EES A06: Introduction to Planet Earth
Introduction to Planet Earth
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EES A06: Introduction to Planet Earth
Teaching Assistants and their general roles:
Course Administration: Siobhan Bonisteel Course Material: Syed Bukhari
Contact Information:
Most questions can be directed to the discussion boards but pressing personal matters can be
directed to the instructor or any TA as appropriate through the Quercus Inbox.
Please read this document carefully. By answering the quiz which is worth 2 bonus marks you
are agreeing to having read and accepted the conditions on submitting module assignments.
Structure of the course
This course consists of weekly 2 hour lectures with an online mid-term and final exam (worth
34% and 34% respectively) and 10 approximately weekly online module assignments of which 8
will be included in your final grade (8 x 4 = 32%). Weekly lectures are open to attend
synchronously for all students Mondays from 10:00 to 12:00 and recordings will be made
available after class time and will remain available for the remainder of the term. Attendance
during the synchronous session is not required, nor recorded.
Quercus
This course uses the University's learning management system, Quercus, to post information
about the course. This includes posting readings and other materials required to complete class
activities and course assignments, as well as sharing important announcements and updates.
The site is dynamic and new information and resources will be posted regularly as we move
through the term, so please make it a habit to log in to the site on a regular, even daily, basis. To
access the course website, go to the U of T Quercus log-in page at https://q.utoronto.ca. Once
you have logged in to Quercus using your UTORid and password, you should see the link or
"card" for EESA06H3 S 20231:Introduction to Planet Earth. You may need to scroll through other
cards to find this. Click on the EESA06H3 S 20231:Introduction to Planet Earth link to open our
course area, view the latest announcements and access your course resources. There are
Quercus help guides for students that you can access by clicking on the "?" icon in the left side
column. SPECIAL NOTE ABOUT GRADES POSTED ONLINE: Please also note that any grades
posted are for your information only, so you can view and track your progress through the
course. No grades are considered official, including any posted in Quercus at any point in the
term, until they have been formally approved and posted on ACORN at the end of the course.
Please contact me as soon as possible if you think there is an error in any grade posted on
Quercus.
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Introduction
In this course, you will learn how our planet ‘works’ by virtual visits to countries in very different
geologic settings and by examining the often destructive nature of geologic processes like
earthquakes, tsunamis, glaciers, and volcanic eruptions.
We will examine how the landmasses that occupy the surface of the planet are being continually
moved and reshaped by the immense forces of ‘Plate Tectonics’ over its long 4.5-billion-year
history. At one time, geologists thought that continents and oceans were immovable, fixed in
position and had formed where they are now found. Better knowledge of the Earth’s interior
and realization that the mantle is hot and is slowly moving by convection which when combined
with improved knowledge of the ocean floors resulted in the development of Plate Tectonic
theory in 1968 by the University of Toronto geologist, Jock Tuzo Wilson. The hard rocky outer
skin of the planet (the crust) is thick (up to 100 km or more), brittle and broken into large pieces
called ‘lithospheric plates.’ Continents are carried like passengers in the plates that move over
the weak hot mantle rocks below at rates up to 25 cm a year. By sliding around the surface of
the planet, plates move continents around, opening and closing ocean basins as continent
collide or break apart and it has been in operation for at least 3.5 Ga. This process is ongoing:
Toronto is moving 3.7 cm every year. In the 50 years that UTSC has been in existing it has moved
almost 2 m westward from its original position. Your home is not where it was last night and will
be in a different place tomorrow. Don’t get lost.
The entire plate tectonic process can be likened to a conveyor belt where new crust is created at
spreading centers and eventually destroyed by subduction. In this way, the Earth is neither
expanding nor shrinking in size. In some cases, orogenic events result in the fusing together of
plates (a process called ‘obduction’) and the creation of even larger plates (called
supercontinents). Geologists recognize a cycle of supercontinent formation and breakup (the
Wilson cycle named after Tuzo Wilson) which is the basic rhythm of Earth history and divides the
history of the planet into distinct chapters of supercontinental growth and decay.
