Lawrence A. Frakes Explained

Lawrence Austin Frakes (born 1930)[1] is an American-born geologist and paleoclimatologist residing in Australia since 1973. He holds (emeritus) the Douglas Mawson Professor of Geology chair, at the University of Adelaide, in South Australia.[2] Mount Frakes, a shield volcano in the Crary Mountains of Antarctica, is named for him.

Career

Lawrence Frakes is the son of Frank. B. Frakes and Elizabeth Austin (and is descended from an old ranching family near Elizabeth Lake (Los Angeles County, California)), and is a cousin of naturalist William Franklin Frakes and historian George E. Frakes.[3] Frakes studied at the University of California, Los Angeles where he earned his master's degree in 1959 (with a thesis on "The geology of the Quatal Canyon area, Kern, Ventura, and Santa Barbara Counties, California") and his Ph.D. in 1964 (entitled "Paleogeography of the Trimmers Rock Member of the Fort Littleton Formation (Devonian) in southern and eastern Pennsylvania")[4] with advisor John C. Crowell.[5] Frakes worked at University of California, University of New Mexico, Florida State University, and later in the Department of Earth Sciences at Monash University in Australia. He was named to his position as the Douglas Mawson Professor of Geology chair, at the University of Adelaide in 1985.[6] Professor Frakes was Chairman of the Dept. of Geology and Geophysics at the University of Adelaide from 1986-1989.

Frakes researches the relationship between continental drift and climate change.[7] [8] He has written a number of papers about glaciation and plate tectonics.[9] His studies of ocean sediments helped to determine the history of glaciation,[10] and have been published in well-respected journals, including Nature.[11] [12]

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Birth year from WorldCat catalog entry, retrieved 2019-10-20
  2. Book: The Polar Times. 1966. American polar society. 4.
  3. Web site: Frank B. Frakes (1908-1988) - Find a Grave.
  4. http://catalog.library.ucla.edu/vwebv/search?searchType=7&searchId=1456&maxResultsPerPage=50&recCount=50&recPointer=0&resultPointer=0&headingId=8389243{{dead link|date=December 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  5. Web site: Lawrence A. Frakes. Geotree: The Academic Genealogy of Geology and Geochemistry (academic tree.org).
  6. Book: Mineral Industry Quarterly. 1982. S.A. Department of Mines and Energy. 27.
  7. Book: Colin P. Summerhayes. Earth's Climate Evolution. 13 July 2015. Wiley. 978-1-118-89738-6. 87–.
  8. Book: University of California (System). University Bulletin: A Weekly Bulletin for the Staff of the University of California. 1968. Office of Official Publications, University of California. 58–.
  9. Book: Oscar R. López-Gamundí. Luis A. Buatois. Late Paleozoic Glacial Events and Postglacial Transgressions in Gondwana. 2010. Geological Society of America. 978-0-8137-2468-3. 5–.
  10. Book: Sea Secrets. 1972. International Oceanographic Foundation. 80.
  11. Book: Reed Business Information. New Scientist. 5 April 1973. Reed Business Information. 7–. 0262-4079.
  12. Book: Gabrielle Walker. Snowball Earth: The Story of the Global Catastrophe That Spawned Life As We Know It. 24 August 2009. A&C Black. 978-1-4088-0714-9. 124–.