David Ballantyne Rowley

David Ballantyne Rowley obituary, Chicago, IL

David Ballantyne Rowley

David Rowley Obituary

Visit the Inclusive Funeral Care website to view the full obituary.
David Ballantyne Rowley, a resident of Porter Beach, Indiana, passed away peacefully at his family's lakeside home on May 30, 2024. In March, he celebrated his 70th birthday alongside his family as they took in the solar eclipse.

Born on March 14, 1954 in Washington, D.C., David was the second of four sons of accomplished scientists Janet D. Rowley and Donald A. Rowley. He grew up in Hyde Park, near the University of Chicago, which would prove to be his academic and professional home.

Steeped in the countercultural ethos of the 1960s, throughout his life David maintained a low tolerance for prescriptive and parochial value systems. He took every opportunity to question the status quo whenever he perceived injustice or arbitrary exertion of control.

David's early education followed a roundabout path, including time at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools and the New Experimental College in Skyum Bjerge, Denmark. David graduated from Denison University and went on to earn a Ph.D. in geology from SUNY Albany. He joined UChicago's geophysical sciences research faculty in 1993 and became a tenured professor in 2000. He served as chair of the geophysical sciences department, editor of the Journal of Geology, and as mentor and advisor to countless students throughout his 31-year teaching career at the university.

As a research geologist, David's scientific work sought to understand the deep history and constant motion of Earth's tectonic plates. He made significant contributions to the fields of paleogeography, paleoaltimetry, the formation of the Himalaya-Tibet Plateau, and the central role of heat from Earth's core in driving tectonic movement. David's work earned him recognition from the American Geophysical Union, where he was named a Fellow in 2018.

David was a dedicated father to four children. He raised Jason, Jenny, and Gia in a quiet suburb of Chicago with his first wife, Renee. He treated Molly Petchenik-daughter of his second wife, Nancy Joseph-as one of his own. Highlights of his family life include adventurous family travel, celebrations at great restaurants, and weekends at the family house in the Indiana Dunes. He treasured every moment he spent with his family. The feeling is mutual.

David's passions went beyond the intellectual. He loved spending time on the water, and was a gifted sailor throughout his life. Every spring, he looked forward to his first chance to sail out to the horizon and back to the beach on the family's Hobie Cat. He also leaves behind a squad of his "hockey buddies" with whom he played on most Tuesday and Thursday evenings for the past 25 years. He was an avid golfer, and insisted on walking the whole course. Many evenings, David could be found tossing a ball on the beach with his devoted dog, Essie, before returning home to watch the sun set over Lake Michigan and the Chicago skyline.

David's death was preceded by those of his parents, Donald and Janet, and his brothers, Don and Robert. He is survived by wife Nancy; children Jason, Jenny, and Gia, and their mother, Renee; step-daughter Molly; brother Roger; sister-in-law Carise; and niece and nephew Anra and Ian.

David had an abiding love for the Indiana Dunes: both its community and its spectacular natural surroundings. In lieu of flowers, the family is encouraging donations be made to Friends of the Indiana Dunes (https://dunefriends.org/) and Great Lakes Surf Rescue Project (https://glsrp.org/).

Friends and family will gather to remember David at the Florentine Stairs on Porter Beach on Friday, June 7, at 2pm, and will begin sharing memories at 2:30pm.

Arrangements by Inclusive Funeral Care, 773-370-2959 or www.InclusiveFuneralCare.com.
Inclusive Funeral Care

4880 North Clark Street, Chicago, IL 60640

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July 4, 2025

Jeff Fillipone posted to the memorial.

July 16, 2024

Judy Parrish posted to the memorial.

July 11, 2024

Rebecca Jamieson posted to the memorial.

Jeff Fillipone

July 4, 2025

I write this in shock and sadness having learned of Dave's death only just now. I met Dave when I was a geology undergraduate at SUNY Albany 1979-82. He and his cohort of grad students at that time were great influences on a number of us undergraduates, and many of us went on to graduate studies and life-long careers in the geological and geophysical sciences. Dave stands out among that group of early influencers in my life because of his kind and engaging personality and brilliance as a geologist and mentor. I can remember Dave's voice and laughter as though it were yesterday. We were friends in that long ago time, but I never forgot him and I will miss him. A great man, who left us too soon. May God bless Dave and his family and give them strength to heal from their loss.

Judy Parrish

July 16, 2024

I only just learned about this. Dave was a great colleague. We were both postdocs with Fred Ziegler at the University of Chicago, and although we didn't overlap, we still connected frequently. Dave was an outside-the-box thinker and always interesting to talk with. I am so sorry. My deepest condolences to his family.

Rebecca Jamieson

July 11, 2024

This is very sad news, which unfortunately I only heard about today. I first met Dave nearly 50 years ago when he was starting his graduate work at SUNY and I was finishing mine at Memorial University of Newfoundland. SUNY and MUN were rivals in those days and we enjoyed a spirited debate on the ins and outs of Appalachian geology. I have respected him and admired his work ever since. On May 10 he served as External Examiner for a Dalhousie PhD student, where his breadth and depth of knowledge and enthusiasm for encouraging young researchers were on full display. There was no sign of any impending health risk at that time - just 3 weeks before his death. This is a huge loss for the whole tectonics community. My sincere condolences to his entire family.

Feng Xue

June 27, 2024

The loss of David is shocking and saddening news that took a long time for me to process. In 1992, at the recommendation of the late Professor Alfred Kröner at Mainz University, I wrote to David asking about the possibility of pursuing graduate study with him. He quickly wrote back and invited me to fly from Germany to join him and Dr. Judy Baker of Cambridge University for a field trip in the Dabie Shan in China.

