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  • April 2024

  • Fri 5

    Special Meeting of the IAFI Ellensburg Chapter

    April 5, 2024 @ 4:30 pm - 6:00 pm PDT
    Central Washington University 400 E University Way, Ellensburg, WA, United States

    Dear Members, Former Members, and Friends, I trust this message finds you in good health and spirits. I'm Mike Doran, a fellow member of the Ellensburg Chapter of the Ice Age Floods Institute, and I'm reaching out to you with an important invitation. Our chapter has a storied past filled with enriching field trips, captivating lectures, and engaging speakers. However, it's time for us to refocus our efforts and ensure that we're set for continued growth and success in the future. To achieve this, a dedicated group of us has been actively discussing strategies and ideas. Now, we're eager to invite you to join us for a special meeting where we can gather your invaluable input, ideas, and concerns. Your participation, in any capacity you choose, is vital as we navigate our path forward. We're fortunate that Karl Lillquist has arranged for us to convene on Friday, April 5th, at 4:30 PM in a meeting room at Dean Hall on the Central campus. (Please note that parking restrictions on campus ease after 4:30 PM as there is no cost then. Use parking lot O-5. Just be sure to park in General Parking slots and not Staff slots. ) The meeting time aligns perfectly with Nick's Bretz lectures, providing an ideal opportunity for us to meet before attending his 7:00 PM talk. During our gathering, we'll create an open forum for discussion and have light refreshments available. Additionally, we will be conducting elections for the following officer positions: Secretary, Vice-President, and President. This is an excellent opportunity for members to get involved and help shape the future direction of our organization. Whether you're interested in taking an active role in the organization, standing for election, or simply wish to share your thoughts, your presence will be immensely valued. Together, we aim to bolster Karl and Nick's efforts and ensure the sustained success of our chapter. We're genuinely excited about the possibilities that lie ahead and eagerly anticipate seeing you there. Should you have any questions or concerns beforehand, please feel free to reach out to me at 253-278-3470. Warm regards, Mike Doran

  • Sun 7

    Geologist’s Day – 1st Sunday in April

    April 7, 2024

    Geologists Day, a day dedicated to an underappreciated science, takes place on the first Sunday in April every year. Without geologists, we would know nothing about the over 4.5 billion year history of the earth. Geology is a science that studies the materials, natural features, and processes found on earth, as well as the history of all life that’s ever lived. Geologists around the world have made an enormous contribution to our way of life by discovering and developing our natural resources of minerals, hydrocarbons and water, by understanding the evolution of our planet and our solar system, by defining the evolution of life on Earth, by identifying the risks associated with natural hazards such as earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions, and by the technological and innovation spin-offs derived from many branches of geoscience such as geophysics and geochemistry. History of Geologists’ Day Geology, or the study of the composition of rocks, soil and other materials, has been around since the times of Ancient Greece. In their pursuit of understanding the world around them, Greek scientists, who wondered how the rocks were formed, began studying fossils and generating theories to go along with their ideas and research. Later, during the Middle Ages, when science was thought to have challenged the Catholic Church, more advances came (albeit sometimes subversively) in the field of geology. During this time, Leonardo da Vinci explored the functions of the human body but also, one of his lesser-known pursuits, is that he became a pioneer in geology. One of da Vinci’s interesting lines of research was related to fossils. He concluded that the fossils he and others had found embedded on mountain tops must have been from animals that swam on an ancient sea bed, though none of them were exactly sure how they could have gotten there. During the 17th-century, scientists began to make important links between certain sedimentary deposits in the oceans and the strata observable in rock formations. Much of the explanation as to how that happened, however, continued to remain a mystery until James Hutton and William ‘Strata’ Smith came along. These two well-known geologists helped find the explanation of the earth’s long and slow development over the course of thousands of years. Smith was also credited as the creator of the first, geologically detailed, national map of any country in the world. In this case, the country was England and he has since become known as the ‘Father of English Geology’. Geologists’ Day, itself, was actually the idea of a group of well-known Soviet geologists who established it in April, 1966. The day was chosen in the spring because it notes the end of winter and is a time that ramps up to the summer season field work when geologists are so active. While it continues to be a favorite day of the Russian Mineralogical Society, the day eventually made its way beyond the former Soviet Union and began to be celebrated by geologists, geophysicists and geochemists in various places in Europe, the United States and other countries around the world. How to Celebrate Geologists’ Day Held on the first Sunday in April, the celebration of Geologists’ Day can be fun for professional rock lovers and hobbyists alike! This day strives to help further the study of how the earth came to be. Geologists’ Day is all about learning the history of the earth, the geologists who studied the earth, and helping to inspire people out there to study geology. Learn More About Geology Give a nod to Geologists’ Day by learning a bit about what the discipline of geology is and how it works. Digging in rocks, observing maps, and studying how they all came to be is what a geologist’s job is all about. Make use of these online resources to learn more about geology: Ice Age Floods Institute website The Geological Society of America Society of Economic Geologists International Association for Promoting Geoethics Those who are even more interested might take the time to join a few online classes to further their studies. Take a look into the history of geologists, what they believed about the earth at the time they lived. If it turns out there’s an inner rock-lover in there, just waiting to get out, why not go for a degree while you’re at it?! Show Appreciation to a Geologist Geologists’ Day aims to show appreciation for the geologists that continue to study rocks and all their formations. In fact, this is the perfect day to gather with some friends or family to thank some of those favorite geologists, or even just a science teacher, who may have made a difference in the understanding of the world we live in. Listen to a Geology Themed Playlist Hop onto Spotify or another favorite music hosting site and enjoy these songs that are reminiscent of the study of the earth, rocks, landslides and all the beautiful things that go along with geology: We Will Rock You (1977) Queen The Geologists are Coming! (2017) The Amoeba People Landslide (1975) Fleetwood Mac The Petroleum Age (2011) Philip Gibbs Geology Rocks (2017) Los Beekeepers Uranium Rock (1973) Warren Smith Sweet Geology (aka The Mineral Song) (2007) The Akkademiks Share Geology Day with Friends Show appreciation for the studies of geologists by sharing this holiday with friends and family. Go big by throwing a geology party, or keep it small by simply gifting friends or coworkers with a small stone or rock as a token of the day. Whatever method is chosen, just the acknowledgment of this day is a step in the right direction toward appreciating the earth and its scientists! (credit https://www.daysoftheyear.com/days/geologists-day/)

