Biographical Memoirs: Volume 89, Volume 89

Front Cover
National Academies Press, Feb 3, 2008 - Biography & Autobiography - 422 pages

On March 3, 1863, Abraham Lincoln signed the Act of Incorporation that brought the National Academy of Sciences into being. In accordance with that original charter, the Academy is a private, honorary organization of scientists, elected for outstanding contributions to knowledge, who can be called upon to advise the federal government. As an institution the Academy's goal is to work toward increasing scientific knowledge and to further the use of that knowledge for the general good.

The Biographical Memoirs, begun in 1877, are a series of volumes containing the life histories and selected bibliographies of deceased members of the Academy. Colleagues familiar with the discipline and the subject's work prepare the essays. These volumes, then, contain a record of the life and work of our most distinguished leaders in the sciences, as witnessed and interpreted by their colleagues and peers. They form a biographical history of science in America-an important part of our nation's contribution to the intellectual heritage of the world.

 

Contents

ROBERT JOHN BRAIDWOOD
22
HARMON CRAIG
44
GEORGE KELSO DAVIS
58
VINCENT GASTON DETHIER
76
WALTER GORDY
96
KENNETH LOCKE HALE
114
CHARLES F HOCKETT
150
HENRY M HOENIGSWALD
180
HALLAM LEONARD MOVIUS JR
242
WILLIAM DUWAYNE NEFF
262
DONALD OSCAR PEDERSON
284
JAMES MATHER SPRAGUE
306
OWSEI TEMKIN
324
JOHN GORDON TORREY
344
JEROME VINOGRAD
356
AARON CLEMENT WATERS
368

WILLIAM WHITE HOWELLS
206
HENRY G KUNKEL
224
FRED LAWRENCE WHIPPLE
392
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