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- GEOL1001 Earth Materials
- GEOL1002 From Petrology to Petrogenesis
- GEOL1003 History of Life
- GEOL1004 Dynamic Earth
- GEOL1006 Foundations of Physical Geoscience
- GEOL1012 Surface Processes
- GEOL1013 The Earth
- GEOL1014 Geochemistry
- GEOL1015 Geology of Planetary Bodies
- GEOL2004 Chemistry of Earth Environments
- GEOL2008 Vertebrate Palaeontology and Evolution
- GEOL2009 Surface Processes & Structures
- GEOL2010 Igneous Petrology
- GEOL2012 Metamorphism
- GEOL2014 Global Geophysics
- GEOL2026 Maps, Images and Structures
- GEOL2027 Structural Geology and Tectonics
- GEOL3003 Geodynamics & Global Tectonics
- GEOL3036 Biodiversity and Macroevolutionary Patterns
- GEOL3038 Experimental Methods in Water-Rock Interaction
- GEOL3039 Physics of Oceans, Ice Sheets and Climate
- GEOL3040 Crustal Dynamics, Mountain Building & Basin Evolution
- GEOL3042 Geological/Environmental Mapping Project
- GEOL3043 Earth Resources & Sustainability
- GEOLM002 Earthquake Seismology & Earthquake Hazards
- GEOLM003 Earth & Planetary System Science
- GEOLM006 Earth & Planetary Materials
- GEOLM008 Physical Volcanology & Volcanic Hazard
- GEOLM010 Tectonic Geomorphology
- GEOLM012 Palaeoclimatology
- GEOLM018 Palaeoceanography
- GEOLM021 Melting and Volcanism
- GEOLM022 Hydrogeology and Groundwater Resources
- GEOLM037 Deep Earth & Planetary Modelling
- GEOLM905 Independent MSci Project
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Planetary Geology: An Introduction
A second edition of Planetary Geology: An Introduction book will be published by Dunedin Academic Press at the end of June 2013 More...
GEOLM037 Deep Earth & Planetary Modelling
AIMS
The course aims to provide an understanding of key topics in modern techniques to simulate the deep Earth, with particular emphasis to atomistic computer simulations. Specific examples from current research will be presented.
OUTCOMES
- an appreciation of the strengths and weaknesses of modern deep Earth research techniques
- critical evaluation of current and competing theories for the dynamics of the solid-Earth
- appreciation for melting behaviour in the mantle as a trigger to volcanism over different time scales
- analysis and synthesis of separate lines of investigation from observational geophysics to laboratory experimentation and numerical modeling of deep-Earth properties
- synthesis of these lines of investigation into models of geodynamical process
Practical and Transferable Outcomes:
- critical evaluation of information, ideas and interpretations;
- use of the various information sources;
- effective communication of information in writing.
CONTENT
The course covers current understanding of dynamics and properties of the deep Earth using observational, laboratory and theoretical techniques, and includes:
- Current computer simulation methods used to study the properties of core and mantle materials.
- the temperature, light element content, and physical properties of the core
- complexity at the core-mantle boundary
- deep mantle convection and geodynamics of plate subduction
- partial melting behaviour of the mantle and volcanic response
- the deep carbon cycle
- melting models for large scale meteorite impacts
| Title |
Deep Earth and Planetary Modelling |
| UG Code |
GEOLM037 |
| Coordinator |
Prof Dario Alfe |
| Other Contributors |
Prof. John Brodholt, Dr. David Dobson, Prof. Lars Stixrude and Dr. Dominic Fortes |
| Term |
2 |
| Credit | 0.5 CU |
| Written Exam |
40% |
| Coursework |
60% (4 practical reports) |
| Pre-Requisites |
GEOL1004 Dynamic Earth; GEOL2014 Global Geophysics; GEOL2024 Petrology |
| Maths & Stats Content and Requirement | |
| Total Number of Hours of Student Work | 188 hours |
| Hours of Lectures/Seminars | 30 hours |
| Hours of Practicals/Problem Classes | 10 hours |
| Hours of Tutorials | 0 |
| Days of Fieldwork | 0 |
| Other | None |
|
Annual Monitoring |
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| Categorizing Student Performance Levels |
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|
Moodle page |
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