International Association for Engineering Geology and the Environment


The International Association for Engineering Geology and the Environment, formerly International Association for Engineering Geology, also known as IAEG, is an international scientific society which was founded in 1964. It is affiliated with the International Union of Geological Sciences and has 3,798 members and 59 national groups all over the world.
The association aims to promote and encourage the advancement of engineering geology through technological activities and research. At the same time it strives to improve teaching and training in engineering geology, and to collect, evaluate and disseminate the results of engineering geological activities. Together with Springer Science+Business Media, it publishes the Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment.
The first president of the IAEG was Asher Shadmon, who held the office from 1964 to 1968. The current president is Rafig Azzam from Aachen University of Technology.
Every two years, the IAEG awards the Hans Cloos medal to an engineering geologist of outstanding merit. Every four years, the IAEG organizes an international congress, during which a general meeting of the association takes place and the board for the subsequent four years is also elected. The XII IAEG Congress was held in Turin in September 2014. The XIII IAEG Congress will be held in San Francisco, in September 2018, and will also serve as the 61st annual meeting of the Association of Environmental & Engineering Geologists.

History

The birth of the IAEG

During the XXII International Geological Congress in New Delhi, on 12 December 1964, the Israeli geologist Asher Shadmon remarked that "quarry materials and mineral products used in engineering" were not being discussed and proposed that the IUGS should create and fund an international permanent commission dedicated to that topic. Other geologists at the congress suggested that the commission should cover also the relationship between the materials in their natural place and the work of engineers.
On 17 December the assembly voted the following motion unanimously: "It is recommended that a distinct Commission of "Engineering Geology" should be established in the context of International Geological Congresses. The objective of the Commission and its Sub-commissions would be to promote the knowledge and dissemination of appropriate information, gather ´case-histories´, prepare literature reviews and relevant catalogues, provide information on completed or ongoing research, gather statistical geological data on the industries and determine the list of further research required".
On 19 December, although the interest in engineering geology was high, due to scarcity of resources that did not allow to support a new permanent commission, the executive committee of the IUGS proposed to create a small committee, headed by Shadmon, in charge of producing and presenting a report on the state of the situation by contacting the International Society for Soil Mechanics and the International Society for Rock Mechanics, as well as existing national societies of engineering geology.
However, on 21 December the delegates decided to immediately hold a new session during which the International Association for Engineering Geology was unanimously created. Besides Asher Shadmon, the founding members were Marcel Arnould, G. Bain, M.S. Balasundaram, L.M.C. Calembert, R.S. Chaturvedi, G.C. Chowdhary, E. Beneo, K. Erguvanli, A. Hamza, M.S. Jain, L.E. Kent, V.S. Krishnaswamy, J.D.S. Lakshmaman, A.R. Mahendra, M. Manfredi, V. Prasad, B. Ramchandran, J.Th. Rosenqvist, B. Sanatkumar, P.B. Srinivasan, L.S. Srivastava and M. Zapata. They elected a provisional committee to steer the initial activity.

The first years

At the beginning, the association worked on enhancing the provisional committee to gain full international representation. By the end of 1966, the committee was composed as follows: Asher Shadmon, as President; Marcel Arnould, as Secretary; E. Beneo ; V.S. Krishnaswamy, R.S. Mithal and M.S. Balasundaram ; K. Erguvanli ; A.M. Hull, president of the American Association of Engineering Geologist; E.M. Sergeev and N.V. Kolomenskij ; Quido Záruba ; M.D. Ruiz ; G. Champetier de Ribes, as Treasurer. Discussions to join the IAEG were still ongoing with representatives of Australia, Japan and Mexico.
During the first two years the first statutes were established and a programme of the activities was defined. The purposes and goals of the association were defined as follows: "Article 1: The scope of engineering geology covers the applications of earth sciences to engineering, planning, construction, prospecting, testing and processing of related materials"; "Article 2: The aims of the IAEG are to encourage research, training and dissemination of knowledge by developing the international cooperation in its relation to engineering".
At the 1967 meeting of the IUGS, a request of affiliation of the IAEG to the IUGS was presented and accepted by the executive committee. The decision was ratified unanimously by the general assembly of the IUGS on 23 August 1968 in Prague.

