One of his ancestors was a schoolmaster who settled in
Sydney in 1797.[2] Thomas George Vallance grew up in
Sutherland, New South Wales (NSW) and in 1945 matriculated at Sydney's Canterbury Boys' High School. He graduated from the
University of Sydney (USYD) with a B.Sc. in 1950 and a Ph.D. in 1954. Under the influence of
William Rowan Browne, he focused on geology, especially petrology.[1] Vallance's Ph.D. thesis Studies in the metamorphic and plutonic geology of the Wantabadgery-Adelong-Tumbarumba district, NSW[3] is based on research in central NSW and the region near
Broken Hill. With Browne, he coauthored papers on the
metamorphic petrology of the region near
Cooma and on the geology of the region near
Mount Kosciuszko. Vallance was a postdoc at the
University of California, Berkeley from 1953 to 1954. In 1954 he was appointed the USYD's petrology lecturer, as the successor to Harold Rutledge (1920–1954),[1] who died in the
1954 BOAC Lockheed Constellation crash.[4] In 1954 Vallance visited the U.K. and met
Victor and Joan Eyles, who inspired him to study the history of the geological sciences and to collect historical material, particularly related to the history of geological research in Australasia.[1][5] At the University of Sydney, he was promoted in 1956 to senior lecturer. In May 1957 he married the geologist Hilary Brinton Krone in a ceremony at Sydney's
Christ Church St Laurence. In 1961, supported by a
Nuffield traveling fellowship, he visited the
University of Cambridge and gave the inaugural Bennett Lecture in geology at the
University of Leicester. At USYD he was promoted in 1965 to associate professor of petrology.[1] For the academic year 1977–1978 he was a visiting professor of petrology at the
University of Geneva.[2] In 1989 at USYD, he retired as professor emeritus.[1]
Vallance is best known for his research on metamorphic petrology.[5] Perhaps his most important paper is his petrological study (1960)[6] of
spilites (altered basaltic rocks). This research contributed to understanding the mechanisms of hot water circulation through the oceanic basaltic crust. He continued his spilite search into the 1970s.[1]
Vallance compiled an extensive card index (with about 3,000 cards) of geologists, mining experts, surveyors, and prospectors,[12] who either worked in Australia or on Australian geological materials. His card index was posthumously compiled and published as a
CD-ROM. Upon his death his death in 1993, he was survived by his widow, a son, and a daughter. The Earth Sciences History Group of the Geological Society of Australia, with funding from his widow, established the Tom Vallance medal, awarded biennially in recognition of historians of Australian geology.[1][12]
Branagan, D. F.; Vallance, T. G. (1967). "Notes: The geological society of Australasia (1885–1905)". Journal of the Geological Society of Australia. 14 (2): 349–351.
Bibcode:
1967AuJES..14..349B.
doi:
10.1080/00167616708728673.
Vallance, T. G. (1967). "Mafic Rock Alteration and Isochemical Development of Some Cordierite-Anthophyllite Rocks". Journal of Petrology. 8: 84–96.
doi:
10.1093/petrology/8.1.84.
Vallance, T. G. (1978). "Pioneers and leaders — a record of Australian palaeontology in the nineteenth century". Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. 2 (3): 243–250.
doi:
10.1080/03115517808527782.
Kinny, P. D.; Leitch, E. C.; Vallance, T. G. (1985). "Thermal metamorphism near Willi Willi, New South Wales". Australian Journal of Earth Sciences. 32 (4): 333–342.
Bibcode:
1985AuJES..32..333K.
doi:
10.1080/08120098508729336.
^Vallance, T. G. (1960). "Concerning spilites". Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. W. 85 (1): 8–52.
^Vallance, T. G. (1960). "Presidential Address: Concerning Spilites". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 85, part 1: 8–52.
^Vallance, T. G. (1969). "Presidential Address: Spilites Again: Some Consequences of the Degradation of Basalts". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 94: 8–51.
^Vallance, T. G. (1975). "Presidential Address: Origins of Australian Geology". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 100, part 1: 13–43.