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Further information about Professor David J. Lowe University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand July 2017 Recent and earlier research and contributions David has published widely in a range of disciplines (tephrochronology, pedology, clay mineralogy, Quaternary science, geochronology, geoarchaeology) with more than 180 refereed publications in scientific journals or books (including 25 book chapters) to his name. He has undertaken research in New Zealand, Antarctica, Australia, Canada, Japan, and the U.K., and also has field experience in Taiwan, France, Germany, Ireland, Switzerland, western U.S.A. (eight states including Alaska and Hawaii), and Fiji. David has recently published with colleagues an edited volume of the journal Quaternary Geochronology (Lane et al. 2017) specifically on tephras entitled “Advancing tephrochronology as a global dating tool: applications in volcanology, archaeology, and palaeoclimatic research” (vol. 40, pp. 1-146). The papers are grouped into two themes reflecting (1) advances in methodologies (4 papers) and (2) building regional tephrostratigraphic frameworks (7 papers). These 11 papers, together with an introductory article (Lane et al.) and obituary, showcase some of the recent advances in tephrochronology arising from research by members of the International Focus Group on Tephrochronology and Volcanism (INTAV) and the EXTending TephRAS (EXTRAS) project being led by David. Since 2016, David, with students and colleagues, has been leading a project examining volcanic hazards in the Waikato region by studying ‘hidden ash’ deposits, called ‘cryptotephras’, in lake sediments and peats as part of a project funded by EQC and the Waikato Regional Council. He has also been working with colleagues in New Zealand, Germany (Bremen Univ.), and the UK (Swansea Univ.) on liquefied tephra layers in lake sediments that are thought to relate to past earthquake activity on newly- discovered geological faults in the Hamilton area. Another area of research recently completed has been on the discovery of two new morphological form, namely ‘books’ and 'mushroom-cap-shaped’ (MCS) spheroids of the clay mineral halloysite that arose indirectly from work with Vicki Moon and graduate students investigating geotechnical properties and landsliding in the Tauranga area. Previously, book-forms had been associated exclusively with kaolinite. The charge characteristics of the MCS spheroids helped explain the flow-sliding at Omokoroa through a new ‘attraction-detachment’ model published in Geology. New work on the structure of halloysite, partly derived from research undertaken in the Mt Gambier-Mt Schank area of Holocene volcanics in South Australia during leave at CSIRO in Adelaide in 1991-92, has also been completed with Jock Churchman and others. From 2011, David led a Marsden-funded project “New views from old soils” (now completed) that examined research questions (1) how allophane sequesters and protects carbon in allophanic soils and paleosols, and (2) how ancient DNA (aDNA) is stored and protected in such materials and

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Page 1: Further information about Professor David J. Lowe · 2017-07-11 · Further information about Professor David J. Lowe. University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand . July 2017 . Recent

Further information about Professor David J. Lowe University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand

July 2017 Recent and earlier research and contributions David has published widely in a range of disciplines (tephrochronology, pedology, clay mineralogy, Quaternary science, geochronology, geoarchaeology) with more than 180 refereed publications in scientific journals or books (including 25 book chapters) to his name. He has undertaken research in New Zealand, Antarctica, Australia, Canada, Japan, and the U.K., and also has field experience in Taiwan, France, Germany, Ireland, Switzerland, western U.S.A. (eight states including Alaska and Hawaii), and Fiji. David has recently published with colleagues an edited volume of the journal Quaternary Geochronology (Lane et al. 2017) specifically on tephras entitled “Advancing tephrochronology as a global dating tool: applications in volcanology, archaeology, and palaeoclimatic research” (vol. 40, pp. 1-146). The papers are grouped into two themes reflecting (1) advances in methodologies (4 papers) and (2) building regional tephrostratigraphic frameworks (7 papers). These 11 papers, together with an introductory article (Lane et al.) and obituary, showcase some of the recent advances in tephrochronology arising from research by members of the International Focus Group on Tephrochronology and Volcanism (INTAV) and the EXTending TephRAS (EXTRAS) project being led by David.

Since 2016, David, with students and colleagues, has been leading a project examining volcanic hazards in the Waikato region by studying ‘hidden ash’ deposits, called ‘cryptotephras’, in lake sediments and peats as part of a project funded by EQC and the Waikato Regional Council. He has also been working with colleagues in New Zealand, Germany (Bremen Univ.), and the UK (Swansea Univ.) on liquefied tephra layers in lake sediments that are thought to relate to past earthquake activity on newly-discovered geological faults in the Hamilton area. Another area of research recently completed has been on the discovery of two new morphological form, namely ‘books’ and 'mushroom-cap-shaped’ (MCS) spheroids of the clay mineral halloysite that arose indirectly from work with Vicki Moon and graduate students investigating geotechnical properties and landsliding in the Tauranga area. Previously, book-forms had been associated exclusively with kaolinite. The charge characteristics of the MCS spheroids helped explain the flow-sliding at Omokoroa through a new ‘attraction-detachment’ model published in Geology. New work on the structure of halloysite, partly derived from research undertaken in the Mt Gambier-Mt Schank area of Holocene volcanics in South Australia during leave at CSIRO in Adelaide in 1991-92, has also been completed with Jock Churchman and others. From 2011, David led a Marsden-funded project “New views from old soils” (now completed) that examined research questions (1) how allophane sequesters and protects carbon in allophanic soils and paleosols, and (2) how ancient DNA (aDNA) i s stored and protected in such materials and

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how such aDNA could be extracted and used to inform past environmental reconstructions (see publications). This work involved collaboration with Prof Alan Cooper, Dr Jock Churchman, and Dr Jennifer Young (University of Adelaide), Dr Nic Rawlence (University of Otago), and Dr Jamie Wood (Landcare Research, Lincoln). The Waikato group included former student Dr Yu-Tuan (Doreen) Huang (now a postdoc in Umea, Sweden), Dr Ray Cursons, and Heng Zhang (now a PhD student). The group used synchrotron facilities at the National Synchrotron Radiation Research Centre (NSRRC), Hsinchu, Taiwan. Late in 2015, the second edition of the award-winning book “A Continent on the Move: New Zealand Geoscience Revealed” was published by the Geoscience Society of New Zealand together with GNS Science. This edition contained numerous updates and considerable new material. As well as contributing two articles, David was the editor responsible for 10 articles in Chapter 11 “Climate Swings and Roundabouts” (pp. 262-295). He also contributed a chapter to a new book “The Drama of Conservation − The History of Pureora Forest, New Zealand” that was published by Springer, Berlin, and the New Zealand Department of Conservation, Wellington.

In August, 2013, the final volume of the AUSTALASIAN INTIMATE project was published as Vol. 74 of Quaternary Science Reviews (pp. 1-280) “Linking Southern Hemisphere records and past circulation patterns: the AUS-INTIMATE project” (edited by J. Reeves, B. Alloway, T. Barrows). David contributed or co-authored three papers for this volume (2013), two earlier papers towards the project (2007, 2008), and contributed to a poster and bulletin published by GNS Science (2005).

