Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Department of Geodesy and Geophysics'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the top 35 dissertations / theses for your research on the topic 'Department of Geodesy and Geophysics.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Browse dissertations / theses on a wide variety of disciplines and organise your bibliography correctly.
Broermann, James, and James Broermann. "Alignment of post-Atlantic-rifting Volcanic Features on the Guinea Plateau, West Africa, and Present-Day Deformation in the Southwest United States from GPS Geodesy." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/626156.
Full textKent, Tyler. "Comparing Deformation at Soda Lake Geothermal Field from GPS and 3D Seismic." Thesis, University of Nevada, Reno, 2013. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1540191.
Full textThe transition between the two distinct structural regimes of the Walker Lane and the Basin and Range allows for complex transtensional fault interactions. The Carson Sink is the surface expression of the interaction of shear and extensional strains that cause both crustal extension and block rotation. This study investigates this tectonic shift at the Soda Lake geothermal field by comparing the direction and rate of deformation from both regional GPS and a 34 sq km 3D seismic survey. The GPS stations in the region estimate the strain field by comparing tensor solutions that show changing direction and magnitude of strain across the Carson Sink. Using stations surrounding the Soda Lake 3D seismic survey, the strain tensor produced is comparable in orientation to Basin and Range strain but has larger magnitudes. To quantify deformation within the Soda Lake 3D seismic survey, we calculate fault dip and offset of a deformed paleo-planer lacustrine mudstone. Plotting the mean dip direction of the faults in the seismic reflectivity, matches the mean surrounding GPS extensional direction, suggesting fault displacement is likely to be normal dipslip. Using a minimum age of 0.51 Ma from nearby sedimentation rates, the measured extension across the 5.4 km length of this study has a rate of 0.19 mm/yr. This is quite a high value for Basin and Range extension and it is likely a result of some influence from the Northern Walker Lane. The lack of an obvious piercing point for shear observed within the seismic volume precludes a clear estimate of strike-slip related motion within the Soda Lake 3D seismic survey. Clear extension and a large fault bend, indicates a localized relay ramp model. With focused extension indicated by two late Quaternary extrusive volcanic bodies, a model of a transtensional pull-apart basin is also considered. Given the few mapped intrabasinal faults at the surface, this study gives a unique view into fault offsets inside the Carson Sink.
Frey, Sarah E. "Characterization of instabilities in the problem of elastic planetary tides." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280697.
Full textMoore, Thomas Leonard. "Paleoclimate studies for controversial continental paleogeographies: The application of spherical geodesic grids and climate models to Gondwana's Devonian apparent polar wander path." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/284583.
Full textEvans, Eileen Louise. "Geodetic Imaging of Fault System Activity." Thesis, Harvard University, 2014. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:11414.
Full textEarth and Planetary Sciences
Shuler, Harrey Jeong. "Recovery of the local gravity field by spherical regularization wavelets approximation and its numerical implementation." Thesis, The University of Texas at Austin, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3615225.
Full textAs an alternative to spherical harmonics in modeling the gravity field of the Earth, we built a multiresolution gravity model by employing spherical regularization wavelets in solving the inverse problem, i.e. downward propagation of the gravity signal to the Earth's surface. Scale discrete Tikhonov spherical regularization scaling function and wavelet packets were used to decompose and reconstruct the signal. We recovered the local gravity anomaly using only localized gravity measurements at the observing satellite's altitude of 300 km. When the upward continued gravity anomaly to the satellite altitude with a resolution 0.5° was used as simulated measurement inputs, our model could recover the local surface gravity anomaly at a spatial resolution of 1° with an RMS error between 1 and 10 mGal, depending on the topography of the gravity field. Our study of the effect of varying the data volume and altering the maximum degree of Legendre polynomials on the accuracy of the recovered gravity solution suggests that the short wavelength signals and the regions with high magnitude gravity gradients respond more strongly to such changes. When tested with simulated SGG measurements, i.e. the second order radial derivative of the gravity anomaly, at an altitude of 300 km with a 0.7° spatial resolution as input data, our model could obtain the gravity anomaly with an RMS error of 1 ~ 7 mGal at a surface resolution of 0.7° (< 80 km). The study of the impact of measurement noise on the recovered gravity anomaly implies that the solutions from SGG measurements are less susceptible to measurement errors than those recovered from the upward continued gravity anomaly, indicating that the SGG type mission such as GOCE would be an ideal choice for implementing our model. Our simulation results demonstrate the model's potential in determining the local gravity field at a finer scale than could be achieved through spherical harmonics, i.e. less than 100 km, with excellent performance in edge detection.
