"PizzAbundance"
An exercise for learning and practicing abundance estimation in soils
Summary: Order pizzas with different combinations of toppings and have your students estimate the abundance of each topping and decide on a modifier before eating well-earned pizza.
1. First, categorize possible pizza toppings, for example:
Gravels = sausage, beef, bacon, olives ( we made the executive decision that olives are gravels and informed our students)
Channers = pepperoni, ham, salami, mushrooms, green peppers, spinach
2. Formulate & order the pizzas with different combinations of toppings
We expected 15 people, so we ordered 4 medium pizzas, including a vegan and veggie pizza, and a range of difficulties for abundance estimation:
(A) Pepperoni
(B) Green peppers + olives
(C) Sausage + ham
(D) Olives + mushrooms + spinach (no cheese)
Tip 1: Avoid similar-colored toppings, such as bacon + ham
Tip 2: Combine gravel and channer toppings for more difficult estimation
3. Go through the PizzAbundance presentation with the students
Tip 1: Keep the pizzas secret until the end of the presentation
Tip 2: If you have photos of rocky soils, those would be a great addition
Tip 3: Try to keep the presentation short so the pizza doesn’t get cold!
4. For each pizza, have the students give: (1) size, shape, and % rock fragments for each topping (2) Total %RF (3) RF modifier, if necessary, using the correct abbreviations
We labeled the pizzas A through D and spread them around the classroom. Each student wrote 1-3 for each pizza on their own paper. For example:
Pizza B:
1. Channers (green peppers) 25%
Gravels (olives) 15%
2. Total: 40% RF
3. VCH (very channery)
Tip 1: This is a great chance for students to apply the rules for rock fragment modifiers (e.g. for a mix of sizes, the largest size class is generally named)
Tip 2: Keep in mind that you will not be able to predict abundance ahead of time. We decided that my estimations, with input from assistant coaches, would serve as our answer key. It turned out that all our pizzas were dominated by channers
Other modifications:
Adapt for estimating abundance of secondary carbonates or redox features:
- Reddish toppings are concentrations (e.g. pepperoni)
- Grayish toppings are depletions (e.g. mushrooms)
- Cheese is a depleted matrix
It’s best to connect this to actual field estimation as quickly as possible!