David Tucker is a geologist in Washington state. He is a research associate at Western Washington University, and was an instructor at North Cascades Institute, and the director of the now defunct Mount Baker Volcano Research Center.[1][2][3][4] He operates the blog "Northwest Geology Field Trips",[5]: 55 a "must-read" blog for laypeople interested in geology.[4] In 2015, he published a popular book on Washington geology, Geology Underfoot in Western Washington.[6][7][8][9] He resides in Bellingham, Washington.[10]
Tucker is a 1974 and 2004 Western Washington University graduate.[11]
In 2012, Tucker and two collaborators published a paper that described a new species of Gastornis, a flightless bird, Rivavipes giganteus. The description followed discovery of the largest known fossil bird footprint, found in the Chuckanut Formation, and which Tucker helped organize a volunteer team to helilift out of a landslide.[12][13][14]
Tucker, Dave (November 2011). John Scurlock (ed.). Snow & Spire: Flights to Winter in the North Cascade Range. Wolverine Publishing. ISBN978-0-9826154-7-8. (contributed essays)[15]
Tucker, Dave (2015). Geology Underfoot in Western Washington. Mountain Press Publishing. ISBN9780878426409.
Mustoe, G.; Tucker, D.; Kemplin, K (2012), "Giant Eocene bird footprints from northwest Washington, USA", Palaeontology, 55 (6): 1293–1305, doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2012.01195.x