TABLE OF CONTENTS GeoDaze 2015 Donors 3 GeoDaze 2015 Welcome 4 GeoDaze 2015 Committee 5 EarthWeek Event Locations 6 GeoDaze/EarthWeek Keynote Information 7 GeoDaze Schedule of Events Day 1 Thursday, April 9 8-14 Economic Geology Geophysics Climate and Paleoclimate GeoDaze Poster Session Day 2 Friday, April 10 14-16 Tectonics and Geochemistry GeoDaze Keynote Speaker: Paul Hoffman Slideshow Awards and Closing Remarks Earthweek Plenary Poster Session EarthWeek Oral Plenary Session “Linking the spheres of our dynamic earth” EarthWeek Keynote Speaker: James Collins GeoDaze Dinner Party Maps and Directions 17-19 Field Trip Guide 20 2 GeoDaze 2015 was made possible by generous donations from SONSHINE EXPLORATION INDIVIDUALS Gerard and Byoung Sun Beaudoin Barbara Bohn Elwood and Della Brooks Jeffrey and Mary Ann Bryant Carlotta Chernoff Anthony and Nancy Ann Ching Jessica Conroy Ted Cross Michael and Marian Fellows Karl Flessa Terrence Gerlach and A. LitasiGerlach Willie Guenthner James and Diane Hays John Hoelle Gary and Yvonne Huckleberry Owen Hurd Mari Jensen Richard D. Jones John Kerns Susan M. Kidwell Peter Kresan Michael Kutney Robert and Barbara Laughon Scott Lewis Leslie D. McFadden Norman Meader Robert Peterson S. Lynn Peyton William and Susan Purves Miles G. Shaw Doug and Dawna Silver John and Alison Sturgul Sarah Tindall Al Vaskas and Susan Bernstein Anonymous Donors Sponsors listed as of March 30, 2015. Later sponsors will be acknowledged on the website. GeoDaze program cover photograph and EarthWeek logo photographs by Luke Parsons (www.LukeParsonsPhoto.com) 3 WELCOME We are pleased to welcome you to the 43rd annual GeoDaze! GeoDaze is a long-standing research symposium organized by student volunteers from the Department of Geosciences featuring groundbreaking research from undergraduate and graduate students. Each year, GeoDaze is made possible by generous donations from individuals and corporate sponsors. We thank you for your continued support. GeoDaze provides the opportunity for students to present their research to an enthusiastic audience of faculty, industry professionals, peers, and the general public. GeoDaze collaborates with five other departments in the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences (SEES) to bring you EarthWeek, a celebration of scientific research to promote interdisciplinary discussion, collaboration, and exposure for all of the participating departments. A full schedule of EarthWeek events is included on page 6 of this program, and we encourage you to take advantage of all that EarthWeek has to offer. This year, GeoDaze is proud to present 35 oral and 27 poster presentations from Geosciences graduate and undergraduate students. The diversity of these presentations reflects the Department of Geosciences’ breadth and includes research in economic geology, tectonics and geochemistry, geophysics, paleoclimate, and climate dynamics. In addition, we are proud to support Zachary Naiman as he represents our department at the EarthWeek Plenary Session, “Linking the Spheres of our Dynamic Earth”, featuring interdisciplinary talks by representatives from each of the SEES departments. Please show your support for Zach on Friday afternoon at 2:00pm! This year, GeoDaze is proud to host Dr. Paul Hoffman, Professor Emeritus of Geology