Kim
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ShareI'm currently attending the International Geological Congress in Brisbane, Australia. At this meeting I've been struck by the huge presence that the mining industry has at this meeting, with major sponsors that include Rio Tinto, BHPBillition, Vale, Xstrata, and the Moultrie Group; and the relatively minor visibility of energy companies in contrast to similar meetings in the US where oil and gas interests seem to reign (Petrobras being the only major energy-based industrial sponsor). The depth and breadth of the scientific presentations on mineral resources is hugely impressive: ore petrogenetic processes, geochemical and geophysical exploration methods, remote sensing, structural control of ore deposits, tectonic distribution of ore deposits, role of ore deposits in evolution of the crust, metallurgical processing, minerals that support emerging technologies....And it is very clear that production of minerals is of very high interest from an economic standpoint accounts for 54% of Australia's total goods and services, and has invested more than $125 billion in Australia in the last 10 years." China's rising demand for mineral commodities (Acrobat (PDF) 472kB Aug24 12) (source USAid) will far outstrip Chinese domestic production of minerals (source USGS), and this is a large focus of the talks at this meeting and an undercurrent of conversation throughout. Mineral exploration is pushing frontiers: looking deeper, at lower grade deposits, and in developing countries that are actively seeking to develop their resources as a primary economic driver. And the big mining companies are actively hiring—but they are targeting their recruitment efforts at Canadian, Australian, and Chinese students. (I did run into one of my former students from Montana State University here in Brisbane, and he is working in the mining industry—but hired by a major international mining company to work on a roll front uranium deposit here in Australia. There were few employment opportunities in the mining sector for him in America).
I would suggest that this state of affairs is a major short coming of geoscience education in America, and actually reflects a forthcoming national crisis. A 2008 review of degree requirements for BS degrees that only 2% of geology departments in the US required a course in Economic Geology Drummond and Marks, 2008, Journal of Geoscience Education. At my institution, we lost our Economic Geology course in 1986 when our administration chose to not replace our economic geologist upon his untimely death. Subsequently, I've only been able to cover a week or two of sulfide and oxide minerals and their occurrences in my Mineralogy course for majors, and spend about a week on mineral resources in my introductory Environmental Geology course. Otherwise, that's all the economic geology our students will get (in Montana, with its heritage of mining from the Virginia City gold rush to mining "the richest hill on Earth" at Butte). And I've personally been involved with exploration for talc, gold, molybdenum and uranium from Alaska across the length of the Rocky Mountains in the western US, and have contributed to environmental mine remediation projects throughout most of my career. But we just can't seem to "fit" Economic Geology into our curriculum And I suspect that this is true for many, if not most, of the geoscience departments in America—there are not many faculty trained or interested in teaching economic geology, and other courses have taken precedence given limited course credits in a degree program (Drummond and Markin, 2008). So, where will the next generation of economic geologists come from to meet our national mineral needs?References
Drummond, C.N., and Marks, J.M., 2008, An Analysis of the Bachelor of Science in Geology Degree as Offered in the United States, Journal of Geoscience Education, v56, #2, http://nagt.org/nagt/jge/abstracts/mar08.html
USAid, China's Rising Demand for Mineral Commodities, http://www.fess-global.org/workingpapers/chinas_rising_demand_for_minerals.pdf
U. S. Geological Survey, 2010 Minerals Yearbook, China: http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/country/2010/myb3-2010-ch.pdf
U.S. Geological Survey, Mineral Commodity Summaries 2012, http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/mcs/2012/mcs2012.pdf
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