David (with Prof Louis Schipper) convened the second Waikato-Bay of Plenty regional soils meeting, Wai-BoP Soils 2013, on 5 Dec, 2013, at the University of Waikato on behalf of the NZ Society of Soil Science. David and Louis co-convened the first Wai-BoP Soils meeting in December 2011.

In July 2011, David co-convened a session on tephrochronology at the Inqua Congress in Bern, Switzerland, and represented New Zealand on the International Council. He and colleagues convened two symposia at the Inqua Congress in Nagoya, Japan, in July-August 2015.

In May 2010, David gave a public lecture in Kirishima, Kyushu Island, Japan, as part of the INTAV "Active Tephra" conference. He also presented a series of seminars at 4 universities during a JSPS- sponsored tour of Japan after the conference.

In 2009, David was invited by the Queensland Branch of the Australian Society of Soil Science to give the Ron McDonald Memorial Lecture in Brisbane, the first New Zealander to be given the award. His lecture was entitled "Where pedology meets geology - insights into Andisols in Australasia".

In November 2007, David was a key-note plenary speaker at an international symposium on Quaternary environmental change that was held in Tsukuba, Japan, to mark the 50th anniversary of the Japan Quaternary Association (JAQUA). David also gave a seminar at the National Taiwan University (NTU) in Taipei, Taiwan, in November, 2007. Earlier David gave two keynote talks at the INQUA congress held in Cairns in July-August 2007. In March 2006 David was an invited speaker at a conference on Andisols in the Mt Fuji area of central Japan. David also worked for several months in 2006 at both the Waikato Radiocarbon Dating Lab in Hamilton and at Scion Research in Rotorua.

In 2005, David attended an international tephra conference in the Yukon Territory (Canada) and

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visited colleagues in Saskatchewan and central Alaska as part of his sabbatical leave. Earlier, David spent eight months undertaking palaeoenvironmental and tephrochronological research in universities in Northern Ireland and Great Britain during sabbatical leave in 1998-99, and ten months undertaking pedological and volcanological research on Quaternary volcanic eruptives and associated soils in southeast South Australia whilst at CSIRO (Division of Soils) in Adelaide 1991-92.

David's early professional experience includes soil survey-related work for the Soil Bureau of DSIR, Hamilton, and benzene synthesis in the liquid-scintillation based Waikato Radiocarbon Dating Laboratory. In Antarctica during the 1978-79 field season, David's four-man field party (led by now-Emeritus Professor Michael Selby) manhauled a sledge whilst undertaking geological, geomorphological and pedological mapping in the Transantarctic Mountains. The party also discovered unique iron meteorites, one of which is displayed in the Canterbury Museum (Antarctic Wing), Christchurch.

Recently completed research projects

Recently completed research undertaken with colleagues from New Zealand and overseas, and with postgraduate students, includes:

1. Developing new age models for key tephra marker beds for New Zealand since 30,000 years ago

using Bayesian modelling techniques including revising the age of Kawakawa/Oruanui tephra (published in 2008 and 2013).

2. Contributing to the development of the New Zealand climate event stratigraphy (NZCES) as part of the NZ-INTIMATE project (published in the AUS-INTIMATE issue of Quaternary Science Reviews Vol. 74, 2013). Previously contributed to the preliminary NZCES in 2007.

3. Comprehensive review of the discipline of tephrochronology and its application from a global perspective.

4. Evaluating the likelihood of the “bipolar seesaw” mechanism operating in the New Zealand region since 30 cal ka.

5. Determining the timing and impacts of early Polynesian settlement in New Zealand, and assessing the impacts of volcanism on early Maori in New Zealand.

6. Developing a comprehensive model relating tephras to archaeology in New Zealand, and determining the calendar age of the Kaharoa eruption of Mt Tarawera at AD 1314 ±12 using dendrochronological wiggle-match dating and radiocarbon dating.

7. Using tephrochronology with palynology and other palaeoenvironmental proxies to compare the synchroneity or otherwise of abrupt climate change during the transition from marine isotope Stage (MIS) 2 to Stage 1 (Last Termination), including identification of a cooling event from ca. 13,800-12,600 cal yr BP.

8. Reviewing the Andisols of the world and of New Zealand and Australia. 9. Determining climatic and vegetational change from MIS 5e (Last Interglacial) through to MIS 1

(Holocene) in Northland using analyses of cores from Lake Omapere near Kaikohe. 10. Developing new models of upbuilding pedogenesis in tephra and loess deposits in New

Zealand. 11. Developing soil-landscape modelling techniques to map target soil properties in plantation forests

in Southland, central volcanic plateau and Northland regions, and assessing the affects of forest harvesting on the efficacy of such modelling.

12. Testing the sustainability of plantation forestry on Mamaku Plateau, central North Island, using

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soil and foliar phosphorus measurements associated with two rotations of Pinus radiata. 13. Contributing to two joint papers defining the climate event stratigraphy of New Zealand as part

of the Australasian INTIMATE project (in 2007 and 2013). 14. Contributing to a chapter on tephrostratigraphy and tephrochronology for Elsevier’s

Encyclopaedia of Quaternary Science (including a revised 2nd edition published in 2013), and contributed a chapter on tephrochronology to Encyclopaedia of Scientific Dating Methods in 2014.

15. Determining the paleoclimate of the Auckland region during MIS 2 using tephropalynological analysis of cores from Kohuora Crater, Auckland Volcanic Field, and of Adelaide Tarn, NW Nelson, since c. 16,000 years ago

16. Reviewing the alteration, formation and occurrence of minerals in soils. 17. Developing improved tephra correlation techniques using electron microprobe analysis of glass

shards in bi-modal Rotorua Tephra, and of melt inclusions in strongly weathered tephra deposits. 18. Reviewing the use of palaeoenvironmental ancient DNA in Quaternary research. 19. Evaluating carbon sequestration by allophanic soils and mechanisms for DNA binding to

allophanic materials using synchrotron radiation. 20. Assessing drivers of plantation forest productivity on eroded and non-eroded soils in hilly and steep

land in eastern North Island. 21. Documenting the occurrence of new morphologies of halloysite (‘books’, ‘mushroom-cap-shaped

spheroids’) and the structure of halloysite, especially the way in which H2O is incorporated into the sheets. Also, contributed to the new ‘attraction-detachment’ model built around the charge characteristics and abundance of the mushroom-cap-shaped spheroids in a very sensitive layer at Omokoroa in the Tauranga region that helped enable flow sliding to occur.

22. Discovery of accelerated weathering of glass in Andisols in North Island because of the use of fertilizers for the past ~50 years (with Matthew Taylor and colleagues).

Paddy fields growing rice near Tokyo Ultisol landscape, Mahurangi Forest, Northland

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World tephra specialists, Dawson City, Yukon Territory, 2005

Pedology students in Whakarewarewa Forest Rotorua, 2013

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Publications Tephrochronology, Quaternary science and environmental change Lane, C.S., Blockley, S.P.E., Lowe, D.J., Suzuki, T., Smith, V.C. (editors) 2017. “Advancing

tephrochronology as a global dating tool: applications in volcanology, archaeology, and palaeoclimatic research”. Quaternary Geochronology 40, 146 pp.

