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Restructure and expand: add Research/Expansion Tectonics, 'Succession from S. Warren Carey' section (1993 letter passing on Earth-expansion baton, linked to Carey page), Recognition (2017 CNPS award), added books and external link; add birth place
 
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| image = James Maxlow 492.jpg
| image = James Maxlow 492.jpg
| alt = James Maxlow
| alt = James Maxlow
| birth_date = {{birth date|1949|00|00|mf=y}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1949|05|12|mf=y}}
| birth_place = Middlesbrough, England
| fields = [[Geologist]]
| fields = [[Geologist]]
| residence = Glen Forrest, Western Australia, Australia
| residence = Glen Forrest, Western Australia, Australia
| nationality = English
| nationality = English-born Australian
| known_for = [[Expanding Earth]]
| known_for = [[Expanding Earth]], Expansion Tectonics
}}
}}


Dr James Maxlow was born in Middlesbrough, England in 1949. His passion for geology no doubt was inherited from a family history of �ironstone workers� supplying iron ores mined from the Cleveland Hills, south of Middlesbrough, to the foundries and steel rolling mills of Middlesbrough during the 1800s.
'''Dr. James Maxlow''' (born 1949) is an English-born Australian geologist and the leading contemporary researcher of '''Expansion Tectonics''' — a term he coined to distinguish the expanding- and growing-Earth theory from conventional plate tectonics. Regarded by his peers as the direct successor of Professor [[Samuel Warren Carey]], the "father of modern Earth expansion," Maxlow has spent decades developing quantitative, empirical small-Earth modelling studies in support of the [[Expanding Earth]] hypothesis.


James immigrated to Australia with his parents in 1953, where he grew up in Melbourne. He initially studied Civil Engineering at the then Swinburne College, but soon became disillusioned with engineering and redirected himself to a degree in Geology at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, graduating in 1971. It was in Melbourne where he later met and married his lovely wife Anita and during their work and travels around Australia bore their three children, Jason, Karena and Jarred.
==Biography==


After initially working as a mine geologist in Victoria, a brief sojourn into surveying, survey drafting, mine surveying and home building again saw James return to geology, this time in the Northern Territory and later in Western Australia. His varying work experience being directly attributed to the fluctuating stock market and mining economy at the time � an unfortunate side effect of the profession. James spent in excess of 25 years working as an exploration and mine geologist throughout much of Australia, gaining valuable field experience and knowledge, which he has since applied to research into his other passion � Earth Expansion.
===Early life and education===
James Maxlow was born in Middlesbrough, England, in May 1949. His interest in geology can be traced to a family history of "ironstone workers" who supplied iron ore mined from the Cleveland Hills, south of Middlesbrough, to the foundries and steel rolling mills of the town during the 1800s. In 1953 he emigrated to Australia with his parents and grew up in Melbourne.


James' interest in Earth expansion stems from working in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. The Pilbara region is a huge, ancient domal structure, several hundreds of kilometres across. There, 2,500 million year old iron and silica-rich sedimentary rocks form the largest deposits of iron ore in the world. What was so intriguing to James was that the bedded sediments, right down to finest sedimentary laminations seen in the iron ores, could be intimately correlated between widely separated sites for distances of over 300 kilometres.
Maxlow initially studied civil engineering at the then Swinburne College, but, becoming disillusioned with engineering, redirected himself to a degree in geology at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT), graduating in 1971. It was in Melbourne that he met and married his wife, Anita, with whom he has three children. Many years later he returned to university, gaining a Master of Science in geology in 1995 and a Doctorate of Philosophy in 2001 at Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Western Australia, receiving a letter of commendation from the university Chancellor for his original, thought-provoking research into Expansion Tectonics.


James' studies showed that, in the central portion of the Pilbara domal structure, some 30 kilometres of sediment and volcanic rocks had been eroded away. It occurred to James that this domal structure may have been a preserved fragment of the ancient Earth, with the dome reflecting the radius of the ancient Earth. It took a further fifteen years of working and raising a family before circumstances allowed James to return to University. Amidst a barrage of academic intolerance he gained his Masters in geology in 1995, followed by a Doctorate of Philosophy in 2002 at Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Western Australia, including a letter of commendation from the university Chancellor for thought provoking original research.
===Career as a geologist===
After first working as a mine geologist in Victoria, and after brief periods in surveying, survey drafting, mine surveying and home building, Maxlow returned to geology in the Northern Territory and later in Western Australia. Over a career spanning more than 25 years (and, in total, some four decades before his retirement in 2013) he worked as an exploration and mine geologist throughout much of Australia, accumulating extensive field experience that he later applied to his research into Earth expansion.


