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Geological Engineering involves utilizing geological principles for the planning, design, construction, and maintenance of civil engineering projects. This expanding discipline addresses growing societal concerns about environmental protection, risk mitigation, and enhancing global safety. Geological Engineering covers diverse areas such as analyzing foundation conditions for major constructions, responsibly developing natural resources (including minerals, water, energy sources, and petroleum), evaluating groundwater systems, ensuring infrastructure safety (like dams, offshore platforms, and transportation networks), and assessing geological hazards (such as slope failures, seismic activity, and volcanic threats). The field also intersects with financial planning, urban development, forensic investigations, and the conservation of historical sites.
Apply your understanding of earth materials to address challenging engineering issues. Protect critical infrastructure like dams and pipelines, evaluate geological threats, remediate contaminated groundwater systems, and pursue other vital work. Waterloo offers one of only two such programs in Ontario. The curriculum combines Civil Engineering coursework for technical design skills with Earth Sciences studies for geological expertise. Additionally, the co-op program provides valuable professional experience through two years of relevant employment. Graduates can pursue global opportunities in sectors like energy production, mining, environmental remediation, and water resource management.