Lindsey, Eric Ostrom. "Fault properties, rheology and interseismic deformation in Southern California from high-precision space geodesy." Thesis, University of California, San Diego, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3721663.
Full textThis dissertation presents the collection and processing of dense high-precision geode- tic data across major faults throughout Southern California. The results are used to inform numerical models of the long-term slip rate and interseismic behavior of these faults, as well as their frictional and rheological properties at shallow depths. The data include campaign surveys of dense networks of GPS monuments crossing the faults, and Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) observations from ENVISAT. Using a Bayesian framework, we first assess to what extent these data constrain relative fault slip rates on the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults, and show that the inferred parameters depend critically on the assumed fault geometry. We next look in detail at near-field observations of strain across the San Jacinto fault, and show that the source of this strain may be either deep anomalous creep or a new form of shallow, distributed yielding in the top few kilometers of the crust. On the San Andreas fault, we show that this type of shallow yielding does occur, and its presence or absence is controlled by variations in the local normal stress that result from subtle bends in the fault. Finally, we investigate shallow creep on the Imperial fault, and show that thanks to observations from all parts of the earthquake cycle it is now possible to obtain a strong constraint on the shallow frictional rheology and depth of the material responsible for creep. The results also suggest activity on a hidden fault to the West, whose existence has been previously suggested but never confirmed.
Karegar, Makan A. "Theory and Application of Geophysical Geodesy for Studying Earth Surface Deformation." Thesis, University of South Florida, 2018. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10839114.
Full textAn interdisciplinary approach at the interface between geodesy and geophysics has recently resolved several Earth science problems at regional and global scales. I use the term “geophysical geodesy” to distinguish the technical and theoretical aspect of geodesy from geophysical applications of geodetic techniques. Using a wide range of Earth observation data, I study the spatio-temporal characteristics of Earth surface deformation in the United States associated with several geophysical processes, including natural and anthropogenic subsidence and uplift, regional relative sea-level rise, and continental hydrological loading. The theoretical portion of this dissertation applies loading theory and develops a new hybrid method to improve the estimate of hydrologically-induced vertical deformation at time scales from sub-annual to multi-annual. The application part of this dissertation benefits from GPS and other geodetic and geologic data sets to study and model Earth’s surface uplift due to CO2 injection at an oil reservoir in coastal Texas, and coastal subsidence and nuisance flooding along the Mississippi River Delta and eastern seaboard of the United States.
Heck, Jacob. "Geodesy, crustal deformation and neotectonic segmentation of the eastern Central Andes." The Ohio State University, 2019. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu154644714256979.
Full textShcherbenko, Gina Nicole. "Post-Seismic Strain and Stress Evolution from Continuous GPS Observations." Thesis, State University of New York at Stony Brook, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1567846.
