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2019/20 Undergraduate Programme Catalogue

BA English & Environment

Programme code:BA-ENGL&ENVIUCAS code:GA1A
Duration:3 Years Method of Attendance: Full Time
Programme manager:Prof Graham Huggan Contact address:g.d.m.huggan@leeds.ac.uk

Total credits: 365

Entry requirements:

AAB at A-Level including Grade A in English Literature

School/Unit responsible for the parenting of students and programme:

School of English

Examination board through which the programme will be considered:

School of English

Relevant QAA Subject Benchmark Groups:

Since this is a Joint Honours degree with a significant component in English literature, English benchmark standards
(http://www.qaa.ac.uk/Publications/InformationAndGuidance/Documents/English07.pdf) will be used, but will be adapted to meet the requirements of a cross-disciplinary programme.
Threshold standard:
(1) Students studying on this programme will be able to show an understanding, both historical and contemporary, of the relationship of human beings to their environment, and of the ways in which this relationship is articulated in literary and non-literary texts.
(2) Students studying on this programme will be able to show an understanding of the foundational principles of environmental social science.
(3) Students studying on this programme will be able to conduct research through self-formulated questions and tasks, to display competence in both written and spoken English, and to exercise a degree of independent critical judgement in the reading of literary, scientific and other (e.g. journalistic) texts.
Typical standard:
(1) Students studying on this programme will be able to interpret different ideas and values represented in and through language and literature, and to apply these ideas and values to both historical and contemporary environmental issues and debates.
(2) Students studying on this programme will be able to demonstrate confident analytic skills with respect to historical and contemporary environmental problems, and to exercise critical judgement in addressing these, both via their own and others' work.
(3) Students studying on this programme will be able to produce carefully argued essays in English that address specific issues and areas of importance in environmental studies, and that demonstrate independent critical judgement in the reading of literary and scientific texts.

Programme specification:

At the end of the programme students should be able to demonstrate:
(1) An understanding of historical and contemporary environmental issues and debates;
(2) An understanding of how to analyse these debates, using tools and skills derived from both the arts (literary criticism) and the sciences (qualitative/quantitative analysis);
(3) An awareness of how the English and environmental studies fields intersect with and complement one another;
(4) A critical understanding of the principles of cross-disciplinary research;
(5) A flexible ability, adapted to the needs of different potential employers, to analyse both imaginative (literary) and informative (scientific) texts, to produce reasoned arguments for and against particular environmental actions, and to convert conceptual understandings (e.g. of the changing human-environment relationship) into practically applicable goals.

The programme will: allow students to study English literature in its relation to historical/contemporary environmental issues and debates and vice versa, developing and combining skills derived from both of the appropriate disciplinary areas (i.e., English and environmental studies). At Level One, students will gain introductory insights into some of these issues and debates while working on the critical and analytical skills needed to address them. At Level Two, students will sharpen these skills by applying them to sets of contexts (around, for example, wildness/wilderness or climate change or biodiversity) in which both qualitative (interpretative) and quantitative forms of analysis are required. Level Three will provide the opportunity for an autonomous research project while also honing pre-professional skills in such environmentally oriented areas as environmental journalism and consultancy, biodiversity management and work with non-profit organisations (NGOs). As also argued above (see Statement), the programme is distinctive in bringing two sets of knowledge and techniques to bear on contemporary environmental issues and problems, using arts- as well as science-based methods and approaches to explore the cultural, historical and ethical dimensions of these issues and problems, and developing crosscutting critical and analytical skills that are relevant to a variety of both culturally and environmentally oriented professional


Year1 - View timetable

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]

Students must study 125 credits.

Compulsory modules:

Students will be required to study the following CORE modules:

ENGL1000Studying and Researching English5 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL1340Environment, Crisis and Creativity: Contemporary Nature Writing20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL1350Foundations of English Studies20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE1111Sustainable Development20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE1381Skills for Environmental Social Science10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE1450Environmental Politics and Policy10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Discovery modules:

Candidates will be required to study 40 credits of Discovery modules. These may be made up of Discovery modules offered by English or Earth and Environment or from outside of both schools.


