David G. Gee (11 December 1937 – 5 October 2023) was a British and Swedish geologist, who worked in Sweden for most of his career.
[3] His father was Edward Rowland Gee (1901–1988), a geologist who worked in India and Pakistan and was appointed OBE in 1960.
[5] His Ph.D. thesis The structural geology of the Biskayer-huken Peninsula, North Spitsbergen was supervised by W. Brian Harland.
In 1964 and 1965 Gee worked part-time for the Norwegian Polar Institute (Norsk Polarinstitutt) — during this employment he mapped parts of Svalbard.
[5] He played an important role in the discovery of valuable minerals in the Myrviken Alum Shale Formation.
After the Fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989, EUROPROBE provided enhanced opportunities to geologists and other Earth scientists in eastern Europe[1] until its termination of funding of active research in 2002.
Geosektionen, one of the national association members of the European Federation of Geologists (EFG), has bestowed the annual honorary title each year beginning in 1997.