Lane, C.S., Lowe, D.J., Blockley, S.P.E., Suzuki, T., Smith, V.C. 2017. Advancing tephrochronology as a global dating tool: applications in volcanology, archaeology, and palaeoclimatic research. Quaternary Geochronology 40, 1-7.

Lowe, D.J., Shane, P.A.R., de Lange, P.J., Clarkson, B.D. 2016. Guidebook for Rangitoto Island AQUA field trip, Auckland, 2016. School of Science, University of Waikato, in association with the Australasian Quaternary Association (AQUA) Biennial Conference, Auckland, New Zealand, 5-9 December, 2016. 35 pp.

Jara, I.A., Newnham, R.M., Vandergoes, M.J., Foster, C.R., Lowe, D.J., Wilmshurst, J.M., Moreno, P.I., Renwick, J.A., Homes, A. 2015. Pollen-climate reconstruction from northern South Island, New Zealand (41°S), reveals high- and low-latitude teleconnections over the last 16 000 years. Journal of Quaternary Science 30, 817-829.

Moriwaki, H., Nakamura, N., Nagasako, T., Lowe, D.J., Sangawa, T. 2015. The role of tephras in developing a high-precision chronostratigraphy for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction and archaeology in southern Kyushu, Japan, since 30 cal. BP: an integration. Quaternary International 397, 79-92.

Lowe, D.J., Alloway, B.V. 2015. Tephrochronology. In: Rink, W.J., Thompson, J.W. (eds).

“Encyclopaedia of Scientific Dating Methods”. Springer, Dordrecht, pp. 783-799. Lowe, D.J. (subeditor) 2015. Climate swings and roundabouts − paleoclimatic fluctuations across

Zealandia. [Chapter11] In: Graham, I.J. (chief editor) “A Continent on the Move: New Zealand Geoscience Revealed, 2nd Edition”. Geoscience Society of New Zealand with GNS Science, Wellington, pp. 263-295.

Lowe, D.J., Tonkin, P.J., Palmer, J., Lanigan, K., Palmer, A.S. 2015. Dusty horizons. In: Graham, I.J.

(chief editor) “A Continent on the Move: New Zealand Geoscience Revealed, Second Edition”. Geoscience Society of New Zealand with GNS Science, Wellington, pp. 286-289.

Lowe, D.J., Alloway, B.V., Shane, P.A.R. 2015. Far-flown markers. In: Graham, I.J. (chief editor) “A

Continent on the Move: New Zealand Geoscience Revealed, Second Edition”. Geoscience Society of New Zealand with GNS Science, Wellington, pp. 172-175.

Lowe, D.J., King, C.M. 2015. A dramatic landscape. [Chapter 1] In: King, C.M., Gaukrodger, D.J.,

Ritchie, N.A. (eds), The Drama of Conservation − The History of Pureora Forest, New Zealand. Springer, Berlin, and New Zealand Dept. of Conservation, Wellington, pp. 1-17.

Lowe, D.J. 2014. How Lake Rotoroa was formed: influence of the ancestral Waikato River. In:

Taylor, J. Hamilton Lake − City Playground. Published by Jeff Taylor, Hamilton, pp. 6-13.

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Rawlence, N.J., Lowe, D.J., Wood, J.R., Young, J., Churchman, G.J., Huang, Y.-T., Cooper, A. 2014. Using palaeoenvironmental DNA to reconstruct past environments: progress and prospects. Journal of Quaternary Science 29, 610-626 [open access].

Lowe, D.J. 2014. Marine tephrochronology: a personal perspective. In: Austin, W.E.N., Abbott, P.M.,

Davies, S.M., Pearce, N.J.G., Wastegård, S. (editors), “Marine Tephrochronology”. Geological Society (London) Special Publication 398, 7-19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/SP398.11

Alloway, B.V., Lowe, D.J., Larsen, G., Shane, P.A.R., Westgate, J.A. 2013. Tephrochronology. In:

Elias, S.A., Mock, C.J. (editors) The Encyclopaedia of Quaternary Science, 2nd edition, Vol. 4, pp. 277-304. Elsevier, Amsterdam.

Barrell, D.J.A., Almond, P.C., Vandergoes, M.J., Lowe, D.J., Newnham, R.M., NZ-INTIMATE members

2013. A composite pollen-based stratotype for inter-regional evaluation of climatic events in New Zealand over the past 30,000 years (NZ-INTIMATE project). Quaternary Science Reviews 74,

4-20. Vandergoes, M.J., Hogg, A.G., Lowe, D.J., Newnham, R.M., Denton, G.H., Southon, J., Barrell, D.J.A.,

Wilson, C.J.N., McGlone, M.S., Allan, A.S.R., Almond, P.C., Petchey, F., Dalbell, K., Dieffenbacher- Krall, A.C., Blaauw, M. 2013. A revised age for the Kawakawa/Oruanui tephra, a key marker for the Last Glacial Maximum in New Zealand. Quaternary Science Reviews 74, 195-201.

Lowe, D.J., Blaauw, M., Hogg, A.G., Newnham, R.M. 2013. Ages of 24 widespread tephras erupted

since 30,000 years ago in New Zealand, with re-evaluation of the timing and palaeoclimatic implications of the late-glacial cool episode recorded at Kaipo bog. Quaternary Science Reviews 74, 170-194.

Newnham, R.M.; Vandergoes, M.; Sikes, E.; Carter, L.; Wilmshurst, J.; Lowe, D.J.; McGlone, M.S.;

Sandiford, A. 2012. Does the bipolar seesaw extend to the terrestrial southern mid-latitudes? Quaternary Science Reviews 36, 214-222.

Hogg, A.G.; Lowe, D.J.; Palmer, J.G.; Boswijk, G.; Bronk Ramsey, C.J. 2012. Revised calendar date for

the Taupo eruption derived by 14C wiggle-matching using a New Zealand kauri 14C calibration data set. The Holocene 22, 439-449.

Lowe, D.J.; Moriwaki, H.; Davies, S.M., Suzuki, T.; Pearce, N.J. (Editors) 2011. “Enhancing

tephrochronology and its application (INTREPID project): Hiroshi Machida commemorative volume”. Quaternary International 246, pp.1-396.

Lowe, D.J.; Davies, S.M.; Moriwaki, H.; Pearce, N.J.; Suzuki, T. 2011. [Preface] Enhancing

tephrochronology and its application (INTREPID project): Hiroshi Machida commemorative volume. Quaternary International 246, 1-5.

Holt, K.A.; Lowe, D.J.; Hogg, A.G.; Wallace, R.C. 2011. Distal occurrence of mid-Holocene Whakatane

Tephra on the Chatham Islands, New Zealand, and potential for cryptotephra studies. Quaternary International 246, 344-351.

