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  1. William Maurice Ewing (12 de mayo de 1906 – 4 de mayo de 1974) fue un geofísico y oceanógrafo estadounidense.

  2. Ewing has been described as a pioneering geophysicist who worked on the research of seismic reflection and refraction in ocean basins, ocean bottom photography, submarine sound transmission (including the SOFAR channel), deep sea core samples of the ocean bottom, theory and observation of earthquake surface waves, fluidity of the ...

  3. 9 de may. de 2024 · Maurice Ewing (born May 12, 1906, Lockney, Texas, U.S.—died May 4, 1974, Galveston, Texas) was a U.S. geophysicist who made fundamental contributions to understanding of marine sediments and ocean basins, using seismic methods.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. William Maurice Ewing fue un geofísico y oceanógrafo estadounidense.

    • Early Years and Education
    • Professional Career
    • Former Students
    • Honors Awarded to Maurice Ewing
    • External Links

    William Maurice Ewing was born on May 12, 1906, to Floyd and Hope Hamilton Ewing. Maurice (Pronounced Morris), like his six younger siblings, was heir to the self-discipline and hard work of a farming family that coaxed a livelihood from the harsh flats of the Texas Panhandle. Recreation and relaxation would remain foreign concepts throughout his l...

    1930 Mapping the Continental Shelf

    After a year at the University of Pittsburgh as a physics instructor, in 1930 Ewing joined the Lehigh University faculty. Four years later, an unexpected visit by Professor Richard Field, of Princeton, and William Bowie, of the US Coast and Geodetic Survey, altered the course of his career completely. The geologic problem they hoped Ewing could unravel was whether the deep place where the continental shelf ends was a geologic fault or the result of outbuilding of sediment from the land. Field...

    1935 Explosion Seismology at Sea

    With a $2000 grant from the Geological Society of America, Ewing set out in 1935 to do what had never been tried before explosion seismology at sea. On board the Coast Survey’s Oceanographer and later that year on the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution’s Atlantis, Ewing, with Albert Crary and H.M. Rutherford, began tests to trace the basement rock off the coast of Virginia in an outcrop almost to the edge of the continental shelf. Their outdated equipment was borrowed from an oil company th...

    1940 Undersea Photography

    The scientific community was indeed astounded when, in 1940, Ewing, his younger brother Robert, Vine, and Worzel obtained clear shots of ripples and bare cobbles (proving that currents existed at the bottom, something denied until then) and an abundance of animal life and tracks (contrary to biologists’ predictions). Just before the outbreak of World War II, Ewing accepted the offer of Columbus Iselin to work at Woods Hole on contracts from the newly created National Defense Research Committe...

    Most if not all of his 200-plus graduate students achieved a measure of success well above the average. And what higher a professor’s glory than to count among his ahmmi the likes of Albert Crary, Milton Dobrin, William van Dorn, Jim Dorman, Charles Drake, Gordon Hamilton, Jim Hayes, Bruce Heezen, John Bracken Hersey, Sam Katz, Marcus Langseth, Gar...

    1999 The Maurice Ewing a 299 ft research vessel owned by the Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory, is launched
    1997 Maurice Ewing Earth and Planetary Sciences Fund is established by the National Academy of Sciences
    1977 Maurice Ewing Medalis created as SEG's highest award
    1976 Maurice Ewing Medal is created, jointly awarded by the American Geophysical Union and the US Navy
    - Maurice Ewing by Dolores Proubasta, The Leading Edge Mar 1991, Vol. 10, No. 3, pp. 15-20
  5. Dar inicio a un trabajo sobre la vida y obra de Maurice Ewing geofísico estadounidense, que realizó grandes aportaciones al conocimiento del suelo oceánico, nos lleva a indagar sobre uno de los grandes genios de nuestra época moderna.

  6. 20 de abr. de 2013 · Cuando Ewing y su equipo, en plena Segunda Guerra Mundial, se encontraban estudiando la gravedad de los submarinos y la efectividad de las explosiones bajo el mar, descubrió un fenómeno que supondría un avance fundamental: los canales de sonido.