Susan Beck personifies all of the attributes articulated in the intent of the Paul G. Silver Award: exemplary contributions in leadership, mentorship, collaboration, community involvement, and research. She has had a distinguished academic career at the University of Arizona since 1990. She has made fundamental contributions to our understanding of mountain building, crustal structure, earthquake processes, and seismic hazards.
What makes Susan particularly suited to receive the Paul G. Silver Award is that in addition to her contributions to science, she has been a tireless leader in her community, a steadfast mentor to her students, and a longtime advocate of inclusive and equitable international scientific collaboration. Nowhere is her dedication to her community more evident than in the great joy she takes in working with and learning from younger scientists. In the classroom, during fieldwork, and throughout the process of data analysis, interpretation, and writing, Susan leads with encouragement and by example. She takes special interest in bringing young women to the Earth sciences, encouraging their participation and helping erode barriers to their inclusion and advancement. Susan has the rare ability to see potential in everyone and to enable them to reach that potential. Of her 140 publications in peer-reviewed journals, more than 60 have one of her students as lead author. Many who benefited from her mentorship occupy prominent positions at national laboratories, are tenured faculty in five countries across three continents, and work at a diverse suite of industries and private businesses.
Susan has been a key leader in large-scale community endeavors to improve our organizational culture and advance multidisciplinary and international scientific projects. While chair of the IRIS (Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology) board of directors, Susan led efforts to establish an Early Career Investigators group to help advance career opportunities for pretenure scientists, and she helped develop the IRIS International Development Seismology program to encourage collaboration in projects with researchers outside the United States. Her experience at IRIS in the development and management of the EarthScope project, along with her many contacts in South America (in particular, her engagement in scientific and organizational developments following the 2010 M 8.8 Maule earthquake in Chile), have made her an invaluable resource in the current efforts to establish SZ4D (Subduction Zones in Four Dimensions), a multinational effort to study the structure and seismicity of subduction zones.
The breadth and depth of Susan’s contributions to our science, its culture,
interdisciplinary structures, and diversity make her a fitting recipient of AGU’s 2023 Paul G. Silver
Award.
—David S. Simpson, President Emeritus, EarthScope/IRIS Consortium, Washington, D.C.