Moriwaki, H.; Suzuki, T.; Murata, M.; Ikehara, M.; Machida, H.; Oba, T.; Lowe, D.J. 2011. Sakurajima-

Satsuma (Sz-S) and Noike-Yumugi (N-Ym) tephras: new tephrochronological marker beds for the last deglaciation, southern Kyushu, Japan. Quaternary International 246, 203-212.

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Lowe, D.J. 2011. Tephrochronology and its application: a review. Quaternary Geochronology 6 107- 153.

Holt, K.; Wallace, R.C.; Neall, V.E.; Kohn, B.P.; Lowe, D.J. 2010. Quaternary tephra marker beds and

their potential for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction on Chatham Islands east of New Zealand, southwest Pacific Ocean. Journal of Quaternary Science 25, 1169-1178.

Lowe, D.J.; Wilson, C.J.N.; Newnham, R.M.; Hogg, A.G. 2010. Dating the Kawakawa/Oruanui

eruption: comment on “Optical luminescence dating of a loess section containing a critical tephra marker horizon, SW North Island of New Zealand” by R. Grapes et al. Quaternary Geochronology 5, 493-496.

Walker, M.; Johnsen, S.; Rasmussen, S.O.; Popp, T.; Steffensen, J.-P.; Gibbard, P.; Hoek, W.; Lowe, J.J.; Andrews, J.; Björck, S.; Cwynar, L.; Hughen, K.; Kershaw, P.; Kromer, B.; Litt, T.; Lowe, D.J.;

Nakagawa, T.; Newnham, R.M.; Schwander, J. 2009. Formal definition and dating of the GSSP (Global Stratotype Section and Point) for the base of the Holocene using the Greenland NGRIP ice core, and selected auxiliary records. Journal of Quaternary Science 29, 3-17.

Lowe, D.J. 2008. Globalization of tephrochronology: new views from Australasia. Progress in

Physical Geography 32, 311-335.

Lowe, D.J.; Alloway, B.V.; Shane, P.A.R. 2008. Far-flung markers [Tephras] In: Graham, I.J. (chief editor) “A Continent on the Move: New Zealand Geoscience into the 21st Century”. Geological Society of New Zealand Miscellaneous Publication 124, 170-173.

Lowe, D.J.; Shane, P.A.R.; Alloway, B.V.; Newnham, R.M. 2008. Fingerprints and age models for

widespread New Zealand tephra marker beds erupted since 30,000 years ago: a framework for NZ-INTIMATE. Quaternary Science Reviews 27, 95-126.

Froese, D.G.; Slate, J.L.; Lowe, D.J.; Knott, J. (editors) 2008. "Global Tephra Studies: John Westgate

and Andrei Sarna-Wojcicki Commemorative Volume". Quaternary International 178, 1-320.

Froese, D.G.; Alloway, B.V.; Lowe, D.J. 2008. John A. Westgate - Global tephrochronologist, stratigrapher, mentor. Quaternary International 178, 4-9.

Lowe, D.J.; Tonkin, P.J.; Neall, V.E.; Palmer, A.S.; Alloway, B.V.; Froggatt, P.C. 2008. Colin George

Vucetich (1918-2007) - pioneering New Zealand tephrochronologist. Quaternary International 178, 11-15.

Gehrels, M.J.; Newnham, R.M.; Lowe, D.J.; Wynne, S.; Hazell, Z.J.; Caseldine, C. 2008. Towards rapid

assay of cryptotephra in peat cores: review and evaluation of selected methods. Quaternary International 178, 68-84.

Leonard, G.; Lowe, D.J.; McSaveney, E.; Smith, R.T.; Stewart, C.; Wright, I. 2007. Living on the ring of

fire - volcanoes. In: Te Ara team (editors), "Life on the Edge - New Zealand's Natural Hazards and Disasters". David Bateman, Auckland, pp. 76-115.

Newnham, R.M.; Lowe, D.J.; Giles, T.M., Alloway, B.V. 2007. Vegetation and climate of Auckland,

New Zealand, since ca. 32 000 cal. yr ago: support for an extended LGM. Journal of Quaternary Science 22, 517-534.

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Newnham, R.M.; Vandergoes, M.J.; Hendy, C.H.; Lowe, D.J.; Preusser, F. 2007. A terrrestrial palynological record for the last two glacial cycles from southwestern New Zealand. Quaternary Science Reviews 26, 517-535.

Alloway, B.V.; Lowe, D.J.; Barrell, D.J.A.; Newnham, R.M..; Almond, P.C.; Augustinus, P.C.; Bertler,

N.A.; Carter, L.; Litchfield, N.J.; McGlone, M.S.; Shulmeister, J.; Vandergoes, M.J.; Williams, P.W. and NZ-INTIMATE members 2007. Towards a climate event stratigraphy for New Zealand over the past 30,000 years (NZ-INTIMATE project). Journal of Quaternary Science 22, 9-35.

Newnham, R.M.; Vandergoes, M.J.; Garnett, M.H.; Lowe, D.J.; Prior, C.; Almond, P.CJ. 2007. Test of

AMS 14C dating of pollen concentrates using tephrochronology. Journal of Quaternary Science 22, 37-51.

Alloway, B.V.; Larsen, G.; Lowe, D.J.; Shane. P.A.R.; Westgate, J.A. 2007. Tephrochronology. In: Elias,

S.A. (editor-in-chief) Encyclopaedia of Quaternary Science. Elsevier, London, pp. 2869-2898.

Smith, R.T.; Lowe, D.J.; Wright, I.C. 2006. “Volcanoes.” Te Ara - The Encyclopedia of New Zealand [Online]. Updated 9 June 2006. New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage, Wellington. URL: http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/EarthSeaAndSky/NaturalHazardsAndDisasters/Volcanoes/en

Briggs, R.M.; Lowe, D.J.; Esler, W.R.; Smith, R.T.; Henry, M.A.C.; Wehrmann, H.; Manning, D.A. 2006.

Geology of the Maketu area, Bay of Plenty, North Island, New Zealand. Sheet V14 1:50 000. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Waikato, Occasional Report 26. 44 pp + map. [Published in collaboration with Bay of Plenty Regional Council, Whakatane.]

Gehrels, M.J.; Lowe, D.J.; Hazell, Z.J.; Newnham, R.M. 2006. A continuous 5300-yr Holocene

cryptotephrostratigraphic record from northern New Zealand and implications for tephrochronology and volcanic-hazard assessment. The Holocene 16, 173-187.

Hajdas, I.; Lowe, D.J.; Newnham, R.M.; Bonani, G. 2006. Timing of the late-glacial climate reversal in

the Southern Hemisphere using high-resolution radiocarbon chronology for Kaipo bog, New Zealand. Quaternary Research 65, 340-345.

