Allan Verne Cox (December 17, 1926 – January 27, 1987) was an American geophysicist. His work on dating geomagnetic reversals, with Richard Doell and Brent Dalrymple, made a major contribution to the theory of plate tectonics. Allan Cox won numerous awards, including the prestigious Vetlesen Prize, and was the president of the American Geophysical Union. He was the author of over a hundred scientific papers, and the author or editor of two books on plate tectonics. On January 27, 1987, Cox died in an apparent suicide.
Biography
Cox began studying chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley. However, after a single quarter he left school and spent three years in the United States Merchant Marine. He returned to Berkeley, but had so little interest in chemistry that his grades were too low to avoid being drafted into the United States Army. When he returned, he switched his major to geology. His research career in geology began in 1950 when he took a position as a field assistant to Clyde Wahrhaftig studying glaciation in the Alaska Range; the pair later had a long romantic relationship.[1][2][3] For his graduate research at the University of California, Berkeley, Cox concentrated on rock magnetism with John Verhoogen as his supervisor. Verhoogen was one of the few geologists of the time who took the hypothesis of continental drift seriously. His stance made a deep impression on Cox.[4]
After receiving his Ph.D. in 1959, Cox joined the United States Geological Survey in Menlo Park, California. There he collaborated with another geophysicist, Richard Doell, on rock magnetism. The two were particularly interested in geomagnetic reversals. At the time, very little was known about the timing of reversals. The rock specimens they collected were too young (a few millions of years) to date accurately until the potassium-argon dating method was developed. Cox and Doell arranged for the USGS to hire Brent Dalrymple, a graduate from Berkeley with expertise in this method. The three succeeded in creating the first geomagnetic polarity time scale. This work made possible the first test, by Frederick Vine and Drummond Matthews, of the seafloor spreading hypothesis.[4]
Cox was hired as a professor at Stanford University in 1967. He became Dean of the School of Earth Sciences in 1979 and demonstrated a talent for administration that was widely acknowledged by his colleagues.[4]
Cox died in a bicycle accident, colliding with a large redwood tree after falling off a cliff on Tunitas Creek road, in the mountains Northwest of Stanford University. The San Mateo County coroner concluded that Cox's death was a suicide.[5] Cox was normally very safety conscious and had exceptionally not worn a helmet on that day. Cox's death came five days after he learned he was going to be charged with child molestation. Cox allegedly had repeatedly molested the son of one of his graduate students. Cox had told the father of the molested child that he would kill himself if the allegations were reported to the police.[6]
Two years after Cox's death, his longtime partner Clyde Wahrhaftig came out as gay during his acceptance speech for the Geological Society of America's Career Achievement Award, thus revealing Cox's sexuality as well. (Cox had remained closeted for his entire life.) Without directly mentioning the allegations against Cox at the time of his death, Wahrhaftig's speech implied Cox's suicide was the result of anti-gay prejudice, concluding, "I hope that, by making this revelation here, I contribute in some small way to the creation of a society with a sufficiently intelligent, open, and compassionate attitude toward sexuality that suicides such as Allan Cox's will be a thing of the past."[3]
After his death, a number of memorials to him were created. The American Geophysical Union had the annual Allan Cox Lecture from 1998 to 2001; this lecture was replaced by the Edward Bullard lecture.[11] The Geological Society of America (Geophysics Division) selects a student each year for the Allan V. Cox Student Research Award;[12] and Stanford University awards the Allan Cox Medal for Faculty Excellence Fostering Undergraduate Research.[13]
Cox, Allan V.; Doell, R. R. and; Dalrymple, G. B. (1964). "Reversals of the earth's magnetic field—Recent paleomagnetic + geochronological data provide information on time + frequency of field reversals". Science. 144 (3626): 1537–1543. Bibcode:1964Sci...144.1537C. doi:10.1126/science.144.3626.1537. PMID17741239.
Gordon, R. G.; Cox, A; O'H.are, S. (1984). "Paleomagnetic Euler poles and the apparent polar wander and absolute motion of North America since the Carboniferous". Tectonics. 3 (5): 499–537. Bibcode:1984Tecto...3..499G. doi:10.1029/TC003i005p00499.
^"Queer Scientists of Historical Note". National Organization of Gay and Lesbian Scientists and Technical Professionals. 2009. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
^Bill Workman (March 13, 1987). "Stanford Dean killed himself, coroner rules". San Francisco Chronicle. The San Mateo County coroner has ruled that Stanford University dean Allan Cox, a world-renowned expert in earthquake studies, committed suicide when he smashed his bicycle into a tree in January. Coroner Paul Jensen said yesterday he has 'conclusive evidence' that Cox, 60, a suspect in a sexual molestation case at the time, killed himself by deliberately riding his bike down a hill and off the road at high speed.
^Lisa Lapin (January 30, 1987). "Was death a suicide born of sex probe". San Jose Mercury News. p. 1A. 'San Mateo County sheriff's detectives say Cox committed suicide when he struck the redwood head-on during a bicycle ride Tuesday morning, five days after he learned he was to be charged with child molestation. [para break] Cox, the 60-year-old dean of the Stanford earth sciences department, was being investigated on suspicion of repeatedly molesting a friend's teen-age son, according to Lt. Richard McKillip. McKillip said detectives told Cox on Friday that he was under investigation . . .A childless bachelor, he was especially close to the victim's parents and their 19-year-old son.'
"Awards & Honors". Geomagnetism & Paleomagnetism section of the American Geophysical Union. Archived from the original on 29 January 2012. Retrieved 12 September 2011.