The Department of Geosciences

The Department of Geosciences brings together expertise in the Earth sciences, biology, chemistry, and physics to explore the system dynamics of Earth and similar planets.  Our faculty investigate the habitability of Earth and other planets in the past, present and future, explore processes that modify the Earth’s surface in response to natural and anthropogenic forces, and provide the fundamental science for the development and management of natural resources and assessment of natural hazards.  

We achieve our mission by attracting and retaining a diverse, world-class faculty and student body, by providing a stimulating and collegial educational and research experience for undergraduate and graduate students, and by educating a broader population to make informed decisions about key environmental and resource issues.

Since the first Department of Geology at Penn State was created in 1921, the department has offered a variety of B.S., B.A., and advanced degrees.  In 2025 these included a B.S. in Earth Sciences, Earth Science and Policy, Geobiology, and Geosciences, a B.A. in Geosciences, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Geosciences with dual degrees in Astrobiology, Biogeochemistry, and Climate Science.

Note: Events prior to the 1990s are documented in earlier historical publications (see “The College of Earth and Mineral Sciences at Penn State” book by E. Willard Miller) and are intentionally not repeated here. 

  • 1988
    Merger of Three Graduate Programs

    The Department of Geosciences was created in 1971 from the departments of geology/geophysics and geochemistry/mineralogy, but retained separate graduate programs in geochemistry-mineralogy, geology, and geophysics. With the adoption of a new governing constitution, the three graduate programs were combined into a single program awarding M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Geosciences.

  • 1990
    Faculty Turnover and New Directions

    In 1990, the Department of Geosciences began a decade-long transition, marked by a modest 20% reduction in faculty size and a shift in research focus from high-temperature/pressure studies on silicates and oxides to chemical weathering, global geochemical cycles, and numerical modeling.

  • 1990
    New Undergraduate Geosciences Curriculum

    Six core courses in Physical Geology, Earth Materials, Physical Processes, Earth History, Structural Geology, and Field Geology were combined with a year-long senior level research project culminating in a Senior Thesis to form the core of a modern B.S. curriculum.

  • 1991
    Dr. Michael A. Arthur appointed Department Head

    Dr. Shelton S. Alexander was succeeded in January of 1991 by Dr. Michael A. Arthur, a paleoceanographer specializing in the circulation and chemistry of past oceans, their relation to changes in global climate, and geochemical cycles of various elements.

    A man with a gray beard wearing a wide-brimmed outdoor hat and jacket, standing outdoors near a shoreline.
  • 1997
    Dr. Rudy L. Slingerland appointed Department Head

    Slingerland was home-grown, having received his M.S. (1973) and Ph.D. (1977) from the department. He was a sedimentary geologist/geomorphologist and member of ESSC (the Earth System Science Center) who promoted the study of geological systems through mathematical and computational models.

    Smiling man wearing a light button-down shirt, standing in front of a bookshelf filled with hardcover books
  • 1998
    New Petroleum Geosystems M.S. Program

    This M.S. program grew from the need of industry for interdisciplinary scientists trained in problem-based collaborative research.  Graduate students studied in interdisciplinary cohorts focused on problems coordinated with industry sponsors. Turgay Ertekin, professor of petroleum and natural gas engineering, and Peter Flemings, associate professor of geosciences, led the initiative.

  • 1999
    Penn State Astrobiology Research Center (PSARC) Established

    PSARC was created in EMS as a member organization of the NASA Astrobiology Institute, to conduct research on life in the universe and its cosmic implications. Dr. Hiroshi Ohmoto directed this interdisciplinary center that brought together researchers from the Departments of Geosciences, Meteorology, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Biology and Chemistry.

  • 1999
    Rise in department stature

    By 1999 Penn State Geosciences had risen to national prominence, ranking 7th in geology, 3rd in sedimentology/stratigraphy, and 5th in both geochemistry and hydrogeology.

  • 2000
    Dramatic changes in enrollment, staffing, and disciplinary focus

    By the start of the new millennium, undergraduate majors had fallen to levels not seen since the 1960s, and a period of tenure-track faculty turnover brought new expertise in global change, numerical modeling of earth systems, crustal geodynamics, and astrobiology.

  • 2000
    The rise of non-traditional research and educational programs

    2000-2010 saw the rise of novel, externally funded programs including the Biogeochemical Research Initiative for Education (BRIE); Center for Environmental Kinetics Analysis (CEKA); Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS); Center for Geomechamics, Geofluids, and Geohazards; and Appalachian Basin Black Shales Group (ABBSG).

  • 2000
    New B.A. in Geosciences

    This degree was designed for non-traditional students interested in the intersections among geoscience and environmental law, planning, and business.

