

MgAlBO4(Sinhalite)

Me2+CO3KNO3(Niter)

Na2SO4(Thenardite)

CaSO4(Anhydrite)Al2SiO5 (K-S-A)

ZrSiO4 (Zircon)

KAl2Si3O8 (Kspar)

AlPO4(Berlinite)

Na3PO4(Olympite)

(e.g., Calcite)

Si 4+ P5+ S6+

B 3+ C4+ N5+

Inset 5: Typical simple oxysalt minerals (__MOn minerals without OH or H2O)

Minerals withcations of very low

ionic potential(e.g., K+, Na+, Ba2+)

Minerals with cations of low (e.g., K+) to moderate (e.g., Al3+) ionic potential

"K-S-A" indicates kyanite,andalusite, & sillimanite.

NaNO3(Natratine)

Minerals with cations of low ionic

potential

8 most abundant solutes dissolved in seawater9th to 16th most abundant 17th to 22nd most abundant

2nd to 8th most abundant solutes in average river water Most abundant solute in average river water (HCO3

–)

Ions that enter later phases in igneous rocks because of their large size (mostly "large-ion lithophiles")

Ions that enter early-forming phases in igneous rocks

Ions least depleted from mantle in formation of crustIons enriched in CAIs (Ca-Al-rich inclusions in meteorites) relative to the composition of the solar system

Solutes that can be limiting nutrients in the oceans

Macronutrient solutes on land Micronutrient solutes on land

Ions essential to the nutrition of at least some vertebrates ("essential minerals")

Solutes that can be limiting nutrients in the growth of bacteria

Fe 26m=55.845r=0.76

Ferrous iron

2+

N 7

m=14.007

14 15

r=0.11

Nitrogenas nitrate (NO3–)

5+

P

m=30.974

31r=0.34

Phosphorus as51

phosphate (PO43–

5+

and HPO42–)

S 16

m=32.066

32 33 34 36

r=0.29

Sulfur assulfate (SO42–)

6+

K 19m=39.098

39 40 41

r=1.33

Potassium ionCa 20

m=40.078

40 42 4344 46 48

Calcium ion

2+

r=0.99

Mg 12m=24.305

24 25 26

r=0.65

Magnesium ion

2+

Fe2+

55

Mn 25m=54.938

r=0.80

Manganous Mn

2+

59

Co 27m=58.933r=0.74

Cobaltous cobalt

2+r=0.69

Cu 29Cupric copper

2+

Zn 30m=65.39

64 66

r=0.74

67 68 70

Zinc ion

2+

r=0.27

Cl7+

(ClO4– )

as per-chlor-nate

as per-manga-

nate

42Mo2+

Nb414+

Nb413+

H1

2hydrogenMolecular

2N 7

nitrogenMolecular O

8

as inatmosphericOH0, HO2, and H2O2

1–

Anionswith incomplete outer electron

shells

Also see Inset 9.

Ions

that

tend

to

ent

er in

to

and/

or s

tay

in

O2-

-bea

ring

solid

s

Ions

that

tend

to o

nly

ente

r O

2--b

earin

g so

lids

late

, or

not a

t al

l, an

d in

stea

d to

ent

er o

r re

mai

n in

aque

ous

solu

tion

.

See also Inset 9.

presumably as rheniate

26

(smaller print where very scarce)

10

36

129

Example

Inset 9: The many

valence states of nitrogen

and carbon

5+ NO3– (nitrate)

4+ NO2 (nitrogen dioxide)3+ NO2

– (nitrite)2+ NO (nitric oxide)1+ N2O (nitrous oxide)0 N2 (nitrogen)3– NH3 (ammonia)

Shown above in the main table.

2– CH3OH (methanol)3– C2H6 (ethane)4– CH4 (methane)

4+ CO2 (carbon dioxide)

2+ CO (carbon monoxide)

0 graphite, diamondacetic acid, carbohydrates,

Other alkanes yield non-integer valuesfrom 4– to 2–.

Also see Inset 9.

N2 is the most abundant constituent of the atmosphere; NO2, NO, N2O,

and NH3 are minor constituents.

3+ HOOCCOOH (oxalic acid)

calculated assuming H is 1+ and O is 2-.

Example

Inset 9: The many

valence statesof nitrogen and carbon

5+ NO3– (nitrate)

4+ NO2 (nitrogen dioxide)3+ NO2

– (nitrite)2+ NO (nitric oxide)1+ N2O (nitrous oxide)0 N2 (nitrogen)3– NH3 (ammonia)

Shown above in the main table.

N2 is the most abundant constituent of the atmosphere; NO2, NO, N2O,

and NH3 are minor constituents.

2– CH3OH (methanol)3– C2H6 (ethane)4– CH4 (methane)

4+ CO2 (carbon dioxide)

2+ CO (carbon monoxide)

0 graphite, diamondacetic acid, carbohydrates,

Other alkanes yield non-integer valuesfrom 4– to 2–.

3+ HOOCCOOH (oxalic acid)

calculated assuming H is 1+ and O is 2-.

Valencestate

MAP AND CHART SERIES MCH092RV2doi:10.1130/2015.MCH092RV2

Published by The Geological Society of America, Inc.3300 Penrose Place • P.O. Box 9140Boulder, Colorado, 80301-9140, USA

© 2015 The Geological Society of America, Inc. All rights reserved.Printed in the USA

An Earth Scientist's Periodic Table of the Elements and Their IonsL. Bruce Railsback, Department of Geology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, 30602-2501, U.S.A. For more resources, see the Earth Scientist's Periodic Table of the Elements and Their Ions website.

An earlier version of this table was published as Figure 1 of L.B. Railsback, 2003, An Earth Scientist's Periodic Table of the Elements and Their Ions: Geology, v. 31, no. 9, p. 737–740. Publication of that version was supported by National Science Foundation Grant DUE 02-03115.

An Earth Scientist’s Periodic Table of the Elements and Their Ions (REVISED) By L. Bruce Railsback, 2015This periodic table is designed to contextualize trends in geochemistry, mineralogy, aqueous chemistry, and other natural sciences. First published as an insert in the September 2003 issue of Geology, this version is updated and supersized—36" × 76"!

MCH092RV2, 1 folded sheet (36" × 76"), 7 p. text | $10.00 |

The Geology of Plate Tectonics Compiled by Gregory R. WesselThis chart belongs in every geology classroom and lab! Printed in full-color, it attempts to organize the types of plate boundaries and displays them in a useful graphic form. The chart describes geologic features with each type. Sheet is 36" × 53" (folded only).

MCH059REV, 1 folded sheet (36" × 53") | $9.95 |

The Grand Canyon Trail of Time Companion

By Karl Karlstrom and Laura Crossey

The creators of the “Trail of Time” exhibi-tion at Grand Canyon have published this guide to the exhibit to enhance your walk along the accessible Rim Trail from Grand Canyon Village to Yavapai Geology Museum. Families, groups, and individuals will find activities in the guide that combine sight-seeing, learning, challenges, and adventure. Be sure to take a copy of this guide along on your trip to Grand Canyon, and find out for yourself why it won the 2011 first place award from the National Association of Interpretation.

8 ½" × 5 ½"; side-spiral bound (Published by Trail of Time Publishers.)

TRAIL, 136 p., ISBN 9780578404967 | $14.95 |

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

15

You May Also Like

SPE489P: Grand Canyon Geology: Two Billion Years of Earth’s History

Edited by J. Michael Timmons and Karl E. Karlstrom, 2012

Page 16: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

ON

LIN

Eht

tp://

rock

.geo

soci

ety.

org/

stor

e/

PH

ON

E+1

.303

.357

.1000

, Opt

ion

3

+1.8

00.4

72.19

88 —

TO

LL-F

REE

with

in th

e U

nite

d St

ates

FA

X

+1.3

03.3

57.10

70 —

24-

hour

line

E-M

AIL

gs

aser

vice

@ge

osoc

iety

.org

MA

ILGS

A Sa

les

and

Serv

ice,

P.O.

