| Peter Burns
Peter Burns was born in 1966 in New Brunswick, Canada. He graduated from
the University of New Brunswick with a B.Sc. (first class honors) in geology
in 1988, and from the University of Western Ontario with an M.Sc. in geology
in 1990. He continued his graduate work at the University of Manitoba, and
received a Ph.D. in 1994. His dissertation, under the direction of Frank
Hawthorne, concerned theoretical aspects of the crystal chemistry of Cu2+
oxysalt minerals. In 1994 he was awarded a National Sciences and Engineering
Council of Canada Postdoctoral Fellowship, which he used to conduct research
in mineral phase transitions at Cambridge University from 1994 to 1995, and
then in the mineralogy of uranium at the University of New Mexico from 1995
to 1996. He was a Visiting Assistant Professor of geology at the University
of Illinois-Urbana from 1996 to 1997. He became an Assistant Professor of
geology at the University of Notre Dame in 1997, was promoted to Associate
Professor in 1999, and became the Henry Massman Chair in Civil Engineering
and Geological Sciences in 2000. He directs the Environmental Mineralogy and
Crystal Structures research laboratory, and works with several
undergraduate, graduate, and post-doctoral students on various aspects of
low-temperature mineralogy, especially the mineralogy of actinides. He has
been awarded the Donath Medal of the Geological Society of America, the
Young Scientist Award of the Mineralogical Association of Canada, and the
Mineralogical Society of America Award. He is married to Tammy, and they
have one son, Kelson.
|