New Geology Faculty: Dr. Dave Marchetti
Transcription
New Geology Faculty: Dr. Dave Marchetti
GEOLOGY PROGRAM • WESTERN STATE COLLEGE • GUNNISON, COLORADO 81231 A NEWSLETTER FOR ALUMNI, STUDENTS AND FRIENDS OF THE GEOLOGY PROGRAM Introduction This is now our 6th Geology Newsletter. It’s been a great few years with good enrollments and great opportunities for students in graduate school, oil and gas, mining, and the environmental industry. Hopefully the downturn is not too deep or long. Here is a brief recap of the news for 2007-09: • Western State Geology with 60-70 majors has more majors than any time since 1983! • We have a new faculty member Dr. Dave Marchetti. Dave is a geomorphologist with expertise in cosmogenic dating; • The department continues to be involved in a number of student research projects that have shed light on some very interesting aspects of regional geology including the West Elk and NineMile Hill volcanoes, the Moenkopi Formation in the salt valleys of Utah, local glacial geology etc.; • Students and faculty have been involved in the geologic mapping of another local quadrangle -Signal Peak -- and with geologic and Quaternary mapping near Fish Lake in Utah; • The department has been able to purchase new petrographic microscopes, an X-ray diffractometer, a X-ray microanalysis attachment for the SEM, corer for lake sediments, and a shallow seismic refraction system; • And finally, the news just keeps getting better. W.A. “Tex” Moncrief donated another $1.5 million to the department to enhance our already very successful petroleum geology program. SPRING 2009 New Geology Faculty: Dr. Dave Marchetti Dave Marchetti came to Gunnison in the fall of 2007 as our new geomorphologist / hydrogeologist and is thrilled to be at Western. Dave is originally from a small village southeast of Rochester NY called Penfield. He grew up with thick piles of glacial till in his back yard and outcrops of the Lockport Dolomite, which makes up part of the Niagra Falls escarpment, a short bike ride away. Dave attended SUNY Geneseo for college and after a brief stint as a biology, geography, and then chemistry major he switched to geology ultimately ending up with a somewhat odd undergraduate degree in geochemistry. Like many other upstate New Yorkers with a fascination with geomorphology (think G.K. Gilbert – who was from Rochester; and John Wesley Powell – who came from Mt. Morris which is only a few miles from Geneseo) Dave headed west to the University of Utah for graduate school. For his MS project he worked on applying the then relatively new technique of cosmogenic exposure age dating to some debris-flow deposits in Capitol Reef National Park. He stayed at Utah for his Ph.D. where he incorporated surficial mapping and cosmogenic dating of glacial and mass movement deposits to understanding the Quaternary history of the Fremont River drainage basin. Towards the end of his graduate time at Utah he started a project with several USGS mappers on the age of lake deposits in the San Luis Valley and was introduced to western and central Colorado. After grad school, Dave taught at Colgate University in central NY for a year and remembered why doing geology was easier and more rewarding where one could see the rocks and the sun shone more than once a month. Dave has several current research project that involve Western students including additional cosmogenic dating of glacial deposits in central and northern Utah mountains and Quaternary mapping of more 7.5 minute quadrangles than he’d like. In his free time he takes advantage of the great outdoor opportunities around the Gunnison Valley including skiing and fishing, and just plain old walking around and looking at stuff. On his desk in Hurst Hall is what may be one of the best collections of shark teeth in western Colorado. PAGE 2 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER Annual Geology Awards and Scholarships We have held two geology banquets since the last newsletter. In 2007, we graduated ten new alumni at a barbeque in Jim’s backyard. In 2008, eleven new alumni joined your ranks. At the banquets we handed out our annual awards: The RMAG “Hammer”, awarded to our outstanding senior went to Jeramy Harshman ‘07 in 2007 and to Chuck Samra ‘08 in 2008. The VAL MITCHELL MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP IN GEOLOGY, awarded to our outstanding junior went to Andrew Payton ‘08 in 2007 and to Tyler Patrick ‘09 in 2008. The MENZER SCHOLARSHIP, awarded to encourage a beginning student to think about a career in geology was awarded to Sarah Ablel ’08 and Andrew Payton’08 in 2006 ant to Katherine Schuller ’09 in 2007. The RICHARD AND BELVA MOYLE SCHOLARSHIP awarded for summer field camp went to Ray Gerrity ‘09 in 2007. The annual graduation banquet is held each spring the night before graduation. All geology alumni are invited but please let us know in advance if you plan to join us. Bartleson-Prather Geology Research Scholarships The Bartleson-Prather Fund for Excellence in Geology is going strong. As we described in past newsletters, the fund provides a scholarship and research supplies for students, on a competitive basis, between their junior and senior year. We have awarded two scholarships since the last newsletter. Christoper Dorian ’07, working with Jim Coogan, conducted a gravity survey of the Jacks Cabin area to look for subsurface faulting. Chris actually got good data out of the old Worden Gravimeter some of you might remember from taking geophysics with Ray Ruhle. This past summer Andrew Payton ’08 working with Dave Marchetti studied the glacial sediments near East Beckwith. In addition to doing a fair chunk of surficial mapping and relative age dating, Andrew was able to estimate paleoclimatic conditions during the Last Glacial maximum from glacier reconstructions and simple climate modeling. Andrew’s work may be expanded upon during the next Research in Quaternary class. New Geologic Maps We completed the Signal Peak quadrangle in 2007 and it is now available from the Colorado Geologic Survey at: http://geosurvey.state.co.us/ Signal peak was mapped by Jim Coogan, Rob Fillmore and Allen Stork with the help of Joe Nicolette ’07 and Andrew Payton ’08. We have proposal into the Colorado Geologic Survey to map the Cement Creek quadrangle and the Parlin quadrangle. In Memorium — Kevin (Tex) McAndrews ‘75 died in Austin, Texas in March of 2008, just short of his 59th birthday. Kevin moved here from Texas, was an outstanding student here and in fact, was the 2nd recipient of our RMAG hammer award in 1975. He was well known for his intensity and excellence in everything he did from geology to hunting in which he was without peer. Kevin went on to earn a Master’s degree at Colorado State University and worked for Bear Creek Mining and later for Kennecott in Tucson, Reno, Salt Lake City (where he was District Manager) and finally Guadalajara up until 1998. He was highly respected by his peers and colleagues in the mining industry. He was most proud of his two daughters (who are quite successful in their own right) and of his new house in Manzanillo, which he bought upon retirement in order to do some deep-sea fishing, which he loved. I consulted for Kevin in the summers of 1988 and 89 looking for placer gold prospects. After some initial research and office work, I was ready to go into the field. Upon asking him for some advice, Kevin replied “Bruce, Just follow your nose!” which was excellent advice. Kevin was a good friend and I will miss him. Warren Seeton ‘76 was 55 years old upon his death and worked in the mining industry all of his life. He mostly grew up in Taylor Park where his dad, Ross Seeton, had many placer mining claims. If anyone ever had “gold fever”, it was Warren. I remember Warren well as a very kind, bright and engaging young man who was quite intense about mining. He was in poor health for a number of years prior to his death and periodically he would call and ask me what I thought about the “meaning of life.” It was rather unsettling and, as fate would have it, since Warren had a deep respect for Kevin McAndrews ‘75, I asked Kevin to call him and talk to him, which he did, much to his credit. Paul Maniaci ’04 – Paul was killed in an avalanche near Jackson Hole, WY on Saturday, March 10, 2007. Paul was an extremely avid mountain biker, rock climber, skier, and adventure racer. At the time of his death he was teaching in Steamboat Springs. While at Western, Paul was a member of the Mountain Search and Rescue Team as well as a member of the Adventure Racing Team. After graduation, he worked in the WSC Student Services Center and taught at the Gunnison Valley School before moving to Steamboat. PAGE 3 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER W West Ellk Volca ano –Fa all 2008 8 Resea arch in Volcan nology Thanks to aluumni giving, laast fall’s researrch cllass had a greatt experience. The T spring befo fore, thhe class – Saraah Able ’08, Ch hris Nash ’08,, A Andrew Heger ’08 and JD Ru umbaugh 08 – deecided they waanted to study West W Elk Volcano. W this pre-plaanning they weere able to com With me baack to Gunnisoon two weeks early e for intense fieeld work on thhe volcano. Th he logistics werre fun – the field area was w in the centter of the West Elk W Wilderness so we w arranged witth a local outfiitter paack in our gearr and supplies (small ( world – the ouutfitter was Johhn Nelson the father f of Keri N Nelson ‘03). Frrom our base we w were then abble to sppend six days sampling s the laava flows exposed onn the south andd southwestern side of West Elk E Peeak – shown beelow. It was a typiccal Gunnison August A in the high h coountry with snoow and clouds one day and beeautiful clear skies the next. The approximately 20000’ of vertical relief each daay was also funn – paarticularly for old o knees. S Sarah on a typiical flow Andrew, JD D, Allen’s chairr, Sarah and Chhris relaxing Andrew and Chris tryinng to find “goood” rock. PAGE 4 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER Faculty News Inactive (old, retired or escaped) Division: Scott Effner ‘88 and wife Sue in January, 09, two memorable days fly-fishing on the upper Cebolla with Tom Shrake ‘81, as well as showing Tom and Anne's daughter, Katie, around campus as a potential student, having supper (and Margaritas!) way out in the La Garita’s with Lauren Hart Ellison ‘77, bumping into Rebecca Nanni ‘96 and James Porter ‘97 at the Firebrand (again), lunch with Lynn Padgett ‘97 and having a great Continental Divide hike near Monarch Pass with Freddy and Mary Frankel '77 and I’ve probably forgotten somebody. Oh yes, I also have a Facebook site and you can see many of our alums there. It’s always fun to see you, so be sure to call if and when you ever get back to Gunnison And finally, one of the milestones of my life was reached in 2006 when I attended my 50th college reunion in Beloit, Wisconsin and then afterwards flew to Switzerland to visit my daughter and family and spent two weeks hiking in the Austrian and Swiss Alps. Tom and Bruce skiing Monarch Bruce Bartleson (1965-1998) continues to have an active retirement with far too many committee meetings – one of the things I really hated while at Western. But now I’m the president of the town Library Board (trying to build a new library) as well as on the Western State Alumni Board and the Scenic Byway Committee. On top of that I’ve gained quite a bit of local fame by becoming (by default) the unofficial custodian of Gunnison weather records. On the other hand, I do still have a lot of time for fun things like traveling, mountain biking, hiking, back-country telemarking and fly-fishing. We’ve had some great trips in the past few years. Since I talked to you last we have been to: 1) New England for the fall colors and met Nancy Molyneux (’77) and Rich at Little Squam Lake in the White Mountains of New Hampshire and had a great tour of a part of the world I had never seen; 2) Hawaii in March of 08’ for 2 glorious weeks near the end of one of the worst (or best – super snow fall!) winters we have ever had here – we did both the Big Island and Kauai; 3) the French Riviera at Le Lavandou, a very nice little coastal town southwest of Cannes, and a tour of the Grand Canyon du Verdon – really spectacular. 