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Secretary: John Splettstoesser

Spletts
John Splettstoesser in Antarctica

John is a geologist who was born and grew up in the Minneapolis area, Minnesota.   He earned a Bachelors degree in Geological Engineering at the University of Minnesota, with graduate work in Engineering Statistics at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.    He was on the faculty of Ohio State University, University of Nebraska, and the University of Minnesota for some 22 years, and ended his academic career as Visiting Faculty at College of the Atlantic, Bar Harbor, Maine, where he taught geology and courses on Antarctica.   Most of his geologic field work has been in Antarctica (8 summer field seasons, from 1960-61 to 1985-86), as well as in remote parts of the world where his research has been on wind erosion and geomorphology.  He has traveled and done geologic field work on each of the continents, specifically in Alaska, Greenland, Lapland, Spitsbergen, Faeroe Islands, Iceland, Arctic Canada, Siberia, Israel, Australia, New Zealand, Atacama Desert in Chile, Easter Island, Sinai Desert, Falkland Islands, and Japan.

He has been a part-time lecturer/naturalist since 1983 on more than 100 cruises to Antarctica and most of the sub-Antarctic islands, as well as 45 to the Arctic and sub-Arctic, including Arctic Canada, Greenland, Svalbard, Iceland, Alaska, Russian Far East, Northwest Passage, Northeast Passage, as well as other remote locations.  He was a staff lecturer on the 65-day circumnavigation cruise of Antarctica, in 1996-97.   His work has taken him to all three of the South and North Poles: Geographic, Geomagnetic, and Magnetic.  Since the formation of the International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators (IAATO) in 1991, John has represented the group at seven consultative Meetings of the Antarctic Treaty nations, and also testified on Antarctic science and tourism legislation in the U.S. House and Senate in Washington, D.C. From 1988 to 1990 he was on the American Geophysical Union Public Policy Speaker Program, where he presented seminars at U.S. universities and the University of Bern, Switzerland.

John has authored about 180 publications in his field, including 5 books (edited), and received two polar medals (U.S. and U.S.S.R.) for his work in Antarctica, where he has a glacier and a mountain named for him, as well as a fossil snail species of Cambrian age.  Four military medals were earned for service with the U.S. Army in Korea.  He is past President (2002-04) of the Antarctican Society, based in Washington, D.C., and also past President of the American Polar Society (2003-06).  John lives in Waconia, Minnesota, U.S.A.