moondawg
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What is the difference between civil and environmental engineering?
That being said, environmental engineering is just one of the things you cover in a civil engineering degree(the other 4 are transportation, structures, water resources, and geotechnical engineering). Environmental engineers do things like designing land fills and other waste storage, water treatment plants, waste water treatment plants and do things with air pollution as well. Those are the big topics we hit in my Intro to Environmental Engineering class. Water resources is another discipline that also focuses on the environment. They can work to ensure valuable animal habitat is not destroyed by river modifications and many other topics. Certainly don't neglect the other 4 though. You may decide later on that one of the other disciplines is more interesting to you, and if you do decide to stick with environmental, the other knowledge you gained will be invaluable. I'm focusing on bridges which can include an awful lot of geotechnical,water resources, and environmental engineering as well as the obvious structural engineering.Civil engineering is the profession in which a knowledge of the mathematical and physical sciences gained by study, experience, and practice is applied with judgment to develop ways to utilize, economically, the materials and forces of nature for the progressive well-being of humanity in creating, improving, and protecting the environment, in providing facilities for community living, industry and transportation, and in providing structures for the use of humanity.
moondawg said:What is the difference between civil and environmental engineering?
Nearly every example you gave for what an environmental engineer does requires at least one other discipline. To say all, or even most environmental engineering jobs are more sciencey is either an over statement or just plain wrong. Every environmental engineer (except my professor studying meth in our drinking water) either deals first hand with design or construction, or manages a preexisting plant.Bob Engineer said:They're really very different. I know a lot of universities clump the two departments together into one, but the disciplines are pretty distinct.
Civil engineers deal more with building things... steel, concrete, buildings, bridges, utilities, land development, construction, soil mechanics, and how to get water from one place to another. It's more physics-ish.
Environmental engineers deal more with avoiding contaminating our water/soil/air... industrial runoff, landfills, soil contaminants, smoke plumes, underground water supplies, superfund sites, and how to keep our water clean, rather than just moving it around like civs do... Erin Brockovich sorts of things. It's more chemistry-ish and biology-ish.
That's sort of the nutshell version. Wikipedia actually gives a pretty good overview of the two disciplines, if you want a not-so-nutshell version.
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