Pioneering Canadian mining geophysicist, explorationist and entrepreneur, Duncan Crone

In a close contest with Doug Oldenburg nominated for his work in Electromagnetic Geophysics, and development of the UBC Geophysical Inversion Facility, Duncan Crone has been chosen by the global panel of judges to be into the International Mining Technology Hall of Fame in the Exploration category at the gala awards dinner in Denver on February 20th, during SME Conference week.

James Duncan Crone, 1929-2011, was known and recognised in the mining and exploration community around the globe. He was a very innovative, practical-minded geophysicist who made numerous important contributions to the advancement of mining geophysics and to mineral exploration discoveries during his long career.

He joined the remarkable group of innovative geophysicists working for Newmont in Jerome, Arizona under the legendary Dr Arthur Brant, which included Harry Seigel and Len Collett. Here, the practical application of Induced Polarisation to mineral exploration was born. Later, with co-operation from Newmont, Crone would use what he learned in Jerome to build practical IP and EM instrumentation which were simple to operate and extremely reliable.

In the early 1950s he returned to Canada and joined Radar Exploration where he was involved with magnetic, gravity, and vertical loop EM surveys following up early airborne EM surveys for massive sulphide deposits. One of his achievements during this time was to successfully apply gravity surveys to distinguish graphite from massive sulphides in the Bathurst mining camp.

Serving as Noranda’s first Chief Geophysicist from 1956 until 1962, his focus was to develop practical, portable EM systems that could be used to find near-surface massive sulphides. The JEM and the Shootback EM method were invented and developed, constituting great improvements over other instrumentation available at that time. The Shootback method was an ingenious way to remove the effects of topography on tilt-angle EM surveys.

In 1962, he founded Crone Geophysics where the Shootback EM method was further improved and put into production. His innovation and inventiveness led him to produce numerous practical and portable instruments such as the CEM (Horizontal Shootback EM with larger coils than the JEM), the VEM (Vertical Loop EM transmitter hoisted on a mast, with tilt-angle CEM receiver), and the RADEM (VLF receiver). These were sold to a worldwide market. Crone, always close to the action in mineral exploration, was involved with numerous discoveries while consulting for Amoco and Mattagami Lake Mines among others, many of which were based on his picks of priority targets from airborne surveys, and followed-up with his EM instruments.

In the 1970s, as Induced Polarization became more widely used around the world, Crone also saw the need for a practical, lightweight, easy to operate IP system. This led to the development of a battery-powered IP transmitter and compact receiver which facilitated shallow IP surveys in difficult and remote locations as well as borehole IP surveys.

Realising that there was a growing need to look deeper into the earth, and drawing on early instrumentation and research by Newmont, he began to develop borehole and surface time-domain EM equipment, which he named Pulse EM. This was the first commercially available surface time-domain EM system in the world, and it was an immediate success. It was soon being used worldwide.

In 1978, the first commercial Borehole Pulse EM system in the world was produced by Crone Geophysics. Today, borehole Pulse EM is an integral part of many exploration programs, and has led to the discovery of many deep massive sulphide orebodies.