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Career change no trauma for geological consultant

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While completing his obligatory term of national service in South Africa during the early 1980s, RSG Globai's Mike Sperinck got the opportunity to do something that many people only dream about - giving orders to a superior. The Rhodes University geology and chemistry graduate was completing officers' training, and had been posted with South Africa's Geological Survey to concentrate on engineering geology, when it was discovered that the parade ground of the Country's largest army base -voortrekkerhoogter - was sitting on a significant gravity low. Sperinck, who had reached the rank of lieutenant, was given the task of drilling 10 bore holes in the middle of what was the regiment sergeant major's "holy grail".

Mark Fraser

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2003

Gold Gazette

Gold Gazette

ISSN:0816-455X
年,卷(期):2003.5(65)