- Source: Jack Zussman
Jack Zussman (31 July 1924 – September 2024) was a British crystallographer and mineralogist. He was professor of geology and head of the department of geology at the University of Manchester from 1967 to 1989. He is best known for his co-authorship of a series of reference books that summarise the physical, chemical and optical properties of the rock forming minerals that were published between 1962 and 2013, which are widely known as Deer, Howie and Zussman or DHZ.
Early life
Zussman was born in London in 1924, and lived in east London until 1939, when he was evacuated to Somerset. After he finished his school education, Zussman served with the Royal Navy as a radar mechanic. His service included escorting convoys to Arctic ports of the Soviet Union, for which he was later awarded the Ushakov medal and the Arctic Star. Once the war ended, he took up a place at Downing College, Cambridge to study physics.
Career
Zussman began his work on crystallography during a PhD at the University of Cambridge, where he was based at the Cavendish laboratories. He published several early papers on the structure of nucleotides, with chemist Alex Todd, and amino acids.
In 1952, he took up a position in mineralogy and crystallography, in the geology department at the University of Manchester. He began working on the structure of silicate minerals, including the amphiboles and serpentine group minerals.
In 1962, he was appointed reader in mineralogy at the University of Oxford, but he returned to Manchester to take up the Chair of Geology and post of head of department in 1967. Zussman remained as head of department for 22 years, until his retirement in 1989.
In 1969, Zussman was one of a small number of scientists who had access to some of the newly-collected samples of moon rock for research investigations. One moon rock sample was placed on display in a museum in Manchester for a week, just two months after being collected by Neil Armstrong. Later, Zussman recalled overhearing a visitor say ‘I’ve seen something like that in our grate’ on seeing the dark and bubbly samples of lunar lava.
The mineral zussmanite was named in his honour in 1964 by mineralogist Stuart Agrell.
Zussman was dean of the faculty of science at Manchester from 1980 to 1981, and president of the Mineralogical Society from 1980 to 1981.
In 2019, Zussman published a brief history of geology at the University of Manchester with his colleague, geologist David Vaughan.
The rock-forming minerals
In 1961, it was announced that Jack Zussman and two fellow mineralogists who were also at the University of Manchester, Bob Howie and Alex Deer were working on a book on rock-forming minerals. The first volume, on ortho- and ring-silicates, was published in 1962, and by 1963, the five-volume set was already known as 'Deer, Howie and Zussman'. Zussman and colleagues kept working on the reference set for the rest of their careers, and long into retirement. By 2013 the full set included eleven volumes on specific mineral groups, along with three editions of an abridged version An Introduction to the Rock-Forming Minerals.
Personal life and death
Zussman turned 100 on 31 July 2024, and died two months later, in September.
References
External links
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar penerima Medal of Honor untuk Perang Dunia II
- Jack Zussman
- An Introduction to the Rock-Forming Minerals
- Lizardite
- Deaths in October 2024
- Timeline of the discovery and classification of minerals
- Coupled substitution
- List of minerals named after people
- Ferrogedrite
- Zussmanite
- Sphalerite