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Contents
Confidence Is Off-Shoot of ARS Programs

Dennis Finnegan's experience with ARS water quality scientists has led to a
career with the U.S. Geological Survey.
(K7399-16) |
Norm Fausey taught Dennis Finnegan what its like to be a federal water
quality scientist. Finnegan learned his lessons well and has just recently
become one himself, sampling stream water and studying aquatic habitats in the
Lake Erie-Lake St. Clair watershed for the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).
As a part-time research assistant in the ARS Soil Drainage Research Unit at
Columbus, Ohio, Finnegan paid his dues. He spent hours entering field data into
computers and helped lay thousands of feet of drainage pipe, move tons of dirt,
irrigate countless research plots, and prepare plant and soil samples. And when
he wasnt doing that, there were always farm chores, like baling hay and
mowing pastures.
From 1990 to 1992during his sophomore and junior years at Ohio State
University (OSU) in ColumbusFinnegan worked with Fausey, who heads the
soil drainage unit. Finnegan majored in agronomy, with an emphasis in soil and
water conservation and a minor in geology. He had gotten a late start at
school, entering Ohio State at age 22 after a stint with the U.S. Navy.
Fauseys tutelage and the geology minor combined to help Finnegan
achieve his recent rating as a physical scientist for USGS at age 29. He joined
USGS during his senior year at OSU.
ARS gave me my first exposure to working scientists, Finnegan
says. I was in the dark about how scientists actually earn a living. I
learned the ins and outs of how a scientific organization works.
I saw firsthand the amount of preparation that is behind running a
research project. I also learned a lot about computer data entry. Norm gave me
a lot of responsibility, trust, and respectalong with the keys to the
labeven though I was a new guy. I gained confidence because of
this, he says.
Among other things, Finnegan participated in Fauseys research showing
that crop yields can be raised considerably while improving water quality by
pumping irrigation water through underground drainage pipes during dry summer
days. Columbus is in central Ohio, where soils tend to get waterlogged.
All of this was good training for Finnegan, who is now traveling hundreds of
miles to sample streams from New York to Michigan, collecting data for the USGS
National Water Quality Assessment Program. -- By Don Comis, ARS.
"Confidence Is Off-Shoot of ARS Programs" was published in
the September 1996
issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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