4) a really remote and acrophobic Anasazi ruins west of Blanding in Canyonlands. For several years now Duane Vandenbusche and I have been putting on a historical and geological tour of the mining camps of the San Juan Mountains including, Lake City, Ouray, Telluride, Silverton and Durango. We go for a week, stay in nice hotels and take Western State vans (not nearly as fun as the old weenie wagons). The trip has been a sell-out now for 5 straight years and is run through the Extended Studies department of Western. We’ve also done a fundraiser tour for the Crested Butte Center for the Arts by leading tours (70 people) into Taylor Park and the Crested Butte- Irwin areas. I’ve had the good fortune to spend some time with some of you alums, such as; having dinner with Rod Graham 83’ on his annual ice fishing expedition to Gunnison, hiking in the Ouray area with Colleen McShane Cope ’77 and family, skiing with Bob and June Just ’74, several times, as well as Mary Lou Bevier (1982-85) is still at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, BC. Here is her report: “I've been transforming my courses so as to increase student learning and engagement, with help from geo-science education experts hired for the Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative at UBC. We are two years into a fiveyear project which we hope will change science education at UBC and then percolate out to other institutions.” She also found some live brachiopods at a May low tide and sent me some pictures. (Yep, they’re not extinct, yet) She also spends a lot of time sailing from her Salt Spring Island retreat cabin. Holly Brunkal (2005-2007), former lecturer in the geology department, is currently working on her PhD in the Engineering Geology department at the Colorado School of Mines. Her dissertation research will include an examination of the geology, geomorphology, vegetative regime, and other factors that influence channel sediment recharge in areas that have been burned by wildfire and have experienced debris flows. The goal of the project is to find a debris channel recharge rate that will calculate the timing of when the “gun is reloaded” for the next debris flow event. Field work for the project will be done in Colorado, New Mexico and Southern California. Holly continues to represent the Rocky Mountain section on the board of directors of the Association for Women Geoscientists, and is the vicepresident of the student chapter of the Association of Environmental and Engineering Geologists at CSM. She is also employed by the USGS to work on research specific to post wildfire debris-flows, estimating run-out and inundation areas. Holly spends her summer months in Gunnison, enjoying mountain biking, hiking and going to Blue Mesa. Ron Hill (2007-2008) Ron Hill came to us from the USGS as the first Moncrief Chair in Petroleum geology. After a year he moved on to become Senior Geochemist for Marathon Oil. Ron reports that he and Pam “are cruising along in Houston and adjusting to our new life. Kids are great, Andrew is talking and walking and Alex is Alex, a wild three year old. They are great fun.” PAGE 5 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER Tom Pratherr (1965-1999)-T Tom is currenttly wimping ouut byy spending all of February an nd March in Tuubac, Arizona, a fancy golfing resort r but send d us this report:: "I’ll break thiss down into seaasons: Summers - sttaying around the t Gunnison country c - hikingg, cllimbing, bikingg, fishing, golf,, camping. I ennjoyed seeing thhe Destinationss Unknown gro oup (’83) and hiking h around the t uppper Cement Creek C Valley lo ooking at our olld field camp arrea in August, 2008. 2 Fall - Again, there's nowherre like the Gunnnison country to bee in the fall. We W take lots of fall f color viewiing trips mostlyy byy bicycle with some camping g and fishing thhrown in. w - A good d time to travel.. We took Late fall to winter N November trips to Tennessee, Colorado Plateeau and Soouthern Arizonna. Winter trip ps to Southern Arizona A and Teexas. At homee in snow coun ntry I still do loots of cross coountry and dow wnhill skiing an nd this winter added a snowshhoeing (a terriffic workout). Spring - Backk home for morre of the usual activities. O a sad note I need On n to report the passing of Pokie to his m many friends. Thhe highlight off Pokie’s year was w always fieeld caamp - he lovedd the hiking and d being aroundd the students. Y may remem You mber that when n it was time to break camp, Pookie would go hide in the wo oods not wantinng to leave. Richard Moyyle after retirem ment from the University of U has kept buusy. He assisteed in the transffer of the Naturral Utah H History Museum m from Union Station S in Ogdeen the Ecoles D Dinosaur Park. Lots L of cleanin ng, cataloging, inventory but thhe job is finisheed. He’s a volu unteer guide onn Thursdays soo stop by. He andd Belva celebraated their 50th wedding w annniversary and had their 1st grreat grandchildd – Ellie in 20007. H is doing fieldd trips with eleementary and high He h school kids. R Richard says, “W We are pleased d about our scholarship grant to yoour departmentt – It is a pleasure to realize it i might help a biit to further geoology at Westeern.” We wholleheartedly agrree thhank you Richaard and Belva! Active (currrently emplloyed) Division: Jim Coogan – Moving from m the morning headlines h to thhe yooung geologistts in my 8:00 class, I’m struckk by the coonnection betw ween boardroom m and classroom. This is no ivvory tower operration here in Gunnison, G and the unncertainties thaat pervade our profession p in Denver, D H Houston, and Washington W are starting to show w up on the faaces of our majors. It is intereesting that, at a time when all seectors of the prrofession are taaking a “wait-aand-see” posturre tooward hiring yooung geologists, Western studdents are streaming into our o ever-more dynamic d program. Our classees haave been full over the past few w years. This semester, s the deemand for our upper-division n geophysics cllass exceeded thhe supply of computers and so oftware licensees. Not bad in a m major that used to be marked by b an avoidancce of math and phhysics! So, I’m m starting out with w a pitch to all a of our loyal allums: when youu see a part-tim me or full-time opportunity thhat m might be filled by b a Western Geology G studennt or recent alum m – let us know! The T constant feedback from employers is thaat thhey are continuually surprised that our majorss out-perform Jim draw wing structurre contours on o the “vanboarrd” studentts from all otheer undergrad (aand some M.S..) programs in the state s and regionn. Let’s put a larger l sample out o there and proove them right! On a personal notee, I’m enjoying the great snow w that the last twoo winters havee blanketed oveer the Gunnisonn Country. I now understand u whhat you ‘70’s grraduates have been b raving about all a of these yeaars. I’m also ennjoying the cam maraderie that Daave Marchetti and a Denny New well have addeed to alreadyy congenial tradition that Alleen, Rob, and I inherited from Bruce B and Tom m. The irreverennt humor is stilll alive, thoughh the material iss necessarily updated u from Bruce’s B preP.C. reepertoire. Wheen not in Gunniison, I’ve enjoyyed running innto many of you onn 17th Street whhere I still mainntain a healthy connection to induustry in the “off ff-season”. Alissa is still doingg great work for the USGS, and we’ve been com mpensating for the t commuute over Monarrch and Kenosha passes by taaking some extended vacations inn the past few years. y We try to t get up to the Sellkirk Mountainns of BC every spring for som me steep, deep skkiing at backcoountry lodges. We enjoyed a three-week Grand Canyon kayakk trip in ’07, as well as a “sum mmer” ski trip vissiting friends inn Argentina annd Chile. I keeep a hand (som metimes two) inn research – witth yet another geologic mapp coming out laast year from my m work with thhe Utah Surveyy. I also particippated in an NS SF-funded scopingg conference for fo and Internattional Continenntal Scientiific Drilling Prrogram proposaal to drill the Sevier Desert detachment off central Utah. Closer to Gunnison, I’m still inttrigued with foollowing up on the 7.5’ maps that Allen, Rob, annd I have beenn able to put ouut with the helpp of student coauthors, and we hoope to begin cooperating in thhe next year PAGE A 6 GEOLOGY Y ALUMNI NEWSLE ETTER with a proposed USGS initiativ w ve for completting the G Gunnison and Leadville L 1:100,000 quads. Casey Dukem man I’m still teeaching Geologgy and A Anthropology att WSC. My wiife, Ruth, is woorking with thee County and son Jacob, now 13 3, is in Gunnisoon Middle Scchool. I’m alsoo the Field Direector at the Moountaineer A Archeology site, a 10,450 yearr old (carbon years) y Folsom O Occupation on top of “W” Mo ountain. Robert Fillm more ‘ 86 – I am a still thorougghly enjoying teeaching and living here, and watching w my booys grow up, litttle time lines that t they are. Everett E (11!) iss in the 5th graade annd Henry (8) iss in the second grade. I am am mazed at how quuickly 11 yearss can pass. In fact, f as fast as those years haave paassed, it makess me think that maybe a million years isn't all a thhat long after alll. This happen ns, I think, as you y get older. I finished myy book on Cany yonlands and Arches A last sppring - many off you may rem member me worrking on it. It toook me seven years y to finish the t damned thiing. The first boook only took three t years. I guess g I'm slow wing down in my m olld age - or som mething. It may y also have som mething to do w kids, and thhe abundance of with o wonderful meetings m we have heere at Western.. I continue to work on the Moenkopi M Form mation and the efffect of salt upllift on its sedim mentation in thee salt anticline reegion of Coloraado/Utah. The more work I do d on it, the m more cool thingss I'm finding. This spring (099) the Researchh inn Basin Analysis class will ag gain be workingg on it, althouggh affter this year, I think we will have exhaustedd all the good exxposures and itt will be time to o write somethhing up. Things are hoopping in the department d studdent-wise. Ouur ennrollment has grown g considerrably. Many sttudents are cooming in speciffically to study y Petroleum Geeology, and it apppears that the word has gotteen out. For insstance, last yeaar booth Sed/Strat and Mineralogy y were forced to t offer two labb seections. It lookks like this sum mmer's Field Geeology course will allso be divided into i two sectio ons. We'll see if i it continues. Allen n Stork – I’m still teaching and a having a grreat time. It’s beeen fun integratiing X-ray diffrraction and microaanalytical technniques into the Mineralogy annd Petroloogy classes – more m stuff to huurt their brains with. Rob and I are a also teachinng new classes designed for elementary school teachers as paart of a college--wide reform inn educatiion. Maybe soomeday your kiids will have a teacher who knnows minerals,, rocks and fossils. I’vve continued my m research on local l volcanic rocks. The mappinng we did for the t Gunnison and a Signal Peakk quadraangles produce fascinating paatterns of interbbedded gravel and ash flows as the San Juaan volcanism coontinuously disruptted the Tomichhi Creek and Gunnison G River drainages. The exxposure is goodd enough to prooduce a detaileed topograaphic map of thhe pre-volcanic surface with 40’ contouurs. The maps are a spectacular! My last Reseearch in Volcannology and Pettrology classes continued studdies of the post Saan Juan basaltss. In 2006 we studied s 9-Mile Hill volcano – on the Lakke City road and in 2008 studiied sections of Wesst Elk volcano exposed on West W Elk Peak. I am also still woorking on Fijiaan plutons withh Jim Gill and his h collaboorators in Japann. Juddy and I are now w empty nesterrs. Peter graduuated in 2006 and a is attendingg classes at Weestern but out of o the house living with w friends. He’s H working part time at the Gunnison Brewerry. Right now he is majoringg in anything but b geology – I stilll have hope thoough. Judy is doing d “art quiltts” and keeping active workinng in the yard and around thee house. We hoppe you will stoop by if you aree ever in town. Allen Stork S – the “olld grey beard” PAGE 7 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER Alumni News 1969 Gary Dixon “Still trying to cut loose this consulting work and hope to clean up past due commitments this year and Bruce and Allen have summarized your letters, e-mails, and call an end to it. I keep running into WSC grads with this phone conversations. Thanks for updating us and telling us Nevada/Utah work. Don Sweetkind ‘81 is cooperating with what you are doing. Please take a moment to tell us what USGS-Water Resources out of Nevada for the past several you're doing if you haven't already. Information from you years and we seem to be on opposite sides of the water helps us assess the Geology Program. We do listen and issues in our encounters. Don is working on developing a appreciate your comments, whether critical or geologic framework model for the feds as I am for the complimentary. Southern Nevada Water