During the
Cold War, Bonini collaborated with geophysicist George P. Woollard on U.S. Navy- and Office of Naval Research-funded geophysical surveys that supported strategic military objectives such as submarine navigation, missile guidance, and global geodetic refinement. A key focus of this work was the global standardization of gravity measurements. Bonini's contributions were acknowledged in the U.S. Air Force–funded
Assembly of Gravity Data report (1959), which credited Woollard and colleagues with establishing a coherent World Gravimetric System. Over the course of six global expeditions, Bonini conducted more than 400 gravity measurements across over 85 countries, from Alaska to Antarctica, using a Worden gravimeter sensitive enough to detect variations as small as one 100-millionth of Earth's gravitational pull. These measurements, conducted in part during U.S. Navy–sponsored missions, were instrumental in identifying regional gravity anomalies that interfered with vertical reference systems—especially in the Pacific—and in refining global navigation and missile guidance systems. and the
Strait of Gibraltar. He also made contributions to the interpretation of complex structures in far-flung locations including the Northern Rockies, Nicaragua, Alaska, and Maine. == Personal life ==