Ernest Willington Skeats Explained

Ernest Willington Skeats (1 November 1875  - 20 January 1953) was an English-Australian geologist and academic.[1]

Skeats was born in Berais Town, Southampton, England, son of Frank George Skeats, a bank clerk and his wife Alice Erena Martin and was educated at Handel and Hartley colleges, Southampton, and entered the Royal College of Science, London, where he received a D.Sc. in geology in 1902.[2]

Skeats moved to Australia in 1904, succeeding John Walter Gregory in the chair of geology and mineralogy at the University of Melbourne. He specialised in petrology and stratigraphy.

Skeats was President of the Royal Society of Victoria 1910–1911.

He was elected president of the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy for 1925.[3]

He won the Clarke Medal, awarded by the Royal Society of New South Wales in 1929.

References

Notes and References

  1. Thomas A. . Darragh . Ernest Willington Skeats . 11 . 1988 . skeats-ernest-willington-8440 . 2024-02-06.
  2. University intelligence . 25 July 1902 . 5 . 36829.
  3. News: Personal . . LXXXIX . 26,184 . South Australia . 27 November 1924 . 23 December 2018 . 8 . National Library of Australia.