at Harvard University, as our keynote speaker. Dr. Hoffman is a sedimentary and tectonic geologist and is widely known for the development of the Snowball Earth hypothesis. We invite you to attend Dr. Hoffman’s presentation entitled “Dates and dynamics: Snowball Earth comes of age” at 11:15 AM on Friday, April 10th in the North Ballroom. In accordance with tradition, many exciting “extracurricular” events will take place during GeoDaze. Our panel of faculty judges and sponsors will present awards for the best talks and posters in each session as well as the overall runner-up and best talk award at 12:15 PM on Friday, and the GeoDaze slide show will surely embarrass and entertain at 12:45. All attendees of GeoDaze are invited to attend the GeoDaze party, Friday evening. Eat, drink, and explore the beautiful backyard (complete with Pelletier Chicken Mansion!) of Dr. Jon and Pamela Pelletier. Make sure to save some energy for the GeoDaze field trip on Saturday. This year, we will learn about how University of Arizona researchers are taking advantage of the unique laboratory of Biosphere2. We would like to thank all of those who helped support and organize GeoDaze this year. Your tireless efforts ensure the continued success of GeoDaze! Kathleen Compton and Jonathan Delph Co-Chairs, 2015 GeoDaze Symposium 4 COMMITTEE Co-chairs…………………………..……….Kathleen Compton and Jonathan Delph Outreach……………………………………………………………….…Dakota Isaacs Audio/Video………………….…………..….Melissa Harrington and Garrison Loope Publications…..………………………………...…..Paul Goddard and Luke Parsons Treasurer…………………………………………………………………….Kevin Ward Slideshow………………………..Adam Hudson, Ryan Leary, and Drew Laskowski Field Trip……………...………Phillip McFarland, Intan Yokelson, and Kate Metcalf Refreshments………………………………..…......................................Emma Reed Webmaster………………………………………………………………Jared Olyphant Awards………………………………………..……..Gloria Jimenez and Shana Wolff Correspondence………………….….….………Nicollette Buckle and Kim Fendrich Registration……………………………….……....Dominik Kardell and Daniel Porter Alumni Relations……………………………………………..………..Andrea Stevens DEPARTMENT OF GEOSCIENCES INFORMATION Department of Geosciences The University of Arizona Gould-Simpson Building 1040 E. 4th Street Tucson, AZ 85721 Phone: 520-621-6000 Fax: 520-621-2672 5 EarthWeek Event Locations and Schedule Tuesday April 7th Bryant Bannister Tree-Ring Building Lobby Tuesday, April 7th Tree-Ring Day Building Tours and 5-min Talks Wednesday, April 8th-Friday, April 10th Student Union Memorial Center- Level 3 Wednesday April 8th North Ballroom Thursday April 9th GeoDaze: Oral Sessions El Día del Agua Friday April 10th EarthWeek Plenary: Oral Session Keynote Speaker GeoDaze: Oral Sessions Keynote Speaker South Ballroom El Día del Agua GeoDaze: Poster Session Catalina Room El Día del Agua SWESx: Oral Sessions Rincon Room El Día del Agua AIR: Oral Sessions Tucson Room SNRE: Poster Session SWESx: Lunch EarthWeek Plenary: Poster Session AIR: Lunch Santa Rita Room View a complete version of the GeoDaze 2015 Program with Abstracts: http://earth.geo.arizona.edu/15/schedule.html 6 GeoDaze Keynote Address “Dates and dynamics: Snowball Earth comes of age” Paul F. Hoffman Dr. Paul Hoffman is a Professor Emeritus at Harvard University. He was awarded the Penrose Medal by the Geological