Earth Science Syllabus
Earth Science Syllabus
SYLLABUS
PAPER I
2. Earth Materials, Surface Features and Processes: Gross composition and physical properties of
important minerals and rocks; properties and processes responsible f or mineral concentrations; nature
and distribution of rocks and minerals in different units of the earth and different parts of India.
Physiography of the Earth; weathering, erosion, transportation and deposition of Earth‟s material;
formation of soil, sediments and sedimentary rocks; energy balance of the Earth‟s surface processes;
physiographic features and river basins in India
PAPER I
I. GEOLOGY
Concept of point group, space group, reciprocal lattice, diffraction and imaging. Concepts of crystal
field theory and mineralogical spectroscopy. Lattice defects (point, line and planar). Electrical, magnetic
and optical properties of minerals. Bonding and crystal structures of common oxides, sulphides, and
silicates. Transformation of minerals – polymorphism, polytypism, and polysomatism. Solid solution
and exsolution.
Metamorphic structures and textures; isograds and facies. Mineral reactions with condensed phases,
solid solutions, mixed volatile equilibria and thermobarometry. Metamorphism of pelites, mafic -ultra
mafic rocks and siliceous dolomites. Material transport during metamorphism. P-T-t path in regional
metamorphic terrains, plate tectonics and metamorphism.
Petrogenetic aspects of important rock suites of India, such as the Deccan Traps, layered intrusive
complexes, anorthosites, carbonatites, charnockites, alkaline rocks, Kimberlites, ophiolites and
granitoids.
Theory of stress and strain. Behaviour of rocks under stress. Mohr circle. Various states of stress and
their representation by Mohr circles. Different types of failure and sliding criteria. Geometry and
mechanics of fracturing and conditions for reactivation of pre-existing discontinuities. Common types
of finite strain ellipsoids. L-, L-S-, and S-tectonic fabrics. Techniques of strain analysis. Particle
paths and flow patterns. Progressive strain history. Introduction to deformation mechanisms. Role of
fluids in deformation processes. Geometry and analyses of brittle -ductile and ductile shear zones.
Sheath folds. Geometry and mechanics of development of folds, boudins, foliations and lineations.
Interference patterns of superposed fold. Fault-related folding. Gravity induced structures.
Tectonic features of extensional-, compressional-, and strike-slip-terrains and relevance to plate
boundaries. mantle plumes.
Himalayan Orogeny; concept of super continent, their assembly and breakup.
Theories on origin of life. Organic evolution – Punctuated Equilibrium and Phyletic Gradualism models.
Mass extinctions and their causes. Application of fossils in age determination and correlation.
Paleoecology, Life habitats and various ecosystems, Paleobiogeography. Modes of preservation of
fossils and taphonomic considerations. Types of microfossils. Environmental significance of fossils and
trace fossils. Use of microfossils in interpretation of sea floor tectonism. Application of
micropaleontology in hydrocarbon exploration. Oxygen and Carbon isotope studies of microfossils and
their use in paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic interpretation. Important invertebrate fossils,
vertebrate fossils, plant fossils and microfossils in Indian stratigraphy.
Morphologic and tectonic domains of the ocean floor. Structure, composition and mechanism of the
formation of oceanic crust. hydrothermal vents-. Ocean margins and their significance. Ocean
Circulation, Coriolis effect and Ekman spiral, convergence, divergence and upwelling, El Nino. Indian
Ocean Dipole Thermohaline circulation and oceanic conveyor belt. Formation of Bottom waters; major
water masses of the world‟s oceans. Oceanic sediments: Factors controlling the deposition and
distribution of oceanic sediments; geochronology of oceanic sediments, diagenetic changes in oxic and
anoxic environments. Tectonic evolution of the ocean basins. Mineral resources. Paleoceanography –
Approaches to paleoceanographic reconstructions; various proxy indicators for paleoceanographic
interpretation. Reconstruction of monsoon variability by using marine proxy records Opening and
closing of ocean gateways and their effect on circulation and climate during the Cenozoic. Sea level
processes and Sea level changes.
6) GEOCHEMISTRY:
Atomic Structure and properties of elements, the Periodic Table; ionic substitution in minerals; Phase
rule and its applications in petrology, thermodynamics of reactions involving pure phases, ideal and
non-ideal solutions, and fluids; equilibrium and distribution coefficients. Nucleation and diffusion
processes in igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary environments, redox reactions and Eh - pH
diagrams and their applications. Mineral/mineral assemblages as „sensors‟ of ambient environments.