Box

9140

, Bou

lder

, CO

8030

1-91

40, U

SA

The

“mem

ber p

rice

” is

you

r dis

coun

ted

pric

e al

read

y ca

lcul

ated

from

the

list p

rice.

Do

not d

educ

t an

addi

tiona

l dis

coun

t fro

m th

is p

rice.

To re

ceiv

e m

embe

r dis

coun

t, or

der m

ust b

e pl

aced

by t

he m

embe

r and

hav

e m

embe

r’s n

ame

with

pay

men

t. In

stitu

tions

are

not

elig

ible

for m

embe

r dis

coun

ts. B

e su

re to

incl

ude

your

mem

ber n

umbe

r in

the

spac

e pr

ovid

ed. (

Not

e:

mos

t sal

e pr

ices

are

not

elig

ible

for a

dditi

onal

dis

coun

t.)

PR

OD

UC

T

CO

DE

DES

CR

IPTIO

NQ

TY

PR

ICE E

AC

HTO

TA

L

× × × × × × × × × ×

TERM

S: C

heck

, mon

ey o

rder

(in

U.S.

fund

s, p

ayab

le o

n U.

S. b

ank)

, or m

ajor

cre

dit

card

s ar

e ac

cept

ed fo

r pay

men

t. Cr

edit

card

use

rs, p

leas

e pr

ovid

e fu

ll na

me

of c

ardh

olde

r, ca

rd n

ame,

num

ber,

and

expi

ratio

n da

te. S

igna

ture

requ

ired

to

proc

ess

orde

r. Co

lora

do re

side

nts

add

appr

opria

te s

ales

tax.

Ple

ase

allo

w 2

–3

wee

ks fo

r del

iver

y. P

rices

sub

ject

to c

hang

e w

ithou

t not

ice.

Subt

otal

Colo

rado

Res

iden

ts

ADD 

TAX

Ship

ping

& H

andl

ing

US $

5.0

0

METH

OD

OF P

AY

MEN

TTO

TA

L

OR

DER

ED

BY:

NA

ME

AD

DR

ES

S

CIT

YS

TATE / P

RO

VIN

CE

ZIP

/ P

OS

TA

L C

OD

EC

OU

NTR

Y

DAY

TIM

E P

HO

NE

CELL P

HO

NE

E-M

AIL

SH

IP T

O:

(IF D

IFFER

EN

T F

RO

M A

BO

VE)

NA

ME

AD

DR

ES

S

CIT

YS

TATE / P

RO

VIN

CE

ZIP

/ P

OS

TA

L C

OD

EC

OU

NTR

Y

DAY

TIM

E P

HO

NE

GS

A M

EM

BER

NO

.

ORDER FORM SH

OP ON

LINE }

http:/

/rock

.geos

ociet

y.org/

store/

Che

ck / M

oney

Ord

er }

pay

able

to T

he G

eolo

gica

l Soc

iety

of A

mer

ica

(Pay

men

t in

U.S.

fund

s, d

raw

n on

a U

.S. b

ank)

Mas

terC

ard

VIS

A

Am

eric

an E

xpre

ss /

Opt

ima

Dis

cove

r

CA

RD

NU

MB

ER

CA

RD

EX

PIR

ATIO

N D

ATE

NA

ME O

N C

AR

D—– P

LEA

SE P

RIN

T

SIG

NATU

RE O

F C

AR

DH

OLD

ER

DATE

Page 17: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Books in PrintField Guides

2000 IGC Field Trip Guide CD-ROM Tectonic Evolution of South AmericaEds: U.G. Cordani, E.J. Milani, A. Thomaz Filho, and D.A. Campos2000 | FLDIGC01 | $10.00 | member price $7.00

Field Trip Guides to the Backbone of the Americas in the Southern and Central Andes Ridge Collision, Shallow Subduction, and Plateau UpliftEds: Suzanne Mahlburg Kay and Víctor A. Ramos2008 | FLD013 | $10.00

Structural Geology and Tectonic Evolution of the Sognefjord Transect, Caledonian Orogen, Southern Norway A Field Trip GuideAlan Geoffrey Milnes and Fernando Corfu2011 | FLD019 | $10.00

From the Shield to the Sea Geological Field Trips from the 2011 Joint Meeting of the GSA Northeastern and North-Central SectionsEds: Richard M. Ruffolo and Charles N. Ciampaglio2011 | FLD020 | $10.00

Geological Field Trips in Central Western Europe Fragile Earth International Conference, Munich, September 2011Eds: Sara Carena, Anke M. Friedrich, and Bernd Lammerer2011 | FLD022 | $10.00

Field Guide to Samos and the Menderes Massif Along-Strike Variations in the Mediterranean Tethyan OrogenEds: Klaus Gessner, Uwe Ring, and Talip Güngör2011 | FLD023 | $10.00

The Southern Cordillera and BeyondEds: Jose Jorge Aranda-Gomez, Gustavo Tolson, and Roberto S. Molina-Garza2012 | FLD025 | $10.00

Neoproterozoic Glacial and Associated Facies in the Tanafjord-Varangerfjord Area, Finnmark, North NorwayA.H.N. Rice, Marc B. Edwards, and T.A. Hansen2012 | FLD026 | $10.00

Deformation, Fluid Flow, and Mass Transfer in the Forearc of Convergent Margins Field Guides to the Northern Apennines in Emilia and in the Apuan Alps (Italy)Eds: Paola Vannucchi and Donald Fisher2012 | FLD028 | $10.00

From the Blue Ridge to the Coastal Plain Field Excursions in the Southeastern United StatesEds: Martha Cary Eppes and Mervin J. Bartholomew2012 | FLD029 | $10.00

Classic Concepts and New Directions Exploring 125 Years of GSA Discoveries in the Rocky Mountain RegionEds: Lon D. Abbott and Gregory S. Hancock2013 | FLD033 | $10.00

Formation of the Sierra Nevada Batholith Magmatic and Tectonic Processes and Their TemposEds: Vali Memeti, Scott R. Paterson, and Keith D. Putirka2014 | FLD034 | $10.00

Elevating Geoscience in the Southeastern United States New Ideas about Old Terranes—Field Guides for the GSA Southeastern Section Meeting, Blacksburg, Virginia, 2014Eds: Christopher M. Bailey and Lorrie V. Coiner2014 | FLD035 | $10.00

Exploring the Northern Rocky MountainsEds: Colin A. Shaw and Basil Tikoff2014 | FLD037 | $10.00

Trials and Tribulations of Life on an Active Subduction Zone Field Trips in and around Vancouver, CanadaEds: Shahin Dashtgard and Brent Ward2014 | FLD038 | $10.00

Diverse Excursions in the Southeast Paleozoic to PresentEd: Ann E. Holmes2015 | FLD039 | $15.00

Tripping from the Fall Line Field Excursions for the GSA Annual Meeting, Baltimore, 2015Eds: David K. Brezinski, Jeffrey P. Halka, and Richard A. Ortt Jr.2015 | FLD040 | $15.00

Exploring the Geology of the Inland NorthwestEds: Reed S. Lewis and Keegan L. Schmidt2016 | FLD041 | $25.00

Gold, Structures, and Landforms in Central South Carolina Field Guides for the 2016 GSA Southeastern Section Meeting, Columbia, South CarolinaEd: William R. Doar III2016 | FLD042 | $10.00 | member price $15.00

Geology of the Baraboo, Wisconsin, AreaEds: Richard A. Davis Jr., Robert H. Dott Jr., and Ian W.D. Dalziel2016 | FLD043 | $15.00