Authority. This work is winding down and will conclude this next fall when the State Bruce Bartleson or Allen Stork Engineer for Nevada conducts water right hearings for the Geology Department eastern part of the state. These hearings are conducted in a Western State College court-room setting and are incredibly contentious. This will Gunnison, CO 81231 be my sixth and last hearing! email: brucebartleson@msn.com Speaking of hearings, I came across Kirk Swanson ‘83 in astork@western.edu the Granite Springs water right hearings in 2007. He was We still have a few people that we can’t find. If you have representing the Applicants for water and I represented the any clues contact us. Protestants. He caught me in the hallway at break and we 1960’s Mike Arndt (‘66), Own Abdali (‘68), Sultan Alrecounted for a bit about WSC, profs, course work, and Somali (‘69), Ken Carmichael (’69)Peter Buchanan Gunnison in general. He was a lot smarter than I was for he, (‘64), Thomas Schanefelt (‘69) like Sweetkind, persevered and got his PhD. Nothing new to report from the Snake River Plain. We’re snow-bound 1970’s Aboullah Baroun (‘71), David Dagenhart ’73), (sound familiar) and looking for relief from the cold and Richard Davis (’77), Larry Ecklund (’71), Jon wind.” Jezisek (‘79), Richard Snyder (‘74) Howard Fishman continues to work for Chevron in 1980’s Sue Collings (’82), Tom Dalsaso (’85), Richard Midland, Texas, now approaching 34 years. Howard Klebanow (’84), Barbara McCabe (’83),Nancy continues to provide G&G application and technical McManus (’82), Martin Muffich (83), Carol Willis computing support. During the past 3 years in addition he (’82) 2000’s Brian Behn (‘00), Annie Owens (‘02), Deni Harshman has been project manager and supervising as many as 8 contractors in verifying and loading all current and historical (‘05) digital well log data into Chevron's corporate database. He continues to serve on the Western State Alumni Advisory Board and visits Gunnison at least twice a year Jon Untiedt reports that he is “Very, Very, Thoroughly and Happily Retired” and also wanders around in his camper, fishing wherever the opportunity arises. Come on out Jon! 40 1970 Dr. Connie (Nuss) Knight writes “For the past several 30 years I have been associated with a couple of small companies, working as the exploration manager of each. 20 During 2006 I worked as Exploration Manager for Robson Energy. Mr. Robson came from the real estate industry with 10 lots of short-lived vigor. As his exploration manager, I put together a portfolio of deals with various degrees of 0 risk. Upon Mr. Robson's hasty departure from the oil and gas industry, I purchased some of the deals back from 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 Robson. One such deal was a small, infill drilling prospect on the Central Kansas Uplift. A partner and I recently turned that deal to a small independent company. Four producers were 1961 drilled toward the end of last year, and more drilling is Richard (Mike) O’Rourke checks in from Pueblo West and planned. I sold a second land deal (17,000 acres in is still enjoying retirement. Northwest Colorado) to a small independent company, True 1968 North Energy. I am helping True North to develop that Connie (Trainor) Durand Connie was here this fall for regional play. Homecoming and we had great time reminiscing at dinner I have two other (great) self-generated land plays. I will along with Patty Costar, Biol ’71. be looking for investors for additional leases soon. One of these deals I sold to Noble Energy five years ago. Noble WSC Geology Graduates by Year Alumni News PAGE 8 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER didn’t get the job done, so I am in the process of getting leases back. This is a huge “sleeper” company maker play. Lately I have been very busy with professional volunteer work. I am on the RMAG board, I am the technical program coordinator for the 2009’ SIPES meetings, and I recently accepted a position on the advisory board for the new land management program at Western State. My biggest commitment is that I will co-edit an RMAG special publication “Structural Applications to Rocky Mountain Hydrocarbon Accumulations”. Please consider this an advertisement and feel free to submit abstracts folks. The publication is scheduled to debut in 2011. We will put out a “call for abstracts” soon.” Jim Browne “The past 2 years have been rather uneventful just working keeping Dastardly Deeds Ltd, a very competitive, successful, landscape maintenance company in the Evergreen area. Lots of vacations (not enough) relaxing and diving on the Kona Coast and diving in Cozumel. Keeping in shape, still volunteering for the National Sports Center for the Disabled at Winter Park (my 20th year) Last week I had a group of amputees from Texas that had never skied and we were at the top of Mary Jane on the 3rd day (my feet were freezing but they were fine with their prosthetic feet) I have taught my 5 year old granddaughter to ski and she is beginning to push me. Life is good.” 1971 Dan Larsen “In July '07, I retired and gave away everything non-essential to needy families, rented a small UHaul and now live in a small cabin in Red Lodge, MT. I have again taken up skiing after a 21 year lull and spend the summers traveling and hiking in the Beartooth Wilderness. I just woke up one day with the last kid finally out of the nest, no debt, single, healthy, hating the city life I was trapped in for 18 years and I bailed.” 1972 Gary Dow reports that “I retired from the USBR in January 2007. Then I got bored after a month or so and am now working for Paul C. Rizzo Assoc. in southern Missouri. We're rebuilding Taum Sauk dam that failed in Dec. 2005. Thankfully, no one was killed but it did cause a lot of damage. I'm in charge of foundation preparation, mapping, and approval. Our next job may be in or near Brisbane, Australia. Do you recall helping Rusty and I dig my car out of the snow along the road about 1/2 way to Crested Butte? Of course it was Rusty's fault☺” Tim Kelly As a graduate of WSC and the Landman for the State of Colorado, Tim currently is a member of the Advisory Board for the Professional Land and Resource Management degree program. Tim oversees the leasing and title records for the 4 million acres of state mineral rights. He serves as the Mineral Leasing Manager for the State board of Land Commissioners. George Podsobinski notes that he is now retired after 30 years of public school teaching in the Canon City School District. However, he is still an Adjunct Professor at the Pueblo Community College Fremont Campus teaching Geology and Physics. 1973 Philip Petty “I’m still teaching math in a small school (K-12) in upstate New York. I live in the Adirondacks, an interesting rock sequence which is an extension of the Canadian Shield. Lots of glacial debris, but very little soil.” Charles Ponchak still owns and operates Kilbane Cleaners with stores all over western Colorado. He also owns a geological consulting company, San Juan Geological & Mining Consultants, which does mining property evaluation; primarily gold and silver, narrow fissure veins. He takes properties from rank exploration to production including permitting. Charlie still loves to hunt deer and elk. Marty Wittstrom “I am in my third year as VP of International Exploration with Reliance Industries. I took the position because it was essentially a green field situation with a company with substantial resources. I spend most of my time in Mumbai, India, but I make it back to North America frequently enough for my family not to forget me. Mumbai is not as out of the way as it might first sound. I'm always bumping into people from grad school, or people I worked with at Chevron or Gulf, or some industry/university program. Haven't bumped into anyone from WSC yet though... that I know of. The last two years have been very busy, as you would expect, and this year is shaping up to be slow, which is not surprising. The slowdown since Q4 2008 has had its benefits though by allowing time for some needed organizational work. Last year I headed-up a corporate team to develop and implement a Corporate Reserves Reporting System to meet or exceed every international standard. This year I'm developing an exploration and portfolio management process for worldwide exploration. I am also putting together a comprehensive training program for the many young G&G folks that we have. In the last couple of years we have taken fifteen blocks in Australia, E. Timor, Kurdistan, Peru, Colombia, Yemen, Oman. I review deals constantly. I think I probably see more geology in a month than most geologists ever see. I even put in a bid for an old Barrett property in Peru. My favorite exploration area right now is Brazil. I had a lock on two subsalt blocks in Brazil in the vicinity of the recent big discoveries down there, but that deal fell apart when the government withdrew the blocks. I look at a lot of deals in North America, but have not pursued them aggressively, as the deal terms were too steep compared to what was available elsewhere. My wife, Jan, is a geologist/geophysicist and has taught geology at Mt. Royal College in Calgary for eight years. Intro Geology, environmental geology, geologic hazards, and intro to the petroleum industry, and she is now developing a hydrology course. Also, she's a great structural geologist. Whenever I have a critical question in that department, she's the one I depend on. You can see what her students think of her by going to www.ratemyprofessor.com I do not use MySpace or Facebook. Anyone wishing to contact me can use rxman77@yahoo.ca. Recent info on what has been going on in my world can be seen at www.classmates.com. For professional purposes my profile can be seen at www.linkedin.com/in/mdwittstrom. PAGE 9 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER I have a place at Lake Vallecito, near Durango. I'm not there very much, but in a few years I hope to be there a lot more. Sometime in the near future I need to start thinking about getting back to the US. I have been the exploration and subsurface manager for most basins in North America, so if anyone knows of an opportunity, especially the Rockies, please let me know. 1974 Steve Craig Steve is back in Reno after a brief venture in Denver with Gryphon Gold, but the economy sunk that job. He writes “Basically, I am enjoying the quiet times that I am having. I know that things will pick up and I won't have time to do dinky things around the house. I find that I enjoy reading my old text books and the latest news on other mining companies that are still operating. I do expect, however, that I will be busy with some consulting work once we get into the new year and get our new president installed.” On weekends he heads back to his old home town of Leadville to visit his folks. He makes sure that both parents remain healthy by insisting they continue to shovel snow (mom is 82 and dad is 90). He gets the snow blower out to get rid of the bigger piles lying around. Steve still has interest in high speed skiing and hiking and he is looking forward to getting back into the spirit of the Colorado Rocky Mountains again. Steve recently sent a bunch of pictures from our famous Oklahoma field trip in 1973 with Fred Menzer. Write to me for copies! Ray Hensley is a general contractor doing erosion control, storm water pollution prevention and other programs. He is enjoying his family and grandchildren and reports that life is good and he loves this country! June and Bob Just and I got to do a little back-country skiing in the past few years and usually make it up here for the Alumni Ski Weekend. June is still with Geographix doing technical support and Bob is with the Bureau of Indian Affairs after a brief “retirement.” 1975 Fred Conrath is a Program Manager for the BLM and supervises the inspection and enforcement branch of the Glenwood Springs Energy Office. This staff performs environmental, human health and safety and oil and gas production inspections and they enforce regulations, policy and all applicable laws. I have a staff of 12 people, 10 BLM and 2 USFS. The staff consists of 1 administrative assistant, 2 land law examiners, 1 production accountability technician, 5 inspectors, 1 GIS specialist, and 2 petroleum engineers. John Danahey says Hello! Peter Herzberg is still in Corning, NY and still does a lot of traveling with his wife to European countries and especially Scotland where they go every year. Jeff Holway reports that after 27 years with JP Morgan and its predecessor companies he joined a group of associates who formed Water Street Healthcare Partners in 2005. “It is not as stimulating as being in the Gunnison Country, but is fun and keeps the lights on. I still like to ski, hike, mountain bike, etc.” Kevin McAndrews passed away in March, 2008 of cancer. See the In Memoriam section. John Murphy reports that John Murphy Millwork was rated the 37th fastest growing millwork company in the country. 