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WebDoG
Welcome to WebDoGS!   Dedicated to:
(1)  Helping you find Geology info on the Internet,
(2)  Putting good Rockstuff on the Net,
          and...
(3)  Inviting YOU to publish rockstuff on the Net.

Land of the WebDoGS!
(note: 1 million years ago = 1 Ma, or mega annum)
Rodinia: Really old supercontinent (~950 Ma)
Pangaea: Pretty old supercontinent (~300 Ma)
WebDoGS: Virtual supercontinent (~someday)
animated plate reconstruction

News of the Week....       
Jan 29-Feb 10:   
Rocks in the News  

  Surf's Up! 
surfer
 Cruise to
Rocks on the Web.

Bugs Forever!   Visit our
Amber   page.  

Time Travel!   Test drive the
Time Machine.   

Other Cool WebDoGS Pages-To-Be!


      The WebDoGS page is maintained by the students and faculty of the Department of Geological Sciences at the University of Kentucky for the benefit of the worldwide assemblage of rockheads (in effect, you are a de facto rockhead if you finish reading this paragraph). We welcome your comments, suggestions, and submissions for inclusion in our never-ending search for the best WebWare around!
      Read our Credits page, then contact us by Feedback (that's the easiest way) or by Email.   This page updated March 12, 1997.   You are reader #  since March 12, 1997.

To: University of Kentucky Department of Geological Sciences homepage. 
To: University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences homepage. 
To: University of Kentucky homepage.

There is no need to read the fine print. 

Disclaimer: This web page neither condones, nor contains instructions for, the fabrication of nuclear, biological, or geological weapons utilizing the pages of this treatise, nor can liability for any such use be placed on the developers of these pages, nor the unwitting contributors, nor the DoGS itself. We adhere fervently to the following beliefs: that thrust belts be utilized exclusively by consenting and informed adults; that subduction leads to orogeny; that kink folding may be habit-forming; and that quartz crystals can, in the proper hands, foretell the past and protect the bearer from untimely isostatic rebound. Beyond these claims, we simply beseech all students of geology to keep their eyes on the road while driving past Interstate roadcut outcrops, no matter how siren-like the rocks call for their attention(, that they not perish and we, their loving universities, lose their tuition money). For more information and disclaimers, see our Credits page.