Field Excursions in Southern California Field Guides to the 2016 GSA Cordilleran Section MeetingEds: Brian Kraatz, Jade Star Lackey, and Joan E. Fryxell2017 | FLD045 | $42.00 | member price $30.00

Forts, Floods, and Periglacial Features Exploring the Pittsburgh Low Plateau and Upper Youghiogheny BasinEds: Joseph T. Hannibal and Kyle C. Fredrick2017 | FLD046 | $30.00 | member price $20.00

From the Blue Ridge to the Beach Geological Field Excursions across VirginiaEds: Christopher M. Bailey and Shelley Jaye2017 | FLD047 | $42.00 | member price $30.00

Geologic Field Trips of the Canadian Rockies 2017 Meeting of the GSA Rocky Mountain SectionEd: Jean C.C. Hsieh2017 | FLD048 | $30.00 | member price $20.00

From the Puget Lowland to East of the Cascade Range Geologic Excursions in the Pacific NorthwestEds: Ralph A. Haugerud and Harvey M. Kelsey2017 | FLD049 | $42.00 | member price $30.00

Geology at Every ScaleField Excursions for the 2018 GSA Southeastern Section Meeting in Knoxville, TennesseeEds: Annette Summers Engel and Robert D. Hatcher Jr.2018 | FLD050 | $60.00 | member price $42.00

Ancient Oceans, Orogenic Uplifts, and Glacial Ice Geologic Crossroads in America’s Heartland Ed: Lee J. Florea2018 | FLD051 | $64.00 | member price $45.00

Exploring Extreme and Unusual Geology in the Stable Midcontinent Field Excursions for the 2019 GSA South-Central, North-Central, and Rocky Mountain Sections Joint Meeting Eds: Marcia K. Schulmeister and James S. Aber2019 | FLD052 | $38.00 | member price $26.00

Field Excursions in the Carolinas Guides to the 2019 GSA Southeastern Section MeetingEds: John Chadwick and Steven C. Jaume'2019 | FLD053 | $26.00 | member price $18.00

Iceland The Formation and Evolution of a Young, Dynamic, Volcanic Island—A Field Trip GuideBrennan T. Jordan, Tamara L. Carley, and Tenley J. Banik2019 | FLD054 | $40.00 | member price $28.00

Geologic Excursions in Southwestern North AmericaEd: Philip A. Pearthree2019 | FLD055 | IN PRESS

The Gigantic Markagunt and Sevier Gravity Slides Resulting from Mid-Cenozoic Catastrophic Mega-Scale Failure of the Marysvale Volcanic Field, Utah, USARobert F. Biek, Peter D. Rowley, and David B. Hacker2019 | FLD056 | IN PRESS

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

17

Page 18: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Memoirs

The Large-Wavelength Deformations of the Lithosphere Materials for a History of the Evolution of Thought from the Earliest Times to Plate TectonicsA.M.C. Şengör2003 | MWR196 | $10.00

Proterozoic Tectonic Evolution of the Grenville Orogen in North AmericaEds: Richard P. Tollo, James McLelland, Louise Corriveau, and Mervin J. Bartholomew2004 | MWR197 | $10.00

The Geology and Climatology of Yucca Mountain and Vicinity, Southern Nevada and CaliforniaEds: John S. Stuckless and Robert A. Levich2007 | MWR199 | $10.00

Jamaican Rock Stars, 1823–1971 The Geologists Who Explored JamaicaEd: Stephen K. Donovan2010 | MWR205 | $10.00

Origin and Evolution of Precambrian High-Grade Gneiss Terranes, with Special Emphasis on the Limpopo Complex of Southern AfricaEds: Dirk D. van Reenen, Jan D. Kramers, Stephen McCourt, and Leonid L. Perchuk2011 | MWR207 | $10.00

Exploring the Earth’s Crust History and Results of Controlled-Source SeismologyClaus Prodehl and Walter D. Mooney2012 | MWR208 | $10.00

Hydrology and Geochemistry of Yucca Mountain and Vicinity, Southern Nevada and CaliforniaEd: John S. Stuckless2012 | MWR209 | $10.00

Tectonics of the Southeastern Tibetan Plateau and Its Adjacent ForelandB. Clark Burchfiel and Chen Zhiliang2013 | MWR210 | $10.00

Peninsular Ranges Batholith, Baja California and Southern CaliforniaEds: Douglas M. Morton and Fred K. Miller2014 | MWR211 | $10.00

Geodynamics of a Cordilleran Orogenic System The Central Andes of Argentina and Northern ChileEds: Peter G. DeCelles, Mihai N. Ducea, Barbara Carrapa, and Paul A. Kapp2015 | MWR212 | $10.00

Linkages and Feedbacks in Orogenic SystemsEds: Richard D. Law, J. Ryan Thigpen, Arthur J. Merschat, and Harold Stowell2017 | MWR213 | $60.00 | member price $42.00

Women and GeologyWho Are We, Where Have We Come From, and Where Are We Going?Ed: Beth A. Johnson2018 | MWR214 | $60.00 | member price $42.00

The Edwards AquiferThe Past, Present, and Future of a Vital Water ResourceEds: John M. Sharp Jr., Ronald T. Green, and Geary M. Schindel2019 | MWR215 | $86.00 | member price $60.00

Maps and Charts

All maps and charts are folded.

Geology of Plate TectonicsComp: Gregory R. Wessel1986 | MCH059REV | $9.95

Geology of the Nevado de Toluca Volcano and Surrounding Areas, Central MexicoComp: Armando Garcia-Palomo, Jose Luis Arce, Jose Luis Macias, Juan Manual Espindola, Lucia Capra, and Victor Hugo Garduno2002 | MCH089F | $5.00

Geology of Kangmar Dome, Southern TibetComp: Jeffrey Lee, Jing Lin Wan, William S. Dinklage, and Yu Wang2002 | MCH090F | $5.00

Geologic Map of the Batesburg and Emory Quadrangles, Lexington and Saluda Counties, South Carolina with Explanatory NotesComp: Donald T. Secor Jr. and Arthur W. Snoke2002 | MCH091F | $5.00

Earth Scientist’s Periodic Table of Elements and Their IonsComp: L. Bruce Railsback2015 | MCH092RV2 | $10.00

Geology of the Scott-Reedy Glaciers Area, Southern Transantarctic Mountains, AntarcticaComp: M.B. Davis and D.D. Blankenship2005 | MCH093F | $5.00

Quaternary Fault and Lineament Map of Owens Valley, Inyo County, Eastern CaliforniaComp: D.B. Slemmons, E. Vittori, A.S. Jayko, G.A. Carver, and S.N. Bacon2008 | MCH096F | $5.00

Geologic Map of the Central Wassuk Range, Western NevadaComp: B.E. Surpless2010 | MCH098F | $5.00

Geology of the Manuel Benavides Area, Chihuahua, MexicoComp: Fred W. McDowell2010 | MCH099F | $5.00

Geology of the Stokes Mountain Region, CaliforniaComp: Diane Clemens-Knott2011 | MCH100F | $5.00

Geologic Map of the San Emigdio Mountains, Southern CaliforniaComp: Alan D. Champman and Jason B. Saleeby2012 | MCH101F | $5.00

Geological Map of the Western Border of the Cuicateco Terrane, Southern MexicoComp: Edgar Angeles Moreno, Mariano Elias Herrera, Consuelo Macias Romo, Jose Luis Sanchez-Zavala, and Fernando Ortega-Gutierrez2012 | MCH102F | $5.00

Geologic Map of the West-Central Barberton Greenstone BeltComp: Donald R. Lowe, Gary R. Byerly, and Christoph Heubeck2012 | MCH103F | $5.00

