Cha~les T. Prewitt, State university
of New York at Stony Brook, Chairman
Paul B. Barton, u.s. Geological survey
Peter M. Bell, Carnegie Institution of washington
Morris E. Fine, Northwestern university
Simon Foner, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
David L. Kohlstedt, Cornell university
William c. Luth, Sandia Laboratories
Murli H. Manghnani, University of Hawaii
Amiya K. Mukherjee, University of California at Davis
Eugene c. Robertson, u.s. Geological Survey
George R. Rossman, California Institute of Technology
Albert w. Schlechten, Colorado School of Mines
PREFACE
This report is written with the hope of
stimulating new and further interaction between research scientists in
the earth and the materials sciences. Workers in these fields often
study the same natural phenomena and use similar instruments. The chief
differences are the actual substances used in the experiments, and,
sometimes, the questions that are being asked of nature. In qeneral,
the earth scientist is studying the structure and coapoaition of
natural materials to find out how the earth has been formed; the
materials scientist is studying the structure and composition of both
natural and processed materials so as to control their properties and
behavior. The overall similarity of methods and instruments used
suggests that frequent interchange between the two fields would be
mutually profitable. Indeed, such interchange, when it has occurred,
has been beneficial.