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41px-face.jpg Maria Brumm has a Master's degree... in Earth Science! She lives in Seattle, WA, where she works in environmental consulting.

Opinions expressed on Green Gabbro are well-reasoned and insightful. Needless to say, they are not those of my employers, Seed Media Group, or anyone on my thesis committee. Disclaimers expressed on this blog may be those of the Whad'Ya Know? quiz show.

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« Teaching Engineers to Blog? | Main | Delicious Internet Noms »

Earth Scientists on Stamps

Category: FluffGeoscientistsScience Culture
Posted on: February 19, 2009 8:33 AM, by Maria Brumm


mohorovicic-stamp.png
Following the Royal Mail's release of some lovely new Darwin stamps, a few of us got to Twittering over lunch yesterday about the lack of geologists on this year's release of American scientist stamps.

(What's that? You have no idea what Twittering is? It's a stupid Web Eleventy-Point-Oh jibber-jabber service, pay no attention. If you are an Eleventy-Point-Oh sort of person, though, perhaps you should be following me.)

Googling around a bit for existing stamps that feature earth scientists, I found the pickings to be surprisingly slim. Alfred Wegener has been on stamps issued by both East Germany and Greenland, but not in recognition of his ill-fated early support of continental drift. The stamps honored his work in polar meteorology (Wegener died on an ill-fated scientific expedition to collect the first full year of weather data in interior Greenland).

Other earth scientists with stamps:

The question we were having fun with at lunch, though, is this: Which earth scientists would you pick to put on stamps?

To avoid making this too simple an exercise in listing off a bunch of awesome dead earth scientists, I'm going to stick to a themed (at least by nationality) set of four. My suggestions for the USPS:

Yes, I booted Harry Hess in favor of Marie Tharp in order to fill a diversity box. It's a set of stamps, yo; it is not just a straightforward list of the people whose names are already in the history books, it is a sneaky kind of aspirational statement. I'm disappointed that I failed on the racial/ethnic diversity box; if anyone has suggestions I would love to hear them. Remember, though, stamps are always posthumous honors.

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Comments

1

I nominate Charles Schuchert (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Schuchert) mostly because it'd be cool to have a relative on a stamp. Other than that your list is pretty good.

Posted by: marciepooh | February 19, 2009 10:11 AM

2

Motherfucking geologists! On the motherfucking USPS stamps!!

Posted by: arvind | February 19, 2009 1:44 PM

3

John Wesley Powell seems like a trite, obvious choice, but you just know if the USPS does decide to honor geotypes, he'll be at the top of the list. For the diversity, I would nominate Florence Bascom.

Posted by: Lockwood | February 19, 2009 5:07 PM

4

I am out in the field, and cannot remember if he made it to a stamp, but Sir Douglas Mawson is on the $100 Australian banknote.

Norman L. Bowen would be a candidate for a US stamp.

Posted by: Phil | February 19, 2009 5:16 PM

5

Louis Agassiz, Charles Lyell, Wallace Broecker, Nicholas Shackleton, Lonnie Thompson, Sue Hendrickson, and Roger Revelle. I suppose one could argue some of those do not qualify as 'earth scientists'.

Posted by: llewelly | February 19, 2009 8:11 PM

6

GKG is a good choice, but some llewelly's nominations fail the posthumous test.

Posted by: ScienceWoman | February 19, 2009 8:21 PM

7

Agassiz's legacy is tarnished by his creepy racism. He really shouldn't get a stamp until after all the scientists who make better role models have been appropriately honored.

Posted by: Maria Brumm | February 19, 2009 9:34 PM

8

Isn't Broecker still alive?

Also, I think Inge Lehmann deserves a stamp simply because her big discovery is attributed to Mohorovicic in the stamp pictured above.

If the discovery has already made the cut, it might as well be properly attributed.

Posted by: Lab Lemming | February 20, 2009 6:12 AM

9

Maria Brumm | February 19, 2009 9:34 PM

Agassiz's legacy is tarnished by his creepy racism. He really shouldn't get a stamp until after all the scientists who make better role models have been appropriately honored.

I hadn't known Agassiz's creepy racism was any worse than typical for his time period. Since seeing your comment, I've done some more reading on Agassiz, and I now agree with you. Thank you for the correction.

Science Woman, Lab Lemming, Broecker and Thompson are both still alive. I didn't realize that was a disqualifying criteria, but if it is they're both out. (My list was too long anyway.)

Posted by: llewelly | February 20, 2009 3:17 PM

10

I'd put Helen Tappan Loeblich on a stamp; any microfossil stratigrapher would know why.

Why not Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Marsh? And Dana and Clarence King and of course Harry Hess too.

Posted by: Andrew | February 20, 2009 10:46 PM

11

Sir Douglas Mawson has featured on several Australian stamps.

I'd add William Smith to the list.

Posted by: Sarah | February 23, 2009 5:28 AM

12

Douglas Mawson has left the Australian $100 note in favour of others - Monash and Nicholls. A shame - the $100 image was the frontespiece of my M. Sc. thesis on rocks Mawson studied in the Northern Flinders Ranges, and the note design included one of his cross sections that showed my sequence.

Wegener is honoured by an ?80s vintage ?DDR stamp I have somewhere - not to hand as I write this note - that lacks his image, but shows his continental drift reconstruction. I suspect it is the first continental drift stamp ever issued.

And yes - a big shout for Bill Smith.

Posted by: David Hilyard | February 24, 2009 7:49 PM

13

Okay, I know very little geology, but the Mohorovicic Discontinuity Layer rocks my world, but then again, I'm a huge moho.

Posted by: Pareidolius | March 1, 2009 1:44 AM

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