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| At left, Hannah Hastings ’08 and Andrea Pain ‘08 snorkeled the Puerto Rico shoreline to collect seagrass as part of their earth and environmental sciences senior research seminar. |
| Posted 03.17.08 |
Seniors Capstone Project Takes Student Researchers to Puerto Rico |
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In January, Hannah Hastings ’08 and Andrea Pain
‘08 collected seagrass from the ocean floor to study nutrient content in a
dinoflagellate-rich ecosystem off the southwest coast of Puerto Rico. The seniors returned to Wesleyan and analyzed their samples for carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus levels. They discovered a high ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus compared to the normal ratio in the ocean. “We discovered that high dinoflagellate concentrations are directly associated with elevated nitrogen to phosphorus ratios,” Pain said during Part I of the Earth and Environmental Science Department’s Senior Seminar Research Project colloquium March 6. Part II of the colloquium is scheduled for March 25. Hastings and Pain were among 15 students and two faculty members who traveled to Puerto Rico Jan. 7 to 13 to carry out multiple research projects on the island. These students are enrolled in the E&ES 398 course, Senior Seminar, the capstone course for the E&ES major. Tim Ku and Dana Royer, both assistant professors of earth and environmental sciences, teach the class. “This year, we chose to take the class to Puerto Rico because the island has a wide variety of terrain and different environments to study,” Ku said. “The students come up with an original research question and the procedures necessary to answer that question.” Ku and Royer suggest general research topics to their classes; however the students are encouraged to come up with their own ideas, too. The students break into groups of two and three, and direct their own study and analysis. Michelle Chen '08 and Rebecca Sorell '08 studied the depositional history of a salt flat near the shoreline city of Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. The duo, along with their classmates, waded through worm-infested, mushy terrain collecting 10 sediment core samples in a lagoon. Afterwards, they dissected the core, photographed the contents and described the sediments’ substance. They discovered layers of clay, shell hash,
silt, salt and organic layer, within their samples, and even traces of
mangrove roots, and halite, or rock salt. Halite forms in evaporated water
basins. |
| By Olivia Bartlett, The Wesleyan Connection editor. Photos contributed by Tim Ku. |