Urey Medal

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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.

Contents

Urey Medalists

YearNameInstitution
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 California, 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 California, Berkeley, USA
2005 Alexandra 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  [ de ] Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Germany
2016 Klaus Mezger  [ de ] University of Bern, Switzerland
2017 Eiji Ohtani  [ jp ] Tohoku University, Japan
2018 Susan L. Brantley Pennsylvania State University, USA
2019 Eric Oelkers GET Laboratory, CNRS, France
2020Jill Banfield University of California, Berkeley, USA
2021Sachiko Amari Washington University in St. Louis, USA

See also

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References

  1. "Urey Award". European Association of Geochemistry. Retrieved 21 June 2015.