Geochemical studies of aerosols, surface-, marine-, and ground waters. Radioactive decay schemes and
their application to geochronology and petrogenesis. Stable isotopes and their application to earth
system processes; geochemical differentiation of the earth; geochemical cycles.
7) ECONOMIC GEOLOGY:
Magmatic, hydrothermal and surface processes of ore formation. Metallogeny and its relation to crustal
evolution; Active ore-forming systems, methods of mineral deposit studies including ore microscopy,
fluid inclusions and isotopic systematics; ores and metamorphism- cause and effect relationships.
Geological setting, characteristics, and genesis of ferrous, base and noble metals. Origin, migration
and entrapment of petroleum; properties of source and reservoir rocks; structural, stratigraphic and
combination traps. Methods of petroleum exploration. Concepts of petrophysics, Petroliferous basins
of India. Origin of peat, lignite, bitumen and anthracite. Classification, rank and grading of coal; coal
petrography, coal resources of India. Gas hydrates and coal bed methane. Nuclear and non -conventional
energy resources.
9) QUATERNARY GEOLOGY:
1) Signal Processing: Continuous and discrete signals; Fourier series; auto and cross correlations,
linear time invariant systems with deterministic and random inputs; band limited signal and sampling
theorem; Fourier and Fast Fourier transforms; Z-transform; convolution; Filters: discrete and
continuous, recursive, non-recursive, optimal and inverse filters; deconvolution; fractal analysis.
2) Field theory: Newtonian potential; Laplace and Poisson‟s equations; Green‟s Theorem; Gauss‟
law; Continuation integral; equivalent stratum; Maxwell‟s equations and electromagnetic theory;
3) Numerical analysis and inversion: Numerical differentiation and integration, finite element,
and finite difference techniques; Simpson‟s rules; Gauss‟ quadrature formula; initial value problems;
pattern recognition in Geophysics. Well posed and ill-posed problems; method of least squares; direct
search and gradient methods; generalized inversion techniques; singular value deco mposition; global
optimization.
4) Gravity and Magnetic fields of the earth: Normal gravity field; Clairaut‟s theorem; Shape of
the earth; deflection of the vertical, geoid, free-air, Bouguer and isostatic anomalies, isostatic models
for local and regional compensation. Geomagnetic field, secular and transient variations and their
theories; palaeomagnetism, construction of polar wandering curves.
5) Plate Tectonics and Geodynamics: Marine magnetic anomalies, sea floor spreading; mid-
oceanic ridges and geodynamics; plate tectonics hypothesis; plate boundaries and seismicity. Heat flow
mechanisms, thermal moddling of earth,core-mantle convection and mantle plumes.
6)Seismology Elastic theory: Seismometry: short period, long period, broad band and strong
motion; elements of earthquake seismology; seismic sources: faulting source, double couple hypothesis,
seismic moment tensor, focal mechanism and fault plane solutions; seismic gaps; seismotectonics and
structure of the earth; Himalayan and stable continental region earthquakes, reservoir induced
seismicity; seismic hazards; earthquake prediction, travel time residuals, velocity anomalies, seismic
tomography.
7) Gravity and Magnetic Methods: Gravimeters and magnetometers; data acquisition from land,
air and ship; corrections and reduction of anomalies; ambiguity; regional and residual separation;
continuation and derivative calculations; interpretation of anomalies of simple geometric bodies,
single pole, sphere, horizontal cylinder, sheet, dyke and fault. Forward modelling and inversion
of arbitrary shaped bodies and 2-D, 3-D interfaces. Interpretations in frequency domain.
8) Electrical and Electromagnetic Methods: Electrical profiling and sounding, typical sounding
curves, pseudo-sections; resistivity transform and direct interpretation; induced polarization
methods. Electromagnetic field techniques; elliptic polarization, in -phase and out of phase
components, horizontal and vertical loop methods; interpretation; VLF (very low frequency);
AFMAG (Audio frequency magnetic) methods; and central frequency sounding; transient
electromagnetic methods; magneto-telluric method; geomagnetic depth sounding.
