Российский государственный геологоразведочный университет (МГРИ) | |
Motto | Mente et Malleo (умом и молотком), by mind and by hammer |
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Type | Public |
Established | 17 April 1930 |
Rector | Kosyanov Vadim Alexandrovich |
Academic staff | 328 |
Students | 6647 (including the branch in Stary Oskol) |
Postgraduates | 1,000 |
Other students | 20.7% (2020) total percentage of international students |
Address | Miklukho-Maklaya Street, 23, 117997, Moscow, Russia , , Russia 55°38′59″N 37°30′47″E / 55.6497°N 37.5131°E |
Campus | Urban |
Colors | Blue, dark-blue, white |
Mascot | Bear |
Website | mgri |
University rankings | |
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Regional – Overall | |
QS Emerging Europe and Central Asia[1] | 251-300 (2022) |
Sergo Ordzhonikidze Russian State University for Geological Prospecting (Russian: Российский государственный геологоразведочный университет, МГРИ), or the Russian State University for Geological Prospecting is named after Sergo Ordzhonikidze and previously known as the Moscow Geological Prospecting Institute, is a public university based in Moscow, Russia, specialising in geology, geophysics, gemmology, ecology and other earth-science disciplines.
There was a task in the USSR to prepare 435,000 engineers and technicians in five years (1930-1935) during the USSR industrialization period, while their number in 1929 was 66,000.[2]
In 1930 the Moscow Mining Academy was divided into six independent institutes by the order of Supreme Soviet of the National Economy. Among the new colleges which grew out of the Academy's departments was Moscow Geological Prospecting Institute (Russian: Московский геологоразведочный институт).
Over the entire history of MGRI, the university raised more than 30,000 specialists, 1,500 candidates and 400 doctors of sciences. More than 1,300 foreigners from over 78 countries of the world are among the graduates of Russian State University of Geological Prospecting.
University graduates are the discoverers of more than two hundred large mineral deposits both in the Russian Federation and abroad. There is one mineral named after university as Mgriite (Cu3AsSe3). Lots of other minerals as well as geographic and geological objects and about 280 species of fossils of flora and fauna are named after graduates(professors and geologists) of MGRI. About 15 graduates of MGRI were elected academicians of the USSR Academy of Sciences(now the Russian Academy of Sciences) and 12 people were elected as corresponding members. Professors have been working on the set of "Construction Norms and Regulations" for engineering and geological spheres in Commonwealth of Independent States(CIS) and in Latin America. For more than 100 years of history, the university has developed scientific and pedagogical schools in almost all areas of the Earth Sciences. Graduates of MGRI have made a significant contribution to the development of the geological prospecting and mining industries internationally.