SS
Member Since 1976
Seth Stein
Professor, Northwestern University
Honors and Awards

Walter H. Bucher Medal
Received December 2022
Citation
Seth Stein is an extraordinary scientist who has made fundamental contributions to many geophysical disciplines. He has investigated processes within Earth’s lithosphere using techniques including seismology, space-based geodesy and marine geophysics. Seth and his students and colleagues have produced numerous seminal publications in the fields of seismic wave theory, Earth structure, normal mode seismology, plate kinematics, intraplate stresses and seismicity, oceanic microplates, plate boundary deformation, lithospheric heat flow and the structure of ocean plates, the causes of deep earthquakes, paleoplate reconstructions, the growth of the Andes, and seismic hazards. And this list is by no means complete. Seth continues to make major contributions, particularly addressing plate motions and how plate boundaries and plate interiors evolve, with special interest in the resulting earthquakes and hazards. A major focus of Seth’s current research is on better understanding multiple aspects of earthquake hazards, including how, where and when they occur and the shaking that results. Seth and colleagues are exploring how well the hazard maps, which are used to design earthquake-resistant structures and thus reduce losses from earthquakes, represent true seismic hazards, what causes the uncertainties involved and how to make better forecasts. Another focus of Seth’s recent studies involves using seismic imaging methods to identify the processes by which continents rift apart to form new ocean basins, particularly the evolution of North America’s unique 1.1-billion-year-old Midcontinent Rift. Using a novel approach of comparative “riftology,” Seth is discovering how continental rifting starts, how it proceeds and why it ends. As an example, Seth incorporated EarthScope seismic modeling into the construction of a model that resembles the kind of rift initiation occurring in the East African Rift Valleys, solving a long-standing riddle as to why the Midcontinent Rift Zone rifting stopped so soon after it began. This project, as with several others such as the seminal work on modeling the thermal structure of oceanic lithosphere, was done with Seth’s leading collaborator (and also wife and life partner!), the accomplished geophysicist Carol Stein. Seth is also an exemplary mentor, always making sure that students got first-author credit for their work done on big projects, and his enormous enthusiasm and great mentoring skills, combined with his exceptional seismology textbook, which (with its many early open-source preprint versions) has been a defining text for more than 40 years, have brought many students into the field of geophysics.
 
— Michael Wysession Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis, Missouri
 
Response
As a seismologist interested in earthquakes and tectonics, I’m honored to receive the Bucher medal and deeply grateful to my nominators. The medal was first awarded in 1968 to Tuzo Wilson for his role in discovering plate tectonics. Three years later, I was in the first undergraduate generation who learned plate tectonics as fact rather than a fringe idea. I was captivated by how this elegant simple concept explained how our planet worked and decided to make a career of it. During my education - four years at MIT and three at Caltech, I was advised, taught, or influenced by seven future Bucher medalists and other senior scientists. Geophysics was then concentrated in a few very large departments, so an eminent seismologist told me that joining Northwestern was “a good first job.” However, I took a different view. I thought comparable science could be done in a small department and formulated a research philosophy to do that. First, investigate major problems based on their importance rather than availability of funding. Second, don’t be constrained by conventional wisdom. Third, work with students as colleagues, advising rather than supervising. This medal is as much my collaborators’ as mine. Most important is my wife Carol. Over 40 years, our partnership made a special relationship, albeit without work/life separation. We assured our 3-year-old son that whatever the oceans’ depth, there was room for whales. Our daughter tolerated endless scientific discussions.Great collaborators – too many to fully list - included Tim Dixon, Michael Wysession, Mian Liu, Sue Hough, Bruce Spencer, Norm Abrahamson, Richard Gordon, Donna Jurdy, Emile Okal, Anke Friedrich, and Bernie Wood.  Helping students grow into superb scientists is my job’s best part. I had the privilege of working with 30 outstanding PhD students including Doug Wiens, Joe Engeln, Don Argus, Chuck DeMets, George Helffrich, Gary Acton, Tom Shoberg, John Weber, John Delaughter, Lisa Leffler, Andy Newman, Eryn Klosko, Alberto Lopez, Kim Schramm, Carl Ebeling, Laura Swafford, Miguel Merino, and the recent “seismological dream team” – Eddie Brooks, Leah Salditch, Jamie Neely, Molly Gallahue, Reece Elling, and Boris Rösler. AGU has been crucial to my career, like everyone’s here. Through it, our individual science is refined and merged into a greater entity. Hopefully even as AGU evolves and becomes more complex, we can stay focused on using scientific excellence to better understand how our planet works and how people can better live with it. — Seth Stein, Northwestern University
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James B. Macelwane Medal
Received December 1989
Union Fellow
Received January 1989