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T21. It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, It’s a UAV—Advances in wintsch@indiana.edu; Craig Dietsch, Univ. of Cincinnati, dietscc@
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) for Research and ucmail.uc.edu; Gregory Walsh, U.S. Geological Survey, gwalsh@
Education. Cosponsored by National Association of usgs.gov; Ryan Deasy, U.S. Geological Survey, ryantdeasy@gmail
Geoscience Teachers; GSA Geoscience Education .com; William Devlin, Rock Bottom Associates, pevo26@icloud.com.
Division; Eastern Section–SEPM (Society for Sedimentary
Geology). Lauren Neitzke Adamo, Rutgers Univ., Revisiting the Geology of Central Park, Manhattan, New York
Lneitzke@eps .rutgers.edu; Christian Rowan, Rutgers City, USA. Steven J. Jaret, American Museum of Natural History,
Univ., cmr392@ scarletmail.rutgers.edu; Ashyln Spector, sjaret@amnh.org; Nicholas D. Tailby, American Museum of
Rutgers Univ., as3201@eps.rutgers.edu. Natural History, ntailby@amnh.org; Keiji Hammond, American
Museum of Natural History, khammond@amnh.org.
T22. Geoscience and “Science Denial” in the Classroom and
Beyond. Cosponsored by GSA Quaternary Geology and Accessible Geology in the Hartford Basin. Cosponsored by
Geomorphology Division. Kristine Larsen, Central International Association for Geoscience Diversity (IAGD); Eastern
Connecticut State Univ., Larsen@ccsu.edu. Section–SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology). Jennifer Piatek,
Central Connecticut State Univ., piatekjel@ccsu.edu; Anita
T23. Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) Three- Marshall, Univ. of Florida, anita.marshall@ufl.edu; Sean Thatcher,
Dimensional (3D) Learning: Exploring K–12 Geoscience Rutgers Univ., sean.thatcher1990@gmail.com.
3D Activities that Engage Students in Natural Science
Phenomenon. Jeffrey Thomas, Central Connecticut State Exploring Western New England’s Geologic History: A Half-
Univ., thomasjed@ccsu.edu; Marsha Bednarski, Central Day Field Trip for Teachers and Community. Cosponsored by
Connecticut State Univ., bednarskim@ccsu.edu. National Association of Geoscience Teachers, New England
Section. Tarin Weiss, Westfield State Univ., tweiss@westfield
FIELD TRIPS .ma.edu; Susan Meabh-Kelly, Henry Abbot Technical School,
Trip registration opens in January. For additional information, susankelly.ct@gmail.com; Lindsay Waack, Wilton High School,
please contact the Field Trip chair Jean Crespi, jean.crespi@ LWAACK@fairfieldschools.org; Lori Weeden, Univ. of
uconn.edu. Massachusetts, Lowell, Lori_Weeden@uml.edu.
Burying the Park: Hartford and its Rivers. Cosponsored by SHORT COURSES
Eastern Section–SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology); Course registration opens in January. For additional informa-
GSA Quaternary Geology and Geomorphology Division. Gary A. tion, please contact the Short Course chair, Margaret Thomas,
Gomby, Central Connecticut State Univ., garygomby@ccsu.edu. Margaret.Thomas@ct.gov.
Anthropocene Landscape Change and the Legacy of Human Teaching the Anthropocene. Cosponsored by Eastern Section–
Impacts in Southern New England. Cosponsored by Eastern SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology). Robert M. Thorson,
Section–SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology); GSA Univ. of Connecticut, robert.thorson@uconn.edu.
Quaternary Geology and Geomorphology Division. William
Ouimet, Univ. of Connecticut, william.ouimet@uconn.edu; High Tech, Low Tech, No Tech? Developing Inclusive Field
Robert Thorson, Univ. of Connecticut, robert.thorson@uconn.edu. Experiences. Jennifer Piatek, Central Connecticut State Univ.,
piatekjel@ccsu.edu; Anita Marshall, Univ. of Florida,
Building Connecticut’s Jurassic Park: Biotic and Environmental anita.marshall@ufl.edu; Sean Thatcher, Rutgers Univ.,
Recovery from the End-Triassic Extinction in the Hartford Basin. sean.thatcher1990@gmail.com.
Cosponsored by Eastern Section–SEPM (Society for Sedimentary
Geology); Connecticut Geological Survey Department of Energy and The LiDAR Revolution in Earth Surface Mapping—From Data
Environmental Protection. Peter A. Drzewiecki, Eastern Connecticut Download to Applications in Historic Land-Use Reconstruction
State Univ., drzewieckip@ easternct.edu; Paul E. Olsen, Lamont- and Surficial Geologic Mapping. Cosponsored by Eastern
Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia Univ., polsen@ldeo.columbia Section–SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology). William
.edu; James A. Hyatt, Eastern Connecticut State Univ., hyattj@ Ouimet, Univ. of Connecticut, william.ouimet@uconn.edu;
easternct.edu; Randolph P. Steinen, Univ. of Connecticut and Janet Radway Stone, U.S. Geological Survey (emeritus), jrstone@
Connecticut Dept. of Energy and Environmental Protection (retired), usgs.gov; Margaret A. Thomas, Connecticut Geological Survey,
rsteinen@gmail.com. margaret.thomas@ct.gov.
Metamorphic Terranes of Western Connecticut: A Complex The Digital Geologic Map Schema (GeMS). Robert G.
History of Early Paleozoic Accretion, Deformation, and Marvinney, Maine Geological Survey, robert.g.marvinney@
Intrusion. Cosponsored by Geological Society of Connecticut; maine.gov; David R. Soller, U.S. Geological Survey, drsoller@
Connecticut Geological Survey Department of Energy and usgs.gov; Ralph Haugerud, U.S. Geological Survey, rhaugerud@
Environmental Protection; GSA Structural Geology and Tectonics usgs.gov.
Division; GSA Mineralogy, Geochemistry, Petrology, and
Volcanology Division. William Burton, U.S. Geological Survey
(emeritus), bburton@usgs.gov; Robert Wintsch, Wesleyan Univ.,
50 GSA Today | October 2020