Ian W Dalziel


Ian W Dalziel
Professor, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Jackson School of Geosciences
Professor, Institute for Geophysics, Jackson School of Geosciences

Phone: +1 512 471 0431, +1 512 471 6156
Email: ian@ig.utexas.edu
CV (url)

Media Rep Contact

Anton Caputo (primary)
512-232-9623
email

Monica Kortsha

email

 
 

Ian has dedicated most of his career to understanding global tectonic processes and to mapping out the geography of ancient times on a dynamic Earth. His 35 years of field experience have been devoted to work in the British Caledonides, the Canadian Shield, the Andes, and Antarctica. NSF-sponsored fieldwork in Antarctica between 1995 and 1998 led Ian to propose that ancestral North America, known to geologists as Laurentia, was connected to South America, Africa, and Antarctica one billion years ago by a large promontory, which he named the "Texas Plateau" (see Powerpoint animations "Texas Through Time" and "From Texas To Antarctica" and "Making of Texas" poster). The results of this work were published in the January 1995 issue of Scientific American. Recently, working with colleagues from the U.K. and Australia, Ian has turned his attention to unraveling the complicated tectonic history of Scotland, his homeland. Ian was president of the International Division of Geological Society of America from 1996 to 1997, has served as delegate to the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research of International Union of Geological Sciences since 1987, and has served as the International Secretary of the American Geophysical Union since 1996.

Media Rep Contact

Anton Caputo (primary)
512-232-9623
email

Monica Kortsha

email