Geology major O’Leary honored with first place at BAPG Scholarship Night | Fredonia.edu

2022-12-14 14:14:20 By : Ms. Coco Li

Sarah O’Leary, a senior in the Department of Geology and Environmental Sciences majoring in Geology with a minor in Chemistry from Athens, N.Y., was recognized with first place at the 2022 Buffalo Association of Professional Geologists’ (BAPG) Geology Scholarship Night held at Classics V in Amherst, N.Y., on Nov. 16.

Ms. O’Leary presented her research project, “Metamorphic Conditions of a Garnet-Bearing Gneiss from the High-Pressure Belt, Western Grenville Province.” The presentation was based on her research project on a garnet-bearing gneiss from southern Ontario, supervised by Department of Geology and Environmental Sciences Assistant Professor Wentao Cao. Camera For Microscope

Geology major O’Leary honored with first place at BAPG Scholarship Night | Fredonia.edu

Ms. O'Leary in the field doing research.

In her project, O’Leary documented microscopic petrographic textures using a polarizing light microscope and scanning electron microscope and interpreted them as former melt-mineral interface and crystalized melt. She utilized thermodynamic modeling on the bulk rock, and retrieved peak equilibrium pressure-temperature conditions at ~1.5 GPa and ~700 °C within the suprasolidus conditions of the modeled phase equilibrium diagrams.

The study confirms the finding of previous research that the Grenville mountain belt was a hot orogen, with its lower crust partially melted, which may have facilitated the exhumation process.

O’Leary started her research project as a sophomore. Her early participation and years-long project have allowed O’Leary to conduct the in-depth petrological project from petrographic documentation to mineral chemistry and thermodynamic modeling.

Attending the BAPG event was a “great experience,” O’Leary said. “I enjoyed meeting other geologists and talking to other people in the field.” She also mentioned that “it's a good opportunity to present research work and share what you've accomplished.”

O’Leary’s project was funded in part through the generous support of the Costello Interplay Award and the Phyllis and Lawrence Patrie Endowment for the Sciences, both established through the Fredonia College Foundation.

The Buffalo Association of Professional Geologists was founded in 1985 to strengthen and advance the geological sciences. It is an organization all about fostering geologic knowledge within the western New York region and beyond, according to the BAPG website.

The Marion Sonnenfeld Scholarship, which recognizes outstanding female students who exemplify leadership, hard work and a good sense of community, have been presented to undergraduate students Angie Sempertegui, Anna E. Evans and Kate Price.

Students will once again have the opportunity to raise their multicultural competence with the return of the Belize Service Learning Project, following a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, during J-Term.

Learning how to write computer code from scratch was among several highlights for nearly three dozen area middle and high school students at SUNY Fredonia for Hour of Code, a global initiative that promotes computer science and computer programming during Computer Science Week.

Geology major O’Leary honored with first place at BAPG Scholarship Night | Fredonia.edu

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