Geologic Map and Cross Sections of the Swansea-Clara Peak Area, Buckskin Mountains, West-Central ArizonaComp: John Singleton2013 | MCH104F | $5.00

Detailed geologic map of the Inner Piedmont and Carolina superterrane at the northeast end of the Pine Mountain window, GeorgiaComp: Matthew T. Huebner, Justin R. Rehrer, Robert D. Hatcher, Jr., and Andrew L. Wunderlich2014 | MCH105F | $5.00

Geologic Map of the Southeast Face of El Capitan, Yosemite Valley, CaliforniaComp: Roger L. Putnam, Allen F. Glazner, Bryan S. Law, and Greg M. Stock2014 | MCH106F | $5.00

Reviews in Engineering Geology

A Paradox of Power Voices of Warning and Reason in the GeosciencesEds: Charles W. Welby and Monica E. Gowan1998 | REG012 | $10.00

Understanding and Responding to Hazardous Substances at Mine Sites in the Western United StatesEd: Jerome V. DeGraff2007 | REG017 | $10.00

Geology of Coal Fires Case Studies from Around the WorldEd: Glenn B. Stracher2008 | REG018 | $10.00

Deep Geologic RepositoriesEd: Norbert T. Rempe2008 | REG019 | $10.00

Landslides and Engineering Geology of the Seattle, Washington, AreaEds: Rex L. Baum, Jonathan W. Godt, and Lynn M. Highland2008 | REG020 | $10.00

The Challenges of Dam Removal and River RestorationEds: Jerome V. De Graff and James E. Evans2013 | REG021 | $10.00

Military Geosciences in the Twenty-First CenturyEds: Russell S. Harmon, Sophie E. Baker, and Eric V. McDonald2014 | REG022 | $10.00

18

Explo

re }

Disc

over

} Ac

quire

Don’t see the book you want? Find it as an e-book at the GSA Store. | } rock.geosociety.org/store

Page 19: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Special Papers

Geology, Hydrogeology, and Environmental Remediation Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory, Eastern Snake River Plain, IdahoEds: Paul Karl Link and L.L. Mink2002 | SPE353 | $5.00

Petrologic and Structural History of Tobago, West Indies A Fragment of the Accreted, Mesozoic Oceanic Arc of the Southern CaribbeanArthur W. Snoke, David W. Rowe, J. Douglas Yule, and Geoffrey Wadge2001 | SPE354 | $5.00

Is the Present the Key to the Past or the Past the Key to the Present? James Hutton and Adam Smith versus Abraham Gottlob Werner and Karl Marx in Interpreting HistoryA.M.C. Şengör2001 | SPE355 | $20.00

Nearshore Marine Paleoclimatic Regions, Increasing Zoogeographic Provinciality, Molluscan Extinctions, and Paleoshorelines, California Late Oligocene (27 Ma) to Late Pliocene (2.5 Ma)Clarence A. Hall Jr.2002 | SPE357 | $10.00

Geology and Geophysics of an Arc-Continent Collision, TaiwanEds: Timothy B. Byrne and Char-Shine Liu2002 | SPE358 | $10.00

Natural Hazards in El SalvadorEds: Julian J. Bommer, William I. Rose, Dina L. López, Michael J. Carr, and Jon J. Major2004 | SPE375 | $10.00

Hydraulic Tests of Miocene Volcanic Rocks at Yucca Mountain and Pahute Mesa and Implications for Groundwater Flow in the Southwest Nevada Volcanic Field, Nevada and CaliforniaArthur L. Geldon2004 | SPE381 | $10.00

Cenozoic Climatic and Environmental Changes in RussiaEds: A.A. Velichko and V.P. Nechaev2005 | SPE382 | $10.00

Reconstruction of Pleistocene Ice-Dammed Lake Outburst Floods in the Altai Mountains, SiberiaJürgen Herget2005 | SPE386 | $10.00

Plates, Plumes, and Paradigms on CD-ROMEds: Gillian R. Foulger, James H. Natland, Dean C. Presnall, and Don L. Anderson2005 | SPE388CD | $10.00

Stone Decay in the Architectural EnvironmentEd: Alice V. Turkington2005 | SPE390 | $10.00

Net Dextral Slip, Neogene San Gregorio–Hosgri Fault Zone, Coastal California Geologic Evidence and Tectonic ImplicationsWilliam R. Dickinson, Mihai Ducea, Lewis I. Rosenberg, H. Gary Greene, Stephan A. Graham, Joseph C. Clark, Gerald E. Weber, Steven Kidder, W. Gary Ernst, and Earl E. Brabb2005 | SPE391 | $10.00

Isotopic and Elemental Tracers of Cenozoic Climate ChangeEds: Germán Mora and Donna Surge2005 | SPE395 | $10.00

Geoinformatics Data to KnowledgeEd: A. Krishna Sinha2006 | SPE397 | $10.00

New Frontiers in Dead Sea Paleoenvironmental ResearchEds: Yehouda Enzel, Amotz Agnon, and Mordechai Stein2006 | SPE401 | $10.00

Neogene-Quaternary Continental Margin Volcanism A Perspective from MéxicoEds: Claus Siebe, José Luis Macías, and Gerardo J. Aguirre-Díaz2006 | SPE402 | $10.00

Temper Sands in Prehistoric Oceanian Pottery Geotectonics, Sedimentology, Petrography, ProvenanceWilliam R. Dickinson2006 | SPE406 | $10.00

In Situ-Produced Cosmogenic Nuclides and Quantification of Geological ProcessesEds: Lionel L. Siame, Didier L. Bourlès, and Erik T. Brown2006 | SPE415 | $10.00

Paleoenvironmental Record and Applications of Calcretes and Palustrine CarbonatesEds: Ana María Alonso-Zarza and Lawrence H. Tanner2006 | SPE416 | $10.00

Cenozoic Volcanism in the Mediterranean AreaEds: Luigi Beccaluva, Gianluca Bianchini, and Marjorie Wilson2007 | SPE418 | $10.00

Advances in High-Pressure MineralogyEd: Eiji Ohtani2007 | SPE421 | $10.00

The Evolution of the Rheic Ocean From Avalonian-Cadomian Active Margin to Alleghenian-Variscan CollisionEds: Ulf Linnemann, R. Damian Nance, Petr Kraft, and Gernold Zulauf2007 | SPE423 | $10.00

Large Ecosystem Perturbations Causes and ConsequencesEds: Simonetta Monechi, Rodolfo Coccioni, and Michael Rampino2007 | SPE424 | $10.00

Continental Intraplate Earthquakes Science, Hazard, and Policy IssuesEds: Seth Stein and Stéphane Mazzotti2007 | SPE425 | $10.00

The Pennsylvanian–Early Permian Bird Spring Carbonate Shelf, Southeastern California Fusulinid Biostratigraphy, Paleogeographic Evolution, and Tectonic ImplicationsCalvin H. Stevens and Paul Stone2007 | SPE429 | $10.00

Plates, Plumes, and Planetary ProcessesEds: Gillian R. Foulger and Donna M. Jurdy2007 | SPE430 | $10.00

Formation and Applications of the Sedimentary Record in Arc Collision ZonesEds: Amy E. Draut, Peter D. Clift, and David W. Scholl2008 | SPE436 | $10.00

Late Cenozoic Drainage History of the Southwestern Great Basin and Lower Colorado River Region Geologic and Biotic PerspectivesEds: Marith C. Reheis, Robert Hershler, and David M. Miller2008 | SPE439 | $10.00

The Terrane Puzzle New Perspectives on Paleontology and Stratigraphy from the North American CordilleraEds: Robert B. Blodgett and George D. Stanley Jr.2008 | SPE442 | $10.00

