A nearly $2.2 million in-kind donation by Petroleum Experts Limited, an Edinburgh, Scotland-based company, will help Middle Tennessee State University geosciences undergraduates become more adept at geomapping and in turn enhancing their career prospects.
With the donation, Petex is granting access to the educational licenses of the Move Suite, an industry-leading software whose applications current and future MTSU students will have access to on campus.
MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee noted Petexâs $2,180,000 donation during the August Fall Faculty Meeting to kick off the new academic year.
âItâs software that will be used primarily by undergraduate students and a few graduate students,â said geosciences professor Mark Abolins, who coordinated the agreement with Petex.
Abolins, who has been a geosciences faculty member for 20 years, emphasized the critical need for Petexâs Move Suite because âthereâs a huge amount going on with GIS (Geographic Information Systems) in this department.â
âThis donation allows a few undergraduates to take the next step,â Abolins said. âThis will help students understand the resources and the environment in the earth (shallow subsurface) just beneath our feet.â
For the Midstate, ground water and caves are prevalent, but natural gas, oil and ore are found beyond Rutherford County, Abolins said.
âThere isnât the interest in those things here because of the characteristics in the earth,â he added. âThis package will really boost our capability to work with this third dimension, the earth just beneath our feet.â
Historically, undergraduates did not use the software, which was primed for graduate students or for those working in the private sector after earning their degree, Abolins said.
âThis is an important gift that will help both our current students and our future students,â College of Basic and Applied Sciences Dean Bud Fischer said.
âThis gift will enhance the student experience by allowing students the opportunity to gain competence using an industry standard software, MOVE Structural Geology Modelling Software,â Fischer added. âI commend Mark in his efforts to pursue this venture with Petex for the Geosciences Department.â
MTSU student Braliegh Beshears, 20, a geosciences major from Ashland City, Tennessee, said geology âaffects everyday life in a way most people donât realize. It impacts building construction, roads, fresh-water sources, even oil and gas are by-products of geology.â
After graduation, Beshears said she would like âto work close to home, if at all possible. However, I have no objections to traveling (with my job), which is often necessary with geology.â
As part of the agreement, Petex specified the software âhas to be used on campus,â Abolins said. âIt is strictly for educational purposes.â
Eleven students who are utilizing Move Suite this semester are in an MT Engage course called structural geology. In that course, the students learn about bent and broken rock and what bent and broken rock means for resources and the environment, Abolins said.
Vanderbilt University and a few dozen other universities worldwide utilize this software, he added.
MTSUâs Department of Geosciences features 155 undergraduate majors, 12 graduate students, nine full-time faculty and two lecturers. Henrique Momm is the interim chair of the program.
For more on Petex, visit http://www.petex.com.
MTSU has more than 300 combined undergraduate and graduate programs. Geosciences is one of 11 College of Basic and Applied Sciences departments.
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