James A. Jackson Explained

James Jackson
Birth Date:1954 12, df=yes
Birth Place:India
Nationality:British
Field:Geophysics
Alma Mater:University of Cambridge
Doctoral Advisor:Dan McKenzie

James Anthony Jackson CBE FRS (born 12 December 1954) is Professor of Active Tectonics and head of Bullard Laboratories, Department of Earth Sciences, Cambridge University. He made his name in geophysics, using earthquake source seismology to examine how continents are deformed. His central research focus is to observe the active processes shaping our continents.[1]

Education and career

Jackson was born and raised in India, which probably established his interest in all aspects of Asia, which is where much of his current research has been concentrated. He was sent back to boarding school in the UK for his education.[2]

Jackson attended the University of Cambridge from 1973 graduating with a 1st Class degree in geology in 1976. Then, under the tutelage of Dan McKenzie at the Bullard Laboratories, Cambridge, he received his PhD in 1980. His research was within geophysics and used earthquakes to study the processes that produce the major surface features of the continents, such as mountain belts and basins. It included field work with seismometers in Iran and with the Seismic Discrimination Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Between 1977 and 1981 he was a visiting scientist in the Seismic Discrimination Group at MIT before returning to Cambridge to take up a research fellow position in Queens' College, Cambridge, where he became Assistant Dean in 1983. In 1984, he was appointed as an assistant lecturer in the Department of Earth Sciences, Cambridge, lecturer in 1988 and reader in 1996. He was made Professor of Active Tectonics in the Department of Earth Sciences in 2003.[3]

Communicating about the implications of his research for resilience against earthquakes, and about geophysics and earthquakes, to both societies at large and organisations has been an important part of his work. In 1995 he gave the televised Royal Institution Christmas Lectures. In 2023 he was a guest on the BBC Radio 4 programme The Life Scientific.[4]

Current research

Using evidence from earthquakes, remote sensing, geodesy and geomorphology he is able to observe, quantitatively, the geometry and rates of deformation processes while they are active. In addition to seismology, his current research uses space-based remote sensing (including radar interferometry, GPS measurements and optical imagery) combined with observations of the landscape in the field, to study the evolution and deformation of the continents on all scales, from the movement of individual faults in earthquakes to the evolution of mountain belts.

Much of his work is carried out in collaboration with researchers from the COMET Project[5] where he is associate director.

Selected publications

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://comet.nerc.ac.uk/people.php?first=James&last=Jackson James Jackson's profile on the COMET Project web site
  2. http://www.dar.cam.ac.uk/lectures/2006/JamesJacksonBiography.shtml Darwin College Lecture Series
  3. http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/univ/annualreport/2003/o.html University of Cambridge Annual Report, 2003: Awards and prizes and appointments
  4. Web site: Understanding earthquakes and building resilience. 21 March 2023.
  5. http://comet.nerc.ac.uk COMET Project
  6. Web site: Bullerwell Lecturers and Lectures.
  7. Web site: The UK's 100 leading practising scientists. 17 January 2014.
  8. Web site: Wollaston Medal. Geological Society of London. 30 August 2015.
  9. Web site: The Wollaston Medal 2015 citation & reply. Geological Society of London. 30 August 2015.