Arnold H. Bouma   |   Visit Guest Book

"A truly caring man who put his family and students first and who truly
impacted thousands of lives." Surrounded by his family, Arnold H. Bouma
passed away the evening of Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, at age 79. He is survived
by his best friend and wife for more than five decades, Lieneke; their
three sons, three daughters-in-law, and seven grandchildren. He was known
internationally in the geological world as "an extraordinary geoscientist,
a prolific author and editor, an educator committed to the highest standard
of teaching and a researcher who advanced the geocommunities' knowledge
through his innovation, creativity and tireless contributions to deep-water
sedimentology and stratigraphy." Arnold Bouma was born in 1932 in
Groningen, Netherlands. His professional education started at the State
University at Utrecht, Netherlands where he earned a masters of science in
Geology, Sedimentology and Paleontology in 1959 and a doctorate in
Sedimentary Geology in 1961. Arnold Bouma's 1962 research findings
identified a sequence for dividing deep-water turbidites into intervals -
which later became known as "the Bouma Sequence;" it has been cited as
being "a geological milestone of the 20th century." In 1966, Arnold and his
family immigrated to the U.S. where he accepted a professorship in
oceanography at Texas A&M University. From 1975 to 1981, he was a marine
geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. Between 1981 and 1986, he was a
senior scientist, manager, and acting vice president for Gulf Oil Research
and Development Co. In 1986, he became a senior research associate at the
Chevron Research and Development branch in La Habra, Calif. He left Chevron
in 1988 to become the Charles T. McCord chaired professor at LSU in Baton
Rouge where he taught for many years. In 2005, he and his wife returned to
College Station, Texas, where he held a position as adjunct professor with
a bold plan to establish a Shale Studies Center at Texas A&M. Arnold was
the winner of LSU's 2003 Distinguished Research Master Award and a
distinguished lecturer and leader for the American Association of Petroleum
Geologists and the Society for Sedimentary Geology. His numerous awards
include the Francis P. Shepard Award from the SEPM in 1982 and the
Outstanding Education Award from the Gulf Coast Association of Geological
Societies in 1992. In 2007 he was the recipient of the Sidney Powers
Memorial Award, the AAPG's highest honor. And in 2010, Arnold received the
Doris M. Curtis medal for scientific excellence. A memorial service will be
held at Aria Memorial Chapel on Wednesday, Dec. 21, at 11 a.m. In lieu of
flowers, the family requests any memorials to be sent in honor of Arnold
Bouma to the SEPM Foundation endowment fund (www.sepm.org) to help support
future graduate studies. Please send family condolences and sign online
register book at www.ariacremation.com. "There are still discoveries to be
made, but it won't be the computer that tells us what it all means, for
that, we always have to go back to the rock." - AHB. Arrangements with ARIA
Cremation Service and Funeral Home 19310 Preston Road, Dallas, TX 75252,
(214)306-6700.
Published in The Advocate on December 19, 2011

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