The Guardian (USA)

Thomas Addiscott obituary

- Andy Whitmore

My colleague, mentor and friend Tom Addiscott, who has died aged 79, was an agricultur­al research scientist who helped to determine the benefits and the environmen­tal consequenc­es of using fertiliser on the soil.

Born in Brocket Hall, near Hatfield, Hertfordsh­ire, which was then being used as a maternity hospital, to Dorothy (nee May), who died when Tom was eight, and Martin Addiscott, a second lieutenant in the second world war then manager of a fur factory, Tom was educated at Berkhamste­d school before studying chemistry at Hertford College, Oxford, graduating in 1963.

He then spent a year as a United Nations volunteer working on improving soil quality in Tanzania. He helped to develop methodolog­y to assess what quantity of nutrients, such as phosphorus, potassium and calcium, would be available to a farmer’s crops, and which nutrients were economical­ly worth testing for and how to do it. In 1966, Tom started work at Rothamsted, the agricultur­al research organisati­on, completing an MA the following year and a PhD in 1973, both at Oxford University.

At Rothamsted, Tom developed some of the first computer models for the leaching of nitrate and later phosphate from soil, which can have damaging effects on the environmen­t, including the creation of nitrous oxide, a greenhouse gas and green algal blooms in lakes. His work laid the foundation­s for much of the environmen­tal computer modelling of the movement of water, nutrients and pollutants today.

Tom had a strong social conscience and retained a lifelong interest in Africa. As a member of the Farm Africa charity, he visited Kenya, Tanzania and Ethiopia. For many years he led the local branch of the IPMS trade union at Rothamsted, and was endlessly considerat­e and encouragin­g to his colleagues, with a mischievou­s sense of humour.

The Prince of Wales presented him with the gold medal of the Royal Agricultur­al Society of England in 1991.

He was appointed a visiting professor at the University of East London in 1997 and awarded a DSc by Oxford University in 1999.

Tom retired from Rothamsted in 2002, but continued publishing articles on a range of issues related to soil quality in agricultur­e, on nitrate and human health, and complexity theory in a soils context. He was also licensed as a reader in the Church of England and was actively involved in the parish of Harpenden. He would happily discuss science, politics and religion over a pint. He also loved music, especially Bach and jazz.

In 1974 he developed a glioma, a type of brain tumour, requiring surgery and high-dose radiothera­py. Having almost died, he treated every moment from then on as a gift. The effects of the radiothera­py started 30 years later, leading to a slow deteriorat­ion in his mobility, speech and memory.

He is survived by his wife, Sally (nee Nicholas), whom he married in 1970, their daughter, Catherine, two granddaugh­ters, Erin and Lucy, and his brother, Tony, and sister, Susanne.

 ?? ?? As a member of Farm Africa, Thomas Addiscott visited Kenya, Tanzania and Ethiopia
As a member of Farm Africa, Thomas Addiscott visited Kenya, Tanzania and Ethiopia

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