David Alexander Brown

David Alexander Brown was a geologist who played an important role in developing the study of Geology in Australia. He was born on 8 February 1916 in Scotland.[1] His father fought and died at Gallipoli in World War I. His mother took him to New Zealand when he was four years old.[2]

He studied at the University of New Zealand and graduated in 1937 with a Master of Science degree. In 1936 he started work in a field geologist job at the New Zealand Geological Survey. In 1938 he changed jobs, working for the New Zealand Petroleum Exploration Group.

When World War II broke out he first joined the New Zealand Expeditionary Force, and then later the Royal Navy. He took up flying aircraft from aircraft carriers, in the Fleet Air Arm. He was posted to the Barents Sea and North Sea. His highlight was to bomb the German battleship Tirpitz in April 1944 in Altenfjord a Norwegian fjord while flying a Fairey Barracuda torpedo bomber in Operation Tungsten.

He found his wife Patrica in the Women's Royal Naval Service. After the war they lived in London.

Brown was given a post graduate scholarship to study Bryozoa (or Polyzoans) from the Tertiary period in New Zealand. His jobs were at the Imperial College of Science and Technology and the British Museum of Natural History. In 1948 he graduated with a PhD and a DIC, and an award of the Lyell Fund from the Geological Society of London in 1953.[3] He became a world expert on polyzoa, and a good taxonomist.

After this he migrated back to New Zealand and rejoined the New Zealand Geological Survey. The Otago University recruited him as a lecturer in 1950. In 1959 he accepted at job at the Canberra University College as the chair of geology. He set up the geology department, not specialising but employing people with a range of specialities. At various times he was the dean of science, dean of students, and he ensured the library had a good range of journals.

Brown was the president of the Geological Society of Australia. He was skilled at translating Russian to English and wrote a Russian to English dictionary for geoscience.

A Bryzoan species from the Schizoporellidae was named after him, Dakaria dabrowni.[4] A mollusc Mauidrillia browni is named after him.[5]

He had three children and nine grandchildren. He died 3 November 2009 in Sydney.

References

  1. Sydney Morning Herald http://notices.smh.com.au/death/61626/notice.aspx. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. "War and Study Shaped Scientist of Many Talents". Canberra Times. 5 December 2009. p. 26.
  3. "Lyell Fund".
  4. Mary D. Rogick (1962). "Studies on Marine Bryozoa, XIV. Dakaria". Transactions of the American Microscopical Society (Blackwell Publishing) 81: 84–89. doi:10.2307/3223947. JSTOR 3223947.
  5. http://rsnz.natlib.govt.nz/volume/rsnz_73/rsnz_73_03_001620.html Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand Volume 73, 1943-44 page 192

Publications

Notes

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