  • Tue 9

    The Geology of Sunset Highway

    April 9, 2024 @ 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm PDT
    Wenatchee Valley Museum and Cultural Center 127 S. Mission, Wenatchee, WA, United States

    The Wenatchee Valley Erratics Chapter of the Ice Age Floods Institute will meet Tuesday, April 9 at 7:00 PM, at the Wenatchee Valley Museum and Cultural Center, 127 S. Mission, Wenatchee. Or via Zoom link https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84520197937 Webinar ID: 845 2019 7937 Dr. Earl F. Cater, Director of the Douglas County Museum in Waterville, will present “The Geology of Sunset Highway.” Topics he will discuss include: Early Euro-American explorations of the Big Bend country; Difficulty in getting to Douglas County because of elevation and size; Barriers to Euro-American settlement: Rocks and no roads, Banks Lake area’s 800-feet high basalt cliffs, Corbaley Canyon’s fractured gneiss and schist, rockslides from basalt layers; Obstacles from glaciation: Yeager Rock and multiple haystack rocks and other glacial features; The first stage in Okanogan, March 1884: The Jack Smith story; 1913 Declaration of the Sunset Highway as the Red Trail; 1926 Declaration of the Sunset Highway as the Yellowstone Trail. The program is free and open to the public. Contact information: Dr. Earl F. Cater Director, Douglas County Museum efcater@gmail.com 515-371-3535 Susan D. Freiberg Erratics Chapter Publicity wenvalerratics@yahoo.com

  • Fri 12

    45th Parallel’s Concert: Lost in Deep Time. April 12, 2024

    April 12, 2024 @ 7:00 pm - 10:00 pm PDT
    Straub Collaborative 3333 NW Industrial St,, Portland, OR, United States

    This live musical experience immerses the musicians and audience in large-scale projections of landscapes animated to the contemporary classical program. Using photogrammetry and LiDAR, the scenes are rendered in three-dimensional point clouds that animate to reveal the sculptural aspects of the geology and landforms. The second half of the evening’s program is “He Who Saw the Deep,” which are five studies for a larger piece in development about the ice age floods. Principally drawing on floodscapes in the Channeled Scablands, these five works explore the enigmatic landscapes that inspired J Harlen Bretz’s cataclysmic flood theory set to a musical program performed by Pyxis Quartet. Friday, April 12, 2024 at 7:00PM Straub Collaborative 3333 NW Industrial St, Portland, ORMore information can be found here.  Get your tickets at 45th Parallel website. WORKS Andy Akiho: Prospects of a Misplaced Year PERFORMERS Ron Blessinger, violin Greg Ewer, violin Charles Noble, viola Marilyn de Oliviera, cello Yoko Greeney, piano Brad Johnson, visual artist Meanwhile, enjoy this trailer video

  • Thu 18

    Field Trip to the Ice Dam Site

    April 18, 2024 - April 19, 2024

    A field trip to Sandpoint ID to view geologic features related to the ice dam(s) that blocked the Clark Fork River causing the formation of Glacial Lake Missoula is planned for April 17-19th by the Glacial Lake Missoula chapter.  Tony Lewis of the Coeur du Deluge Chapter will narrate a day long bus trip on April 18.  A car caravan will visit Farragut State Park and other downstream sites the next day.   Registration is limited and is being handled by the Montana Natural History Center at https://events.humanitix.com/ice-dam-field-trip Discounted registration is available at Schweitzer Resort until March 18th.  For further information check out these details or contact Sherry McLauchlan, 406-207-7760.

