Jane Plant

Last updated

Professor

Jane Anne Plant
Jane Plant.png
Born(1945-02-01)1 February 1945
Died4 March 2016(2016-03-04) (aged 71)
Education
Awards CBE, FREng, FRSE, FRSA
Scientific career
Fields Geochemistry
Institutions
Website cancersupportinternational.com
Example of a map created by the G-BASE This map is based on analysis of 1154 shallow (0.05 - 0.25 m) soil samples collected at varying densities. Antimony G-BASE in Shallow Soils.png
Example of a map created by the G-BASE This map is based on analysis of 1154 shallow (0.05 – 0.25 m) soil samples collected at varying densities.

Jane Anne Plant CBE, FREng, FRSE, FRSA (1945–2016) was a leading geochemist, scientist, and author. Plant was a pioneer in the field of geochemical surveys and environmental surveys. [1] She was Chief Scientist at the British Geological Survey and was a Professor of Geochemistry at Imperial College London. Plant was also highly involved in the Institution of Mining & Metallurgy (now Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining) where she was involved in many aspects including a role on the Council, and was the first female President of the Institution of Mining & Metallurgy, a post she held from 2001 to 2002. This gave her an extensive network of key connections with government, industry and academia.

Contents

Plant was diagnosed with cancer six times and studied the link between dairy and breast cancer. She published several books on the subject. [2]

Plant was appointed a CBE in 1997 in recognition of her contribution to Earth science and industry. She was a British Geological Survey scientist until her retirement from the role of Chief Scientist in 2005. Plant was Emeritus Professor of Geochemistry at Imperial College until her death on 4 March 2016. [3]

Early life

Plant was born in Woodville, Derbyshire, the only child of Ralph and Marjorie (née Langton) Lunn who were village shopkeepers. She attended at Ashby de la Zouch Grammar School from where she went to Liverpool University in 1963. She graduated with first class honours in geology and took the prize for the best degree in her year. [4]

Career

Plant spent most of her career at the British Geological Survey (BGS), and is credited for establishing the ‘Environment and Health’ as significant research. She joined the Institute for Geological Sciences (former name of BGS) in 1967, at the age of 23. There, she led the geochemical reconnaissance programme mapping the presence of elements in Scottish Highlands. [5] She was the first woman to be appointed to a Scientific Officer role [1] rather than in a technical or supporting grade.

She was assigned to the Atomic Energy Section in London, led by Stanley Bowie. [6] She developed methods for a regional geochemical survey in the north of Scotland and was awarded a PhD in 1977 from the University of Leicester for her thesis "Regional Geochemical mapping in Great Britain with particular reference to sources of error". [7]

Plant developed the high-resolution BGS Geochemical Baseline of the Environment (G-BASE) programme to map different chemicals over the land surface by analyzing sediments, ore deposits, soils and water samples. The programme began to broaden and created a geochemical database, which could be applied to economic, health and environmental issues. [4] She applied her maps to health and her findings helped create the field of environmental health, specifically researching Asian and Africa, and was able to study a correlation between a lack of available selenium and heart disease in China. [1]

Her personal influence on the research community was great. After getting her PhD in 1977, she received a special merit promotion in 1983. Along with numerous awards, she was also a member of Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution (1999-2005). Her achievements were recognized by her peers with many awards. [4]

Cancer research

Her research in the environmental geochemical field became more personal in 1993 when she was diagnosed with breast cancer for the sixth time. She noticed the low cancer rate among Chinese women and discovered a correlation between cancer rate and dairy consumption. [6] [8] Her research led to many of the protocols used in today's geochemical mapping projects worldwide. [5]

Plant believed that the link between dairy and breast cancer is similar to that between smoking and lung cancer. [9] [10] She commented that "basically dairy has now got a lot of oestrogen in it because it's common practise to milk pregnant cows, which has driven up the oestrogen content of milk. It also contains tiny proteins called growth factors, and these growth factors directly promote cancer." [9] Plant was concerned about the Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) in cow's milk which she argued could increase the risk of breast and prostate cancer. [11] She recommended that cancer patients take conventional treatment but also adopt a dairy-free diet. [9] Plant's dairy-free regime was a plant-based diet that was mostly vegan. She was disappointed that her ideas were not accepted by the medical community but thousands of cancer sufferers were interested in her theories and wrote to her for advice. [4] [8]