Society of America in 2011. Dr. Hoffman is a sedimentary and tectonic geologist with extensive field experience in northern Canada and southern Africa. A few of his best known papers include United plates of America, the birth of a craton (1988), Did the breakout of Laurentia turn Gondwanaland inside-out? (1991), and A Neoproterozoic snowball Earth (1998). Dr. Hoffman will present supporting observations for the Snowball Earth hypothesis that were unavailable when the hypothesis was first proposed. Student Union North Ballroom, Friday April 10th, 11:15 AM-12:15 PM EarthWeek Keynote Address “Emerging infectious diseases, synthetic biology, and two faces of extinction” James P. Collins James P. Collins will give this year’s EarthWeek Keynote address. He is an evolutionary ecologist whose research group studies the role of host-pathogen interactions in species decline and extinction. Collins’s other research is focused on intellectual factors that have shaped the development of Ecology as a discipline, and on Ecological Ethics. Student Union North Ballroom, Friday, April 10th, 3:30-4:30 PM 7 GeoDaze Thursday, April 9, 2014 8:00-8:15 Welcome and Coffee 8:15-9:30 Economic Geology Part I SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Alexandra Macho 8:15 EOCENE HYDROTHERMAL SYSTEMS AND CONTRASTING HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION IN THE BATTLE MOUNTAIN DISTRICT, NEVADA Caleb A. King 8:30 THALLIUM DISTRIBUTION IN POTASSIUM SILICATES FROM THE BATTLE MOUNTAIN REGION, NV Shelby Rader 8:45 TIME SCALES OF A GEOTHERMAL SYSTEM FROM ACTINOLITE FE-MG ZONING Zack McIntire 9:00 FE OXIDE-RICH MINERALIZATION AND RELATED ALTERATION IN THE YERINGTON DISTRICT, NEVADA: AN UPDATE Simone Runyon 9:15 VEIN-HOSTED AG (±CU, PB, ZN) AND W (±PB, ZN, CU) MINERALIZATION IN THE CERRO COLORADO AND LAS GUIJAS DISTRICTS, PIMA COUNTY, ARIZONA J.D. Mizer 9:30-9:45 BREAK 9:45-11:45 Economic Geology Part II SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Christian Rathkopf 9:45 CHUKARU PEKI PROJECT, TIMOK CU-AU DISTRICT, SERBIA Matthew Wetzel 8 10:00 THE DIRTY LIFE AND TIMES OF NORMAL FAULTS: IMPLICATIONS FOR FAULT MECHANICS FROM CROSSCUTTING RELATIONSHIPS IN HIGHLY EXTENDED DOMAINS Carson A. Richardson 10:15 FAULT-SURFACE RECONSTRUCTION AND EPIDOTE NORMALIZATION AT SAN MANUEL-KALAMAZOO PORPHYRY COPPER DEPOSIT Juan Fajardo 10:30 CONTRASTING STYLES OF LARAMIDE HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION IN THE SUPERIOR MINING DISTRICT, ARIZONA Sean O’Neal 10:45 K-METASOMATISM AS RELATED TO MANGANESE AND COPPER DEPOSITS IN UPPER-PLATE TERTIARY SEDIMENTARY UNITS OF CENTRAL-WESTERN ARIZONA Christy M. Caudill 11:00 CALC-SILICATE ALTERATION AND ORE CHARACTERIZATION OF THE SAN XAVIER SOUTH-MISSION-PIMA SOUTH ORE BODIES, ASARCO MISSION COMPLEX, PIMA COUNTY, ARIZONA: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE OPTIMIZATION OF MOLYBDENUM RECOVERY Sarah E. Baxter 11:15 THE DISTRIBUTION OF RHENIUM CONCENTRATIONS AT THE BAGDAD PORPHYRY CU-MO DEPOSIT Christian Rathkopf 11:30 HISTORY AND GEOLOGY OF THE GLOVE MINE, SANTA CRUZ COUNTY, ARIZONA: MINING TO MINERAL COLLECTING J.D. Mizer 11:45-12:45 LUNCH 9 12:45-2:00 GeoDaze Poster Session SUMC South Ballroom Poster presentations from all GeoDaze participants will be on display during both this session and during the Friday