- Edward Bullard
Infobox Scientist
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name = Edward Bullard
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birth_date =21 September 1907
birth_place =Norwich
death_date =3 April 1980
death_place =California
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fields =Geophysics
workplaces =British Admiralty , National Physical Laboratory,University of Cambridge
alma_mater =University of Cambridge
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known_for =Dynamo theory
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awards =Hughes Medal ,Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society
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footnotes =Sir Edward "Teddy" Crisp Bullard (
21 September 1907 -3 April 1980 ) was a geophysicist born into a wealthy brewing family inNorwich , England. He studied Natural Sciences atClare College, Cambridge [ [http://www.chu.cam.ac.uk/archives/exhibitions/Kellytalk07.pdf Reflections on Churchill's scientists - the first generation] ] . He studied under Ernest Rutherford at theCavendish Laboratory ofUniversity of Cambridge and in the 1930s he received his PhD as a nuclear physicist.As it was the
Great Depression and he was married he had to find a career to survive on. In the 1930s nuclear physics did not seem to be it so he switched to geophysics. DuringWorld War II he was an experimental officer atHMS Vernon , and worked on the development ofdegaussing techniques to protect shipping frommagnetic mine s.He became one of the most important geophysicists of his day. He also did studies of the ocean floor even though he suffered from seasickness and could rarely take scientific trips on the ocean.
He held a chair at the
University of Toronto from 1948-50 and was head of the National Physical Laboratory between 1950 and 1955. He returned to Cambridge in 1955, first as an assistant in research, then as a Reader and finally to a chair created for him in 1964. He was a founding fellow ofChurchill College, Cambridge He was important to
dynamo theory , hence his most important work concerned the source of the Earth's magnetic field. He was often frustrated by efforts to increase geophysical interest at the University of Cambridge. In his career he won theHughes Medal and theGold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society .Then during the early 1960s Bullard and his associates used a computer to try and fit all of the continents together. Instead of using the shorelines, like other geophysicists had done, he used a depth of 2000 meters (6560 ft) below sea level. This depth corresponds to about half way between the shoreline and the ocean basins and represents the true edge of the continents. By doing this he discovered a near perfect fit among the continents put together. With this discovery he helped further the idea that earlier geophysicist,
Alfred Wegener , had suggested calledPangaea .After retiring from Cambridge he settled to a position in California where he died in 1980. His papers are held by the
Churchill Archives Centre .External links
* [http://www.agu.org/inside/awards/bullard.html University of California San Diego obit]
* [http://www.flickr.com/photos/costi-londra/865482654/ Bullard photo]
* [http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:1EfAkEGMJNMJ:assets.cambridge.org/052181/9296/excerpt/0521819296_excerpt.pdf+%22Edward+Bullard%22+%22physicist%22+-wikipedia&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=2 Cambridge article]
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