Eiju Yatsu was a Japanese geomorphologist who taught in Japan, US and Canada. He is best known for his contributions to weathering and 'rock control' in geomorphology.
Professor Yatsu is best known for several influential research texts in geomorphology. In particular, 'Rock Control in Geomorphology ', written when Yatsu was in the Department of Geography at the University of Ottawa, although the book stemmed from lectures given at Louisiana State University. Yatsu indicates the ethos and a definition of ‘rock control’:
Geomorphology should be constructed on a scientific basis, especially exact dating, correct of processes, and physico-chemical and mechanical understanding of rocks. The intention of this essay has not been to explain how rock controls are reflected in land forms, but to emphasize the importance of physicochemical and mechanical understanding of rocks in geomorphological studies and also to explain, to some degree, such thinking and methods of studying.
This emphasis on a scientific view of geomorphology was continued by his comprehensive The Nature of Weathering which covered basic rock mechanics and weathering organisms, both rarely included in more recent texts on weathering. The ideas of rock control in geomorphology are still relevant in explaining landforms. Yatsu's interest in the science of geomorphology also extended to philosophical aspects of the subject in a 'Great debate' about the subject. This paper and one of 1992 comprise Part 1 of Fantasia in Geomorphology. Part 2 of this volume is a wide-ranging discussion of the philosophy and practice of geomorphology that includes Peirce's abduction, Paul Feyerabend's 'anything goes' by way of 'Neurath's boat'. Discussion of these views of the philosophy, or pragmatism, involved in geomorphology still continues.
Selected bibliography
1966 Rock Control in geomorphology, Tokyo: Sozosha
1971 Landform material science, rock control in geomorphology. Proceedings, 1st Guelph Symposium on Geomorphology, 49-73.
1992 To make geomorphology more scientific. Transactions, Japanese Geomorphological Union, 13, 2, 87-124.
1996 Graffiti on the wall of a geomorphology laboratory. Geomorphology Sans Frontieres, Eds. McCann, S.B. and Ford, D.C. Chichester: John Wiley, 53-58.
2002 Fantasia in Geomorphology Reprint of "To Make Geomorplogy More Scientific" and its Supplemental Discussion. Tokyo: Sozosha.