Response of Upper Gulf Coast Estuaries to Holocene Climate Change and Sea-Level RiseEds: John B. Anderson and Antonio B. Rodriguez2008 | SPE443 | $10.00

Investigations into the Tectonics of the Tibetan PlateauEds: B. Clark Burchfiel and Erchie Wang2008 | SPE444 | $10.00

Deformation and Exhumation at Convergent Margins The Franciscan Subduction ComplexUwe Ring2008 | SPE445 | $10.00

The Geology of Early Humans in the Horn of AfricaEds: Jay Quade and Jonathan G. Wynn2008 | SPE446 | $10.00

The Permian Extinction and the Tethys An Exercise in Global GeologyA.M. Celâl Şengör and Saniye Atayman2009 | SPE448 | $10.00

The World in a Crucible Laboratory Practice and Geological Theory at the Beginning of GeologySally Newcomb2009 | SPE449 | $10.00

Paleoenvironments of Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho, and Its CatchmentEds: Joseph G. Rosenbaum and Darrell S. Kaufman2009 | SPE450 | $10.00

Management and Restoration of Fluvial Systems with Broad Historical Changes and Human ImpactsEds: L. Allan James, Sara L. Rathburn, and G. Richard Whittecar2009 | SPE451 | $10.00

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

19Don’t see the book you want? Find it as an e-book at the GSA Store. | } rock.geosociety.org/store

Page 20: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Preservation of Random Megascale Events on Mars and Earth Influence on Geologic HistoryEds: Mary G. Chapman and Laszlo P. Keszthelyi2009 | SPE453 | $10.00

Earth Science in the Urban Ocean The Southern California Continental BorderlandEds: Homa J. Lee and William R. Normark2009 | SPE454 | $10.00

The ICDP-USGS Deep Drilling Project in the Chesapeake Bay Impact Structure Results from the Eyreville Core HolesEds: Gregory S. Gohn, Christian Koeberl, Kenneth G. Miller, and Wolf Uwe Reimold2009 | SPE458 | $10.00

Hydrothermal Processes above the Yellowstone Magma Chamber Large Hydrothermal Systems and Large Hydrothermal ExplosionsLisa A. Morgan, W.C. Pat Shanks, III, and Kenneth L. Pierce2009 | SPE459 | $10.00

America’s Most Vulnerable Coastal CommunitiesEds: Joseph T. Kelley, Orrin H. Pilkey, and J. Andrew G. Cooper2009 | SPE460 | $10.00

Field Geology Education Historical Perspectives and Modern ApproachesEds: Steven J. Whitmeyer, David W. Mogk, and Eric J. Pyle2009 | SPE461 | $10.00

Stratigraphy and Geology of Volcanic AreasEds: Gianluca Groppelli and Lothar Viereck-Goette2010 | SPE464 | $10.00

Geology and Tectonic Evolution of the Central-Southern Apennines, ItalyLivio Vezzani, Andrea Festa, and Francesca C. Ghisetti2010 | SPE469 | $10.00

Ancient EarthquakesEds: Manuel Sintubin, Iain S. Stewart, Tina M. Niemi, and Erhan Altunel2010 | SPE471 | $10.00

Geology and Geoarchaeology of the Black Sea Region Beyond the Flood HypothesisEds: Ilya V. Buynevich, Valentina Yanko-Hombach, Allan S. Gilbert, and Ronald E. Martin2011 | SPE473 | $10.00

Qualitative Inquiry in Geoscience Education ResearchEds: Anthony D. Feig and Alison Stokes2011 | SPE474 | $10.00

High Geologic Slip Rates since Early Pleistocene Initiation of the San Jacinto and San Felipe Fault Zones in the San Andreas Fault System, Southern California, USASusanne U. Janecke, Rebecca J. Dorsey, David Forand, Alexander N. Steely, Stefan M. Kirby, Andrew T. Lutz, Bernard A. Housen, Benjamin Belgarde, Victoria E. Langenheim, and Tammy M. Rittenour2011 | SPE475 | $10.00

Geoarchaeology, Climate Change, and SustainabilityEds: Antony G. Brown, Laura S. Basell, and Karl W. Butzer2011 | SPE476 | $10.00

Recent Advances and Current Research Issues in Lunar StratigraphyEds: William A. Ambrose and David A. Williams2011 | SPE477 | $10.00

Volcanism and Evolution of the African LithosphereEds: Luigi Beccaluva, Gianluca Bianchini, and Marjorie Wilson2011 | SPE478 | $10.00

Geological Criteria for Evaluating Seismicity Revisited Forty Years of Paleoseismic Investigations and the Natural Record of Past EarthquakesEds: Franck A. Audemard M., Alessandro Maria Michetti, and James P. McCalpin2011 | SPE479 | $10.00

Mélanges Processes of Formation and Societal SignificanceEds: John Wakabayashi and Yildirim Dilek2011 | SPE480 | $10.00

A new geological map of the Island of Syros (Aegean Sea, Greece) Implications for lithostratigraphy and structural history of the Cycladic Blueschist UnitMark Keiter, Chris Ballhaus, and Frank Tomaschek2011 | SPE481 | $10.00

Societal Challenges and GeoinformaticsEds: A. Krishna Sinha, David Arctur, Ian Jackson, and Linda C. Gundersen2011 | SPE482 | $10.00

Analogs for Planetary ExplorationEds: W. Brent Garry and Jacob E. Bleacher2011 | SPE483 | $10.00

The 2 ka Eruption of Misti Volcano, Southern Peru The Most Recent Plinian Eruption of Arequipa’s Iconic VolcanoChristopher J. Harpel, Shanaka de Silva, and Guido Salas2011 | SPE484 | $10.00

On the Strata of the EarthMikhail Vasil’evich Lomonosov Trans: Stephen M. Rowland and Slava Korolev2012 | SPE485 | $10.00

Mineralogical and Geochemical Approaches to ProvenanceEds: E. Troy Rasbury, Sidney R. Hemming, and Nancy R. Riggs2012 | SPE487 | $10.00

Impossible Journey The Story of the Victoria Land Traverse 1959–1960, AntarcticaJohn G. Weihaupt, Alfred W. Stuart, Frans G. Van der Hoeven, Claude Lorius, and William M. Smith2012 | SPE488 | $10.00

Mima Mounds The Case for Polygenesis and BioturbationEds: Jennifer L. Horwath Burnham and Donald L. Johnson2012 | SPE490 | $10.00

Geology and Geomorphology of Barbados A Companion Text to Maps with Accompanying Cross Sections, Scale 1:10,000Robert C. Speed Eds: Christine Speed and Richard Sedlock2013 | SPE491 | $10.00

Recent Advances in North American Paleoseismology and Neotectonics East of the RockiesEds: Randel Tom Cox, Martitia P. Tuttle, Oliver S. Boyd, and Jacques Locat2013 | SPE493 | $10.00

New Perspectives on Rio Grande Rift Basins From Tectonics to GroundwaterEds: Mark R. Hudson and V.J.S. (Tien) Grauch2013 | SPE494 | $10.00

The Volcanic Geology of the Mid-Arc Island of Dominica, Lesser Antilles The Surface Expression of an Island-Arc BatholithA.L. Smith, M.J. Roobol, G.S. Mattioli, J.E. Fryxell, G.E. Daly, and L.A. Fernandez2013 | SPE496 | $10.00

Understanding Open-Vent Volcanism and Related HazardsEds: William I. Rose, Jose Luis Palma, Hugo Delgado Granados, and Nick Varley2013 | SPE498 | $10.00

Neogene Deformation between Central Utah and the Mojave DesertEd: R. Ernest Anderson2013 | SPE499 | $10.00

The Web of Geological Sciences Advances, Impacts, and InteractionsEd: Marion E. Bickford2013 | SPE500 | $10.00

