- James F. Reilly
Infobox Astronaut
name =James Francis Reilly, II
type =NASA Astronaut
status =Retired
nationality =American
date_birth =March 18 ,1954
place_birth =Mountain Home Air Force Base ,Idaho
occupation =Geologist
selection =1994 NASA Group
time =35d 10h 34m
mission =STS-89 ,STS-104 ,STS-117
insignia =|James Francis Reilly, II,
Ph.D. (bornMarch 18 ,1954 ) is an Americangeologist and a formerNASA astronaut who has flown on threespace shuttle missions:STS-89 ,STS-104 andSTS-117 . He was born atMountain Home Air Force Base ,Idaho and considersMesquite, Texas to be his hometown. He enjoys flying, skiing, photography, running, soccer, hunting and fishing.Education
Reilly graduated from Lake Highlands High School,
Dallas, Texas , in 1972. He has three degrees from theUniversity of Texas at Dallas , a bachelor of science degree ingeosciences in 1977, a master of science degree in geosciences in 1987 and a doctorate in geosciences in 1995.Organizations
Officer in the U.S. Navy Reserve. Member, American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Naval Reserve Association, Tailhook Association, Reserve Officers Association, Association of Space Explorers.
pecial honors
Antarctic Service Medal, 1978. US Navy ROTC scholarship, 1972. Seventh Honorary U.S. Marshal, 2001.
Experience
After receiving his bachelor of science degree in 1977, Reilly entered graduate school and was selected to participate as a research scientist specializing in stable isotope
geochronology as part of the 1977-1978 scientific expedition toMarie Byrd Land, West Antarctica . In 1979, he accepted employment as an explorationgeologist withSanta Fe Minerals Inc. , in Dallas, Texas. From 1980 to the time he was selected for the astronaut program, Reilly was employed as an oil and gas exploration geologist forEnserch Exploration Inc. , in Dallas, Texas, rising to the position of Chief Geologist of the Offshore Region. Concurrent with his duties as an exploration geologist, he was actively involved in the application of new imaging technology for industrial applications in deep water engineering projects and biological research. As part of this work, Reilly has spent approximately 22 days in deep submergence vehicles operated byHarbor Branch Oceanographic Institution and the U.S. Navy.NASA experience
Selected by NASA in December 1994, Reilly reported to the Johnson Space Center in March 1995 and completed a year of training and evaluation, and is qualified for flight assignment as a mission specialist. Initially, he was assigned to work technical issues for the Astronaut Office Computer Support Branch. Reilly flew on
STS-89 in 1998 andSTS-104 in 2001. He has logged over 517 hours in space, including three spacewalks totaling 16 hours and 30 minutes. He has worked both on theISS andMir space stations. Reilly was next assigned as the Astronaut Office lead on Shuttle training. In 2007 was a member of the crew ofSTS-117 . Concurrent with his crew assignment he is designated as Payloads and Procedures Operations lead for the Astronaut Office ISS Branch.ource
*NASA biography [http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/reilly.html]
External links
* [http://www.spacefacts.de/bios/astronauts/english/reilly_james.htm Spacefacts biography of James F. Reilly]
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