The course concludes by looking at the 4 billion years long geological history of Canada and
Ontario including reference to modern environmental problems facing Canadians. We will look
at the complex causes and impacts of climate change, mineral exploration and mining, the
impact of urban development, disposal of a wide variety of wastes, the clean-up of
contaminated sites and waters, and the key role those environmental geoscientists play in our
society. Some have argued that the influence of mankind on our environment is now so
profound that we are now living in a different geological era referred to as the Anthropocene.
Learning outcomes
At the end of this course, you will know how planet Earth ‘works’ regardless of your course of
study. This knowledge is the key to protecting our complex human world from risks and natural
disasters, the need to protect the environment and to find ever scarcer resources, especially the
minerals needed for a green economy and water, and extract them in an environmentally-
sustainable fashion. This is a field called ‘Environmental Geoscience’ which is the focus of a
Specialist Undergraduate Program within the Department of Physical and Environmental
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Sciences (DPES) and a 12-month all-course professional Master of Environmental Science (M.
Env.Sc) program.
There is a shortage of suitably qualified environmental geoscientists in Canada and abroad. The
profession requires well-trained individuals and offers many diverse opportunities for a career.
If you are interested in a career in geoscience see the web site of the Association of Professional
Geoscientists of Ontario (pgo.ca) and how to become a P.Geo.
By the end of this course, you should be able to
1) Compare and contrast the characteristics, hazards, and mechanics at plate tectonic
settings globally.
2) Outline the influences in the building of the Plate Tectonic theorem.
3) Describe how the Province of Ontario was shaped over 3 billion years of Earth’s History.
4) Identify ongoing environmental concerns related to Urban Geology in and around
Toronto
Recommended Resources
A number of accompanying resources are recommended for this course, particularly for those of
you who develop an interest in the material or prefer to explore other learning styles. They are
not examinable, and should be considered supplementary.
1) The following books are recommended (but not required)
• Canada Rocks – The Geologic Journey. This course textbook frames the
geological history of Canada against what is known of modern global plate
tectonics. Relevant chapters for each lecture are shown on the attached weekly
schedule. I don’t expect you to know or be examined on every detail and term in
the textbook it is designed to provide background for what we do in lectures.
• Tuzo: The Unlikely Revolutionary of Plate Tectonics. This book is an account of
the life and achievements of one of the giants of earth sciences, J. Tuzo Wilson.
It is a chronicle of events surrounding the unfolding story of the plate tectonic
theorem.
2) Geologic Journey- a 5-part World TV documentary series which aired on Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation’s ‘The Nature of Things’ in late 2010 with David Suzuki and
Nick Eyles and which is available online on Quercus. It is based on the geology of various
parts of the world.
3) Websites:
• Planet Rocks - https://planetrocks.utsc.utoronto.ca/ - a compilation of sites of
geologic, environmental, and historic interest across Ontario
• USGS Earthquake map - https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map - this
United States Geological Survey product shows a livestream of ongoing
earthquake activity. It is on display in the Environmental Science & Chemistry
Building.
Academic Integrity
The University treats cases of cheating and plagiarism very seriously. The University of Toronto’s
Code of Behaviour on Academic Matters (http://www.governingcouncil.
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utoronto.ca/policies/behaveac.htm) outlines the behaviours that constitute academic
dishonesty and the processes for addressing academic offences.
Potential offences in papers and assignments include using someone else’s ideas or words
without appropriate acknowledgement, submitting your own work in more than one course
without the permission of the instructor, making up sources or facts, obtaining or providing
unauthorized assistance on any assignment. For example, sharing answers or using shared
answers constitutes a breach of academic integrity.
On tests and exams cheating includes using or possessing unauthorized aids, looking at someone
else’s answers during an exam or test, misrepresenting your identity, or falsifying or altering any
documentation required by the University, including (but not limited to) doctor’s notes.
