In 1936, Wilson joined the
Geological Survey of Canada as a government geologist. This was interrupted by the
Second World War during which he served with the
Royal Canadian Engineers, serving in Europe and reaching the rank of Colonel. He was involved in
Operation Musk Ox. For his wartime service, he was appointed an
OBE. In 1946 he was appointed the first Professor of Geophysics at the
University of Toronto. He made significant contributions to the theory of
plate tectonics, adding a concept of
hot spots, hot region beneath the crust. Plate tectonics is the
scientific theory that the rigid outer layers of the Earth (
crust and part of the
upper mantle), the
lithosphere, is broken up into around 13 pieces or "plates" that move independently over the weaker
asthenosphere. Wilson maintained that the
Hawaiian Islands were created as a tectonic plate (extending across much of the
Pacific Ocean) shifted to the northwest over a fixed hot spot, spawning a long series of
volcanoes. He also conceived of the
transform fault, a major plate boundary where two plates move past each other horizontally (
e.g., the
San Andreas Fault). The
Wilson cycle of seabed expansion and contraction (associated with the
Supercontinent cycle) bears his name, in recognition of his iconic observation that the present-day
Atlantic Ocean appears along a former suture zone and his development in a classic 1968 paper of what was later named the "Wilson cycle" in 1975 by
Kevin C. A. Burke, a colleague and friend of Wilson. His name was given to two young Canadian
submarine volcanoes called the
Tuzo Wilson Seamounts. Wilson was president (1957–1960) of the
International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG). In 1968 he became the second campus principal of the University of Toronto's Erindale College, now known as the
University of Toronto Mississauga. Wilson is perhaps the most notable of UTM's principals, as his time in office influenced the early development of the campus, which was formally established in 1967. In 1974 he left to become the Director General of the
Ontario Science Centre and passed the role of principal to
E. A. Robinson. In 1983 he became Chancellor of
York University, Toronto. He was the host of the television series
The Planet of Man. ==Honours and awards==