|
Eulogy for Dr. George Clinton Milligan
Eulogy by Marcos Zentilli
February 3rd, 2018, King’s College Chapel, Halifax, NS.
Thank you Marlene, Betty Ann, Jayar, family and friends.
I transmit the regrets and condolences of many geologists who would like to be here, but are this weekend participating in the Annual Colloquium of the Atlantic Geoscience Society, this year in Truro.
It is an honour to be speaking on behalf of a person who touched my life and influenced me in more ways than I had realized. I will not mention all the names of those who wrote nice things about Dr. Milligan, because it would take me too long; I’m sorry for the omissions.
I was hired for one year while Dr. Milligan was on sabbatical absence. We (with 3 children and my recently widowed mother) occupied their house in Parker Street and the Milligan family sort of adopted us.
Dr. Milligan (I only started calling him Clint 15 years later), was the kind of person who inspired that kind of respect. When I opened his office in the Dunn Building in early January 1973 I found detailed instructions on what he expected me to do and teach. First was an apology and a pile of Structural Geology assignments in yellow bristol board, which he had no time to grade; I was lucky that I had learned analytical geometry while studying engineering, because he taught a projection system that few geologists would know how to handle. He believed that geologists should be able to think and solve problems in three dimensions and he was right. That was for Structural Geology. Since I was his replacement, I was to also teach four more courses that same term: Economic Geology I, Advanced Economic Geology II, a Seminar on Geology of the Canadian Shield, and Photogeology (the use of air photography in mapping geology). I am convinced that nobody in the department was aware that he taught five courses at a time. Just fresh from grad school, I had no teaching experience.
But teaching was not the only thing that Dr. Milligan did. To function, a geology department requires thin sections of rocks, and polished sections of ores for microscopic study. So, he built what I believe was the best thin sections laboratory in the country, adapted machines, and trained a technician who was able to rise to his very high expectations. Gordon Brown retired recently; for him Dr. Milligan was a father figure rather than a boss. The Department needed copies of line drawings, maps and manuscripts, and used an ancient “ozalid” machine that used light-sensitive paper which was developed by ammonia vapor; awful fumes wafted ominously through the Dunn Building. Well, Dr. Milligan was the only person who knew how to make it work properly, so he did. And then he was Undergraduate Advisor, meaning his half-closed office door was knocked at all times of day and evening, including weekends; the department was buzzing with activity after working hours.
And then there was an Open House day when the public came to visit the university. Geology students were remarkably cooperative and enthusiastic in showing what a geologist does: the common room was a full field camp with tents, sleeping bags, even a mock fire.
There were displays of microscopes, compasses, geology picks, minerals, rocks, fossils, gold panning. Who else was close enough to the students and knew how to organize people? So, Dr. Milligan did. And there was a mock-up of a volcano about 6 feet long and 4 feet tall, and a reddish chemical was lit up on its crater and spewed the most incredible fireworks and heavy smoke, to the delight of the visitors. But then we had to evacuate the floor until the presumably-toxic fumes dissipated.
Dr. Milligan, taught Field Methods. In May there was Field School, and who organized the troops? The Field School was based at Crystal Cliffs camp, and later a Saint Francis Xavier residence, Antigonish. I was told that Dr. Milligan was less popular when he used a bugle to wake up the unenthusiastic, hungover students. Mapping exercises were at fossil-rich Arisaig, Northumberland Strait, near a place called Malignant Cove (after the ship Malignant, which ran aground there during the American Revolution); the students called it Milligan Cove. Epic were the traverses along the brooks: in those years the woods were knee-deep in snow in May. Dr. Milligan taught an ingenious method he had developed in Manitoba, to plot accurate geological maps along brooks. While recording the geology, the student counted paces following only 2 directions on the compass: say so many paces to the north, then turned at right angles to the east across the brook, so many paces, then turned north, then east, and so on. The track was simple to keep up in 2 columns in the notebook, and the zig-zag maps were extremely easy to plot on graph paper.
Where did Dr. Milligan learn all these geometric and accurate things? Once visiting him at the veteran’s hospital he told us about his work during the 1944 Italy campaign in World War II, because of his engineering training, he was ordered to advise the artillery generals of the deviation the gunners should apply due to the changing winds in the Apennines; not only did the winds change with altitude but depending on the time of the day. Assembling meteorological data transmitted from the field, he used high-powered trigonometry and geometry, with a slide rule (only gray-haired people know what I mean; they never ran out of charge. Because some targets were up to 20 km away, he said deviations from the bullseye due to wind could be 2 km or more. He recounted with pride that once he had a hard time persuading the general of a particularly tricky wind situation near the Adriatic Sea; he insisted and was the temporary hero when the artillery shot hit exactly on the roof of a Nazi ammunitions depot near Ravenna.
