George Tilton


George Tilton was an American geochemist who specialized in uranium-lead geochronology. He was the first to measure a U-Pb date on zircon and was instrumental in developing analytical techniques for the measurement of U, Th, and Pb in minerals and rocks, using isotope dilution and mass spectrometry.

Biography

George Tilton was born in Danville Illinois on June 3, 1923. He enrolled at Blackburn College in Illinois, but his education was interrupted in 1943 when was called to serve in the US Army. He participated in the campaign to liberate France, where he was wounded in November 1944. After the war, in 1947, Tilton completed his B.S. in Chemistry from the University of Illinois, including a term paper on "reactions of slow and fast neutrons" and a senior thesis on the use of radioactive tracers to study chemical reactions. He earned his Ph.D. in Chemistry at the University of Chicago in 1951, working on clean lab chemistry, isotope dilution and mass spectrometry techniques to measure the uranium content of meteorites. Fellow graduate student Clair Patterson and he achieved two momentous results: the first accurate age of Earth and the solar system based on Pb isotope ratios, and the ages for terrestrial rocks using U-Pb isotopic dates. He was a researcher at the Carnegie Institution of Washington from 1951-1965, working on U-Pb dating and the use of isotope tracers. In 1965 George accepted the offer of a Professorship at the University of California, Santa Barbara. There he mentored many graduate students and researchers until his retirement in 1991. He remained an active Emeritus Professor there until a few years before his death.

Awards and honors