This Geology and Physical Geography course gives students a broad and comprehensive training and allows them to develop their own specialist interests.
A varied fieldwork programme builds on a variety of lecture and laboratory based teaching, providing students with a range of practical scientific skills.
The first year of the course provides students with a strong foundation in geology and physical geography through a range of exciting core modules. Students will build on this in the second year, where they can start to choose from optional modules, covering topics as diverse as continental deformation, geological natural hazards, hydroclimatology and environmental protection. In the third year, students will lead the research for their dissertation. This could be anything from an industry-linked project with the British Geological Survey to a remote-sensing project investigating glacier retreat. Students can also choose from a wide range of optional modules, and have the option of specialising further if they stay for the four-year MSci programme (dependant upon performance).
Getting out of the lecture theatre and into the field is an exhilarating experience. Whether students are sampling, mapping or collecting data, the subject matter really comes alive. There's no better way to learn about the natural and the built world than by being in the great outdoors.
Fieldwork is a key element of the degree programmes, and Earth Sciences at the University of Birmingham has an outstanding reputation for providing its students with high quality field training. It offers students the chance to travel, work independently as well as in a group and learn valuable technical skills. The University of Birmingham will make the necessary arrangements to accommodate students with disabilities for field courses throughout their time at Birmingham.
The field courses help students to develop as an observational Earth scientist. In year one, semester one there is a one-week residential field course to Northern Ireland. In semester two, there is a one-week residential field course to Pembrokeshire in SW Wales. These courses will provide students with practical skills and theory spanning the breadth of Earth Sciences. All students taking Earth Sciences courses do these trips together giving students the opportunity to get to know those on the Geology, and the Palaeontology and Geology courses.
In year two, students continue to develop their core Geology as well as new Physical Geography field skills. There is a one-week residential field course to NW Scotland. This trip focuses on Quaternary Geology and geomorphology. In semester two, there is a one-week residential field course to SW England working on the world famous “Jurassic Coast" and then down in Cornwall.
The first two years of field training lead to the dissertation project, which will involve field data collection of approximately one week usually carried out between years two and three. This could be in a wide range of topics to suit students' interests, from glacial geomorphology to groundwater pollution to volcanic hazards. Students will also have the option to undertake their project with an industrial partner, leading to an industry-linked dissertation project. Students' project may focus on an aspect of resource or applied geology. Students have recently worked on projects linked with local councils, extraction companies and the British Geological Survey.
In years three (and four if students stay for an MSci), students will select one residential field course each year, giving them more control over the shape of the degree: Volcanology in Tenerife, Sedimentary Basin Analysis in SE Spain or Resource Geology in the UK.