Geomorphology: Weathering and erosion; Transportation and deposition due to wind, ice, river, sea, and resulting landforms, Structurally controlled landforms.
Structural Geology: Concept of stratum; Contour; Outcrop patterns; Maps and cross sections; Dip and strike; Classification and origin of folds, faults, joints, unconformities, foliations and lineations; shear zones. Stereographic and equal area projections of planes and lines; computation of true thickness of beds from outcrops and bore-holes.
Palaeontology: Major steps in the evolution of life forms; Fossils; their mode of preservation and utility; Morphological characters, major evolutionary trends and ages of important groups of animals – Brachiopoda, Mollusca, Trilobita, Graptolitoidea, Anthozoa, Echinodermata; Gondwana plant fossils; Elementary idea of verterbrate fossils in India.
Stratigraphy: Principles of stratigraphy; Litho-, chrono- and biostratigraphic classification; distribution and classification of the stratigraphic horizons of India from Archaean to Recent.
Mineralogy: Symmetry and forms in common crystal classes; Physical properties of minerals; Isomorphism and polymorphism, Classification of minerals; Structure of silicates; Mineralogy of common rock-forming minerals; Mode of occurrence of minerals in rocks. Transmitted polarised light microscopy and optical properties of uniaxial and biaxial minerals.
Petrology: Definition and classification of rocks; Igneous rocks-forms of igneous bodies; Crystallization from magma; classification, association and genesis of igneous rocks; Sedimentary rocks – classification, texture and structure; size and shape of sedimentary bodies. Metamorphic rocks – classification, facies, zones and texture. Characteristic mineral assemblages of pelites in the Barrovian zones and mafic rocks in common facies.
Economic Geology: Properties of common economic minerals; General processes of formation of mineral deposits; Physical characters; Mode of occurrence and distribution in India both of metallic and non-metallic mineral deposits; Coal and petroleum occurrences in India.
Applied Geology: Ground Water; Principles of Engineering Geology.
Admitting Institutes for JAM
As per the JAM Brochure details, there are total 15 IITs that offer admissions to various M.Sc. programs based on the IIT JAM 2017 Scores.
Apart from these IITs, 15 National Institute of Technologies (NITs) and 02 Centrally-Funded Technical Institutes are also participating as JAM 2017 Admitting Institutes.
Below, we have mentioned the list of all the institutes that participate in IIT JAM. Please check it out! –
S.No. | Admitting Institutes Name |
1. | IISc Bangalore |
2. | IIT Bhubaneswar |
3. | IIT Bombay |
4. | IIT Delhi |
5. | IIT Gandhinagar |
6. | IIT Guwahati |
7. | IIT Hyderabad |
8. | IIT Indore |
9. | IIT Jodhpur |
10. | IIT Kanpur |
11. | IIT Kharagpur |
12. | IIT Madras |
13. | IIT Patna |
14. | IIT Roorkee |
15. | IIT Ropar |
16. | IIEST Shibpur |
17. | NIT Agartala |
18. | MNNIT Allahabad |
19. | NIT Arunachal Pradesh |
20. | NIT Calicut |
21. | NIT Durgapur |
22. | MNIT Jaipur |
23. | NIT Jalandhar |
24. | NIT Jamshedpur |
25. | NIT Manipur |
26. | NIT Nagaland |
27. | VNIT Nagpur |
28. | NIT Rourkela |
29. | NIT Silchar |
30. | NIT Srinagar, J&K |
31. | NIT Warangal |
32. | SLIET Punjab |