Hi All -

The Mira Geoscience Rock Property Database System (RPDS) is no longer publicly 
available online, and has been replaced by our Geoscience INTEGRATOR data 
management solution.

However, the database itself still exists - it contains a lot of public data 
from the Geological Survey of Canada, and also some from other parts of the 
world.  It also contains a lot of published data from the standard 
petrophysical texts (CRC handbooks etc).

I am certain the database could be revived if there were commercial interest.

Anyone interested can contact me at 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.

Regards,

James



From: SEGMIN <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Mike Dentith via 
SEGMIN
Sent: Monday, 9 December 2019 10:16 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Mike Dentith <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [SEGMIN] society of physical properties of materials

  This message originated outside Mira Geoscience.
In my experience a very  useful petrophysical database is that for Finland.  It 
is a very large (~130,000 samples, density, susc, int of rem mag) and free to 
download  from the GTK website.  The rock names are in Finnish - not 
surprisingly - but most are similar to their English equivalents and for those 
that were not obvious one of our students kindly created a cheat sheet which I 
can provide if anyone's interested.
Mike

From: SEGMIN 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> On 
Behalf Of Rob Gordon via SEGMIN
Sent: Monday, 9 December 2019 4:39 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: Rob Gordon <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Re: [SEGMIN] society of physical properties of materials

John McGaughey of Mira started a significant project to database physical 
properties in the early 2000's.

I am not sure if this is what people are interested in. Arguably, this type of 
work should be continued...
This was an old unpublished doc from the usgs, I found about 15 years ago to be 
quite useful.

Rob















Robert L. Gordon P.Eng., MBA., HFGC

2284 Carol Road
Oakville, OM
L6J 6B6

905 337 9377
Cell: 647 228 9577

www.iwaynegretzky.com<http://www.iwaynegretzky.com/>
www.algonquinheritage.com<http://www.algonquinheritage.com/>

[cid:[email protected]]<http://www.linkedin.com/in/RobLGordon>






From: SEGMIN [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mel Best 
via SEGMIN
Sent: Sunday, December 8, 2019 1:40 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: Mel Best
Subject: Re: [SEGMIN] society of physical properties of materials

    Randy Enkin at the GSC office in Sidney, BC has been working on a Canadian 
petrophysical database. He may know of other databases as well.

        Mel Best

On 08/12/2019 9:33 AM, Ed Cunion via SEGMIN wrote:
Sergio,

No, but pleading ignorance here for not being aware off the top of the head of 
any exclusively petrophysical societies. It might be a good exercise though to 
take a day to compile a list of petrophysical database and/or drill log 
internet sites.

The NGU (Norway) had an online petrophysical listing (Dragon?) up a while back 
that were used as a reference, it's guessed other national geological surveys 
may have something similar and/or perhaps more recent online worth checking. 
i.e. Finland, Sweden, Australia (CSIRO?), Canada (NRCAN?), the US, UK, the GFZ 
etc. and also perhaps some universities. Mineralogy societies or groups might 
also have some physical properties databases up in the public domain with 
density susceptibility etc. There may be accessible research papers or 
exploration report submissions up also. looking for these individual 
papers/reports may take more than a day,

Regards,

Ed

Ed Cunion
Red Rocks Geophysical
Lakewood, CO 80228 USA
mobile/text 001-720-300-3641

On Thu, Dec 5, 2019 at 3:13 PM S E Geoscience and Exploration via SEGMIN 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Dear all,

as we all know, in Geophysics we investigate the subsurface at different 
scales: from studies covering the whole Earth, such as Seismology, to insights 
into the first meters, such as GPR.

At the end we deal with material properties. Is someone out there also a member 
of any society of physical properties of materials?

Thanks,


--
Sergio Espinosa, Ph.D., P.Geo
S E Geoscience & Exploration
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