Casey Ravenhurst PhD, 1987), remembers: “He always wore a neck brace because of wear and tear from the thump line(?) he used to carry heavy packs full of rocks out of the bush”.
His work in Manitoba in the 50s left a lasting impact. I had seen references to a Milligan (1960) publication (Geology of the Lynn Lake district; Manitoba Mines Branch, Publication 57-1, massive 317p) so I wrote to Dr. Scott Anderson (1998 PhD of one of Dr, Milligan’s ex-students, Professor Becky Jamieson), current Chief Geologist of the institution, now renamed “Growth, Enterprise and Trade”, about what his organization considered its impact to be; within minutes he answered, and I quote:
“Sorry to learn of the passing of G.C. Milligan. A well-worn copy of Publication 57-1 resides on a shelf in my office. This publication was noteworthy for a number of reasons. It was the first regional-scale compilation of the Lynn Lake belt – one of the most important Paleoproterozoic greenstone belts in the world. As Milligan states in the introduction, the geological maps that accompanied the report covered an area of approximately 3,630 square miles, or “…a little less than half the area of Massachusetts.” The preliminary mapping was completed between 1946 and 1950 by a large team of geologists that included Milligan, just after the discovery of the famous Lynn Lake nickel sulphide deposit. Prior to 1953, the only access to the area was by canoe or floatplane. Milligan followed up the preliminary mapping with more detailed work during the field seasons of 1954 and 1955, and parts of 1956 and 1958. Unfortunately, much of the preliminary mapping was done using inaccurate and highly distorted base maps (the best available at that time). In order to produce a set of maps of “reasonable accuracy and consistency”, Milligan went through the laborious process of reconstructing the original mapping, including more than 3000 miles of traverse lines, by checking the original field notes and maps of each geologist against aerial photographs to identify locations of mapped outcrop. Milligan then compiled and synthesized all available geological information, resulting in a publication that represented a truly monumental achievement, which has helped guide research and exploration in the Lynn Lake belt for more than 50 years.” * (at the bottom, see additional evaluation of the same work by a retired Manitoba Survey geologist)
Frank Nolan (BSc, 1963), one of his early students, who liked Dr. Milligan very much and recently visited him at Camp Hill, said to me: “Milligan was a pretty humble guy who wouldn’t think of bragging about his accomplishments.”
“Reasonable accuracy and consistency” were very important to Dr. Milligan, and he expected it from his students. Craig Miller (BSc (Honours) 1974; MSc 1979) wrote: “One of his mantras was that although interpretations change, good descriptions don’t. For an exam in structural geology,
Dr Milligan handed out the thick map package from his memoir on the Lynn Lake area. The exam consisted of a number of questions on structural geology related to the maps. When he reviewed the exam in class, he said that if his interpretations were taken as being the right answer, we all failed miserably. However, he said that many of our arguments were good ones, and that he had to dig out his original field notes to prove us wrong”.
His former undergraduate students use expressions like: David MacDonald (BSc, 1982) “He was a true gentleman” , Peter Thomas (BSc(Honours), 1980) “Dr. Milligan was my favourite professor”; “He was a great role model for scores of young geologists”. “In my undergraduate days one year I was the only student to enroll in his 4th year Structural Geology. He taught it anyway, one afternoon a week, in his office. Best course I ever took!”.
“Stories of his adventures in Labrador and the Manitoba bush, and stories of those who were his mentors, filled our heads with possibilities”.
Labrador Expedition, 1947 (PDF – 10 Mb)
Thomas Duffett (BSc 1979; Geologic Technologist, and Instructor at Dalhousie) wrote: Dr. Milligan is the main reason I stayed in geology. My marks were never stellar, but he saw past the marks and encouraged me to continue, and 43 years later, I am still going strong-ish. He taught us how to map using the most basic tools…techniques that I try to pass on to our current students as I instruct at current field schools.”
I was particularly touched by what a former Icelandic graduate student (Johann Helgason – PhD, 1983, now with the Geological Survey of Iceland) wrote: “I vividly recall the times that I and Nancy Gruver-Van Wagoner (PhD 1981) went over to the Dunn Building and took lessons on Mid-Ocean Ridges with Dr. Milligan and he would bring in people like Dr. Charlotte Keen from the Geological Survey of Canada at BIO. We looked at the ocean ridge phenomena from various new angles and learned a lot. He is missed.”