During the trip, I came to know David as a warm, generous, energetic, and fun-to-work-with person. Every day after fieldwork, he invariably called his family to talk to his two young kids (Gia was yet to arrive). I secretly told myself that I wanted to be a father like him when I started my family one day.

Four months later, David picked me up at O'Hare and carried my luggage on his shoulder. When I told him it was a bit shocking to see my professor carrying my luggage, he told me he forgot he was a professor. David was the very first American I got to know in person, and he had a great influence on me as I adjusted to the American way of living and thinking.

In 2007, I was kidnapped while on a business trip in Asia, and my family was devastated. Nearly ten years after I graduated from UChicago, David rose up and did everything he could to rescue me and support my family. His bravery inspired me and helped me survive the great injustice imposed upon me by my kidnappers. In the aftermath, David continued to encourage me to recover when I visited Nancy and him in Hyde Park and when he came to Texas to give invited speeches at Anadarko Petroleum and Rice University.

The last time we communicated was a few months ago when I reemerged from traveling in the backwaters of Southeast Asia. We exchanged the latest developments in our lives and near-term plans. David told me he had spent a month each year working in Paris for the last couple of years and hoped to continue to do so for the next several years at least. If I had known it was my last opportunity to talk to him, I would have told him how much I appreciated the profound and positive influence he had on my life.

Confucius said, "The high mountain is looked up to; the great road is easy to travel on." David is that towering mountain for me to look up to, and how he conducted his life will continue to guide me all my life. Rest in peace, David, and my condolences to the family for your great loss.

Group of 10 Memorial Trees

Feng Xue

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Single Memorial Tree

Margaret Hawthorne

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Margaret "Nini" Hawthorne

June 11, 2024

I knew David and his family who lived across the street from me in Chicago when we were growing up, and he was in my brother´s class at the Lab School. Although I had not seen him in years, I heard about him periodically from other Hyde Park friends. I am so very sorry for your loss. I remember him very fondly.

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Karen vanMeenen

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Julia & Platon

June 8, 2024

Julia & Platon

June 8, 2024

Julia & Platon

June 8, 2024

Spending an hour out on Lake Michigan with David on his treasured Hobie Cat during the Summer of 2022 was one of the most delightful experiences we're ever had. Neither of us had been on Lake Michigan, let alone a Hobie Cat before, and there we were being treated to such a beautiful experience with such a beautiful soul, talking about tectonic plates and geological solutions to climate change. It's an experience that was full of joy, insight and ease, which is how we'll always think of David.

Single Memorial Tree

Julia

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Paul Mann

June 6, 2024

Kathy Scanlon

June 5, 2024

Dave and I met when we were both incoming first-year grad students in the geology department at SUNYA. Jack Grippi, Dave, and I shared an apartment that first year - lots of good memories there. I'll add a photo from that time that is my favorite because his warm personality shows... and he has a geology reprint open in his lap, of course.

Jeff Karson

June 5, 2024

Dave´s career was marked by wide-ranging and commonly iconoclastic contributions to critical issues in global tectonics. He brought sharp thinking and lively discussions to topics as diverse as central Asian tectonics, global sea level change, rates of seafloor spreading, paleoaltimetry, and dynamic topography. I always made time to see his presentations at the fall AGU meetings. We will miss our friend and colleague.

Cara, Claire, Lauren

June 5, 2024

Your entire family has not been far from our thoughts this past week. Molly would frequently talk about David as her brilliant and beloved stepfather throughout law school. We are sending so much love to you. - Cara, Claire, and Lauren (Molly's law school friends)

Group of 10 Memorial Trees

Cara, Claire, and Lauren

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Suzanne OConnell

June 5, 2024

One summer, maybe 1977, a small group of SUNYA grad students were camped out along the fjord next to Table Mountain in Newfoundland. I'd brought my kayak and he asked to take it out. At that time, he was under the impression that it would roll itself. Of course, it takes a lot of strength and practice to make a kayak role. He had the strength, but not the practice. We were all scared when it went over because it was a while before he surfaced. He was never afraid to try new things. Suzanne OConnell

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William Mann

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Paul Mann

June 5, 2024

Dave was one of the first people I met at SUNY Albany when I visited there as a prospective grad student in the spring of 1978. Dave was always smiling, enthusiatic and fully immersed in his science - which was wide-ranging and global in scale. I would usually see him at the fall AGU meetings - and his positive demeanor and outlook never changed. A life well lived, my condolences to his family, rest in peace Dave.

Tim Kusky

June 4, 2024

Shocking and very sad news. Dave and I were classmates in early days in Albany, then colleagues and friends since. The world has lost a great scientist and person, very sad, condolences to the family.

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Lipsons

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Brian

June 3, 2024

Dave (Proffer) Rowley played every shift like it was his last. RIP Dave.
B #46

Thomas J Koss

June 3, 2024

SHOCKED! I just heard the news and I couldn't believe it. I played with Dave, "The Professor", this year at the Winter Classic and we had a great time. Very good hockey player. Life is too short, so let's enjoy life as much as Dave did. RIP Hockey Bro.

Dave Zdan " Dave Z 43 "

June 2, 2024

I played hockey with Dave. We affectionately called him "The Professor." Dave was a talented and determined man on and off the ice. I always welcomed his company, except when he was the opposing defenseman and mugging me on the boards. I am lucky to have known him. Rest in peace Dave.

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July 4, 2025

Jeff Fillipone posted to the memorial.

July 16, 2024

Judy Parrish posted to the memorial.

July 11, 2024

Rebecca Jamieson posted to the memorial.