William E Dollarhide Author

Paul W. Blackburn began working as a Soil Scientist for the SCS, later to become the NRCS, in June 1976. Paul retired as an MLRA Project Office Leader in January of 2018 with a total of 41 years of service. Paul is enjoying staying close to home, doing small home remodel projects, and teaching grandsons about soils.

John B. Fisher worked over 41 years as a Soil Scientist in Nevada with NRCS before retiring as a Senior Regional Soil Scientist in 2017. John lives in Reno and enjoys reading, gardening, and playing with his grandsons.

William E. Dollarhide transferred to Nevada NRCS in 1969. He served as a Soil Scientist, Project Leader, Assistant State Soil Scientist, State Soil Scientist, and Major Land Resource leader before retiring in 2010, after 41 years of service. Bill lives in Reno with his family and enjoys gardening and playing senior softball.

Douglas J. Merkler began working as a Soil Scientist for the SCS, later to become the NRCS, in September 1978. Douglas retired as a Resource Soil Scientist for Nevada in July of 2017, just shy of 39 years of service. Douglas remains active in the Soil Science Society of America and the International Biogeographic Society, is currently teaching at Nevada State College, and has started a resource-oriented, drone-based consulting firm with his wife in retirement.

Joseph V. Chiaretti began his career as a Soil Scientist with the BLM in south-central New Mexico in 1978 and then transferred to the SCS (now NRCS) in 1979. He mapped soils on four soil survey areas in New Mexico over 19 years, serving as lead field mapper and Project Leader. Joe, along with co-authors Paul, John, and Douglas, is recognized by the NRCS as a million-acre mapper for the National Cooperative Soil Survey (NCSS) program. In January 1998, Joe transferred to Nevada and conducted quality assurance on soil survey products in the former Great Basin MLRA region until November 2008. He then served on the Soil Survey Standards staff of the National Soil Survey Center in Lincoln, Nebraska as an instructor, the principal editor of NCSS standards documents such as the National Soil Survey Handbook and the Keys to Soil Taxonomy, and the national soil classification expert. Joe retired from federal service in early 2014 and is now enjoying his hobbies of gardening, hiking, and traveling back in his adopted State of Nevada.

James G. Bockheim was Professor of Soil Science at the University of Wisconsin from 1975 until his retirement in 2015. He has conducted soil genesis and geography in many parts of the world. His interest in Nevada stemmed from its high pedodiversity. His previous books include Pedodiversity (2013; with J. J. Ibáñez); Soil Geography of the USA: a Diagnostic-Horizon Approach (2014); Cryopedology (2015); The Soils of Antarctica (2015; editor), and The Soils of Wisconsin (2017; with A. E. Hartemink), and Soils of the Laurentide Great Lakes, USA and Canada.