20. Geophysical Discovery of the Pima Mine, Pima County, Arizona

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 178 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1991
Abstract
This case history really started during the tail end of WWII when two Navy men, both Colorado School of Mines graduates, got together in Washington, DC, while they were assigned to the Office of Navy Petroleum Reserves doing some of the first aerial magnetometer work ever done on a practical oil exploration basis over the offshore area of the Gulf Coast. When separated from Naval Service active duty in 1946, the two men, Walter E. Heinrichs, Jr., and Robert E. Thurmond, tried, unsuccessfully, to form a commercial air magnetometer business. Later they got together again in Jerome, AZ, with Newmont Mining's early geophysical exploration endeavors from 1947 to 1949. Subsequent to the Newmont experience, they jointly proposed a specific mining geophysical exploration and development program to Herbert Hoover, Jr., then president of United Geophysical Co. of Pasadena, CA. Mr. Hoover, in consultation with his father Herbert Hoover and others of his staff at United, particularly Edwin G. Schempf, executive vice president, and Raymond A. Peterson, vice president of research, agreed to establish the proposed program under United's auspices, to be headquartered at Tucson, AZ. The primary objective would be to practically test and develop various mining geophysical methods and techniques while exploring particularly for base metals in the general area of southeast Arizona and southwest New Mexico.
Citation
APA:
(1991) 20. Geophysical Discovery of the Pima Mine, Pima County, ArizonaMLA: 20. Geophysical Discovery of the Pima Mine, Pima County, Arizona. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1991.