9) Seismic Methods: Generalized Snell‟s Law; Ray theory; reflection, refraction, diffraction;
Zoeppritz‟s equation; seismic energy sources; detectors; seismic noises and noise profile analysis;
seismic data recording, reduction to a datum and weathering corrections; Interpretation of refraction
and reflection data; CDP/CMP; velocity analysis, F-K filtering, stacking, deconvolution, migration
before and after stack; bright spot analysis; wavelet processing; attenuation studies, shear waves, AVO;
VSP; introduction to 3D seismics; seismic stratigraphy.
10) Well logging: Open hole, cased hole and production logging; Electrical logs; lateral, latero,
induction, temperature, S.P; porosity logs; sonic, density, neutron; natural gamma; determin ation
of formation factor, porosity, permeability, density, water saturation, lithology; logging while
drilling.
(IV) METEOROLOGY
2) Physical Meteorology: Thermal structure of the atmosphere and its composition. Radiation: basic
Laws - Rayleigh and Mie scattering, multiple scattering, radiation from the sun, solar constant, effect
of clouds, surface and planetary albedo. Emission and absorption of terrestrial radiation, radiation
windows, radiative transfer, Greenhouse effect, net radiation budget; Thermodynamics of dry and
moist air: specific gas constant, Adiabatic and isoentropic processes, entropy and enthalpy, Moisture
variables, virtual temperature; Clausius – Clapeyron equation, adiabatic process of moist air;
thermodynamic diagrams: Hydrostatic equilibrium: Hydrostatic equation, variation of pressure with
height, geopotential, standard atmosphere, altimetry. Vertical stability of the atmosphere: Dry and
moist air parcel and slice methods. Tropical convection. Atmospheric optics - visibility - optical
phenomenon - rainbows, haloes, corona, glarg, mirage.
3) Atmospheric Electricity: Fair weather electric field in the atmosphere and potential gradients,
ionization in the atmosphere. Electrical fields in thunderstorms, theories of thunderstorm
electrification - Structure of lightening flash-mechanism of earth-atmospheric change balance-role
of thunderstroms.
4) Cloud Physics: Cloud classification, condensation nuclei, growth of cloud drops and ice -crystals,
precipitation mechanisms: Bergeron, Findeisen process, coalescence process – Precipitation of warm
and mixed clouds, artificial precipitation, hail suppression, fog and cloud – dissipation, radar
observation of clouds and precipitation, radar equation, rain drop spectra, radar echoes of hail storm
and tornadoes, radar observation of hurricanes, measurements of rainfall by radar.
5) Dynamic Meteorology: Basic equations and fundamental forces: Pressure, gravity, centripetal and
Corolis forces, continuity equation in Cartesian and isobaric coordinates. Momentum equation
Cartesian and spherical coordinates; scale analysis, inertial flow, geostrophic and gradient winds,
thermal wind. Divergence and vertical motion Rossby, Richardson , Reynolds and Froude numbers.
Circulation, vorticity and divergence; Bjerknese circulation theorem and applications, vorticity and
divergence equations, scale analysis, potential vorticity, stream function and velocity potential.
Atmospheric turbulence: Mixing length theory, planetary boundary layer equations, surface layer,
Ekman layer, eddy transport of heat, moisture and momentum, Richardson criterion; Linear
Perturbation Theory: Internal and external gravity waves, inertia waves, gravity waves, Ross by waves,
wave motion in the tropics, barotropic and baroclinic instabilities. Atmospheric Energetics: Kinetic,
potential and internal energies – conversion of potential and internal energies into kinetic energy,
available potential energy.
6) Numerical Weather Prediction: computational instability, filtering of sound and gravity waves,
filtered forecast equations, barotropic and equivalent barotropic models, two parameter baroclinic
model, relaxation method. Multi-layer primitive equation models. Short, medium and long range
weather prediction. Objective analysis; Initialization of the data for use in weather prediction models;
data assimilation techniques, application of satellite in NWP (Numerical Weather Prediction) and
remotely sensed data.
7) General Circulation and Climate Modelling: Observed zonally symmetric circulations, meridional
circulation models, mean meridional and eddy transport of momentum and energy, angular
momentum and energy budgets; zonally asymmetric features of general circulation; standing eddies;
east-west circulations in tropics: climate variability and forcings; feedback processes, low frequency
variability, MJO Madden-Julian oscillation), ENSO, QBO (quasi-biennial oscillation) and sunspot
cycles. Basic principles of general circulation modelling; grid-point and spectral GCMs; role of the
ocean in climate modelling; interannual variability of ocean fields (SST, winds, circulation, etc.) and
its relationship with monsoon, concepts of ocean – atmosphere coupled models.