Full textStrain evolution and stress evolution following the 4 April 2010 M7.2 El Mayor-Cucapah earthquake are modeled using an adaptation of the strain transient detection tool developed by Holt and Shcherbenko 2013. The evolution of stress is calculated from postseismic strains, which are modeled from continuous GPS horizontal displacements. Strain fields are modeled in 2 ways; the total strain field based on total observed cGPS displacements, and the residual strain field, which subtracts a reference field from the total model. The residual shows anomalous strains resulting from the postseismic relaxation of the 2010 event. Anomalous and total strains are modeled in 0.1 year epochs for 2.4 years following the event. Both total and anomalous strains are converted into stress changes over time, assuming elastic incompressible behavior. Following the El Mayor event, the GPS constrained strain evolution shows the following: (1) The Southern San Andreas experiences a reduced rate of right-lateral strike slip strain accumulation between 3 July 2010 and 7 August 2012 (Figure 16a-d). (2) The San Jacinto Fault has normal rate of right-lateral strike-slip strain accumulation during this time. (3) Before the Brawley swarm of 26 August 2012, the state of strain evolves to enable unclamping of a left-lateral fault zone in the Brawley Seismic Zone (Figure 16a-d). (4) Large shear strains accumulate on the Laguna Salada Fault (northernmost segment)/southern Elsinore FZ (Figure 16a-d). We converted the strain changes into Coulomb stress changes on existing faults (both right-lateral and left-lateral). Several regions show increased Coulomb stress changes throughout the postseismic process. Furthermore, the Coulomb stress changes on the faults in the region progressively increase toward failure up to the time of the Brawley swarm.
O'Toole, Thomas Bartholomew. "Studies of earthquakes and microearthquakes using near-field seismic and geodetic observations." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2013. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:9dcaca2e-c141-4e8a-94f6-34a9ff50d061.
Full textVazquez, Becerra Guadalupe Esteban. "GEODESY IN ANTARCTICA: A PILOT STUDY BASED ON THE TAMDEF GPS NETWORK, VICTORIA LAND, ANTARCTICA." The Ohio State University, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1236711490.
Full textAnderson, Eric Ross. "Analysis of rainfall-triggered landslide hazards through the dynamic integration of remotely sensed, modeled and in situ environmental factors in El Salvador." Thesis, The University of Alabama in Huntsville, 2013. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1543417.
Full textLandslides pose a persistent threat to El Salvador's population, economy and environment. Government officials share responsibility in managing this hazard by alerting populations when and where landslides may occur as well as developing and enforcing proper land use and zoning practices. This thesis addresses gaps in current knowledge between identifying precisely when and where slope failures may initiate and outlining the extent of the potential debris inundation areas. Improvements on hazard maps are achieved by considering a series of environmental variables to determine causal factors through spatial and temporal analysis techniques in Geographic Information Systems and remote sensing. The output is a more dynamic tool that links high resolution geomorphic and hydrological factors to daily precipitation. Directly incorporable into existing decision support systems, this allows for better disaster management and is transferable to other developing countries.
Matos, Ana Cristina de Oliveira Cancoro de. "Implementação de modelos digitais de terreno para aplicações na área de geodésia e geofísica na América do Sul." Universidade de São Paulo, 2005. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/3/3138/tde-10102005-104155/.
Full textThe objective of this thesis has been to collect new information and to evaluate available data in order to provide arguments in the analysis for the derivation of the best DTM for South America. The continental and oceanic part of a block limited by latitudes 60º S and 25º N and longitudes 100º W and 25º W is the object of the model. In the continental area data derived from topographic maps, the recent Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) and the available DTM2002 model were used. In the oceanic area the depth data from DTM2002, nautical maps of different scales, boarding maps and LEPLAC project were used in Brazil and nautical maps in Argentina. The activities involved an intensive process of comparison between the existing models (SRTM, DTM2002, GLOBE, GTOPO30, ETOPO2, JGP95E, TERRAINBASE e ETOPO5) and the new information. With respect to SRTM 2,013 blocks of 1º X 1º in the continental area were analysed, deriving for each block the maximum and minimum values for the height with the respective position, the mean value and the number of points without information. The 3D representation as well as the histogram of the heights for each block is also presented. The GPS points established along the Amazonas, Solimões and Madeira rivers in Amazonas on the BMs in São Paulo area were also compared with SRTM interpolated values. SRTM, DTM2002, GLOBE, GTOPO30, ETOPO2 and ETOPO5 were also compared between themselves in the common points of the grid. Besides, an important comparison were carried out with the first order levelling network. After the analysis were finished three different DTM were generated for South America. The grid spacing were select envisaged a compatibilization between computer capacity and the applications requirements. Finally, two specific applications for mineral exploration and geoid computation were implemented: the terrain correction and the indirect effect.