The Impact of the Geological Sciences on SocietyEd: Marion E. Bickford2013 | SPE501 | $10.00

Rethinking the Fabric of GeologyEd: Victor R. Baker2013 | SPE502 | $10.00

Through the End of the Cretaceous in the Type Locality of the Hell Creek Formation in Montana and Adjacent AreasEds: Gregory P. Wilson, William A. Clemens, John R. Horner, and Joseph H. Hartman2014 | SPE503 | $10.00

Earth’s Early Atmosphere and Surface EnvironmentEd: George H. Shaw2014 | SPE504 | $10.00

Volcanism, Impacts, and Mass Extinctions Causes and EffectsEds: Gerta Keller and Andrew C. Kerr2014 | SPE505 | $10.00

Reconstruction of a Late Proterozoic to Devonian Continental Margin Sequence, Northern Alaska, Its Paleogeographic Significance, and Contained Base-Metal Sulfide DepositsEds: Julie A. Dumoulin and Alison B. Till2014 | SPE506 | $10.00

20

Explo

re }

Disc

over

} Ac

quire

Page 21: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Toward an Improved Understanding of Uplift Mechanisms and the Elevation History of the Tibetan PlateauEds: Junsheng Nie, Brian K. Horton, and Gregory D. Hoke2014 | SPE507 | $10.00

Coastline and Dune Evolution along the Great LakesEds: Timothy G. Fisher and Edward C. Hansen2014 | SPE508 | $10.00

The 2011 Mineral, Virginia, Earthquake, and Its Significance for Seismic Hazards in Eastern North AmericaEds: J. Wright Horton Jr., Martin C. Chapman, and Russell A. Green2015 | SPE509 | $20.00

East European Craton Early Precambrian History and 3D Models of Deep Crustal StructureMichael V. Mints, Ksenia A. Dokukina, Alexander N. Konilov, Irina B. Philippova, Valery L. Zlobin, et al.2015 | SPE510 | $20.00

The Origin, Evolution, and Environmental Impact of Oceanic Large Igneous ProvincesEds: Clive R. Neal, William W. Sager, Takashi Sano, and Elisabetta Erba2015 | SPE511 | $20.00

Recollections of a PetrologistJoseph Paxson Iddings, Ed: Davis A. Young2015 | SPE512 | $10.00

Late Jurassic Margin of Laurasia A Record of Faulting Accommodating Plate RotationEds: Thomas H. Anderson, Alexei N. Didenko, Cari L. Johnson, Alexander I. Khanchuk, and James H. MacDonald Jr.2016 | SPE513 | $20.00

The Interdisciplinary Earth A Volume in Honor of Don L. AndersonEds: Gillian R. Foulger, Michele Lustrino, and Scott D. King2015 | SPE514 | $20.00

Paying Attention to Mudrocks Priceless!Eds: Daniel Larsen, Sven O. Egenhoff, and Neil S. Fishman2015 | SPE515 | $15.00

Caves and Karst Across TimeEds: Joshua M. Feinberg, Yongli Gao, and E. Calvin Alexander Jr.2016 | SPE516 | $20.00

Unusual Central Nevada Geologic Terranes Produced by Late Devonian Antler Orogeny and Alamo ImpactForrest G. Poole and Charles A. Sandberg2015 | SPE517 | $15.00

Large Meteorite Impacts and Planetary Evolution VEds: Gordon R. Osinski and David A. Kring2015 | SPE518 | $15.00

Geothermal Energy An Important ResourceEds: Carolyn B. Dowling, Klaus Neumann, and Lee Florea2016 | SPE519 | $25.00

Geoscience for the Public Good and Global Development Toward a Sustainable FutureEds: Gregory R. Wessel and Jeffrey K. Greenberg2016 | SPE520 | $30.00

Tracks, Trails, and Thieves The Adventures, Discoveries, and Historical Significance of Ferdinand V. Hayden’s 1868 Geological Survey of Wyoming and Adjacent TerritoriesJack E. Deibert and Brent H. Breithaupt2016 | SPE521 | $15.00

Belt Basin Window to Mesoproterozoic EarthEds: John S. MacLean and James W. Sears2016 | SPE522 | $30.00

The Web of Geological Sciences Advances, Impacts, and Interactions IIEd: Marion E. Bickford2017 | SPE523 | $60.00 | member price $42.00

The Stratigraphic Record of Gubbio Integrated Stratigraphy of the Late Cretaceous–Paleogene Umbria-Marche Pelagic BasinEds: Marco Menichetti, Rodolfo Coccioni, and Alessandro Montanari2016 | SPE524 | $25.00

Tectonic Evolution, Collision, and Seismicity of Southwest Asia In Honor of Manuel Berberian’s Forty-Five Years of Research ContributionsEd: Rasoul Sorkhabi2017 | SPE525 | $60.00 | member price $42.00

The Crust-Mantle and Lithosphere-Asthenosphere Boundaries Insights from Xenoliths, Orogenic Deep Sections, and Geophysical StudiesEds: Gianluca Bianchini, Jean-Louis Bodinier, Roberto Braga, and Marjorie Wilson2017 | SPE526 | $42.00 | member price $30.00

Unconventional The Development of Natural Gas from the Marcellus ShaleDaniel J. Soeder2017 | SPE527 | $42.00 | member price $30.00

Geoecology of the Marias River Canyon, Montana, USA Landscape Influence on Human Use and Preservation of Late Holocene Archaeological and Vertebrate RemainsJames G. Schmitt, John W. Fisher Jr., Michael P. Neeley, David F. Pac, Frankie D. Jackson, Scott J. Patterson, Jennifer L. Aschoff, and Stuart Challender2017 | SPE528 | $30.00 | member price $20.00

The Restless Indian Plate and Its Epic Voyage from Gondwana to Asia Its Tectonic, Paleoclimatic, and Paleobiogeographic EvolutionSankar Chatterjee, Christopher R. Scotese, and Sunil Bajpai2017 | SPE529 | $42.00 | member price $30.00

Quaternary Glaciation of the Great Lakes Region Process, Landforms, Sediments, and ChronologyEds: Alan Kehew and B. Brandon Curry2018 | SPE530 | $42.00 | member price $30.00

Paleozoic Stratigraphy and Resources of the Michigan BasinEds: G. Michael Grammer, William B. Harrison III, and David A. Barnes2018 | SPE531 | $60.00 | member price $42.00

The Tectonic Setting and Origin of Cretaceous Batholiths within the North American Cordillera The Case for Slab Failure Magmatism and Its Significance for Crustal GrowthRobert S. Hildebrand and Joseph B. Whalen2017 | SPE532 | $42.00 | member price $30.00

Tectonosedimentary Relations of Pennsylvanian to Jurassic Strata on the Colorado PlateauWilliam R. Dickinson; Preface: Jon Spencer2018 | SPE533 | $60.00 | member price $42.00

Geology and Tectonics of Subduction Zones A Tribute to Gaku KimuraEds: Timothy Byrne, Michael B. Underwood, Donald Fisher, Lisa McNeill, Demian Saffer, Kohtaro Ujiie, and Asuka Yamaguchi2018 | SPE534 | $40.00 | member price $28.00

Museums at the Forefront of the History and Philosophy of Geology History Made, History in the MakingEds: Gary D. Rosenberg and Renee M. Clary2018 | SPE535 | $89.00 | member price $62.00

Chesapeake Bay Impact Structure Development of “Brim” Sedimentation in a Multilayered Marine TargetHenning Dypvik, Gregory S. Gohn, Lucy E. Edwards, J. Wright Horton Jr., David S. Powars, and Ronald J. Litwin2018 | SPE537 | $38.00 | member price $25.00

