J. Tuzo Wilson

Canadian geologist
Also known as: John Tuzo Wilson
Quick Facts
In full:
John Tuzo Wilson
Born:
Oct. 24, 1908, Ottawa, Ont., Can.
Died:
April 15, 1993, Toronto, Ont. (aged 84)

J. Tuzo Wilson (born Oct. 24, 1908, Ottawa, Ont., Can.—died April 15, 1993, Toronto, Ont.) was a Canadian geologist and geophysicist who established global patterns of faulting and the structure of the continents. His studies in plate tectonics had an important bearing on the theories of continental drift, seafloor spreading, and convection currents within the Earth.

The son of a Scottish engineer who had immigrated to Canada, Wilson in 1930 became the first person at any Canadian university to graduate in geophysical studies (B.A., Trinity College, University of Toronto). He then studied at St. John’s College, Cambridge (B.A., 1932), Princeton University (Ph.D., 1936), and Cambridge University (M.A., 1940; Sc.D., 1958). He worked with the Geological Survey of Canada (1936–39) and served with the Royal Canadian Engineers during World War II, rising to the rank of colonel. After the war, in 1946, Wilson became professor of geophysics at the University of Toronto, where he remained until 1974, when he became director general of the Ontario Science Centre. From 1983 to 1986 he was chancellor of York University. He was president of both the Royal Society of Canada (1972–73) and the American Geophysical Union (1980–82). Among his major publications were One Chinese Moon (1959), IGY: Year of the New Moons (1961), A Revolution in Earth Science (1967), and Continents Adrift and Continents Aground (1977).

In the early 1960s Wilson became the world’s leading spokesman for the revived theory of continental drift, at a time when prevailing opinion held that continents were fixed and immovable. His paper entitled A New Class of Faults and Their Bearing on Continental Drift (1965) introduced the concept of the transform fault. Whereas previous theories of continental drift had conceived of plates as either moving closer together (convergent plates) or further apart (divergent), Wilson asserted that a third kind of movement existed whereby plates slide past each other. This theory became one of the bases for plate tectonics, which revolutionized the geophysical sciences in the 1970s. A range of mountains in Antarctica is named for him.

Michael Faraday (L) English physicist and chemist (electromagnetism) and John Frederic Daniell (R) British chemist and meteorologist who invented the Daniell cell.
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seafloor spreading, theory that oceanic crust forms along submarine mountain zones, known collectively as the mid-ocean ridge system, and spreads out laterally away from them. This idea played a pivotal role in the development of the theory of plate tectonics, which revolutionized geologic thought during the last quarter of the 20th century.

Shortly after the conclusion of World War II, sonar-equipped vessels crisscrossed the oceans collecting ocean-depth profiles of the seafloor beneath them. The survey data was used to create three-dimensional relief maps of the ocean floor, and, by 1953, American oceanic cartographer Marie Tharp had created the first of several maps that revealed the presence of an underwater mountain range more than 16,000 km (10,000 miles) long in the Atlantic—the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

The seafloor spreading hypothesis was proposed by the American geophysicist Harry H. Hess in 1960. On the basis of Tharp’s efforts and other new discoveries about the deep-ocean floor, Hess postulated that molten material from Earth’s mantle continuously wells up along the crests of the mid-ocean ridges that wind for nearly 80,000 km (50,000 miles) through all the world’s oceans. As the magma cools, it is pushed away from the flanks of the ridges. This spreading creates a successively younger ocean floor, and the flow of material is thought to bring about the migration, or drifting apart, of the continents. The continents bordering the Atlantic Ocean, for example, are believed to be moving away from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at a rate of 1–2 cm (0.4–0.8 inch) per year, thus increasing the breadth of the ocean basin by twice that amount. Wherever continents are bordered by deep-sea trench systems, as in the Pacific Ocean, the ocean floor is plunged downward, underthrusting the continents and ultimately reentering and dissolving in Earth’s mantle, from which it had originated. (See also continental drift.)

Earth's tectonic plates
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plate tectonics: Seafloor spreading

A veritable legion of evidence supports the seafloor spreading hypothesis. Studies conducted with thermal probes, for example, indicate that the heat flow through bottom sediments is generally comparable to that through the continents except over the mid-ocean ridges, where at some sites the heat flow measures three to four times the normal value. The anomalously high values are considered to reflect the intrusion of molten material near the crests of the ridges. Research has also revealed that the ridge crests are characterized by anomalously low seismic wave velocities, which can be attributed to thermal expansion and microfracturing associated with the upwelling magma.

Investigations of oceanic magnetic anomalies have further corroborated the seafloor spreading hypothesis. Such studies have shown that the strength of the geomagnetic field is alternately anomalously high and low with increasing distance away from the axis of the mid-ocean ridge system. The anomalous features are nearly symmetrically arranged on both sides of the axis and parallel the axis, creating bands of parallel anomalies.

Measurements of the thickness of marine sediments and absolute age determinations of such bottom material have provided additional evidence for seafloor spreading. The oldest sediments so far recovered by a variety of methods—including coring, dredging, and deep-sea drilling—date only to the Jurassic Period, not exceeding about 200 million years in age. Such findings are incompatible with the doctrine of the permanency of the ocean basins that had prevailed among Earth scientists for so many years.

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The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by John P. Rafferty.