Yang, Qian. "Applications of Satellite Geodesy in Environmental and Climate Change." Scholar Commons, 2016. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/6440.
Full textHoltkamp, Stephen Gregg. "NEW METHODS FOR DETECTING EARTHQUAKE SWARMS AND TRANSIENT MOTION TO CHARACTERIZE HOW FAULTS SLIP." Miami University / OhioLINK, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1369741772.
Full textRitzer, Jason Andreas. "The Topography, Gravity, and Tectonics of the Terrestrial Planets." Case Western Reserve University School of Graduate Studies / OhioLINK, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=case1278603504.
Full textLecavalier, Benoit. "A Model of the Greenland Ice Sheet Deglaciation." Thèse, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/30362.
Full textSobrero, Franco Sebastian. "Logarithmic and Exponential Transients in GNSS Trajectory Models as Indicators of Dominant Processes in Post-Seismic Deformation." The Ohio State University, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu153174766741719.
Full textWalters, Richard John. "Geodetic observation and modelling of continental deformation in Iran and Turkey." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2012. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:39c0e88a-4f45-483a-b8e1-6a7dc3e9d41b.
Full textZhou, Yu. "Investigating past and present continental earthquakes with high-resolution optical imagery." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2016. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:2792e6e7-b1f9-4bd3-ad40-3dc96e113251.
Full textYoung, Emma Victoria. "Determining the ability of terrestrial time-lapse microgravity surveying on a glacier to find summer mass balance using gravitational modeling." Master's thesis, Temple University Libraries, 2017. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/473458.
Full textM.S.
Mass loss of alpine glaciers presently account for about half of the cryospheric contribution to the global sea-level rise. Mass balance of alpine glaciers has predominantly been monitored by; (1) glaciological and hydrological methods, and (2) satellite gravimetric methods using data from NASA’s Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite mission. However, the former can be logistically costly and have large extrapolation errors: measurements taken at monthly temporal scales are expensive and have a spatial resolution of roughly one kilometer. The latter provides monthly mass-balance estimates of aggregates of alpine glaciers, although the spatial resolution (~300 km) is far too coarse for assessing individual glaciers’ mass balance. Ground-based, time-lapse microgravity measurements can potentially overcome some of the disadvantages of the glaciological, hydrological, and satellite gravitational methods for assessing mass changes and their spatial distribution on a single glacier. Gravity models were utilized to predict the gravity signals of the summer-time mass balance, changes in the seasonal snow cover outside of the glacier, and the vertical gravity gradient (VGG) needed for the free-air correction on Wolverine Glacier, AK. The modeled gravity signal of the summer-time mass balance (average of -0.237 mGal) is more than an order of magnitude larger than the uncertainty of conventional relative gravimeters (±0.007 mGal). Therefore, modeling predict that the time-lapse gravitational method could detect the summer-time mass balance on Wolverine Glacier. The seasonal snow effect was shown to have the greatest influence (~ -0.15 mGal) on the outer 100 m boundary of the glacier and minimal effect (~ -0.02 mGal) towards the center, both larger than the uncertainty of relative gravimeters. The VGG has a positive deviation, about -0.1 to -0.2 mGal/m, from the normal VGG (-0.309 mGal/m). Thus, seasonal snow effect and VGG need to be correctly accounted for when processing gravity measurements to derive the residual gravity signal of the glacier mass balance. Accurate measurements of elevation changes, seasonal snow depth, and the VGG should be performed in future gravity surveys of glaciers.
Temple University--Theses
Amarante, Rogério Rodrigues 1972. "Sistematização do processamento de dados gravimétricos aplicados a determinação do modelo geoidal." [s.n.], 2012. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/258364.
