Sharat Kumar Roy
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Sharat Kumar Roy (27 August 1897 – 17 April 1962) was an American geologist of Indian origin. He took an interest in volcanoes and later was a specialist on meteorites. He worked as a curator of geology at the
Chicago Natural History Museum The Field Museum of Natural History (FMNH), also known as The Field Museum, is a natural history museum in Chicago, Illinois, and is one of the largest such museums in the world. The museum is popular for the size and quality of its educational ...
and took part in several expeditions of the Museum. The US Geodetic Survey named a peak on Baffin Island after him as ''Mount Sharat'' in 1944.


Life and work

Roy was born in Shyamnagar, Nadia, Bengal where his father Navin Krishna was an engineer. He moved to Hazaribagh with family where he went to St. Columba's College and then joined Bangabasi College, Calcutta for his pre-university certificate. During World War I, he served in the British Indian Army. He then went to the University of London (1919) along with Raja Bose, son of the geologist
Pramatha Nath Bose Pramatha Nath Bose (12 May 1855 – 1934) was a pioneering Indian geologist and paleontologist. Bose was educated at Krishnagar Government College and later at St. Xavier's College of the University of Calcutta when he obtained a Gilchrist s ...
. He moved to the US and then joined the University of Illinois from where he received a BS (1922) and an MS (1924). He worked for some time in the New York State Museum, Albany before joining the Field Museum of Natural History as an assistant curator of invertebrate paleontology. Roy joined the Rawson-MacMillan expedition of 1927-28 to Labrador and Baffin Island and collected fossils from Silliman's Fossil Mount and described a number of new fossil taxa. From 1942 to 1946 he served in the US Air Force in the India-Burma theatre (posted for a while at Roosevelt Nagar, now called Kalyani, and at Dhubulia, Nadia) and towards the end of the war, he collected Permian brachiopods and geological specimens from the Salt Range. Returning to the Field Museum, he became a chief curator in 1947. He joined trips to Central America to study volcanoes between 1952 and 1961 with a visit in 1957-58 to Europe and India to examine stony meteorites. He received a PhD from the University of Chicago in 1941. In one of his researches, he replicated the claims made by Charles B. Lipman of finding bacteria inside meteorites and demonstrated that they were only the result of contamination after entry into the earth. Roy was married to Elsa and lived on South Everett Avenue, Chicago. He died at Billings Hospital. He was a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, the Geological Society of London apart from Sigma Xi and Theta Epsilon Pi.


Writings

Roy published most of his work in publications of the Field Museum (Geological Series): * 1927. How old fossils. Geology Leaflet 9. * 1929. Contributions to paleontology. Pub. 254, vol. 4, no. 5. * 1931. A Silurian worm and associated fauna ( with Croneis, Carey G.). Pub. 298, vol. 4, no. 7, pp. 229–247. * 1932. Upper Canadian (Beekmantown) drift fossils from Labrador. Pub. 307, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 29–59. * 1933. A new Devonian trilobite from southern Illinois. Pub. 327, vol. 6, no. 4, pp. 67–82. * 1935. A new Silurian phyllopodus crustacean. Vol. 6, no. 9, pp. 141–146. * 1935. A new Niagaran Conularia. Vol. 6, no. 10, pp. 147–54. * 1935. A Silurian phyllopod mandible with related notes. Vol. 6, no. 11, pp. 155–160. * 1937
The Grinnell ice-cap
Vol 7, no. 1, pp. 1–19. * 1937. The history and petrography of Frobisher’s "gold ore". Pub. 384, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 21–38. * 1938. Additional notes on the Grinnell ice-cap. Pub. 434, vol. 7, no. 4, pp. 59–69. * 1941
The Upper Ordovician fauna of Frobisher Bay, Baffin Island
Mem. vol. 2, pp. 1–212. * 1949. The Mapleton meteorite (with Robert K. Wyant). Vol. 7, no. 7, pp. 99–111. * 1949. The Navajo meteorite (with Robert K. Wyant). Vol. 7, no. 8, pp. 113–127. * 1950. The Smithonia meteorite (with Robert K. Wyant). Vol. 7, no. 9, pp. 129–134. * 1950. The La Porte meteorite (with Robert K. Wyant). Vol. 7, no. 10, pp. 135–144. * 1951. The Benld meteorite (with Robert K. Wyant). Vol. 7, no. 11, pp. 145–157. * 1953. Fresh-water limestone from Torola valley, northeastern El Salvador, Central America. Fieldiana, vol. 10, pp. 173–191. * 1955. The Paragould meteorite. * 1957. The present status of the volcanoes of Central America. * 1957. A restudy of the 1917 eruption of Volcán Boquerón, El Salvador, Central America. * 1957. The problems of the origin and structure of chondrules in stony meteorites. * 1962. The Walters meteorite. A few of his publications were made elsewhere: * 1929. Columnar structure in limestone: Science n. s., vol. 70, pp. 140–141. * 1932. Preparation of microfossils: The Museum Journal (British Museum), vol. 32 pp. 261–266. * 1934. Memorial of Oliver Cummings Farrington: Geol. Soc. America Proc., pp. 193–210. * 1953. Polar geology: Polar Engineering Handbook: U. S. Navy, Bur. of Yards and Docks. He also wrote popular articles: * 1929. Cruising with the sealers of Newfoundland: Outdoor America (in two parts) 8 pp. * 1933. The gory saga of the North: Esquire Magazine.


References


External links


Field Museum archive footage showing Sharat K. Roy in central America
{{DEFAULTSORT:Roy, Sharat Kumar 1897 births 1962 deaths American geologists People associated with the Field Museum of Natural History