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David Leaman

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Name
  
David Leaman

Role
  
Author

Education
  
University of Tasmania


Books
  
Water: Facts, Issues, Problems and Solutions

David Leaman - Orford Prosser River Simazine Contamination


David Edward Leaman, born in Hobart, Tasmania is an author, structural geologist, geohydrologist and geophysicist.

Contents

Training

David Leaman, BSc PhD graduated from the University of Tasmania and studied in the Tasmanian Mines Department. His graduate research and early project work for the Department of Mines was related to engineering projects, groundwater assessments and fracture flow in crystalline rocks. He had been specifically trained as a government cadet for specialized engineering and hydrological projects. His title in the Mines Department was Groundwater and Engineering Geologist with the Geological Survey of Tasmania and he worked there from February 1966 till 1973. His doctoral thesis in 1970 derived from problems recognised in Midlands Tasmania and provided the first comprehensive descriptions of dolerite intrusions coupled with a theory of emplacement. The understanding was important for basin and catchment studies, and coal resource evaluations. The supervisor of this research was Prof. S. Warren Carey.

Endeavors

Leaman used to lecture and perform research at the University of Tasmania. From 1966 to 1981, he worked for the Geological Survey of Tasmania. His professional studies focus on dolerite, igneous intrusions, granite and the use of gravity and magnetic geophysical methods. Since 1981 he has maintained a geophysics consulting firm, Leaman Geophysics. In this role he participated in discovering mineral deposits at North Hilton, Queensland, North Rosebery in Tasmania, and coal in Queensland. Also he has been involved in oil and gas exploration in Papua New Guinea and Bass Strait. He has also assisted local communities and landowners who believe forestry has affected or will affect their land. He was a lecturer at the University of Tasmania from 1972 to 2001 in the areas of civil engineering, tectonics and environmental geology and led field excursion for applied geophysics. In this time he supervised Honours and Doctoral students as well. Funding cuts led to the termination of employment in 2001. He was a member of the Key Centre team for study of Ore Deposits.

Leaman was secured by applicants for appeal to the Tasmanian Resource Management and Planning Appeal Tribunal as their expert scientist to establish proof of the danger of logging and harvesting in the area of South Sister, near St. Marys, Tasmania. His long-term research and experience in holistic catchment assessment, and his independence from government and industry groups, has been valued by many local communities and landowners. He has sought to help such groups understand how land use changes might affect their properties and local water resources. He has been engaged to act as expert scientific witness in appeals concerning risks to water resources in Tasmania, Victoria and South Australia.

Leaman leads walking tours and led the hiking group during the 2008 Hobart Mountain Festival, celebrating 172 years since Charles Darwin first climbed Mount Wellington. He has also been a lecturer for the University of the Third Age at Kingborough since 1997.

Leaman is a member of a number of societies and has been President of the Royal Society of Tasmania on two occasions.

Works

Leaman has authored a number of guide books about Tasmania, including Walk into History in Southern Tasmania, published in 1999, and Step into History in Tasmanian Reserves, published in 2001. He co-authored Mount Wellington Walk Map and Notes with K. D. Corbett, published in 2004.

He also wrote The Rock Which Makes Tasmania, published in 2002, a comprehensive, authoritative work on the Jurassic dolerite rock that dominates the island of Tasmania; other works include Water-Facts, Issues, Problems and Solutions (3rd edition 2007) and Earthly Secrets (2009).

He also published many academic papers, numerous industry reports and maps.

References

David Leaman Wikipedia


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