1976 Stuart Cohen has had a highly varied, multi-media career doing some exploration for coal and uranium, surveying for the BLM, computer programmer and more recently acting as a tax accountant. He reports that he is now semi-retired living up on Vallecito Reservoir above Bayfield and enjoying a lot of backcountry skiing with a bunch of locals including Lauren (Hart) Ellison ‘77. Peter Dea “In August 2006, we sold Western Gas Resources to Anadarko Petroleum Corporation where I had been President and CEO since 2001, following the sale of Barrett Resources Corporation to Williams in August 2001. Running two NYSE public companies was fun while it lasted but that era is over for me. Having a hard time keeping a job, in May 2007, I founded a small, private oil and gas exploration and production company based in Denver called Cirque Resources LP. As of early 2009 we have 18 employees and have leased nearly 500,000 acres, focused on resource plays largely in the Rockies. Approximately 25% of our staff is WSC alumni including Shannon Townley ‘06, Sean Hlousek ’97, James Taylor ‘08 and briefly over winter break, Brian Cribari. I continue to serve on the Board of Trustees at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science where I was appointed Chairman in January 2009; Western State College; Independent Petroleum Association of Mountain States (IPAMS); and American Geologic Institute Foundation. I serve on Advisory Boards of WSC Professional Land & Resource Management Program and University of Colorado-Denver Business School, Global Energy Management Program. In 2008 I joined the Colorado Forum which is a group of leaders across the state that address issues facing Colorado such as education, transportation, the economy and healthcare. Summers find me riding horses and mountain bikes and scampering up peaks in the Crested Butte area where Cathy spends the summer training our 7 horses. Each summer I ride my horse on the 100 mile week-long Roundup Riders of the Rockies ride in a different part of Colorado with 150 men including 5 WSC alumni. Last year we rode above timberline in the San Juan Mountains with spectacular views. Winter finds our family skiing in Vail, CB and British Columbia. Sons Drake and Austin are in college and Cort will join them next year. We get our annual beach fix either in Nosara, Costa Rico, the north shore of Kauai or Martha’s Vineyard Island.” Jan (Polyasko) Bellis is now in Pinedale, WY, working for the BLM as a geologist. She recently was appointed to the local Town Planning and Zoning Commission. She has been in Pinedale for a year and 1/2 after spending 20 years in Boulder. Fred Menzer reports “We moved back to Phoenix a couple of years ago when the Henderson Operations General Manager position changed to VP Global Operations for Climax Molybdenum. Then in November 2007 I changed to VP Africa for Freeport-McMoran and have been involved PAGE 10 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER with the Tenke Fungurume development project in Democratic Republic of Congo. As of January I have changed positions again and will be returning to Colorado as VP Colorado Operations for Climax. I had the opportunity to relocate from the US to the DRC but declined. With the year-plus of construction of the Tenke project the company has a functional team there in Congo now and the work that I could do from Phoenix by commuting was becoming less significant. With this transition, I asked for a different assignment and was pleased to be able to return to the Climax Moly organization. So, I will have an office at Henderson again and will hopefully be able to restart the Climax Mine again in the next few years when the metals markets revive. Warren Seeton died in May 2006. See the In Memoriam section 1977 Al Clough writes “I am continuing with my latest career shift as a pilot for a regional airline that operates a variety of wheel and float planes providing scheduled service, air tours and charters throughout southeast Alaska. I had a great visit with Rod “sheep man” McCabe ‘77 and his lovely wife, Jan when they came through on a cruise last summer.” Colleen (McShane) Cope says. “The past 3 years have been filled with lots of work, teaching Earth Science (buzz word now…“earth systems”) at the high school level, and, most recently, working on a project which involves creating science videos for the classroom using our own students as actors. I’ve had some fun adventures not just teaching and studying the geology I love, but living it too – one, after a suggestion from Bruce, was a family backpacking trip into the Sangre de Cristo Range which we had not explored much before – was stunningly beautiful, but after 65 switchbacks (we counted along the way) up a hanging valley, and 5 miles, we began referring to it as “Brokeback Mountain.” So be aware that Bruce’s advices while still the best – will always take you from the ordinary! Another no-pain-nogain type of experience in the past 3 years was a train trip through the Copper Canyon in Mexico – much larger than the Grand Canyon, and a track that takes you through 84 tunnels and over 37 bridges. I’m thinking we should talk about an alumni river trip down the Grand Canyon!” Bob Dickerson “I have been with S.M. Stoller Corp, an environmental consulting company, for about 10 years now. Since leaving the U.S. Geological Survey Yucca Mountain Project Branch I have largely stayed busy in southern Nevada doing structural and mineralogy studies in support of groundwater modeling efforts on the Nevada Test Site, volcanic stratigraphy for other DOE projects in Nevada, and geomorphology and paleo-climatology studies for the U.S. Air Force in support of their archeological studies program on the Nevada Test and Training Range (formerly the Nellis Bombing Range). Mapping surface features in a valley filled with unexploded ordnance is quite the thrill. The Yucca Mountain work resulted in about 30 published articles, geologic maps, and abstracts. The Nellis Air Force work has resulted in another 10 or 12 published reports and abstracts. On the home front Pam, my lovely bride of 5 years, and I continue to guide canoe trips in the summer, climb frozen water falls in winter, and ride our motorcycles together for most of the year. Our son Will shares our love of river trips and snorkeling adventures in Hawaii, and loves to ride in our sidecar outfit” Lauren (Hart) Ellison “I've had some good things happen! I moved from Durango down the road to Bayfield to have my horses with me, I was married last year to Carl Ellison (a music teacher in Durango) and I retired to 3 days a week doing the same job, working with high school kids with disabilities in the region. I'm still skiing at Purgatory and also doing a lot of backcountry skiing. Summers are filled with riding horses as fast and as much as possible. This summer we vacationed with the horses in the beautiful La Garitas, and were graced with a visit by Bruce B. A day early, but hey, he brought trout and margaritas! We have a camper on the truck and plan on spending even more time around Gunnison this summer - I'm still in love with Gunnison County.” Freddy Frankel “I’m still in Exploration and International New Ventures with Chevron in Sugar Land, Texas. The past couple of years have kept me busy with Libya, both wildcat exploration and business development efforts. Recently I have also been looking at certain parameters of “unconventional” shale and “tight gas sand” plays in the US. All the while really enjoying some great field trips to look at rocks in such places as: Book Cliffs of Utah (shallow water sands), Caicaos Islands (carbonate platforms), Karoo Basin-South Africa (turbidites), Northern California (fault seals), Mut Basin in Southern Turkiye (reefs), Nuevo Leon Mexico (salt diapirism), Grand Canyon (just for fun), several trips to Libya and of course a great hike with the Bartlesons on Monarch Pass! Mary is an avid oil painter (maryfrankel.com), Lauren is studying engineering at Texas Tech and will be in Spain for 10 weeks this summer, and Sophie is starting high school after canoeing the Boundary Waters this summer.” Brad Pendergraft “I will be starting my 10th year of teaching at Salmon River High School where I teach Earth Science. I also teach night classes at SUNY Potsdam as an adjunct professor. I hope to publish a trail guide for the Northern Adirondacks soon through the Adirondack Mountain club.” F. Doug Taylor says Hello! 1978 Eric Bard continues to work as a geophysicist at Western Geco in Denver. His wife Celia is a teacher at St. Mary’s Academy and his son Nicky goes to the Denver School of the Arts. Greg Embery “It was good to hear that you and Doc Prather are alive and well and still kicking about the Gunnison hills. If I could have made a living there, I would probably still be there as well. I am a 1978 graduate, and you were my advisor at the time. You guys taught me well and I've been actively employed in the oil and gas sector for 30 years. Saw some lean years between '86 and '92, but managed to get through them ok. I'm still married to Heather; I married her in '74, up on Gothic Peak. Although we own a home on the Navaho River, south of Pagosa Springs, I’ve spent the last few years working out of Kansas PAGE 11 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER City. I miss Colorado badly. For the past two years, I've been working on large CBM projects, first in Chile, South America, and now in Botswana, Africa. The plane ride to Botswana is way too long! I've been meaning to get back to Gunnison for a visit for some time now and I still hope to get it done. When I do, I'll look you up.” Mark Fernandes “Mark and Donna are now officially empty nesters; spending free time skiing and traveling; son Justin is in a fellowship program for a PHD in Electrical Engineering at NE Univ. doing research under a grant from Dept of Homeland Security; Elise in Vermont getting a degree in Ski Area Management!!; Mark hanging on (actually looking forward to being set free) in the construction business; Donna in her 16th year teaching HS Science. I’m all ecstatic about the prospects of equality, opportunity, and prosperity expected under our new administration.” Vicky Hutchinson reports that she transferred from Washington D.C. to Lagos, Nigeria in Aug. 2007. “I have a new appreciation for traffic.” Myra (Vaag) Lugsch “Myra has been consulting for an oil and gas database company in Denver (Suhaka Consulting, which just became Wofda LLC) the past couple of years and says it's fun to be back into geology again. She squeezes in a few hours of work in between volunteering in the classroom and attending PTA and Accountability meetings at school. Twins Mitch and Dean are now 10. Myra, Bill and the boys enjoy skiing, bicycling, golf and hanging out at the pool. Bill and the boys are also into cars, motorcycles and go-carts, but generally leave their mom at home when pursuing these activities. Myra has attended Auto Mezzi (an Italian car show in Denver) and spotted Eric Lipinski ‘81 in a Pantera last summer and Bob Dickerson ‘77 on a Ducati motorbike the summer before. The Lugsch family hopes to make it to Gunnison one of these days” Bruce Norton “When we last spoke I was working for Colorado-Ute Electric in the IS department - building and maintaining computer networks. Colorado-Ute was bought by Tri-State Generation and Transmission in Thornton, CO and after a period of transition, I was given the option of moving to Thornton or going on food stamps. Having lived in Denver during the energy boom of the 1970's I knew that welfare was a much better option than living in the city. So Jan (significant other, still gainfully employed in the mortgage industry at the time), the 3 huskies and I remained in Montrose. I soon found another computer networking job at Scaled Technology Works (STW) in Montrose. This was a Burt Rutan (the space plane guy) company that manufactured composite airplane parts. It was a good job but most of the employees were engineers (aeronautical, no less) which compelled me to drink copious amounts of cheap wine after a hard day at the office. Jan's job required her to deal with the general public, who can be almost as obnoxious as engineers (aeronautical or otherwise). So one evening, after imbibing several large goblets of cheap wine, we decided to retire! Cheap wine is a wonderful invention. Soon after I left STW, the company went belly-up, no doubt