MSc Environmental Monitoring, Modelling and Reconstruction / Course details
Year of entry: 2024
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Course description
MSc Environmental Monitoring, Modelling and Reconstruction focuses on analysing past, present, and future dynamic environments, providing you with the skills for a career in environmental management or consultancy, and a firm grounding for research in the environmental sciences.
Concerns over the human impact on the environment have stimulated demand from governments and industry for the monitoring, analysis and modelling of natural processes in environmental systems.
This is essential if we are to improve understanding of the interrelation of environmental variables to predict and manage their responses to anthropogenic perturbations.
By studying this course, you will gain:
- advanced theoretical knowledge and practical expertise to collect, interpret and analyse contemporary and past environmental data;
- modelling skills to investigate the interrelationships between environmental variables, and to predict their responses to changing internal and external conditions;
- intellectual and practical skills to design and undertake field and/or laboratory experiments in contemporary environmental process-monitoring, or palaeo-environmental reconstruction, and to design and test appropriate environmental models with the data you collect.
Aims
The overall aims of the course are for you to gain:
- the appropriate level of advanced theoretical knowledge and practical expertise required to collect, interpret, and analyse contemporary and past environmental data;
- the modelling skills required to investigate the interrelationships between environmental variables, and to predict their responses to changing internal and external conditions;
- the intellectual and practical skills required to design and undertake field and/or laboratory experiments in contemporary environmental process-monitoring, or palaeo-environmental reconstruction, and to design and test appropriate environmental models with the data they collect;
- a practical understanding of the research process, and the skills necessary to see an environmental research project through to completion.
Special features
- Geography has been studied at Manchester for more than 125 years, and we're one of Europe's best-equipped universities for the subject.
- We're home to world-class academics and the new Manchester Urban Institute (MUI).
- Join the Manchester University Geographical Society (MUGS) a society run by Geography students for Geography students.
Teaching and learning
Important notice
The School of Environment, Education and Development (SEED) recognises the value of fieldwork. However, the safety and wellbeing of our students and staff remains our priority. The School will assess on a regular basis the viability of any travel and fieldwork and communicate any significant changes to our students at the earliest possible opportunity.
The ability of fieldwork and travel to proceed, and whether any changes to proposed fieldwork and travel might be necessary, will remain subject to factors such as the:
- rules and guidance on travel and activities implemented and published by the UK and overseas governments;
- outcome of any risk assessments conducted by the University;
- educational value and student experience of the fieldwork, if significant changes to the proposed fieldwork would be necessary;
- availability of appropriate insurance cover;
- availability of appropriate travel and accommodation and any significant changes to their financial costs.
All fieldwork and travel will be subject to a rigorous risk assessment process and the implementation of any protective measures identified by the risk assessment to ensure the health and safety of all our students and staff.
In some circumstances, it may become necessary to make changes to fieldwork or programme related travel. The University will notify you of those changes at the earliest opportunity. If any fieldwork does not go ahead as planned, then the School's focus will be on seeking to offer a suitable alternative and ensure that the Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs) of the programme are met.
Please note that Countries may change their immigration and visa regulations at short notice. The School cannot guarantee that where visas are required for fieldwork, they will be granted but we will take steps so that if a visa is refused, affected students are not academically disadvantaged.
Coursework and assessment
Taught units comprise two-thirds of the course and are assessed by a wide range of project work, essays and reports.
There are no formal examinations.
The remainder of your course consists of the dissertation.
Course unit list
The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.
Title | Code | Credit rating | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|---|
Environmental Change & Reconstruction 1: Concepts in Stratigraphy and Geochronology | GEOG60111 | 15 | Mandatory |
Environmental Change and Reconstruction 2: Palaeoecology in Practice | GEOG60122 | 15 | Mandatory |
Dissertation Support | GEOG60662 | 15 | Mandatory |
Environmental Monitoring and Modelling Practice | GEOG70552 | 15 | Mandatory |
Environmental Monitoring and Modelling Concepts | GEOG70581 | 15 | Mandatory |
Environmental Monitoring Modelling and Reconstruction Field Course | GEOG70641 | 15 | Mandatory |
Environmental Change and Reconstruction 2: Palaeoecology in Practice | GEOG60122 | 15 | Optional |
Digital Terrain Analysis | GEOG60412 | 15 | Optional |
Environmental Remote Sensing | GEOG60941 | 15 | Optional |
GIS and Environmental Applications | GEOG60951 | 15 | Optional |
Displaying 10 of 22 course units | |||
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Scholarships and bursaries
We offer a number of postgraduate taught scholarships and merit awards to outstanding applicants and international students.
In addition, the Manchester Alumni Scholarship Scheme offers a £3,000 reduction in tuition fees to University of Manchester alumni who achieved a first-class Bachelors degree and are progressing to a postgraduate taught masters course.
For more information, see Fees and funding or search the University's postgraduate funding database
Facilities
We are one of Europe's best-equipped universities for geography, with numerous laboratories. These include the main teaching laboratory, microscopy laboratory, and sediments and project laboratories.
You can also learn professional skills such as coding and programming specialist, industry-standard software such as image processing, GIS, GPS and cartographic representation.
The University's Main Library is home to the University Map Collection, which comprises about 100,000 map sheets of every part of the world.
For more information visit our Facilities webpage .