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American Mining Hall of Fame
2002 Medal of Merit Recipient

Kenneth L. Zonge
Ken Zonge is president of Zonge Engineering and
research Organization, Inc., of Tucson, Arizona, which he founded in
1972 to make use of his Ph.D. thesis on broadband induced
polarization (IP), which is also called complex resistivity (CR).
This electrical method, for which he holds the patent, was
originally developed and successfully used for disseminated copper
exploration. Six years later the company developed instrumentation
for the controlled source audio-frequency magnetotellurics (CSAMT)
system, which was oriented toward massive sulfide detection. These
two techniques were combined in a single receiver for commercial use
and the company began to manufacture and market geophysical
instrumentation on a worldwide basis.
Zonge Engineering has since expanded into all
electrical geophysical methods and today provides services and
instrumentation for exploration programs for minerals, hydrocarbons,
geothermal resources, engineering and environmental concerns, and
unexploded ordinance (UXO). The company has its main manufacturing
and operating office in Tucson, Arizona, and operating offices in
Sparks, Nevada; Fairbanks, Alaska; Adelaide, Australia; Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil; and Antofagasta, Chile.
In 1995, Ken received the Society of
Exploration Geophysicists Enterprise Award for “having
demonstrated courage, ingenuity, and achievement while risking his
own resources and future in developing a product which is recognized
as a distinct and worthy contribution to the industry.”
He received a BS degree in Electrical
Engineering from the University of Alaska in 1962 and MS and Ph.D.
degrees in Electrical Engineering and Geosciences from the
University of Arizona in 1972. Ken is now an adjunct professor at
the University of Arizona. |