Dear Colleagues:

The following obituary appeared in the latest Northern Miner. A more
extensive review of Brant's career appeared in the Leading Edge (The Leading
Edge, 03 (1984), no. 06, 18-26). For anyone not having access to the SEG's
digital archive, I would be pleased to fwd them a copy of this article.

Ken Witherly
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Dr. Arthur A. Brant, a founding father of mining geophysics, died recently
at the age of 91 in Tucson, Arizona. 'Doc Brant' as he was fami1iliarly
referred to by his many students and colleagues at Newmont Mining, enjoyed
an extraordinary career in exploration geophysics, including initiating
develop of induced polarization and the Newmont helicopter AEM system. An
imposing man with a fondness for large cigars, Doc was noted for his out
spoken opinions on politics as well as geophysics.

Born in Toronto in 1910, Brant received a B.Sc. (Honors) from the University
of Toronto in 1932, winning the gold medal in
mathematics and physics, followed by an M.Sc. in 1933, at the same time
achieving distinction in several varsity sports, especially hockey. After a
brief period at Princeton, he received an ex-change fellowship to Germany,
where he his doctorate at the University of Berlin and, in addition, coached
the first German national hockey team in the 1936 Olympics.

Returning to Toronto as an assistant professor of physics in 1937, he soon
made headlines by discovering a high grade hematite deposit through the ice
under Steep Rock Lake using electrical methods. Rising to associate
professor in 1940, he married his college sweetheart, Lilli Umbach, (later a
noted portrait painter) and rapidly developed an extensive consulting
practice.

In 1949, he left the University of Toronto to become director of Newmont's
Geophysical Department in Jerome, Arizona. Drawing on a talented team of
former students from Toronto (many of who became noted geophysicists), the
Newmont group under Brant to successfully developed the induced polarization
method of detection of disseminated sulphides, pioneered a variety of
borehole techniques, established a solid foundation for electromagnetic
techniques and developed the first time domain EM system, as well as the
first helicopter AEM system.

Brant remained with Newmont until his nominal retirement in 1975, after
which he served as initial chairman of the GEOSAT
committee, and as adjunct professor at Columbia University and the
University of Arizona.

Brant published and lectured widely and received numerous honors and awards
during his long career, including the Society of Exploration Geophysicists
highest award, the Maurice Ewing medal, in 1987. In that same year, a group
of associates and friends established the Arthur Brant Chair in Exploration
Geophysics at the McKay School of Mines in Reno, NV, followed by the Brant
Laboratory in 1998.

In recognition of the many developments pioneered by Brant, and the Newmont
group in advancing exploration geophysics in
Canada, the Canadian Exploration Geophysical Society intends to establish a
Canadian prize or scholarship in his honor.
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