Plant's dairy-free diet relied on plant proteins such a soy and was inspired by the eating habits of rural China. [1] She followed this diet for 18 years and remained cancer-free. However, her cancer returned three more times and she blamed these recurrences on becoming lax about her diet. [1] Plant stated that she had strayed from her diet and had a weakness for calves’ livers cooked in butter. [8] Plant died at her home in Richmond upon Thames from a blood clot following chemotherapy. [4]

Discoveries

Along with writing books, Plant took part and co-wrote many scientific reports and papers. One examined the geological problems from the geochemical maps based on sediment samples and found that in the Northern Highlands, the regional variations are related to the position of the basement slices. These are attributed to the lateral variations in sediment composition. [12] Plant found that there are three belts of alpine type ultramafic rocks in the Scottish Highlands. Each of these rocks are associated with a change of sedimentation and structural style. [13]

A more recent article, looked at the relationship between synthetic chemicals and increased pollution in the environment and the impact on both humans and the Earth's ecosystems. An emphasis is placed on the risk perception of radioactivity in society, which is found to be quite dangerous. [14] Plant's article also advocates for the expansion of processes like “biomimicry” and green chemistry to attempt to reduce waste and impact on the environment. [14] She believed the pollution and degradation caused by the population pressure pose a threat to the sustainability of the Earth.

Awards

Plant received many awards: [15]

Selected publications

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Monica Grady</span> British space scientist

Monica Mary Grady, CBE, is a leading British space scientist, primarily known for her work on meteorites. She is currently Professor of Planetary and Space Science at the Open University and is also the Chancellor of Liverpool Hope University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jane Francis</span> British paleoclimatologist

Dame Jane Elizabeth Francis, is the Director of the British Antarctic Survey. She previously worked as Professor of Palaeoclimatology at the University of Leeds where she also was Dean of the Faculty of Environment. In 2002 she was the fourth woman to receive the Polar Medal for outstanding contribution to British polar research. She is currently the Chancellor of the University of Leeds.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Janet Watson</span> British geologist

Janet Vida Watson FRS FGS (1923–1985) was a British geologist. She was a professor of Geology at Imperial College, a rapporteur for the International Geological Correlation Program (IGCP) (1977–1982) and a vice president of the Royal Society (1983–1984). In 1982 she was elected president of the Geological Society of London, the first woman to occupy that position. She is well known for her contribution to the understanding of the Lewisian complex and as an author and co-author of several books including Beginning Geology and Introduction to Geology.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alexandra Navrotsky</span> Physical chemist in the field of nanogeoscience

Alexandra Navrotsky is a physical chemist in the field of nanogeoscience. She is an elected member of the United States National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and the American Philosophical Society (APS). She was a board member of the Earth Sciences and Resources division of the NAS from 1995 until 2000. In 2005, she was awarded the Urey Medal, by the European Association of Geochemistry. In 2006, she was awarded the Harry H. Hess Medal, by the American Geophysical Union. She is currently the director of NEAT ORU, a primary program in nanogeoscience. She is distinguished professor at University of California, Davis.

Isabel Patricia Montañez is a paleoclimatologist specializing in geochemical records of ancient climate change. She is a distinguished professor and a Chancellor's Leadership Professor in the department of earth and planetary sciences at University of California, Davis. As of 2021, Montañez is the director of the UC Davis Institute of the Environment.

Suzanne Yvette O'Reilly is an Australian professor of geology noted for her pioneering contributions to mapping the deep Earth with an interdisciplinary approach. In 2007, the Royal Society of New South Wales awarded her the Clarke Medal for outstanding contributions to Australian geology. She has over 350 peer-reviewed publications with over 40,000 citations, and has supervised more than 40 PhD students to graduation.

