Established in 1909, the Bureau of Economic Geology is the oldest research unit of The University of Texas. The Bureau is the State Geological Survey of Texas and has been an integral part of the development of the state’s economic success through the years. Our mission is to serve society by conducting objective, impactful, and integrated geoscience research on relevant energy, environmental, and economic issues. Our vision is to be a trusted scientific voice to academia, industry, government, and the public, whom we serve.

Bureau researchers spearhead basic and applied research projects globally in energy resources, technologies and economics, coastal and environmental studies, land resources and use, geologic and mineral mapping, hydrogeology, geochemistry, and subsurface nanotechnology. The Bureau provides advisory, educational, technical, and informational services related to the resources and geology of Texas, the nation, and the world.

Talented people are the Bureau of Economic Geology's formula for success. Our staff of over 200 includes scientists, engineers, economists and graduate students, representing 27 countries, often working in integrated, multi-disciplinary research teams. The Bureau's facilities and state-of-the-art equipment are world class, and include 19 individual laboratories hosting researchers investigating everything from nanoparticles to shale porosity and permeability. The Bureau also maintains three major well core research and storage facilities, in Houston, Austin, and Midland -- together believed to be the largest archive of subsurface rock material in the world -- as well as the state’s wireline log library.

Featured Dataverses

In order to use this feature you must have at least one published or linked dataverse.

Publish Dataverse

Are you sure you want to publish your dataverse? Once you do so it must remain published.

Publish Dataverse

This dataverse cannot be published because the dataverse it is in has not been published.

Delete Dataverse

Are you sure you want to delete your dataverse? You cannot undelete this dataverse.

Advanced Search

201 to 210 of 1,057 Results
Unknown - 875 B - MD5: 659f9c387197b9a371fd147cc430630a
Unknown - 2.0 KB - MD5: 12e5d6df32df2c3733410bffc87a1482
Unknown - 140 B - MD5: 0d4be3c850b1faf2c3d38fd8e27abb74
dBASE Table for ESRI Shapefile - 658.0 KB - MD5: c5663425fb87f115bd4560172f3ed5b8
Shape - 1.8 MB - MD5: 78b93cd115dcbce49205c55ad061d069
Shape - 45.8 KB - MD5: 936d37f646f00502941ea94ddfc83524
dBASE Table for ESRI Shapefile - 1.1 MB - MD5: a25c1e741b71ab41aa18f77aed71618a
ESRI Shapefile - 424 B - MD5: 8ebd7d966556c3dcff2c2f54af7e3238
Shape - 2.2 MB - MD5: 1dbc916d584d0e205388d16d712e7892
Shape - 87.3 KB - MD5: d934605b071e0405b730be4b3bcc2d93
Add Data

Log in to create a dataverse or add a dataset.

Share Dataverse

Share this dataverse on your favorite social media networks.

Link Dataverse
Reset Modifications

Are you sure you want to reset the selected metadata fields? If you do this, any customizations (hidden, required, optional) you have done will no longer appear.