OBITUARY -
REG GERSTELING
Born in Amsterdam, Reg Gersteling migrated with his
parents to South Africa at the age of eleven.
After completing school, he enlisted in the South African Air Force and
saw action as a tail gunner in a bomber over Italy and Yugoslavia. Bullet holes in his jacket proved how lucky
he was to survive. At the conclusion of
the war, he returned to South Africa and studied Geology at Rhodes University in
Grahamstown. It was there that he met
Sybil, and two years later they were married.
After graduation, Reg’s first job was as a mine
geologist at the Tsumeb copper mine in South West Africa (now Namibia). Reg, his wife Sybil and their young family
then moved to Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia), where Reg was employed as an
exploration geologist for Rio Tinto. It
was an exciting time and place to be a young geologist and Reg revelled in the
challenges of setting up tent camps in pristine and barely inhabited areas. He loved the African bush and its wildlife,
where he experienced charging rhino and lions prowling round the camps. In 1962, the family moved to Southern
Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where Reg worked on several mines as well as on
exploration projects. After
Independence in 1965, he was recruited as a part-time member of the police
anti-terrorist unit.
In late 1969, Reg and Sybil decided to make a move
and Reg took a Senior Geologist job based in Sydney. It was a wrench leaving friends and family in Africa, moving from
a small mining community to a large city, their situation exacerbated when the
company folded. Undeterred, he soon
joined the staff of CSR where he stayed until his retirement.
As Senior Geologist, Reg was involved in many of the
company’s major projects. He played an
important part in the Mount Gunson copper project in South Australia, the
Yandicoogina iron ore project in Western Australia, and the Lebong Tandai gold
project in Indonesia.
At a time when Australia’s mineral exploration
industry was burdened with “gung-ho” attitudes, Reg, with his background in
mine geology, insisted on rigour - in geological mapping, in core logging, in
sampling, in resource assessment. He
regarded the training of junior geologists as an important part of his job,
providing sound advice backed up by reference to specific examples from his own
experience. He encouraged his junior
geologists to develop their exploration models and challenged them to produce
the evidence to support their ideas. He
never failed to include them when he was working with or briefing mining
engineers and metallurgists on exploration targets and prospects.
Late in his career, after retiring from
CSR, Reg spent some years working for Horizon Pacific and also for Cambridge
Mining, based in Jakarta.
Reg was a highly sociable man, a great raconteur,
always keen to share his experiences.
And he loved a good argument -
in fact, he sometimes seemed to take a contrary view just to see how others
would react.
Reg and Sybil celebrated their 50th
wedding anniversary in 1998, surrounded by their family. Reg passed away suddenly during October at
the age of 76. He is survived by his
wife, Sybil, their five children and 17 grandchildren. We remember him fondly as a true
professional, mentor and friend.
- Ken
Maiden and Rick West