Australian geologist (1914–2006)
Rhodes Whitmore Fairbridge (21 May 1914 – 8 November 2006) was an Australian geologist and expert on climate change. His father was Kingsley Fairbridge.[1]
Born in Pinjarra, Western Australia, Fairbridge graduated from Queen's University in Ontario and earned his master's degree from Oxford. In 1941, he earned a doctorate in geology from the University of Western Australia.
He taught at Columbia University from 1955 until his 1982 retirement. While there, he was supervising editor for the Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences. In the early 1960s, he developed the so-called "Fairbridge Curve",[2][3] a record of changes in sea levels over the last 10,000 years.[4] In the 1980s Fairbridge wrote about climate's impact on the long-term evolution of shields and peneplains.[5][6]
Fairbridge died in 2006 in Amagansett, New York of a brain tumor.[7][8]
- ^ Mackey, Richard. "Rhodes Fairbridge and the idea that the solar system regulates the Earth's climate" (PDF). Journal of Coastal Research. SI 50 (Proceedings of the 9th International Coastal Symposium): 955–968. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2008.
- ^ "Fairbridge sealevel curve". www.unc.edu. Archived from the original on 15 June 2017.
- ^ 15 October 2003 Classification of Coasts. Journal of Coastal Research pp. 155–165
- ^ The “Solar Jerk”, The King-Hele Cycle, and the Challenge to Climate Science
- ^ Fairbridge, Rhodes W.; Finkl Jr., Charles W. (1980). "Cratonic erosion unconformities and peneplains". The Journal of Geology. 88 (1): 69–86. Bibcode:1980JG.....88...69F. doi:10.1086/628474. S2CID 129231129.
- ^ Fairbridge, Rhodes W. (1988). "Cyclical patterns of exposure, weathering and burial of cratonic surfaces, with some examples from North America and Australia". Geografiska Annaler. 70 A (4): 277–283. doi:10.1080/04353676.1988.11880257.
- ^ Pearce, Jeremy ( 27 November 2006). Rhodes W. Fairbridge, 92, Early Expert on Climate Change, Dies. New York Times
- ^ "Earth scientist's early climate change indicator lives on". The Sydney Morning Herald. 6 January 2007.