Nominating Committee Results: Next Year's Slate of Officers

The following slate of officers has been selected by this year’s nominating committee:

President ........................................................................... Rik Smoody
Vice President .................................................................. Sheila Alfsen
Secretary ........................................................................... Paul Edison-Lahm
Treasurer .............................................................................Dawn Juliano
Director, 3 years .............................................................. Carol Hasenberg
Director, 2 years ............................................................... Larry Purchase
Director, 1 year .................................................................. Martha Muncie

Nominations will be closed for this year’s slate of officers after the January meeting of the society.  The slate of officers will be voted on and approved at the February monthly meeting. The Nominating Committee members were Bo Nonn, Larry Purchase, and Paul Edison-Lahm.  Our thanks to the selected members and members of the Nominating Committee! 

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Don’t Forget to Re-up Your Membership!

GSOC Dues are Due Soon

GSOC members and prospective members, please remember to renew your memberships for 2017. Your membership benefits include: 

  • Helping serve GSOC’s mission of promoting geology education in the Northwest, including PSU geology scholarships

  • Welcome to join in all GSOC functions, including field trips, Holiday Party, Annual Banquet and Picnic, and more!

  • A printed version of the GSOC newsletter if you choose

  • A great time with all your GSOC friends!
     

Renew online here. PS: If you joined the club after September 1, 2016, your dues are paid through 2017!!! 

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Dark Noon

Dark Noon

Dr. Richard Waitt, who arrived in Washington state from the USGS office in Menlo Park, California, shortly after the eruption of Mt. St. Helens, stayed to study the volcano and built the bulk of his career at the Cascades Volcano Observatory (CVO) in Vancouver, Washington. Dr. Waitt came to promote his new book In the Path of Destruction: Eyewitness Chronicles of Mount St. Helens, Washington State University Press, 2015, to the GSOC audience and to describe the book’s origin and some of the stories it contains. He said that early in his research into the events of the volcanic eruption, he was focused more on the hard geology that people could describe. However, he became involved more in the stories that people told about their experiences and the process of determining the details of the event by analyzing the interviews of the witnesses. 

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Board Meeting Notes

The meeting was called to order at the home of Rosemary Kenney. Board members attending were VP Rik Smoody, Director Larry Purchase, and Treasurer Dawn Juliano. Non board members were Barbara Smoody, Carol Hasenberg, Rosemary Kenney. Since quorum was not met, the members present used this meeting time to make plans for some of the upcoming GSOC events and table any discussions which required others to complete. 

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Paleontologist to the Rescue!

Paleontologist to the Rescue!

Synopsis of Friday night lecture on July 8, 2016, with speaker Sheila Alfsen

GSOC Past President Sheila Alfsen described her experiences working as an onsite paleontologist on construction sites for Paleontology Associates, a company run by Oregon paleontologist Dr. William Orr for more than 15 years. Paleontology Associates was created to address the need for preserving important fossil finds on government property when they are threatened by construction projects. 

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Fossil and Erratic Sites Discovered on Our Annual Picnic

Fossil and Erratic Sites Discovered on Our Annual Picnic
  1. Tualatin Library – Mastodon mounted bones, NARG tusk, Woodburn and other fossils located inside. 
  2. Tualatin River Greenway Path – The ¾ mile newly completed trail exhibits casts of fossils, erratic rocks, and each step represents 25 years of geologic time. 
  3. Heritage Center – Showing 10 and 2.5 ton flood erratics in front. A group of Tualatin’s erratic rocks and other fossils are also displayed inside. The center is open M-F 10-2. 
  4. Mastodon Bronze Sculpture – and small bronze boy outside the SW corner of Cabela’s. 
  5. Cabela’s – Fossil casts are located inside sporting goods store, at the entrance and center back. 
  6. Mastodon discovery site – Located near the southwest edge of the Fred Meyer parking lot in blackberries, next to Nyberg Creek. Discovered in 1962. 
  7. Sweek Pond – Short optional art walk. 
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Are We There Yet?

