In a career spanning more than 4 decades, Douglas Burbank’s sustained and outstanding research contributions developed the field of quantitative tectonic geomorphology. Doug’s early-career work on glacial geomorphology and basin analysis positioned him to play a pioneering role in an emergent field focused on understanding interactions among erosion, climate, tectonics, and topography. Owing to his ability to anticipate the promise of nascent tools and to synthesize diverse data sets spanning the lithosphere to the atmosphere, Doug stood at the forefront of this field, which continues to thrive in large part due to the trail that he blazed.
Few scientists explore the globe so intrepidly as Doug. The world’s high mountains—of Asia, Europe, North and South America, and Oceania—were his intellectual playground. The more than 160 publications Doug produced span an incredible intellectual breadth: tectonics, structural geology, geodynamics, and climate. The G.K. Gilbert Award honors Doug’s contributions to geomorphology, which are equally diverse, and include insight on bedrock channel profiles, terrace generation, hydraulic geometry, and denudation rates. His papers gave us terms that are now part of the lexicon of our field, such as threshold hillslopes and the glacial buzz saw. Doug counts among his colleagues international collaborators who were part of all of his research teams, many talented postdocs, and 36 graduate students, for which he was an outstanding mentor. His leadership took many forms, from directing the Institute for Crustal Studies at the University of California, Santa Barabara, service on numerous national-level steering committees, and his role as a scientific ambassador, as demonstrated by a long list of visiting professorships and named lectures. Doug was also strongly involved in initiatives that produced global-scale topographic and precipitation data that continue to yield dividends not only for geomorphology, but also for the broader Earth sciences community.
The two editions of Tectonic Geomorphology, coauthored with Bob Anderson, are clearly written and masterfully illustrated books that not only provide a gateway to the field, but also provide a road map for determining what methods are likely to provide the most fruitful answers to questions that span wide ranges of time and space. One can say without hesitation that Doug indeed wrote the book on tectonic geomorphology.
In closing, Douglas Burbank is a highly deserving recipient of the G.K. Gilbert Award for teaching us how surface processes, climate, tectonics, and topography interact.
—Isaac Larsen, University of Massachusetts Amherst
The Pamir Frontal Thrust along the leading edge of the northern Pamir is characterized by multiple earthquakes with moment magnitudes of 6.5–...