EarthWeek/Plenary Poster Session. Economic Geology G01: RE-OS GEOCHRONOLOGY IN BLACK SHALES AND HEAVY OILS FROM PETROLEUM BASINS IN THE COLOMBIAN ANDES Sebastian Jimenez Geophysics G02: RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN UPPER MANTLE HETEROGENEITY AND CRUSTAL DEFORMATION IN THE NORTHERN APENNINES, ITALY Angela Blanks-Bennett G03: EVALUATING FAULT GEOMETRIES BENEATH THE NORTHERN APENNINES, ITALY USING PRESENT-DAY SITE VELOCITIES MEASURED BY GPS Enrique Chon Climate and Paleoclimate G04: A MODELING STUDY OF THE EFFECTS OF GEOMETRY AND CLIMATE ON THE CIRCULATION AND DEPOSITION IN THE RED SEA Hala Alwagdani G05: LOI DATA FOR TOTAL ORGANIC AND TOTAL INORGANIC CARBON IN THE NORTH AWASH OSI ISI SITE IN NORTHERN ETHIOPIA AND ITS IMPLICATIONS ON PAST ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE CONDITIONS DURING HOMINID EVOLUTION Joseph Valachovic G06: DECOMPOSITION OF THE ATLANTIC MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION INTO ITS MAJOR COMPONENT TRANSPORTS IN CMIP5 MODELS Rebecca L. Beadling G07: LINKING CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND CORAL HEALTH THROUGH GREAT BARRIER REEF CORAL RECORDS Emma Reed 10 G08: TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSES OF SPELEOTHEMS AS INDICATORS FOR DROUGHT IN SOUTHWEST U.S. CAVES Melissa Harrington G09: ANALYSIS OF AMAZON RAINFALL DATA SETS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF PALEOCLIMATE RECORDS Anson H. Cheung Tectonics and Geochemistry G10: DETRITAL ZIRCON ANALYSIS OF ROCK SLABS FROM BRAZIL FOR PROVENANCE, ABSOLUTE AGE AND REGIONAL GEOHISTORY STUDY Jessie McGraw G11: GEOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF MELT GENERATION IN MAINE MIGMATITES Daniel Favorito G12: PALEOENVIRONMENTS AND AGE ANALYSIS OF THE LOBO FORMATION: A LARAMIDE SYNTECTONIC DEPOSIT IN SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO Marie G. De los Santos G13: LU-HF ISOTOPIC TRENDS DURING SHALLOW SUBDUCTION AND FOUNDERING OF THE FARALLON SLAB AND THE RESULTANT MAGMATIC SWEEP ACROSS THE SOUTHWESTERN U.S. Michelle Dafov G14: BRITISH COLUMBIA COAST MOUNTAINS METASEDIMENTARY ROCKS: AGE CONSTRAINTS AND PROVENANCE Michelle Dafov G15: JACK HILLS QUARTZITE YIELDS HADEAN AGE ZIRCONS Michelle Dafov G16: TONALITIC MAGMATISM, EXHUMATION, AND ROTATION ALONG THE BAKER-OLDS FERRY TERRANE BOUNDARY, BLUE MOUNTAINS, EASTERN OREGON Alexandra S. Macho G17: UTILIZING ArcGIS FOR DATA INTEGRATION AND RECONSTRUCTION OF HISTORICAL GEOLOGIC MAPS: A CASE STUDY OF THE COAST MOUNTAINS BATHOLITH IN BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA Intan Yokelson 11 G18: DETRITAL ZIRCON AGE ANALYSIS OF THE JACK HILLS QUARTZITE CONGLOMERATE (RED) Jessie McCraw G19: CLIMATE AND TECTONIC CONTROL ON EROSION ACROSS THE ALPINE FAULT, SOUTH ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND Kaitlynn Walker G20: (U-TH)/HE AND U-PB THERMOCHRONOMETRY AND U-PB GEOCHRONOMETRY OF EXPOSED BEDROCK OUTCROPS IN THE WINDMILL ISLANDS, ANTARCTICA Patrick Boyd G21: FORELAND BASIN STRATIGRAPHIC CONTROL ON THRUST BELT EVOLUTION James B. Chapman G22: ATTEMPT TO CONSTRAIN INITIATION OF THE SOUTHERN TIBETAN DETACHMENT SYSTEM USING U-PB GEOCHRONOLOGY AND TEMPORAL EVOLUTION OF ASSOCIATED INTRUSIONS Stephen Sobansky G23: PROVENANCE OF EO-OLIGOCENE AND QUATERNARY STRATA IN THE LOESS PLATEAU