Rock Solid Academics
Why Study Geology at Wheaton College?
Through our curriculum, Wheaton’s geology students study processes that range from water precipitation to mineral crystallization to plate tectonics that are continually sustained by our Creator, as we take seriously our responsibility to understand and care well for creation. Geology majors are equipped to pursue careers and graduate school relevant to water and mineral resources, energy, natural hazards, agriculture, sustainability, environmental consulting, geotechnical engineering, global climate change, and scientific discovery, with implications for diverse communities of people and the whole of creation.
This is your chance to dive in to questions about origins, to explore how geology addresses critical challenges to human flourishing in the realms of global climate change and resource management, and to live out stewardship of the Earth and be a part of the solution, all while preparing for adventure after you graduate.
Every year, geology majors receive substantial funding for trips to study the geology of spectacular regions of interest around the world or scholarships to take field courses at the Wheaton College Field Station in the Black Hills in South Dakota, with funds provided by the Richard D. House Geological Endowed Fund. Come and join us! Where would you like to go?
Sample Courses
Geology majors and minors take a variety of core and elective classes, such as:
- Dynamic Earth and Environment
- Energy & Climate Change
- Earth History and Stratigraphy
- Fundamentals of Mineral Science
- Soil Science
- Process Geomorphology
- Hydrogeology
- Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology
- Sedimentary Geology
- Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
- Field Geology (at the Wheaton College Field Station, Black Hills, SD)