Member Login

Login
No account yet? Register
 

Search GeoPrac

Site Sponsors

Even More News and Blog Posts!

New on GeoPrac.net, the Other News and Blogs page has had a major facelift. To supplement our regular GeoNews and Articles, we aggregate news feeds and blog entries from all over the web into one easy to browse source. Check it out!  

Become an Author

GeoPrac.net is a community site, we are only as good as the content our members contribute!

Whether it's a one time contribution, or a monthly or quarterly article, please consider becoming an author

Subscribe by Email

Subscribe to GeoPrac.net Headlines by Email. Powered by FeedBurner.com, Don't forget to follow instructions to verify your subscription!

Enter your email address:

RSS Feeds

To subscribe to GeoPrac.net headlines, use one of the buttons below. Or view other available feeds or read more about RSS.

Home arrow Articles arrow Browse by Category arrow Miscellaneous arrow The Ultimate Geotechnical Engineering Challenge
The Ultimate Geotechnical Engineering Challenge - Intro and Background Print E-mail
Written by Ed Nowatzki   
Monday, 28 May 2007
Article Index
Intro and Background
The Geotechnical Challenge
Problems and Solutions 1
Problems and Solutions 2
Prologue
Digg!Reddit!
Del.icio.us!Google!
Facebook!Slashdot!
Technorati!StumbleUpon!
Newsvine!Furl!
Yahoo!Ma.gnolia!

Prologue

I have very fond memories of those days and the excitement that surrounded one of mankind’s greatest achievements.  To this day I cherish the commemorative pins shown in Figure 7 that Grumman’s management gave to their employees.  I left Grumman in 1972, about the time funding for the Apollo and Post-Apollo Programs was being substantially cut.  To make a bad pun, it did not take a rocket scientist to figure out that, with NASA’s lunar landing and exploration programs being phased out, the days of a geotechnical engineer in the employment of an aircraft manufacturer were numbered.  Fortunately, I was able to obtain a position with a geotechnical engineering consultant in New Jersey and get back to earth so-to-speak.  That position was the beginning of a career that has involved entirely different types of geotechnical engineering challenges almost every day, but none as great as the one described above.  It was the ultimate challenge, period!

By the way, I never took a course during my entire academic career through the Ph.D. that covered any of the topics discussed in this essay.  Neither did Les Karafiath.

Figure 7

Commemorative pins distributed to employees of Grumman Aerospace Corporation
Left – Lapel pin given to personnel of Grumman’s Apollo Project.
Right – Pin signifying the lunar contact light on the LM – given to all Grumman employees.

Acknowledgement

The author wishes to acknowledge Dr. Naresh C. Samtani, PE, PhD, President of NCS Consultants, LLC, for his effort in reviewing this article and providing comments.



Trackback(0)
Comments (0)add comment

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley
Smiley

security image
Write the displayed characters


busy
Last Updated ( Monday, 04 June 2007 )
 

Site Sponsors

Users Online

No Users Online

Statistics

Members: 81
News: 347
Web Links: 109

GeoPrac.net © 2007 Randy Post unless noted.
Terms of Use | Copyright Info | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Sitemap

Other Randy Post Sites: RnRPost.com | NameDrawing.net 

Article Copyright

All content in the ARTICLES section of GeoPrac.net is copyrighted by their authors unless otherwise noted and reproduced here with permission. Refer to the copyright page or the terms of use for more information.