Posted by admin - June 17th, 2009
Charles Ager, founder of Nanominerals Corporation, is considered a Professional Geophysical Engineer (PEng) and a Registered Professional Geoscientist (PGeo) in the province of British Columbia, Canada. He is also a Registered Geophysicist (PGP) in California, USA.
In 1974, Charles Ager received his Geophysics PhD from the University of British Columbia, Vancouver.
A year before that, Charles Ager was honored with a Predoctoral Scholarship Killam Trust Award. This award is given by the Canada Council to Canadian researchers who dedicate themselves in various fields of sciences like social, natural, health, or human sciences.
Two years earlier, while at the University of British Columbia, Ager completed his Geophysics Master of Science. Prior to that, Ager was a Bachelor of Arts in Math/Physics major at the California State University in Sacramento and graduated with honors in 1968.
Between 1961 and 1965, Ager was with the United States Air Force’s Tactical Air Command. At Lowry Air Force Base in Denver, Colorado, he obtained an Electronics Technician, or ET, certificate and developed F105 Fighter Bombers.
Charles Ager is also affiliated with establishments such as the Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of British Columbia and Society of Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration.
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Posted by admin - January 14th, 2009
From its humble beginnings, the Bacardi-Stockholm Water Foundation Professorship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has championed water conservation efforts and the development and improvement of water quality all over the world.Funded initially by a $2 million endowment from the Bacardi Family Foundation, the Bacardi-Stockholm Water professorship has been continually monitoring the water supply of this planet. The professorship is part of the Bacardi environmental policy, an important mission of the Bacardi family. Today, the current Bacardi-Stockholm Water Professor is now on a mission to further advance water conservation and development research. Tapped by NASA, Professor Dara Entekhabi and a team of scientist will design a satellite that will greatly aid monitoring efforts of the world’s water resources.Prof. Dara Entekhabi’s satellite will be used for the Soil Moisture Active-Passive mission (SMAP) which will be launched in December 2012. The mission’s satellite is slated to gather valuable information from the levels of soil moisture from various locations of the world. The said pieces of information will then be used to analyze and provide precise weather forecasts as well as accurate predictions on the global carbon cycle.Prof. Dara Entekhabi, who is also the director of the Parsons Laboratory for Environmental Science and Engineering in MIT’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, stated that soil moisture is vital in determining the status of water, energy and carbon cycles of the planet. Essential processes such as evaporation and plant transpiration is also linked with soil moisture.The SMAP Mission is based on an earlier satellite project that was also commissioned by NASA and led by Prof. Dara Entekhabi.
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