Brian Atwater
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Brian Franklin Atwater is a geologist who works for the United States Geological Survey and is also a research professor at the University of Washington. Time Magazine nominated him as one of the 100 most influential people in 2005, along with the likes of Spike Lee and Ziyi Zhang.
Atwater has spent much of his career studying the likelihood of large earthquakes and tsunamis in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. In 2005, he published a book with others, "The Orphan Tsunami of 1700," that summarizes the evidence for a magnitude 9 earthquake in the Northwest on 26 January 1700, known as the 1700 Cascadia Earthquake. The earthquake produced a tsunami so large that contemporary reports in Japan noted it, allowing Atwater's team to assign a precise date and approximate magnitude to the earthquake. Its occurrence and size are confirmed by evidence of a dramatic drop in the elevation of Northwest coastal land, recorded by buried marsh and forest soils that underlie tidal sediment, the deposition of a layer of tsunami sand on the subsided landscape, the death or injury of affected trees (see dendrochronology), and descriptions of the earthquake and tsunami in regional Amerindian legends.
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[edit] Other Work
Atwater has also limned various supporting papers about earthquakes around the Pacific Rim and about other geological topics including great glacial floods in Washington State, and the natural history of San Francisco Bay.
In 2006 he began reconnaissance geologic mapping in coastal Indonesia, part of the ground-truth sleuthing needed to develop a "smart system" for protecting Indian Ocean communities from future tsunamis.
[edit] Education
Born in New Britain, Connecticut on September 18, 1951, Brian was educated at Northfield Mount Hermon, a boarding school in Gill, Massachusetts. He received his BS at Stanford University in California, where he began working for the U.S. Geological Survey, while dabbling in political activism. Atwater received his PhD from the University of Delaware.
[edit] Personal
When not digging in the mud, Atwater lives in Seattle, Washington, with his wife, an exchange student or two, and two cats. Somewhat eccentric, he can occasionally be sighted on the streets of Seattle at the wheel of his blue 1960s-era Comet station wagon, the car he bought as a graduate student for a few hundred dollars.
[edit] References
The Orphan Tsunami of 1700 [1]
[edit] External links
National Public Radio podcast with gallery, May 4, 2005 [2]