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| Research Programs and Teaching and Research Facilities |

| The Department is housed in Leonard Hall, a
four-floor 70,000 square-foot building on the UND Campus. Our physical
facilities, including lecture and laboratory space, and the F. D.
Holland, Jr. Geology Library, are superior to those in most geoscience
departments at universities similar in size and mission to UND. |
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| F. D. Holland, Jr. Geology Library. We have a full-time staff librarian in the F. D. Holland, Jr.
Geology Library which is the largest geoscience library in the upper
Midwest with more than 50,000 volumes, 500 journal titles, 100,000 maps,
18,000 microfiche records, 8,000 air photos, and several hundred
geological databases on CD. The library is also a depository for U.S.
Government documents and specializes in U.S. Geological Survey
publications. |
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Laboratories and Research Equipment
- The Petroleum Engineering Laboratory is a 576 sq ft facility
housed in the basement of Leonard Hall. The laboratory features a
high pressure/high temperature acoustic core flooding system for
research on enhanced oil recovery and CO2 sequestration and
Schlumberger's ECLIPSE and PETREL software for reservoir simulation
operations. The hardware and software in the Petroleum
Engineering Lab are funded by a UND faculty start-up and ND EPSCoR, and
two on-going research projects are funded by DOE through the UND EERC.
- The Mining Engineering Laboratory is another 576 sq ft facility
housed in the basement of Leonard Hall. The Laboratory contains a
variety of equipment for testing rock properties and computers and
software for analyses.
- The Environmental Analytical Research
Laboratory (Water Quality
Laboratory), EARL, is housed on the third floor of Leonard Hall and is
jointly administered by the departments of Geology and Geological
Engineering, Chemical Engineering, and Chemistry. The laboratory is
staffed by a full-time technician and includes an inductively coupled
argon plasma-atomic emission spectrometer (ICP), a gas
chromatograph-mass spectrometer (GCMS), an ion chromatograph (IC) a
total organic carbon analyzer (TOC), ion selective electrodes (ISE) and
ancillary equipment to support teaching, scientific research and
engineering design projects in aqueous chemistry and water resources
investigations.
The
Wilson M. Laird Core and Sample
Library (North Dakota Geological
Survey) is a climate controlled facility, located directly across the
street from Leonard Hall. The facility consists of 2,000 square feet of
office and laboratory space and 18,000 square feet of core storage. It
currently houses approximately 129 kilometers of cores and approximately
40,000 boxes of drill cuttings. The cores represent about 80% of the
cores cut in the North Dakota portion of the oil- and coal-rich
Williston Basin, and about 95% of the samples collected. The facility
also houses an extensive collection of water-well samples and cores.
- Geophysics facilities include: two Geometric proton-precession
magnetometers, a LaCoste and Romberg gravity meter, Trimble 5700 and
Leica System 300 real-time-kinematic GPS with sub-centimeter resolution,
two high-resolution laser range finders, three solar-powered weather
stations, a divided-bar thermal conductivity apparatus, and a
high-precision temperature logging system.
- Hydrogeology Program. Auger rig and extensive field equipment. Details in the program
description.
- Other Department facilities include: an X-Ray Diffraction Laboratory
with a computer-controlled Phillips XRD using automatic peak matching
software library; a Paleontology Laboratory which includes an extensive
collection of invertebrate and vertebrate specimens; and a Stable
Isotope Geochemistry Laboratory for isotopic analysis of waters, rocks
and fossils in paleoclimate and environmental investigations.
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