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Research Staff Member Paul Silver Dies
Monday, 10 August 2009 08:27
Paul Silver died tragically in an automobile accident in North Carolina on 7 August as he was driving his daughter Celine back from a research internship in Florida. Celine perished in the crash as well.

A member of the Research Staff at DTM since 1982, Silver was an international leader in understanding how earthquakes are triggered and how they interact with each other. He made a series of important contributions to earthquake research by observing the slow redistribution of stress and strain along fault zones.

In one long-term study of small earthquakes triggered by a large event in southern California, he and his colleagues discovered an annual cycle: fall had the greatest number of earthquakes, spring the least. The team found that this pattern could be related to barometric pressure changes—less pressure meant reduced stress on the faults, which permitted them to move more frequently.

Last year, Silver was co-author of a paper showing there were subtle changes in the speed of seismic waves that preceded two small earthquakes—encouraging results for the field of earthquake forecasting.

Silver’s research took him all over the world. He organized and conducted seismic field experiments in northern Canada, southern Africa, Chile and Bolivia, China, and Tibet, as well in California and elsewhere in western North America. He is widely recognized for developing the techniques to determine the direction-dependence of seismic wave speeds in the Earth’s upper mantle, a procedure now in widespread use to study the patterns of convective flow in the Earth’s interior and the processes by which the continents were assembled.


Paul with daughter Celine

Silver served as the President of the Seismology Section of the American Geophysical Union from 2004 to 2006, and he chaired the Board of Directors of both UNAVCO and the Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology. He was a leader in proposing the concept of a Plate Boundary Observatory of seismometers, strainmeters, and geodetic instruments in western North America, a facility that is now operational as part of the EarthScope project of NSF.

Among his honors, Silver was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2007, and he was the Royal Astronomical Society Harold Jeffreys Lecturer in 2005. He was also a Fellow of the AGU and the Geological Society of America and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.

A man of exceptional creativity and consistently good humor, Silver served as mentor and collaborator to younger scientists throughout his career. Many of the students and postdoctoral scientists who worked with Silver while at the Carnegie Institution continued to collaborate with him for years thereafter, testimony to the positive influence that he had on the careers of many now active in Earth science.  In recognition of his contributions to science and to his role as a mentor to dozens of young scientists, the Carnegie Institution has established a Paul G. Silver Postdoctoral Fellowship in Seismology.  For those interested in contributing to this fellowship, please click here.

The funeral/ memorial service for Paul and Celine was held at Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church in Bethesda on Monday, 17 August, at 2 p.m., with the burial following at Parklawn Memorial Park and Menorah Gardens in Rockville.
Visitation was held at Pumphrey Funeral Home in Bethesda on Saturday, 15 August, from 3-5 p.m. and from 7-9 p.m.

Information on a memorial celebration of Paul Silver's contributions to science, to be hosted by the Carnegie Institution in the near future, will be posted as available.

We are collecting comments from friends and colleagues for Paul's family. If you would like to contribute to this collection, please click here.