THROUGH COMPARATIVE STATISTICAL Jordan Abell Planetary Science G24: WIND EROSION LANDFORMS ON MARS Cyanna Hicks G25: EOLIAN AND GEOLOGIC MAPPING NEAR GORDII DORSUM OF THE LARGE FOSSAE FORMATION OF MARS Allison McGraw Environmental Science G26: OVER THREE YEARS OF MONITORING 129I SPREAD IN PACIFIC OCEAN AFTER THE 2011 FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI NUCLEAR POWER PLANT ACCIDENT Ching-Chih Chang G27: ADVENTURE SCIENCE: EXPLORING ROCK WEATHERING AT THE COLD BOUNDARY OF EARTH Kexin Li 12 2:00-3:45 Geophysics SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Cheryl Peyser 2:00 MORPHOLOGY, TIMING AND INTERPRETATION OF CYLINDRICAL FEATURES IN 3-D SEISMIC DATA FROM THE GUINEA PLATEAU, WEST AFRICA Clinton Koch 2:15 INVESTIGATION OF VERTICAL CRUSTAL MOTION USING GPS Alexandria Will-Cole 2:30 TOPOGRAPHIC CONTROLS ON SOIL AND REGOLITH THICKNESS FROM SHALLOW-SEISMIC REFRACTION CONSTRAINTS ACROSS UPLAND HILLSLOPES IN THE VALLES CALDERA, NEW MEXICO Jared Olyphant 2:45 PRELIMINARY DEEP TOMOGRAPHIC IMAGING OF THE SOUTHERN ANDES SUBDUCTION ZONE Daniel Evan Portner 3:00 RAPID GEODETIC SHORTENING ACROSS THE SANTA BARBARA AND EASTERN CORILLERA OF NORTHWEST ARGENTINA AS MEASURED BY THE PUNA-ANDES GPS ARRAY Phillip McFarland 3:15 20,000 METERS AND MORE UNDER THE CRUST Jamie Ryan 3:30 AMBIENT NOISE TOMOGRAPHY ACROSS THE ALASKAN CORDILLERA Kevin M. Ward 3:45-4:00 BREAK 4:00-5:00 Climate and Paleoclimate SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Connor Nolan 4:00 THE PAST AS THE KEY TO THE FUTURE: USING PALEOCLIMATE RECORDS TO INFORM RISK OF INDIAN MEGADROUGHT Garrison Loope 13 4:15 TAKING THE OCEAN’S TEMPERATURE: GALÁPAGOS CORALS AND CHANGES TO ENSO Gloria Jimenez 4:30 PACIFIC SEA LEVEL RISE PATTERN AND GLOBAL WARMING HIATUS Cheryl Peyser 4:45 3-POLE SOIL GENESIS INITIATIVE: A GLOBAL APPROACH TO CITIZEN SCIENCE Yadi Wang GeoDaze Friday, April 10, 2014 8:00-9:30 Tectonics and Geochemistry Part I SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Andrea Stevens 8:00 IDENTIFYING SOURCES OF LOCAL SPRINGS IN THE COLORADO RIVER DELTA USING STABLE ISOTOPES Hector A. Zamora 8:15 INVESTIGATING THE TIMING OF MELT-PRODUCING HIGH GRADE METAMORPHISM IN THE RUBY RANGE, SOUTHWESTERN MONTANA THROUGH ZIRCON U-PB GEOCHRONOLOGY Mariah C. Romero-Armenta 8:30 (U-TH)/HE AND U/PB THERMOCHRONOMETRY AND U/PB GEOCHRONOMETRY OF EXPOSED BEDROCK OUTCROPS IN THE WINDMILL ISLANDS, ANTARCTICA Patrick Boyd 8:45 ZIRCON (U-TH)/HE AGE-EU CORRELATIONS REVEAL THERMAL HISTORY OF LAURENTIAN BASEMENT OVER PAST 1.3 BILLION YEARS Devon A. Orme 9:00 LOW-TEMPERATURE THERMOCHRONOLOGY OF LARAMIDE RANGES IN MONTANA INDICATE CRETACEOUS EXHUMATION ASSOCIATED WITH EARLY LARAMIDE TECTONICS Mariah C. Romero-Armenta 14 9:15 CALIBRATING TRACE ELEMENT PROXIES FOR CRUSTAL THICKNESS OF MAGMATIC ARCS: SR/Y AND LA/YB Lucia Profeta 9:30-9:45 BREAK 9:45-11:00 Tectonics and Geochemistry Part II SUMC North Ballroom Session leader: Ryan J. Leary 9:45 SYNOROGENIC RECORD OF BASIN REORGANIZATION IN THE SIERRAS PAMPEANAS REGION OF ARGENTINA Andrea Stevens 10:00 INDIAN CONTINENTAL MARGIN SUBDUCTION, HIGH-PRESSURE, LOW-TEMPERATURE METAMORPHISM AND SYNCONVERGENT EXHUMATION DURING INDIA-ASIA SUTURING, LOPU KANGRI RANGE, SOUTH-CENTRAL TIBET Andrew K. Laskowski 10:15 SEDIMENTOLOGY, PROVENANCE AND GEOCHRONOLOGY OF A SUTURE ZONE