The first general assembly

The input from the Czechoslovakian engineering geologist has been noticeable in the first years, especially that of Quido Záruba and Jaroslav Pasek. They were together responsible for organizing a section on engineering geology at the XXIII International Geological Congress in Prague in 1968, at which they shared the aims of the IAEG. They also organised the first scientific symposium of the IAEG in Brno, from 26 to 27 April 1968 and a second symposium during the IGC on "Engineering geology and land planning".
The first general assembly was held on 23 August 1968 in Prague during the XXIII IGC. At the time of the congress, the country was deeply affected by the movement of soviet troops. Nevertheless, the general assembly went ahead and the statutes were ratified and an executive committee was elected for a period of four years to replace the provisional committee.
The new committee was composed as follows: Quido Záruba, President; Marcel Arnould, Secretary General; G. Champetier de Ribes, Treasurer; Asher Shadmon, Past President; L. Calembert, Vice-president for Europe; L. Cluff, Vice-president for North America; M.D. Ruiz, Vice-president for South America; L. Oborn, vice president for Australasia; H. Tanaka, Vice-president for Asia; a representative from Ghana as Vice-president for Africa. Other members: N.V. Kolomenskij ; A Nemock ; J. Janjic ; R. Glossop ; A. Drucker ; J.M. Crepeau.
In addition to the executive committee, three "working groups" were established:
  1. Landslides, under the responsibility of J. Pasek ;
  2. Soluble rocks, under the responsibility of F. Reuter and K. Erguvanli ;
  3. Geotechnical mapping, under the responsibility of M. Matula.
Finally, it was decided to organize future congresses specifically for the IAEG and to hold these alternately with the International Geological Congresses, which means that both events would take place every four years but the IAEG would have a congress with a general assembly every two years and scientific symposia in the years in between.
The first congresses with general assemblies were as follows:
The first elected executive committee decided in their second meeting at the UNESCO Palace in Paris to create a journal of the IAEG, to be edited and published by the Association and called the Bulletin of the IAEG.
The first edition of the Bulletin was distributed during the first IAEG congress in September 1970 in Paris. This was possible thanks to the personal efforts of Quido Záruba, the IAEG president, J. Pasek, Marcel Arnould and several other staff from the Paris School of Mines. Starting as a simple artisanal publication, the Bulletin became a scientific reference among the most respected journals in the fields of engineering geology, the environment and other geosciences, and "the official journal of the IAEG". It is now published by Springer Science+Business Media and edited by the Association, and goes with the title Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment.

The second statutes

As a result of the progressive involvement of engineering geologists in consulting, in the study, design, construction and supervision of large projects and in the assessment and remediation of environmental issues, an update of the first statutes of the association was deemed necessary. The second statutes were approved by the general assembly in Kyoto in 1992.
A new definition of engineering geology was given, which reflected the experience collected during the previous 25 years and read as follows: "Engineering geology is a science devoted to the investigation, study and solution of engineering and environmental problems which may arise as the result of the interaction between geology and the works and activities of man as well as to the prediction of and the development of measures for prevention or remediation of geologic hazards. Engineering geology embraces: the definition of geomorphology, structure, stratigraphy, lithology and groundwater conditions of geological formations; the characterization of the mineralogical, physico-geomechanical, chemical and hydraulic properties of all earth materials involved in construction, resource recovery and environmental change; the assessment of the mechanical and hydrologic behaviour of soil and rock masses; the prediction of changes to the above properties with time; the determination of the parameters to be considered in the stability analysis of engineering works and of earth masses; and the improvement and maintenance of the environmental condition and of the properties of the terrain".

