Mark Hinman’s Pencil Case
Mark Hinman’s Pencil Case
This is a short rendition
So let me start the race
And help you understand
It’s not Just ……..a Pencil Case
Long ago and far away
Some mines had stayed their way
Old Cobar, a rusty kind of town,
We worked hard to keep the shafts going down.
But when the managers face was dark
The geos looked for any shiny spark
There was little hope, for the bloke from Shell
He was apparently a disciple of Tim Bell
(second speaker explains Mark transferred from Shell to Cobar as part of his Peak PhD…also some context of the incredible dynamic Tim Bell bought to structural geology through porphryoblast studies)
Elura had seen fired a lot of blasts
But no one had ever seen those micro …….porphyroblasts
So we held to more conventional ways
And sent Mark to the core yard maze.
A merry dance of Tom Brown’s core
Already cut and half broken ore
There were surveys to be found
That seems to indicate the core could not be round!
An ori mark could not to be seen
And Mark applied his skills to Lotus 123
(second speaker explains that neither Peak or McArthur River had reliable core orientation so Mark developed a rotational calculation based on cleavage or bedding as the reference line…it was all manipulated by his formulas in 123….the fore runner to Excel)
The calculations resolved the gaps
That Pontil drilled to fill the maps
Mark checked the dip and fixed the strike
His wily protractor tracked the bends
And calculated where an ore zone ends
No simple case of ABC
He used the Greeks to help us see
That alpha beta was the best
When you used a stereo net
But here the story takes a bend
Because when we thought he had gone astray.
To find in the end
It was his health that paid
Those awkward little kidneys …..never gave him peace
And he left our little home
Though he was happy at the Ox
Between the Chesney and The Peak
While at the CSA we missed his happy smile and the daily chance to speak.
Home is what you make of it
And Mark made that work for him
In a renovators dream …. back from EGRUs study grounds
He paced himself like an ebbing tide
With dialysis on a 3 day ride
It was day one … recovery time
Day two … feeling great
And day three ….thinking he might not make the gate
Still somehow he made it happen
Like the champion he was
And those of us around him
Only hoped his heart wouldn’t break
The transplant meant he got back to the rocks
And came across the sufferings of the ol Mt Isa Block
It’s twisted form and hidden charm
So like him, no one could hold him back
From the slippery Merlin moly
To McArthurs broken shales
Across Starra’s hue red oxide
To Kulthors crackled ore
No one else could piece together
And the chocolate box was poor
(speaker 2 explains that Mark named all of the Kulthor faults after chocolates)
Until Mark dissected it
And showed us there was more
Some could not believe that such a magic map
Came from simply looking at the core
But the part I always treasure
Was when he would sit and measure
The history of our world in a colouring hush
With pencil cases open and choosing colours without rush
He explained thin skinned mechanics
Beside inverted basins….. thrust tectonics
And I marvelled at the mix of graphite and wax
To trace the nature of our earth’s twisted tortured tracks.
He even spent some time with the good ol CSIRO
When Mark studied core for more than a year ….or so
At McArthur River before the mine began
It seemed a simple seam ……and what could possibly go wrong
There was talk of road headers to sing the company song
They would work, unless someone made the ore zones fault
And so the Feasibility hid that in its vault
Till the hand drawn maps from Mark saw it was not so
For there were faults a plenty and the work was there to show.
Somehow these disparate forms
And timely structural shapes
Came to mesh an artful mind that Mark Hinman could curate
In generous lines and careful words he did sometimes amuse
And left us all to follow up the clues.
For long ago and far away.
I still hear his call
From a quiet footfall
To the thump his back pack made
Spilling pencils all around
And if you seek the souvenir to see where he has been
Look no further than Hinman et al …….two thousand eighteen

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