Occupation Profile for Geoscientists

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Study the composition, structure, and other physical aspects of the earth. May use geological, physics, and mathematics knowledge in exploration for oil, gas, minerals, or underground water; or in waste disposal, land reclamation, or other environmental problems. May study the earth's internal composition, atmospheres, oceans, and its magnetic, electrical, and gravitational forces. Includes mineralogists, crystallographers, paleontologists, stratigraphers, geodesists, and seismologists.

 
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Overview

$72,660.00 Median Annual Wage 1,000 Average Job Openings Per Year
1.2 Average Unemployment Percentage 0.0 Percentage That Completed High School
31,000 Employment Numbers in 2006 6.9 Percentage That Had Some College
38,000 Employment Numbers in 2016 (est.) 93.0 Percentage That Went Beyond College Degree

Sample Job Titles

Core Analysis Operator
Core Analyst
Crystallographer
Development Geologist
Engineer, Soils
Engineering Geologist
Environmental Consultant
Environmental Field Office Manager
Environmental Geologist
Environmental Specialist
Exploration Geologist
Geochemist
Geodesist
Geological Scout
Geological Specialist
Geologist
Geologist, Petroleum
Geomorphologist
Geophysical Laboratory Director
Geophysical Prospector
Geophysicist
Geoscientist
Grade Control Geologist
Invertebrate Paleontologist
Marine Geologist
Micro Paleontologist
Mine Geologist
Mineralogist
Mining Production Geologist
Oceanographer
Oceanologist
Paleontologist
Petrographer
Petroleum Geologist
Petrologist
Project Geologist
Project Geophysicist
Prospector
Research Geologist
Sedimentationist
Stratigrapher
Supervisor, Geophysical Laboratory
Volcanologist



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Sources: Career Guide to Industries (CGI), Occupational Information Network (O*Net), Occupation Outlook Handbook (OOH)