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paleonet Sedimentological Books and classes



Hi,

We are looking for some elementary books and guidance about sedimentology 
for future lectures.
Particularly on the recognition of minerals etc!

Any suggestions?

help in advance!



Respectfully,

Xavier Panades I Blas
55, Marksbury Road
Bedminster
Bristol BS3 5JY
England (EC)

http://www.acs.bolton.ac.uk/~xp1pls/
















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Subject: Welcome to paleonet
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2002 19:57:02 +0100

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[Last updated on: Fri Jul  6 15:20:57 2001]
PaleoNet: A User's Guide

Table of Contents

           Introduction - General information
	         Addresses - Where to send what and why
	         Subscription - How to sign-on
	         Unsubscription - How to sign off
	         Reply Default - Current PaleoNet reply setting
	         PaleoNet Archives - How to access past PaleoNet messages

	         Subscriber Options

	         Digests - How to get PaleoNet to send mailing periodically.
	         Recipients List - How to get a list of PaleoNet subscribers.
	         Information About List - How to get information about the PaleoNet 
list.
	         Online Help - How to get on-line help.

Introduction

PaleoNet represents an experiment in establishing a higher level of personal 
interaction among paleontologists of diverse specialties and experience. 
This type of interaction was characteristic of paleontology during most of 
its existence, but has declined due, in large part, to our own success. 
Today paleontology is far more diverse than it was 20 or even 10 years ago; 
encompassing everything from descriptive systematics and biostratigraphy to 
remote sensing and biogeochemistry. In addition, paleontology has also been 
subdivided into the professional sectors of industry, academics, museums, 
and government to the extent that paleontologists in some sectors have come 
to feel as though they have little in common with their colleagues who have 
found employment elsewhere. The re-establishment of connections between 
paleontologists of all types is PaleoNet's primary goal.

PaleoNet's operating model falls somewhere between an informal electronic 
journal and a very large social gathering of paleontological professionals 
(including students) convened to discuss current events in the field. As a 
subscriber, you can expect to find wide variety of information accessible 
through PaleoNet at any time. These include ongoing informal conversations 
about papers, ideas, techniques, requests for information, announcements, 
etc., set against a background of more formal contributions such as 
editorials, meeting reviews, book reviews, software reviews, and the like. 
The purpose of these exchanges is to put you in touch, and keep you in 
touch, with what is happening in paleontology. The key concept that makes 
PaleoNet work, however, is participation.

Since PaleoNet is primarily a forum for public communication within the 
paleontological community, all postings to PaleoNet should be made to the 
entire subscriber list and not to individuals. Anyone who receives a reply 
to his or her PaleoNet message through a private e-mail posting is 
encouraged to make the posting public along with their response.PaleoNet 
would also like to make a special request for participation by graduate 
students. I know that during both my M.S. and Ph.D. programs I often felt 
isolated because there were few people on my campus who were interested in 
the research problems with which I was grappling or had expertise/experience 
in the fields my research demanded. This is natural, but that realization 
does little to ease your sense frustration. PaleoNet is offered to you, as a 
practical means of finding knowledgeable people with which to discuss your 
research problems. Moreover, PaleoNet offers a means whereby you can 
participate in discussions of direct relevance to your future careers 
side-by-side with interested paleontologists from a wide variety of 
backgrounds and at all stages of their own career development.

PaleoNet is not affiliated with any professional paleontological society but 
seeks to serve as a clearinghouse for any information of relevance to any 
form of paleontology. Additional information about PaleoNet is available on 
the PaleoNet web sites:

http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/Paleonet/ (PaleoNet West) 
http://www.nhm.ac.uk/hosted_sites/paleonet/ (PaleoNet East)


Addresses

There are two e-mail addresses used by PaleoNet subscribers to post messages 
to the PaleoNet list and configure various list options for their address. 
The address to which messages to the PaleoNet list are sent (= PaleoNet List 
Address) is:

PaleoNet@nhm.ac.uk

This address should be clearly distinguished from the e-mail address of the 
PaleoNet listserver management software (PaleoNet Server Address) to which 
the commands that are the subject of this User's Guide are sent. That 
address is:

PaleoNet-Request@nhm.ac.uk

All e-mail lists are basically computer programs designed to accept e-mail 
messages from senders and route those to the list subscribers. In this 
sense, the distinction between the PaleoNet List Address and the PaleoNet 
Server Address reflects the difference between the datafile and program 
control options of any computer program. The Majordomo software that manages 
PaleoNet expects messages that are to be routed to the entire list to come 
to one address (the List Address). User commands that will control and/or 
change the manner in which the software sends you PaleoNet messages must, of 
course, be sent to a different address (the Server Address) to avoid 
confusion. This manual primarily concerns itself with commands that PaleoNet 
subscribers can send to the PaleoNet List Address to control the manner in 
which PaleoNet messages are sent to them and/or get information about the 
PaleoNet list from the Majordomo software.

Because all commands to Majordomo are sumbitted by e-mail PaleoNet users 
must be careful with any other text (e.g., signature files) that might be 
appended to their command messages. The danger here is that upon 
encountering any non-command text the server software might mistakenly 
regard this text as a command, become confused, and fail to execute any 
valid commands contained in the message. User's may avoid this by turning 
off any "append signature" routines in their e-mail software when they send 
commands to the PaleoNet server address.

The other e-mail address that PaleoNet subscribers should take note of is 
that of the PaleoNet list-owner:

N.MacLeod@nhm.ac.uk

If you have any questions, concerns, suggestions, or are having any 
technical difficulty subscribing, unsubscribing, sending messages to, or 
getting messages from PaleoNet, please feel free to contact me.