  • Thu 25

    Field Presentations to 7th Grade Science Students

    April 25, 2024 @ 10:00 am - 1:00 pm PDT
    Fort Cascades Regional Park North Bonneville, WA, United States

    On Thursday, April 25, four classes of 7th grade science students from Henkle Middle School will be visiting Fort Cascades Park on the Columbia River below Bonneville Dam for talks by Jeanette Burkhardt and Margaret Neumann of Yakama Fisheries and Mid-Columbia Fisheries, and Lloyd DeKay of the Ice Age Floods Institute. All together, 90 students will learn more in the field about fish, natural resources and Gorge geology. The presenters also volunteer in leading field trips for the Columbia Gorge Master Naturalist program.

  • May 2024

  • Sun 5

    Columbia Gorge Geology Field Trip – May 5th

    May 5, 2024 @ 8:30 am - 3:30 pm PDT
    Skyline Health Foundation 211 Skyline Dr, White Salmon, WA, United States

    Lloyd DeKay, president of the Columbia River Gorge Chapter of IAFI, has volunteered to lead a day-long presentation and field trip on June 1, 2024,  to explore the geology of the central-east portion of the Columbia River Gorge for winning donors at the Skyline Health Foundation's Cultivate Columbia fundraiser on April 13, 2024. The day will begin at 8:30 AM with a slide presentation about the origins and geohistory of the Gorge.  Then participants will board a bus for a 40+ mile roundtrip to see and discuss a number of uniquely interesting places and geologic features found in the Gorge between White Salmon and The Dalles. Basalt Pillows We'll see and discuss lahar deposits, kolk ponds, tree casts, differences between pillow basalts and Maar deposits, Ice Age Floods features, indigenous petroglyphs and even a brief trip through Africa USA. Lunch will be no-host at a local restaurant along the way. Maar Deposits This field trip is donated in support of the Skyline Health Foundation. The Cultivate Columbia fundraiser is currently sold out, so if you don't have tickets and you wish to participate, you should contact the foundation director, Elizabeth Vaivoda at 509-637-2602 for more details.

  • Tue 7

    LECTURE: An Overview of the Missoula Floods

    May 7, 2024 @ 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm PDT
    Pomeroy Senior Center 695 Main St., Pomeroy, WA, United States

    Lloyd Stoess, Palouse Falls Chapter President, will take participants on an epic journey from northwest Montana, through northern Idaho, eastern Washington, the Washington-Oregon border and as far south as the coast of California.   Come and see how our channeled scablands are just a part of the story - a story like none other on earth.

  • Sat 11

    Cheney-Spokane Chapter Hike – Saturday 5/11 at 12 PM – Waikiki Springs

    May 11, 2024 @ 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm PDT
    Waikiki Springs Trailhead Washington

    Come join us for an easy hike just north of Spokane to explore Ice Age floods features, led by IAFICS board member geologist Michael Hamilton. This is one of the newest conservation areas in Spokane, and has well established trails. Waikiki Springs is an out-pouring of the Spokane Aquifer through the bottom of an ancient valley buried by sands and gravels of the great outburst floods of the last Ice Age. Hiking group size is limited to the first 20 people to sign up. After confirming your registration we will send you the hike details and keep you up-to-date on any changes that happen before the day of the hike. Resources: Waikiki Springs Nature Preserve

  • Tue 14

    MCBONES: The Coyote Canyon Mammoth Site

    May 14, 2024 @ 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm PDT
    The Reach Museum 1943 Columbia Park Trl , WA, Richland, WA, United States

    Gary Kleinknecht will present MCBONES: The Coyote Canyon Mammoth Site Learn about the activities going on at this local mammoth dig site, the impact of Ice Age floods revealed at the site and the ongoing paleoenvironmental study. Presented by our own Lake Lewis Chapter Program Director and ‘go-to’ mammoth dig volunteer: Gary Kleinknecht. Gary serves as the Education Director for MCBONES, the educational 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization which oversees activities at the Coyote Canyon site. Tuesday, May 14th @7PM at The REACH Museum 1943 Columbia Park Trail, Richland, WA 99352

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