Environmental Science Course Requirements
Course Outline
Intro Course
Students must complete the following intro course:
Core Courses
Students must complete the following 3 core courses:
Concentration Courses
Students must complete 5 concentration courses at the 3000-level or above. Students should speak with their advisor about which concentration courses are most appropriate for their program of study.
- EAS 3010 Evolution of the Earth System
- EAS 3530 Physical Oceanography
- EAS 3540 Ocean Satellite Remote Sensing
- EAS 4710 Ground Water
- EAS 4190 Geofluids (including drilling and borehole field experiences)
- EAS Hydrogeophysics
- EAS 4740 – Quantitative Data Analysis for the Geosciences
- EAS 4870 Introduction to Radar Remote Sensing
- PLSCS/CEE 4110 Applied Remote Sensing and GIS for Resource Inventory and Analysis
- PLSCS 3650 Environmental Chemistry
- BEE 4270 Water Measurement and Analysis Methods
- BEE 4730 Watershed Engineering
- BEE 4750 Environmental Systems Analysis
Field Courses
Exposure to the basic observations of earth science in the field is necessary to fully understand the chosen area of concentration in the major. A minimum of 3 credits of appropriate coursework is required, although more experience with fieldwork is encouraged. The following field course is recommended:
Other field options:
- Field courses offered by another college or university*
- Experience gained participating in field research with Cornell faculty (or REU at another institution)*
- 3-semester credits of advisor-approved Independent Research (EAS 4910 / EAS 4920).
Independent research must conclude with formal paper describing results and conclusions or else a poster or oral presentation of results presented at a public venue.
*Field course options marked by an asterisk (*) require pre-approval by the faculty advisor and the EAS Curriculum Committee. These courses/internships/REUs should require observations to be taken in the field and interpreted by the student. Field courses should generally require 40+ hours of active observation and data collection in the field. Students using a non-credit research option for the field course requirement are required to complete an additional EAS concentration course.