Published online 3 September 2009
Mineralogical Magazine; June 2009; v. 73; no. 3;
p. 511-514
© 2009 Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland
WILLIAM ALEXANDER DEER 1910-2009
Graham Chinner
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Alex Deer was born into a world of empires soon to be torn apart. His
earliest memory was of the sun blotting out as the sinister bulk of a zeppelin
passed over on its bombing run into the Mersey docks. Home was in Rusholme, a
working class suburb of Manchester, where he was brought up in a strictly
Baptist family. If he was later to abandon the more ascetic features of his
upbringing, he retained for life the self discipline and sense of duty it
instilled.
An avid reader from an early age, in his midteens he came across in the
local library a copy of Darwin's Origin of Species. Reading this
through seems to have been his epiphany, determining his ambition to become a
natural scientist. His was hardly a privileged family, but with an excellent
state school education, and scholarship aid, he was able to graduate from
Manchester University and start his first research project, on the diorites of
Glen Tilt - pushing his bike from Rusholme to the field area and lodging with
a gamekeeper's family. His first stroke of luck came on applying for a
Strathcona scholarship to Cambridge. The admissions tutor at St. John's
College, James Wordie (the geologist on Shackleton's 1914 expedition and
Elephant Island castaway) spotted and supported the application; so in 1934
Alex came to Cambridge as a Johnian and one of the first research students in
C.E. Tilley's newly assembled Department of Mineralogy and Petrology.
L.R. Wager now enters the story. Although only four years older than Alex,
Laurence was already a seasoned explorer, on Shipton's 1933 expedition the
highest attainer up Everest, and the veteran of two Greenland expeditions. On
Gino Watkins' British Arctic Air Route Expedition (BAARE) of 1930, Wager had
discovered what we now know as the . . . [Full Text of this Article]
Copyright © 2009 by Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland