Lonnie Thompson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lonnie Thompson (b.1948), is a glaciologist and Distinguished University Professor in the School of Earth Sciences at The Ohio State University. He has achieved global recognition for drilling ice cores from mountain glaciers and ice caps in the tropical and sub-tropical regions of the world. He and his wife, Ellen Mosley-Thompson, run the ice core paleoclimatology research group at the Byrd Polar Research Center. [1]
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Lonnie Thompson was born July 1, 1948 in Gassaway, West Virginia. He went on to obtain his undergraduate degree from Marshall University, where he majored in geology. He subsequently attended The Ohio State University where he received his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees.
“ | In his efforts to obtain ice cores, Thompson has spent an enormous amount of time at elevations above 5,500 meters. High-altitude climbers typically tackle a peak by spending time in a series of camps at lower elevations to acclimatize and then making a final rushed push for the summit. But Thompson and his loyal band of colleagues, students and mountain guides spend literally months at a time working at altitude...
Thompson and his colleagues have managed to drill into tropical glaciers with nothing more to rely on than a combination of modest funding, low-tech equipment, ingenuity and sheer muscle power. Because the thin air at high altitudes precludes the use of helicopters, all of the drilling equipment and supplies must be carried up and down the slopes by yaks, mules, horses or humans... |
” |
-- Mark Bowen, Thin Ice
[edit] Honors and Awards
2001: Thompson was featured among eighteen scientists and researchers as "America's Best" by CNN and Time Magazine.
2002: Thompson was awarded the Dr. A.H. Heineken Prize for Environmental Sciences by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.
2005: Lonnie was elected to the National Academy of Science.[2]
November, 2005: Lonnie was featured in a "Rolling Stone" article on those fighting global climate change. [3]
2005: Lonnie was awarded the prestigious Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement, an honor often regarded as the environmental science equivalent to the Nobel Prize. [4]
February, 2007: Ellen and Lonnie were awarded the Roy Chapman Andrews Society Distinguished Explorer Award at Beloit College, Beloit, WI. [5]
[edit] Publications
Lonnie Thompson has gone on dozens of field research expeditions; has been awarded 53 research grants from the NSF, NASA, NOAA and NGS; and has over 165 publications. An abbreviated list of expeditions, grants, and publications can be found in Lonnie's C.V. (PDF).
Some notable publications include:
- Evidence of abrupt tropical climate change: past and present. L.G. Thompson, Mosley-Thompson, E., Brecher, H., Davis, M.E., Leon, B., Les, D., Mashiotta, T.A., Lin, P.-N., Mountain, K., 2006. "Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A." 103 (28), 10536.
- Tropical glacier and ice core evidence of climate change on annual to millennial time scales. L.G. Thompson, E. Mosley-Thompson, M.E. Davis, P.-N. Lin, K. Henderson, T.A. Mashiotta, 2003. Climatic Change 59, 137-155.
- Kilimanjaro ice core records: evidence of Holocene climate change in tropical Africa. L.G. Thompson et al., 2002. Science 298 (5593), 589-593. doi:10.1126/science.1073198.
- Ice core evidence for climate change in the Tropics: implications for our future. L.G. Thompson, 2000. Quaternary Science Reviews 19, 19-35.
- Tropical climate instability: the last glacial cycle from a Qinghai-Tibetan ice core. L.G. Thompson, T. Yao, M.E. Davis, K.A. Henderson, E. Mosley-Thompson, P.-N. Lin, J. Beer, H.-A. Synal, J. Cole-Dai, J.F. Bolzan, 1997. "Science" 276 (5320), 1821-1825. doi:10.1126/science.276.5320.1821.
[edit] References
- Mark Bowen (2005). Thin Ice. ISBN 0-8050-6443-5, a history of Thompson's career and adventures. See also Thin Ice: Website; Review
[edit] Trivia
During a storm atop Huascaran, Peru's highest peak (>6,000 m.), gale-force winds pushed Thompson's tent (with him inside) towards a precipice. Thompson saved himself with a self-arrest, jamming his ice ax through the floor of his tent. (Source: Bowen, Thin Ice)
[edit] External links
- Ice Core Paleoclimatology Research Group, Lonnie's and Ellen's research group at OSU.
- Lonnie's web page at Byrd Polar
- Ellen's web page at Byrd Polar
- Lonnie Thompson's Department of Geological Sciences faculty home page
- Ellen Mosely-Thompson's Department of Geography faculty home page
- Lonnie Thompson, biography from the Encyclopedia of World Biography
- "Deciphering the ice: scientist drills into tropical glaciers for clues to Earth's climate changes" from CNN/Time.
- "Tropical Glacier Retreat" from RealClimate. May 23, 2005.
- "The 'Indiana Jones' of a Shrinking Realm", biographical profile of Thompson from the Washington Post. July 29, 2006