Dr. George Clinton Milligan and his wife Bobby frequently opened their home to students and colleagues, in a warm and generous way that is rarely experienced these days. My granddaughter Mallory Williams-Zentilli visited Clint in my name at the veterans’ hospital, where she was volunteering as a Dalhousie Nursing student; she said: “Tata, you have to visit him soon”. I had scheduled to visit him on Thursday 25th at 11:30 and had printed some documents that I wanted to share with him about the recent passing, in Italy, of his former student and colleague Fab Aumento (PhD 1965). Clint left us on Tuesday the 23rd.
For me Clint was a true gentleman, unassuming, a kind but demanding mentor, a friend and an example of unstinting dedication to students. When he retired as Emeritus Professor, the Department held a Symposium on Undergraduate Geology Education in his honour, and our best lecture room in the building is known as the Milligan Room.
I end by quoting one of his former students:
Dr. Milligan was “A true Geologist in every sense of the word and I am extremely proud to have been touched by his shadow. We all are.”
Thank you.
Marcos Zentilli
Emeritus Professor
Department of Earth Sciences
Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS.
- “George Milligan’s comprehensive report was our bible to get us stated, at the Manitoba Survey, in remapping the Lynn Lake volcanic belt in the seventies. He did his PhD on the intrusions there and divided them into pre and post Sickle. He nailed the basic geology back then without age data, trace-element chemistry or global tectonic theory. His old Wasekwan amphibolite and its coeval (pre-Sickle) intrusions remain as the now known and dated (~1890 to 1830 million year) old subduction related (arc-backark) volcanics. His younger (~1835-1830 m.y.) Sickle Group sediments are the record of the early continental collisions that built Manitoba and the largest part of North America. … .. In1978 Paul Gilbert and Ric Syme remapped the main volcanics; Paul Lenton and I remapped a lot of the sediments…. George Milligan’s map of the Sickle sediments is still definitive. He mapped clean burnt-over areas. We had grey rock covered with grey lichen. Typically, we did our work standing on the shoulders of a giant.” Dr. Herman Zwanzig, 3-2-2018
Obituary for George Clinton Milligan
Dr. Prasanta Sarkar (PhD, 1978), a Canadian who truly believed our best days are ahead
Dr. Prasanta Sarkar: Geologist. Author. Entrepreneur. Grandfather. Born Oct. 29, 1937, in Calcutta, India; died Sept. 30, 2017, in Toronto; of septic shock; aged 79.
Prasanta Sarkar was born in pre-independence India during tumultuous times. As a child, he witnessed gaunt victims of the Bengal famine dying quietly on the crowded sidewalks and the bombing of a nearby gun factory. He then watched the chaos of India’s partition, during which he lost his father. But there was still time for fun. He developed a lifelong love for soccer and test cricket and, in the last half of his life, he was a devoted – if never uncritical – Toronto Blue Jays fan.
Prasanta was accepted into Stanford University but couldn’t raise the ship fare to leave the country. He studied geology at University of Calcutta instead – and dabbled in politics on the side. In 1963, he gained a life partner in an arranged marriage to Ruma, a city girl from New Delhi. His career in India’s emerging mining industry took them to remote parts of the country, much to my mom’s chagrin. Always the adventurer, he once participated on a man-eating tiger hunt, a story he rolled out with flourish for his wide-eyed grandchildren.
Prasanta and Ruma moved to Japan in the late 1960s when he joined a Japanese mining firm. But inspired by Pierre Trudeau – and a visit to the Canadian pavilion at Expo 1970 in Osaka – he chose Canada as our family’s new home. He went first and we joined him after my brother, Rana, was born. I remember my father standing at Halifax Airport wearing his familiar Wayfarer glasses as we descended down the stairs. He smelled of Old Spice and cigarettes – a familiar smell.
Prasanta pursued his PhD in geochemistry at Dalhousie University and we grew up riding bikes, roller-skating and immersing ourselves in pop culture. With Dad, we pored over atlases and almanacs, watched current-event shows and played our favourite game, “Find the Country,” using magnets on our metal globe.
He was a Killam Scholar and his PhD research led to the discovery of a tin mine in Nova Scotia. Prasanta founded Krigold Resources and spent months working in northern Ontario and Africa. His mining ventures were bold but seldom lucrative. He made and lost fortunes but was happy knowing he provided livelihoods in First Nations reserves and in remote villages around the globe.
We grew up with freedom, but also one caveat: do well academically. My Dad worried we were disadvantaged by our skin tone and insisted we work harder for it. In his later years, he mellowed, exploring spirituality, yoga and homeopathy. Prasanta’s laser focus then turned to a new passion, his grandchildren. He also wrote and published his memoir Shackles of Independence – A Memoir of an Unknown Indian for them. He suddenly passed away while writing “Part 2, the Canadian years.” In his last days, he was studying for his driving test and writing his 80th birthday party speech.
