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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours. Prerequisite: Economics 1A and Engineering 106 recommended. Transportation and associated environmental problems confronting urban areas, and prospective technological and institutional solutions. Draws upon concepts and methods from economics, engineering, political science and environmental studies. Offered in alternate years. GE credit: SocSci, Wrt.-(I.) Sperling
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-4 hours. Prerequisite: Engineering 103 and 104 (may be taken concurrently), course 171L must be taken concurrently. Restricted to Civil Engineering and Civil Engineering/Materials Science and Engineering majors only. Soil formations, mass-volume relationships, soil classification, effective stress, soilwater- void relationships, compaction, seepage, capillarity, compressibility, consolidation, strength, states of stress and failure, lateral earth pressures, and slope stability.-I, III. (I, III.) Kutter
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1.00 Credits
Laboratory-3 hours. Prerequisite: course 171 must be taken concurrently. Laboratory studies utilizing standard testing methods to determine physical, mechanical and hydraulic properties of soil and demonstration of basic principles of soil behavior.- I, III. (I, III.) Kutter
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-4 hours. Prerequisite: courses 135 (may be taken concurrently) and 171. Soil exploration and determination of soil properties for design; consolidation and elastic settlements of foundations; bearing capacity of soils and footing design; lateral earth pressures and retaining wall design; pile foundations; excavations and dewatering.-II. (II.) Boulanger
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-4 hours. Prerequisite: course 171 and 171L. Earthquake sources and ground motions. Cyclic behavior of soils; triggering, consequences, and mitigation of effects of liquefaction. NEES (Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation) equipment and techniques for studying earthquake engineering with focus on liquefaction problems.-II. (II.) Kutter
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; discussion/lecture-3 hours. Prerequisite:Engineering 104. Pavement types (rigid, flexible, unsurfaced, rail), their applications (roads, airfields, ports, rail) and distress mechanisms. Materials, traffic and environment characterization. Empirical and mechanistic-empirical design procedures. Maintenance, rehabilitation and reconstruction; construction quality; asphalt concrete mix design.-I. (I.) Harvey
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1.00 - 5.00 Credits
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Directed group study of selected topics with separate sections in (A) Environmental Engineering; (B) Hydraulics and Hydrologic Engineering; (C) Engineering Planning; (D) Geotechnical Engineering; (E) Structural Engineering; (F) Structural Mechanics; (G) Transportation Engineering; (H) Transportation Planning; (I) Water Resources Engineering; (J) Water Resources Planning. May be repeated for credit when the topic is different.-I, II, III. (I, II, III.)
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4.00 Credits
Lecture-3 hours; laboratory-3 hours. Prerequisite:Mathematics 22A (may be taken concurrently). Computational problem solving techniques for civil and environmental engineering applications using structured C programming. Algorithm design applied to realistic problems. Not open for credit to students who have completed course 119A.-II. (II.) Jeremic, Kleeman
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1.00 Credits
Discussion-1 hour. Prerequisite: upper division standing in Civil and Environmental Engineering; consent of instructor. Research group conferences. May be repeated for credit. (P/NP grading only.)- I, II, III. (I, II, III.)
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1.00 - 5.00 Credits
Internship. Prerequisite: upper division standing; approval of project prior to the period of the internship. Supervised work experience in civil engineering. May be repeated for credit. (P/NP grading only.)
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