| Biography
John Tuzo Wilson
(1908-1993)

Source: Communication Canada |
Born October 24, 1908 in Ottawa, Canada,
the eldest son of John Armistead Wilson and Henrietta L. (Tuzo)
Wilson, John Tuzo Wilson received his first Bachelor of Arts
degree in physics and geology from the University of Toronto
in 1930 and his second shortly thereafter from Cambridge University.
He earned his doctorate in geology from Princeton University
in 1936. Soon after Dr. Wilson joined the Geological Survey
of Canada, and did field work in the Northwest Territories.
When World War II broke, he served in the Royal Canadian Army
Engineers. In 1946 he joined the University of Toronto as
professor of geophysics, and was further appointed principal
of the University's Erindale College in 1967. In 1974 Wilson
was named Director General of the Ontario Science Centre.
He was also the chancellor of York University (1983-1986).
John Tuzo Wilson was an adventurous scholar whose professional
impact was immense. His work was characterized by the combination
of a vigorous imagination, a wide knowledge of regional geology
and geophysics, and the insight and ability to synthesize
the major features of the Earth. In the early 1960s, Wilson
refined and championed the theory of plate tectonics, which
was then held in disrepute, by contributing a crucial concept:
he suggested that the Hawaiian and other volcanic island chains
may have formed due to the movement of a plate over a stationary
“hotspot" in the mantle. This theory eliminated
an apparent contradiction in plate-tectonics theory –
the occurrence of active volcanoes located many thousands
of kilometers from the nearest plate boundary. Hundreds of
following studies proved Wilson right. However, in the early
1960s, this idea was considered so radical that his "hotspot"
manuscript was rejected by all the major international scientific
journals. Indeed, everyone else believed that the continents
were not movable and stayed in one place. The paper was finally
published in 1963 in the Canadian Journal of Physics, and
became a milestone in plate tectonics.
Another of Wilson's important contributions to the development
of the plate-tectonics theory was published two years later.
He proposed that there must be a third type of plate boundary
to connect the oceanic ridges and trenches, which he noted
can end abruptly and "transform" into major faults
that slip horizontally. (A well-known example is the San Andreas
Fault zone.) Unlike ridges and trenches, “transform
faults,” as he called them, offset the crust horizontally,
without either creating or destroying it. Wilson's hypothesis
was soon confirmed and in a short time it became a cornerstone
of geology – a rare example of a single person’s
developing an elegant yet simple concept which can profoundly
affect a major scientific field.
Wilson was also among the first to relate seafloor spreading
to continental geology. The term Wilson Cycle is now used
to refer to the cyclical process by which an ocean basin such
as the North Atlantic closed (in so doing generating the Appalachian
and the Caledonian mountain systems) and later re-opened,
in this case to form the present Atlantic Ocean basin.
Dr. Wilson was elected president of the Royal Society of
Canada (1972-1973), the American Geophysical Union (1980-1982),
and the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics. He
was also elected honorary fellow in many international scientific
organizations. Among the many other honors and awards he received
are the Bucher Medal of the American Geophysical Union, the
Penrose Medal of the Geological Society of America, the John
J. Carty Medal of the National Academy of Sciences, and the
Logan Medal of the Geological Association of Canada. He served
as the Chief Canadian Delegate on the NATO Science Committee,
and was awarded the Companion of the Order of Canada in 1984.
John Tuzo Wilson died on April 15, 1993, in Toronto.
Adapted from http://www.edu.pe.ca/southernkings/biographytuzo.htm
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