due to some engineering blunder. We are currently spending our golden years sipping cheap wine and blissfully contemplating the granodiorite formations visible from our backyard. We consistently invest in our Powerball retirement account which should hit any day now (did Western offer a statistics class?) and as soon as we receive those funds you should be able to establish another chair for the Geology Dept.” 1979 Jon Ake “Geez, it has been so long since we talked I'm not sure where to start with any kind of update. I recently changed jobs and am now living in the metro Washington, DC area (outside the Beltway I might add). After 18 years at the Bureau of Reclamation (3 of which I was on "loan" to the DOE Yucca Mountain Project) I'm now with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in the Office of Research. It has been pretty interesting so far, doing some of my own research and also responsible for getting other research projects going at several of the National Labs as well as with some different Universities. I'm still working on seismic hazard and risk analyses for critical structures. There is a lot of activity right now as several license applications for new nuclear power plants have been submitted to the NRC, the first in about 30 years. The NRC (as with most other regulatory bodies) is changing from a deterministic, narrow-scope design approach to a more probability-based, risk-informed design and analysis approach. From a hazard analysis perspective, it makes the questions more challenging. Part of the reason I came out here is that my wife (Barb) has a 2-3 year detail at the headquarters of the Bureau of Reclamation in downtown DC. She is a civil engineer and has worked for Reclamation for about 25 years. We were married in 1993. It has been kind of interesting living in the DC area, there is a lot to see and do here, but I can't see staying here too long. The sun just doesn't shine often enough, and I’ve concluded that there is absolutely nothing to like about 90% humidity in the summer (there isn't anything quite like a packed subway car ride home on a hot summer afternoon- a regular symphony of smells). The kids: Philip is now 28 and lives in Denver. He graduated from CSU a number of years ago in biology and chemistry and after a couple of years at the FDA now works at a large medical company helping to work the regulatory process of bringing new medical devices to market. Jeff is now 24 and lives in New York. He is on some sort of undefined hiatus from CSU, as a parent I'm a little worriedbut at least I'm not writing tuition checks for a while. He has a variety of partial jobs-writing business plans, a little bartending, standup comedy on occasion and anything else to try and pay the bills in NYC.” 1980 Carol (Mooney) Hogsett is still with Los Alamos National Labs and writes. “I'll be heading down to the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show in a couple of weeks. Love looking and hunting down specimens! I am doing the choreography for the upcoming Los Alamos Light Opera production of the Sound of Music March 6-8, 13-14. The show is coming PAGE 12 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER together nicely with a cast of about 45. Not a lot of dancing scenes, which is good for my time management... I am the president of the Los Alamos Light Opera board, busy doing some archiving - LALO has been around for 60 years! The first production was HMS Pinafore 1948, and Fredreich Reines played Dead Eye Dick. Reines discovered the neutron and got a Nobel Prize for that one before he came to Los Alamos! I know that if I look at all of the programs for the past 60 years, there are some other pretty famous scientists that either played instruments in the orchestra or were in the cast. See: http://www.myspace.com/losalamoslightopera Brian Johnson “After spending the last 20 years largely focusing in on commercial issues in the energy and utilities sector, I was able to get my hands dirty in the world's newest country, Timor Leste. A few of us from Australia were invited up to evaluate the merits of onshore energy resources and to the extent they could be used for power generation. This entailed bumping along the broken down infrastructure for a week (reminded me of Pearl Pass at times) visiting numerous oil and gas seep sites, as well as assessing previously drilled exploration wells. It was great to fly the flag of ignorance on how to get good gas samples out of gas seeps from my Western colleagues while on the road. The team was impressed with the response from people I went to college with some 30 years ago and the subsequent effectiveness of sampling.* We have been slightly delayed on development plans for developing these resources due to a few problems occurring in the financial sector, but confident that things will move forward. Another interesting resource we have run into while evaluating opportunities in Timor Leste is the Methane Hydrates that occur and accumulate all along the trench areas, as well as in any pipelines that would look to transport LNG or gas liquids through the trench areas. Maybe this is a science where Oceanography meets Geology - Geonography doesn’t quite sound right though! *Editors Note – Brian asked me about sampling an open gas seep and knowing nothing about this myself, sent it out to the Western petroleum alums. Steve Reynolds ’78 and Larry Moyer ’78 both came up with good advice. Remember, Western State Geology gives cradle to the grave service! Bob King wrote us last May and said; “Hope all is going well. Just want to let you know that I have recently accepted a position with Cooper Energy in Perth and will be leaving New Zealand Oil & Gas in Wellington in a couple of days. New Zealand has been great but the industry is booming in West Australia and was simply made an offer that was difficult to refuse.” Kim Mauch reports “I’ve been working in the wine industry as a sales representative the past year, first for a wine distribution company and now also for an Amador County winery. With this bad economy, I feel lucky to have both jobs, especially in an industry that this economy hasn’t adversely affected. Still live in Auburn with 4 dogs and a husband, and that’s about it. Better than nothing, I hope.” 1981 Bryan Roberts writes “We have been building upon my company's successes since 1999. Excalibur Group, LLC provides environmental consulting, engineering, and remediation services to the mid-Atlantic region and professional recruiting services (www.excaliburgrpllc.com). We have placed mostly professional engineers and senior marketing and program managers with firms having offices around the world. As one of the principals, we have 20 full and part-time professionals working from their home offices (virtual office space) in five states. I manage environmental projects as a senior hydrogeologist (strike and dip are crucial in Pennsylvania) dealing with petroleum hydrocarbons (Peter Dea's ‘76 class), polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons, metals, and volatile organic constituents (Yes, Dr. Stein's Chemistry class was worth the efforts), physical geology (Dr. Bartleson), structural geology (Dr. Prather's class skills are still used), as well as record pay roll, manage our invoicing, and provide administrative support to our staff. Retirement is at least 10 years away. In addition, I am a professional parent with five children, two of whom attend Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, VA and my oldest is graduating in May 2009. He was on campus the morning of April 16, 2007 when the massacre took place and since he is an EMT with the city of Blacksburg, he supported the rescue efforts from the fire station for the entire day. Within 24-hours of the shooting, I received over 60 phone calls from family, friends, and associates checking on his welfare. A tragedy that was beyond belief. My youngest son and I are strong Broncos fans and we love watching them each weekend. My wife, Kathleen is an adjunct professor at George Mason University in Fairfax, VA in the Business School of Management. Activities for the family include hiking, biking, skeet and trap shooting, bird hunting, traveling and photography. Generally, we live the American dream and look forward to our time together. Wishing all of my friends and associates from Western State success and peace as we approach the challenges of our changing world. Gary Skipp is still with the USGS in Denver. 1982 Kristen Andrew-Hoeser “I’m still working at Entech where I’ve been doing geologic hazards and unstable slope remediation for 15 years. I taught for awhile at Univ. of Colorado at Colorado Springs (Physical Geology) while working at Entech, but it turned out to be too much work. So, now I’m just at Entech and have more time to enjoy my family and get the housework done.” Dennis Beaver “I’m now 3 years into the solar business and still at it! I recently attained NABCEP certified solar PU Installer Certification and am staying busy installing and servicing PU and solar thermal throughout Colorado.” Dave Hill writes “I’ve been working in the environmental cleanup industry for 20 years, the past 15 of which have been spent cleaning up soil and groundwater contamination and unexploded ordnance at the Massachusetts Military Reservation on Cape Cod. I’ve been blessed with a happy, healthy 12 year old daughter, two adult stepchildren and two grandchildren. I still ski when there’s snow, and play poker PAGE 13 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER just like the old days (remembering Chino and Tom Prather at field camp!). Beers to Dennis, Smiley, Sue, Kris and all from that era.” Phil Mulholland “I still live in southwestern Montana and have been for the last 23 years. My wife and I raised twin daughters, both of whom are enrolled in college; one is studying geology at U of M. I've been working as a geologic consultant for the past three years for various mining/exploration companies. Most of this work focused on developing surface mineable porphyry moly deposits, underground gold skarns, breccia pipes and talc deposits. Due to the recent financial problems throughout the world, consulting work has dried up for me so I had to take a real job. I am currently the Chief Geologist for Yukon Zinc Corporation. We are in the development stages of constructing a new underground mine (Wolverine Project) 275 km northeast of Whitehorse, YT. The mine is centered on a relatively high grade VMS deposit with a current mine life of approximately 9 years.” Eric and Laura Ruud write “Laura changed jobs in June 2007 and is now the full-time Administrative Assistant of the Mechanical Engineering Dept. at the University of Nevada, Reno. She stays very busy with 11 Faculty, 367 Undergrads and 40 Grad students in the department. She stays connected with the Geological community in Nevada through her parttime bookkeeping job with the Geological Society of Nevada. She enjoys skiing on the weekends (after she gets her work done of course!). Eric is working with Geobrugg, a Swiss company that deals with Natural Hazard Mitigation. Debris flows, mud flows, rockfall hazards and slope stability are his main focus. He travels to Switzerland and other locations in Europe for work. He works primarily in California on the coast, like Big Sur, Malibu, San Francisco, San Diego and in lovely Los Angeles. In his spare time he is the Reed high school ski team coach. Last year one of his girls on the team won State finals in the Giant Slalom. He is also the Director of Snowsports at Sky Tavern Junior Ski Program in Reno, NV. This is a great volunteer program where they teach about 1,500 children to ski and board every weekend. This program has been teaching kids for over 60 years. If you wish to donate to the program, check it out. Being a nonprofit, they can always use funds. Eric has also been teaching skiing at the Mt. Rose ski resort for the past eight years to fill in some of his extra time. Eric really enjoys this because he also tries to teach in Spanish; that can be quite funny at times. He practices his Spanish at the Toastmasters club that he sponsored. It is good to challenge yourself in different areas. He is no longer the District Governor for Toastmasters International in Nevada. It was cutting into his skiing time. In the field of Geology, he is the Co-Chair of the upcoming GSN Symposium in May 2010 which will cover the Gold industry primarily on the North American Continent. They are also accepting papers from other countries. This will be the fifth symposium that he has helped organize. It is a great opportunity to bring new concepts and discoveries to the industry. He is still driving that old car from high school, a chopped 1969 Mustang. Someday he will have to buy a new car; perhaps when the kids are out of college. Our son, Alexander, 20, is attending the University of Nevada studying Computer Science. He continues to excel in school. He will likely go on to get a Masters degree after graduating next year. He is involved in some very exciting projects. He is about 6'4" now and has grown into a great adult. Our daughter, Erica, 18, is studying at UNR also. She is taking Nutritional Sciences as a pre-med option and is considering becoming a Geriatric physician (which would be great for our aging group!). She still loves to ski with Eric and helps him with the ski team when she finds the time. She is really enjoying the college life with all of its challenges and the social activities. 