Education
California Institute of Technology.
California Institute of Technology.
Jordan has made significant contributions to plate tectonics concerning the structure of continents, the depth of lithospheric slab penetration, and the nature of mantle convection, for example determining the exact nature and processes involved in plate subduction. Jordan has also pioneered many seismic imaging techniques which he developed for his doctoral dissertation and are now used widely to understand the interior of the earth. Jordan has served on international committees concerning seismic hazard.
2005 Inge Lehmann Medal, American Geophysical Union.
2005 Inge Lehmann Medal, American Geophysical Union 2004 Appointment to University Professor, University of Southern California 2002 Election to American Philosophical Society 2001 National Associate Award, National Academy of Sciences 1998 George P. Woollard Award, Geological Society of America 1998 Election to National Academy of Sciences 1995 Election to American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1983 James B. Macelwane Medal, American Geophysical Union 1983 American Geophysical Union, Fellow 1980–1982 Alfred P. Sloan Fellow in Physics.
National Academy of Sciences]
He was formerly the head of the Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences Department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is a member of the National Academy of Sciences.