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Geophysicist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lisa Tauxe is a geophysicist, professor and former department chair at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego. Tauxe is a researcher and international authority on the behavior of the ancient geomagnetic field and applications of paleomagnetism to geological problems.
Lisa Tauxe | |
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Alma mater |
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Awards | Benjamin Franklin Medal (2014) |
Scientific career | |
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Institutions | Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego |
Website | http://magician.ucsd.edu/ |
Tauxe's contributions include the study of remanent magnetism in geological and archaeological materials, as well as co-founding a collaborative data system for compiling and sharing geological magnetic data from around the globe, the Magnetics Information Consortium (MagIC).[1][2] To facilitate paleomagnetic measurements, Tauxe uses a demagnetized space in San Diego.[3][4] Tauxe is a leader in research that documents when the Earth's magnetic poles reversed. Because technology and electrical grids depend on the Earth's magnetic field to protect it from the Sun's magnetic storms, Prof. Tauxe's work has global significance. She pioneered paleointensity analysis of undersea basaltic glasses and copper slag residues found in archaeological sites, fundamentally changing the process of collecting magnetic field data and the volume of data available to study.[2]
Prof. Tauxe graduated from Columbia University with a Ph.D. in 1983.[2]
In 2014, Prof. Tauxe was awarded the prestigious Ben Franklin Medal for Earth and Environmental Science "[f]or the development of observational techniques and theoretical models providing an improved understanding of the behavior of, and variations in intensity of, the Earth's magnetic field through geologic time."[2][5] As of 2014[update], Tauxe was the general secretary of the American Geophysical Union.[2]
Prof. Tauxe has authored two textbooks,[2] over 150 academic papers,[6] including 44 in AGU journals.
Tauxe has a brother, Dr. Robert Tauxe, who works at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.[14]
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