Yes people! i found that books. in 4:23 she is looking at the book which name is ''Atlas of Sedimentary Rocks Under The Microscope'', and the other book which is under the Atlas of sedimentary.. is '' The Geological Interpredation of Well Logs, 2nd edition''. Yes :D i searched that i found that! by the way, if you want to be a petroleum geologist, you should know geology (whole under department) and geophysics well. good luck :*)
I don't know your level system in the states but in Sweden we have Math D, Physics B, Chemistry B and Biology B as prerequisites in order to be competent. Then you have competitors who are fighting about the sites.
Could anyone tell me a brief overview of the agenda in college majoring in this type of field? Also, is being a petroleum geologist worth to achieve for a career profession?
I want to go into this career so badly but the low oil prices are forcing oil companies to make employees redundant. Mineral mining also is at a low point so exploration geology currently seems like a futile career path for me. :(
***** Oh, thanks for the info. Yeah I have a similar insight to you but I am just a bit worried. I am going to uni next year to study geology for a 4 year MSc course, hopefully in Imperial College London. I have got an interview coming up soon from that uni so hopefully that turns out alright. Do you think the mineral exploration sector is more stable than the oil economy, because I really want to go into the exploration field?
Mind giving the details of the interview ? I have no clue what happens in such interviews , so it would be quite helpful to know from an experienced one.
most, if not all, of the graduate programs I have checked into require a full year of Calculus before you can be admitted to the M.S. program. I know that our undergraduate dept. now requires all B.S. majors to have a year of Calculus. Some programs may let you get by with a year of college algebra. I would imagine that you will need 2 years of algebra and one yr. of geometry to get into most colleges these days. If you can take more, it can only help you. You use math in everything!
Hi can anyone please me if it is possible to become Petroleum Geologist after studying Oil & Gas Management Bsc, after learning about what the upstream sector provide in oil gas I am considering to take become geologist.
There are 2 year technical school programs you can take to become a geological technician or a geological technologist. This is not a geologist though.
Yes people! i found that books. in 4:23 she is looking at the book which name is ''Atlas of Sedimentary Rocks Under The Microscope'', and the other book which is under the Atlas of sedimentary.. is '' The Geological Interpredation of Well Logs, 2nd edition''.
Yes :D i searched that i found that! by the way, if you want to be a petroleum geologist, you should know geology (whole under department) and geophysics well. good luck :*)
Thank you for the video, I am in school for this now!
am on my way to become geologist it is awesome career i love it i only go four yrs more hope i finish
do you get to go outdoors once in a while?
I don't know your level system in the states but in Sweden we have Math D, Physics B, Chemistry B and Biology B as prerequisites in order to be competent. Then you have competitors who are fighting about the sites.
Heck yea, I want to be a treasure hunter!
wow i didnt know that, would love to go there
in 4:23 , what kind of books that she is looking? minerology or petrology books? what are those names?
I want to be a geologist but i'm pretty bad at chemistry. Can I still make it?
Math D or Math 4 what we call it in Sweden right now. You learn using models, spatial analyses, integrals, etc.
Could anyone tell me a brief overview of the agenda in college majoring in this type of field? Also, is being a petroleum geologist worth to achieve for a career profession?
Is there a difference between petroleum geology and petroleum engineering program?
Chemistry, physics and math and a whole lot of Geology!
I'm a petrogeologist. Well I'm still a student but I'm on my way.
I want to go into this career so badly but the low oil prices are forcing oil companies to make employees redundant. Mineral mining also is at a low point so exploration geology currently seems like a futile career path for me. :(
***** Oh, thanks for the info. Yeah I have a similar insight to you but I am just a bit worried. I am going to uni next year to study geology for a 4 year MSc course, hopefully in Imperial College London. I have got an interview coming up soon from that uni so hopefully that turns out alright. Do you think the mineral exploration sector is more stable than the oil economy, because I really want to go into the exploration field?
Tell us how ur interview went . I too am looking forward to joining Imperial next year.
Mind giving the details of the interview ? I have no clue what happens in such interviews , so it would be quite helpful to know from an experienced one.
most, if not all, of the graduate programs I have checked into require a full year of Calculus before you can be admitted to the M.S. program. I know that our undergraduate dept. now requires all B.S. majors to have a year of Calculus. Some programs may let you get by with a year of college algebra. I would imagine that you will need 2 years of algebra and one yr. of geometry to get into most colleges these days. If you can take more, it can only help you. You use math in everything!
Awesome vid!
6 years to get a MS.
Hi can anyone please me if it is possible to become Petroleum Geologist after studying Oil & Gas Management Bsc, after learning about what the upstream sector provide in oil gas I am considering to take become geologist.
There are 2 year technical school programs you can take to become a geological technician or a geological technologist. This is not a geologist though.
2 years at nait
yes you can but you do need a science so physics would be a good choice