Year2 - View timetable

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]

Students must take 120 credits in Level 2.

Over levels 2 and 3 combined, students must take:
1. English: a minimum of 80 credits (at least 40 credits must be at Level 3)
2. Earth and Environment: a minimum of 80 credits (at least 40 credits must be at Level 3)
3. At least 100 credits at Level 2
4. At least 100 credits at Level 3.

Additionally, students must take:
5. a further 40 credits in the named subjects (i.e. in English, Earth and Environment, or a combination of both).
6. a further 40 credits in either the named subjects (English or Earth and Environment) or in Discovery modules (i.e. outside the named subjects).

In order to be eligible for an honours degree, students must:
- meet the Rules for Award
- pass all modules which are designated 'pass for progression'
- pass the required number of credits at each level (a minimum of 100 credits at each Levels 1, 2 & 3) as specified in the Curricular Regulations

Compulsory modules:

Optional modules:

CORE MODULES (SOEE)
Candidates are required to study 40 credits of the following CORE optional modules.
*Students wishing to take SOEE3030 Environmental Research Project at level 3 MUST pass SOEE2570 Research in the Environmental Social Sciences.

SOEE2165Climate Change: Society and Human Dimensions10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2371People, Sustainability, and the Environment20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2570Research in the Environmental Social Sciences30 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2670Environmental Impact Assessment10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2690Managing Biodiversity10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

CORE MODULES (ENGL)
Candidates are required to study at 40 credits of the following CORE optional modules:

ENGL2025Medieval Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2027Eighteenth Century Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2028Literature of the Romantic Period20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2029Renaissance Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3289Victorian Literature20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3290American Words, American Worlds, 1900-Present20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

OPTION MODULES
Candidates may choose to study 40 credits of Discovery modules over Levels 2 and 3 or pursue additonal credits in the two named subjects.

ENGL2023Power of Language20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2024Language in Society20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2041Textual Healing: An Introduction to Scholarly Editing and Publishing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2201Writing Nature: Creative and Critical Practices20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2204Shakespeare and Global Cinema20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2206African American Narrative: Eight Major Works20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2209Where the Wild Things Are: Animals in Children’s Literature20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2284ExtraOrdinary Bodies: Physical Disability in Contemporary Literature and Film20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2345Imagining Revolution: Literature of the English Civil Wars20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3208Arthurian Legend: Chivalry and Violence20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32111Gender, Culture and Politics: Readings of Jane Austen20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32113The Wild: Literature and the Environment20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32114Forming Victorian Fiction20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32120Sex and Suffering in the Eighteenth-Century Novel20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32146Queens, Vikings, poets and dragons: Old English and early medieval Britain20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32148American Danger20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32153Refugee Narratives20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32156Quiet Rebels and Unquiet Minds: writing to contemporary anxiety20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32157Contemporary African Writing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32163Milton20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32167Language of the Media20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32169Contemporary South African Writing20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3227Surrealism and the French Stage20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3233Forensic Approaches to Language20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32660Creative Writing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3268Transformations20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32763Children, Talk and Learning20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3293Victoria's Secrets: Secrecy in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32993Romantic Lyric Poetry20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32997Keywords: The Words We Use and The Ways We Use Them20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32998Writing and Gender in Seventeenth-Century England20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32999Tragedy: Classical to Neo-Classical20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

OPTION MODULES
Candidates may choose to study 40 credits of Discovery modules over Levels 2 and 3 or pursue additonal credits in the two named subjects provided all necessary pre-requisites are met.

