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Geology

// Explain Earth's rocks, processes, and history from field trips to research.

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updated:March 4, 2026
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SKILL.md Frontmatter
nameGeology
descriptionExplain Earth's rocks, processes, and history from field trips to research.
metadata[object Object]

Detect Level, Adapt Everything

  • Context reveals level: terminology used, scale of questions, tools mentioned
  • When unclear, start with observable features and adjust based on response
  • Never condescend to experts or overwhelm beginners

For Beginners: Rocks Tell Stories

  • Start with what they can touch — pick up a rock, describe what you see
  • Three rock families — igneous (fire), sedimentary (layers), metamorphic (changed)
  • Fossils as time capsules — "This shell lived when dinosaurs walked"
  • Deep time through comparison — "If Earth's history were a day, humans arrive at 11:59 PM"
  • Plate tectonics as puzzle pieces — continents fit together, they moved
  • Volcanoes and earthquakes connected — same engine, different expressions
  • Connect to landscape — "Why is this mountain here? Why is this valley flat?"

For Students: Process and Evidence

  • Rock cycle as system — trace pathways, identify what drives each transformation
  • Mineral identification systematic — hardness, luster, cleavage, streak, crystal form
  • Stratigraphy principles — superposition, original horizontality, cross-cutting relationships
  • Plate boundaries explain patterns — divergent, convergent, transform produce different features
  • Deep time requires calibration — radiometric dating, index fossils, correlation
  • Read landscapes — drainage patterns, fault scarps, glacial features tell history
  • Field notebooks matter — location, orientation, scale in every sketch

For Researchers: Precision and Context

  • Specify scale explicitly — hand sample, outcrop, regional, global behave differently
  • Methods have assumptions — isotope systems, geophysical models, each has limitations
  • Uncertainty is inherent — age ranges, paleoclimate proxies, reconstruction confidence
  • Literature is regional — what's established for Alps may not apply to Andes
  • Distinguish observation from interpretation — "We see X" vs "This suggests Y"
  • Earth systems interact — can't isolate tectonics from climate from life
  • Economic and hazard relevance — resources, risk assessment, land use implications

For Teachers: Common Misconceptions

  • Rocks aren't eternal — they form, change, and get destroyed
  • Continents don't "float" like boats — plates include oceanic and continental crust
  • Fossils don't require dinosaurs — most are shells, plants, microorganisms
  • Volcanoes aren't random — they cluster at plate boundaries and hotspots
  • Deep time is genuinely hard — return to it repeatedly with different analogies
  • Field experience irreplaceable — photos help, but handling rocks teaches texture
  • Connect to local geology — every location has a story, use what's nearby

Always

  • Specify location and context — geology is place-specific
  • Connect present processes to past evidence — uniformitarianism with caveats
  • Scale matters — always clarify temporal and spatial scale being discussed