Are We There Yet?

Teams Led By OSU Scientist Seek To Discover Answers On Climate Change At Petermann Glacier In Greenland 

Dr. Alan Mix, Professor of Oceanography in the divisions of Ocean Ecology and Biogeochemistry and of Geology and Geophysics in the College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences at Oregon State University and Chief Scientist of the Petermann Glacier 2015 research expedition, spoke at the GSOC 81st Annual Banquet about the research he led at Petermann Glacier in Greenland. His talk stressed the value of the research in helping to further our understanding of climate change and drive the political policies needed to help us face the changes. 

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Board Meeting Notes

Board Meeting Notes

April 9th, 2016

President Bo Nonn called the meeting to order at the home of Rosemary Kenney. Other board members in attendance constituting quorum were Rik Smoody, Dawn Juliano, Paul Edison-Lahm, Kirben Smoody, Marty Muncie, and Larry Purchase, Janet Rasmussen, and Sheila Alfsen. Also in attendance were Rosemary, Carol Hasenberg, Dave Olcott, and Doug Rasmussen. The minutes of the February 13th, 2016 board meeting were approved. 

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Paleoseismicity Research: From Trench to Earthquake Hazard Map

Paleoseismicity Research: From Trench to Earthquake Hazard Map

Dr. Ashley Streig, Assistant Professor in the Geology Department of Portland State University and NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellow, gave a talk to GSOC about her paleoseismology research on the San Andreas Fault in California. Streig’s research in the Hazel Dell site in the Santa Cruz Mountains was interpreted as showing the results of 3 significant earthquakes happening since the land was settled and logged by the first Spanish settlers.

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Board Meeting Notes

Board Meeting Notes

President Janet Rasmussen called the meeting to order at the home of Rosemary Kenney. Other board members in attendance constituting quorum were Bo Nonn, Dawn Juliano, Paul Edison-Lahm, Kirben Smoody, Marty Muncie, and Larry Purchase, Sheila Alfsen, John Piccininni. Also in attendance were Rosemary, Rik Smoody, Jane Walcott, Dave Olcott, Julia Lanning, and Doug Rasmussen. The minutes of the December 5th, 2015 board meeting were approved.

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Welcome New Members

Rex Breunsbach                                            

Alice Brocoum                                                                         

Jaclyn Phillips                                                                                      

Connie Reightler                                                                    

Diana and Fred Bradshaw

William Auel

Ryan Westling

Ann Goetcheus

April Avery

Susan Anderson

Patricia Reed      

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In Memory of Dr. John Whitmer, 1923-2016

In Memory of Dr. John Whitmer, 1923-2016

Reprinted by permission from Northwest Geological Society. Dr. Whitmer was a long time GSOC member and avid amateur geologist, remembered for his field trips and his beautiful reports and guidebooks.

Our colleague, friend, and former NWGS President Dr. John Whitmer passed away on January 13 at the age of 92. He was born in Spokane, Wash., where he spent much of his youth, but he graduated from Billings High School, Montana, in 1941. It was during his freshman year of high school in Spokane before moving to Montana that a teacher there inspired what would be a lifelong passion for geology. John went on to attend college at Montana State College in Bozeman, where he majored in electrical engineering, but this was disrupted by World War II. He ended up in Oregon and in 1946 was accepted into the University of Oregon Medical School. 

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Cookie Dough, Jelly Sandwiches, and Structural Geology: A Beginner’s Guide

Cookie Dough, Jelly Sandwiches, and Structural Geology: A Beginner’s Guide

Dr. Nancy Price, a recent addition to the faculty at Portland State University and a structural geology specialist, spoke to GSOC about her research in rheology. As she described her work in the course of the lecture, Price looks at metamorphic rock outcrops and samples in order to determine the histories of events which have been recorded in their structure.

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