Competencies and objectives

 

Course context for academic year 2015-16

No data

 

 

Course content (verified by ANECA in official undergraduate and Master’s degrees)

General Competences (CG)

  • CG1 : Be able to work efficiently in a team in their professional or research work, acquiring the ability to participate in research projects and scientific or technological collaborations.
  • CG2 : To be able to make quick and effective decisions in complex situations in their professional or research work, through the development of new and innovative work methodologies adapted to the scientific/research, technological or professional field in which they carry out their activity.
  • CG3 : Be able to access the necessary information in the specific field of the subject (databases, scientific articles, etc.) and have sufficient criteria for its interpretation and use.
  • CG4 : Apply critical reasoning and argumentation based on rational criteria.
  • CG5 : To apply science from a social and economic point of view, promoting the transfer of knowledge to society.
  • CG6 : Ability to prepare, write and present reports and projects in public in a clear and coherent manner, to defend them with rigour and tolerance and to respond satisfactorily to any criticism that may arise from their presentation.

 

Specific Competences (CE)

  • CE1 : To have an in-depth knowledge and understanding of the nature of biodiversity and its ecosystemic relationships both now and in the past.
  • CE12 : To know and understand in depth the regional geology of Spain and peripheral areas, and in particular of the Valencian Community, knowing in detail the main palaeontological landmarks represented in the deposits of the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa.
  • CE13 : To know and handle with dexterity the field, laboratory and laboratory techniques for the extraction, preparation, cataloguing, digital reconstructions, study and dissemination of microfossils and macrofossils.
  • CE15 : Know and understand the causes of climate change and the proxies (diatom studies, foraminifera, tree growth rings, ice cores, current climate data, etc.) used to characterise past climates.
  • CE19 : To prepare, in a clear and concise manner, all types of reports related to palaeontological topics at an official or professional level (reports, subsidies, heritage impact reports, research projects, etc.).
  • CE2 : To understand the nature of the fossil record in relation to the sedimentary process, the biostratinomic and phosildiagenetic phases of the process and the mechanisms of fossilisation.
  • CE23 : Be able to apply the research experience acquired to initiate the development of the research phase of a PhD programme on biodiversity-related topics.
  • CE24 : To develop experimental skills in the handling of laboratory material and equipment in palaeontology.
  • CE3 : To know and understand the palaeodiversity of living beings, their ecosystemic relationships and the palaeogeographical distribution achieved by the main groups of living beings throughout the Earth's history.
  • CE4 : To know, understand and draw conclusions, applicable to the present time, about the crises of biological diversity, its causes and consequences within the framework of actualism.
  • CE5 : To understand in depth the historical nature of the evolutionary process, both in its aspects of unrepeatability and contingency, and in those linked to the fulfilment of laws of nature of all kinds and, therefore, of necessity.
  • CE6 : To know and understand past biological events, as well as the zonations, in time and space, of biota in order to establish the relative stratigraphic position of sedimentary rocks from different geographical areas.
  • CE8 : To be able to interpret environmental and ecological variables of the past from the study of trace organisms in the fossil record.

 

Transversal Competences

  • CT1 : Be able to access information tools in other areas of knowledge and use them appropriately.
  • CT2 : Be able to assess the need to complete their scientific, historical, language, computer, literary, ethical, social and human training in general, by attending conferences or courses and/or carrying out complementary activities, self-evaluating the contribution that these activities make to their overall training.
  • CT3 : Projecting intellectual curiosity and encouraging responsibility for one's own learning.
  • CT4 : To assume an ethical commitment and sensitivity towards environmental problems, natural and cultural heritage.
  • CT5 : Ability to communicate and disseminate scientific ideas.

 

Basic Competences

  • CB10 : Students possess the learning skills that will enable them to continue studying in a largely self-directed or autonomous way.
  • CB6 : Possess and understand knowledge that provides a basis or opportunity for originality in the development and/or application of ideas, often in a research context.
  • CB7 : Students should be able to apply their acquired knowledge and problem-solving skills in new or unfamiliar environments within broader (or multidisciplinary) contexts related to their area of study.
  • CB8 : That students are able to integrate knowledge and face the complexity of making judgements based on incomplete or limited information, including reflections on the social and ethical responsibilities linked to the application of their knowledge and judgements.
  • CB9 : Students are able to communicate their conclusions and the ultimate knowledge and rationale behind them to specialist and non-specialist audiences in a clear and unambiguous way.

 

 

 

Learning outcomes (Training objectives)

To understand how palaeobotany is included as a palaeontological discipline capable of providing data and answers to current ecological questions. To know the chronology established for the Quaternary, with special reference to the glacial and interglacial phases. To understand the environmental and ecological causes and effects caused by glacial and interglacial pulses over the last hundreds of thousands of years. Know the fossil record of plant remains from the last stretch of the Earth's history, how they were obtained and the processes of destruction and preservation that characterise them. To know the type of geological deposits in which these plant remains are recorded and the data they provide for the knowledge of the environment in which they were deposited. To know the bases and fundamentals of plant palaeoecology and the tools commonly used in this palaeontological subdiscipline for the interpretation of the floras of the past. To know the floras present in Europe, and especially in the Iberian Peninsula during the last glacial and interglacial phases, and the role played by refuge areas in the conservation of species. To know the action of man on the floras of the recent past and the existing evidence of this anthropic action. To know the current forest management strategy and the possibilities of adaptation offered by the data provided by palaeoecology.

 

 

Specific objectives stated by the academic staff for academic year 2015-16

No data

 

 

;

General

Code: 38367
Lecturer responsible:
No data
Credits ECTS: 3,00
Theoretical credits: 0,48
Practical credits: 0,72
Distance-base hours: 1,80

Departments involved

  • Dept: UNIVERSIDAD DE VALÈNCIA ESTUDI GENERAL
    Area: UNIVERSITAT DE VALÈNCIA ESTUDI GENERAL
    Theoretical credits: 0,48
    Practical credits: 0,72
    This Dept. is responsible for the course.
    This Dept. is responsible for the final mark record.

Study programmes where this course is taught