SOEE2010Chemistry of the Earth10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2032Personal Development for Careers in the Environmental Sector10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2041Advanced Mathematics 310 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2050Deformation Processes10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2062Sedimentary Processes10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2092Meteorology10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2095Research and Career Skills10 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2096Advanced Fieldwork, Mapwork, and Study Skills20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2106Fieldwork10 credits1 Jan to 31 Jan (13mth)
SOEE2110Introductory Oceanography10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2145Palaeoecology, Palaeobiology and Evolution10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2160Climate Change: Science and Impacts10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2165Climate Change: Society and Human Dimensions10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2170Water Quality10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2180Field, Map and GIS Skills20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2190Time Series Analysis and Digital Signal Processing10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2210Atmosphere and Ocean Dynamics10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2212Tectonophysics10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2250Numerical Methods and Statistics10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2310Tools and Techniques for Business, Environment and Corporate Responsibility20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2355Energy Transitions: Technologies, Markets and Policy10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2371People, Sustainability, and the Environment20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2431Advanced Mathematics 2 for Environmental Science10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2460Contaminated Land Studies: Integrating Business Skills and Science in Consultancy10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2481Atmospheric Pollution from Local to Global Scales
Pre-requisite for: `
10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2490Formation Evaluation10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2500Petroleum Reservoir Engineering10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2510Basin Evolution and Hydrocarbon Resources10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2530Atmospheric Physics10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2550Applied Geophysics30 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2560Reservoir Simulation 110 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2570Research in the Environmental Social Sciences30 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2580Gemstones10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2590Mineralogy and Petrology20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE2600Sedimentary Basins and Hydrocarbon Resources10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2610Economics and Sustainability10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2620Explosive Volcanism: Processes, deposits and resources10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2630Fundamentals of Geophysics10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2631Introduction to Geophysics10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2640Advanced Field Work10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2650GIS for Geoscientists10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2661Advanced Mathematics 410 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2670Environmental Impact Assessment10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE2680Environmental Policy and Governance10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2690Managing Biodiversity10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE2700Environmental Research and Career Skills30 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)

Discovery modules:

Candidates may study up to 40 credits of discovery modules over both Levels 2 & 3 or pursue additional credits in the two named subjects from a list of available modules in any given academic year.


Year3 - View timetable

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]

Students must take 120 credits in Level 3.

Over levels 2 and 3 combined, students must take:
1. English: a minimum of 80 credits (at least 40 credits must be at Level 3)
2. Earth and Environment: a minimum of 80 credits (at least 40 credits must be at Level 3)


Additionally, students must take:
5. a further 40 credits in the named subjects (i.e. in English, Earth and Environment, or a combination of both).
6. a further 40 credits in either the named subjects (English or Earth and Environment) or in Discovery modules (i.e. outside the named subjects).

In order to be eligible for an honours degree, students must:
- meet the Rules for Award
- pass all modules which are designated ‘pass for progression’
- pass the required number of credits at each Level (a minimum of 100 credits at each Levels 1, 2 & 3) as specified in the Curricular Regulations

Optional modules:

Candidates MUST take 40 credits of the following Final Year Projects:
*In order to take SOEE3030 Environmental Research Project students MUST have passed SOEE2570 Research in the Environmental Social Sciences at level 2.

ENGL3041Final Year Project40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE3030Environmental Research Project40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)

Candidates are required to study 40 credits in English from the optional list below in accordance with the programme requirements for Level 3: 1. English (a minimum of 40 credits) 2. Earth & Environment (a minimum of 40 credits) with no more than 70 credits in one semester.

ENGL3024Modern Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3025Postcolonial Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3026Contemporary Literature20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3027Shakespeare20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Candidates are required to study 40 credits in Earth and Environment from the optional list below in accordance with the programme requirements for Level 3: 1. English (a minimum of 40 credits) 2. Earth & Environment (a minimum of 40 credits) with no more than 70 credits in one semester

SOEE3112Environmental Risk: Science, Policy and Management10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3202Sustainable Consumption10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3521Earth and Environmental Sciences into Schools10 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE3780Sustainable Development in Practice10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Candidates may study further credits in English from the optional list below in accordance with the programme requirements for Level 3.