Full textTese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Engenharia Civil, Arquitetura e Urbanismo
Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-21T16:53:48Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Amarante_RogerioRodrigues_D.pdf: 8479306 bytes, checksum: c6760b22f8c1f110ad1b61e48c59508b (MD5) Previous issue date: 2012
Resumo: Com o uso de métodos adequados, receptores GNSS podem determinar coordenadas com acurácia suficiente para aplicação em projetos de engenharia. Porém a altitude elipsoidal obtida não utiliza o mesmo sistema de referência da engenharia de transportes. A altitude elipsoidal pode ser transformada em ortométrica com a utilização de modelos geoidais que são gerados a partir de dados gravimétricos. Neste trabalho são apresentados alguns conceitos introdutórios sobre a geração de modelo geoidais. Em seguida mostra o desenvolvimento de uma nova sistematização do tratamento de dados gravimétricos com objetivo de facilitar a detecção de erros, aumentar a produtividade e melhorar a organização de resultados obtidos. Dentro deste desenvolvimento, são revisadas as teorias utilizadas para transformar medições feitas com gravímetros diferenciais em aceleração da gravidade. Apresenta também técnicas de ajustamento de observações com intuito tratar erros aleatórios. A nova abordagem sugerida foi utilizada para o desenvolvimento de um software objetivando validar as idéias propostas, permitir a comparação com outras soluções existentes e também servir como uma contribuição tecnológica. Dados gravimétricos reais foram testados dentro da abordagem proposta tendo sido observados mais organização, ganho de produtividade e principalmente a detecção de erros grosseiros e aleatórios. Com a revisão do cálculo da correção da maré, percebeu-se que programas e equipamentos atualmente em uso não possuem configuração do fator gravimétrico, fato que pode influenciar em até 0; 007mGals no processamento das observações
Abstract: With the use of appropriate methods, GNSS receivers can determine coordinates with sufficient accuracy for use in projects. The ellipsoidal height obtained, however, does not use the same reference system as the one used in transportation engineering. The ellipsoidal height can be transformed to orthometric height using geoid models that are generated from gravimetric data. In this work some introductory concepts on the generation of geoid model are presented. Then it shows the development of a new approach in systematization of gravimetric data processing aiming to facilitate the detection of errors, increase productivity and improve the organization of the results obtained in the gravimetric surveys. Within this development, the theories used to convert measurements of the differences in gravity acceleration are revised. It also features adjustment techniques of observations in order to deal with random errors. The new suggested approach was used to develop software in order to validate the proposed ideas, allow comparison with other existing solutions, and also serves as a technological contribution. Gravimetric data were tested within the suggested approach. It was observed better organization, productivity gains and mainly detection of gross errors and random. With the review of the tide correction calculation, it was realized that programs and equipments now widely used have no gravimetric factor setting, a fact that can influence up to 0; 007mGals in processing the readings
Doutorado
Transportes
Doutor em Engenharia Civil
Schmalzle, Gina Marie. "The Earthquake Cycle of Strike-Slip Faults." Scholarly Repository, 2008. http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/177.
Full textRabin, Mickael. "Caractérisation de la déformation récente dans une chaine orogénique lente : l'arc du Jura. Approches combinées morphotectonique, géodésique et géophysique." Thesis, Besançon, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016BESA2008/document.
Full textNo abstract available
Rogister, Yves. "Modes normaux de modèles de Terre en rotation." Habilitation à diriger des recherches, Université de Strasbourg, 2012. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00773648.
Full textTavakoli, Farokh. "Déformation actuelle et cinématique des failles actives observées par GPS dans le Zagros et l'Est iranien." Phd thesis, Université Joseph Fourier (Grenoble), 2007. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00285919.
Full textDans le Zagros, la convergence est accommodée par du partitionnement dans la partie nord. 2-4 mm/an de décrochement dextre sur la MRF sont transférés sur les failles de Dena, Kazerun et Kareh Bas dans le système de failles de Kazerun, se déplaçant à 3-4 mm/an chacune. Dans le Zagros Central, 8 mm/an de raccourcissement sont concentrés près du Golf Persique, contrastant avec une sismicité plus distribuée et indiquant un découplage de la déformation superficielle du socle.
