Birth Date: | 1922 6, df=y |
Birth Place: | Glasgow |
Death Place: | Oxford |
Workplaces: | University of Oxford |
Thesis Title: | Variation in the Terebratulacea of the Fuller's Earth Rock |
Thesis1 Url: | and |
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Doctoral Advisor: | William Joscelyn Arkell |
Known For: | Leading expert on the Palaeozoic |
Awards: | Distinguished Service CrossDSc (Oxon)Fourmarier Prize |
Spouse: | Jean Kirstine Stark Brown |
Partners: | )--> |
William Stuart McKerrow (28 June 1922, Glasgow – 12 June 2004, Oxford) was a British geologist and palaeontologist, known as a leading expert on the Palaeozoic.[1]
After primary school education at The Glasgow Academy,[2] W. Stuart McKerrow became a boarding student at Derbyshire's Abbotsholme School,[1] where he received his secondary school education. He matriculated in 1940 at the University of Glasgow and there in 1941 studied radio science. From 1942 to 1945 he served in the Royal Navy. He joined the Navy as a sub-lieutenant assigned to convey escort duties in the North Atlantic. He served as an expert in high-frequency direction-finding of enemy submarines. In an Atlantic gale, he repaired a faulty radio receiver. He was awarded the UK's Distinguished Service Cross in 1943 and was demobilised with the rank of lieutenant in November 1945.[2]
McKerrow returned to the University of Glasgow and graduated there in 1947 with a degree in geology. He was appointed a departmental demonstrator in the geology department of the University of Oxford[1] and was eventually promoted to lecturer. He was employed at the University of Oxford as a lecturer, tutor, supervisor of research, and leader of geological field excursions. In 1953 he graduated from the University of Oxford as a Doctor of Philosophy.[1] His doctoral thesis, with advisor William Joscelyn Arkell,[2] is entitled Variation in the Terebratulacea of the Fuller's Earth Rock.[3] During the late 1950s McKerrow began collaborating with geologists in the US and Canada and became an expert on the geological links across the Atlantic during the Palaeozoic.[1] He was a research fellow at Caltech for the academic year 1964–1965 and a visiting scientist at the University Chicago in 1973, in 1977, and 1981, at the University of Alberta in 1984, and at Williams College in 1991. He also spent some time at the University of Auckland. Throughout his career at Oxford and during an active retirement, he did research on the local geology in the Cotswolds and Oxfordshire.[2] In 1989 he retired from the University of Oxford — during his career there he had nearly 30 research students. He became a fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford and eventually vicegerent of the college.[1]
During the 1960s and 1970s he did research on the geology of south-west Ireland, the Southern Uplands of Scotland, and Newfoundland. Later in his career he published research on paleoecology and continental redistribution. He was the author or co-author of about 120 scientific articles.[2] He was the editor of the book The Ecology of Fossils: An Illustrated Guide (1978, M.I.T. Press) [4] [5] [6] and the co-editor, with Christopher R. Scotese, of the book Palaeozoic Palaeogeography and Biogeography (1990, Geological Society of London).[7] With F. Brian Atkins (1937–2013), he published Isle of Arran: A Field Guide for Students of Geology (1989, Geologists' Association).[8]
McKerrow was a strong advocate for the preservation of Kirtlington Quarry for use by scientists and the general public. He served as an Elder of the Presbyterian Church and often preached at St Columba's United Reformed Church, Oxford.[2]
He was a founding member of the Palaeontological Association and served as its president from 1970 to 1972. In 1978 the University of Oxford awarded him a Doctorate in Science.[2] In 1995 the Royal Academy of Belgium awarded him the Fourmarier Prize. He was awarded in 1981 the Geological Society of London's Lyell Medal,[1] in 1988 the Edinburgh Geological Society's Clough Medal,[9] and in 1998 the Geological Society of Glasgow's T. Neville George Medal.[10]
In 1949 he married Jean Kirstine Stark Brown, a Glasgow native with a degree in domestic science from The Queen's College in Glasgow. They first met in Portsmouth during WW II. The couple had three sons and three grandchildren.[11] [12]