Participants on ‘Ashes & Issues’ field trip Nov 2008

Tephra section and Prof Masami Nanzyo near Mt Tarawera Nov 2008

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Participants on ‘Hot Volcanic Soils’ field trip 2 December, 2014, part of NZSSS conference, Hamilton

Pedology and soil and land evaluation and management, clay mineralogy, geohazards including landsliding

Kluger, M.O., Moon, V.G., Kreiter, S., Lowe, D.J., Churchman, G.J., Hepp, D.A., Seibel, D., Jorat, M.E., Mörz, T. 2017. A new attraction-detachment model for explaining flow sliding in clay-rich tephras. Geology 45, 131-134.

Lowe, D.J., Churchman, G.J. 2016. Tales of the unexpected: halloysite delivers surprises and a paradox. New Zealand Soil News 64 (4), 12-18.

Taylor, M.D., Lowe, D.J., Hardi, P., Smidt, G., Schnug, E. 2016. Comparing volcanic glass shards in unfertilised and fertilised Andisols derived from rhyolitic tephras, New Zealand: evidence for accelerated weathering and implications for land management. Geoderma 271, 91-98.

Cunningham, M.J., Lowe, D.J., Wyatt, J., Moon, V.G., Churchman, G.J. 2016. Discovery of halloysite books in altered silicic Quaternary tephras, northern New Zealand. Clay Minerals 51, 351-372.

Churchman, G.J., Pasbakhsh, P., Lowe, D.J., Theng, B.K.G. 2016. Unique but diverse: some observations on the formation, structure, and morphology of halloysite. Clay Minerals 51, 395-416.

Huang, Y-T., Lowe, D.J., Zhang, H., Cursons, R., Young, J.M., Churchman, G.J., Schipper, L.A., Rawlence, N.J., Wood, J.R., Cooper, A. 2016. A new method to extract and purify DNA from allophanic soils and paleosols, and potential for paleoenvironmental reconstruction and other applications. Geoderma 247, 114-125.

Huang, Y.-T., Lowe, D.J., Churchman, G.J., Schipper, L.A., Cursons, R., Zhang, H., Chen, T.-Y., Cooper, A. 2016. DNA adsorption by nanocrystalline allophane spherules and nanoaggregates, and implications for carbon sequestration in Andisols. Applied Clay Science 120, 40-50.

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Noyes, A.M., Balks, M.R., Moon, V.G., Lowe, D.J. 2016. Soil recovery following landsliding at Whatawhata Research Station, Waikato, New Zealand: preliminary results. Proceedings of Hill Country Symposium 2016 (New Zealand Grassland Association, New Zealand Society of Animal Production, and New Zealand Grassland Trust, 12-13 April 2016, Rotorua), pp. 83-88.

Moon, V.G., Lowe, D.J., Cunningham, M.J., Wyatt, J., Churchman, G.J., de Lange, W.P., Mörz, T.,

Kreiter, S., Kluger, M.O., Jorat, M.E. 2015. Sensitive pyroclastic-derived halloysitic soils in northern New Zealand: interplay of microstructure, minerals, and geomechanics. In: Rotonda, T., Cecconi, M., Silvestri, F., Tommasi, P. (eds), Volcanic Rocks and Soils. Proceedings of the International Workshop on Volcanic Rocks and Soils, Lacco Ameno, Ischia Island, Italy, 24-25 September, 2015. Taylor and Francis, London, pp. 3-21.

Kleyburg, M.A., Moon, V.G., Lowe, D.J., Nelson, C.S. 2015. Paleoliquefaction in Late Pleistocene alluvial sediments in Hauraki and Hamilton basins, and implications for paleoseismicity. Proceedings, 12th Australia New Zealand Conference on Geomechanics (ANZ 2015), 22-25 February, 2015, Wellington, pp. 524 531.

Lowe, D.J., Balks, M.R., Laubscher, N. 2014. Once despised now desired: innovative land use and

management of multilayered Pumice Soils in the Taupo and Galatea areas, central North Island, New Zealand. Guidebook for field trip “Hot volcanic soils”, New Zealand Society of Soil Science conference “Soil Science for Future Generations”, Hamilton (1-4 December), 85 pp.

Heaphy, M.J., Lowe, D.J., Palmer, D.J., Jones, H.S., Gielen, G.J.H.P., Oliver, G.R., Pearce, S., 2014. Assessing drivers of plantation forest productivity on eroded and non-eroded soils in hilly land, eastern North Island, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Forestry Science 44: 24 (pp.1-10) [open access] (doi: 10.1186/s40490-014-0024-5).

Churchman, G.J., Lowe, D.J. 2014. Clay minerals in South Australian Holocene basaltic volcanogenic soils and implications for halloysite genesis and structure. In: Gilkes, R. (editor), Proceedings of the 23rd Biennial Australian Clay Minerals Society Conference, University of Western Australia, Perth, 3-4 Feb, 2014, pp. 3-6.

Huang, Y-T., Lowe, D.J., Churchman, G.J., Schipper, L., Rawlence, N.J., Cooper, A. 2014. Carbon

storage and DNA adsorption in allophanic soils and paleosols. In: Hartemink, A.E.; McSweeney, K. (eds). “Soil Carbon”. Progress in Soil Science Series, Springer, New York pp. 163-172.

Hartemink, A.E., Balks, M.R., Chen, Z-S., Drohan, P., Field, D.J., Krasilnikov, P., Lowe, D.J.,

Rabenhorst, M., van Rees, K., Schad, P., Schipper, L.A., Sonneveld, M., Walter, C. 2014. The joy of teaching soil science. Geoderma 217-218, 1-9

Moon, V.G., Cunningham, M.J., Wyatt, J.B., Lowe, D.J., Mörz, T., Jorat, M.E. 2013. Landslides in

sensitive soils, Tauranga, New Zealand. In: Chin, T.Y. (Ed.), “Hanging by a thread – lifelines, infrastructure, and natural disasters”. Proceedings 19th New Zealand Geotechnical Society (NZGS) Geotechnical Symposium, Queenstown (20-23 November 2013), Vol 38, Issue 1 (GM), pp. 537-544.

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Lowe, D.J., Lanigan, K.M., Palmer, D.J. 2012. Where geology meets pedology: Late Quaternary

tephras, loess, and paleosols in the Mamaku Plateau and Lake Rerewhakaaitu areas. In: Pittari, A. (compiler). Field Trip Guides, Geosciences 2012 Conference, Hamilton, New Zealand. Geoscience Society of New Zealand Miscellaneous Publication 134B, pp. 2.1−2.45.

Churchman, G.J.; Lowe, D.J. 2012. Alteration, formation, and occurrence of minerals in soils. In:

Huang, P.M.; Li, Y; Sumner, M.E. (eds-in-chief) “Handbook of Soil Sciences. 2nd edition. Vol. 1: Properties and Processes”. CRC Press (Taylor & Francis), Boca Raton, FL, pp.20.1-20.72.

McDaniel, P.A.; Lowe, D.J.; Arnalds, O.; Ping, C.-L. 2012. Andisols. In: Huang, P.M.; Li, Y; Sumner,

M.E. (eds-in-chief) “Handbook of Soil Sciences. 2nd edition. Vol. 1: Properties and Processes”. CRC Press (Taylor & Francis), Boca Raton, FL, pp.33.29-33.48.

