Rock & Gem

Learning From Richard “Dick” Bideaux

- BY BOB JONES

The science mineralogy and the mineral collecting hobby lost one of their most active stalwarts and contributo­rs when my good friend Richard “Dick” Bideaux passed away at age 69. His contributi­ons to mineralogy, the space program, and the understand­ing of ore bodies’ geology and mineralogy literature and collecting are unrivaled. Dick lived in Tucson all his life except when in graduate school at Harvard and working for Jet Propulsion Laboratori­es in California.

I got to know Dick in 1960 through our involvemen­t with the Tucson Gem & Mineral Show ®. I helped Scott Williams, a dealer, and Dick was a very active member of the show committee. Bideaux’s direct involvemen­t as a committee member was the primary factor in raising that Show from a club event to the world’s greatest mineral show. I was also fortunate to collect with Dick and travel to far off lands visiting museums, mines, and noted mineral people.

Traveling with Dick was like having a personal tour guide. He would study the area thoroughly in advance of departure, including every museum and every museum collection. Plus, he would expect you to know something about your destinatio­ns. We purposely went during the dry season for our African trip and chose a camp with a year-round water hole. Each night it was easy to see every creature in the area visited the water hole, thanks to the light. The visitors to the water hole took turns, starting with elephants and ending with small creatures.

Another of Dick’s planning methods and measures involved supplying me with books he had read, so I could suggest things to include in our planning. I recall wanting to visit the Hoba meteorite in Nambia because I remember seeing a photo of it when I was a child. It is one of the largest intact nickel-iron meteorites, and we made sure we saw that phenomenon. Other once-in-alifetime destinatio­ns included a cheetah rescue sanctuary, where injured cats were treated and later released, and a vast salt mine where ocean waters are evaporated in huge shallow ponds to mine the salts. Adding to the salt mine’s wonder are thousands of pink flamingoes present at the site. They live on the algae in the brine.

Living in Tucson, Dick developed an interest in minerals as a teenager and ultimately drew his father

George into the hobby. So into the hobby that George even opened a small mineral business in 1965. He exhibited at the first Tucson show in 1955, while still a teenager, and won a ribbon. His interest in minerals led him to enter the University of Arizona Geology Engineerin­g program after high school.

Dick’s experience collecting minerals was helped through his father’s entreprene­urial presence as the owner of many small-town newspapers and political connection­s. When miner friends hit a mineral jackpot, they would call George, and Dick would head out to the location and collect. An example of this happened in the mid-1950s when a miner working the Glove mine south of Tucson opened a small cavern lined with gorgeous wulfenite crystals. He invited Dick and a partner to mine out dozens and dozens of flats of superb honey-colored wulfenite specimens. This find is still

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recognized as the great Glove Mine wulfenite find.

Dick repeated this success when a miner notified his father that a huge watercours­e lined with wulfenite was opened at the Defiance mine on a Friday. Dick, with Dick Jones, his collecting partner, had just the weekend to collect. They worked night and day and filled two vehicles and a small trailer with boxes of well-known arrowhead-shaped tan wulfenite clusters. Like specimens from the Glove Mine find, these unique Defiance mine wulfenite still shows up on the market today.

Dick’s varied experience­s, travel, and constant desire to learn benefitted the mineral club he was a member of — the Tucson Gem and Mineral Society. He arranged for the Smithsonia­n’s Paul Desautels to exhibit and lecture at the Tucson Show in 1961, which was something the Smithsonia­n had never done. In 1972, Dick invited and hosted his friend, Dr. Peter Embrey of the British Museum of Natural History, as a lecturer at the Show. Dick also arranged for Pierre Bariand of France’s revered Sorbonne to participat­e in the Show.

Dick did not talk about much about his job with Jet Propulsion Laboratori­es, Pasadena, California.

However, his accomplish­ments on that front also were many. He was part of the early days of lunar exploratio­n with the Surveyor satellites to the Moon. Dick’s job was to process the first photos sent back to earth during those lunar missions. He formed and honed his skills during those early days of computer technology while in the army. After his time at Jet Propulsion Laboratori­es, he went on to work with some partners to open a new computer business, “Computing Associates.” Ultimately, the firm developed a major geological mining program. Dick explained the program’s operation this way; the purpose was to compile and sort all the known data about an ore deposit gathered through deep core drilling. The program could predict the quantity, variety, and value of those unseen ores to determine the viability of opening a mine. At least that’s how I understood it.

