John Robert de Laeter, AO, FTSE, FAIP (3 May 1933 – 16 August 2010) was an Australian scientist with a distinguished career across several fields in nuclear physics, cosmochemistry, geochronology, isotope geochemistry. He was also a prominent administrator and promoter who oversaw the establishment of several scientific research and education centres in Western Australia.
De Laeter began teaching in 1957 at the Perth Technical College.[2] While teaching at Bunbury High School in the late 1950s, de Laeter attended a science teachers' conference in Sydney, where he described the following:
I heard two of the world's experts battling it out on how the universe began – the Big Bang Theory versus Steady State Cosmology. It inspired me and I decided there and then to go back to university and do a PhD in physics and get involved in these astrophysical questions.[3]
Further University studies culminated in a thesis on the isotopic composition of terrestrial and meteoritic tin and a PhD in 1966.[4] After researching nuclear physics at McMaster University in Canada on a National Research Council of Canada Fellowship, de Laeter returned to Australia in 1968 as inaugural head of the Department of Physics at West Australian Institute of Technology (the predecessor of Curtin University).[2][3][5]
De Laeter's scientific interests were broad, but centred on the application of mass spectrometry techniques in cosmochemistry and nuclear physics. He is credited with refining the isotopic composition and atomic weight measurements of elements,[2] including antimony,[6]barium,[7]tin[8][9] and ytterbium.[10] This work also lead to mass spectrometric investigations of the Oklo natural nuclear reactor to better understand the diffusion and retentivity of various fission products in the context of managing man-made nuclear waste.[11] From 1980, De Laeter was elected in the IUPACCommission on Isotopic Abundances and Atomic Weights (CIAAW), serving as the Secretary of the Commission from 1984 to 1987 and as its chairman from 1988 to 1991. In 1984, he authored the "CIAAW Technical Guidelines" manual, which still serves as a reference for adopting new atomic weight values by the Commission.
As the West Australian Institute of Technology evolved into Curtin University of Technology, De Laeter became Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research and Development and provided important administrative service and guidance to several major projects including the Technology Park[2] and establishing a SHRIMP Lab in 1994 that became the core of the John de Laeter Centre for Isotope Research. De Laeter's strong interest in the SHRIMP instrument developed by a doctoral colleague, Bill Compston, at the Australian National University is credited for the commercial development of this technology.[5]
De Laeter retired in 1995. A symposium to mark his retirement was notable for one of the last public speeches by Mark Oliphant. This was noted as a very fitting tribute, because Mark Oliphant had given a lecture in 1950 that had inspired Peter M Jeffrey – John de Laeter's PhD supervisor – to begin the pioneering work in mass spectrometry and geochronology in Australia.[16]
^De Laeter, J.R.; Rosman, K.J.R.; Smith, C.L. (1980), "The Oklo natural reactor: Cumulative fission yields and retentivity of the symmetric mass region fission products", Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 50 (1): 238–246, Bibcode:1980E&PSL..50..238D, doi:10.1016/0012-821X(80)90135-1
^De Laeter, J.R.; Blockley, J.G. (1972), "Granite ages within the Archaean Pilbara Block, Western Australia", Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 19 (3): 363–370, Bibcode:1972AuJES..19..363D, doi:10.1080/00167617208728804
^De Laeter, J.R.; Fletcher, I.R.; Bickle, M.J.; Myers, J.S.; Libby, W.G.; Williams, I.R.; Myers, J.S. (1985), "Rb-Sr, Sm-Nd and Pb-Pb geochronology of ancient gneisses from Mt Narryer, Western Australia", Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 32 (4): 349–358, Bibcode:1985AuJES..32..349D, doi:10.1080/08120098508729338
^De Laeter, J.R. (1976), "The Age of the Elements", Australian Science Teachers Journal, 22 (3): 73–80