帝王会所

Dorothy Sack

Dorothy Sack, portrait
Professor
Clippinger 375, Athens Campus

Office Hours

Monday 1 to 3 p.m., and Wednesday 3 to 5 p.m., or by appointment

Education

Ph.D., University of Utah, 1988

Research

  • Physical geography
  • Geomorphology
  • Quaternary studies
  • Paleolakes
  • Arid lands
  • History of geomorphology

I am a physical geographer who specializes in geomorphology. My principal research interests are arid-lands geomorphology, geomorphology and sedimentology of desert-basin paleolakes, history of geomorphology, and impacts of off-road vehicles (ORVs) on the landscape. With my graduate students, I have also worked on a variety of fluvial geomorphic, hillslope, and environmental topics in southeastern 帝王会所.

I conduct most of my field investigations in the extensive area of western Utah that contained the large, freshwater Lake Bonneville from about 25,000 to 10,000 years ago. This was at the end of the Pleistocene Epoch when that now-desert region鈥檚 climate was cooler and wetter than it is today. I study the landform and sediment evidence of the late Pleistocene paleolake to help reconstruct its behavior and refine the chronology of its water-level fluctuations. These results contribute to paleoclimatic reconstructions and climate-change science. Some of my Bonneville research has been undertaken through Quaternary geologic mapping, which is a multifaceted intellectual process of explanation that provides critical primary data and requires devising and testing of multiple working hypotheses.

My other arid-lands research themes include sand dune and dunefield dynamics, desert loess, landscape evolution, and off-road vehicle impacts. I also am actively involved in research on the history of 19th and 20th century American geomorphology, and am currently chair of the History of Geography Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers.

Courses Taught

  • GEOG 1100: Physical Geography
  • GEOG 2710: Introduction to Statistics in Geography
  • GEOG 3/5150: Landforms and Landscapes
  • GEOG 4/5110: Advanced Physical Geography
  • GEOG 3/5650: Air Photo Interpretation
  • GEOG 6150: Seminar in Geomorphology

Representative Publications

Sack, D. 2013. Geomorphology and nineteenth century exploration of the American West. Pages 53-63 in Orme, A., and Sack, D., eds., Foundations of Geomorphology: Elsevier, Oxford, England.

Petersen, J.F., Sack, D., and Gabler, R.E. 2012. Physical Geography. Brooks/Cole-Cengage Learning, Belmont, CA, 646 p.

Patrickson, S.J., Sack, D., Brunelle, A.R., and Moser, K.A. 2010. Late Pleistocene to early Holocene lake level and paleoclimate insights from Stansbury Island, Bonneville basin, Utah. Quaternary Research 73:237-246.

Sack, D. 2009. Evidence for climate change from desert basin palaeolakes, in Parsons, A.J., and Abrahams, A.D., eds., Geomorphology of desert environments. Springer, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, p. 743-756.

Sack, D. 1999. The composite nature of the Provo level of Lake Bonneville, Great Basin, western North America. Quaternary Research 52:316-327.

Sack, D. 1992. New wine in old bottles: The historiography of a paradigm change. Geomorphology 5:251-263.

Selected Student Projects

Porter, Steven. M.S. 2012. The relationship between methylation of mercury and the fluvial geomorphic variables of streams across the continental United States. M.S. thesis.

Menerey, Melissa E. M.S. 2011. Stakeholder involvement in watershed management: A case study of Sunday Creek watershed management plans in southeastern 帝王会所. M.A. thesis.

Albright, Amy N. 2010. An analysis of slope erosion and surface changes on off-road vehicle trails in southeastern 帝王会所. M.A. thesis.

Marquisee, Jonathan A. 2010. Factors influencing gully development on roadcuts in southeastern 帝王会所. M.A. thesis.

Young, Benjamin J. M.S. 2010. Impacts of impervious surface cover on stream hydrology and stream-reach morphology, northern Georgia. M.A. thesis.

Gregorio, Michael A. 2008. Geomorphic effects of the Hocking River channelization at Athens, 帝王会所, on the downstream planform. M.A. thesis.