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Dr. Duncan R. Derry
The recipient of many honors and awards for his work, Derry had
special qualities which were described, at the time he received
an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of Toronto,
as "his humanity, his integrity, his logic and his wisdom."
He was a past-president of the Society of Economic Geologists,
and one of the original founders of the Geological Association
of Canada.
He also launched the Canadian Geological Foundation, and was a
member of the founding group of the Canadian Geoscience Council.
Among his many awards were the Logan Medal, presented for "distinguished
contributions to the earth sciences", and the Selwyn Blaylock
Medal from the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, "in
recognition of his meritorious service to the Canadian mining
industry in general, and especially related to his widely-recognized
talents in the geological sciences."
So highly was he valued in these sciences that in 1980, the Geological
Association of Canada inaugurated a new medal, the Duncan R. Derry
Medal, which is now awarded annually to an outstanding economic
geologist who has made major contributions in the field in Canada.
Dr. Derry was born in England in 1906, graduated at Cambridge
in honor science, then, moving to Canada, took his M.A. and Ph.D.
in geology at the University of Toronto.
In 1935, he joined Thayer Lindsley at Ventures Ltd., forerunner
of Falconbridge, and worked closely with Lindsley for many years
in a highly successful team. It was interrupted only by Derry's
service in World War II, as a squadron leader navigation training
officer.
At Ventures, he supervised exploration and mining programs in
Canada and many other countries, including South Africa, Greece,
Guyana, Chile, Peru, and Greenland. In Canada, he was responsible
for the mine geology for such operations as Canadian Malartic,
Matachewan Consolidated and Opemiska Copper. His contribution
to the success of the latter company was one of his most important
undertakings while with Ventures.
In 1954, Derry joined Rio Tinto as president of Rio Tinto Exploration,
and that job led to the acquisition and development of what is
now Rio Algom's bit uranium mines in the Elliot Lake area of Ontario.
Derry left Rio in 1960 to form his own consulting firm, Derry
Michener Booth & Wahl, which partnership has since become
a highly-respected, household name not just in Canada, but throughout
the mining world.
Dr. Derry added immeasurably not only to the advancement of the
geological sciences and their practical application to mining
development in Canada and elsewhere, but to the publication of
world literature in the field. Most notably, he spent some three
years researching, compiling, funding and publishing an impressive
"World Atlas of Geological and Mineral Deposits."
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