TEACHING THE “TOP TEN” PRINCIPLES OF HYDROGEOLOGY IN THE CONTEXT OF SUMMER GEOLOGICAL CAMP FIELD ACTIVITIES
The Hydrogeologist's Credo (Principle 1), REDOX Realities (Principle 2), and the Plumage Principle (Principle 3) are taught by evaluating the contamination potential of the Fremont County landfill. Students learn about Groundwater Types and the Mark of Zorro (Principle 4), Darcy's Law (Principle 5), Contouring Confusion (Principle 6), the Perfidy of POTS (Principle 7), and In and Out: Surfacewater-Groundwater Interaction (Principle 8) while studying riparian zones along Red Canyon Creek. Bounding Boundaries (Principle 9) is taught by calculating the water budget for Dry Lake (which never goes dry!). Finally, to cap the field season, students learn Principle 10, the Mixing for Chemistry Mastery, taught in the context of a spectacular karst dye tracing experiment incorporating the river that provides drinking water for the Town of Lander. Former Branson students, now employed by environmental consulting firms, report that the critical thinking skills they gained during their field experiences made them far more knowledgeable than their colleagues who were trained traditionally, sometimes with more extensive formal hydrogeologic coursework.