- Walter A. Bell
Infobox_Scientist
name = Dr. Walter A. Bell
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birth_date = 4 January 1889
birth_place =St. Thomas, Ontario ,Canada
death_date = 1969
death_place =Pictou County, Nova Scotia , Canada
residence = Canada
citizenship = Canadian
nationality =
field = Geologist
work_institution =Geological Survey of Canada
alma_mater =Queen's University Yale University
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known_for = Carboniferous stratigraphy
Paleobotany
Paleontology
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prizes = Logan Medal
religion =
footnotes =Walter Andrew Bell (
January 4 ,1889 -1969) was aCanadian geologist . He worked for theGeological Survey of Canada for over 40 years and authored or co-authored 70 publications, mostly concerningCarboniferous stratigraphy ,paleobotany andpaleontology ofAtlantic Canada . He also contributed significantly to central and western CanadianMesozoic andCenozoic paleobotany. His work provided support for the theory ofcontinental drift .Early life
Bell was born to Scottish
Presbyterian parents inSt. Thomas, Ontario . He attendedQueen's University inKingston, Ontario , where he specialized in Geological Engineering. In 1911, he obtained a MSc in Geology fromYale University .Career
In 1911, Bell began his work with the
Geological Survey of Canada examining the Carboniferous plants of Joggins near theBay of Fundy .His scientific work was interrupted byWorld War I . From 1916 to 1919, he served with theRoyal Regiment of Canadian Artillery and fought at Ypres, Vimy and Arras. After the war, Ball stayed inEngland for several months independently examining Britishfossils before returning to his studies at Yale. In 1920, he received his PhD with distinction.After school he returned to the Geological Survey of Canada full-time. He concentrated his research on the structure, stratigraphy and palaeontology of the Lower Carboniferous Horton and Windsor groups of
Nova Scotia . Bell was not a believer in the theory of continental drift, but his findings of the fossil plants proved to be well-known European species, thus becoming the foundation for the modernplate tectonics framework of theMaritimes .Bell’s 1949 publication on fossil plants from
Alberta was expansive as Bell was able to supplement his own collections with those collected 50 years earlier by Dawson, Selwyn, and Tyrrell.In 1950, Bell was promoted from Assistant Palaeobotanist to Director. As Director he encouraged and strengthened paleontological and stratigraphic studies. In 1953, Bell allowed
George Hanson to take over as Director. In the final seven years before his death, his publications included 220 illustrated plates of fossil plants from across Canada.In 1969, Bell died. He was buried at Alma,
Pictou County, Nova Scotia .Legacy
In 1965, he was awarded the
Geological Association of Canada ’s highest honour, theLogan Medal .In 1968 the Saint Mary's University Geology Society was founded as the W.A Bell Geology Club. Subsequently the name was changed to the D.Hope-Simpson Geology Club, in honour of the first chairperson of the Geology Department, Dr. David Hope-Simpson.
In 1995, the Walter A. Bell Memorial Symposium has held in Halifax.
Often cited papers
* Bell, W. A., 1957, "Flora of the Upper Cretaceous Nanaimo Group of Vancouver Island", British Columbia: Geological Survey of Canada Memoir
References
*Zodrow, Erwin L. 1997. "Walter A. Bell (Geological Survey of Canada; 1920-1954): Founding father of the Canadian Carboniferous stratigraphy and pioneering briostratigrapher". Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 95:3-5.
*von Bitter, Peter H. "Walter Andrew Bell (1889-1969): Canadian Carboniferous Stratigrapher, Palaeobotanist and Palaeontologist par excellence". Geoscience Canada. 24(3):135-142.
*Zaslow, Morris. 1975. "Reading the Rocks". Toronto: Macmillan Company of Canada Ltd.
=External links=
* [http://museum.gov.ns.ca/fossils/finders/bell.htm Nova Scotia Museum- Bell]
* [http://www.smu.ca/academic/science/geology/geology/society/D.Hope%20history.htm Saint Mary's University Geology Society History]
* [http://www.bris.ac.uk/researchreview/2006/11474443421.html Marie Stopes (1880-1958)]
* [http://gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/paleogal/paleogsc_e.php Paleontology at the GSC]
* [http://gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/hist/150_e.php The First 150 years of the Geological Survey of Canada]
* [http://www.gac.ca/JOURNALS/TOC/gcv24n3.htm GEOSCIENCE CANADA September 1997, Volume 24 Number 3]
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