During his academic years James met and communicated with many wonderful �expansionists� from around the world. Most notable of which was the late Professor Sam Warren Carey from Tasmania, the father of modern Earth Expansion, Yan Koziar from Poland, and Klaus Vogel from Germany, the father of modern Expanding Earth modeling studies. It was during his academic studies that Professor Carey �passed on� his Expanding Earth baton to James, an honor that he most cherishes.
==Research: Expansion Tectonics==


Since his academic studies James has been actively involved with spreading the merits of Earth Expansion, with conferences in Japan, Athens and Australia to his credit. He has published a book on Earth Expansion (�Terra non Firma Earth� available from [mailto:TerrellaPress@bigpond.com TerrellaPress@bigpond.com]) and is involved with production of software and DVDs to further promote Earth Expansion as a viable alternative to current tectonic theory.
Maxlow's interest in Earth expansion stems from his work in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, a huge, ancient domal structure several hundred kilometres across, where 2,500-million-year-old iron- and silica-rich sediments form the world's largest iron-ore deposits. He was struck that the bedded sediments — down to the finest laminations in the iron ores — could be correlated between sites separated by more than 300 kilometres. His studies indicated that some 30 kilometres of sediment and volcanic rock had been eroded from the centre of the Pilbara dome, and it occurred to him that the structure might be a preserved fragment of the ancient Earth, its curvature reflecting the smaller radius of the Earth at that time.
 
Building on this, Maxlow developed a body of empirical small-Earth modelling studies, reconstructing the continents on globes of progressively smaller radius. He argues that the continental crust reassembles into a complete shell around a smaller Earth, which he presents as evidence that the planet has grown over geological time. He has coined the term '''Expansion Tectonics''' for this framework and has promoted it at conferences in Japan, Athens and Australia.
 
==Succession from S. Warren Carey==
 
During his academic years Maxlow corresponded with many of the world's leading "expansionists," including Yan Koziar of Poland and Klaus Vogel of Germany (a pioneer of modern Expanding-Earth modelling), but most notably the late Professor [[Samuel Warren Carey]] of Tasmania. In 1993 Carey wrote to Maxlow with comments on the manuscript of Maxlow's M.Sc. research and offered to "pass on" his Expanding Earth work to him. Maxlow regards this passing of Carey's Earth-expansion "baton" as one of the greatest honours of his career, and he has since been widely recognised as the principal inheritor and continuer of Carey's research program.
 
==Recognition==
 
In 2017 Maxlow received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the [[John Chappell Natural Philosophy Society]] (CNPS), presented by CNPS President David de Hilster, in recognition of his work advancing Expansion Tectonics.


==Abstracts==
==Abstracts==
Line 32: Line 45:
==Books==
==Books==


* 2018 - ''Beyond Plate Tectonics: Unsettling Settled Science'' (2nd ed. 2021)
* 2014 - ''On the Origin of Continents and Oceans: Empirical Small Earth Modelling Studies''
* 2005 - "[[Terra non Firma Earth]]" ([http://www.oneoffpublishing.com/terranon.html Read in full])
* 2005 - "[[Terra non Firma Earth]]" ([http://www.oneoffpublishing.com/terranon.html Read in full])


==Media==
==Media==


* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_f6hcGJbjL0 Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_f6hcGJbjL0 Yes! The Earth is Expanding 1] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=cj_JTn4oE2o Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=cj_JTn4oE2o Yes! The Earth is Expanding 2] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=-b7qSlJZsqA Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=-b7qSlJZsqA Yes! The Earth is Expanding 3] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6KIzcii2PuY Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6KIzcii2PuY Yes! The Earth is Expanding 4] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qT_gaW3_ywg Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qT_gaW3_ywg Yes! The Earth is Expanding 5] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WbBOw1iRWT8 Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WbBOw1iRWT8 Yes! The Earth is Expanding 6] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pC6fsX7Sbjk Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pC6fsX7Sbjk Yes! The Earth is Expanding 7] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yF0qCIjHPvQ Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yF0qCIjHPvQ Yes! The Earth is Expanding 8] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XhJHyn3-18 Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XhJHyn3-18 Yes! The Earth is Expanding 9] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTuTNIws77Q Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTuTNIws77Q Yes! The Earth is Expanding 10] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=loA5OomrUUU Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=loA5OomrUUU Yes! The Earth is Expanding 11] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7E4OKdmyYQ Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7E4OKdmyYQ Yes! The Earth is Expanding 12] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ULBYjrg-4e4 Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ULBYjrg-4e4 Yes! The Earth is Expanding 13] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LzgcnYwl-AQ Yes! The Earth is Expanding]] (Video Lecture)
* 2006 - [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LzgcnYwl-AQ Yes! The Earth is Expanding 14] (Video Lecture)
 