1983 Nancy and Steve Carpenter “Hockey - Hockey - More Hockey. Steve is the Travel coach for Squirts (9-10 year olds) and Logan's on the team. Nancy is the Squirt Director and plays on the Women's team every chance she gets. Austin plays Travel for the Peewees (11-12 years old). Both teams have been winning big time around the 4 state region we play in. Then Baseball - Baseball - More Baseball. Both boys played on the same team last year, Steve and I and another friend, coached -took the City Championship. Austin went on to play in the State Tournament, Steve and I were asst. coaches. Steve is a board member for Babe Ruth/Cal Ripken Baseball. Tennis somewhere in between, picked up golf, trying to stay ahead of the boys. Bought season passes to Kelly Canyon this year. Boys snowboard and Steve and I strapped on our 10 plus year old Tele skies and smiled all day - Kinda like riding a bike. Eyes are bigger than what our legs could handle. Work? Oh yeah, Steve's the expert for the AMWTP at INL for off-site disposal of radioactive waste. Loves his job and the people he works with. Nancy is doing Massage part time now and substitute teaching part time at the boy’s school. Looking forward to spring as you probably are in Gunny as well. John Evans “Not much change in the past three years. Liz and I are still raising our two kids in Broomfield, Alex age 16 and Lillian, age 7. Not much happening on the geology front for me as I got out of it about 10 years ago. Real estate and property management pay the bills now and let us stay in one place to care for several generations of family. I enjoy reading the newsletters about what some of my old classmates are doing” Rod Graham usually comes up here every winter to do some ice fishing, but we missed him this year. The last I heard from him was in August and he was in Hong Kong negotiating a contract with a Russian company that bought up his old outfit to continue exploration in Mongolia. Ed Light “Married with 2 children, Max 21 and Marlo 18. Worked in IT for 26 years in Colorado Springs, currently with Verizon as a Quality Assurance Manager. I’m still running, fishing, golfing and enjoying Colorado outdoors whenever possible. I still enjoy returning to Gunnison to camp and fish.” PAGE 14 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER Jeff Littfin “All is well up here in Whitefish. You know me, just trying to live the dream. Skiing, kayaking, dirt biking, water skiing, camping, mtn. biking, hiking, hunting and still trying to do some work in my spare time. I'm staying busy with computer consulting -- trouble shooting problems with viruses and spyware and helping people upgrade systems. I handle an array of problems with software-hardware and networking. This last year one of my bigger projects was to install wireless internet access in three buildings at the ski area (Whitefish Resort). It’s a Wireless Distribution System which entails flashing routers with new firmware and making routers communicate with each other to share a single connection from an Internet Service Provider helping to save condo owners monthly internet expenses. We had some great Destination Unknown trips in the past few years. The DU 2006 which I hosted entailed hiking in Glacier National Park and rafting/fly fishing an uncharted canyon in the Bob Marshall Wilderness. We also achieved a Canadian record by flying Brad Boschetto ‘83 30ft in the air on a kite tube on Shuswap Lake and he only dislocated a toe! Ed. Note: If you want to see how crazy this is just search Kite Tubes on UTube. Moonlight waterskiing, waterfall hiking and beaching/anchoring a houseboat in a storm where just a few of the stories which can be told. We had a special appearance by Nanook (Mark Winters ‘83) on the house boat extravaganza. The 2007 trip was composed of hiking in the Cement Creek area up Hunters Hill, taking the ridge line over to Mt. Tilton. then over to Lambertson, and onto Italian Mt. It was a stellar trip down memory lane. It was like a 25 year field camp reunion seeing you Tom and Peter. The second half of the trip down the Black Canyon was real pucker fest. Plan (A) Swimming down through the canyon with just life vests and a rope was Kent Wheelers ’83 idea. Comparable to running Niagara Falls in a barrel!!! Kent's plan (B) was to rappel off the North Rim of the B.C. When he made us look over the edge he realized he didn't bring enough toilet paper for the group. Plan (C) (which we attempted) was to load up the gang (or mules) just before dark (good timing, eh Kent) with 90 lbs packs, stuffed with inflatable kayaks, fishing and camping gear and of course plenty of beer and watch them twist their ankles and fall down S.O.B. gully. After we all had a full body sweat going and Elliott Lips ‘83 just about broke his ankle, we bailed out and made the midnight run over to Chucker Trail and resumed our true passion of drinking beers and driving around in the van telling lies. It turned out to be a spectacular trip kayaking and landing lots of brown trout with our fly rods. Dale Marcum “Weather here has been unbelievable, but we are going to pay for it this summer (water restrictions, fires, all the typical CA stuff). Right now, it is about 70 degrees or so. Don’t know if I told you, but I am now a part owner of Cotton, Shires & Associates. My official title is CFO and Principal Geologic Engineer. The boys are getting big. Sam, at 12.5 years, grew 2 ¼ in the past 4 months. He is now 5’8” (size 12 shoes), which is a full 6 inches taller than I was when I was 12.5 (my dad the engineer kept track on the furnace door), and I was never a small kid. Jack (8 years) is slightly above my growth curve, so he will be the shrimp. Jen had a stroke last winter (hard to believe it was only a year ago). The short story is there were no lasting effects, but things were pretty intense for a while. She had an irregular heart beat (genetics) that was not identified. Eventually her blood clotted (as it tends to swirl around in the heart instead of getting pumped in and out quickly) and she had the stroke. She is on a cocktail of drugs, and we are getting different answers from different doctors, so we are still sorting through things…but…life is good.” Rebecca Miller, R.G., has been working as Principal Geologist for MHW Americas Inc in Tempe, Arizona. She is responsible for project management and marketing the mining industry mostly in Arizona. Recently her team has completed a project scoping study to evaluate the scope, schedule and costs required to build six new leach pads at Freeport-McMoRan's Morenci Mine in eastern Arizona. Rebecca currently serves as Industry Liaison for the Maricopa Section of the Society of Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration and will chair 2 sessions at the National Meeting on Environmental Management Systems. Chuck Place notes that this is his first check-in in 25 years. “I graduated in ’83 and worked as an oil company geologist for 4 or 5 yrs, then in the environmental field for the past 20 yrs. I currently own a company that specializes in designbuild of large scale industrial wastewater treatment facilities that clean the water to produce methane gas. The “biogas” is used to fuel the facilities. Many of my projects make more than 1,000 MCF of natural gas/day. It’s easier than looking for gas wells…. My projects have won several National & State awards for benefit to citizens and the environment. I own a 2nd waste-to-energy company that is in the R&D phase, creating a method of refining waste into a usable fuel. It is unlike any other technology that exists on the market today, but nothing ventured, nothing gained. I also stay active using my geology skills as I continue to explore for oil & gas prospects in KS & OK and plan to drill at least 2 wells in 09.” Welcome back Chuck and good going!! Kent Wheeler “I am staying very busy running a 60 person consulting company (IHI Environmental); however, to balance it out I still find time for backcountry during the winter and climbing most of the rest of the year. I have been very active in the back country of Utah, using geologic maps to find the next great climbing areas in the west desert and southern Utah, as well as staying very active at the Black Canyon of the Gunnison. Fly-fishing and river running seem to take up any spare time. Susan, my wife and I, have been raising two daughters (Maya who is 12 and Mica who is 5). They are great, and it’s kind of fun being the oldest dad in preschool. They are also becoming strong skiers and climbers, to no one’s surprise. The Class of 83, Destination Unknown (DU) is still going strong. Brad Boschetto ‘83 is in Alaska managing Health and Safety Program for Shell’s exploration projects. Dale Marcum ‘83 is a partner in a geotechnical consulting firm in Los Gatos (Cotton and Associates), Elliot Lips ‘83 is a consulting engineer in Salt Lake City (Great Basin Consulting), Bob Twiddy ‘83 is selling bearings for Timkin PAGE 15 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER to mining companies in Wyoming, and as best as anyone can tell Jeff Litfin ‘83 is still on vacation in Montana. A visit the Gunnison which included circumnavigation of Cement Creek with Tom and Bruce, with a night in Peter Dea’s ‘76 cabin in Cement Creek, kayaking the Gunnison Gorge old style (think of how we used to do it in college), and a week floating Desolation Canyon. This year the destination in known (Alaska), but as Brad says Alaska is a big place. I ran into Peter Thurston ‘81 at the top of Cardiac Pass skiing several weeks ago. He is working with Kennecott/Rio Tinto. Joe Winston is practicing law in Colorado Springs and watching his three children grow up – ages 19, 16 and 10. 1984 Leslie Percival says hello from Castle Rock, CO. 1985 Andrea Heller “Hello my fellow geology alums, I just celebrated a fun birthday weekend in the sun and snow here in Crested Butte. This winter I am using non- work time to be as active as I can. I have studded snow tires on my town bike, and cross-country trails out the back door. I am teaching and tutoring k-9th graders in math, reading and writing. I have become an excellent reading teacher for kids who have missed anchoring the rules of the English language. Some of my students receive enrichment and some remediation. Teaching satisfies me and challenges me to stay a lifelong student learner. I send you my best, Andrea” John Lamborn “From 2001-2005 I started and operated a custom sand and gravel products company in Penrose, CO, but sold it in 2005 and moved back to Alaska. I am currently Exploration Manager for Geoinformatics Exploration working on a copper-gold porphyry deposit in the Alaska Range 100 miles northwest of Anchorage at Rainy Pass.” 1987 John Axelson “I had been working on various remediation projects at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal for five years. As things were starting to wind down, I applied for a job with the COGCC a little over two years ago and have been working with the Commission as an Environmental Protection Specialist since that time. I have gotten to do some interesting baseline groundwater studies and reclamation projects. I also have a lot of interaction with O&G operators working with them to get spills/releases cleaned up properly. I still live in Brighton with my wife Dorothy and two daughters Sydnie (9) and Emily (6). I’m still an avid bow hunter and fly fisherman in my spare time. I recently went on my first safari bow hunting plains game in South Africa – it was a great adventure. I also recently updated my book Big Game Hunter’s Guide to Colorado, which was released in its second printing in Oct 08’. I still love the Gunnison area and fly fish the Gunnison & Taylor River at least once every summer.” Tom Claeys “I’ve been working at Amgen as a Chemist since 2001, primarily as a GC/MS and FT-IR analyst. My wife, Christi, and have been married for 14 years and have 2 boys, ages 9 and 6. Still skiing, windsurfing and golfing as avidly as possible. And yes, Geology is still on the brain, but as a hobby.” Jon Kaminsky is now in Lander, Wyoming working for the BLM. Gregg Smith “I have been completing oil and gas wells for XTO in the San Juan and Piceance Basins for the past three years. Also doing some geological consulting in the Uinta Basin and Las Animas Arch. I expect to be a grandpa by the end of January. Can’t believe how time flies!” William Mallory “I’m currently starting my 20th year teaching middle school science in Hugo, Colorado. I also teach a freshman level science course for Morgan Community College. Taught Physical Geology in fall 2008 and will be teaching Historical in spring, 2009. Thanks Drs. Bartleson and Prather!” 