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Alan Gilbert Smith

Alan Gilbert Smith was an English geologist, stratigrapher, and pioneer of plate tectonic reconstruction.

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Alan Gilbert Smith FGS (24 February 1937 – 13 August 2017) was an English geologist, stratigrapher, and pioneer of plate tectonic reconstruction.12

Education and career

Smith was born in Watford, and went to school at Watford Grammar School for Boys. Smith went to university at St John's College, Cambridge, and graduated in 1959 with a B.A. in natural sciences.3 From 1959 to 1963 he was a graduate student in geology at Princeton University, where he completed a PhD thesis on the Structure and stratigraphy of the northwest Whitefish Range, Lincoln County, Montana4 under the supervision of John C. Maxwell5 (1914–2006)6 and Franklyn B. Van Houten3 (1914–2010).7 In 1963, Smith was appointed as a research assistant to Edward Bullard in the Department of Geodesy and Geophysics of the University of Cambridge. In 1964 he was appointed a demonstrator in the same department, and lecturer in 1971. Smith retired in 2004. His doctoral students included Michael Welland.8

Research

Smith's Ph.D. thesis was a major contribution to stratigraphic understanding of the Belt Supergroup.3 Smith and his collaborators did significant research on plate tectonics,8 the tectonics of the Balkan peninsula (especially Greece),9101112 and the geological timescale.1 His 1965 paper The fit of the continents around the Atlantic, co-authored with Edward Bullard and Jim Everett13 has historic importance in the establishment of the validity of plate tectonics.141516 According to Eldridge M. Moores, Smith's 1971 paper Alpine Deformation and the Oceanic Areas of the Tethys, Mediterranean, and Atlantic17 was "a major breakthrough in our views of the relationship between sea floor spreading, the then new-plate tectonics, and orogeny."5 During the 1980s, Smith collaborated with Fred Vine and Roy Livermore,18 the author of The Tectonic Plates Are Moving! (Oxford University Press, 2018).19 In 2003 Smith and co-author Kevin T. Pickering, proposed a unifying explanation for Earth's icehouse periods during the past 620 million years.20

Family

Smith's father was an engineer and inventor, who developed instruments for the Royal Navy during WWII.1 In 1962, Smith married Judy Walton, who worked for Princeton University Press at the time.155 She died in 2010. Smith died in 2017, and was survived by their daughter15 and granddaughter.1

Awards and honours

Selected publications

Books

References

References

  1. Palmer, Douglas. "Alan Gilbert Smith 1937–2017". The Geological Society of London.
  2. Bullard, Edward; Everett, J. E.; Smith, A. Gilbert (1965). "The fit of the continents around the Atlantic". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 258 (1088): 41–51. Bibcode:1965RSPTA.258...41B. doi:10.1098/rsta.1965.0020.
  3. "Smith, Alan Gilbert". Archive Catalogue, Geological Society of London; reference number: LDGSL/1109{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) (papers from 1955 to 2016 of Alan Gilbert Smith)
  4. Smith, Alan Gilbert (1963). "Structure and stratigraphy of the northwest Whitefish Range, Lincoln County, Montana". Princeton University Library; catalog entry for PhD thesis – Princeton University{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  5. "Geological Society of America – 2007 International Division Distinguished Career Award – Citation & Response; Citation by Eldridge Moores; Response by Alan Gilbert Smith".
  6. "John C. Maxwell (1914–2006)". Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin.
  7. MacPherson, Kitta (14 September 2010). "Franklyn Van Houten, expert on sedimentary rocks, dies at 96". News, Princeton University.
  8. Welland, Michael (18 February 2010). "Genesis of a geophysical icon — and a clarification for the Royal Society". Through the Sandglass (blog).
  9. Dilek, Yildirim (17 March 2007). "Geological Society of America nomination letter for 2007 Distinguished Career Award to Aland Gilbert Smith" (PDF). rock.geosociety.org.
  10. Smith, A. G.; Woodcock, N. H.; Naylor, M. A. (1979). "The structural evolution of a Mesozoic continental margin, Othris Mountains, Greece". Journal of the Geological Society. 136 (5): 589–601. Bibcode:1979JGSoc.136..589S. doi:10.1144/gsjgs.136.5.0589.
  11. Smith, Alan G. (1993). "Tectonic significance of the Hellenic-Dinaric ophiolites". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 76 (1): 213–243. Bibcode:1993GSLSP..76..213S. doi:10.1144/GSL.SP.1993.076.01.10.
  12. Dilek, Yildirim; Newcomb, Sally, eds. (2003). "Chapter. The evolution of ideas for the origin and emplacement of the western Hellenic ophiolite by A. G. Smith and A. Rassios". Ophiolite Concept and the Evolution of Geological Thought. Special Papers 373. Geological Society of America. pp. 337–350.
  13. Smith, A. Gilbert; Hallam, A. (1970). "The Fit of the Southern Continents". Nature. 225 (5228): 139–144. Bibcode:1970Natur.225..139S. doi:10.1038/225139a0.
  14. Palmer, Douglas (August 2015). "Bullard's fit". The Geological Society of London.
  15. "Dr Alan Smith, geologist – obituary". The Telegraph. 23 August 2017.
  16. Everett, Jim; Smith, A. (2008). "Genesis of a geophysical icon: the Bullard, Everett and Smith reconstruction of the circus-atlantic continents". Earth Sciences History. 27 (1): 1–11. Bibcode:2008ESHis..27....1E. doi:10.17704/eshi.27.1.w0v227931k184h64.
  17. Smith, A. Gilbert (1971). "Alpine Deformation and the Oceanic Areas of the Tethys, Mediterranean, and Atlantic". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 82 (8): 2039. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1971)82[2039:ADATOA]2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0016-7606.
  18. Livermore, R. A.; Smith, A. G.; Vine, F. J. (1986). "Late Palaeozoic to early Mesozoic evolution of Pangaea". Nature. 322 (6075): 162–165. Bibcode:1986Natur.322..162L. doi:10.1038/322162a0.
  19. Livermore, Roy (2018). The Tectonic Plates Are Moving!. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-871786-7.
  20. Smith, Alan G.; Pickering, Kevin T. (May 2003). "Oceanic gateways as a critical factor to initiate icehouse Earth". Journal of the Geological Society. 160 (3): 337–340. doi:10.1144/0016-764902-115.
  21. Faul, Henry (1965). "The Quest for Numbers: The Phanerozoic Time-Scale: A Symposium Dedicated to Professor Arthur Holmes . W. B. Harland, A. G. Smith, and B. Wilcock, Eds. Geological Society of London, London, 1964. Viii + 458 pp. Illus. $14.50". Science. 149 (3681): 292–293. doi:10.1126/science.149.3681.292.c. p. 293
  22. Scotese, Christopher (1980). "Book Review: Mesozoic and Cenozoic paleocontinental maps".