  • 2003
    Dr. Timothy Bralower appointed Department Head

    Bralower brought research expertise in micropaleontology, paleoceanography, and mass extinctions that dovetailed nicely with the department’s focus on global change.

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  • 2005
    NSF Award for Building and Maintaining a Pipeline for Diversity

    Dr. Tanya Furman grew a partnership between The Pennsylvania State University and Jackson State University that provided longitudinal opportunities, training, mentoring and support for students and faculty members from underrepresented groups in the Geosciences.

  • 2005
    New B.S. in Geobiology

    The burgeoning field of biogeochemistry underpinned a new B.S. degree in Geobiology.

  • 2006
    Two New Diversity Programs: AfricaArray & Fort Valley State Dual Degree Program

    Professor Andrew Nyblade launched a geophysics field course in South Africa to grow Earth science capacity, with students participating from several minority-serving institutions. This became aligned with a partnership between Penn State and Fort Valley State University (FVSU) to offer a combined 3-year + 2-year dual-degree program.

  • 2006
    Susquehanna Shale Hills Critical Zone Observatory

    Dr. Susan L. Brantley was instrumental in launching a program of NSF-funded observatories to better understand the critical zone–the region of the Earth’s surface from top of the vegetation canopy to the bottom of groundwater.

    Group of twelve people wearing cold-weather outdoor clothing stand in a forest in front of a wooden sign reading ‘Shale Hills Unit – Basic Hydrologic Research, Pennsylvania State University'
  • 2010
    Trends in geoscience education

    Undergraduate and, to a lesser extent, graduate enrollments rebounded as the price of oil rose and the new technology of fracking organic-rich shales in the U.S. drove workforce expansion.  A new B.S. in Earth Science and Policy reflected the growing importance of geoscience and geography in questions of public policy.

  • 2010
    Rise in department stature

    US News and World Report ranked the department 6th among Earth Sciences programs, 1st in environmental science, 2nd in geochemistry, 3rd in geology and 8th in paleontology.  Four members of the faculty were members of the National Academy of Sciences.

  • 2011
    Dr. Lee Kump appointed Department Head

    Kump, an expert in biogeochemical cycles, environmental biogeochemistry, and atmosphere/ocean evolution, led the department until 2017 when he was named the seventeenth dean of the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences.

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  • 2017
    Dr. Timothy Bralower appointed Interim Department Head

    Bralower once again served as Department Head when Lee Kump became Dean of the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences. 

  • 2018
    Major lab renovations in the basement of Deike Building

    With NASA support for a new Astrobiology Center led by Professor Katherine Freeman, the University funded major facility upgrades in Deike Building, including a world-class isotope geochemistry lab named in honor of the late, renowned department faculty member Peter Deines; new labs for sedimentology, stratigraphy, paleontology, terrestrial paleoecology, and crustal petrology; a rock prep facility; remodeled seismic station; and field prep space for geophysics and ice research.

  • 2018
    Dr. Demian Saffer appointed Department Head

    Saffer, a geophysicist who studied the role of fluids in tectonic processes, was appointed Department Head in 2018 and left a year later for the University of Texas to become the director of its Institute for Geophysics.

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  • 2019
    Dr. Andrew Nyblade appointed Department Head

    Nyblade, a geophysicist with over 25 years on the faculty and expertise in Earth structure and processes over scales ranging from the deep mantle to the surface, was appointed Department Head.

    Head-and-shoulders portrait of a smiling man wearing glasses and a brown button-up shirt, with a softly blurred green outdoor background.”
  • 2019
    Dramatic changes in enrollments, staffing, and disciplinary focus

    Under Nyblade’s leadership, the department hired 13 new faculty members to replace retirees and created the largest tenure-track faculty since 2000. Undergraduate majors slowly declined and fewer advanced degrees were awarded due to declining financial support from the university and federal government. 

  • 2020
    Establishment of a Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) program

    Dr. Elizabeth Hajek was appointed the inaugural Associate Head for DEI programs within the department, overseeing a DEI program committee.

  • 2020
    Updates in department stature

    US News and World Report ranked the department 1st in geology, 2nd in environmental sciences, 2nd in geochemistry, 6th in Earth Sciences and 8th in paleontology. Updated rankings in 2023 placed geophysics at 9th.

  • 2024
    Dr. Christopher House appointed Interim Department Head

    House, a 24-year member of the department and Director of the Pennsylvania Space Grant Consortium, whose research focuses on origin and evolution of microbial life, was appointed Interim Department Head. 

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  • 2025
    Dr. Eric Kirby appointed Department Head

    Kirby, a tectonic geomorphologist who taught on the faculty at Penn State from 2002 to 2013, returned to the department after serving as Associate Dean for Academic Programs, Oregon State University and Department Chair at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

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