1988 Craig Boeckman “I am the Regional Geologist at Alaska DOT&PF Central Region Materials Section. We perform geotech investigations in Kodiak, Aleutians, and western Alaska (along and south of the Kuskokwim River). I am finally trying to get my masters here at UAA (Anchorage). We have Dan Pavey’s son working for us! As you know Dan Pavey ‘68 is a former WSC Alum and retired Chief Geologist from this section. Hope all is well with WSC, staff, and alums. Call me if any of your students want to try to locate work up here. I might be able to give some suggestions. I understand there are a few WSC graduates who currently work in Alaska.” Scott Effner and his partner Susan are gradually moving their successful environmental business (Whetstone Assoc.) from La Veta, CO to Gunnison, so we’ll see more of him in the future. As usual they did some intense bike tours, this time in Italy with Scott knocking off 11,000’ and 60 miles in one day. Scott, Susan and I had a great backcountry ski up one of the gulches above Ohio City this winter. John Gamble We haven’t heard from John for a while, so were to happy to hear that he is still alive and well in Illinois. He says that he is real estate broker in the western suburbs of Chicago, but still skiing and biking a lot and still gets out West now and then. Carol (Gallatin) Rieger “Let’s see, lots of major changes in Carol’s life lately. She got married to Terry Rieger in May, 2006 at the Garden of the Gods (on the Fountain Formation!) in Denver. She and her husband went on a great tour of the Canadian Rockies and took a guided hike up to the Walcott Quarry to see the Burgess Shale – “just chock full of fossils including more trilobites than you can shake a stick at.” She has some great pictures of all of this, so just contact her. Then just to make life interesting after that, Carol had a baby girl, Samantha, who is now 2 years old. She writes: “Being a mother is wonderful! All is well here in the Denver area. Work is busy and still challenging and fulfilling with my 20-year service anniversary approaching. My family life is more fun that I could have imagined.” She also still does volunteer work for the Morrison Natural History Museum working with Bob Bakker and found some very good adult Stegosaurus tracks.” PAGE 16 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER 1989 Annie (Clements) Eckman is now located in Colorado Springs and recently took a job with as an environmental consultant with Tetra Tech, mostly marketing consulting services to the oil and gas industry. She is doing lots of camping with the girls (now 5 and 8), skiing, riding motorcycles, and enjoys cocktails and following her favorite band – Big Head Todd and the Monsters. Christine Peak “For me life has been travel, travel and more; some to Australia but mostly within the USA, to Oregon, California, Texas, New York. We have Kara in Houston working for NABORS International Drilling as a financial analyst. Jefferson (lizard man) lives actively in Santa Cruz doing photography ...jeffersonpeak.com. Take a look! Husband Jim had triple bypass surgery last November and is recovering well. We are presently in Texas so that he can go on a pig shoot. Looks like pork in the freezer. My big news is that I am now a citizen of the USA. I wanted the privilege to vote in 2008 and hold/express an opinion on politics. It was a laborious but worthwhile process. Montrose remains my home. Jim and I plant a large neighborhood veggie garden each year. Life's great.” Norm Yoast “I am in Craig still teaching, this being my 19th year teaching middle school science, 17 of those in Craig. I teach physical and earth science as well as a River Watch class where we collect data for the Division of wildlife. We are one of the most active schools in Colorado for River Watch with over 3300 samples taken in 15 years on the Green and Yampa Rivers. My wife Deb is still teaching middle school math; Linsey is a junior at Moffat County High School and Colten is a big 7th grader. I still coach football, basketball and track for Moffat County schools and in my spare time fish, hunt, camp and take long relaxing back road motorcycle trips though remote parts of western Colorado.” 1990 Mark Larson is now the field coordinator for a biological station in Virginia. ”I finally got out from the isotope lab and away from Wyoming. I don’t much care for the degree of bureaucracy in the Commonwealth, but the climate, the vegetable garden and all the live old time and bluegrass music more than make up for it. I live over in Floyd County which is one of the places the counter culture decided to retire. It’s definitely a different degree of relaxed out that way compared to the rest of this wired-too-tight state. I work at the station on top of Salt Pond Mountain (such as it is). About half the year, it’s just me and the caretaker.” Julie (Coleman-Clark) Singer had another busy year packing in as many adventure trips as is humanly possible and still working full-time for the Forest Service in Durango. Most of her adventures were river trips such as paddling the Dolores, the Chama, the Rio Grande, the San Juan and even a trip on the Snake River in Yellowstone country. She was able to raise $800K in grant money including a Congressional windfall for the ruin stabilization at Chimney Rock in southwest Colorado. 1991 Elizabeth (Wallner) Francisco “I've been working as an archaeologist for Mesa Verde National Park for close to ten years, specializing in post-fire effects to cultural resources (specifically standing architecture). Most recently my duties at the Park involved grant writing and management, large scale archaeological project management, report writing, condition assessment of standing architecture, site monitoring, dendro sampling and analysis, High Definition Documentation (Laser Scanning) of cliff dwellings, GIS data management, serving as the fire archaeologist for the southwest zone, and a bunch of other not so glamorous stuff. I left the Park in the fall of 2008 and was hired on here in Gunni as the BLM archaeologist in December 2008. So far the job is awesome and I'm so happy to be living in the Gunnison Valley. Currently I'm working out all of the possibilities that this year’s field season could bring, including several interpretive events - this is the 150 year anniversary of hard rock mining in the Lake City area so there will be tours and events along the Alpine Loop. I'll be working with Western on an excavation out Six Mile Lane and assisting USU with their field school on a site near Blue Mesa. Currently I've got two Western students working on different projects: Nick Ross is finishing up the data entry for the work he did last summer on grazing allotments and Jocelyn Jensen is working on the Cultural Resources GIS database adding data and cleaning up old data. Greg Hill writes: “It's been a long time since we've been in touch. Here's a brief update on what I've been up to. Laura, Alaina (now 7), and I moved to Lake Tahoe about a year ago, between Tahoe City and Homewood. We love living in the mountains and forest and spend lots of time outdoors, hiking in the summer and skiing in the winter. In May, I completed a term as president of the Geological Society of Nevada and am now on the board of directors until May of this year. I'm currently president of Harvest Gold Corp. (US) and look after US exploration activities for our Canadian parent company, Harvest Gold Corp.” 1992 Elizabeth (Budzien) Toivonen “It’s been a long time since I’ve been in touch. Since my last update a lot has happened (though not much of it terribly interesting). The small Australian-owned environmental consulting company that I work for (HLA-Envirosciences) was purchased by ENSR AECOM (a large US-based company) a couple of years ago. The transition has been pretty painless and overall I think it has been beneficial to all concerned. I have moved into contaminated sites auditing fulltime, which I really enjoy, but it can also get really frustrating. It still amazes me that Australians aren’t taught grammar, spelling, etc. Some of the reports I review are so difficult to read, the technical aspects of the assessment/remediation jobs get lost in the red pen. (Beth, you should talk to Rob Fillmore about this!) My husband (Trevor) and I finally decided it was time to leave the hustle and bustle of life in Sydney, so in November we moved to Canberra (approximately 3 ½ hours SW of Sydney). Even though Canberra is the nation’s capital, it is PAGE 17 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER like a country town. Sydney has a population of approximately 4 million, while Canberra is closer to 400,000. Of course, we picked the worst time in history to put our Sydney house on the market, but it has sold, so there’s no going back (not that we would ever want to). Canberra is about 2 hours from the Snowy Mountains (one of our favorite get away spots), 2-3 hours from the coast (never really liked beaches, but at least we know it’s there if we want it) and there are various wineries scattered around. We spent Christmas in Oklahoma with my parents. The cold was great (I have never gotten used to Christmas in summer!), but we were a little disappointed not to get any snow – oh well, maybe next time.” Tom Woosley writes “I still live in Boise, with my wife and two kids. Sam is 9 and Shaely is 4. I recently purchased a small rock quarry in a small town near another small town in Idaho, just east of Hells Canyon on the Little Salmon River. We have a lot of fun playing with rocks and large equipment. Our products are made from boulders we quarry, slice, polish and sandblast. The main varieties we work with are Columbia River Basalt, granite and various metamorphic rocks. The favorite being the “Salmon River Jade”, serpentine schist from the Riggins Group. 1993 Dave Lazorchak “When did I graduate- 1993? – Boy, it stinks getting old! Well, short and sweet, still here at the BLM Gunnison Field Office as now just the geologist and AML specialist (Abandoned Mine Lands). Enforcing regulations and compliance with miners (not minors!), disposing of mineral materials, etc. In addition, I'm now closing and cleaning up those mines from the past that are causing problems on our public lands, ranging from hazardous openings to acid mine drainage issues in order to improve the quality of the land and waters around Gunnison and Lake City. Miss those limericks, Bruce.” Bob Richardson (Our all-time favorite van mechanic) tells us that he is officially retired as of August, 2008. “Some say that I’ve been retired ever since I first went up to Gunnison and met Tom and Bruce, who showed me that life is all about having fun no matter what it gives you.” Very nice Bob, Thank you!! 1994 Suzanne (Schauer) Carmody writes that she is teaching Earth Science at Widefield HS. She teaches part time, then helps with her older daughter’s class, and takes her younger daughter to preschool and music class. Her two daughters are Kiri (9) and Cambria (4). She says, “I appreciate geology more now than ever since I teach it!” Jason Eckman “I am currently working as a contractor for EnCana Oil & Gas (USA) Inc. in the Parachute Field Office. I am the Permit and ROW Coordinator for the North Piceance and Paradox Basins. I'm responsible for permitting for Compressor Stations and selecting pipeline routes for well connects and trunk pipelines as well as obtaining the necessary County and BLM permits and coordinating Land Surveyors and Resource surveys (Arch and Bio) and geotechnical studies. It's a pretty interesting job but it can also be frustrating when dealing with the Counties and BLM. I've been working for EnCana since May of 2007. I have moved from Palisade into Grand Junction and my wife and I bought a house near the Chipeta Golf Course. I did all of the landscaping myself and I spent all spring and summer working on it. So I didn't get out in the mountains as much as I wanted to. Chris Lawson “I got married in April, 2008 to Jessica and we had a baby girl, Charlotte Elizabeth Lee Lawson on December 29th. Everyone is doing well. I’m still working for Bentley Systems (12 years now) and still learning software development technologies.” Dr. Peter Stelling “Life is going really well. My family and I are in Bellingham, WA, where my wife Jackie and I teach in the geology department at Western Washington University. I'm teaching a lot, and have just started getting into geothermal energy. We're trying to get out as much as possible (which isn't much these days), and I've recently gotten into cyclocross. I've been trying to get my 4-yr old twins to join me, but the dismounts / mounts are hard with training wheels. If anyone is passing through Bellingham, stop in and say hi! Kelli Trujillo is living in Laramie, WY after having completed her MS in 1999 and her PhD in 2003 at the University of Wyoming, both in Geology with emphasis in Vertebrate Paleontology. Her research focuses on the Upper Jurassic Morrison Fm. She works for Uinta Paleontological Associates, Inc., a consulting company that works mainly with the energy industry. About 2 years ago she found a dinosaur bone bed in a pipeline trench in the Morrison Fm. south of Laramie, and she currently supervises the preparation of the fossils in the UW Geological Museum. She is also working on a long- term project to date the Morrison Fm. using U/Pb techniques, with good results so far! For fun she plays mandolin and sings in a nontraditional bluegrass band and works on her house. 