Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2004, Side 108

Jökull - 01.01.2004, Side 108
handrit að bókinni tveimur vikum áður en hann lést. Kemur þetta rit, sem ber nafnið „Jarðhitabók – eðli og nýting auðlindar“, út hjá Hinu íslenska bókmenntafé- lagi snemma árs 2005. Guðmundur var hæverskur maður og barst ekki mikið á. Hann var athugull og rólegur en gat verið fastur fyrir ef á þurfti að halda. Sem stjórnandi forð- aðist hann að ofstýra en gaf starfsmönnum sínum jafn- an mikið svigrúm og sjálfstæði sem stuðlaði að því að mynda frjótt rannsóknaumhverfi á Jarðhitadeild. Guðmundur var kunnur skákmaður á yngri árum og keppti m.a. á Ólympíumótum í Amsterdam árið 1954, München árið 1958 og Havana árið 1964. Guðmundur kvæntist 21. júlí 1956 Ólöfu B. Jóns- dóttur, sjúkraliða, f. 24. sept. 1930 á Teygingalæk í V-Skaftafellssýslu. Þau eignuðust tvo syni, Magnús Atla, kerfisfræðing og Jón Pálma, viðskiptafræðing. —– —– —– —– —– —– Guðmundur Pálmason, one of the pioneers of geother- mal research and geosciences in Iceland, passed away on 11 March 2004. Guðmundur graduated in technical physics from Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm 1955 and received M.Sc. degree from Purdue University in In- diana, USA. In 1971 he defended his D.Sc. thesis in geophysics at the University of Iceland. In 1955, Guðmundur joined the small geother- mal team at the State Electricity Authority in Iceland, under the supervision of the late Dr. Gunnar Böð- varsson. A year later the Geothermal Division was formed, which was to become the Geothermal Divi- sion of Orkustofnun (Iceland’s National Energy Au- thority) in 1967. In 2003, the Geothermal Division was transformed into the ÍSOR, the Iceland GeoSur- vey. Guðmundur Pálmason became director of the Geothermal Division in 1964, and was to hold this position until he retired in 1997. Under Guðmundur’s management, the Geothermal Division grew from a small workplace with a few employees to a group of over 40 experts involved in almost all the geoscience and engineering disciplines related to the exploration and utilisation of geothermal resources. Guðmundur soon became an internationally renowned geoscientist, partly because of his contri- bution to geothermal research and partly because of his activity in crustal research in Iceland and on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. His D.Sc. thesis was a pioneer- ing work involving a comprehensive study of the Ice- landic crust by explosion seismology. In the 1970s he developed a kinematic model of rifting and crustal formation on mid-ocean ridges, with special applica- tion to the geology of Iceland. This model offered an explanation for many geological observations in Ice- land and ont the mid-ocean ridges. He was also active in heat flow studies and gravity mapping of Iceland. Guðmundur was an active member of the interna- tional geothermal and geoscience community. He was leader of the Icelandic delegations to the UN geother- mal conferences held in Pisa in 1970 and in San Fran- cisco in 1975. He served as a geothermal consultant for UN agencies in El Salvador, Mali, North Korea, Philippines, and Taiwan. He was a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences, chairman of an international working group on the Earth’s rift systems, a member of the ESF consor- tium of the Ocean Drilling Program, and a member of AGU. Guðmundur was, furthermore, actively in- volved in the IUGG and the International Heat Flow Committee and a member of the Board of Directors of the Nordic Volcanological Institute. He was also one of the architects of the International Geothermal Association, serving on its first Board of Directors. He was Chairman of the Technical Programme Com- mittee that organised the World Geothermal Congress held in Florence in 1995, and was elected the first President of the Geothermal Association of Iceland in the year 2000. After his retirement in 1997 he wrote a book in Icelandic that was to cover all aspects of geothermal energy in Iceland: its nature, exploration, utilisation and history. He completed the manuscript only two weeks before his death. Guðmundur is survived by his wife, Ólöf Jónsdóttir, and two sons. Ólafur G. Flóvenz 108 JÖKULL No. 54, 2004
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