AAPG Home > Foundation > GIA Program > Gustavus E. Archie Memorial International Grant
 
Grants In Aid Program
Deadline:
January 31
About the Program
Grants
How to apply
Apply Online
Questions:
> FAQs
> AAPG Grants-in-Aid Committee
Current Recipients
Abstracts:
> 2007
> 2006
> 2005

The American Association of Petroleum Geologists Foundation

Grants-in-Aid Program


Gus Archie was a graduate of the University of Wisconsin with degrees in both mining and electrical engineering. His professional career was spent with Shell Oil Company where, as a scientist, engineer, and administrator, he contributed significantly to the science and technology of the oil industry.

Archie is perhaps best known for his contributions to petrophysics. The prototype equation relating rock porosity to various electrical properties of rock bears his name: Archie's equation. He played the key role in identification of producible horizons at the giant Elk City Field in Oklahoma, an episode which dramatically demonstrated for the first time the role that well log measurements could play in identifying pay zones.

Archie was a very modest and unpretentious man, yet wielded considerable influence in his choice of staff to work with and for him. Many of these people went on, on their own, to make major contributions in their own way in development geology, reservoir engineering, as well as petrophysics. He had a remarkably good feeling for working with the earth and recognizing others who could improve our understanding of it.

The Gustavus E. Archie Memorial International Grant is awarded to two deserving graduate students enrolled in a school outside the U.S., for study of petrophysics and/or development geology of an area outside the U.S., through the American Association of Petroleum Geologists Grants-in-Aid program. It is endowed by the American Association of Petroleum Geologists Foundation, through generous contributions from Dr. and Mrs. Robert M. Sneider, Shell Oil Company and numerous other friends and associates.