8) Synoptic Meteorology: Weather observations and transmission, synoptic charts, analysis of surface,
upper air another derivative chart, stream-lines, isotachs and contour analysis; tilt and slope of
pressure/weather systems with height. Synoptic weather forecasting, prediction of weather
elements such as rain, maximum and minimum temperature and fog; hazardous weather elements
like thunderstorms, duststorms, tornadoes. Tropical meteorology: Trade wind inversion, ITCZ;
monsoon trough tropical cyclones, their structure and development theory; monsoon depressions;
tropical easterly jet stream; low level jets, Somali jet, waves in easterlies; western disturbances; SW
and NE monsoons; synoptic features associated with onset, withdrawal, break active an d weak
monsoons and their prediction. Air masses and fronts: sources, origin and classification of
air masses; and fronts, frontogenesis and frontolysis; structure of cold and warm fronts; weather
systems associated with fronts. Extra-tropical synoptic scale features: jet streams, extratropical
cyclones and anticyclones.
9) Aviation Meteorology: Role of meteorology in aviation, weather hazards associated with take off
cruising and landing, inflight – icing, turbulence, visibility, fog, clouds, rain, gusts, wind shear and
thunderstorms, nowcasting and very short range forecasting.
10) Satellite Meteorology: Meteorological satellites – Polar orbiting and geostationary satellites,
visible and infrared radiometers, multiscanner radiometers; identification of synoptic systems, fog
and sandstorms, detection of cyclones, estimation of SST, cloud top temperatures, winds and rainfall:
temperature and humidity soundings.
1) Physical Oceanography: T-S diagrams; mixing processes in the oceans; characteristics of important
water masses.
Wind generated waves in the oceans; their characteristics; shallow and deep water waves. Propagation,
refraction, and reflection of waves. Wave spectrum, principles of wave forecasting.
Tide-producing forces and their magnitudes; prediction of tides by the harmonic method; tides and tidal
currents in shallow seas, estuaries and rivers. Factors influencing coastal processes; transformation of
waves in shallow water; effects of stratification; effect of bottom friction, phenomena of wave
reflection, refraction and diffraction; breakers and surf; littoral currents; wave action on sediments –
movement to beach material; rip currents; beach stability, ocean beach nourishment; harbour resonance;
seiches; tsunami; interaction of waves and structure.
Estuaries: classification and nomenclature; tides in estuaries; estuarine circulation and mixing; depth
– averaged and breadth – averaged models; sedimentation in estuaries; salinity intrusion in estuaries;
effect of stratification; coastal pollution; mixing and dispersal of pollutants in estuaries and near- shore
areas; coastal zone management.
The global wind system; action of wind on ocean surface; Ekman‟s theory; Sverdrup, Stommel and
Munk‟s theories; upwelling and sinking with special reference to the Indian ocean. Inertial currents;
divergences and convergences; geostrophic motion; barotropic and baroclinic conditions; oceanic
eddies, relationship between density, pressure and dynamic topography; relative and slope currents.
Wind driven coastal currents; typical scales of motion in the ocean.
Characteristics of the global conveyor belt circulation and its causes.
Formation of subtropical gyres; western boundary currents; equatorial current systems; El Nino;
monsoonal winds and currents over the North Indian Ocean; Somali current; southern ocean. Upwelling
process in the Arabian Sea.
Chemical and biological interactions – Ionic interactions; biochemical cycling of nutrients, trace metals
and organic matter. Air-sea exchange of important biogenic dissolved gases; carbon dioxide- carbonate
system; alkalinity and control of pH; biological pump.
Factors affecting sedimentary deposits-CaCO3, Silicate, Manganese nodules, phosphorites and massive
single deposits.
3) Geological Oceanography: Same topics as under subhead “Marine Geology & paleo- oc e
anogra ph y”
Primary and secondary production; factors controlling phytoplankton and zooplankton abundance and
diversity; nekton and fisheries oceanography; benthic organisms; coastal marine communities and
community ecology – estuaries, coral reefs and mangrove communities, deep -sea ecology including
hydrothermal vent communities.
Energy flow and mineral cycling – energy transfer and transfer efficiencies through different trophic
levels; food webs including the microbial loop.