SUCCESSOR BASIN, INDIA-ASIA COLLISION ZONE, TIBET Simon Stickroth 10:30 POST-INDIA-ASIA COLLISION RISE OF THE HIMALAYA FROM TIBETAN PALEOSOLS Ryan J. Leary 10:45 CONSTRAINING DRAINAGE EVOLUTION IN SOUTHERN TIBET; EVIDENCE FOR A PRE-MIOCENE EXTERNALLY DRAINED RIVER SYSTEM NORTH OF THE INDIA-ASIA SUTURE Clay Campbell 11:15-12:15 GeoDaze Keynote Speaker SUMC North Ballroom Prof. Emeritus Paul Hoffman, Harvard University “Dates and dynamics: Snowball Earth comes of age” 12:15-1:00 GeoDaze 2015 Awards and Slideshow SUMC North Ballroom 15 1:00-2:30 EarthWeek Plenary Poster Session SUMC South Ballroom Poster presentations from all EarthWeek participants, including GeoDaze. 2:00-3:30 EarthWeek Plenary Oral Session SUMC North Ballroom 2:00 MOUNTAINS AND TROPICAL CIRCULATION Zach Naiman, GEOS 2:15 ON THE IMPORTANCE OF THE MONSOON RAINFALL FOR PONDEROSA PINE GROWTH THROUGHOUT THE US SOUTHWEST Paul Szejner, LTRR 2:30 EFFECTS OF GROUNDWATER DYNAMICS ON HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL CONDITIONS OVER SOUTH AMERICA Alejandro Martinez Agudelo, ATMO 2:45 A 50-YEAR PROJECTION OF COLORADO RIVER WATER SUPPLY AND DEMAND FOR FIVE ARIZONA TRIBES AND THE CENTRAL ARIZONA PROJECT Carrie Joseph, SWES 3:00 IMPACTS OF WILDFIRE ON THROUGHFALL AND STEMFLOW PRECIPITATION CHEMISTRY AND FLUX Alissa White, HYDRO 3:15 DYNAMIC OF VERTEBRATE POPULATIONS IN THE DESERT SOUTHWEST Erin Zylstra, SNRE 3:45-4:45 Plenary Keynote Address SUMC North Ballroom Dr. James P. Collins, Arizona State University “Emerging infectious diseases, synthetic biology, and two faces of extinction” 4:45-5:00 EarthWeek Awards Session 6:30-11:00 GeoDaze Dinner Party Address and map on page 19 16 UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA CAMPUS MAP STUDENT UNION IS BUILDING No. 19 (BLACK CIRCLE) GOULD SIMSPSON IS BUILDING No. 77 (BLACK SQUARE) 2156 2171 209 211 220 460 Visitor Parking Zone 1 Restricted Area South of Sixth St. Lots Closed to Traffic Lot Specific Permit Parking Construction Controlled from 7A 9P) ( !,1#$0" 230 2235 222 Buildings Street Specific Permit Parking Car Share Location 204 Parking Garages Hourly Parking Pay Station Hourly Parking Motorcycle Parking 559 206 201 2153 231 2241 2155 <35);,&'B$&4-3=& 412 26 5067* 79/79A 87 84 106 83 FJ!#ICM 132 5072* Árbol de la Vida Hall Posada San Pedro Entrance Sixth St. Garage Sonora Hall 45 5084 5161 7228 7227 $)/0)#A30)#C-&" 94&1>/0#C-&" 7103 !"#$&-&/07#$0" D)1%;&,,#C-&" D7 &44* #C- &" :)403/#C-&" D7 &44* #C- &" I)44&/#C-&" +3G&BE&'&5043)/#2/'&4%)55 I)44&/#C-&" 96B 95 61M 61 !"#!38707#$0" 423 6097 POOL 8106 6 6098 62 Rec. Field 62A 7 8110 8112 8178 117 Football Practice Field Frank Sancet Field 8138 117 117 7105 60 6092* !"#$3607#$0" Likins Hall 117 96 Visitor & Permit Parking Arizona Stadium 59 96A !/G&#<4" 58 131 182 McKale Center 115 Entrance 50/50A 6090* 7156 7102 E)4G#C-&" 121 140 96 C 118 121-A 181 Entrance 7167 94 Cherry Ave. Garage Entrance LaPaz Hall Visitor & Permit Parking 120 55 !"#9>@407#$0" 52 122 Villa del Puente 45B 5083 :)403/#C-&" # L3/&#C-&" .387,)/'#C-&" )/#2/'&4% )55 89 90 88 ?>(&,, 123 57 53 93B 5 6093 6092* 180 A E&'&5043 46 82 6089 Hopi Hall Graham Hall Greenlee Hall 99 93 92 70 Main Library 56 6088 6088 43 5183 5244 5242 Arizona Hall Coronado Hall 54 38 4 100 4057 91 63 113 44 107 31 41 :>@/0)3/#C-&" N*/'),,#C-&" $>@07#D)1%@5#<4" 32 34 33 !"