Members

As of May 2018, the IAEG has 3,798 members divided as follows:
The IAEG has 59 national groups :
Country/TerritoryPresidentRelated associationWebsite
CanadaDoug VanDineThe Canadian Geotechnical Societyhttp://www.cgs.ca/
USAEldon M. GathThe Association of Environmental and Engineering Geologistshttp://www.aegweb.org/
MexicoCarlos Garcia Herrera
ColombiaÉdgar E. Rodriguez GranadosColombian Geotechnical Societyhttp://www.scg.org.co/
PeruJose E. Martinez del Carpio
BrazilAdalberto Aurélio AzevedoAssociation for Engineering Geology and the Environmenthttp://www.abge.org.br/site/
ParaguayFrancisco Raúl Mena KnoopParaguayan Geotechnical Societyhttp://spg.org.py/
ArgentinaNorberto Jorge BejermanArgentinian Association of Geology Applied to Engineeringhttp://asagai.org.ar/
IcelandBirgir jonsson
United KingdomHelen ReevesThe Engineering Group of the Geological Society of London http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/engineering
IrelandMichael Looby
PortugalJosé Luís Machado do ValePortuguese Geotechnical Societyhttp://ww.spgeotecnia.pt/
SpainCarlos Delgado
FranceAline QuenezComité Français de Géologie de l’Ingénieur et de l’Environnement.http://www.cfgi-geologie.fr/
BelgiumPhilippe WelterBelgian Society for Engineering Geology and Rocks Mechanicshttp://sbgimr-bvigrm.be/
NetherlandsRobrecht Schmitz
NorwayGuro Groeneng
SwedenGunilla Franzén
FinlandArto Koskiahde
EstoniaJohannes Pello
LithuaniaKastytis Dundulis
RussiaVictor I. OsipovSergeev Institute of Environmental Geoscience Ras http://geoenv.ru/
PolandPawel Dobak
Czech RepublicJan NovotnýCzech Association of Engineering Geologists
SlovakiaMartin OndrasikSlovak Association of Engineering Geologistshttp://saig.sk/index.php
GermanyRafig AzzamGerman Geotechnical Society; German Geological Societyhttp://www.dggt.de/
AustriaChristian ZangerlAustrian Geological Society
SwitzerlandRuedi Krähenbühl
DenmarkJan Dannemand AndersenDanish Geotechnical Society
ItalyGiovanni Battista CrostaIAEG Italian National Grouphttp://www.iaeg.it
HungaryAkos Torok
SloveniaDušanka Brožič
CroatiaDražen NavratilCroatian Geological Society http://www.geologija.hr/hr/
RomaniaCristian MarunteanuRomanian Association for Engineering Geologyhttp://argi.info.ro/ro/prima-pagina/
SerbiaDusko Sunaric
AlbaniaDefrim Shkupi
GreeceMarinos VassilisGreek Committee of Engineering Geologyhttp://www.eetg.gr/
BulgariaDimcho Evstatiev
TurkeyReşat UlusayTurkish Society for Engineering Geologyhttp://muhjeoder.org.tr/
CyprusClio GrammiCyprus Association of Geologists and Mining Engineershttp://www.geomines.org.cy/
GeorgiaZurab Kakulia
IraqAqeel Al-Adili
IranM. Fatemi
AlgeriaBelaid Alloul
NigeriaT.K.S. AbamNigerian Mining & Geosciences Societyhttp://www.nmgs.org.ng/
South AfricaPhil Paige-GreenSouth African Institute for Engineering & Environmental Geologistshttps://www.saieg.co.za/
IndiaGopal DhawanIndian Society of Engineering Geologyhttp://isegindia.org/
NepalRanjan Kumar DahalNepal Geological Societyhttp://ngs.org.np/
BangladeshA.T.M. Shakhawat Hossain
ChinaFaquan Wuhttp://www.china-iaeg.org/default.aspx
South KoreaPark Chung-hwa
JapanMasahiro ChigiraJapan Society of Engineering Geologyhttps://10times.com/organizers/japan-society-engineering-geology
Chinese TaipeiTien-Chang LaiGeological Society Located in Taipeihttp://www.gst.org.tw/cht/
ThailandDennes T. BergadoSoutheast Asian Geotechnical Societyhttp://www.seags.ait.ac.th/
VietnamTa Duc Thinh
SingaporeZhiye ZhaoSociety for Rock Mechanics & Engineering Geologyhttp://srmeg.org.sg/
MalaysiaZakaria Mohamad
IndonesiaImam A. Sadisun
AustraliaHugo Acosta-MartinezAustralian Geomechanics Societyhttps://australiangeomechanics.org/
New ZealandCharlie PriceNew Zealand Geotechnical Societyhttp://www.nzgs.org/

Congresses

Following is a list of the international congresses of the IAEG, which are held every four years. Since 1998, the congresses have a main theme, which is reflected in the denomination of the event.
The IAEG organizes also regional conferences. So far, Asian regional conferences and European regional conferences have been held.

European regional conferences