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Show 120 5. Principles of Chemistry and Chemical Equilibrium. Prerequisite: Chemistry 4. Three lectures and two laboratory periods a week. Five quarter hours. Winter. Gray, Johanson 6. Principles of Chemistry and Quantitative Inorganic Analysis. Prerequisite: Chemistry 5. Three lectures and two laboratory periods a week. Five quarter hours. Spring. Gray 7. Quantitative Analysis. The theory and method of Quantitative Analysis. Prerequisites: Chemistry 6 and Mathematics 4. Two lectures and one laboratory period a week. Three quarter hours. Autumn. Gray 8. Quantitative Analysis. A continuation of Chemistry 7. Prerequisite: Chemistry 8. One lecture and three laboratory periods a week. Three quarter hours. Winter. Gray 9. Quantitative Analysis. A continuation of Chemistry 8. Prerequisite: Chemistry 8. One lecture and three laboratory periods a week. Four quarter hours. Spring. Gray 31. Organic Chemistry. The fundamentals of the chemistry of the compounds of carbon. Four lectures and four hours of laboratory a week. Prerequisite: Chemistry 6. Five quarter hours. Winter. Johanson 32. Organic Chemistry. A continuation of Chemistry 31. Four lectures and four hours of laboratory a week. Prerequiste: Chemistry 31. Five quarter hours. Spring. Johanson 81. Chemistry Applied. Application of chemistry to everyday elementary problems and materials. Two lectures and one laboratory period a week. Three quarter hours. Spring. Staff DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY W. R. Buss, D. O. Peterson The Department of Geography and Geology provides an opportunity for the student to acquire an appreciation of the natural environment through a first hand study of local and distant areas by the use of slides, lectures, laboratory studies, and field trips. A second major purpose of the department is to make the students conscious of world problems, such as conservation, and the reciprocal relationship of man and his environment. The third major purpose is to provide fundamental training needed by those desiring to make a vocation of geology and geography, and to aid in their placement according to their talents. COURSES OF INSTRUCTION Geography 1. Environmental Geography. Where man lives, the relationship and motions of the earth and the effects of these and other factors 121 such as climate, soil, land features, vegetation, and animals on his activities. Five quarter hours. Credit will not be granted for both Geography 1 and 5. Autumn. Buss 2. Physical Geography of Utah. A study of the many diverse features of Utah with emphasis on physiography; scenic features, and natural resources; and brief discussions of exploration and early history, plants, animals, and population trends and changes. Recommended for education students. Two-day field trips required for which a special fee is to be paid. Three quarter hours. Spring. Buss 3. Geography of North America. A survey of the environment and of man and his activities on the continent of North America. Five quarter hours. Winter. Buss Geology 1. General Geology. The earth, its rocks and minerals, its surface and subterranean features, their origin and their causes as revealed in land features. Two field trips required. Four lectures and one laboratory period a week. Five quarter hours. Autumn, Winter, Spring. Buss, Peterson S. Historical Geology. The history of the earth, from its theoretical origin to the present as interpreted from the rocks and their fossil contents. North America, particularly Utah and the adjacent areas, is emphasized. Two required field trips provide a valuable supplement to class discussion. Prerequisites: Geology 1 or Geology 11. Five quarter hours. Spring. Buss, Peterson 5. Rocks and Minerals. Sight recognition of the important rock- forming and other minerals through class discussion and laboratory work, and the identification of the common rocks of the earth's crust by mineral content, association and occurrence. Field trips are required. Three lectures and one laboratory period a week. Four quarter hours. Autumn. Buss 7. Mineralogy of Rock Minerals. Fundamentals of crystallography, and the identification, and sight recognition of the more important rock minerals by physical, chemical and blowpipe tests. Prerequisites: Geology 1 or 11, and Chemistry 2 or 5, or permission of the instructor. One lecture and two laboratory periods a week. Three quarter hours. Winter. Buss |