Luc Bulot | |
Birth Date: | July 23, 1963 |
Birth Place: | Cavaillon, France |
Death Date: | July 27, 2022 |
Death Place: | Manchester, United Kingdom |
Nationality: | French |
Fields: | Biostratigraphy, Plate tectonics |
Workplaces: | National Museum of Natural History, Aix-Marseille University, University of Manchester |
Thesis Year: | 1995 |
Luc Bulot (July 23, 1963 – July 27, 2022) was a French paleontologist mainly known for his work on the biostratigraphy of West Africa and on the determination of Lower Cretaceous GSSP.
Luc Georges Bulot was born in Cavaillon, Vaucluse, France on July 23, 1963.
On October 17, 2015, he married Elsa Schnebelen in Saint-Privat-de-Champclos (Gard).[1]
Bulot graduated with a master's degree in geology from the University of Dijon and obtained a PhD at the National Museum of Natural History of Paris in 1995.
Chairman of the "Working group on the Valanginian" within the International Commission on Stratigraphy, he worked for a long time on the definition of the Lower Cretaceous GSSP.[2]
From 2020 to 2022, he held various simultaneous positions: lead biostratigraphy expert within the North Africa Research Group, co-leader of an LCO/IFREMER/CNRS consortium based in Brest and investigating the links between biostratigraphy, sedimentology and plate tectonics, lecturer at the University of Manchester; and editor of the Arabian Journal of Geosciences (AJGS).[3]
Notable areas of work included:
In July 2022, Luc Bulot died of cancer in Manchester, United Kingdom at the age of 59.
In 2023, many researchers paid tribute, in a special edition of the Journal of African Earth Science, to the extent of his work which redefined a significant part of the stratigraphy of West Africa.[8]