Loading...

Course Description

Cole Gilbert will introduce us to the fascinating geology of the Finger Lakes region and the flora and fauna that has flourished here. We’ll explore 400-million-year-old sea salt beds, the spectacular landscape formed by mile-thick glaciers 15,000 years ago, and the variety of organisms living here after the glaciers retreated.

Faculty Author

Cole Gilbert is a professor in the Department of Entomology, and the Hays and James M. Clark Director of Undergraduate Biology at Cornell. He has been recognized for his teaching with awards from Cornell, the SUNY Chancellor, and the Entomology Society of America. He is interested in all manner of biology and teaches courses in evolution and biodiversity, entomology, and comparative physiology. Cole also regularly gives field workshops for New York State Master Naturalists. Cole earned a BS in biology from Washington University in St. Louis and an MS and PhD in entomology from the University of Kansas. It was there that he met his wife and co-leader of CAU trips, noted arachnologist Linda Rayor, when they did research together on the behavior of spiders.

Benefits to the Learner

Our days will consist of lectures on geology, plants, microbial fauna, arthropods, and vertebrates; lab activities looking at specimens; field trips and nature walks to observe specimens in a variety of habitats—dry and wet; and visits to museums around campus.
Loading...
Thank you for your interest in this course. Unfortunately, the course you have selected is currently not open for enrollment. Please complete a Course Inquiry so that we may promptly notify you when enrollment opens.
Required fields are indicated by .