INTRODUCTION I was required to take a lab course, and I am glad I took Geoscience. I do not think I would have liked biology, I probably would have exploded the chemistry building if I took chemistry with lab, and physics makes me want to cry. So I thought, why not take Geoscience? I think for someone who is not into laboratory courses, this lab course was probably the least painful out of all the options, so I am glad I took this class. Not only was it least painful, it was actually interesting when I learned new things, such as rock types and mineral testing. CONTENT I came into this course with a bit of a background. I currently live in Eco-house, which is a learning community on campus which has a focus on the environment. So coming into …show more content…
While I still appreciate their beauty, in my mind, I wonder how such features are built. Not only do I think about that, but I think about how beautiful landscapes are created and destroyed. While it happens over long periods of time, places as beautiful as the Cape Cod shores or the Grand Canyon probably existed in the past, but tectonics could have destroyed those similar places by convergent, divergent, or transform boundaries, or they could have been eroded away. While it is sad to think about, it also means that new places are built and I appreciate how it happened. Another thing this course has begun to make me realize is that it might not be a great idea to buy a beachfront home. Since the sea levels are rising, if I wanted to keep the land in my family for centuries, that would not be possible unless we take drastic measures to change the rise. However, even if we reduced our carbon emission, ice will still melt and flood low lying areas. So now, I intend to visit beaches often, rather than live on the beach front (unless I rent a vacation home on the beach). This lab has forced me to consider not only where I will live, but where I will work. If sea level rises, Miami, New York, and Boston will all be underwater. Does this mean I will lose opportunities? Possibly, but I expect that the companies I would work at will move and I will work somewhere else not along the