Roger G. Walker
Roger G. Walker, FRSC, MMR is a geologist and an award-winning Emeritus Professor at McMaster University.
Walker obtained his D.Phil. from Oxford University. He was a Postdoctoral Fellow at Johns Hopkins University. For 32 years, he taught at McMaster University. In 1998, Walker left McMaster to be a consultant in Calgary.[1]
In 2013, Walker achieved the title of Master Model Railroader from the National Model Railroad Association.
Honours
- made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- made an honorary member of Society of Sedimentary Geology
Awards
- 1975, awarded the Past Presidents' Medal by the Geological Association of Canada
- 1990, awarded the R. J. W. Douglas Medal by the Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists
- 1999, awarded the Logan Medal by the Geological Association of Canada
- awarded the Francis J. Pettijohn Medal by the Society of Sedimentary Geology
- awarded the Henry Clifton Sorby Medal by the International Association of Sedimentologists
- awarded the Distinguished Educator Award by the American Association of Petroleum Geologists
gollark: You don't even need that, anyone with an internet connection can just look up the algorithms and some implementations.
gollark: I mean, given that encryption is literally applied maths, you can't possibly stop (O NOES) bad people having access to it, only make it so *normal people* don't have convenient access to good cryptographic stuff and can be spied on easily.
gollark: I'm currently very slowly writing a blog post criticizing governments trying to do stupid things with encryption, but writing is hard.
gollark: You can't magically create a backdoor only accessible by people using it for "good reasons", and I would not trust *anyone at all* with the power to arbitrarily read people's communications.
gollark: Don't need to do parenting if the government constantly monitors all your child's communication™!
References
- The Basal Colorado Sandstone- September 10, 2002 Archived December 19, 2010, at WebCite
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