At the June 2017 AASG Annual Meeting, Steve Masterman,
Alaska State Geologist, was elected AASG President. Prior to his Alaska state government service, Steve worked extensively in the
mineral industry, including work in Alaska, Peru and Nevada.He earned a
bachelor’s degree in mining geology from the Royal School of Mines, and a
master’s degree in geological engineering from the University of Alaska
Fairbanks. Also elected were Past-President
David Spears of Virginia, President-Elect Karen Berry of Colorado, Vice
President Richard Ortt of Maryland, Secretary John Metesh of Montana, and Treasurer
Harvey Thorleifson of Minnesota
Sunday, September 17, 2017
Keith Schilling, Director, Iowa Geological Survey
Keith Schilling has been named Director, Iowa Geological Survey. Keith’s professional interests are surface and groundwater interaction, land use/land cover change, watershed modeling, nutrient fate and transport, sediment erosion and transport, floodplain processes, ecohydrology, time-series analysis, biogeochemistry
Philip A. Pearthree named State Geologist of Arizona
Rolfe Mandel, Director of the Kansas Geological Survey
Chip Groat re-named Louisiana State Geologist
Dr. Charles G. Groat has returned as Acting Director &
Professor of Louisiana Geological
Survey. Groat returns to LSU after many years in academia,
government, independent research, and administrative positions. Groat’s prior
tenure at LSU includes serving as the LGS director and state geologist
(1978-1990) and as the executive director for Coastal, Energy, and
Environmental Resources (1992-1995). He will work as acting LGS director with
CES Executive Director David E. Dismukes to explore new research and growth
opportunities for LGS and for LSU’s overall energy, coastal and environmental
research initiatives. Groat is a nationally renowned educator and government
scientist. Most recently, he retired as president and CEO from the Water
Institute of the Gulf. He was professor and director of the Center for
International Energy and Environmental Policy and associate director of the
Energy Institute at the University of Texas at Austin. He was also director of
the U.S. Geological Survey under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.
Nelia W. Dunbar, New Mexico State Geologist
Nelia W. Dunbar has been named New Mexico State Geologist.
According to her web site, “As director of the New Mexico Bureau of Geology and
Mineral Resources, I am responsible for overseeing the research and service
activities of the state geological survey. I work closely with many of the
staff to keep current on their activities, and to provide advice when needed. I
report to the president of New Mexico Tech, who I keep informed about bureau
activities and events. I represent the bureau at the state legislature, to
other state agencies, and at national meetings. I serve as the New Mexico
representative to the American Association of State Geologists organization. My
scientific background is in geochemistry, mainly in the study of volcanic
rocks, and I received funding for, and previously directed the electron
microprobe laboratory, where I now act as advisor. I am an adjunct faculty
member in the Earth and Environmental Science department at New Mexico Tech,
where I have taught classes and advised graduate students.”
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