Lawrence Alexander Hardie Explained

Lawrence Alexander Hardie
Birth Name:Lawrence Alexander Hardie
Birth Date:13 January 1933
Birth Place:Durban, Natal, South Africa
Nationality:American
Death Place:Seaside, California, U.S.
Education:Johns Hopkins University
Field:Geology, Sedimentology, Geochemistry
Work Institutions:Johns Hopkins University Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences professor 1965–2013, chair 1992–1995, 2004–2006
Alma Mater:University of Natal, RSA
Johns Hopkins University, US
(Ph.D.)
Doctoral Advisor:Hans P. Eugster
Francis J. Pettijohn
Awards:Francis J. Pettijohn Medal for Excellence by the Society for Sedimentary Geology in 2003.
Spouse:Glenys Kathleen Hardie (1961-)
Children:Deborah Buettner
Russell Hardie

Lawrence Alexander Hardie (January 13, 1933 – December 17, 2013) was an American geologist, sedimentologist, and geochemist .

Hardie was a professor at Johns Hopkins University in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences.[1] His research topics included evaporites, dolomitization, cyclical deposition of carbonate sediments, and plate tectonic driven changes in seawater chemistry.[2] In the latter, he proposed that changes in the seafloor spreading rates at mid-ocean ridges have altered the composition of seawater throughout earth history, producing oscillations in the mineralogy of carbonate and evaporite precipitates.[3] Specifically citing these scientific contributions, the Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM) awarded him the Francis J. Pettijohn Medal in 2003.[2]

Early life and education

Hardie was born in Durban, Natal, South Africa, on January 13, 1933.[1] He attended the University of Natal, Durban, originally to pursue an undergraduate degree in chemistry. He focused instead on geology after attending lectures by South African geologist Lester Charles King.[4] While a student, Hardie played soccer,[1] and was selected as a member of the South African Universities "All Star" team four times. He earned a B.Sc. degree in Geology and Chemistry in 1955, and a B.Sc. (Hons.)degree in Geology in 1956.

In 1957, he was hired by King as an instructor and taught beginning classes in geology while working on his master's thesis on the origin of the Table Mountain Sandstone. He earned an M.Sc. in geology in 1959 under the guidance of Drs. Peter Matthews and Joseph Frankel.

In 1960, he was awarded a fellowship by the South African Council for Scientific and Industrial Research to spend an academic year in the U.S. He went to Johns Hopkins University and began working with sedimentologist Francis J. Pettijohn and geochemist Hans Eugster, in a newly built geochemistry laboratory.[4] [5] There he conducted experimental work on evaporite minerals. He was offered a full-time graduate fellowship to earn a Ph.D. He briefly returned to South Africa to marry Glenys Kathleen Smith in Durban,[4] and then graduated with a Ph.D. in 1965.

Academic career

Hardie joined the faculty at JHU as an assistant professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences in 1965.[1] He later became a full professor, mentoring more than 30 graduate students. He also taught introductory geology to many undergraduate students, including his own children, introducing them to the intricacies of geological process through extensive field trips.[4] [5] He also served as the department chair from 1992 to 1995, and again in 2004–2006.[1] He retired in 2007 to the status of professor emeritus.[5]

Hardie ran the JHU field camp (Camp Singewald) in western Maryland for many summers in the 1960s and 1970s. He led regular field trips to the Florida Keys and Assateague Island, and also took students to the Bahamas and Baja California, Mexico. His work also took him frequently to the Dolomites in Italy,[1] and he partook in long hikes and climbs. Some of his field work required travel by Zodiac inflatable boats, minibikes, and 3-wheeled all terrain vehicles.

Scientific achievements

Early in his career, Hardie conducted research and experimentation with evaporites. Later he showed that the signal from evaporites provides evidence for seawater chemistry change. He observed that secular changes in the mineralogy of potash evaporites and ooids and cements in marine limestones are synchronous with greenhouse/hothouse climates and global sea level. Hardie's study of evaporites led to the hypothesis, since verified through study of seawater trapped inside crystals of marine halite, that seawater has undergone long-term variations in its major ion composition.[3] He demonstrated that these variations are linked to plate tectonic processes at mid-ocean ridges. These studies improved the understanding of calcifying marine organisms and their role in the global carbon cycle, and also had implications for geochemistry, mineralogy, tectonics, biological evolution (biomineralization), oil/gas resources, and climate change. In recognition, he was awarded the Francis J. Pettijohn Medal for Excellence by the Society for Sedimentary Geology in 2003.[2]

Hardie completed field research on the modern shallow marine carbonates of the Bahamas with Bob Ginsburg and others. In 1977 he wrote a book on comparative sedimentology entitled Sedimentation on the modern carbonate tidal flats of northwest Andros Island, Bahamas. He went on to study ancient carbonates of western Maryland (Cambro-Ordovician) and the Italian Dolomites (Triassic). Hardie's work on carbonates advanced the understanding of climate and sea level change, and the role of Milankovitch cycles in carbonate deposition.

Another of Hardie's contributions involves the study of the origins of dolomite, a mineral associated with the world's oil reserves. When dolomite replaces calcite minerals, its slightly smaller molar volume leaves voids in carbonate rock, causing oil migration. In the Italian Dolomites, Hardie (with student Edith Wilson) demonstrated the hydrothermal origin of dolomite in the Triassic Latemar buildup.

Hardie and his students and colleagues also studied cyclic sedimentation, confirming that platform carbonates of the Middle Triassic (Anisian-Ladinian) of the Latemar buildup consist of a vertical stack of over 500 thin (ave. thickness 0.6-0.85m) shallowing-upward depositional cycles that record high frequency eustatic sea level oscillations in tune to Milankovitch astronomical rhythms. They described the details of the cycles and deposition and created computer simulations that accurately modeled the Latemar cyclostratigraphy using Milankovitch-controlled sea level oscillations.

Awards and honors

Personal life and death

Hardie and his wife Glenys became U.S. citizens.[4] They had two children; his daughter Deborah obtained a degree in mathematics at JHU, and Russell studied engineering at Loyola University Maryland. His son Russell is currently a professor in the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Dayton.[1]

Hardie enjoyed jazz and attended concerts at the Famous Ballroom in Baltimore. After moving from Baltimore to Pasadena, Maryland, in the 1970s, Hardie took to sailing on the Magothy River and the Chesapeake Bay.[1] He taught his children and many of his students to sail. He later took up snow skiing and golf.[1]

Hardie died at age 80 from complications of Alzheimer's disease on December 17, 2013, at the Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula in Monterey, California.[1]

Selected publications

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

References

  1. News: Kelly. Jacques. Lawrence A. Hardie, Hopkins geology professor. Baltimore Sun. January 17, 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140122124147/http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2014-01-17/news/bs-md-ob-lawrence-hardie-20140117_1_geology-ocean-salinity-students. January 22, 2014.
  2. 2003 Annual Report of the Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM). http://www.sepm.org/CM_Files/SocietyRecords/2003.pdf
  3. Johns Hopkins Magazine, February 2002, Vol. 54, No. 1. http://pages.jh.edu/~jhumag/0202web/wholly.html#sea
  4. Johns Hopkins University, Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, Department News Archive, December 20, 2013. http://eps.jhu.edu/about/archive/
  5. JHU University News, January 28, 2014. http://hub.jhu.edu/2014/01/28/lawrence-hardie-eps
  6. The Johns Hopkins News-Letter, Vol. CII, Issue 22