James B. Macelwane Medal

A medal awarded annually by the American Geophysical Union to three to five early career scientists (no more than 10 years beyond having received their Ph.D.). It is named after James B. Macelwane, a Jesuit priest and one of the pioneers of seismology. The medal is regarded as the highest honor for young scientists in the field of Geological and Planetary Sciences.[1]

Medal recipients

Year Recipient[2]
2015 Paul Cassak
2015 Bethany L. Ehlmann
2015 Colette L. Heald
2015 Matthew G. Jackson
2015 Katharine Maher
2014 Rajdeep Dasgupta
2014 Christian Frankenberg
2014 J. Taylor Perron
2014 David Shuster
2014 Jessica Tierney
2013 Jesse Kroll
2013 Motohiko Murakami
2013 Sonia I. Seneviratne
2012 David Richard Shelly
2012 Gabriel J. Bowen
2012 Josef Dufek
2011 Tanja Bosak
2011 Nicolas Dauphas
2011 Arlene Fiore[3]
2011 Adam Maloof[4]
2011 Christian Schoof
2010 David B. Lobell[5]
2010 Rosalind E. Rickaby
2010 Jasper A. Vrugt
2009 Peter J. Huybers
2009 Miaki Ishii
2009 Benjamin P. Weiss
2008 James Badro
2008 Emily E. Brodsky
2008 Diane E. Pataki
2007 Amy C. Clement
2007 Jeanne Hardebeck
2007 Francis Nimmo
2006 Daniel J. Frost
2006 Jerry Goldstein
2006 Jun Korenaga
2005 Paul Asimow
2005 A. Hope Jahren
2005 James T. Randerson
2004 Robin M. Canup
2004 Daniel Sigman
2004 David W. J. Thompson
2003 Kurt M. Cuffey
2003 Guido Salvucci
2003 Lianxing Wen
2002 George Katul
2002 John M. Eiler
2002 Michael Manga
2001 Vassilis Angelopoulos
2001 Daniel P. Schrag
2001 Azadeh Tabazadeh
2000 Scott Doney
2000 Erik Hauri
2000 Quentin Williams
1999 Jeroen Tromp
1999 Rainer Hollerbach
1999 Kenneth A. Farley
1998 Tuija I. Pulkkinen
1998 Lars P. Stixrude
1997 Edouard Bard
1997 Marc Parlange
1997 Robert van der Hilst
1996 David Bercovici
1996 Dara Entekhabi
1996 David Roy Hanson
1995 Stephen Fuselier
1995 Jonathan I. Lunine
1995 Jason Phipps Morgan
1994 Jeremy Bloxham
1994 Daniel J. Jacob
1994 John E. Vidale
1993 Michael Gurnis
1993 David J. McComas
1993 Margaret A. Tolbert
1992 Eric Kunze
1992 David G. Sibeck
1992 Terry C. Wallace
1991 Thomas A. Herring
1991 Roderic L. Jones
1991 Thorne Lay
1990 Steven M. Gorelick
1990 Paul Segall
1990 Ellen R.M. Druffel
1989 Richard G. Gordon
1989 Seth A. Stein
1989 William R. Young
1988 Douglas R. MacAyeal
1988 Marcia McNutt
1988 Kevin B. Quest
1987 J. Leslie Smith
1987 Toshio Terasawa
1987 Mary Lou Zoback
1986 Bradford H. Hager
1986 Edward M. Stolper
1986 Robert A. Weller
1985 William H. Matthaeus
1985 Susan Solomon
1985 John M. Wahr
1984 Mary K. Hudson
1984 Raymond Jeanloz
1984 John H. Woodhouse
1983 William L. Chameides
1983 Donald J. DePaolo
1983 Thomas H. Jordan
1982 Rafael L. Bras
1982 Donald W. Forsyth
1982 Steven C. Wofsy
1981 Ronald G. Prinn
1981 David J. Southwood
1981 Donald J. Weidner
1980 Lawrence Grossman
1980 Thomas Westfall Hill
1980 Norman H. Sleep
1979 Ralph J. Cicerone
1979 Michael C. Kelley
1979 R. Keith O'Nions
1978 John M. Edmond
1978 Thomas E. Holzer
1977 Paul G. Richards
1977 Ignacio Rodriguez-Iturbe
1977 Christopher T. Russell
1976 John S. Lewis
1976 Kurt Lambeck
1976 Robert L. Parker
1975 Dan McKenzie
1975 Vytenis M. Vasyliunas
1975 Gerald Schubert
1974 Amos M. Nur
1973 R. Allan Freeze
1972 John Michael Wallace
1971 Carl I. Wunsch
1970 Lynn R. Sykes
1969 Richard S. Lindzen
1968 Michael B. McElroy
1967 Manik Talwani
1966 Don L. Anderson
1965 Gordon J. F. MacDonald
1964 Klaus F. Hasselmann
1963 Alexander J. Dessler
1962 James N. Brune

See also

References

  1. "James B. Macelwane Medal". Honors program. American Geophysical Union. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
  2. "James B. Macelwane Medal: Past recipients". Honors program. American Geophysical Union. Retrieved 3 July 2014.
  3. "Arlene Fiore Wins AGU Macelwane Medal". Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences: News & Events (Columbia University). 15 July 2011. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
  4. Georgette Chalker, Georgette (11 July 2011). "Adam Maloof awarded 2011 AGU James B. Macelwane Medal". Princeton University Department of Geosciences News. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
  5. Shwartz, Mark (7 September 2010). "David Lobell wins the American Geophysical Union’s Macelwane Medal". The Dish (Stanford University). Retrieved 27 November 2013.
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