Geological Survey Program
Missouri Geological Survey
P.O. Box 250
Rolla, MO 65402-0250
United States
Geological Survey Program
fact sheetMissouri Geological Survey
Director: Carey Bridges, RGSince 1853, the department's Missouri Geological Survey has provided reliable scientific information to describe and promote understanding of Missouri's wealth of natural resources.
Missouri has significant groundwater resources available for use. MGS identifies and evaluates the availability and use of groundwater and utilizes geologic science to ensure protection of critical groundwater resources from potential contaminants to safeguard availability for current and future use.
Missouri experiences geological hazards including, but not limited to, earthquakes, such as catastrophic sinkhole and mine collapse, landslides, swelling soils and flooding. MGS investigates geologic hazards and provides science-based information for emergency planning, mitigation and response coordination that will help protect public safety, security and economic health.
MGS conducts geologic mapping to provide a foundation for a broad list of activities focusing on human health, the environment, natural hazards, anthropogenic hazards, emergency planning and response, energy and mineral resources, groundwater resources, land use planning, agriculture, economic development, education, public policy support and tourism and recreation.
In an effort to provide the public and policy makers fundamental information for decision making, MGS employs an interdisciplinary approach to evaluating earth systems and the implications of changes to these systems. This approach helps the department better understand how natural systems are influenced by increased demand on water, land, mineral and energy resources and provides the foundation for strategies to protect those resources.
Economic and environmental health and the current standard of living depend heavily on adequate and reliable supplies of energy and mineral resources. Missouri produces more than $2 billion annually in resource commodities and global demand continues to grow. Therefore, MGS strives to characterize the availability, quantity and quality of the state’s metallic minerals, industrial minerals, oil and gas occurrences and coal deposits.
* Missouri Geological Survey Databases: Environmental Geology, Wellhead Protection, Oil and Gas, Industrial Minerals.
† Mid-America Earthquake Center, 2009, Impact of New Madrid Seismic Zone earthquakes on the central USA, v. 1, 153 p.
‡ Missouri Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions and Professional Registration, 2008, Final report of the Missouri Earthquake
Insurance Task Force, 30 p.
§ Bernknopf, Richard L. et al., 1996, Societal value of geologic maps: United States Geological Survey Circular 1111, 53 p.
** United States Department of the Interior and United States Geological Survey, 2012, Mineral commodity summaries 2012, 201 p.
Nothing in this document may be used to implement any enforcement action or levy any penalty unless promulgated by rule under chapter 536 or authorized by statute.
Missouri Geological Survey
P.O. Box 250
Rolla, MO 65402-0250
United States