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Barclay Kamb


Walter Barclay Kamb was a longtime professor and researcher at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). Professor Kamb was one of the first scientists to journey to the Antarctic to study how the glacier sheets move and operate. He is listed as a member of the National Academy of Sciences in the Geology department.

Kamb died on 21 April 2011.

In 1952, he received his bachelor's degree at Caltech and in 1956 received his Ph.D. at Caltech under Linus Pauling. "His best student," said Pauling. He became the assistant professor of Geology, from 1956–1960, shortly after receiving his Ph.D. In the next two years he worked as an associate professor, and then became a professor from 1962-1963. Kamb concentrated in being a professor of Geology and Geophysics for the next 27 years from 1963-1990 at Caltech. He became Barbara and Stanley R. Rawn Professor from the years 1990-1999, and then on has remained Rawn Professor Emeritus. Professor Kamb was elected chairman in the Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences from 1972–83, and for a short period, from 1987–89, took charge as Vice President and Provost of the Institute.

Barclay Kamb was a professor Emeritus.

Barclay Kamb was born on December 17, 1931 in San Jose, California. He died at his home in Pasadena on April 21, 2011. He was married to Linda Pauling Kamb and has four sons and nine grandchildren.

Kamb applied for admission to Caltech at age 15. Caltech has a policy against early admission, so Kamb attended Pasadena City College. This so embarrassed Caltech that it admitted Kamb the following year. The Institute never regretted that exception. Later, following completion of his PhD, Kamb was offered the rare opportunity to join the Caltech faculty by Robert Sharp. These were merely the start of Kamb's exceptionalism.

Early in his career, Kamb studied the determination of the atomic structure of minerals, and how they related to different structures of ice. For his work in the field of minerals, Barclay Kamb was awarded the Mineralogical Society of America award.

Professor Kamb concentrated on studying structures produced by rock flow and fracture in the earth. Years later, Kamb turned his attention to studying the mechanics of glacier flow, with an emphasis on basal sliding, surging, and streaming flow in the Antarctic ice sheet. Professor Kamb focused his explorations on the flow of streams in Antarctic glacier ice sheets. His research led to very important discoveries about ice sheets in the 1990s and early 2000s. These ice sheets contained ice streams, which were streams that flowed inside of the sheets with speeds 100 times greater than the movement of the normal ice sheet motion. Kamb reported that if these sheets were to increase in speed and become larger, it could potentially cause a collapse in the ice sheets.


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