Robert Dietz was born on September 14, 1914 in Westfield, New Jersey. Dietz loved science since he was a boy. Science was all that he wanted to focus on in his life. He did not have any interest in religion or anything else in high school, just science. Dietz made an important scientific contribution to the recognition of impact structures, mainly of eroded impact scars on earth and he named them astroblemes. He also contributed to and used new methods of how to explore the seafloor. This included scuba and bathyscaph. Dietz published prolifically in scientific and popular scientific journals and was both a synthesizer of key research and a generator of controversial speculation. He was a great contributor to marine geology. The Dietz family had a total of seven kids and Robert was the second youngest. His father was an engineer and his mother was a devout Christian Scientist. Dietz’ mother died when he was in high school and his father died a few years later. He eventually went to the University of Illinois and took the two astronomy classes. He graduated college and got his PhD. Dietz loved the ideas of science and loved to study it. Robert Dietz wanted to focus on that in his life. …show more content…
These areas were marine geology, continental drift/plate tectonics, and planetary geology. Dietz made contributions in studying and interpreting the sea-floor and the importance of diving technology. He published important analyses of the geomorphic evolution of continental margins, and he later considered the geologic architecture of these margins. He also published a pioneering concept of seafloor spreading. He worked with scientists like Harry Hess and their most famous discovery is their geological reconstruction called pangea. Robert Dietz was important during the plate tectonic revolution and during the birth of planetary