Joseph Rosal, Geology

Joseph Rosal holding a rock in a laboratory
Joseph Rosal

If there鈥檚 a room that Joseph Rosal wouldn鈥檛 mind getting locked into on campus, it would be the Geology Collection room. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like a museum,鈥 he said.

He admitted that it would be easy to get lost in the shelves of colorful minerals and drawers filled with fossils and shells鈥攁ll clues describing Earth鈥檚 past.

But he didn鈥檛 always love rocks. After spending three semesters studying engineering, the Toms River native decided he needed to choose another path. 鈥淚 realized I wasn鈥檛 going to love what I would be doing every day,鈥 he said.

Then he discovered the field of volcanology, and despite never taking a class in his life, he switched his major.

鈥淚t鈥檚 something I could see myself doing for 40 years and still not be bored,鈥 he said.

Send him outside with a rock hammer, and Rosal is in his element. Outdoor field experiences took him to the Catskills and the Adirondacks on weekend trips to bring textbook concepts to life.

鈥淲hile learning the material in the lecture is great, getting to go out and see these features in person is a great learning experience,鈥 he said.

Joining the allowed him to experience rock formations across the country while adventuring through national parks and monuments with fellow students who he now calls friends.

鈥淭he trip also made me realize how much I鈥檝e personally grown during my time at Stockton. If you told me that I鈥檇 spend two weeks camping and hiking in South Dakota and Wyoming when I first came to Stockton in September 2021, I would call you crazy. Those two weeks were some of the best memories I have ever had, and I will forever be grateful that I had that opportunity,鈥 he said.

(Geology is) something I could see myself doing for 40 years and still not be bored... While learning the material in the lecture is great, getting to go out and see these features in person is a great learning experience."

He is heading back west for graduate school at the University of Nevada and to work in the Center for Research in Economic Geology, but before that, he鈥檚 going on one more trip with the Geology Club to explore Arizona this spring.

Rosal enjoyed the coursework outside of his major too. 鈥淧oisons: For Good or Evil鈥 taught him about venomous creatures and poison in mythology. 鈥淚t was a fun class, and in a grander scheme, helped me realize that things that seem bad aren鈥檛 necessarily bad. For example, venomous animals aren鈥檛 evil, they have poison as a defense mechanism for survival purposes,鈥 he said.

Rosal is a first-generation Osprey. Being the first in his family to attend college presented challenges as he entered unfamiliar ground, but he is thankful for the encouragement from his parents who value education.

Communication is a key skill in science. Geology helped him face his fears when he got the opportunity to present his research at the Joint Southeastern-Northeastern GSA conference last year with Rocky Severs, associate professor of Geology, and some classmates.

As a teaching assistant for Physical Geography and a tutor for Geology, he shared his passion and knowledge with classmates. 鈥淪eeing concepts click in a student鈥檚 head when they have their 鈥榓ha鈥 moment is always great to see,鈥 he said.

Matthew 鈥淩ocky鈥 Severs, associate professor of Geology, has witnessed Rosal inside and outside the classroom.

鈥淛oe has been an invaluable member of the Geology program and Geology Club for the last few years," Severs said. "He has always been great about having a sense of humor and sharing his passion with his classmates in the classroom, in the lab and in the field.鈥

Rosal will miss the tight-knit community of Geology majors and professors he bonded with in classes, on field trips and on a road trip out west.

A rock-solid experience at Stockton paved the way for him to climb higher into the field of Geology as he pursues his master鈥檚 degree.