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Geotechnical Engineering typically initiates at the foundation of numerous civil engineering endeavors. All structures built on Earth—and beyond—must establish secure connections with the ground. Various soil conditions exist, ranging from competent, dense, and robust formations to soft, compressible, and unstable ones. The civil geotechnical engineer's role involves predicting ground response to structural loads, estimating soil and rock displacement, and devising construction methods—all while safeguarding public safety, health, and welfare during and after construction, particularly for workers and stakeholders. This discipline intersects with nearly all civil engineering specialties involving ground conditions. Consequently, geotechnical engineers contribute to pipelines, culverts, transmission towers, buildings, tunnels, industrial facilities, power plants, transportation infrastructure, dams, wastewater treatment systems, and other critical projects.