- Francis Parker Shepard
Infobox_Scientist
name = Francis Parker Shepard
birth_date =May 10 1897
death_date = death date and age|1965|4|25|1897|5|10
residence =United States of America
nationality = American
field = Sedimentologist
work_institution =Scripps Institution of Oceanography
alma_mater =Harvard University
University of Chicago
doctoral_students =Robert S. Dietz
Kenneth O. Emery
prizes =Wollaston Medal (1966)
Sorby Medal (1978)
footnotes =Francis Parker Shepard (
10 May 1897 —25 April 1985 ) was an American sedimentologist most associated with his studies ofsubmarine canyon s andseafloor currents around continental shelves and slopes [Citation
last1 = Hancock | first1 = Paul L.
last2 = Skinner | first2 = Brian J.
last3 = Dineley | first3 = David L.
title = The Oxford Companion to The Earth
publisher =Oxford University Press
year = 2000
isbn = 0-19-854039-6 ] .Shepard was born to a moderately wealthy family in Marbleheard,
Massachusetts . He studiedgeology under R. A. Daly atHarvard University , a period that was interrupted by service in theUS Navy during theFirst World War . After meeting his future wife, Elizabeth Buchner, he chose to study for hisdoctorate at theUniversity of Chicago , close to herMilwaukee home. There he worked alongside J. Harlan Bretz,Rollin D. Salisbury andRollin T. Chamberlin (son ofThomas Chamberlin ) on thestructural geology of theRocky Mountains , receiving his degree in 1922.A fortuitous spell using a
yacht belonging to his father, the head of Shepard Steamship Line, turned Shepard in the direction of marine geology. Examining the distribution of sediments on theNew England shelf, he found evidence of the role ofsea level change in the evolution of shelves. After asabbatical in 1933 spent studying submarine canyons off the coast ofCalifornia , Shepard took leave from Chicago and moved his family and two of his graduate students,Robert S. Dietz andKenneth O. Emery , to theScripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla. There his work focused on the shelves off California and theGulf of California , and the processes that shaped them. Submarine canyons, he suggested, were initially carved byriver s when sea levels were lower during the recentPleistocene epoch.In the
Second World War , Shepard again worked for theUS Navy , where his expertise and knowledge of seafloors was used to assistsubmarine operations. After the war, Shepard became director of anAmerican Petroleum Institute project, studying sedimentation in the northernGulf of Mexico between 1951 and 1960 (API Project 51). Although officially retiring in 1966, Shepard continued to work, even after illness had forced him to remain at home.During his career Shepard received both the
Wollaston Medal from theGeological Society of London (1966) and theSorby Medal from theInternational Association of Sedimentologists (1978). Since 1967, theSociety for Sedimentary Geology have awarded the Francis P. Shepard Medal for Marine Geology in recognition of "Excellence in Marine Geology".References
External links
* [http://scilib.ucsd.edu/sio/archives/siohstry/shepard-biog.html Biographical entry] (
Scripps Institution of Oceanography )
* [http://gsahist.org/gsat/gt01dec20_21.pdf Biographical entry] (Geological Society of America )
* [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9067291/Francis-P-Shepard Biographical entry] (Encyclopædia Britannica )
* [http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/template.cfm?name=medallistsfrom1831_ Wollaston Medal winners] (Geological Society of London)
* [http://www.iasnet.org/members/awards.asp Sorby Medal winners] (International Association of Sedimentologists)
* [http://www.sepm.org/events/awards/awardcriteria.htm#Francis%20P.%20Shepard%20Medal%20for%20Marine%20Geology Francis P. Shepard Medal for Marine Geology] and [http://www.sepm.org/events/awards/pastwinners.htm#SHEPARD%20MEDALISTS winners] (Society for Sedimentary Geology)
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