| Paper No. 195-1 | ||
| Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-8:20 AM | ||
| GEORGE ALFRED KIERSCH (1918-2001); GUIDING LIGHT OF MODERN ENGINEERING GEOLOGY | ||
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HATHEWAY, Allen Wayne, Consulting Engineering Geologist, Retired Professor of Geol Engineering, Univ of Missouri, 10256 Stoltz Drive, Rolla, MO 65401, allen@hatheway.net. Born to a mining and construction-oriented family, at Modesto, California, George graduated from Colorado School of Mines (1938), served as an Army combat engineer officer, then worked in Civil Works, and completed a doctorate at Arizona. He assessed the mineral resources of the Navajo Nation, managed the Southern Pacific resource survey, headed the Cornell Geology Department for twenty years, and was a licensed professional engineer. George witnessed and participated in the birth of modern Engineering Geology and the 1947 founding of the GSA Engineering Geology Division. George, a totally practical scientist, gave us the bulk of our professional literature: 1. Major participation in the GSA Review Volumes and Case Histories in Engineering Geology; 2. Constant attention to GSA specialty sessions and field trips; 3. 1955 Engineering Geology - Scope, Development and Utilization; 4. 1978 editing of Heritage of Engineering Geology, our core bible; 5. Adherence to the principles of sedimentation and stratigraphy as the means of dealing with soil and weak-rock; 6. His constant theme that good field mapping and accurate observation, recording and quantitative assessment of material properties, as wedded to engineering geologic map units with definite three-dimensional boundaries, is the essential reason for our existence as applied geologists. | ||
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2002 Denver Annual Meeting (October 27-30, 2002)
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| Session No. 195 Humans as a Geologic Agent: In Honor of George Kiersch Colorado Convention Center: A111/109 8:00 AM-12:00 PM, Wednesday, October 30, 2002 | ||
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