A l'est de l'Iran, entre le block central Iranien et le block de Hellmand, 14 mm/an de cisaillement dextre orienté NS sont observés au travers du block de Lut, avec 6.5 mm/an absorbés à l'ouest (failles de Bam, Gowk et Sabzevaran) et 7.5 mm/an à l'est (zone de suture de Sistan). Des failles majeures senestres orientées EW au nord du block de Lut accommodent une partie du cisaillement (Dasht-e-Bayaz 1.5 mm/an, Doruneh 2.5 mm/an). Au sud de la chaîne du Kopeh Dagh 8 mm/an de cisaillement persistent, dont 3.5 et 2.5 mm/an sont absorbés par du raccourcissement NS dans le Binalud et l'est Kopeh Dagh, 5 mm/an par du décrochement dextre au travers le système de failles de Quchan, et 5-8 mm/an par l'expulsion du basin Sud Caspien vers l'ouest.
La comparaison des taux de glissement actuels avec des taux géologiques court et long terme montre une évolution complexe des activités des failles même dans le contexte de collision continental récente de l'Iran.
Lemaux, James Wilmer II. "The motion between Nubia and Somalia from magnetic anomaly and fracture zone crossings flanking the Southwest Indian Ridge." Thesis, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/1911/17355.
Full textNolan, Clifford Joseph. "Global analysis of linearized inversion for the acoustic wave equation." Thesis, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/1911/19192.
Full textHippchen, Sabine. "Slip partitioning, crustal tectonics and deformation of the Queen Charlotte margin and northern Vancouver Island." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1828/3579.
Full textGraduate
(8817314), Grant Bonnette. "Characterizing Deformation Along an Early-Stage Rift: GPS Observations from the Northern Lake Malawi (Nyasa) Rift." Thesis, 2020.
Find full text"Constraining Source Models, Underlying Mechanisms, and Hazards Associated with Slow Slip Events: Insight from Space-Borne Geodesy and Seismology." Doctoral diss., 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51612.
Full textDissertation/Thesis
Doctoral Dissertation Geological Sciences 2018
"Remote Sensing and Modeling of Stressed Aquifer Systems and the Associated Hazards." Doctoral diss., 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50435.
Full textDissertation/Thesis
Doctoral Dissertation Geological Sciences 2018
Gowan, Evan James. "Glacio-isostatic adjustment modelling of improved relative sea-level observations in southwestern British Columbia, Canada." Thesis, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1828/263.
Full textOchman, Marcin. "Polski korpus inżynierów wojskowych w latach 1807-1831." Doctoral thesis, 2017.
Find full textIn mid-1700s, the armed forces of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth entered a process of modernisation. The first engineering units and the Corps of Engineers were organised and the year 1765 marked the establishment of the School of Chivalry - a military university training military engineers. The engineering corps was recreated with the formation of the army of the Duchy of Warsaw during the Napoleonic era. The Corps was organised based on the French model and continually developed, reaching its highest numbers in 1812. During that time, the Corps of Engineers carried out a number of projects commissioned by Napoleon, such as detailed mapping or the construction of the Modlin fortress. The Artillery and Engineering School, established in 1809 and designed after the French École polytechnique in Paris, trained many prominent engineers, such as General Ignacy Prądzyński and Feliks Pancer.During the era of the Russian-dominated Congress Kingdom of Poland (1815-1830), the Polish armed forces followed the organisation of the Russian Army. The General Logistics Department set up during that time, took over many of the responsibilities and most talented officers from the Corps of Engineers.The engineering corps played a key role in the November Uprising of 1830, constructing a number of field bridges and fortifications. Unfortunately, the most difficult task at the time, the fortification of Warsaw, was never completed. After the fall of the Uprising and the disbandment of the army, including the engineering corps, many soldiers and officers went into exile; still most remained in the Country and those who did became the nucleus of the Polish technology intelligentsia.