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GEOG 441/541
Geography of Mars
Syllabus, F/23
Undergraduates:
GEOG 441-01 (seminar) -02 (lab)
Class numbers: 7156 and 7233
Graduate students:
GEOG 541-01 (seminar) -02 (lab)
Class numbers: 7157 and 7234
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Instructor Information:
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Instructor: Dr. C.M. Rodrigue
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E-mail Address:
rodrigue@csulb.com (please use 441 or 541 as the subject line!)
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Home Page: https://home.csulb.edu/~rodrigue/
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Course Home Page: https://home.csulb.edu/~rodrigue/mars/
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Telephones: (526) 985-4895 or -8432
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Office: LA1 139 (or sometimes in PH1-233_
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Mailbox: LA1-125
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Office Hours: Tuesday 3:30 - 4:20 p.m., Thursday 3:30 - 5:10 p.m., and
by appointment or online
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Catalogue Description:
Prerequisites or corequisites: GEOG 130 or 140 or GEOL 102, and
upper-division (GEOG 441) or post-baccalaureate (GEOG 541) status, or
instructor approval.
Introduction to the geography of Mars, providing a physical regionalization of
the Martian surface and climate and an understanding of underlying tectonic,
geomorphic, and meteorological processes. The course reviews remote sensing
fundamentals and data sources for geographical analysis of Mars.
(2 hours seminar, 2 hours lab activity)
Course Coverage:
The course will cover the history of Mars exploration, review remote sensing
fundamentals and data sources about Mars, and the planet's basic
characteristics. The course then provides a physical regionalization of the
Martian surface and underlying tectonic and geomorphic processes, as well as a
treatment of the climatic regionalization of the planet. Becoming familiar
with how another planet "works" will deepen our understanding of our own
planet! The course will also
touch on Mars' history as a screen for human fantasy and consider the
possibilities of human settlement there.
For more details on course highlights, please visit the course splash page.
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Course Objectives:
- Understanding of the scientific method in geography and related fields as
they analyze another planet
- Understanding of the power and limitations of Earth- and near-Earth-,
flyby-, orbiter-, and lander-based remote sensing as a means of exploring
another planet
- A familiarity with Mars as a place at several scales of analysis
- An appreciation of deep time in the martian landscapes
- A sense of how geographers contribute to the exploration of Mars
- An ability to reason about and generate hypotheses concerning features of
the martian surface from what you know about physical geography, geology,
and/or environmental science
- A sense of how presently available data can be used to test these
hypotheses ... and a sense of which questions cannot be answered now (and the
sorts of data that need to be collected in the future to answer them)
- A deepened appreciation of Earth through contrast with another, similar planet
where the story turned out very differently
- Practice in mapping Mars and communicating your analyses in writing and
suitable maps, graphs, and tables
- And some fun along the way as we look at how Mars sets off the quirks in
the human imagination!
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Required Course Materials:
- Text: Forget, François; Costard, Franç and
Lognonné, Philippe. 2008. Planet Mars: Story of Another Planet,
originally La Planète Mars, trans. Bob Mizon. Springer.
Recommended Course Materials:
- Text, Carr, Michael H. 2006. The Surface of Mars.
Cambridge
University Press (excellent book, if dated now: I stopped using it for our textbood when the price suddenly shot up from around $85 to $200 a few years ago!!!, but, if you can find a used copy for cheaper, you would want to add it to your library, even though it's beginning to show its age)
- Review anthology, Soare, Richard J.; Conway, Susan J.; Williams, Jean-Pierre, and
Oehler, Dorothy Z. 2021. Mars Geological Enigmas: From the Late Noachian Epoch to the
Present Day. Amsterdam, NL; Oxford, UK; and Cambridge, MA. Thorough
and well-written summaries of major research themes dominating modern Mars research.
- Atlas, Hargitai, Henrik. 2021. Mars 36: Pocket Atlas and Calendar for Mars Year 36. Budapest: Hargitai Henrik e.v. This Hungarian geographer does some of the most beautiful cartography for Mars, really breathtakingly beautiful and informative.
