Mongolia 2000
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Summary
The largest scientific expedition to Mongolia since
the dinosaur hunt of 1924 occurred from late July to early September 2000.
The four universities involved were Whitman College, the University of
Washington, Humboldt State University, and Mongolian Technical University.
The 22 scientists included Justin Brooks, Bob Carson, Alison Gillespie,
Justin Merle, and Devon Macauley from Whitman.
The four objectives of the expedition were:
1) Quaternary geology of three
sites where glaciation was predicted on the basis of satellite imagery.
Four of these were at the margin of the Darhad depression in Khovsgol,
Mongolia's northernmost aimag. We learned that there was interaction
between the glaciers and a huge lake in the Darhad depression. Samples
were collected for soil analysis and radiocarbon and cosmogenic dating.
2) Tectonics of tree sites in northern
and central Mongolia where there are active faults.
3) Limnology and botany in northern
Mongolia. We identified plants, particularly in and near lakes.
4) Samples of late Cenozoic intracanyon
basalt flows in northern Mongolia were collected, with hope for future
petrography, geochemistry, and radiometric dating.
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