Field Volcanology A Tribute to the Distinguished Career of Don SwansonEds: Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia, Victor E. Camp, and Anita Grunder2018 | SPE538 | $60.00 | member price $42.00

The Art of Finding Springs, Second Edition Translation of L’Art de Découvrir les Sources, Seconde ÉditionAbbé Paramelle; Trans: Patricia Bobeck2019 | SPE539 | $58.00 | member price $40.00

Tectonics, Sedimentary Basins, and Provenance A Celebration of the Career of William R. DickinsonEds: Raymond V. Ingersoll, Timothy F. Lawton, and Stephan A. Graham2018 | SPE540 | $99.00 | member price $70.00

Circum-Arctic Structural Events Tectonic Evolution of the Arctic Margins and Trans-Arctic Links with Adjacent OrogensEds: Karsten Piepjohn, Justin V. Strauss, Lutz Reinhardt, and William C. McClelland2019 | SPE541 | $120.00 | member price $84.00

250 Million Years of Earth History in Central Italy Celebrating 25 Years of the Geological Observatory of ColdigiocoEds: Christian Koeberl and David M. Bice2019 | SPE542 | IN PRESS

The Physical Geography and Geology of the Driftless Area The Career and Contributions of James C. KnoxEds: Eric C. Carson, J. Elmo Rawling III, J. Michael Daniels, and John W. Attig2019 | SPE543 | IN PRESS

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

21

Page 22: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Decade of North American GeologyThe many volumes of the DNAG collection, created to help celebrate GSA’s 100th anniversary, are available as e-books and can be downloaded for $9.99 each from the GSA store at http://rock.geosociety.org/store. The collection that once filled a floor-to-ceiling bookcase can now be read on your tablet or computer.

The Geology of North America

The Geology of North AmericaAn OverviewEds: Albert W. Bally and Allison R. Palmer1989 | DNAGGNAA | Vol. A | 619 p. | $9.99

Geology of the Precambrian Superior and Grenville Provinces and Precambrian Fossils in North AmericaCoord: S.B. Lucas and M.R. St-Onge1998 | DNAGGNAC1 | Vol. C1 | 387 p. | $9.99

Precambrian Conterminous U.S.Eds: John C. Reed Jr., Marion E. Bickford, R.S. Houston, Paul Karl Link, D.W. Rankin, Paul K. Sims, and W. Randall Van Schmus1993 | DNAGGNAC2 | Vol. C2 | 657 p. | $9.99

Sedimentary Cover of the Craton in CanadaEds: D.F. Stott and J.D. Aitken1993 | DNAGGNAD1 | Vol. D1 | 826 p. | $9.99

Sedimentary Cover North American Craton U.S.Ed: L.L. Sloss1988 | DNAGGNAD2 | Vol. D2 | 506 p. | $9.99

Geology of the Innuitian Orogen and Arctic Platform of Canada and GreenlandEd: H.P. Trettin1991 | DNAGGNAE | Vol. E | 569 p. | $9.99

Geology of the Appalachian–Caledonian Orogen in Canada and GreenlandEd: Harold Williams1995 | DNAGGNAF1 | Vol. F1 | 944 p. | $9.99

The Appalachian–Ouachita Orogen in the United StatesEds: Robert D. Hatcher Jr., William A. Thomas, and George W. Viele1989 | DNAGGNAF2 | Vol. F2 | 767 p. | $9.99

The Geology of AlaskaEds: George Plafker and Henry C. Berg1994 | DNAGGNAG1 | Vol. G1 | 1055 p. | $9.99

Geology of the Cordilleran Orogen in CanadaEds: H. Gabrielse and C.J. Yorath1992 | DNAGGNAG2 | Vol. G2 | 844 p. | $9.99

The Cordilleran OrogenConterminous U.S.Eds: B.C. Burchfiel, P.W. Lipman, and M.L. Zoback1993 | DNAGGNAG3 | Vol. G3 | 724 p. | $9.99

The Caribbean RegionEds: Gabriel Dengo and J.E. Case1990 | DNAGGNAH | Vol. H | 528 p. | $9.99

Geology of the Continental Margin of Eastern CanadaEds: M.J. Keen and G.L. Williams1990 | DNAGGNAI1 | Vol. I1 | 855 p. | $9.99

The Atlantic Continental Margin U.S.Eds: Robert E. Sheridan and John A. Grow1988 | DNAGGNAI2 | Vol. I2 | 610 p. | $9.99

The Gulf of Mexico BasinEd: Amos Salvador1992 | DNAGGNAJ | Vol. J | 568 p. | $9.99 1992 | GNAJCD | CD format | $10.00 | member price $7.00

Quaternary Geology of Canada and GreenlandEd: R.J. Fulton1989 | DNAGGNAK1 | Vol. K1 | 839 p. | $9.99

Quaternary Nonglacial GeologyConterminous U.S.Ed: Roger B. Morrison1991 | DNAGGNAK2 | Vol. K2 | 672 p. | $9.99

North America and Adjacent Oceans During the Last DeglaciationEd: W.F. Ruddiman and H.E. Wright Jr.1987 | DNAGGNAK3 | Vol. K3 | 501 p. | $9.99

The Arctic Ocean RegionEds: A. Grantz, L. Johnson, and J.F. Sweeney1990 | DNAGGNAL | Vol. L | 644 p. | $9.99

The Western North Atlantic RegionEds: Peter R. Vogt and Brian E. Tucholke1986 | DNAGGNAM | Vol. M | 696 p. | $9.99

The Eastern Pacific Ocean and HawaiiEds: E.L. Winterer, Donald M. Hussong, and Robert W. Decker1989 | DNAGGNAN | Vol. N | 563 p. | $9.99

Surface Water HydrologyEds: M.G. Wolman and H.C. Riggs1990 | DNAGGNAO1 | Vol. O1 | 374 p. | $9.99

HydrogeologyEds: William Back, Joseph S. Rosenshein, and Paul R. Seaber1988 | DNAGGNAO2 | Vol. O2 | 524 p. | $9.99

Geology of Canadian Mineral Deposit TypesEds: O.R. Eckstrand, W.D. Sinclair, and R.I. Thorpe1995 | DNAGGNAP1 | Vol. P1 | 640 p. | $9.99

Economic Geology, U.S.Eds: H.J. Gluskoter, D.D. Rice, and R.B. Taylor1991 | DNAGGNAP2 | Vol. P2 | 622 p. | $9.99

Economic Geology, MexicoEd: Guillermo P. Salas1991 | DNAGGNAP3 | Vol. P3 | 438 p. | $9.99

Centennial Special Volumes

Geologists and IdeasA History of North American GeologyEds: Ellen T. Drake and William M. Jordan1985 | DNAGCSV1 | Vol. 1 | 525 p. | $9.99

Geomorphic Systems of North AmericaEd: William L. Graf1987 | DNAGCSV2 | Vol. 2 | 643 p. | $9.99

The Heritage of Engineering GeologyThe First Hundred YearsEd: George A. Kiersch1991 | DNAGCSV3 | Vol. 3 | 605 p. | $9.99

Archaeological Geology of North AmericaEd: Norman P. Lasca and Jack Donahue1990 | DNAGCSV4 | Vol. 4 | 633 p. | $9.99

22

Explo

re }

Disc

over

} Ac

quire

Page 23: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

Centennial Field Guides

Cordilleran Section of the Geological Society of AmericaEd: Mason L. Hill1987 | DNAGCFG1P | Vol. 1 | 490 p. | $9.99

Rocky Mountain Section of the Geological Society of AmericaEd: Stanley S. Beus1987 | DNAGCFG2P | Vol. 2 | 475 p. | $9.99

North-Central Section of the Geological Society of AmericaEd: Donald L. Biggs1987 | DNAGCFG3P | Vol. 3 | 448 p. | $9.99

