Background
He was born at Street Pancras in London to chemist Alfred George Mason and Winnie, née Wheeldon.
He was born at Street Pancras in London to chemist Alfred George Mason and Winnie, née Wheeldon.
He attended Eriva Deene School, Street Clement"s Mixed School and Bournemouth School before attending the University of London (Bachelor of Science 1943, Master of Science 1946), winning first-class honours in mathematics and physics.
From 1946 to 1953 Mason worked with the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research and from 1953 to 1961 with the British Rubber Producers" Research Association. He received his Doctor of Philosophy in 1960 with a thesis on the visco-elasticity of strained rubber, and in 1962 moved to Australia to study keratin on a post-doctoral fellowship with the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) in Sydney, becoming principal research officer He was foundation professor of physics at Macquarie University in 1966 and gave the university"s first undergraduate lecture in 1967.
He served two terms on the university council (1974-1977, 1980-1986), and also remained politically active, opposing the Vietnam War and standing as a Senate candidate for the Australian Reform Movement in 1967.
In 1986 Mason was elected a fellow of the Australian and New Zealand Association for the Advancement of Science, and from 1966 to 1986 he was on the council of the Australian Institute of Nuclear Science and Engineering. He served on the founding council of Griffith University from 1971 to 1977 and as a councillor of the Public Library of New South Wales from 1971 to 1975.
From 1983 to 1986 he convened the advisory council of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (American Broadcasting Company), and he remained active in pacifist causes, notably Scientists Against Nuclear Arms. He published a book on probability, Half Your Luck, in 1986 and published seventy scientific papers during his career.
Mason was diagnosed with a brain tumour in 1985 and retired an emeritus professor from Macquarie University in 1986.
He had become a science broadcaster on the American Broadcasting Company in the 1970s, presenting a series of "Science Show" programs from 1978 to 1985 including "Blood and Iron", which won him (together with Robyn Williams and Halina Szewczyk) a United Nations media peace prize gold citation. Macquarie University still runs the general science courses he designed and awards the Peter Mason prize for outstanding achievement in them annually.
From 1943 to 1946 he was employed at the Ministry of Supply studying the military applications of quartz crystals, and in 1945 he became an associate member of the Institute of Physics.