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this constituted most of GRC's activity in its early years. Rather than simply locating salt domes, reflection seismography could find the location, or at least provide significant clues about where actual pools of oil were located. Major wells drilled next to salt domes included
Spindletop in South Texas, and a well in Nash, Texas. In December 1928, Amerada's drill penetrated the Viola limestone in the Seminole, Oklahoma, area and produced the first oil well in history to be drilled in a structure found by a reflection seismograph.
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Karcher served as president and general manager of
Coronado Corporation, a subsidiary of Texas Instruments, from 1939 to 1941, and as chairman of the board of Las Tecas Petroleum Company from 1941 to 1945. He served as president and chairman of the board of Comanche Corporation from 1945 to 1950. He
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where he began graduate work in
September 1916. For his PhD thesis he focused on X-ray emissions, but continued research into geophysics. While he completed his doctorate, he was associated with the Geological Engineering Company, organized by his former professors Ohern and Haseman. The company was
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In 1919, Karcher applied for patents in reflection seismography. By 1921, he had validated reflection seismology as an authentic tool in the search for oil but at the time oil prices were too low for oil companies to budget for this new technology. Unable at the time to pursue a career in petroleum
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graduate student. GRC began using seismographic refraction but would introduce the seismic reflection method which over the next five years was accepted by the petroleum industry as a promising new tool. Relatively shallow salt domes could be located successfully with the refraction technique, and
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To honor
Karcher's contribution to the use of geophysical methods in oil exploration, the J. Clarence Karcher Award is given in recognition of significant contributions to the science and technology of exploration geophysics. In 1976, Karcher received the Anthony Lucas Medal from the American
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GRC would function as a subsidiary of
Amerada Petroleum which had been formally established in 1920. Karcher was made vice president, with a $ 300,000 research fund and a considerable 15 percent stock interest, which he had negotiated with DeGolyer. One of his first actions after establishing
323:(TI) in 1951. TI would find enormous success and growth pursuing a broader range of electronics manufacturing. Karcher would continue in leadership roles with oil production and exploration companies, but would be largely divested of his interest in GSI by 1950, prior to the inception of TI.
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On June 4, 1971, the
Geophysical Society of Oklahoma city erected a monument in the front lawn of Belle Isle Library, recording how in 1921 Karcher and his team recorded their first seismic data, and "proved the validity of the reflection seismograph as a useful tool in the search for oil."
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in the earth. He thought it would be possible to determine the depth of underlying geological strata by vibrating the Earth's surface while precisely recording and timing the returning waves of energy (sound waves). On
October 16, 1920, Karcher married Lydia Kilborn; they had two children.
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Karcher served as the
President of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists, was a fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a member of the American Physical Society. He also served as charter member of the Dallas Petroleum Club.
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Institute of Mining and
Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers for his invention and development of the reflection seismograph. He was a member of the Geological Society, the Society of Exploration Geophysicists, and a charter member of the petroleum club.
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Karcher died of an apparent heart attack in a Dallas hospital on July 13, 1978. His funeral was on July 10 at
Highland Park Presbyterian in Dallas, and he was buried in his birthplace of Hennessey, Oklahoma.
137:, applying for patents in 1919. By the patenting, and development of reflection seismography, he created the means by which most of the world's oil reserves have been discovered. In 1930 he,
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In 1930, with the backing of DeGolyer, now president of Amerada, Karcher and McDermott, with a 50% interest purchased by DeGolyer for $ 100,000, launched the petroleum exploration company
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World War I interrupted his graduate studies and he served with the United States Bureau of Standards. His assignment was to locate heavy artillery batteries in France by studying the
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Karcher and his staff took the remaining 50% interest. In 1941, DeGolyer and Karcher sold their controlling interest in GSI to GSI Vice-president
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waves the guns generated in the air. He noted an unexpected event in his research and switched his concentration to
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he held a meeting with Karcher that resulted in the creation of Geophysical Research Corporation (GRC) by 1925.
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and H. P. Peacock. Remaining as a wholly owned subsidiary pursuing oil exploration services, GSI spun off
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and was at the head of his class. When the university was granted a chapter in 1918, he was elected to
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where he performed research on ocean-bottom telegraph cable. It was here that he first met a young
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Anthony Lucas Medal, from the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers
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was president of Concho Petroleum Company from 1950 until the time of his death in 1974.
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Upon graduation Karcher accepted the Tyndal Fellowship in Physics at the
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the first to commercialize the concept of the reflection seismograph.
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Society of Exploration Geophysicists – Biographies: Eugene McDermott
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DeGolyer invested $ 100,000 in GSI in Mount, Houston Faust II,
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and businessman. He invented and eventually commercialized the
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515:, (2007), Dallas, Texas, Southern Methodist University, pg. 71
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Oilfield Revolutionary; The Career of Everette Lee DeGolyer
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The Handbook of Texas Online – DeGolyer, Everette Lee
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John Clarence Karcher was born on April 15, 1894, in
513:The ABCs of De; A Primer on Everette Lee DeGolyer
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129:(April 15, 1894 – July 13, 1978) was an American
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567:, Corpus Christi, Texas, pg. 13, July 15, 1978
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174:and settled in a farming community near
433:The History of DeGolyer and MacNaughton
104:Invention of the reflection seismograph
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554:, Odessa, Texas, pg. 2, July 15, 1974
16:American geophysicist and businessman
411:. Texas State Historical Association
409:"Karcher, John Clarence (1894-1978)"
593:People from Spencer County, Indiana
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550:"Noted Dallas Geophysicist Dies",
483:"Encyclopedia of the Great Plains"
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603:University of Pennsylvania alumni
525:Oklahoma City Geophysical Society
302:Geophysical Service Incorporated
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563:"Oil Technology Pioneer Dies",
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489:. Retrieved September 22, 2008.
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527:. Retrieved October 23, 2008
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407:Richard M. Perdue (1995).
211:University of Pennsylvania
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537:J. Clarence Karcher Award
469:December 4, 2008, at the
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135:reflection seismograph
92:University of Oklahoma
438:May 18, 2008, at the
265:Everette Lee DeGolyer
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151:reflection seismology
143:Everette Lee DeGolyer
127:John Clarence Karcher
25:John Clarence Karcher
259:E. L. DeGolyer, 1913
552:The Odessa American
289:Columbia University
237:Bureau of Standards
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481:Wishart, David J.
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313:Cecil Green
273:seismograph
263:Later when
79:Nationality
577:Categories
415:October 8,
362:References
162:Early life
90:1916, BSEE
46:1894-04-15
182:Education
176:Hennessey
157:Biography
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467:Archived
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145:founded
82:American
200:physics
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117:Awards
109:Spouse
417:2021
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