- Raymond Thorsteinsson
Infobox Scientist
image_width = 150px
name = Dr. Raymond Thorsteinsson
birth_date = c. 1930
birth_place =Wynyard, Saskatchewan ,Canada
death_date =
death_place =
residence = Canada
citizenship = Canadian
nationality =
field = Geologist
work_institution =Geological Survey of Canada
alma_mater =University of Saskatchewan University of Toronto University of Kansas
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for = Arctic GeologyPaleontology
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prizes = Gold Medal
Willet G. Miller Medal
Logan Medal
Massey Medal
R.J.W. Douglas Medal
religion =
footnotes =Raymond (Ray) Thorsteinsson (born c. 1930) is an award-winning
Canadian geologist who focuses on the geology of the highArctic . He is a Fellow of The Arctic Institute of North America, primarily known for his contribution to the geology of theProterozoic andPaleozoic rocks.Biography
Thorsteinsson was born in
Wynyard, Saskatchewan . He obtained a BSc in geology at theUniversity of Saskatchewan (1944) and an MSc in geology at theUniversity of Toronto . In 1955, he earned a PhD from theUniversity of Kansas .Thorsteinsson began work in the
Canadian Arctic Archipelago , in 1947, as a summer field assistant. One of his assignments included an epiccanoe trip with Dr. Y.O. Fortier to perform geological reconnaissance in the centre of the largely unknown Arctic region. He began his lifelong career with theGeological Survey of Canada in 1952. He spent most of his time studying the Arctic. At first, his fieldwork was completed on foot and by dog team. He advanced the study of the Canadian Arctic by pioneering the method of landing small aircraft, with oversize tires, in remote places on the Arctic Islands. His work and that of his fellow geologists at the GSC led to extensive land acquisitions during the late 1950s and early 1960s by oil and mining companies.Dr. Thorsteinsson made significant contributions in the fields of
structural geology andbiochronology , as well as in regionalstratigraphy . In 1973, theRoyal Society of Canada noted:His work is particularly characterized by its breadth and includes structural, stratigraphic, and biochronological histories of the enormously thick rock succession of the Islands and forms the basis of all future work. As a result of his studies the geological history and sedimentary column in the Islands are better understood than those in many areas of Canada that have been studied far longer. Few scientists have been fortunate enough to be presented with such a challenge and opportunity, and few could have risen to and mastered such a challenge.Thorsteinsson published more than fifty maps and articles. His geological maps had scales varying from 1/125,000 to 1/500,000.
Thorsteinsson also performed paleontological studies. He made fundamental advances in the knowledge of
graptolites and of theextinct ostracoderm fish . He established the most complete succession of faunal zones inPennsylvanian andPermian rocks in the Arctic.Awards
*Made Fellow of The Arctic Institute of North America
*1969, Awarded the Gold Medal by theRoyal Geographical Society
*1973, Awarded theWillet G. Miller Medal by theRoyal Society of Canada
*1979, Awarded theLogan Medal by theGeological Association of Canada
*1981, Awarded theMassey Medal byRoyal Canadian Geographical Society
*1982, Awarded theR. J. W. Douglas Medal by theCanadian Society of Petroleum Geologists Notes
References
* [http://www.rcgs.org/rcgs/awards/awards_masseyPrevWinners.asp Royal Canadian Geographical Society’s Massey Award]
* [http://www.aina.ucalgary.ca/scripts/minisa.dll/144/proe/proarc/se+arctic,+v.+35,+no.++4,+Dec.+1982,*?COMMANDSEARCH Arctic Institute of North America]
* [http://www.rsc.ca/index.php?lang_id=1&page_id=160 Royal Society of Canada]
* [http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic35-4-560.pdf R. J. W. Douglas Medal Award]
* [http://www.usask.ca/100/alumni/raymond_thorsteinsson.php University of Saskatchewan- 100 Alumni of Influence]
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