Subscription*

The commands you can use to subscribe to PaleoNet are:

subscribe PaleoNet

or

subscribe PaleoNet <e-mail address>

Both commands should be typed on a single line of an e-mail message and sent 
to the PaleoNet Server Address (PaleoNet-Request@nhm.ac.uk). Either command 
should be followed by a carriage return and there should be no other 
information (e.g., signature text) included. The commands are not case 
sensitive so you can use upper-case letters, lower case-letters, or any 
combination thereof in your command. The first form of the command 
(subscribe PaleoNet) will instruct the server to use the return address of 
the incoming message as your subscription address. The second form of the 
command (subscribe PaleoNet <e-mail address>) will allow you to specify an 
address other than the return address of the incoming message as your 
subscription address. You can use the second form of the command to 
subscribe yourself from a remote location.

*When you subscribe to PaleoNet the Majordomo software places your e-mail 
address on the master PaleoNet list. It then uses this list to route all 
incoming PaleoNet messages to PaleoNet subscribers. If your e-mail address 
changes for any reason difficulties can develop unless you change your 
e-mail address on the PaleoNet list and/or contact the list-owner (see 
above) prior to the change. It is often the case that when subscriber's 
e-mail addresses change their local network managers will insert aliases 
into their local systems that will automatically route mail sent to their 
old address to the new address. This practice is very convenient, but can 
lead to frustrating problems later on when the user issues a command to 
PaleoNet's Majordomo server software under his/her new address and the 
software responds that the subscriber is not a member of the list because it 
cannot find the new address on its list. The best policy is to make a record 
of the e-mail address under which you subscribe to PaleoNet and then report 
any change to the list-owner so that he can make sure the appropriate 
changes are made in PaleoNet's subscriber list.


Unsubscription

There are two commands subscribers can use to permanently remove themselves 
from the PaleoNet list:

unsubscribe PaleoNet

or

unsubscribe PaleoNet <e-mail address>

Like the subscribe commands (see above) these commands are not 
case-sensitive and should be sent to the PaleoNet Server Address 
(PaleoNet-Request@nhm.ac.uk). Either command should be followed by a 
carriage return and there should be no other information (e.g., signature 
text) included. The commands are not case sensitive so you can use 
upper-case letters, lower case-letters, or any combination thereof in your 
command. The first form of the command (unsubscribe PaleoNet) will instruct 
the server to unsubscribe the return address of the incoming message from 
the list. The second form of the command (subscribe PaleoNet <e-mail 
address>) will allow you to remove an address other than the return address 
of the incoming message as your subscription address. You can use the second 
form of the command to unsubscribe yourself from a remote location. It 
should also help in the event your e-mail address changes and you want to 
unsubscribe the old address.


Reply Default

PaleoNet's reply default is set to send standard replies back to the entire 
PaleoNet list. If a subscriber wishes to send their reply directly to the 
person who posted the message they must manually type or copy that person's 
e-mail address onto the "To:" line of their e-mail program. There is no way 
for individual users to change this feature of PaleoNet.


PaleoNet Archives

Archives of previous PaleoNet messages are available at serveral different 
addresses. All archive locations can be addressed from the PaleoNet Archives 
Page within this WWW Site.


Digests

PaleoNet digests are available. These consist of collections of all PaleoNet 
postings that are automatically sent to PaleoNet-digest subscribers once 
every week. Digests are an excellent way of remaining (relatively) current 
with what's happening on PaleoNet without having PaleoNet postings arrive in 
your mailbox individually.

PaleoNet digests are set up as a separate list called paleonet-digest. In 
order to become a PaleoNet digest subscriber send the command

subscribe paleonet-digest

to the PaleoNet Server Address (PaleoNet-Request@nhm.ac.uk). Unsubscribing 
from the PaleoNet digest list is accomplished by sending the command

unsubscribe paleonet-digest

to the same address. Although the PaleoNet digests are administratively 
treated as a separate list all messages posted to PaleoNet are routed to the 
digest list and all members of the digest list are able to post messages to 
PaleoNet. If you are a digest subscriber and want to post a PaleoNet message 
please direct the message to the normal PaleoNet address 
(PaleoNet@nhm.ac.uk). Also, if you currently are a regular PaleoNet 
subscriber and wish to become a digest subscriber, don't forget to 
unsubscribe yourself from the regular PaleoNet list (see above). Otherwise 
you will receive individual postings and the weekly digest collection.


Recipients List

Subscribers can request that they be mailed a copy of all non-concealed (see 
below) PaleoNet subscribers by submitting one of the commands:

who PaleoNet

The commands are not case sensitive and should be sent to the PaleoNet 
Server Address (PaleoNet-Request@nhm.ac.uk). No other text should be 
included on the command line.


Information About The List

Subscribers can request that they be mailed a descriptive summary of the 
PaleoNet list by submitting the command:

info PaleoNet

This command is not case sensitive and should be sent to the PaleoNet Server 
Address (PaleoNet-Request@nhm.ac.uk). No other text should be included on 
the command line.


Online Help

Subscribers can obtain a description of all subscriber options and 
associated commands available for PaleoNet (= this document) by submitting 
the command:

intro PaleoNet

This command is not case sensitive and should be sent to the PaleoNet Server 
Address (PaleoNet-Request@nhm.ac.uk). No other text should be included on 
the command line.


Norman MacLeod Department of Palaeontology, The Natural History Museum, 
Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD N.MacLeod@nhm.ac.uk