Kliti Grice, is a chemist and geochemist known for her work in identifying geological and environmental causes for mass extinction events. Her research integrates geological information with data on molecular fossils and their stable carbon, hydrogen and sulfur isotopic compositions to reconstruct details of microbial, fungal and floral inhabitants of modern and ancient aquatic environments and biodiversity hot spots. This information expands our understanding of both the Earth's history and its current physical state, with implications ranging from energy and mineral resource exploration strategies to environmental sustainability encompassing climate dynamics and expected rates, durations and scale of our future planet's health. As one of the youngest women professors in Earth Sciences, she is the founding director of the Western Australian Organic and Isotope Geochemistry Centre (WA-OIGC) and is a Professor of Organic and Isotope Geochemistry at Curtin University in Perth, Western Australia.

Katherine H. Freeman is the Evan Pugh University Professor of Geosciences at Pennsylvania State University and a co-editor of the peer-reviewed scientific journal, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences. Her research interests are organic geochemistry, isotopic biogeochemistry, paleoclimate and astrobiology.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Janne Blichert-Toft</span> Danish geochemist

Janne Blichert-Toft is a geochemist, specializing in the use of isotopes with applications in understanding planetary mantle-crust evolution, as well as the chemical composition of matter in the universe. To further this research, Blichert-Toft has developed techniques for high-precision Isotope-ratio mass spectrometry measurements.

Susan L. Brantley is an American geologist and geochemist who is the Dr. Hubert Barnes and Dr. Mary Barnes Professor at Pennsylvania State University. Her research dominantly studies interactions between fluids and minerals at low temperatures, biological reactions in water-rich fluids within soils, and the geochemical processes that convert rock into soil. However, among many other topics, she has also published work on carbon dioxide emissions from volcanoes, and the environmental impact of shale gas extraction and nuclear waste disposal. During her career, Brantley has published over 200 research papers and book chapters, has been awarded academic prizes and fellowships by many of the world's leading geoscience societies, and has been described as "one of the leading aqueous geochemists of her generation."

Helen Leighton Cannon was an American geologist specifying in geobotany and studying the effects of geological chemicals on the environment. She was a woman in science making large contributions to geology and advancements for women in science. She had a long lasting career at the United States Geological Survey in Washington, D.C., and Denver, Colorado, soon becoming well known for her research and important discoveries. Cannon, along with two colleagues at USGS, set up and participated in the first organized unit studying chemicals in the real environment. The team concluded that by analyzing plants in a given area they could determine what metals were present in the soil and earth in that same area. In 1952, Cannon published a paper based on the findings and this paved the way for more research in geology and plants, geobotany. This research developed further into an important association with health issues, including cancer, as well as aided the United States to find uranium deposits during the Cold War. As an author, she has been largely collected by libraries.

Dominique Weis is a Canadian scientist. She is a Canada Research Chair in the Geochemistry of the Earth's Mantleat at the University of British Columbia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marilyn Fogel</span> American geo-ecologist (1952–2022)

Marilyn L. Fogel was an American geo-ecologist and Professor of Geo-ecology at UC Riverside in Riverside, California. She is known for her research using stable isotope mass spectrometry to study a variety of subjects including ancient climates, biogeochemical cycles, animal behavior, ecology, and astrobiology. Fogel served in many leadership roles, including Program Director at the National Science Foundation in geobiology and low-temperature geochemistry.

Marie Edmonds is a professor of volcanology and geology in the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Cambridge whose research focuses on the physics and chemistry of volcanic eruptions and magmatism and understanding volatile cycling in the solid Earth as mediated by plate tectonics. She is interested in the social and economic impacts of natural hazards; and the sustainable use of Earth's mineral and energy resources. Professor Edmonds is the Vice President and Ron Oxburgh Fellow in Earth Sciences at Queens' College, Cambridge; and the Deputy Head of Department and Director of Research at the Earth Sciences Department, University of Cambridge.

