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    Hope College
   
    Nov 24, 2024  
2023-2024 Catalog 
    
2023-2024 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Geology


The geological sciences play a key role in addressing environmental problems, recognizing and mitigating natural hazards, and procuring natural resources. Furthermore, geoscientists make important contributions to human knowledge in fields as diverse as environmental geology, sustainability, oceanography, planetology, geochemistry, geophysics, plate tectonics and paleontology.

About The Program

Student-faculty research is an important part of the geology program at Hope College. In recent years students and faculty have tackled research projects such as:

  • Analyzing geochemical changes in peat to predict how arctic soils will respond to climate change
  • Working out the geological history of coastal dunes along Lake Michigan
  • Making 3D computer models and gigapixel panoramas from digital photos to study dune erosion
  • Documenting biogeochemical changes in Lake Michigan coastal wetlands as lake levels change
  • Investigating antibiotics and hormones in local groundwater and surface water
  • Using 3D seismic data to characterize subsurface reservoirs in the Gulf of Mexico for CO2 sequestration
  • Building physical models to examine how shale forms faults and folds in delta systems
  • Assessing sources of plastic pollution and changes in litter as it is transported into streams and lakes

Hands-on field experience studying rocks, fossils, soils, and geological processes is an important part of educating new geologists. Hope College is ideally situated to study glacial geology, sedimentology, geomorphology, limnology and environmental issues. To broaden the spectrum of field experience, classes commonly take longer trips to examine the geology of other areas such as the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee, and the Ohio River Valley in Indiana and Kentucky. In addition to these trips, each year the regional geology field trip gives students the opportunity to visit and investigate the geology of a North American region. In the past, regional field trips have gone to the Colorado Plateau, Southern Arizona, Utah, and the Bahamas.

We are well-equipped for teaching and research. In addition to petrographic microscopes, the department has top-of-the line geophysical software, an X-ray diffractometer, a thin section preparation laboratory, an ion chromatograph, a gas chromatograph, an elemental analyzer, an inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometer, and a microwave-assisted reaction system. Students also have access to an infrared Fourier transform spectrometer, a UV-visible light spectrometer, a liquid chromatograph with a quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer, and a field emission scanning electron microscope.

The study of the Earth is eclectic so geologists must be competent in the other natural sciences and in mathematics. Accordingly, we encourage strong minors in other sciences and composite majors with chemistry and physics.

The Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences has an established reputation of excellence. Many graduating seniors have gone directly to work in environmental consulting firms, mineral resource companies, or the energy industry, while others have been accepted at some of the most prestigious graduate programs in the country, including the California Institute of Technology, University of Chicago, Harvard, Stanford, Princeton and various Big Ten universities.

Programs

    MajorsMinors

    Courses

      Geological And Environmental Sciences: Environmental ScienceGeological And Environmental Sciences: Geology