Dick’s computer skills helped develop a historymak­ing series of mineral references, the six-volume “Handbook of Mineralogy,” an immense resource that combines regular mineralogy informatio­n with computer references and research. I enjoyed traveling with Dick during some of his research work on this project. The process included visiting premiere museums, like the British Museum of Natural History, the Sorbonne, Paris’s Natural History Museum, and others. While attending these places, curators would give us free rein to explore collection­s, take notes for his Handbook series, and me for my Rock & Gem writings.

Another vital contributi­on Dick made to our hobby was helping create the Mineralogi­cal Record magazine. The publicatio­n was the idea of John White, assistant curator in the Gem and Mineral Division of the Smithsonia­n Museum. John felt there was a need for a magazine that was more technical than hobby magazines but written for the serious amateur collector. Since Dick, and his father George, lived in Tucson and were active in the then early years of the Tucson Show, he shared his idea with Dick. The father-son duo promptly invited a large group of profession­als and serious collectors to their home one evening during the Show, intending to gather support for John’s idea. The group included Arthur Montgomery, who had already promised John financial support. The meeting was a huge success, as all expressed a need for such a magazine and

promised both financial and written support. Some of us wrote articles, and others promoted the magazine.

That same meeting also resulted in the formation of a new organizati­on, Friends of Mineralogy, which developed regional chapters, produced a column in Mineralogi­cal Record, and produced informatio­nal books on collecting areas.

When Dick’s father died in the 1970s, Dick took over his dad’s mineral business. He also continued going out in the field and gathering more informatio­n to revise the book Mineralogy of Arizona, which he co-wrote in 1979 with the University of Arizona Professor John Anthony and mineralogi­st Sid Williams. Mineralogy of Arizona was a much-needed reference covering all the known minerals found in the state. It also included discussion­s of localities. Many local collectors contribute­d informatio­n, helping make the text as complete as possible. When Dick would hear of an obscure locality, he would visit, collect, and gather informatio­n, and I helped when I could.

The remarkable career of Dick Bideaux influenced every aspect of the mineral sciences and our hobby. His written works ranged from informal discussion­s of crystals, minerals, and localities for amateur collectors to carefully documented research for scientific journals. His immense knowledge of mineralogy and all aspects of it were of great help to the Tucson show committee, which consisted of local volunteers limited in the scope of their world travel experience­s in the early days. By bringing his wide range of contacts to bear, he gave the show committee a remarkable resource most club shows can only hope to have.

As a travel companion, Dick was a constant resource of informatio­n and encouragem­ent. As a friend, he was generous to a fault. More than once, I’d see him buy a lovely specimen of something, knowing he had much better in his collection. When I’d ask him, he would name the friend he was buying it for, usually a young collector.

After spending weeks traveling with him, days collecting, and hours talking minerals, I came to realize he expected the best from his friends, and more importantl­y, he expected the best from himself in whatever he did. There has only been one Dick Bideaux. More’s the pity!

 ??  ?? One of my favorite travel companions, Dick Bideaux preparing to give a talk to a mineral group.
One of my favorite travel companions, Dick Bideaux preparing to give a talk to a mineral group.
 ?? BOB JONES ?? One of the great wulfenite finds made in Arizona in the 1950s was collected by Dick Bideaux and Al Haag.
BOB JONES One of the great wulfenite finds made in Arizona in the 1950s was collected by Dick Bideaux and Al Haag.
 ?? BOB JONES ?? Dick Bideaux and Dick Jones mined huge quantities of wulfenite at the Defiance mine in the 1950s.
BOB JONES Dick Bideaux and Dick Jones mined huge quantities of wulfenite at the Defiance mine in the 1950s.
 ?? BOB JONES ?? Dick Bideaux stands by the multi-ton Hobe nickel-iron meteorite in Africa.
BOB JONES Dick Bideaux stands by the multi-ton Hobe nickel-iron meteorite in Africa.
 ?? BOB JONES ?? With proper planning you can get right next to some of Africa’s great animals like this big fellow.
BOB JONES With proper planning you can get right next to some of Africa’s great animals like this big fellow.
 ?? BOB JONES ?? Ocean waters are evaporated in huge salt pans in Namibia to recover salts while flamingoes enjoy the brine algae.
BOB JONES Ocean waters are evaporated in huge salt pans in Namibia to recover salts while flamingoes enjoy the brine algae.
 ??  ?? Bob Jones holds the Carnegie Mineralogi­cal Award, is a member of the Rockhound Hall of Fame, and has been writing for Rock & Gem since its inception. He lectures about minerals, and has written several books and video scripts.
Bob Jones holds the Carnegie Mineralogi­cal Award, is a member of the Rockhound Hall of Fame, and has been writing for Rock & Gem since its inception. He lectures about minerals, and has written several books and video scripts.

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