G. H. Dury

George Harry Dury (11 September 1916 – 4 October 1996)[1][2] was an English geographer and hydrologist who devised a model showing the relationship between river discharge and other stream variables.

Life

Dury was born at Hellidon, near Daventry, Northamptonshire, the son of Harry Dury (1879–1961), an agricultural labourer then serving in the Royal West Surrey Regiment, and his wife, Harriett Emma, née Colledge (1882–1959). He attended the grammar school in Daventry, and then took a BA degree (1937) and a teacher's diploma (1939) as an external student of the University of London. In 1937 he married Ina Gertrude Newton (1916–2005), daughter of George Lionel Newton, army pensioner, of Hertford Heath, Hertfordshire. They had a daughter, Helen.[1]

While teaching at Elizabeth College, Guernsey, in 1939, Dury and his family were evacuated before the German occupation. He was commissioned in the Royal Air Force in 1941 and assigned to photographic mapping. His mapping of Guernsey served also for his London University MA degree. His first post-war job was as a lecturer in geology and geography at Enfield Technical College in 1946–48. He then became a geography lecturer at Birkbeck College, University of London (1949–62). Having retired to Risby near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, he died at the West Suffolk Hospital there in 1996.[1]

Research

Dury's model is an extension of the Bradshaw model which shows how river characteristics will change from the upper course to the lower course of a river. Dury used a line graph and a logarithmic scale, plotting the discharge along the x-axis and the other stream variables along the y-axis. Other 'stream variables' included depth, width, velocity, slope (gradient) and friction (Manning formula).

Dury's work on quantitative fluvial geomorphology led to a temporary period with the United States Geological Survey in 1960–61 and to co-authorship of the influential study Fluvial Processes in Geomorphology (with Luna B. Leopold, M. Gordon Wolman, and John Miller, 1964). Dury's most widely read book was The Face of the Earth (1959), published by Penguin Books.[1]

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See also

  • List of rivers by average discharge

References

  1. James C. Knox, "Dury, George Harry (1916–1996)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2011) Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  2. "George Dury 1919-1996: an appreciation", Australian Geographer, vol 28, no 1, 1997


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