Contact Information
Dr. Laurie Anderson
Department of Geology and Geological Engineering
Mineral Industries 303
(605) 394-2461
E-mail: Laurie.Anderson@sdsmt.edu
Geology Faculty
Professors L. Anderson, Duke, Paterson, Price and Uzunlar; Associate Professor Masterlark; Assistant Professors Belanger, Pagnac and Terry; Professors Emeritus Fox, Lisenbee, Martin and Redden; Adjunct Professors Benton and McCormick; and Haslem Post-doctoral Fellow Boyd.
Geological Engineering Faculty
Professors Davis and Stetler; Assistant Professors Katzenstein and Sawyer; Professor Emeritus Rahn; Adjunct Faculty M. Anderson, Iles, Long and Roggenthen.
Geology and Geological Engineering
The Department of Geology and Geological Engineering offers advanced study leading to an M.S. degree in geology and geological engineering or a Ph.D. degree in geology and geological engineering. Students must elect to pursue either a Geology Specialization or a Geological Engineering Specialization, each of which has different background requirements and program requirements. The available coursework and current faculty expertise support the following areas of concentration. Students complete courses determined by the student’s committee based on the intended field of study in:
- Energy and Mineral Resources
- Environmental/Exploration Geophysics
- Ground Water / Environmental Studies
- Mineral Deposits/Mineralogy/Petrology
- Sedimentation/Stratigraphy
- Paleontology*
- Structural Geology/Tectonics
- Geomechanics/Engineering Geology
* Ph.D. only. Students concentrating in Paleontology at the Master‘s level should apply for the separate M.S. in Paleontology.
Background Requirements for M.S. and Ph.D.
The Graduate Record Examination (GRE) is required of all applicants. The TOEFL exam is required for students whose native language is not English.
Geology Specialization
- All incoming students are expected to present a full year each of college-level calculus, physics, and chemistry as part of their undergraduate record.
- All incoming students are expected to have completed courses in the following areas.
- Physical Geology
- Mineralogy
- Stratigraphy and Sedimentation
- Petrology
- Structural Geology
- Field Geology
Deficiencies in these areas must be remedied by taking the necessary coursework prior to or in the first year of enrollment in the graduate program.
Students with more than three (3) course deficiencies should complete them prior to applying for admission.
Geological Engineering Specialization
- All incoming students are expected to present three semesters of calculus and one semester of differential equations, as well as two semesters each of physics and chemistry, as part of their undergraduate record.
- All incoming students are expected to have completed courses in the following areas:
- Physical Geology or Geology for Engineers
- Mineralogy
- Stratigraphy and Sedimentation
- Structural Geology
- Statics
- Mechanics of Materials
- Fluid Mechanics
Deficiencies in these areas must be remedied by taking the necessary coursework prior to or in the first year of enrollment in the graduate program.
Students with more than three (3) course deficiencies should complete them prior to applying for admission.
Doctor of Philosophy Program
Admission to the Ph.D. program in Geology and Geological Engineering is normally limited to qualified students who have already earned an M.S. degree in geology, geological engineering, paleontology, or a related field. Students holding an M.S. but with extensive undergraduate deficiencies may be placed into the M.S. program in Geology and Geological Engineering until these deficiencies are remedied. Students with a B.S. degree who apply to the Ph.D. program will be admitted to the M.S. program in Geology and Geological Engineering until they have accumulated sufficient course credits for an M.S. degree. Students placed into the M.S. under one of these two circumstances will be admitted to the Ph.D. program after passing the qualifying exam.
Qualifying Exam
All Ph.D. students are expected to take a qualifying exam to demonstrate their potential for independent research. Students entering with a B.S. degree will take the examination in the semester immediately following the completion of 24 credits of graduate coursework. Students placed in the M.S. due to undergraduate deficiencies must take the qualifying exam in the semester immediately following completion of all deficiencies. Students entering with a completed M.S. degree will take the qualifying exam before the end of their second semester in residence.
To pass the qualifying exam, the student must 1) complete all undergraduate deficiency requirements, 2) submit a valid Ph.D. Program of Study to the department head; 3) complete a literature search and paper on a topic related to the student‘s area of concentration; and 4) present and defend the paper in an oral examination by the department faculty. The paper should reflect a sustained effort and culminate in an analysis of potentially significant research problems. The identified problems need not match the eventual dissertation topic.