Urey Medal
The Urey Medal is given annually by the European Association of Geochemistry for outstanding contributions advancing Geochemistry over a career.[1] The award is named after the physical chemist Harold Urey, FRS.
Urey Medalists
Year | Name | Institution |
1990 | Wallace S. Broecker and Hans Oeschger | Columbia University, USA, and University of Bern, Switzerland |
1995 | Samuel Epstein, Robert N. Clayton, and Hugh P. Taylor, Jr. | California Institute of Technology (Epstein and Taylor) and University of Chicago (Clayton), USA |
1997 | Geoffrey Eglinton and John Hayes | University of Bristol, UK and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, USA |
1998 | Jean-Guy Schilling | University of Rhode Island, USA |
1999 | John M. Edmond | Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA |
2000 | Donald J. DePaolo | University of Berkeley, USA |
2001 | Keith O'Nions | University of Oxford, UK |
2002 | Grenville Turner | University of Manchester, UK |
2003 | Nicholas Shackleton | University of Cambridge, UK |
2004 | Harold C. Helgeson | University of Berkeley, USA |
2005 | Alex Navrotsky | University of California, Davis, USA |
2006 | Herbert Palme | University of Cologne, Germany |
2007 | Harry Elderfield | Cambridge University, UK |
2008 | Pascal Richet | IPGP, France |
2009 | François Morel | Princeton University, USA |
2010 | Charles Langmuir | Harvard University, USA |
2011 | Donald E. Canfield | University of Southern Denmark, Denmark |
2012 | Alexander Halliday | University of Oxford, UK |
2013 | Igor Tolstikhin | Russian Academy of Sciences |
2014 | Edward Boyle | Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA |
2015 | Albrecht W. Hofmann | Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Germany |
2016 | Klaus Mezger | University of Bern, Switzerland |
References
- ↑ "Urey Award". European Association of Geochemistry. Retrieved 21 June 2015.