Hancock was born on 10 August 1928 in
Salisbury,
Wiltshire, educated at
Dauntsey's School near
Devizes and was a
national serviceman in the
Royal Air Force between 1947 and 1949, before going to
Queens' College, Cambridge, to read
geology and
petrology as an undergraduate. He graduated in 1952 and stayed on to work for his
doctorate under the supervision of Maurice Black. His thesis was entitled
The marginal facies of the British Chalk and in 1955 he joined the junior academic staff at
King's College,
London. He became Senior Lecturer in 1970 and Reader in 1977. In 1986 he moved to
Imperial College London where he was awarded the 1989
Lyell Medal of the
Geological Society of London and retired in 1993 to
Shaftesbury but continued to teach at Imperial as Emeritus Professor. He was also an erudite teacher, bringing all aspects of science and general life to bear on his subject; one of his more generalist themes for the undergraduate geologist, being "How can the study of gardening benefit the geologist?". He also had a long time commitment to the
Working Men's College in North London. His contributions included over 110 scientific papers in English and French and a pursuit of the study of the relationship between geology and
viniculture. He died of cancer on 4 March 2004. He was the subject of a memorial volume of the ''Proceedings of the
Geologists' Association'' in 2006 (Vol 117, Part 2), on which some of this article is based. ==References==