David H. Scott Explained

David Holcomb Scott
Birth Date:1916
Death Date:2000[1]
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David Holcomb Scott was an American geologist who worked for the U.S. Geological Survey's Center of Astrogeology in Flagstaff, Arizona. Scott was involved in the Apollo Program, and served as project chief for the Mars geologic mapping program, which was funded by NASA's Planetology Program Office.[2] He served as Discipline Scientist for the NASA Planetary Geology and Geophysics Program, and founded the Lunar Geosciences Working Group, which resulted in publication of Status and Future of Lunar Geoscience.[3] He continued to publish scientific articles on Mars through the 1990s.[4] He authored more formal lunar and planetary geologic maps than anyone else in the Branch of Astrogeology.[1]

According to Don Wilhelms in his 1993 book To a Rocky Moon:[5]

[The USGS Branch of Astrogeology was] able to consider hiring David Holcomb Scott, a former oil company chief geologist and chief of exploration. [Scott] came up to me after a talk I gave in February 1966 at UCLA – which he missed – and said he wanted to do something new and interesting. He hurried through his Ph.D. and in a few years took on a mapping load that three ordinary geologists could not have upheld.

Publications

Notes and References

  1. https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1190/of2005-1190.pdf The U.S. Geological Survey, Branch of Astrogeology—A Chronology of Activities from Conception through the End of Project Apollo (1960-1973)
  2. https://library.usgs.gov/photo/index.html#/item/5d4b0727e4b01d82ce8df27d First Geologic Map of Mars. 1978.
  3. https://www.lpi.usra.edu/lunar_resources/documents/LunarGeoscience.pdf Status and Future of Lunar Geoscience
  4. https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/David-H-Scott-5803122 David H. Scott's research while affiliated with United States Geological Survey and other places
  5. http://www.lpi.usra.edu/publications/books/rockyMoon/ To A Rocky Moon