South-Central Section of the Geological Society of AmericaEd: O.T. Hayward1987 | DNAGCFG4P | Vol. 4 | 475 p. | $9.99

Northeastern Section of the Geological Society of AmericaEd: David C. Roy1987 | DNAGCFG5P | Vol. 5 | 517 p. | $9.99

Southeastern Section of the Geological Society of AmericaEd: Thornton L. Neathery1987 | DNAGCFG6P | Vol. 6 | 477 p. | $9.99

DNAG Special Publications

Perspectives in Regional Geological SynthesisPlanning for The Geology of North AmericaEd: A.R. Palmer1982 | DNAGSP1 | 176 p. | $9.99

History in the MakingThe Evolution of the Decade of North American Geology Project1988 | DNAGSP2 | 9 p. | FREE

Continent-Scale Map Series

(scale 1:5,000,000)

Geologic Map of North AmericaComp: John C. Reed Jr., John O. Wheeler, and Brian E. Tucholke2005 | DNAGCSMS1 | Vol. 1 | 3 sheets | 28 p. | $9.99

Gravity Anomaly Map of North AmericaGravity Anomaly Map Committee under the auspices of GSA and the International Gravity Commission1987 | DNAGCSMS2 | Vol. 2 | 5 sheets | $9.99

Magnetic Anomaly Map of North AmericaCommittee for the Magnetic Anomaly Map of North America1987 | DNAGCSMS3 | Vol. 3 | 4 sheets | $9.99

Seismicity Map of North AmericaComp: E.R. Engdahl1988 | DNAGCSMS4 | Vol. 4 | 4 sheets | $9.99

Stress Map of North AmericaM.L. Zoback, M.D. Zoback, J. Adams, S. Bell, M. Suter, G. Suarez, K. Jacob, C. Estabrook, and M. Magee1991 | DNAGCSMS5 | Vol. 5 | 4 sheets | $9.99

Geothermal Map of North AmericaComps: David D. Blackwell and John L. Steele1992 | DNAGCSMS6 | Vol. 6 | 4 sheets | $9.99

Neotectonics of North AmericaEds: D. Burton Slemmons, E.R. Engdahl, Mark D. Zoback, and David D. Blackwell1991 | DNAGCSMS7 | 498 p. | $9.99

Continent/Ocean Transects

(scale 1:500,000)

Kodiak to Kuskokwim, AlaskaRoland von Huene, Stephen Box, Bob Detterman, Michael Fisher, Casey Moore, and Hans Pulpan1985 | DNAGCOTA2 | Vol. A-2 | 14 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Gulf of Alaska to Arctic OceanArthur Grantz, Thomas E. Moore, and Sarah Roeske1991 | DNAGCOTA3 | Vol. A-3 | 72 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Intermontane Belt (Skeena Mountains) to Insular Belt (Queen Charlotte Islands)C.J. Yorath, G.J. Woodsworth, R.P. Riddihough, R.G. Currie, R.D. Hyndman, C.G. Rogers, D.A. Seemann, and A.D. Collins1985 | DNAGCOTB1 | Vol. B-1 | 8 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Juan de Fuca Plate to Alberta PlainsJ.W.H. Monger, R.M. Clowes, R.A. Price, P.S. Simony, R.P. Riddihough, and G.J. Woodsworth1985 | DNAGCOTB2 | Vol. B-2 | 21 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Juan de Fuca Spreading Ridge to Montana Thrust BeltPrincipal comps: Darrell S. Cowan and Christopher J. Potter1986 | DNAGCOTB3 | Vol. B-3 | 12 p., 3 plates | $9.99

Mendocino Triple Junction to North American CratonM.C. Blake Jr., R.L. Bruhn, E.L. Miller, E.M. Moores, S.B. Smithson, and R.C. Speed1985 | DNAGCOTC1 | Vol. C-1 | 30 p., 3 plates | $9.99

Central California Offshore to Colorado PlateauJ.B. Saleeby1986 | DNAGCOTC2 | Vol. C-2 | 63 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Pacific Abyssal Plain to the Rio Grande RiftD.G. Howell, J.D. Gibson, G.S. Fuis, J.H. Knapp, G.B. Haxel, B.R. Keller, L.T. Silver, and J.G. Vedder1985 | DNAGCOTC3 | Vol. C-3 | 23 p., 3 plates | $9.99

Northern AppalachiansC.E. Keen and R.T. Haworth1985 | DNAGCOTD1 | Vol. D-1 | 11 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Transform Margin South of Grand BanksOffshore Eastern CanadaC.E. Keen and R.T. Haworth1985 | DNAGCOTD2 | Vol. D-2 | 6 p., 1 plate | $9.99

Rifted Continental Margin Off Nova ScotiaC.E. Keen and R.T. Haworth1985 | DNAGCOTD3 | Vol. D-3 | 7 p., 1 plate | $9.99

Rifted Continental Margin Off LabradorC.E. Keen and R.T. Haworth1985 | DNAGCOTD4 | Vol. D-4 | 5 p., 1 plate | $9.99

Adirondacks to Georges BankJ.B. Thompson Jr., W.A. Bothner, P. Robinson, and K.D. Klitgord1993 | DNAGCOTE1 | Vol. E-1 | 55 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Southwestern Pennsylvania to Baltimore Canyon TroughComps: Lynn Glover III and K.D. Klitgord1995 | DNAGCOTE3 | Vol. E-3 | 78 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Central Kentucky to the Carolina TroughD.W. Rankin, W.P. Dillon, D.F.B. Black, S.E. Boyer, D.L. Daniels, R. Goldsmith, J.A. Grow, J.W. Horton Jr., D.R. Hutchinson, K.D. Klitgord, R.C. McDowell, D.J. Milton, J.P. Owens, and J.D. Phillips1991 | DNAGCOTE4 | Vol. E-4 | 41 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Cumberland Plateau to Blake PlateauR.D. Hatcher Jr., D.J. Colquhoun, D.T. Secor Jr., F.A. Cook, W.P. Dillon, K. Klitgord, P. Popenoe, C.E. Merschat, L.S. Wiener, R.C. Milici, A.E. Nelson, R.E. Sheridan, and A.W. Snoke1994 | DNAGCOTE5 | Vol. E-5 | 56 p., 3 plates | $9.99

Somerset Island to Canada BasinJ.F. Sweeney1986 | DNAGCOTG | Vol. G | 5 p., 2 plates | $9.99

La Paz to Saltillo, Northwestern and Northern MexicoLuis-Miguel Mitre-Salazar and Jaime Roldan-Quintana1990 | DNAGCOTH1 | Vol. H-1 | 8 p., 2 plates | $9.99

Acapulco Trench to the Gulf of Mexico across Southern MexicoFernando Ortega-Gutiérrez1990 | DNAGCOTH3 | Vol. H-3 | 9 p., 1 plate | $9.99

Tectonic Section Display 2Comp: R.C. Speed1991 | DNAGCOTTSD | Vol. TSD | 58 p. | $9.99

Phanerozoic Evolution of North American Continent–Ocean TransitionsEd: Robert C. Speed1994 | DNAGCOTPHAN | 504 p. | $9.99

Shop Online } rock.geosociety.org/store

23

Page 24: BOOKSTORE bStre · n 4 Raising Idaho with a plume 59 Pegmatite-aplite togetherness in California 91 Giddy granite in the Altai 149 N 4 | E 1 F| U a R 9: n r Special Paper 538.888.443.4472

3300 Penrose Place • P.O. Box 9140 Boulder, CO 80301-9140

Shop Online } http://rock.geosociety.org

CALENDAR2020

BUY ONLINE } rock.geosociety.org/store

|

ONLY

$ 9.95