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David Smythe - summary CV David Smythe trained as a geophysicist. He worked initially at the British Geological Survey in Edinburgh, then became Professor of Geophysics at Glasgow University until his early retirement in 1998. He moved to France in 2003, and intermittently consulted for the oil industry.

He pioneered marine deep crustal seismic imaging in the 1980s, and led a multinational geophysical experiment at the world’s deepest borehole, in Arctic Russia.

His many papers and public lectures on West Cumbria, from 2007 on, helped to persuade Cumbria County Council to veto the development of a nuclear waste repository in 2013.

His prototype of a new patented 3D medical ultrasound scanner based on geophysical principles has proved the concept, applicable to novel areas like bone strength and intracranial pressure measurement.

After Fukushima, he published a new objective scale for estimating the magnitude of nuclear accidents, which is becoming recognised as superior to the ‘official’ scale.

Since 2014 he has assisted many local UK groups which are opposed to fracking, by providing them with expert geological reviews.


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