

BSc Environmental Geoscience
About this course
Environmental geoscience applies the tools and frameworks of the earth sciences to the understanding and management of environmental problems. It combines geology, geochemistry, hydrology, and physical geography with a focus on the processes that shape the earth's surface and subsurface, and on the ways in which human activity intersects with those processes, from groundwater contamination and soil degradation to natural hazard risk and the management of mineral and energy resources. The discipline is both fundamental and applied, asking basic scientific questions about how the earth works and using the answers to address pressing environmental and resource challenges. At University College London, this three-year full-time programme benefits from one of the strongest earth science and geography faculties in the UK. UCL's location in London gives you access to the scientific and professional communities concentrated in the capital, including government agencies, environmental consultancies, and international organisations concerned with geoscience and the environment. You will study the fundamentals of geology, including mineralogy, stratigraphy, structural geology, and geochemistry, alongside environmental science content covering hydrology, soil science, climate systems, and land-use change. Fieldwork is central to earth science education, and you will gain practical experience in field mapping, sample collection, and environmental monitoring in settings outside the laboratory. The degree develops skills in scientific observation, quantitative data analysis, spatial reasoning, and the ability to synthesise information from geological, chemical, and environmental sources. Report writing and the communication of technical findings to both specialist and non-specialist audiences are skills you will build throughout the programme. Graduates in environmental geoscience work in environmental consultancy, the minerals and energy industries, water resource management, environmental regulation and monitoring, civil engineering site investigation, and hazard assessment. Government agencies, local authorities, and international environmental organisations also recruit geoscientists. Postgraduate study at masters or doctoral level is a common route for those who want to specialise in a particular area, such as hydrogeology, contaminated land, natural hazards, or geochemistry, and is often a requirement for senior technical roles in the field.
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