Lowe, D.J.; Neall, V.E., Hedley, M; Clothier, B.; Mackay, A. 2010. Guidebook for pre-conference

North Island, New Zealand ‘Volcanoes to Ocean’ field tour (27-30 July, 2010). 19th World Soils Congress, International Union of Soil Sciences, Brisbane. Soil and Earth Sciences Occasional Publication No. 3, Massey University, Palmerston North, 239pp. ISSN No. 1175-4966.

Lowe, D.J.; Tonkin, P.J. 2010. Unravelling upbuilding pedogenesis in tephra and loess sequences in New

Zealand using tephrochronology. In: Gilkes, R.J.; Prakongkep, N. (eds), Proceedings 19th World Congress of Soil Science (1-6 Aug., 2010, Brisbane), Symposium 1.3.2 Geochronological techniques and soil formation, pp. 34-37. Published at http://www.iuss.org.

Takesako, H.; Lowe, D.J.; Churchman, G.J.; Chittleborough, D. 2010. Holocene volcanic soils in the

Mt Gambier region, South Australia. In: Gilkes, R.J.; Prakongkep, N. (eds), Proceedings 19th World Congress of Soil Science (1-6 Aug., 2010, Brisbane,), Symposium 1.3.1 Pedogenesis: ratio and range of influence, pp. 47-50. Published at http://www.iuss.org.

Watt, M.J.; Palmer, D.J.; Kimberley, M.O.; Höck, B.K.; Payn, T.; Lowe, D.J. 2010. Development of models to predict Pinus radiata productivity throughout New Zealand. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 40, 488-499.

Palmer, D.J.; Hock, B.K.; Kimberley, M.O.; Lowe, D.J.; Payn, T.W. 2009. Comparison of spatial prediction

techniques for developing Pinus radiata productivity surfaces across New Zealand. Forest Ecology and Management 258, 2046-2055.

Inoue, Y.; Baasansuren, J.; Watanabe, M.; Kamei, H.; Lowe, D.J. 2009. Interpretation of pre-AD 472

Roman soils from physicochemical and mineralogical properties of buried tephric paleosols at Somma Vesuviana ruin, southwest Italy. Geoderma 152, 243-251.

Palmer, D.J.; Watt, M.S.; Höck, B.K.; Lowe, D.J.; Payn, T.W. 2009. A dynamic framework for spatial

modelling Pinus radiata soil-water balance (SWatBal) across New Zealand. Forest Research Bulletin No. 234, 1-93.

Palmer, D.J.; Höck, B.K.; Lowe, D.J.; Dunningham, A.G.; Payn, T.W. 2009. Developing national-scale

terrain attributes for New Zealand (TANZ). Forest Research Bulletin No. 232, 1-81

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Lowe, D.J.; Tonkin, P.J.; Palmer, A.S.; Palmer, J. 2008. Dusty horizons [Loess] In: Graham, I.J. (chief

editor) “A Continent on the Move: New Zealand Geoscience into the 21st Century”. Geological Society of New Zealand Miscellaneous Publication 124, 270-273.

Lowe, D.J. (Editor) 2008. Guidebook for Pre-conference North Island Field Trip A1 ‘Ashes and

Issues’, 28-30 November, 2008. Australian and New Zealand 4th Joint Soils Conference, Massey University, Palmerston North (1-5 Dec.). New Zealand Society of Soil Science, 1-194. ISBN 978-0- 473-14476-0

Lowe, D.J. (editor) 2006. Guidebook for ‘Land and Lakes’ field trip, New Zealand Society of Soil

Science Biennial Conference, Rotorua. New Zealand Society of Soil Science, Lincoln. 63pp.

Claessens, L.; Lowe, D.J.; Hayward, B.W.; Schoorl, J.M.; Veldkamp, A. 2006. Reconstructing high- magnitude/low-frequency landslide events based on soil redistribution modelling and a Late- Holocene sediment record from New Zealand. Geomorphology 74, 29-49

Lowe, D.J.; Palmer, D.J. 2005. Andisols of New Zealand and Australia. Journal of Integrated Field

Science 2, 39-65.

Palmer, D.J.; Lowe, D.J.; Payn, T.W.; Höck, B.K.; McLay, C.D.A.; Kimberley, M.O. 2005. Soil and foliar phosphorus as indicators of sustainability for Pinus radiata plantation forestry in New Zealand. Forest Ecology and Management 220, 140-154.

Shallow peat at Waihi Beach, North Island;, Kaharoa tephra (erupted c. 1314 AD from Mt Tarawera) showing prominently (from Lowe 2011)

Ancient Maori village site (kainga) at Papamoa, North Island, on sand dune with white Kaharoa tephra forming the pre-village datum

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Geoarchaeology and tephrochronology; science policy, Anthropocene, obituaries (etc)

Nelson, C.S., Lowe, D.J., Tonkin, P.J. 2015. The working life of John McCraw (1925-2014): a remarkable New Zealand pedologist and Earth scientist. Journal of the Historical Studies Group (Geoscience Society of New Zealand) 50, 2-29.

Tonkin, P.J., Lowe, D.J., Nelson, C.S. 2015. Obituary − Emeritus Professor Dr John Davidson McCraw

(1925−2014) MBE, MSc NZ, DSc Well, CRSNZ, FNZSSS. New Zealand Soil News 66, 14-35.

Bostock, H.C., Lowe, D.J., Gillespie, R., Priestley, R., Newnham, R.M., Mooney, S.D. 2015. The advent of the Anthropocene in Australasia. Quaternary Australasia 32, 7-16.

Lowe, D.J., Bostock, H.C. 2015. The Anthropocene: an Australasian perspective and survey. New

Zealand Soil News 67, 115-120; and Geoscience Society of New Zealand Newsletter 16, 29-36.

Lowe, D.J., Pittari, A. 2014. An ashy septingentenarian: the Kaharoa tephra turns 700 (with notes on its volcanological, archaeological, and historical importance). Geoscience Society of New Zealand Newsletter 13, 35-46.

Bryan, K.R., Lowe, D.J. 2014. How the Marsden Fund has failed to achieve its potential in the ESA

panel: evidence of limitations in scope, biased outcomes, and futile applications. New Zealand Science Review 71 (1), 3-9.

Lowe, D.J. 2008. Polynesian settlement of New Zealand and the impacts of volcanism on early

Maori society: an update. In: Lowe, D.J. (ed), Guidebook for Pre-conference North Island Field Trip A1 ‘Ashes and Issues’, 28-30 November, 2008. Australian and New Zealand 4th Joint Soils Conference, Massey University, Palmerston North (1-5 Dec.). New Zealand Society of Soil Science. Pp.142-147.

