Keith Medal
The Keith Medal is a prize awarded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Scotland's national academy, for a scientific paper published in the society's scientific journals, preference being given to a paper containing a discovery, either in mathematics or earth sciences.
The Medal was inaugurated in 1827 as a result of a gift from Alexander Keith of Dunottar, the first Treasurer of the Society. It is awarded quadrennially, alternately for a paper published in: Proceedings A (Mathematics) or Transactions (Earth and Environmental Sciences).
Recipients of the Keith Gold Medal
- 1827: David Brewster[1]
- 1829: David Brewster[1]
- 1831: Thomas Graham[2][1]
- 1833: James David Forbes[1]
- 1835: John Scott Russell[3]
- 1837: John Shaw[4]
- 1839: Not awarded[4]
- 1841: James David Forbes[1]
- 1843: Not awarded[4]
- 1845: Thomas Brisbane[4]
- 1847: Not awarded[4]
- 1849: Philip Kelland[3]
- 1851: William John Macquorn Rankine[3]
- 1853: Thomas Anderson[1]
- 1855: George Boole[4]
- 1857: Not awarded[4]
- 1859: John Allan Broun
- 1861: William Thomson[3]
- 1863: James David Forbes[1]
- 1865: Charles Piazzi Smyth[3]
- 1867: Peter Guthrie Tait[3]
- 1869: James Clerk Maxwell[3]
- 1871: Peter Guthrie Tait[3]
- 1873: Alexander Crum Brown[1]
- 1875: Matthew Forster Heddle[1]
- 1877: Henry Charles Fleeming Jenkin[1]
- 1879: George Chrystal[1]
- 1881: Sir Thomas Muir[3]
- 1883: John Aitken[5]
- 1885: John Young Buchanan[1]
- 1887: Edmund Albert Letts[3]
- 1889: Robert Traill Omond[3]
- 1891: Sir Thomas Richard Fraser[1]
- 1893: John Knox[3]
- 1895: Sir Thomas Muir[3]
- 1897: James Burgess[6][1]
- 1899: Hugh Marshall[3]
- 1901: Sir William Turner[3]
- 1903: Thomas Hastie Bryce[1]
- 1905: Alexander Bruce[3]
- 1907:
- 1909: Alexander Smith[3]
- 1911: James Russell[3]
- 1913: James Hartley Ashworth[1]
- 1915: Robert Cockburn Mossmann[3]
- 1917: John Stephenson[3]
- 1919: Ralph Allan Sampson[3]
- 1921: John Walter Gregory[1]
- 1923: Herbert Westren Turnbull[3]
- 1925: Robert Meldrum Craig[1] jointly with ?
- 1927: Christina Cruickshank Miller[3]
- 1929: Alan William Greenwood[1]
- 1931: Arthur Crichton Mitchell[3]
- 1933: Lancelot Thomas Hogben[1]
- 1935: Harold Stanley Ruse[3]
- 1937: Francis Albert Eley Crew[1]
- 1939: Sir William Hunter McCrea[3] jointly with Edward Copson[7][1]
- 1941: James Ritchie[3]
- 1943: William Leonard Edge[1]
- 1945: Charlotte Auerbach[1]
- 1947: Arthur Geoffrey Walker[3]
- 1949:
- 1951: Daniel Edwin Rutherford[3]
- 1953: Alexander David Peacock[3]
- 1955: Ivor Malcolm Haddon Etherington[1]
- 1957: John Barclay Tait[3]
- 1961: Robert Alexander Rankin[3]
- 1963: Reinhold Henry Furth[1]
- 1965: Alexander John Haddow[1]
- 1967: Henry Jack[1]
- 1969: Charles Dewar Waterston[8]
- 1971:
- 1973: Kenneth Lyon Blaxter[1]
- 1977: Brian John Bluck[8]
- 1979: John Mackintosh Howie
- 1981: John Heslop Harrison[1]
- 1983: John Bryce McLeod[9][8]
- 1985:
- 1987: John Mcleod Ball[8]
- 1989:
- 1991:
- 1993: Euan Clarkson (78th award)[8]
- 1995: No award
- 1997: Vladimír Šverák (79th award)
- 1999:
- 2001: No award
- 2005: No award
- 2006: Antonio DeSimone, Stefan Müller, Robert Kohn, Felix Otto
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 "Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh" (PDF). Royal Society of Edinburgh. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
- ↑ "News and Events". University of Strathclyde. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 "Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh" (PDF). Royal Society of Edinburgh. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Keith Awards 1827-1890". Cambridge Journals Online. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
- ↑ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1922). "Aitken, John". Encyclopædia Britannica (12th ed.). London & New York.
- ↑ "Obituary-James Burgess". Retrieved 28 November 2014.
- ↑ http://www.gap-system.org/~history/Extras/Copson_Professor.html
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Directory 2013/2014" (PDF). RSE. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
- ↑ "Professor John Bryce McLeod FRS FRSE (1929 - 2014)". University of Oxford. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
External links
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