Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In 1965, he began making his first film, a documentary film about the geological engineer.
"The geological engineers up at Kenyon have finished their preliminary survey.
Sall, a geological engineer by profession, was born in Fatick.
Geological engineers often become licensed as both engineers and geologists.
Fred's job title in the second season episode "Divided We Sail" is geological engineer.
He hissed somerning through his teeth and took a breath and said: 'Geological engineer.'
"That's a pet name given by geological engineers to any offbeat tool that's supposed to detect underground minerals."
"The main misconception is that Putin can do something," said Viktor Antonov, 62, a geological engineer who regularly uses the station.
During a career as a geological engineer, rocket scientist, space historian and author, Frederick I. Ordway, 74, has never lost his teenage love for science fiction.
It was founded in 1922 by a geological engineer named Philip S. Judy, using the name Air Made Well Company.
They moved back to the Prairies in 1932, with Anderson-Thomson graduating from the University of Saskatchewan in 1936 as a Geological Engineer.
Bailey Willis, USGS geological engineer, played a key role in getting Mount Rainier designated as a national park, Willis Wall is named after him.
A respected geological engineer, he retired as the President of Peerless Precision Products in 1978, and was the Chairman of David E. Morgan Energy, Inc.
He was born in Lusaka, Zambia, where his parents were temporarily working as geological engineers, and in 1991 completed secondary studies at the Mathematics-Physics High School in Bucharest.
Geological engineers stated that there was no known solution to overcoming the problem, and that if the contractor had blasted into the area, the tunnel would have been filled with sand and water within minutes.
Although the cave is known by the people living in that region, it became open to tourism as a result of the scientific research conducted by Sukru Eroz, a geological engineer from Cebeli Village, between the years 1983-1990.
As chairman of the Geological Engineers Branch of the Turkish Architects and Engineers Association, Mr. Oztas is one of many who have repeatedly warned of the precarious state of Turkey's housing.
J. David Rogers, a professor and geological engineer at the Missouri University of Science and Technology who was not involved in the report, said such overlap of research and commercial interests was common in science and engineering but added that it might be perceived as a conflict of interest.