Lowe, D.J.; Newnham, R.M. 2004. Role of tephra in dating Polynesian settlement and impact, New

Zealand. Past Global Changes 12 (No. 3), 5-7 + 3 pages full references at www.pages- igbp.org/products/newsletters/ref2004_3.html

Gumbley, W.; Higham, T.F.G.; Lowe, D.J. 2004. Prehistoric horticultural adaptation of soils in the middle Waikato Basin: review and evidence from S14/201 and S14/185, Hamilton. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology 25, 5-30.

Hogg, A.G., Higham, T.F.G., Lowe, D.J., Palmer, J.; Reimer, P.; Newnham, R.M. 2003. Wiggle-match

date for Polynesian settlement of New Zealand. Antiquity 77, 116-125.

Lowe, D.J.; Newnham, R.M.; McCraw, J.D. 2002. Volcanism and early Maori society in New Zealand. In: R. Torrence & J. Grattan (eds) "Natural Disasters, Catastrophism and Cultural Change", Routledge, London, pp. 126-161.

Lowe, D.J.; Newnham, R.M.; McFadgen, B.G.; Higham, T.F.G. 2000. Tephras and New Zealand

archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Science 27, 859-870.

PDFs of some papers are available at the University of Waikato 'Research Commons' at http://researchcommons.waikato.ac.nz/sci_eng/

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Participants in INTAV’s “Active Tephra” conference in Japan 12 May, 2010. Sakurajima volcano in background erupted later that day. Photo: Koji Okumura.

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Recognition

Honours and distinctions

David was Chair of the Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of Waikato, from July, 2012, until April, 2014, when the department was merged with several others to form the new School of Science in the Faculty of Science and Engineering at the University of Waikato. He was until July 2015 programme convenor and postgraduate coordinator for the Earth sciences group within the school.

David has held, and holds, elected office in both international and national geoscience organizations and is the Immediate Past-President (2015-2019) of the International Focus Group on Tephrochronology and Volcanism (INTAV) within the International Union for Quaternary Research (INQUA). Previously he was Secretary 2007-2011 and President 2011-2015. David convened an international Inter-INQUA field conference on tephra, loess and paleosols in New Zealand in 1994 during an earlier stint (1991-1995) as Secretary of the Commission of Tephrochronology of INQUA (predecessor to INTAV). He helped to organise the “Active Tephra” conference in Japan in 2010 for INTAV. Currently, he and the INTAV committee are working on the next inter-INQUA specialist tephra conference to be held in 2018.

David has been involved for more than three decades in organizing and leading conference and society activities, thereby helping facilitate science communication for professional scientist and students from New Zealand and overseas. He convened the annual conference of the Geological Society of New Zealand in Hamilton in 2001. David has been on the organising committees of three further Geosciences Society of New Zealand annual conferences including most recently in November 2012 when the conference was hosted at the University of Waikato in Hamilton. He has also organized and led field trips through the North Island in association with international conferences including in 1993, 1994, 2008, and 2010, and for national conferences in 1981, 1982, 1985, 2006, 2012, and 2014. David is preparing for trips associated with the forthcoming Australasian Quaternary Association (AQUA) conference being held in Auckland in December, 2016.

In addition, David has hosted and supported dozens of visiting academics and young scientists, including 16 long-term visitors, from the USA, Canada, Australia, The Netherlands, Norway, England, Ireland, and Japan.

Currently David is currently a member of the editorial panels (boards) for four journals, Journal of Quaternary Science, Quaternary Geochronology, Quaternary International, and Frontiers in Earth Sciences. He was an associate editor for Soil Science Society of America Journal for 6 years from 2006 to 2011 and a member of the editorial advisory panel of New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics for 6 years from 2004 to 2009.

David’s contributions to research and lecturing have been recognised by awards and honours both internationally and in New Zealand.

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2016 - David has been working with colleagues as a guest editor for a special issue on

tephrochronology (mainly papers presented in tephra symposia at the INQUA congress in Nagoya, Japan, in 2015) to be published in Quaternary Geochronology in early 2017

- Invited chapter by D.J. Lowe and B.V. Alloway (2105) “Tephrochronology” was published in the “Encyclopaedia of Scientific Dating Methods” (Springer), which won the Geoscience Information Society’s “Best Geoscience Reference Work Award”, 2016

- Member of the Hutton Fund Committee (Royal Society of NZ) for research grants for NZ zoology, botany and geology

2015

- Proposer and leader of an international tephra project , EXTRAS “Extending tephras as a global geoscientific research tool stratigraphically, spatially, analytically, and temporally within the Quaternary” as a core part of the activities of the International focus group on tephrochronology and volcanism (INTAV) within INQUA, 2015-2023 (Dec 2015)

- Elected an Honorary Life Fellow of the International Union for Quaternary Research (INQUA) at Nagoya Congress, Japan, an award for “prominent internationally recognized Quaternary scientists for meritorious service to Quaternary science” (July 2015)

- Elected Immediate Past President, International Focus Group on Tephrochronology and Volcanism (INTAV) of INQUA, 2015-2019

- Member of ‘Continent on the Move’ Revision Committee of the Geoscience Society of New Zealand, and editor of chapter 11 “Climate Swings and Roundabouts” of revised 2nd edition (March 2014-September 2015)

2014 - Invited to write a preface for volume “Marine Tephrochronology” in November 2013 for

Geological Society (London) Special Publications (Lowe 2014) - Member of 2014 Hatherton Award Committee of the Royal Society of New Zealand

2011 - Awarded the McKay Hammer Award by the Geoscience Society of New Zealand “for the most

meritorious contribution to New Zealand geology published in the years 2008-2010” - Lead co-guest editor of volume 246 of set of papers "Enhancing tephrochronology (INTREPID

project): Hiroshi Machida commemorative volume" for journal Quaternary International - Elected President, International Focus Group on Tephrochronology and Volcanism (INTAV) of

INQUA, 2011-2015. - New Zealand delegate (Royal Society of New Zealand) to International Council, 18th

International INQUA Congress, Bern, and current New Zealand representative 2011-2015 - Co-convenor of tephrochronology symposium at 18th International INQUA Congress, BERN

- Participated in a Canadian Broadcasting Corp (CBC) television documentary in episode “Western Pacific Rim” for series “Geologic Journey II”

- Awarded “Citation of Excellence for Associate Editors for 2010” by Soil Science Society of America Journal

2010 - Elected Fellow of Royal Society of New Zealand - Awarded Marsden Fund funding for 3-year project on ancient DNA and paleosols in the North

Island - Awarded Fellowship of Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science for lecture tour of Japan

in May - “Outstanding reviewer” award for papers handled 2008-9 from Quaternary Science Reviews

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2009 - Ron McDonald Memorial Lecture award, Queensland branch, Australian Society of Soil Science. - Leader of INTREPID project of INTAV "Enhancing tephrochronology as a global research tool"

and INTREPID II (ongoing project supported by INQUA) (completed July 2015) - The book "A continent on the Move: New Zealand Geoscience into the 21st Century",

published in 2008 by the Geological Society of NZ, and of which David was one of 3 technical/scientific editors, was awarded "best book in environment" category at Montana NZ Book Awards.

