Marie Tharp and the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
In honor of International Women’s Day and the beginning of Women’s History Month, we thought some of our favorite female geologists deserved a shout out. One of my personal favorites is this girl, Marie Tharp, who did something very important for our modern understanding of geology—she discovered the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.<!-- more --.
The ocean floor has always been a mysterious place and in the 1950’s it was even more so; most believed it was simply a flat, boring plain. After World War II, many feared the next warfront would be underwater, so the quest to gather more information about the ocean floor was in full force, which proved to be good for science.
Marie was working at the Lamont Geological Observatory when the funding for ocean research started pouring in. Many of her colleagues would go out to sea and come back with mounds of sonar data that could be used to determine the depth of the ocean floor. Back at the lab, Marie began piecing together the numbers and using them to make a map of the ocean floor.
Marie, and her colleague Bruce Heezen, began to notice something interesting about the map (which she made by hand, by the way)—the ocean floor was not flat. In fact, there were mountains! Underwater! Most notably, these mountains formed a very long chain, one that went right down the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Marie thought it was a volcanic rift center, an idea that was initially dismissed as “girl talk”.
Marie and Bruce (who came around to the idea that it was a volcanic rift center) published their first map in 1957. At this time, most people still did not like the idea of a mid-ocean ridge because it was too closely linked with continental drift, which was considered geological nonsense at the time. A few years later, Harry Hess would use the Mid-Atlantic Ridge to support his theory of seafloor spreading, which ultimately led to the unifying theory of plate tectonics.
Marie devoted much of her life to mapping; she and Bruce released a map of the entire ocean floor in 1977. Our modern understanding of Earth processes and plate tectonics would not be possible without these maps. The discovery of mid-ocean ridges was a crucial piece to the puzzle of how continents move and ultimately why Earth works. So thank you Marie!
-CM
For more information: http://bit.ly/1BfCjWE http://huff.to/18oityd A brief autobiography: http://bit.ly/1mEqFR7 This book:http://amzn.to/1wMccZ0
Photo (Marie with Bruce Heezen) credit: Marie Tharp Maps http://bit.ly/1NqP5YX