Background
Doris Livesey Reynolds was born on 1 July 1899 in Manchester, to parents Alfred Reynolds and Louisa Livesey.
Doris Livesey Reynolds was born on 1 July 1899 in Manchester, to parents Alfred Reynolds and Louisa Livesey.
Reynolds first attended school in Essex, then going on to Bedford College, graduating with a degree in geology in 1920. Whilst at Bedford, she studied under two of the most famous female geologists of the time, Catherine Raisin and Gertrude Ellis, who encouraged her interest in petrology.
She was the first woman to be elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Reynolds taught at University College London after graduating, and then at Queen"s University Belfast between 1921 and 1926 as assistant to Arthur Dwerryhouse and John Kaye Charlesworth. Her early work focused on the geology of Northern Ireland, in particular the Triassic sandstones of the north-east, where she discovered authigenic potash feldspar.
She also worked with albite-schists, discovering the metasomatic origin of albite, which has a correlation with increases of soda.
Reynolds work focused on geochemical and structural conditions that contribute to the formation of rocks through metasomatism. Whilst conducting field work on the island of Colonsay, she discovered that the local xenoliths of quartzite in hornblendite were transformed metasomatically into micropegmatite.
In 1926 she returned as a lecturer to Bedford College, and in 1927 received a Doctor of Science
During a field trip with some students to the Ardnamurchan Peninsula in 1931, Reynolds met Arthur Holmes, the Professor of Geology at the University of Durham. When Holmes became Regius Professor of Geology at the University of Edinburgh in 1942, Reynolds became an honorary research fellowship
This was an informal and unremunerated teaching and research position within the geology department.
Reynolds developed the theory of "granitisation" during the 1940s, in an effort to explain the formation of granite in the Earth"s crust. The theory postulated that granite in the Earth"s crust formed fluids moving upwards through the crust, changing them into granite chemically. lieutenant was a controversial theory which proved divisive until the 1960s in the field of petrology and became known as a "Granite Controversy".
The theory was proven incorrect eventually, but inspired research in a previously neglected area of geology.
Holmes died in 1965 and Reynolds went on to publish a revised edition of his classic textbook Principles of Physical Geology in 1978. She died in Hove, on 10 October 1985.