An example of large scale dissolution An example of active erosion (transportation of objects, not weathering) An example of biochemical perception before lithification An example of cross bedding Where a river has hit hard rock and stopped erosion An example of a cross cutting relationship An example of root wedging Some Metamorphic limestone A halite Ripple marks! An intrusive igneous Rock larger than your hand A cutbank A piece of coal A mosasaur fossil (hint: geology offices) Find me some SiO2 An invertebrate fossil (but you have to ID it!) A geologist (other than your professor or TA) A Gneiss rock A fault line (of any size and type) An anticline or a syncline An non- silicate mineral (but you have to ID it!) A well sorted breccia Something with oxidation A mineral vein thicker than finger width An example of the principle of superposition An example of large scale dissolution An example of active erosion (transportation of objects, not weathering) An example of biochemical perception before lithification An example of cross bedding Where a river has hit hard rock and stopped erosion An example of a cross cutting relationship An example of root wedging Some Metamorphic limestone A halite Ripple marks! An intrusive igneous Rock larger than your hand A cutbank A piece of coal A mosasaur fossil (hint: geology offices) Find me some SiO2 An invertebrate fossil (but you have to ID it!) A geologist (other than your professor or TA) A Gneiss rock A fault line (of any size and type) An anticline or a syncline An non- silicate mineral (but you have to ID it!) A well sorted breccia Something with oxidation A mineral vein thicker than finger width An example of the principle of superposition
(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
An example of large scale dissolution
An example of active erosion (transportation of objects, not weathering)
An example of biochemical perception before lithification
An example of cross bedding
Where a river has hit hard rock and stopped erosion
An example of a cross cutting relationship
An example of root wedging
Some Metamorphic limestone
A halite
Ripple marks!
An intrusive igneous Rock larger than your hand
A cutbank
A piece of coal
A mosasaur fossil (hint: geology offices)
Find me some SiO2
An invertebrate fossil (but you have to ID it!)
A geologist (other than your professor or TA)
A Gneiss rock
A fault line (of any size and type)
An anticline or a syncline
An non-silicate mineral (but you have to ID it!)
A well sorted breccia
Something with oxidation
A mineral vein thicker than finger width
An example of the principle of superposition