Evaluation and marks
The course will be evaluated by:
a) Mid-term exam (multiple-choice, online): 34 marks
.
b) Completion of 10 online module assignments *: 32 marks
c) Final exam (non-cumulative, multiple-choice, online): 34 marks
If you miss a midterm, you must submit relevant paperwork BOTH through ACORN and through
the DPES self-declaration absence form. Please see the following link for further details:
https://www.utsc.utoronto.ca/physsci/self-declaration-absence-form-0. For A-level courses
such as this one, it's not permissible to transfer the value of a missed mid-term to the final
exam.
Final exam absences must be declared to the Registrars office:
https://www.utsc.utoronto.ca/registrar/missing-examination
We do not accept any form of absence declaration or extension requests for missed module
assignments, but note that your lowest two module grades will be removed for all students.
If you experience any technical issues during an exam, they must be thoroughly documented by
capturing screenshots of the problem and contacting course staff.
Things to make your life easier (and ours)
There are over 1000 students in this course, and as such, students should be aware of the
following.
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1. I and the TAs will be available during regularly-scheduled office hours which will be
posted on the course homepage.
2. We don’t bell curve exam marks, nor do we round up marks close to a grade boundary.
3. We don’t know the dates of the mid-term and final exams until we are informed of them
by the Registrar’s Office: we have no control over when they are scheduled. Their dates
will be announced as soon as we know.
4. AccessAbility Services: Students with diverse learning styles and needs are welcome in
this course. In particular, if you have a disability/health consideration that may require
accommodations, please feel free to approach the AccessAbility Services Office as soon
as possible. They will work with you to ensure you can achieve your learning goals in this
course. All enquiries are confidential. The UTSC AccessAbility Services staff members are
available by appointment to assess specific needs, provide referrals and arrange
appropriate accommodations (416-287-7560) or [email protected].
5. We have a well-tried system in place that deals with virtually every issue that may come
up. Your first stop for any issue or question is the discussion boards. Many times,
someone else may have already posted about the same problem, and if they haven’t,
you should post to help others! We monitor the discussion boards closely and try to
answer promptly. If you need to discuss something privately, please attend either mine,
or the TA’s office hours, which will be hosted online (see the main Quercus page for
upcoming office hours). There should be little reason to contact me directly, but if
necessary, use the Quercus Inbox to do so (see posted instructions). I do not guarantee a
response to messages sent directly to my email (which I have deliberately not given out).
Module assignments
Ten module assignments will be posted on-line on the Monday of the relevant lecture and you
will generally have about two weeks to review and complete each one with no extensions. Note
that some modules have longer or shorter availabilities which will be posted on Quercus on a
page entitled “Weekly Schedule”. During the latter part of the course, there is significant overlap
in the availabilities of module assignments. Once you have completed the module assignment,
the material will still be available thereafter for exam revision purposes, but you will no longer
have access to the questions/answers.
It is your responsibility to check the Quercus module assignment schedule and announcements
carefully for due dates or changes to availabilities.
The most common reasons for not completing the modules are illnesses, family emergencies,
technical issues, and simply forgetting the deadline. Most issues can easily be avoided if you
start early. In lieu of extensions, every student will have the lowest two of the ten module
grades dropped from their final grade.
Technical issues may arise when completing quizzes online and prevent you from completing
the module assignment. These issues can be reduced by completing the modules on desktop or
laptop computers rather than on mobile devices or tablets, using computers with Ethernet
connection rather than Wi-Fi, using Chrome or Firefox browsers, and not leaving the module
open and idle for more than 5-10 minutes. In the event of a technical issue with completing the
module you must email Syed Bukhari at least 24 hours before the module deadline otherwise it
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will not be considered. If you have a grade-related query with respect to the modules, you must
contact Syed Bukhari no more than one week following the due date.