#9>@407#$0" 81 77 78 5073 U.A.P.D. 93C .)(07>4/& 4063 68 37 35 4144 4059 4062 17 40 36 4164 4177 65 ILC 27 5075 4121 93A 19 28 29 129 64 67 21 30A 5066 4058 Old Main 30 160 5162 23 105 3 !"#93450#$0" !"#$&=>/'#$0" 69 66 Student Union 25 !"#2/3-&4530*#+,-'" 432 Entrance 20 Entrance Second St. Garage Visitor & 114 Permit Parking 8179 8111 !"#$&-&/07#$0" L3/&#C-&" 3175 24 3140 136 Parker House 4054 74 .387,)/'#C-&" 158 B H)1&5#!"#A>8&45#I)* FJ!#ICM E)4G#C-&" 158 12 Pima House Yuma Hall 4056 4052 151 D)1%;&,,#C-&" 11 !"#$%&&'()*#+,-'" 2152 Babcock 8229 8230 !"#!38707#$0" :)403/#C-&" 10 9 8 109 135 128 2025 109 J)0K,#D7)1%3>/5#<4" Maricopa Hall Gila Hall 3233 !"#$&=>/'#$0" Entrance !@=,3'#C-&" :>@/0)3/#C-&" Coconino Hall 112 2030 2032 I)44&/#C-&" 438 71 202 !"#.&,&/#$0" 2136 444 2 2029 2119 2021 203 202 240 D7&44*#C-&" 3038 76 3141 241 D7&44*#C-&" 6 159 5 72 134 3231 7/7A F,3-&#A'" Manzanita/ Mohave Hall (”Manzymo”) :>@/0)3/#C-&" 104 3039 73 155C 2146 155J 150 2180 1018 3113 75A Fine Arts Center !"#93450#$0" 177 103 4 Entrance 119 Permit Entrance 3 417 Entrance Entrance 199 75 2147 416 E),1#<4" N*/'),,#C-&" 2 85A 470 176 +3G&BE&'&5043)/#2/'&4%)55 !"#$%&&'()*#+,-'" 85 174 1016 108 Visitor & Permit Parking Entrance 1157 428 Entrance 116 Park Ave. Garage Entrance Tyndall Ave. Garage Visitor & Permit Parking 456 1225 207 !"#:);&,#$0# # Highland 190 Garage Visitor & Permit Parking +3G&B !"#.&,&/#$0" 1173 1232 1233 2012 2182 1172 1239 1115 420 221 2226 L3/&#C-&" 197 Main Gate Garage Visitor & Permit Parking $)/0)#A30) 94&1>/0 1224 1237 E)4G#C-&"# 1240 !"#:);&,#$0" 483 2168 2181 !"#<4)=71)/#$0" 433 1 206 205 Misc. Lots: SV, Loading, Disabled !"#<4)=71)/#$0" 212 2165 (M-F 7:00am-4:30pm) 1142 Permit Required 2167 466 Legend: 2236 A3/8#A'" I)44&/#C-&" 2013 - 2014 Campus Parking Map 215 8 17 MAP OF STUDENT UNION: LEVEL 3 ALL TALKS WILL BE LOCATED IN THE NORTH GRAND BALLROOM ALL POSTERS WILL BE LOCATED IN THE SOUTH GRAND BALLROOM 18 MAP FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA TO HOUSE OF JON PELLETIER FOR DINNER PARTY Party from 6:30-11:00 19 Fieldtrip Biosphere 2 Saturday, April 11, 2014 8:45 am – 3:00 pm http://earth.geo.arizona.edu/15/trip.html Led by the Dean of the College of Science and Geosciences Professor Joaquin Ruiz The Geodaze 2015 annual field trip will take place at BioSphere2 just north of Tucson, Arizona. BioSphere2 is a world-renowned center for climate science consisting of manipulatable micro-environments that lead to a better understanding of landscape evolution, sustainable processes, and how the Earth might react to different stimuli (e.g. the addition of greenhouse gases). 8:45 am Arrive at Gould-Simpson loading dock (NW corner of the building) 9:00 am Depart Gould-Simpson loading dock 10:00 am Arrive at BioSphere2 10:30 am Begin tours 12:30 pm Lunch 2:00 pm Depart BioSphere2 3:00 pm Arrive back at Gould-Simpson loading dock Transportation Each participant will have a place reserved in a high-occupancy van or approved personal vehicle for the full field trip time. Since the trip includes guided-driving tours we would appreciate that no other vehicles are used for the field trip. Also, because we have a full day of traveling and tours, please be considerate to other field trip participants and arrive on time for departure. 20