ENGL3208Arthurian Legend: Chivalry and Violence20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32111Gender, Culture and Politics: Readings of Jane Austen20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32113The Wild: Literature and the Environment20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32114Forming Victorian Fiction20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32120Sex and Suffering in the Eighteenth-Century Novel20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32146Queens, Vikings, poets and dragons: Old English and early medieval Britain20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32148American Danger20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32153Refugee Narratives20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32156Quiet Rebels and Unquiet Minds: writing to contemporary anxiety20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32157Contemporary African Writing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32163Milton20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32167Language of the Media20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32169Contemporary South African Writing20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3227Surrealism and the French Stage20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3233Forensic Approaches to Language20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32660Creative Writing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3268Transformations20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32763Children, Talk and Learning20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3293Victoria's Secrets: Secrecy in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32993Romantic Lyric Poetry20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32997Keywords: The Words We Use and The Ways We Use Them20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32998Writing and Gender in Seventeenth-Century England20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32999Tragedy: Classical to Neo-Classical20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3314Imagining Posthuman Futures20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3321Angry Young Men and Women: Literature of the Mid-Twentieth Century20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3342Millennial Fictions20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3365Theatricalities: Beckett, Pinter, Kane20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3386Telling Lives: Reading and Writing Family Memoir20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3394Bowie, Reading, Writing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3396Fictions of the End: Apocalypse and After20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3410Modernist Sexualities20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3439States of Mind: Disability, Cognitive Impairment and Mental Health in Contemporary Culture20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3680Postcolonial London20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3999Literature of the 1890s20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Candidates may study further credits in Earth and Environment from the optional list below in accordance with the programme requirements for Level 3. No more than 70 credits may be taken in one semester.

SOEE3040Easter Field Class (Geological Science)10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3060Advanced Sedimentology and its Applications10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3092Applied Micropalaeontology10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3102Isotope Geochemistry10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3110Earth System Science: Biogeochemical Cycles10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3112Environmental Risk: Science, Policy and Management10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3135Engineering Geology10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3151Dynamics of Weather Systems10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3171Volcanic Processes10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3190Earth Observations from Space10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3200Practical Geophysics10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3202Sustainable Consumption10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3221Research Seminars in Geophysics10 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE3250Inverse Theory10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3260Global Seismology10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3270Business and Sustainable Development10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3282Groundwater10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3291Atmospheric Science Field Skills10 credits1 Sep to 31 Jan
SOEE3350Geoelectrics10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3410Atmosphere and Ocean Climate Change Processes10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3431Atmospheric Pollution: Causes, Impact and Regulation10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3450Structural Geology10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3460High-Temperature Processes in the Earth10 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE3470Plate Tectonics and Geodynamics10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3480Past Global Environmental Systems10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3490Mountain Belt Processes10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3500Basin Dynamics and Petroleum Systems10 credits 
SOEE3515Ice in the Earth System10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3521Earth and Environmental Sciences into Schools10 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE3530Global Geophysics10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3560Field Class: Petroleum Reservoir Architectures10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3600Ore Deposits and their Exploitation10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3610Oceanography in the Earth System10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3630Strategic Energy Issues10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3660Geology and Mineral Exploration in Northern Ireland10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3670Reservoir Simulation 210 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3690Advanced Fieldwork: Principles of Environmental Ecology10 creditsNot running in 201920
SOEE3700Practical Weather Forecasting10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3710Frontiers in Environmental Research10 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
SOEE3720Environmental Geology in Northern Ireland10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3740Seismic Interpretation10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3750Sustainability Economics in Practice10 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
SOEE3760Terrestrial Biosphere in the Earth System10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
SOEE3770Sustainable Futures20 credits 
SOEE3780Sustainable Development in Practice10 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Last updated: 17/05/2021 16:24:36

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