1995 Eric Jordan “I’m still in the big apple (six years now), chasing tunnel boring machines and making swiss cheese of Manhattan. This past year was eventful. I started a new project (now mapping the new Long Island Railroad Tunnels into Grand Central Terminal), won a silver medal at the International Six Days Enduro (ISDE) in Greece, and got married!! Super happy. My wife is from Philadelphia... one of those six degrees of separation stories. We are looking forward to starting a family. Gunnsion is still very much on the radar. I've stayed in close touch with numerous friends, plus we still try to visit the land up at Irwin about once a year, which, by the way has seen a huge jump in property taxes.. I don't understand it. I’m also, possibly the longest renter at Plotts mini storage: +10 years now…and I thought I’d be back in two…. Looking forward to the newsletter and reading about all my fellow classmates…. 1996 Kurt Feltus is still doing contractual work in the Crested Butte area and has his own company, Double Top Frame and Finish. He is currently working on major addition to his own home in CB South. PAGE 18 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER Matt Hohne is President of Eagle Environmental LLC in Burlington, WA and writes: “I’m still performing due diligence on commercial properties throughout the West. Business is great and never busier. I have been spending my free time gardening and enjoying the north Cascades/Mount Baker. Thank you Western State Geo! You Rock.!” Rebecca Nanni and husband James Porter, ’97 always seem to run into me at the Firebrand Restaurant (formerly the Epicurean for you old-timers). Rebecca is teaching in a charter school in Taos and James is doing construction and carpentry. 1997 Ryan Bagby “I now work for Schlumberger Technology Corporation and have worked for them since December 2006. My family and I now live in Lafayette, LA and we are loving the weather (YEA NO SNOW!!) and the food” Becky Biglow “I tried to abandon geology, but geology is currently winning! I finished my Master's of Architecture in 2007, but one summer between semesters in architecture school, I had a fantastic experience working as a consulting hydrologist on a hurricane recovery effort in North Carolina. That job was so fun that it brought me back to geologyrelated work. I've been taking advantage of the flexibility in my life to travel with work at a moment’s notice, and working on various wild fire rehab endeavors - many trips to California this past year. When I wasn't at a fire, I worked in Bryce Canyon National Park this past year doing a myriad of things as a "physical scientist". Chances are I'll be back in Bryce Canyon this spring - please stop by and visit if you're in the neighborhood! Eric Bjornstad is my across the street neighbor and computer consultant. He is currently working for an engineering/surveying firm in Crested Butte and right now is working on a project involving the new Western State Union. Eric and wife, Jennifer have a girl, Emma, 5 and a baby boy Evan who is 5 months old. Amy Crawford We got this from Amy a year ago, “I'm back in Alaska and teaching high school at a small school in a Native village called Angoon. It's kind of like the homegrown Peace Corps--very challenging, but also rewarding. The town is right on the ocean--a gorgeous setting. You can only get here by ferry or float plane. Anyway, I'm teaching mostly English but I also teach on Earth Science class.... so after all these years, I have to recall what I learned in geology! My brain's a little rusty, but it has been fun. And this summer we got this email: “I'll be moving in about ten days to a new teaching job in Unalaska/Dutch Harbor (in the Aleutians), but I don't know that address yet.” Casey Dukeman -- see the faculty listing Sean Hlousek “Elaine and I are celebrating our 10th anniversary this year and are traveling to Europe for that! First time over there for both of us and we are very excited. I also have news regarding work. I have moved on from Premier Data Services to an oil and gas company called Cirque Resources which is run by Peter Dea ‘76 - who I understand is still in touch with the Geology department up there. I'll be their Lead Data Coordinator working with just about everyone to help them produce lease maps and other geographic products. I'll also be assisting them with their business work-flow with respect to the data they are using. I expect it will be challenging but also rewarding. I'm looking forward to it! Outside of work I'm busy with all of the outdoor activities I can fit into any given weekend! August 2nd-3rd, I'm coming up there to camp, visit town, and float the river. If you'll be around we ought to get together for coffee or a beer to catch up.” Lynn Padgett Lynn is still doing the work of 5 people all at the same time, only now the big news is that she was elected County Commissioner in Ouray County running as a Democrat in a strongly Republican district. She’ll find time somehow. Andi Sullivan “I’m currently an Archeologist with the BLM in Socorro, NM. I acquired my MA in December, 2006. I’ve worked in state and federal government positions since graduation from Western in 1997.” Phil Van Zale writes us from Boulder where is wife is getting a Masters. “I’ve been working as a software engineer for a little over a year now at Wall Street on Demand. I’ve managed to stay out of trouble mostly. Still enjoying skiing, biking, hiking and most things mountains. I get to visit with James and Becca sometimes and I make homemade handcranked ice cream. I don’t remember the last time I was called a slimy bastard.” 1998 Stephanie (Foggia) Lovell is up in Alaska and writes: “I currently am playing a dual role as Mommy to my beautiful 3 ½ year old daughter, Billi Elizabeth, and working as a Mine Geologist for Kinross at their Fort Knox gold mine just north of Fairbanks. It's an interesting position, responsible for releasing the ore, tracking the progress of the shovels in the dig faces, and monitoring and mapping the high walls. I just went back to work this past July, after staying home for 3 years with Billi. Needless to say after 3 years of Sesame Street, Teletubbies, etc... I needed some refreshing on my geology! :-) My husband is due to retire from the Alaska Air National Guard next January, so this has played a big part in me returning to work. We plan to stay here in Alaska after he retires. Sounds like things are very exciting down there!!! Hopefully, we'll make it down there one of these years... introduce Billi to Colorado snow!!! My current boss is from the Grand Junction area, so we chat from time to time about the area.” Katye McConaghy “I was promoted to Senior Geologist for the Freeport-McMoran Santa Rita Mine in New Mexico. Two months later, the mine was shut down. I am still there working on resource models but it is awfully lonely. Shelby is finishing his Master’s degree in Cultural Anthropology & Food Studies. Hopefully, this year we will start a community garden here in Silver City. Everyone is welcome to visit!” Zach Reynolds is now in Canon City, CO and writes “”I have 3 great kids: Emily- 8, Megan - 6 and Owen – 3. My wife Carmen and I are still enjoying beautiful Colorado and all it has to offer. 1999 Ralph Falsetto got married in Homer, Alaska in 2006 but is temporarily in Utah with the Forest Service. He writes: “I PAGE 19 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER am on a 2 year detail working for the Forest Service Washington office. I am on a team of mostly computer geeks that are working with the Forest Service to move all of their data to the Kansas City Data Center. I am a virtual employee. All of our communication is through conference calls, video teleconference, email and instant messages. Ryan Field is now in San Diego Dr. Nathan Goodale writes “I’m currently a faculty member at Hamilton College in upstate NY. I have been working on several research projects in Jordan, Ireland and British Columbia. All of the projects center on the origins and dissolution of villages. I was married to Alissa, my partner for the past 5 years, in Oct. , 2008 in NY.” 2000 Duncan Drummond is based in Chico, CA and writes “I am currently working for an environmental consulting firm of about 50 employees. I am working towards my Professional Geologist Registration in the State of California. California requires 5 years of working experience under a profession geologist. I have about 2 years left and I love my job! I have been married for 4 years (wife-Nicole) and we have 14 month son named Leif. I don't ski as much as I would like! I want to thank you and the rest of the faculty for an education and experiences that still resonate clearly in mind, today. I hope all is well with the staff and yourself. Please send my regards to everyone. Ryan Murphy writes “I'm still living in Houston and enjoying it as much as could be expected for a place that is so "topographically challenged". After leaving ExxonMobil in 2006 I am now in my third year working deepwater Gulf of Mexico exploration for the mid-size independent Hess. The work is a lot of fun and Hess is a great company. I've also somehow managed to keep my field boots dirty with trips to look at salt tectonics in Mexico, do some fieldwork in extensional systems in Greece and Egypt, and trek around South Africa studying turbidites. Other than that I still manage one or two ski trips each season and come back to Colorado every summer to check another Fourteener off the list.” 2002 Jason Eliassen has been working at Antero Rescourses for the past five years along with fellow WSC grads Andrew Wood ’04, Josh Shaw ’03, Kelly Bruchez ’07, Woody Webber ‘08, and of course CEO Paul Rady ’78. We regularly meet up with other WSC grads who are also working the downtown Denver area. Jeff Jackson is working for XTO Resources in Fort Worth after finishing his master’s degree at Colorado School of mines. 2003 Kain Leonard is in town and just married Stephanie. Congratulations. 2006 Casey Dick is currently living in Norman OK with his wife Julie and daughter Emily – born Oct. 2008. He is working on his master’s degree in civil engineering, focusing on water resources. Emily keeps us very entertained. 2007 Jack Helmsing is a 2nd Lieutenant in the US Army. He is currently assigned to the 4th Brigade of the 2nd Infantry Division as an Airborne Ranger. PAGE 20 GEOLOGY ALUMNI NEWSLETTER Laccoliths – Volcanoes and a College Your donations have been critical to the development of the Geology Program If you give to the college remember that you can designate a gift or pledge directly to the Geology Department through one of the funds listed below. Geology Fund – for general use by the department (equipment – field trips …..) Bartleson-Prather Geology Research Scholarship (for student research) Valerie Ann Mitchell Memorial Geology Scholarship Richard W. and Belva R. Moyle Geology Scholarship Fred J. Menzer, Jr. Geology Memorial Scholarship Rady Endowment in Petroleum Geology Moncrief Endowment in Petroleum Geology Gifts go to the WSC FOUNDATION, ASPINALL- WILSON CENTER, P.O. BOX 1264, GUNNISON, CO 81230
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