geochronology - All Posts
Let’s Date Rocks! A Geochronological Journey from the Outcrop to a Numeric Age
On February 13, 2023
![Microscopic image of sample NJ-14](https://wmblogs.wm.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Nailah_tnail-280x190.jpg)
By Nailah Johnson ’24 Last summer I worked with a team of William & Mary undergraduate students to study the geology of central Virginia. In particular,
What’s WMÜTTS?
On November 4, 2022
![WMÜTTS Crew](https://wmblogs.wm.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/wmutts-crew3-280x190.jpg)
By Chuck Bailey Scientists like their acronyms, and in some fields the more acronyms the better. Earlier this year I received a GSA AGeS-DiGS
Neoacadian Poets in the Blue Ridge
On April 29, 2019
![](https://wmblogs.wm.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/NeoacadiansTnail-280x190.jpeg)
Every spring my Earth Structure & Dynamics class visits the Appalachian Mountains on our weekend field trip. The goals of the trip are twofold:
Summer Research: It’s About Time
On June 26, 2018
![W&M geologist George Denny with a portable magnetometer at a dimension stone quarry in central Virginia.](https://wmblogs.wm.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/AboutTimeThumbnail-280x190.jpg)
Mid-summer is here, and it’s been a busy few weeks for my undergraduate research students. The 2018-19 William & Mary Structural Geology & Tectonics
Explorations in Time-Depth Space: The Earth Structure & Dynamics Field Trip 2017
On May 5, 2017
![The 2017 Earth Structure & Dynamics class in the Blue Ridge Mountains, Virginia.](https://wmblogs.wm.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/TimeDepthFig10-280x190.jpg)
The Earth Structure & Dynamics class field trip rolled west from Williamsburg to the Blue Ridge Mountains on a near perfect early spring weekend