Geologist's work spans globe, philanthropy helps students
Dale Grant, who has âalways been a Buff,â has moved to establish a major scholarship for geological sciences students
Dale Grantâs career and travel have spanned the worldâand included jobs in eastern China and Saudi Arabiaâand now his geology training helps quickly alert the world where, how big and how damaging severe earthquakes are.
At the University of Colorado Boulder in the 1970s, Grant became energized by the great outdoors, and his career âseemingly fell in front of me.â Now, the man who says heâs âalways been a Buffâ has moved to establish a significant scholarship for geological sciences students with his estate.
Grantâs career, both in college and beyond, has been far-flung and meaningful. He hopes his scholarship fund helps enable future students to find similarly rewarding careers.
Like many students, Grant did not arrive at CU Boulder planning to become a geologist. He began as an engineering student, but later changed course. A dorm buddy got Grant interested in both rugby and geology.
Grant was working up to 30 hours a week as a dishwasher and food-server in the dorms, and he found that he was âstrugglingâ with his classes. Meanwhile, he discovered the joy of skiing, which âbegan to dominate my winter life.â In summers, heâd work as a whitewater-raft guide.
Academically, a presentation by geology Professor Emeritus Theodore Walker seized Grantâs attention. âIt so interested me that I changed majors.â
But he took a break from college in 1974, in his junior year, to move to Crested Butte, work as a lift operator and join skiingâs âfreestyle craze,â along with some high-school friends. He spent a couple years skiing, rafting and rough-necking on oil rigs.
In July 1976, Grant was guiding whitewater-rafting trips in Idaho just before the devastating Big Thompson Flood, which killed 144 people and remains Coloradoâs deadliest flood. The state highway department needed people with math and science backgrounds to work on a survey crew to find the center-line of the decimated highway.
âI learned how to be a surveyor, which I didnât think anything of at the time.â
He returned to CU-Boulder in 1978 and got his geology degree with a geophysics option in 1979. Within two weeks of graduation, he saw an ad for geothermal exploration that required a background in surveying. He got the job, which took him around the western United States.
He then took a job with Geophysical Services Inc., which deployed him to western Oman. Grant spent two years there, working seven weeks on, three weeks off. In his off time, he went to Greece, Austria and Nepal, where he did the Annapurna base-camp trek.
Later, GSI sent Grant and others to western China, where the team used seismic sensors to search for oil and gas. He saw the Great Wall of China before it was rebuilt and saw the terra cotta soldiers in Xian just as their excavation was beginning.
Grant worked in Saudi Arabia, where he did computer processing and interpretation of data. The work was stimulating, but the working conditions were constrained. Grant recalls disembarking from a jetliner to walk past a phalanx of automatic weapons and then being required to surrender his passport. He and his colleagues were driven to a luxurious compound that was surrounded by barbed wire. He describes it as a âgilded cage.â
A bus ferried them to and from the work site. In his off time, he went on safari in Kenya, completed two treks in Nepal, traversed 14 countries in Europe, heli-skied in New Zealand and explored much of Asia.
Heâd seen pretty much everything he wanted to see in the world, and after a few years, he chose to return to Colorado, where he earned a teaching certificate at Western State College in Gunnison, a locale convenient for skiing at Crested Butte.
After teaching awhile, he took a job at the U.S. Geological Surveyâs Yucca Mountain Program. Then he moved to the USGS National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, where heâs served as a geophysicist for a decade and a half.
Grant is on a team that determines where, when and how big significant quakes are. The USGS NEIC has monitors that flag potential earthquakes 24 hours a day, seven days a week. âOur job is to take a look at (the data) and determine, âIs it real? Is it an earthquake, or is it noise: an explosion or some other event?ââ
Having made that determination, the team will issue an initial report on the location and magnitude of the quake. This generally happens in 10 to 12 minutes for events in the United States and within 20 minutes for quakes elsewhere in the world. The NEIC issues refined reports as more data are verified.
The work is important. âItâs critical when an earthquake happens to know exactly where it was and how big it was in order to determine the possibilities of damage and casualties,â Grant says. The NEIC makes this information available to the first responders.
On average worldwide, there are about 1,000 quakes of magnitude 4 or greater per month.
His degree from CU Boulder became the âmeans to my career,â Grant notes, adding that there was never any question about where he would study. CU has always been âmy school,â he adds. âThatâs where I always wanted to go. There was never anywhere else.â
Born in Casper, Wyo., Grant grew up in Denver. Attending CU Boulder seemed a foregone conclusion. âOn Saturdays, weâd get around the radio and listen to the Buffs games back in the â50s and â60s.â
That deep connection is one reason he plans to endow a scholarship fund in geological sciences. âThatâs where Iâd like to see people study, because itâs something in my heart, something I always enjoyed. And also think itâs the future, because the environment is so trashed right now that if we donât have people who are knowledgeable and concerned about it, I donât see any way out of it.â
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