Prasanta left us stacks of newspapers, books and magazines full of marginalia and annotations despite losing most of his reading eye sight to diabetes. He also commissioned a pencil drawing of Lester B. Pearson to honour Pearson’s role in founding the pluralistic, progressive Canada we know today. He was that sort of Canadian. He truly believed our best days were ahead.
Rakhi Henderson is Prasanta’s daughter.
Lives Lived celebrates the everyday, extraordinary, unheralded lives of Canadians who have recently passed. To learn how to share the story of a family member or friend, go online to tgam.ca/livesguide
Sam Akande (PhD, 1983), elected Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Science (FAS) for 2018
Sam Akande was our PhD student (1983) – studied Gays River Zinc mine in NS. Has had an outstanding career in geoscience education in Africa,
San was just elected Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Science (FAS) for 2018; there are very few geoscientists in the Academy of Science:
https://www.unilorin.edu.ng/index.php/faculty-of-science/2448-professor-akande-s-o
2015 Grover E. Murray Memorial Distinguished Educator Award of AAPG. The Grover E. Murray Memorial Distinguished Educator Award is given in recognition of distinguished and outstanding contributions to geological education. Only one award is to be given per year unless funding is approved by the Executive Committee when the award slate is approved. Contributions leading to consideration for this award will most often involve the teaching and counseling of students at the university level, and contributions to the education of the public, and management of educational programs may also be recognized.
Samuel O. Akande (PhD), fnmgs, fnape
Professor
Department of Geology,
University of Ilorin,
PMB 1515, Ilorin,
Nigeria.
Tel: +234-70-391-237-24
Samuel Akande <samoakande2004@yahoo.com>
Brian Maciag and Erin Keltie visit the Canadian Light Source
On the Beamlines: Researchers from Dalhousie University are studying platinum, a critical metal, to determine how mining companies could best locate the precious metal when they conduct field surveys.
Platinum is in high demand for use in catalytic converters and other industrial processes. It is also used in jewelry because of its strength and resistance to tarnishing.
CLS enables world-leading research thanks to funding by Innovation in Canada, NSERC / CRSNG, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Government of Saskatchewan, NRC/CNRC, and the University of Saskatchewan. Thank you!
https://www.facebook.com/CanLightSource/posts/1597348650362012
Gavin McNamara and Kara Vogler attended the 2018 AGU in New Orleans, where they present a poster.
The American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting is the largest Earth and space science meeting in the world and was held in New Orleans, Louisiana this year. As first-time attendees, Kara Vogler and I (Gavin McNamara) were slightly overwhelmed by the busy schedule (over 20’000 oral and poster presentations) for the 5-day meeting.
At any one time, there were dozens of presentations covering a wide variety of topics ranging anywhere from inner earth processes, to climate science, to planetary geology. The most intriguing oral presentation that I attended during these five days was about the ethical and scientific complications of geo-engineering. Heated debate ensued regarding the moral implications of controlling our climate through injecting aerosols into the stratosphere or producing clouds over the ocean to increase albedo.
Assessment of methods for measuring glacier mass balance of the Taku and Lemon Creek glaciers, Southeast Alaska (PDF – 21 Mb)
Kara and I attended AGU to present the glacier research we took part in this past summer with the Juneau Icefield Research Program (JIRP). Our project was focused upon continuing the longest running study of any glacier in the Western hemisphere. We did this through digging 30 pits scattered throughout the Juneau Icefield in order to determine the amount of snow gained in the previous year’s snowfall. In combination with data reflecting the glacial ice loss, we calculated the mass of glacial ice lost or gained for the entire year. This is called the glaciological method, which we wanted to compare to data collected by NASA’s Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE). The GRACE data is collected by a pair of orbiting satellites that are able to detect changes in the mass of Earth’s surface (ie glacial ice gain or loss). We found that these two methods had a significant correlation, although the GRACE data is representative of a larger area than the glaciological data.
We presented our assessment of these methods in the form of a poster at AGU. This convention was a fantastic way to get an idea as to the diversity of research occurring in Earth sciences and to chat with masters and PhD students and professors and researchers from around the world. We also made sure to take advantage of the incredible live music and delicious food the Crescent City had to offer!
Introducing Doctor Jennifer Frail-Gauthier
Congratulations to Jennifer Frail-Gauthier on a very successful PhD defence yesterday, with External Examiner Dr. Gail Chmura.
Welcome to the Earth Sciences Blog space.
We hope that you will find this blogs informative and useful in obtaining information about us. Please visit often as we hope to keep this blog populated with our most recent events, notices and gossip.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 5
- 6
- 7