- Text, your introductory physical geography, general geology, or
environmental science textbook that, of course, you would never even think of
selling back to the bookstore! In case you did, here are some free e-book
resources:
- Rodrigue, Christine M. 2004. Lectures for GEOG 140, Introductory
Physical Geography.
https://home.csulb.edu/~rodrigue/geog140/lectures/
(a lot of the graphics are 404, but it's still serviceable, if a bit dated)
- Pidwirny, Michael, and Jones, Scott. 2014. Fundamentals of Physical
Geography, 2nd ed.
http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/contents.html
- Ritter, Michael E. 2006. The Physical Environment: An Introduction
to Physical Geography.
https://www.thephysicalenvironment.com/
- Southard, John. 2007. Lectures for MIT Course 12.090, The Environment
of the Earth's Surface. MIT OpenCourseWare http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/earth-atmospheric-and-planetary-sciences/12-090-the-environment-of-the-earths-surface-spring-2007/course-textbook/
- Novel, your choice from an approved list of novels set on Mars for
those of you seeking extra credit just to lay in some safety padding!
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Grading:
I grade on a modified curve based on the following assessments:
- Midterm = 25%
- Final = 25%
- Bibliographic review essay = 25%
- Labs = 25%
- For graduate students, a project entailing original analysis of archival
data suitable for conference presentation = 25% effort beyond the other
requirements of the class. There are no suitable conferences in the fall, so
I'll have you give your results to the class on the last evening before
finals.
There will be an extra credit opportunity. You can read a novel set on Mars
and do a report relating the story to the state of Mars science at the time
the novel was written. Depending on how good a job you do, you can gain up to
10 additional points (6-8 is typical), and this can potentially move you up a
full letter grade.
Makeup Policy:
Makeups are possible in the event of a documented unexpected emergency in a
student's life or through prior arrangement with the instructor when the
student has advance knowledge of a compelling conflict in schedule, including
jury duty or other governmental obligation; death, injury, or serious illness
in the family; certain University sanctioned activities; or religious
obligations and observances. Makeups under these circumstances will not be
penalized. Scheduling a plane flight before the final is not a compelling
conflict in schedule and will be penalized. All other makeup requests are
subject to denial or serious penalty.
COVID-19 and Mode of Instruction:
COVID-19 continues to spread, though usually "only" sickening the vaccinated. COVID, which is expanding at the start of the Fall 2023 semester, may impact the operation of this course in ways we can't predict right now. Our class is approved for face-to-face operation, which works well for the lecture and lab nature of the course. If changes become necessary, I may elect to mix face-to-face classes with one or more online options, e.g., synchronous Zoom classes (the "Owl" or my own Zoom computer) or asynchronous lecture and Canvas commentary. No matter the mix, however, I'll have assignments turned in on paper with backup data placed on Canvas or e-mail.
Given the improv nature of these adjustments, which may be in "real-time" as the semester, I'll be very receptive to student ideas to improve the class so that everyone can get the most out of it, no matter what the virus is up to.
The University requirements on COVID-19 are detailed below in the policies section.