==External links==
 
* [https://www.jamesmaxlow.com/ Dr. James Maxlow — Expansion Tectonics] (official site)


[[Category:Scientist]]
[[Category:Scientist|Maxlow James]]
[[Category:Expansion Tectonics]]
[[Category:Expansion Tectonics|Maxlow James]]

Latest revision as of 13:04, 16 July 2026

James Maxlow
James Maxlow
Born(1949-05-12)May 12, 1949
Middlesbrough, England
ResidenceGlen Forrest, Western Australia, Australia
NationalityEnglish-born Australian
Known forExpanding Earth, Expansion Tectonics
Scientific career
FieldsGeologist

Dr. James Maxlow (born 1949) is an English-born Australian geologist and the leading contemporary researcher of Expansion Tectonics — a term he coined to distinguish the expanding- and growing-Earth theory from conventional plate tectonics. Regarded by his peers as the direct successor of Professor Samuel Warren Carey, the "father of modern Earth expansion," Maxlow has spent decades developing quantitative, empirical small-Earth modelling studies in support of the Expanding Earth hypothesis.

Biography

Early life and education

James Maxlow was born in Middlesbrough, England, in May 1949. His interest in geology can be traced to a family history of "ironstone workers" who supplied iron ore mined from the Cleveland Hills, south of Middlesbrough, to the foundries and steel rolling mills of the town during the 1800s. In 1953 he emigrated to Australia with his parents and grew up in Melbourne.

Maxlow initially studied civil engineering at the then Swinburne College, but, becoming disillusioned with engineering, redirected himself to a degree in geology at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT), graduating in 1971. It was in Melbourne that he met and married his wife, Anita, with whom he has three children. Many years later he returned to university, gaining a Master of Science in geology in 1995 and a Doctorate of Philosophy in 2001 at Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Western Australia, receiving a letter of commendation from the university Chancellor for his original, thought-provoking research into Expansion Tectonics.

Career as a geologist

After first working as a mine geologist in Victoria, and after brief periods in surveying, survey drafting, mine surveying and home building, Maxlow returned to geology in the Northern Territory and later in Western Australia. Over a career spanning more than 25 years (and, in total, some four decades before his retirement in 2013) he worked as an exploration and mine geologist throughout much of Australia, accumulating extensive field experience that he later applied to his research into Earth expansion.

Research: Expansion Tectonics

Maxlow's interest in Earth expansion stems from his work in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, a huge, ancient domal structure several hundred kilometres across, where 2,500-million-year-old iron- and silica-rich sediments form the world's largest iron-ore deposits. He was struck that the bedded sediments — down to the finest laminations in the iron ores — could be correlated between sites separated by more than 300 kilometres. His studies indicated that some 30 kilometres of sediment and volcanic rock had been eroded from the centre of the Pilbara dome, and it occurred to him that the structure might be a preserved fragment of the ancient Earth, its curvature reflecting the smaller radius of the Earth at that time.

Building on this, Maxlow developed a body of empirical small-Earth modelling studies, reconstructing the continents on globes of progressively smaller radius. He argues that the continental crust reassembles into a complete shell around a smaller Earth, which he presents as evidence that the planet has grown over geological time. He has coined the term Expansion Tectonics for this framework and has promoted it at conferences in Japan, Athens and Australia.

Succession from S. Warren Carey

During his academic years Maxlow corresponded with many of the world's leading "expansionists," including Yan Koziar of Poland and Klaus Vogel of Germany (a pioneer of modern Expanding-Earth modelling), but most notably the late Professor Samuel Warren Carey of Tasmania. In 1993 Carey wrote to Maxlow with comments on the manuscript of Maxlow's M.Sc. research and offered to "pass on" his Expanding Earth work to him. Maxlow regards this passing of Carey's Earth-expansion "baton" as one of the greatest honours of his career, and he has since been widely recognised as the principal inheritor and continuer of Carey's research program.

Recognition

In 2017 Maxlow received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the John Chappell Natural Philosophy Society (CNPS), presented by CNPS President David de Hilster, in recognition of his work advancing Expansion Tectonics.

Abstracts

Books

  • 2018 - Beyond Plate Tectonics: Unsettling Settled Science (2nd ed. 2021)
  • 2014 - On the Origin of Continents and Oceans: Empirical Small Earth Modelling Studies
  • 2005 - "Terra non Firma Earth" (Read in full)

Media

External links