Stephen Moorbath


Stephen Erwin Moorbath was a British geochronologist. He set up and then directed the Geological Age and Isotope Research Group at the University of Oxford, before retiring.

Research

Moorbath and his collaborators demonstrated the great gap between Scourian and Laxfordian gneisses in northwest Scotland. He established the basic mineral age pattern of the Scottish and Irish Caledonides and interpreted it as a cooling-uplift interval. He also pioneered lead isotope studies of ancient gneisses, showing that much of the Lewisian existed over 2,900 million years ago. Stephen dated the oldest rocks yet known on the Earth from west Greenland, and applied the rubidium–strontium method to date Torridonian sediments. In addition, he elucidated the complex history of British and Scandinavian lead ores, and showed that the Tertiary acid magmas of Skye are re-melted Lewisian gneisses whereas those of Iceland are of mantle origin.

Awards and honours

Moorbath was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1977. In 1978 he was awarded the Murchison Medal by the Geological Society of London and in 1979 he was awarded the Steno Medal by the Danish Geological Society for his work on isotopes and dating the Precambrian of Western Greenland.