GEOGRAPHY (GEOG)
GEOG
1010. Weather and Climate.
Lec. 3. Credit 3.
Introduction to weather and climate; landforms; soils; vegetation; water.
uGEOG 1120. Human Geography. Lec. 3. Credit
3.
Distribution of people and their activities as they are related to the earth.
uGEOG 1130. Geography of Natural Hazards. Lec.
3. Credit 3.
The societal and economic impact of natural hazards including flooding,
hurricanes, tornadoes, volcanoes, earthquakes, landslides, disease, wildfire,
drought, famine, and climate change. The response of governments, cultures,
and individuals to natural hazards.
GEOG 3010. Geography of the United States.
Lec. 3. Credit 3.
Prerequisite: GEOG 1010. The United States; its physical environment, resources
and cultural development.
GEOG (GEOL) 3200. Water Resources.
Lec. 3. Credit 3.
This course deals with water as a resource basic for life on Earth. Topics
to be covered include: dams and reservoirs, irrigation, inter-basin transfers,
river channel modification, flood control, water quality and water law.
GEOG 3330. Meteorology. Lec. 3. Lab. 2.
Credit 4.
Earth's atmosphere and the mechanics and causes of day to day weather changes.
GEOG 3400. Field Studies in Latin America.
Credit 4.
Prerequisite: GEOG 1010 or 1120, or consent of instructor. A 2-3 week trip to
study the geography and culture of a Latin American country. May be repeated for
credit if trip is to a different field area.
GEOG (GEOL) 4150 (5150).
Geomorphology. Lec. 3. Lab.
2. Credit 4.
Prerequisites: GEOL 1040 and 2300 or consent of instructor. Analysis of
landforms and processes that shape them.
GEOG 4210 (5210). Cartography. Lec 2.
Lab. 2. Credit 3.
Principles and practices of map construction and interpretation.
GEOG (GEOL) 4410 (5410).
Remote Sensing. Lec 2. Lab.
2. Credit 3.
Prerequisite: GEOL 2300 and GEOL 3230 or consent of instructor. Principles
and
applications of remote sensing. Provides a survey of the concepts and
techniques of remote sensing and image analysis for natural resources,
geomorphology and Earth surface processes.
GEOG 4510 (5510). Theory
of GIS, I. Lec. 3. Credit 3.
Prerequisites: Consent of instructor; computer literacy is assumed, GEOL 2300
and/or 4410 (5410) are recommended. Introduction to 1) the PC ARC/INFO GIS package,
2) ArcView GIS package and 3) the integration of Global Positioning Systems
(GPS) with GIS.
GEOG 4511 (5511). Theory of GIS, II.
Lec. 3. Credit 3.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor and GEOG 4510 (5510). Intermediate principles
of GIS using ArcGIS and ArcView packages. Advanced integration of GPS with GIS.
Spatial analysis and modeling capabilities of GIS emphasized.
GEOG 4620 (5620). Principles of GIS.
Lec. 3. Credit 3.
Prerequisite: none. Introduction to the fundamentals of GIS.
Theoretical and technical principles of managing and processing geographic data,
nature of geographic data, spatial data models of map projection systems, kriging,
structures and spatial analytical and modeling techniques.
GEOG 4650 (5650). Environmental
Applications of GIS. Lec. 3. Credit 3.
Prerequisite: GEOG 4510/4520 or consent of instructor. Applications
of GIS in environmental sciences and engineering. Main emphasis is on
approaches, scripting and modeling exercises. Covers the scope of
ecosystems, forestry, drainage basins, pollution modeling and spatial analysis
of contaminants in various environments using GIS as the main tool of
analysis. Completion of a real-world GIS project is required.
GEOG
(GEOL) 4711 (5711). Hydrogeology. Lec.
3. Lab. 2. Credit 4.
Prerequisites: GEOL 1040 and GEOL 1045; CHEM 1120; MATH 1830 or 1730 (MATH 1910
is recommended); or consent of instructor. Occurrence and movement of ground
water, well hydraulics, water quality and pollution.
GEOG 4810-4820. Special Problems. Credit
1-3.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Research course on topics of significance
in the field of geography. A paper reporting the results of this research is
required. Course may be taken for credit more than once.
GEOG 4850 (5850). Advanced GIS.
Lec. 3. Credit 3.
Prerequisite: GEOG 4510/4520. Advanced topis in GIS, including
writing of avenue scripts, writing and importing Visual Basic scripts,
customization of the interface; customization of spatial, network and 3D
extensions of ArcView and AML.
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Meets Tennessee Technological University and Tennessee Board
of Regents minimum degree requirements. |
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