Bruno's DEG Legacy Lives On

'Founding Father's' Impact Felt

This year, the AAPG Division of Environmental Geosciences (DEG) celebrates its 10-year anniversary — the AAPG House of Delegates voted to establish DEG at the 1992 annual meeting held in Calgary. Prior to this action, all environmental issues for AAPG were the responsibilities of the Hydrology and Waste Management and Environmental Geology committees.

As a way to recognize our 10th year as a division, it is appropriate to not only reflect on our beginnings but also mention some recent developments that invoke a certain confidence for the future.

No one was more active in the creation of the DEG than our "founding father," the late Bernold M. "Bruno" Hanson.

An AAPG past-president and Sidney Powers Memorial Award winner from Midland, Texas, Bruno was DEG's first president and served in that role for two years. He was awarded Honorary Membership in the division in 1997 and received our highest tribute, the DEG President's Award, in 1998.

Environmental stewardship, as well as environmental leadership, from those of us in the oil and gas industry was very important to Bruno. He conscientiously worked to ensure that environmental issues and responsible environmental practices were both recognized and integrated into petroleum geology and our industry activities. It was his foresight and leadership that led to environmental issues and concerns of the membership transitioning from committee-level status to a division of the Association.

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This year, the AAPG Division of Environmental Geosciences (DEG) celebrates its 10-year anniversary — the AAPG House of Delegates voted to establish DEG at the 1992 annual meeting held in Calgary. Prior to this action, all environmental issues for AAPG were the responsibilities of the Hydrology and Waste Management and Environmental Geology committees.

As a way to recognize our 10th year as a division, it is appropriate to not only reflect on our beginnings but also mention some recent developments that invoke a certain confidence for the future.

No one was more active in the creation of the DEG than our "founding father," the late Bernold M. "Bruno" Hanson.

An AAPG past-president and Sidney Powers Memorial Award winner from Midland, Texas, Bruno was DEG's first president and served in that role for two years. He was awarded Honorary Membership in the division in 1997 and received our highest tribute, the DEG President's Award, in 1998.

Environmental stewardship, as well as environmental leadership, from those of us in the oil and gas industry was very important to Bruno. He conscientiously worked to ensure that environmental issues and responsible environmental practices were both recognized and integrated into petroleum geology and our industry activities. It was his foresight and leadership that led to environmental issues and concerns of the membership transitioning from committee-level status to a division of the Association.

Upon Bruno's passing in April 2000, the DEG wanted to create a vehicle to perpetually honor and recognize his leadership role in our division and our Association. The DEG leadership worked with the AAPG Foundation to establish the Bernold M. "Bruno" Hanson Memorial Environmental Grant. This grant, with an endowment currently valued at over $33,000, is now a part of the Foundation's annual Grants-in-Aid Program that supports geology graduate students.

The major stipulation for this grant requires that it be used for the "study of specific environmental issues related to exploration and production of petroleum and energy minerals, or application of technologies developed in the petroleum or energy minerals industries to environmental problems."


I have served on the AAPG Foundation Grants-in-Aid (GIA) Committee for the last several years, and this has allowed me to keep up with current thesis and dissertation research activities. Many of the GIA applications that have come across my desk have had interesting environmental components although, on-balance, they have not competed favorably with the more traditional industrially oriented proposals.

With the creation of the Hanson Memorial Environmental Grant, we have made a permanent commitment to keep petroleum environmental issues at the forefront of the GIA program. This sends a clear signal to the work force of the future that we believe environmental concerns to be a routine part of doing business in today's world, and that we are serious about practicing this belief.

Consider the matter of BTEX (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylenes) in aquifers — a major and recurring environmental problem in industrialized countries. These compounds are routinely produced by refineries and petrochemical plants worldwide, and have chemical characteristics that make them troublesome in the natural environment. They:

  • Are soluble in fresh water.
  • Readily diffuse from where they are introduced to adjacent areas.
  • Can potentially impact a large aquifer volume.

Technologies like pump-and-treat are often deployed to remediate affected aquifers, but these may be expensive and require long-term operational commitments. Thus a need exists for an inexpensive, less intrusive and more effective means to remediate aquifers that have been impacted by BTEX.

Work being carried out by the first-ever recipient of the Hanson Memorial Environmental Grant (HMEG) may help provide a solution to this problem.


The award was made through last year's GIA Program to Jackson M. Spain , a graduate student in the Department of Geological Sciences at Virginia Tech. The science being done by Jackson is high-caliber, fills a crucial need and will be widely deployed upon successful completion.

Jackson is conducting a study to optimize a technology known as in-situ, or intrinsic bioremediation. It is a method that relies on naturally occurring microbes to degrade and consume organic contaminants, and has great potential as a remediation tool.

A key objective of his work is to better understand the fluid-rock controls that influence microbial degradation of BTEX dissolved in water. The research may indicate whether subtle geochemical differences in aquifer characteristics allow degradation to occur. For example, the distribution of iron-oxide rich materials may exert a major control on whether microbes are able to consume BTEX or not.

Such an investigation is a bit removed from the "source-reservoir-seal" type studies routinely done in our industry, but it is a good example of how our profession adapts to address changing needs.

It also illustrates that geology is a multifaceted field. We routinely work with the rock-water-atmospheric system, and thus we are among the best-suited disciplines to tackle the environmental issues associated with such systems. Further, it helps ensure that we will remain at the forefront of environmental stewardship.

I think Bruno Hanson recognized much of this before we did. Our commitment to environmental awareness is a major part of the legacy he left our organization, our profession, and our industry. Our division is only 10 years into this legacy, but we will not stop.

Thanks, Bruno.

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