Earth & Environmental Science Journalism
Curriculum
Science Courses Requirement
Any course at the 4000 level or higher in the Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences (EESC courses) may be used to fullfill the science coursework requirement. Some EESC courses are given in alternate years only. With permission of the E&ESJ program director, courses from other science departments may be counted towards the science coursework component of the E&ESJ degree. Appropriate science courses include, but are not limited to:
- EAEE E4001: Industrial ecology of Earth resources
 - EAEE E4007: Environmental geophysics field studies
 - EEEB W4789: Biogeography
 - EEEB G6110: Evolution I
 - EEEB G6400: Amazonia Seminar
 - EESC BC 3021: Forests and environmental change
 - EESC BC 3025: Hydrology
 - EESC W4001: Advanced general geology
 - EESC W4008: Introduction to atmospheric science
 - EESC W4030: Climatic change
 - EESC W4050: Global Assessment and Monitoring using Remote Sensing
 - EESC W4076: Geologic mapping
 - EESC W4223: Sedimentary Geology
 - EESC W4550: Plant physiological ecology
 - EESC W4835: Wetlands and climate change
 - EESC W4885: The chemistry of continental waters
 - EESC W4920: Paleooceanography
 - EESC W4925: Principles of Physical oceanography
 - EESC W4926: Principles of Chemical oceanography
 - EESC W4941: Principles of Geophysics
 - EESC W4947: Plate Tectonics
 - EESC W4949: Introduction to seismology
 - EESC G6001: Earth Science Colloquium
 - EESC G6201: Sedimentary Environments and Facies
 - EESC G6221: Sedimentary basins
 - EESC G6810: The carbon cycle
 - EHSC P6300: Environmental Health Sciences
 
E&ESJ Program
    Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
    61 Route 9W
    Dept. of Earth & Environmental Sciences
    106 Geoscience Building 
    Palisades, NY 10964
845.365.8550

