Community
Mourns Death of Jon C. Boothroyd, Acclaimed Coastal Geologist
Multiple
environmental agencies participated in volunteer beach profiling training led
by Dr. Jon Boothroyd, Professor Emeritus, URI. In 2014 Boothroyd explains
changes seen at South Kingstown Town Beach over the decades. (Photo credit
Tracey C. O’Neill)
SOUTH
KINGSTOWN – The University of Rhode Island announced the loss of
their “beloved Geosciences Professor Emeritus Jon C. Boothroyd, a field
researcher, Coastal and Environmental Geologist, and active
participant in development of the Rhode Island Shoreline Change Special
Area Management Plan (Beach SAMP).
Boothroyd
provided his expertise, time and advice to students, organizations and
environmental agencies across the state, and worked closely with the Coastal
Resources Management Council on coastal issues including
beach erosion, coastal inundation, sea level rise and climate change
initiatives.
The
revered geologist and professor, died on October 15, one day prior to being inducted into the
university’s College of the Environment and Life Sciences Hall of Fame.
Boothroyd
served as Rhode Island’s Geologist for more than a decade. A statement was
issued from the University’s Coastal Resources Center earlier this week.
Throughout
his career, Dr. Boothroyd trained several generations of environmental
geologists, managers, and academics working in the field today. In 2013, a
group of former graduate students had a special elevation benchmark placed near
the beach in Charlestown, R.I., to mark the professor’s vital research related
to the consequences of sea level rise and storm surges on Rhode Island’s
vulnerable coastline.
“Jon
had a lasting and profound impact on the Rhode Island Coastal Resources
Management Program. Much of the geologic language in the program was drafted by
Jon and he trained many of our staff, including me,” said
CRMC Executive Director Grover Fugate. “Jon was an ‘old school’
scientist and had a sense of integrity that people could see and hear and I
think that is why he was so widely respected. He was able to take very complex
geological processes and break them down so that the average individual could
understand, and this is what made him so widely sought after – his ability to
span so many audiences. He will be sorely missed but not forgotten, as his
legacy will live on through our program.”
Boothroyd
earned a B.A. in Economics from the University of New Hampshire-Durham, an M.S.
in Geology from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and a Ph.D. in
Geology from the University of South Carolina-Columbia.
A
wealth of institutional knowledge, members of the coastal community spoke of
their friend and colleague as irreplaceable.
“Jon’s
work on the Beach SAMP was invaluable, and the CRMC will profoundly miss his
input on such endeavors. He was a credit to the scientific community,” Anne
Livingston Maxwell, Chair said in a statement for CRMC.
“He
loved his work and all the ways he could use his work for good. But more
than that, he was a good person. He is irreplaceable and he is already being
missed!” – Veronica
Berounsky in a statement for the Narrow River Preservation Society.