William R. Dickinson

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BornOctober 26, 1931 Edit this on Wikidata
DiedJuly 21, 2015 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 83)
Occupation
William R. Dickinson
BornOctober 26, 1931 Edit this on Wikidata
DiedJuly 21, 2015 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 83)
Alma materStanford University
Occupation
Employer
Awards
Dickinson's QFL triangle

William Richard Dickinson (October 26, 1931  July 21, 2015) was a professor emeritus of geoscience at the University of Arizona and a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.[1] Dickinson was a professor at Stanford University[2] and joined the U of A faculty in 1979.[3]

Dickinson was born near Nashville, Tennessee, on October 26, 1931,[4] and grew up in Travellers Rest, a historic plantation house built by the slaves of his great-great-grandfather Judge John Overton in 1799.[5] Dickinson enrolled at Stanford University in 1948, and graduated with a Bachelor's of Science in petroleum engineering in 1952 and a Ph.D in geology in 1958.[5]

Career

Dickinson was renowned for his work in plate tectonics,[6] sedimentary geology and Pacific Oceana geology and was considered one of the foremost experts on the geology of the Colorado Plateau. Dickinson was one of the founders of the Gazzi-Dickinson Method and its primary application, QFL diagrams and their use in sandstone provenance.

Dickinson's research includes studying the potsherds (historic or prehistoric fragments of pottery) of Pacific Oceana. Over the years, he visited hundreds of Pacific Islands collecting and dating sherds.[7]

Awards

Later life

References

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