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Harry Hess published 'The History of Ocean Basins' in 1962, outlining a theory of how tectonic plates can move which was later called 'sea floor spreading'. He identified the presence of mid ocean ridges, and that ocean trenches are where ocean floor is destroyed and recycled.
- Frederick Vine and Drummond Matthews
Image courtesy of the Naked Science Society. They published...
- John Tuzo-Wilson
The Canadian geophysicist John Tuzo-Wilson was initially...
- Alfred Lothar Wegener
In 1915 he published ‘The Origin of Continents and Oceans’,...
- Frederick Vine and Drummond Matthews
This process is called plate tectonics, and it transformed the thinking of geologists. One of them, Harry Hess, was an instrumental figure in figuring out how plate tectonics worked. Hess possessed two valuable skills: careful attention to detail and the ability to form sweeping hypotheses.
20 Μαΐ 2024 · Harry Hammond Hess, a professor of geology at Princeton University, was very influential in setting the stage for the emerging plate-tectonics theory in the early 1960s. He believed in many of the observations Wegener used in defending his theory of continental drift, but he had very different views about large-scale movements of the Earth.
1 Οκτ 2024 · In this paper, Hess, drawing on Holmes’s model of convective flow in the mantle, suggested that the oceanic ridges were the surface expressions of rising and diverging convective mantle flow, while trenches and Wadati-Benioff zones, with their associated island arcs, marked descending limbs.
HARRY HAMMOND HESS 115 Harry Hess was a pioneer in development of the now widely accepted theory of ocean-floor spreading. In 1960, in a widely circulated report to the Office of Naval Research, Harry proposed that the mid-oceanic ridges were the loci of upwelling in 1969 indicates that it was the most referenced work in solid-
Harry Hammond Hess, a professor of geology at Princeton University, was very influential in setting the stage for the emerging plate-tectonics theory in the early 1960s. He believed in many of the observations Wegener used in defending his theory of continental drift, but he had very different views about large-scale movements of the Earth.
20 Μαΐ 2024 · This question particularly intrigued Harry H. Hess, a Princeton University geologist and a Naval Reserve Rear Admiral, and Robert S. Dietz, a scientist with the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey who first coined the term seafloor spreading.