John Yellich

John Yellich
Emeritus Director of the Michigan Geological Survey
Location:
1142 Rood Hall, Mail Stop 5241 and MGRRE (Core Lab) - 5272 W Michigan Ave, Mail Stop 5241
Mailing address:
Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences
澳门六合彩官网直播
1903 W Michigan Ave
Kalamazoo MI 49008-5241 USA
John Yellich
Education:
  • M.S., Geosciences, 澳门六合彩官网直播, 2013
  • B.A., Geology, 澳门六合彩官网直播, 1968
Research Interests:
  • Mineral exploration and development
  • Environmenal geology and brownfields projects
  • Groundwater assessments and remediation
Bio:

John A. Yellich is the director of the Michigan Geological Survey at 澳门六合彩官网直播. He received his bachelor's and master's degrees from 澳门六合彩官网直播 and his professional geologist certification from the . Yellich brings more than forty years of geologic experience in mineral exploration and development, environmental consulting, business operations, and safety compliance. He has worked in more than thirty states conducting mineral and petroleum assessments in the United States, Canada, Australia and China.

Yellich is an exploration, mineral development and environmental geologist with experience in mineral resources in western states; the upper Midwest; the Piedmont province of the east; Canadian provinces of Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta; northern and south-eastern Australia; and oil and mineral provinces in China. He has authored a number of Canadian Securities Administration feasibility reports to validate exploration information. He has guided and reviewed several surface water and ground water investigations and negotiated regulatory agreements during the conduct of environmental liability assessments for Fortune 50 companies. Yellich has worked extensively on mineral exploration models testing, confirmation and successful validation of potential targets in Michigan, Minnesota and Canada. He developed a business model for assessing corporate environmental liabilities for many lessees of Fortune 50 in 21 states, and the process for expedited abatement liabilities.

regarding the importance of a Michigan geological survey and its relationship to future mining projects, mineral exploration, and job opportunities.