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18. 	 Wellbore Integrity: Subsurface Issues and Solutions.          37. 	 The Future of Glacial Chronostratigraphy in the U.S.:                  GSA TODAY | www.geosociety.org/gsatoday
     Barbara Kutchko, Barbara.kutchko@netl.doe.gov.                      Pre–Late Wisconsinan Glaciation East of the Mississippi
                                                                         River. Charles Rovey, Missouri State Univ., charlesrovey@
19. 	 Geology of Marcellus-Utica Shale and How it Relates to Oil         missouristate.edu.
     and Gas Production. Wendell Barner, Barner Consulting,
     LLC, wendell.barner@gmail.com                                  38. 	 Quaternary Interglacials in North America. Martin Head,
                                                                         Brock Univ., mjhead@brocku.ca.
20.	 Environmental and Engineering Problems and Solutions
     Associated with the Marcellus-Utica Shale Play. Wendell        39. 	 Regional Geophysical Studies in the Central and Eastern
     Barner, Barner Consulting, LLC, wendell.barner@gmail.com.           U.S. Kevin Mickus, Missouri State Univ., kevinmickus@
                                                                         missouristate.edu; Sourav Nandi.
21. 	 Passive Seismic Monitoring of Brittle and Non-Brittle
     Deformation during the Stimulation of Unconventional           40. 	 Applied Geology, Environmental, Engineering,
     Shale Reservoirs. Richard Hammack, richard.hammack@                 Hydrogeology, and Applied Geophysics. Terry West, Purdue
     netl.doe.gov; Abash Kumar; Erich Zorn.                              Univ., trwest@purdue.edu.

22. 	 Understanding and Assessing Potential Hazard/Risk from        41. 	 Geoarchaeology. Harry Jol, Univ. of Wisconsin, jolhm@
     Induced Seismicity in the North-Central and Northeastern            uwec.edu.
     United States. Michael Rosenmeier, RIZZO Associates,
     Michael.rosenmeier@rizzoassoc.com; Doug Raszewski.             42. 	 Surficial Geologic Mapping. Cosponsored by Great Lakes
                                                                         Geologic Mapping Coalition; Great Lakes Section SEPM.
23. 	 Telling Histories of Shale. Conevery Bolton Valencius, Univ.       Kevin Kincare, USGS, Kkincare@usgs.gov; Gary Fleeger.
     of Massachusetts, conevery.valencius@umb.edu; Brian Frehner.
                                                                    FIELD TRIPS
24. 	 Urban Biogeochemistry and Geochemistry. Emily M. Elliott,
     eelliott@pitt.edu; Daniel J. Bain.                               Direct your field-trip proposals to Joe Hannibal (NC,
                                                                    JHannibal@cmnh.org) or Kyle Fredrick (NE, fredrick@calu.edu).
25. 	 Biogeochemistry & Geobiology of Anoxic/Euxinic Systems.       1. 	 New Insights and Lessons Learned from the Johnstown
     Molly O’Beirne, Univ. of Pittsburg, mdobeirne@pitt.edu;
     Joseph Werne; William Gilhooly.                                     (Pennsylvania) Flood of 1889. Carrie Davis Todd,
                                                                         Baldwin-Wallace Univ., cdavisto@bw.edu.
26. 	 Biogeochemical Cycling and Biomineralization:                 2. 	 From Fort Pitt to Coal Hill: Geological, Archaeological,
     Observations at the Microscale. Dawn Cardace, Univ. of              and Historical Aspects of Downtown Pittsburgh and
     Rhode Island, cardace@uri.edu.                                      Mount Washington. Joe Hannibal, Cleveland Museum
                                                                         of Natural History, jhannibal@cmnh.org; Albert Kollar,
27. 	 Precambrian Assembly of a Continent from the Northeast             Carnegie Museum of Natural History.
     to the Mid-Continent to the Southwest: Modern                  3. 	 The Old, the Crude, and the Muddy: Oil History in Western
     Approaches to Study Ancient Crust. Benjamin Hallett,                Pennsylvania. Kristin M. Carter, Pennsylvania Geological
     Univ. of Wisconsin–Oshkosh, hallettb@uwosh.edu;                     Survey, krcarter@pa.gov; Kathy J. Flaherty.
     Christopher Daniel.                                            4. 	 Abandoned Mine Drainage in the Pittsburgh Area:
                                                                         Occurrence and Passive Treatment. Bob Hedin, Hedin
28. 	 Recent Advances in Volcano Observation and Monitoring.             Environmental, info@hedinenv.com.
     Loÿc Vanderkluysen, Drexel Univ., loyc@drexel.edu.             5. 	 Pleistocene Features of the Laurel Highlands and Upper
                                                                         Youghiogheny Basin. Rebecca Kavage Adams, Maryland
29. 	 Paleolimnological Studies of Climate Variability and               Geological Survey, rebecca.adams@maryland.gov;
     Environmental Response. Arielle Woods, Univ. of                     David K. Brezinski.
     Pittsburgh, ariellewoods@pitt.edu; Mark Abbott.
                                                                    WORKSHOPS
30. 	 Application of Organic Geochemical Proxies to (Paleo)
     Environmental Studies. Dervla Kumar, Univ. of Pittsburgh,        Direct your workshop proposals to the workshop coordinator:
     dmk81@pitt.edu; Joseph Werne.                                  Timothy Fisher, timothy.fisher@utoledo.edu
                                                                    1. 	 3D Printing of Terrain Models. Chris Harding, Iowa State
31. 	 Progress Toward Understanding Present and Past River
     Responses to Climate in Eastern and Midwestern North                Univ., charding@iastate.edu.
     America. J. Steven Kite, West Virginia Univ., jkite@wvu.edu;   2. 	 Geologic Overview and Environmental Considerations
     Todd Grote; Bill Monaghan.
                                                                         in Marcellus and Utica-Point Pleasant Exploration
32. 	 Redeveloping in the Urban Landscape—Expected and                   & Production. Jeffrey Dick, Youngstown State Univ.;
     Unexpected Challenges. Frank Benecquista, KU Resources,             Dan Billman, dan@billmangeologic.com
     Inc., fbenacquista@kuresources.com.                            3.	 Ground-Penetrating Radar for the Earth Sciences.
                                                                         Harry M. Jol, Univ. of Wisconsin, jolhm@uwec.edu.
33. 	 Shoreline Behavior, Paralic Architecture, and Lake-Level
     Change in the Great Lakes. John W. Johnston, Univ. of                                                               continued on next page
     Waterloo, jwjohnston@uwaterloo.ca; Todd Thompson;
     Erin Argyilan.

34. 	 Quaternary Paleolimnology of the Laurentian Great
     Lakes Region. Joe Ortiz, Kent State Univ., jortiz@kent.edu;
     Beverly Saylor.

35. 	 Quaternarists’ Perspectives on the Anthropocene.
     Francine McCarthy, Brock Univ., fmccarthy@brocku.ca.

36. 	 Applications of OSL and TCN to Chronologic Problems
     along the Margins of the LIS. Cosponsored by GSA
     Quaternary Geology and Geomorphology Division. Kenneth
     Lepper, North Dakota State Univ., ken.lepper@ndsu.edu.

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