2008 - Appointed to a personal chair (professorship) at Waikato University 1 February - Presented inaugural professional lecture "A date with tephra" 16 December - Invited participant at international consortium workshop "Studying uncertainty in palaeo-

environmental reconstruction - a net" (SUPRAnet) in U.K. - Co-guest editor of volume (vol. 178) of papers "Global Tephra Studies - John Westgate and

Andrei Sarna-Wojcicki Commemorative Volume" for journal Quaternary International.

2007 - Invited plenary keynote speaker at international symposium "Quaternary Environmental

Change in Asia and the Western Pacific", Tsukuba, Japan, November. - Invited keynote speaker in two sessions 'Recent advances in tephrochronology' (S. Davies/K.

Aoki, convenors) and 'Abrupt environmental and archaeologic changes' (J. Lowe/C. Turney, convenors) at 17th International INQUA Congress, Cairns, Australia, 28 July- August.

- Elected Full Voting Member, International Union for Quaternary Research Commission on Stratigraphy and Chronology (INQUA-SACCOM), 2007-2011

- Appointed Secretary, International Focus Group on Tephrochronology and Volcanism (INTAV) of INQUA, 2007 - 2011.

- Official New Zealand delegate (Royal Society of NZ) to International Council, 17th International INQUA Congress, Cairns.

2006 - Invited key-note speaker at international field conference on "Volcanic-ash Soils", Mt Fuji

area, Japan (March). - Associate investigator in team (lead by Professor Rewi Newnham) awarded funding by

the Nature Environment Research Council (NERC), UK, for research on cryptotephra studies in northern New Zealand.

2005 - Invited co-author of chapters in international and national encyclopaedias (Encyclopaedia of

Quaternary Science, Encyclopaedia of New Zealand) - Invited speaker at international inter-INQUA tephra conference "Tephra Rush" in Dawson

City, Yukon Territory, Canada.

2004 - Invited key-note speaker at the 2nd International Workshop on Andisols in Sendai, northeast Japan - Invited by the Vice-Chancellor to speak at the 40th Anniversary Celebration Winter Lecture

Series at University of Waikato

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2003 - Associate investigator in team (led by Dr Alan Hogg) awarded Marsden funding for

palaeoclimatic analysis and radiocarbon calibration of marine isotope stage 3 using Agathis australis (kauri).

2002

- Awarded the N.H. Taylor Memorial Lecture Award of the New Zealand Society of Soil

Science - Awarded Fellowship of the New Zealand Society of Soil Science

2000 - Invitation Fellow of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, undertaking a lecture

tour of five universities and carrying out pedological and tephrostratigraphic field work on Hokkaido, Honshu and Kyushu islands, Japan.

1999

- Participated in a Television New Zealand documentary on the origins and timing of settlement of early Polynesians in New Zealand

- Associate investigator in team (led by Professor Rewi Newnham) awarded funding by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), U.K., for research on interhemispheric synchrony of global climate change

1998

- Distinguished Scholar Award, Queen's University of Belfast, U.K.

1996 - Sole guest editor of volumes 34-36 "Tephra, Loess, and Paleosols - An

Integration" for journal Quaternary International

1995 - Awarded a Higher Education 'Link' Award by the British Council to facilitate joint research

with Plymouth University, England.

Earlier - Academic Merit Award of the University of Waikato (1992) - Visiting scientist award, CSIRO Division of Soils, Adelaide (1991-1992) - W.A. Pullar Prize of the Geological Society of New Zealand (1986) (inaugural prize winner) - Sir Theodore Rigg Award of the New Zealand Society of Soil Science (inaugural Waikato

University prize winner, 1982.

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Professors Lowe, Chen (National Taiwan Univ., Symbolic ancient altar depicting the soils of Taipei) and Takesako (Meiji Univ., Japan) in China (at Taiwan Soil Museum, Taichung, Prof Chen’s lab, 2007 Taiwan)

External Involvement

Membership of professional and learned societies • Immediate Past President of International Focus Group on Tephrochronology and

Volcanism (INTAV) 2015-2019 • President of International Focus Group on Tephrochronology and Volcanism (INTAV) • 2011–2015; previously Secretary 2007-2011 and 1991-1995 • Co-leader NZ Society of Soil Science biennial conference (Hamilton) field trip “Hot

volcanic soils”, Dec 2014 • Co-leader Geoscience Society of NZ annual conference (Hamilton) field trip “Where

geology meets pedology”, Nov 2012 • Co-convenor of two Waikato-Bay of Plenty regional soil science meetings, “Wai BoP

Soils”, at Waikato University (Dec 2011, 2013) on behalf of NZ Society of Soil Science • New Zealand Quaternary representative for INQUA from 2007-2019 • Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand since 2010 • Co-leader of North Island field trip "Volcanoes to Ocean" for 19th World Soil Congress in

Brisbane 2010. • Co-organiser of INTAV "Active Tephra" conference in Kirishima, Japan, 2010 • Co-leader of North Island field trip "Ashes and Issues" for 4th joint international soils

conference of Australian and New Zealand soil science societies in Palmerston North, 2008

• Co-scientific/technical editor of Geological Society of New Zealand book "A Continent on the Move" (2008), winner of 'environment' award of Montana New Zealand Book Awards, 2009

• Visited national soil museums in Taichung, Taiwan, and Tsukuba, Japan, 2007; • Co-leader of field trip “Land and Lakes” for biennial conference of society in Rotorua 2006;

Fellow of New Zealand Society of Soil Science (FNZSSS) since 2002; N.H. Taylor Memorial Lecturer in 2002; member of society since 1975

• Member of Royal Society of New Zealand (MRSNZ) from 1994 to 2010 • Member of Geological Society of New Zealand since 1975 (foundation member Waikato

Branch); on National Committee GSNZ two terms 2000-2003; convenor of annual conference "Advances in Geosciences", Hamilton, 2001

• Foundation member of Australasian Quaternary Association (AQUA) since 1979

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• Executive Secretary of Commission on Tephrochronology (COT) of International Union for Quaternary Research (INQUA) 1991-1995; Convenor international inter-INQUA field conference "Tephras, Loess, Paleosols", Hamilton, 1994

• Co-leader New Zealand field trip, 10th International Clay Conference, Adelaide, in 1993 • Editorial Advisory Panel, New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics for 7

years 2004-2010 • Editorial Board, Quaternary Geochronology since 2015 • Editorial Board (Review Editor), Frontiers in Earth Sciences since 2014 • Editorial Board, Quaternary International since 2005 • Editorial Board, Journal of Quaternay Science since 2008 • Associate Editor, Soil Science Society of America Journal (Pedology Division) for 6

years from 2006 to 2011.

North Island soils tour, World Soils Congress July 2010

Prof Mike Hedley explains management of Horotiu soils, North Is. soils tour, WSC July 2010

With Meiji University staff and grad students, Participants on ‘Geology meets pedology’ field trip exchange visit to New Zealand, Nov 2012 for Geociences Society of NZ conference, Nov 2012