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Topics:
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Introduction
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The general nature of scientific inquiry
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The specific features of geographic inquiry
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Geography and Mars
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History of Mars exploration
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History of Mars observation from Earth
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History of the robotic missions to Mars
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Remote sensing basics
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Electromagnetic spectrum
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Passive vs. active remote sensing
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Emitted sources and reflected sources
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Imaging vs. spectroscopy
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Spatial, spectral, radiometric, and temporal resolution
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Georeferencing and correction
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Spacecraft types: flyby, orbiter, lander, rover
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Sources of data on Mars available today
- Missions to Mars
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Imagery from on or near Earth
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Mars in space
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Orbital characteristics
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Rotational characteristics
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Basic dimensions
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The moons of Mars: Phobos and Deimos
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Martian palæomagnetism, the solar wind, and ablation of the atmosphere
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A physiographic regionalization of Mars and the processes behind the
patterns
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Introduction: a foray into a whole new vocabulary for landforms
- The orders of relief: Scale of topographic variation
- First order of relief: the crustal dichotomy and the Tharsis bulge
- Second order of relief: the conspicuous features that can organize our
mental map
- Third order of relief: regions of the Noachian, Hesperian, and Amazonian
epochs
- Fourth order of relief: landscapes and landforms of single images
- Fifth order of relief: individual features seen in the highest resolution
images from orbit and at the scale of the landers' and rovers' activities
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A climatic regionalization of Mars and the processes behind the
patterns
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The Martian atmosphere: composition and vertical structure
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Martian weather
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Martian geochemical cycles and weather
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Martian climates today
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The Martian "tropics"
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The Martian mid-latitudes
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The Martian polar zones
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Human-environment interactions: Mars of the imagination
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Science fiction imagines Mars
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Science imagines Mars
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Pseudoscientists imagine martian artifacts
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Politicians imagine Mars
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Policy Section
COVID-19 Health and Safety Requirements
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, CSULB has implemented health and safety protocols that follow the guidance of local, state, and national public health authorities and occasionally change in response to that guidance (see COVID-19 website). As a member of our campus community, you are expected to follow all campus policies, including COVID-19 related requirements. These apply to anyone who is physically present on University grounds or participating in any CSULB-related activity. Please visit the campus COVID-19 website on a regular basis this semester.
Accessibility:
Disability:
It is the student's responsibility to let me know at the beginning of the
semester if s/he has a disability that may require accommodation. I am
personally committed to making my classes accessible and providing
accommodations that will help everyone have the same chance at success. I
need to know about the issue at the beginning of the semester, though, so that
we can work out a mutually reasonable and satisfying accommodation. For more
information on campus support services for disabled students, please check out
https://www.csulb.edu/student-affairs/bob-murphy-access-center.
Documentation status:
As an educator, I strive to make courses accessible to all students regardless of immigration status. If your status presents obstacles to engaging in specific activities or fulfilling specific criteria, you may request confidential accommodations. You may also consult with the Office of Equity & Compliance (https://csulb.edu/equity-compliance) or the Dream Success Center (https://csulb.edu/dream) for examples of possible accommodations. Such arrangements will not jeopardize your student status, your financial aid, or any other part of your residence. Please advise me if and when you feel comfortable during the semester so that I may make appropriate alterations as needed.
Prejudice:
Violent incidents over the last few years have underscored the pervasiveness of prejudicial views of Black, Asian, Latinx, Native American, Jewish, Muslim, LGBTQ+ people, and others -- and how they create structural obstacles and inequities that can cost people's lives, safety, health, income, wealth, and ability to pursue interests and education. In my classes, I strive to create an environment that supports meaningful interactions among all my students in the common pursuit of research, inquiry, and learning, and I try to be aware of the damage that these personal and structural forces do to many students and ease their impacts as they affect your enjoyment of and progress in this class. Please feel welcome to let me know of any such impacts or, if you would be more comfortable, you can approach one of the following student assistance resource centers:
Veterans:
Veterans come back from their service possibly quite altered or hurt by the experience and may find it a challenging mission to fit (back) into campus life, where so few of the rest of us have any understanding of their experiences or context to put them in. If you are a veteran, that isolation can pose an accessibility problem that may affect your progress in this class and other classes. If you think this may be the case, please let me know about your situation as soon as possible, so that we can find accommodations or resources that can help you benefit from this class. You might also want to contact the CSULB Veterans Services office.
Title IX:
Title IX prohibits gender discrimination, including sexual harassment and sexual misconduct. If you have experienced sexual harassment, sexual assault, rape, dating/domestic violence, or stalking, the Campus Confidential Advocate is available to help. Jaqueline Urtez (e-mail: advocate@csulb.edu, phone: (562) 985-2668) can provide free and confidential support, accommodations, and referrals for victims without having to report the assault to campus authorities. While students are welcome to discuss assaults with faculty or disclose such experiences in class discussions or assignments, both faculty and teaching assistants are classified as responsible employees who are required to report all known incidents of sexual harassment/misconduct to the Office of Equity & Compliance/Title IX Office for follow-up. Reporting this information will result in the student being contacted by the Office of Equity & Compliance/Title IX Office with information on accommodations and reporting options for possible investigation. Students do not need to respond to the Office of Equity & Compliance/Title IX Office, but students who do wish to report the assault for possible investigation are encouraged to contact the Campus Confidential Advocate, who can help them through the reporting process, or they can report the assault directly to the Office of Equity & Compliance/Title IX Office by completing an online reporting form at https://www.csulb.edu/equity-compliance/title-ix-at-the-beach or contacting the Office of Equity & Compliance at OEC@csulb.edu.
