Geology and Geological Engineering M.S. and Ph.D.
Contact InformationDr. Maribeth H. Price
Department of Geology and Geological Engineering
Mineral Industries Building, Room 307
(605) 394-2461
Maribeth.Price@sdsmt.edu
Program Summary
The M.S. degree program includes coursework and research. Students may specialize in either geology or geological engineering and will complete a thesis on a research topic chosen by the student. Geological Engineering students typically work in areas related to water resources, groundwater, water quality, environmental resource protection, geologic hazards, or geophysics. Geology students typically work on research in regional geology and stratigraphy, mineral deposits, geologic remote sensing, and related disciplines. Opportunities for international research are available through faculty research programs in Turkey, China, Mongolia, Antarctica, Namibia, and other locations.
The PhD. degree program includes both coursework and research, and emphasizes the completion of a dissertation that makes a unique and significant contribution to a research field. Students may specialize in geology, geological engineering, or paleontology. Students work with faculty mentors to develop a specialized program of study in an active research area within the department, including energy, water, mineral resources, environmental studies, or vertebrate paleontology. Opportunities for international research are available through faculty research programs in Turkey, China, Mongolia, Antarctica, Namibia, and other locations.
Program Description
The Mission of the Deptartment of Geology and Geological Engineering is to train professional geologists and geological engineers with exceptionally strong technical backgrounds and superior field expertise, well-prepared to live and work in a diverse global environment, through participation in an active research program focused in the fields of energy, water, mineral resources, environmental studies, and paleontology.
Strengths of the department are:
- Proximity and diversity of geology in the Black Hills allowing for practical, field-based education.
- Emphases in vertebrate paleontology, resources (ground-water, energy, mineral), and environmental studies.
- Twelve teaching faculty members (and 3 emeritus professors with Ph.D. degrees from major universities.
- Strong reputation with universities and companies for quality programs and graduates.
- Outstanding placement of graduates in career positions.
- Close collaboration with industry and government organizations.
- Access to over 300,000 fossil and mineral specimens from the School of Mines Museum of Geology research collections.
- Attracts students from 23 states across the USA.
- Ranks in 90th percentile of North American departments by student enrollment.
- Opportunities for international education through annual spring break field trips, summer field camps, and research collaborations.
The M.S. and Ph.D. degree programs with an emphasis in geological engineering are each one of only a dozen such programs in the United States. The M.S. program in Paleontology is a unique degree--There is no other paleontology master’s degree in the Unites States.
Rapid City (population 60,000,elevation 3240 feet) is situated on the eastern flank of the Black Hills, a Laramide uplift exposing rocks from latest Archean to Tertiary. Cenozoic sedimentary rocks bearing mammalian fauna are in the Big Badlands 30 miles east.
Majestic Mount Rushmore and the emerging sculpture of Crazy Horse are both in the Harney Peak granite, around which approximately 10,000 pegmatites have been emplaced. The Homestake mine produced 40 million ounces of gold between 1976-2001 from iron-formation-hosted veins, and is one of two finalists for a national deep underground science laboratory. The drill core, paper and digital archives are available for research, and will be supplemented by underground access as the Deep Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory (DUSEL) comes online at Homestake.
Within a 60 mile radius of Rapid City, there are abundant opportunities for outdoor recreation, including skiing (downhill and cross-country), mountain biking, hiking, rock climbing, fishing, hunting, camping, spelunking, and snowmobiling.