Liane G. Benning is a biogeochemist studying mineral-fluid-microbe interface processes. She is a Professor of Interface Geochemistry at the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam, Germany. Her team studies various processes that shape the Earth Surface with a special focus on two aspects: the nucleation, growth and crystallisation of mineral phases from solution and the role, effects and interplay between microbes and minerals in extreme environments. She is also interested in the characterisation of these systems, developing in situ and time resolved high resolution imaging and spectroscopic techniques to follow microbe-mineral reactions as they occur.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Melanie Leng</span>

Melanie Jane Leng is a Professor of Isotope Geosciences at the University of Nottingham working on isotopes, palaeoclimate and geochemistry. She also serves as the Chief Scientist for Environmental Change Adaptation and Resilience at the British Geological Survey and Director of the Centre for Environmental Geochemistry, a collaboration between the University of Nottingham and the British Geological Survey. For many years she has been the UK convenor and representative of the UK geoscience community on the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kristín Vala Ragnarsdóttir</span> Icelandic academic

Kristín Vala Ragnarsdóttir is an Icelandic Earth and sustainability scientist and activist who is Professor of Sustainability Science in the Faculty of Earth Sciences and the Institute of Earth Sciences at the University of Iceland. She was the first woman to be a full professor in Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol in the UK and at the same time the first woman to become a full professor in the Science Faculty there. She was also the first woman to serve as Dean of a School at the University of Iceland.

Elizabeth A. Canuel is a chemical oceanographer known for her work on organic carbon cycling in aquatic environments. She is the Chancellor Professor of Marine Science at the College of William & Mary and is an elected fellow of the Geochemical Society and the European Association of Geochemistry.

Karen H. Johannesson is an American geochemist and professor in the School for the Environment at the University of Massachusetts Boston and the Intercampus Marine Sciences Graduate Program of the University of Massachusetts System. She teaches geochemistry and has expertise in environmental geochemistry, biogeochemistry, trace element speciation, geochemical modeling, chemical hydrogeology, reaction path and reactive transport modeling.

John Nicholas Ludden CBE FRSE is a British geologist, with expertise in igneous petrology and geochemistry. He was the 19th director of the British Geological Survey from 2006 to 2019, and has been president of the European Geosciences Union and the International Union of Geological Sciences.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Valsami-Jones, Eugenia (2 January 2018). "Jane Plant (1945–2016)". Mineralogical Magazine. 80 (6): 1145–1147. doi: 10.1180/minmag.2016.080.142 .
  2. Hicks, Cherrill (2 June 2014). "Give up dairy products to beat cancer". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  3. "Professor Jane Plant CBE 1945–2016". British Geological Survey. 14 March 2016. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "The Geological Society of London - Jane Ann Simpson (Professor Jane Plant, 1945-2016)". www.geolsoc.org.uk. Retrieved 11 April 2019.
  5. 1 2 "Jane Plant | Association of Applied Geochemists". www.appliedgeochemists.org. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
  6. 1 2 Mather, John. "Jane Ann Simpson (Professor Jane Plant, 1945–2016)". The Geological Society. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  7. "Professor Jane Plant". University of Leicester. 7 April 2016. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  8. 1 2 3 "Jane Plant". Thetimes.co.uk. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  9. 1 2 3 "'I believe the link between dairy and breast cancer is as strong as the link between smoking and lung cancer'". Independent.ie. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  10. "Diet change cured my cancer". Standard.co.uk. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  11. "Committee on Carcinogenicity of Chemicals in Food, Consumer Products and the Environment (COC)". Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  12. Johnstone, G. S.; Plant, Jane; Watson, Janet V. (1979). "Regional geochemistry of the Northern Highlands of Scotland". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 8 (1): 117–128. Bibcode:1979GSLSP...8..117J. doi:10.1144/gsl.sp.1979.008.01.10. S2CID   129385097.
  13. Garson, M. S.; Plant, Jane (March 1973). "Alpine Type Ultramafic Rocks and Episodic Mountain Building in the Scottish Highland⋅". Nature Physical Science. 242 (116): 34–38. Bibcode:1973NPhS..242...34G. doi:10.1038/physci242034a0.
  14. 1 2 Plant, Jane A; Bone, James; Ragnarsdottir, Kristin Vala; Voulvoulis, Nickalaos (June 2011). "Pollutants, human health and the environment – A risk-based approach". Applied Geochemistry. 26: S238–S240. Bibcode:2011ApGC...26S.238P. doi:10.1016/j.apgeochem.2011.03.113.
  15. "Honours". JanePlant.com. Archived from the original on 3 April 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  16. "Your Life in Your Hands". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 16 November 2021.