Apr 24, 2024  
2006-2007 Graduate Catalog 
    
2006-2007 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Geological Sciences, M.S.


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Program Objectives and Description: The graduate program in the geological sciences is designed to prepare students for professional employment in geoscience careers in industry, consulting firms, local, state, or federal government, teaching at the community college or secondary level, and serves as a foundation for graduate studies beyond the M.S. level. It is also suitable training for careers in environmental law and natural resource and hazard planning. The department encourages an integrative, multi-disciplinary approach.

Admission Requirements: Incoming students are expected to meet the requirements of the graduate School, have a solid background in science and mathematics, and show evidence of superior scholarship. All students entering the M.S. program are expected to have a background equivalent to that required for the Bachelor of Science degree in geology at CWU and to have completed a geological field camp for college credit. Applicants must provide Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores for the general test. Graduates in chemistry, physics, engineering, biology, or other technical disciplines are also encouraged to apply. Deficiencies in the student’s undergraduate training as determined by the geology department at the time of matriculation must be removed without graduate credit during the first year of graduate study. If English is a secondary language, students must score 550 or above on the TOEFL examination.

Application Deadlines and Supporting Materials: Applications and all supporting materials are due by February 1 for fall quarter entrance. Applications will include a statement of your background and purpose, official transcripts, general GRE scores, and three letters of recommendation.

Program Requirements: The department offers an M.S. degree that requires a minimum of 60 credits of graduate study. Fifty-four credits are earned from coursework and research (35 credits at the 500 level or above) and six credits are allowed for thesis (GEOL 700). All graduate students must register for GEOL 501, Current Topics in Geology, during the fall quarter of their first year, GEOL 502, Regional Geology of the Pacific Northwest, and GEOL 503, Introductory Graduate Research Methods. GEOL 504, Graduate Seminar Series, is required during the first six quarters of a student’s graduate program. Candidates must pass a final oral examination on their thesis project and supporting coursework, given by a thesis committee consisting of the thesis advisor and two other faculty. Normal completion of the Master of Science requires two academic years and an intervening summer of field study. Students may be encouraged to begin field work prior to matriculation.

Areas and Electives in Specialization:
Course requirements are tailored to the individual student’s academic background, professional goals, and research interests through advising from the graduate faculty and thesis committee chair. The greatest departmental strengths are in active and regional tectonics, seismology, geodesy, geomorphology and Quaternary geology, paleohydrology, environmental geo-chemistry, and volcanology. The Department is a participating member of the Southern California Earthquake Center, a National Science Foundation (NSF)-sponsored science and technology center. The department houses the data analysis center for the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA), a network of continuously operating GPS receivers distributed throughout the Pacific Northwest in the U.S. and Canada. In addition, the department has strong ties with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), administered by Caltech for National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA); the opportunity to participate in JPL programs is a unique feature of the geology program at Central. The department is a participating member of the Western North America Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar Consortium (WinSAR) consortium and Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology (IRIS).

Central lies on the Columbia River basalt plateau, adjacent to the crystalline core and majestic volcanoes of the Cascade Mountains. Seismicity and active volcanism of the Cascadia subduction zone, highly deformed rocks of northern Washington and British Columbia, and a water- and natural-resource based economy in central Washington provide ideal opportunities to study a wide variety of geologic problems.

Equipment and Computer Facilities: The geological sciences department has excellent research computer facilities. We currently support numerous Sun Microsystems workstations and servers. ERMapper, PCIworks, MatLab, Islandworks, and Arcinfo/Arcview are available for image processing and analyzing remotely sensed images and DEMs. In addition, the department has access to the Spatial Information Systems Laboratory.

The geodesy laboratory houses the data processing center for PANGA. The laboratory analyzes continuous data from the permanent GPS array in the Pacific Northwest. The geodesy laboratory has a pool of Trimble SSi and 4700 receivers for geodetic experiments.
The department is equipped with digital surveying equipment (Leica Total Stations and Trimble kinematic GPS) and recently acquired ground penetrating radar equipment. The department has Nikon and Leica petrographic microscopes, research polarizing reflected and transmitting light microscopes, with CCD-video camera displays.

The department is currently expanding its geochemistry facilities. With NSF support, the department has acquired sample preparation facilities, a geochemistry laboratory with an ICP-MS and stable-isotope mass spectrometer, and an automated Philips PW 3400 Powder X-Ray Diffractometer. Laboratories include a stable isotope laboratory, equipped with a general purpose extraction line for analysis of waters, carbonates, and soils and a modern geochemistry laboratory, equipped for isotonic, major-element and trace-element analysis of earth materials.

Graduate Committee: The student must have a three-member graduate committee, selected in consultation with the advisor; two members must be from the geological sciences department.

Examination: Candidates must pass a final examination on their thesis and course work.

Subtotal Credits: 14


Electives and Seminars (to be selected by advisement) Credits: 25 to 31


Total Credits: 60


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