Withdrawal Policy:
It is the student's responsibility to withdraw from classes. Instructors have
no obligation to withdraw students who do not attend classes and, because of
the bureaucratic difficulty involved, generally do not do so. This
often catches transfer students by surprise, because community colleges
require instructors to take daily roll and drop non-attending students and provide easy and
routine mechanisms for them to do so. If you've been "spoiled" by that system,
please be aware that it doesn't work that way here.
Here
are the various deadlines: http://www.csulb.edu/enrollment-services/key-dates-and-deadlines
Cheating and Plagiarism Policy:
Written work that you hand in is assumed to be original unless your source
material is documented appropriately. Using the ideas or words of another
person, even a peer, or a web site, as if it were your own, is plagiarism.
Simply changing the wording around so that it's not a direct quotation is
still plagiarism if you don't give credit to the source of the ideas. If you
use the exact wording of your source, enclose the statement in quotation marks
or (with longer quotations) indent and single space it and then cite the
source and page. When in doubt, cite. Cheating and plagiarism are serious
academic offenses: They represent intellectual theft. Students should read the
section on cheating and plagiarism in the CSULB catalogue, which can be
accessed at http://catalog.csulb.edu/content.php?catoid=2&navoid=30.
Furthermore, students should be aware that faculty members have a range of
academic actions available to them in cases of cheating and plagiarism. At a
minimum, I will fail a student cheating or plagiarizing on a particular
assignment, but only if I think that there was some misunderstanding about
what these offenses are; if I feel that the decision to cheat or plagiarize
was intentional, I will fail a student in the course. I also may then refer
the student to Judicial Affairs for possible probation, suspension, or
dismissal.
When in doubt, cite: It keeps you out of trouble and makes your work look
polished and professional. Please ask me if you think you're getting
into a grey area: I would be happy to consult with you about particular
problems that come up. To learn a little more about plagiarism, take a look at
this workshop on
ethics in science that several faculty put together: The second section is
about plagiarism. https://home.csulb.edu/~rodrigue/geography/gdep/ethics.html.
What about ChatGPT, Bard, LLaMa, Ryter, and Other AI?
AI is transforming the generation of writing and graphics and it has hit so suddenly that business, education, scientists, writers, and artists are floundering to figure out its impacts and ethical use. It will destroy some of your planned career paths; it will open up new careers for you, too. It is, therefore, important for you to become familiar with these AI models and, so, you may use them in certain ways in this class. For example, grad students might find it useful to start their research essay ("What refereed journal articles or other academic resources could I use to research the change from neutral hydrochemistry to acidic hydrochemistry on Mars?" or whatever your topic is); all students could make use of it to ask questions about lecture, lab, or research material you don't quite understand ("what does hydrochemistry mean?"); anyone trying the extra credit novel report might start off with "which of the novels listed at https://home.csulb.edu/~rodrigue/geog441541/novels.html is about the adventures of a female character?" or whatever you'd like to read about in a novel; all students could use AI to proofread your writing for spelling, grammar, and syntax, and I would be one happy professor reading more literate student efforts <G> and, above all, cite any AI you used for any of these purposes just as though it were an academic source, which it is. Whatever you do, don't use AI to write your essays or labs as that would amount to plagiarism and is, nowadays, detectable in TurnItIn and several new AI AI-detection programs! Also, whatever you do, don't trust AI to be telling you the truth! It's known to lie and make stuff up ("hallucinate"). You need to check its work, using regular search engines or even another AI, so you don't come off looking like a goofball! In trying to formulate my policies on this topic, I found the following sources really helpful, and you might, too:
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This document is maintained by Dr.
Rodrigue
First placed on the web: 01/25/07
Last updated: 08/10/23
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