Walter Scott Adkins

Geologist and paleontologist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroGeologist and paleontologist
wasGeologist Scientist Paleontologist Zoologist Entomologist Ethnologist
Work fieldBiology Science Social science
Gender
Male
Birth24 December 1890
Death22 September 1956 (aged 65 years)
Star signCapricorn
Education
University of Tennessee, KnoxvilleBachelor of Science
Columbia University
Sorbonne Paris Cité University (group)
Awards
Guggenheim Fellowship1931
The details

Biography

Walter Scott Adkins (24 December 1890 – 22 September 1956) was a geologist and paleontologist, known for his books Handbook of Texas Cretaceous Fossils (1928) and Mesozoic Systems in Texas (1933). He is also known for his work on the distribution of shoestring and barrier sands in the subsurface of the Miocene and for his work on the origin and migration of petroleum.

Biography

Adkins earned a B.S. from the University of Tennessee in 1910. He was a graduate student in entomology at the University of Tennessee and then at Columbia University, where he studied Drosophila under Thomas Hunt Morgan. Adkins was a professor from 1913–1915 teaching geology at Texas Christian University, from 1916–1918 teaching anatomy at the Illinois Medical School, and from 1918–1919 teaching anatomy at Baylor Medical School. He worked for the Texas Bureau of Economic Geology from 1919 to 1921 and for the Mexican petroleum company El Águila from 1921 to 1925. In 1925–1926, he went to France and studied at the Sorbonne under Émile Haug. In 1926 Adkins returned to Texas to rejoin the Bureau of Economic Geology, where he remained until 1934 when he started work for the Shell Development Company. As chief stratographer and head of special problems research, Adkins worked for Shell until he retired in 1950.

Adkins's first marriage ended in divorce; his first marriage produced a son, Jack Scott Adkins (1922–1944), who was killed in the Anzio invasion. The second marriage of W. S. Adkins was to a former student, Mary Grace Muse.

Adkins has the honor of being chosen as the first paleontologist to hold a Guggenheim Fellowship, which was for the academic year 1931–1932.

Selected works

  • with Will McClain Winton: Paleontological correlation of the Fredericksburg and Washita formations in North Texas. 1920.
  • with W. M. Winton: Geology of Tarrant County. 1920.
  • Geology and mineral resources of McLennan County. 1923.
  • Geology and mineral resources of the Fort Stockton quadrangle. 1927.
  • Handbook of Texas Cretaceous fossils. 1928.
  • with M. B. Arick: Geology of Bell county, Texas. 1930.
  • with E. H. Sellards and F. B. Plummer: Geology of Texas. 1933.
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