Hugh Nicol (chemist)
Prof Hugh Nicol FRSE FRIC FCS (1898-1972) was a British bacteriologist and agricultural chemist.
Life
He was born in Shoreham-by-Sea in Sussex on 5 July 1898.
He studied Science at the University of London. He then became an Assistant Bacteriologist at Rothamsted Experimental Station then moved to the Commonwealth Bureau of Soil Science. In 1946 he moved to Scotland as Professor of Agricultural Chemistry at the West of Scotland Agricultural College in Glasgow.[1]
In 1952 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir William Gammie Ogg, Kenneth Braid, Donald McArthur and John Walton.[1]
He retired in 1963 and died at home in Shoreham-by-Sea on 27 August 1972.[2]
Publications
- Microbes by the Million (1939 reprinted 1945)
- Microbes and Us (1955)
- The Limits of Man (1967)
gollark: Pigeonhole principle you utterly.
gollark: A large one, though.
gollark: Of course you can, cubes.
gollark: > primes have other advantages that I am not telling you for the sake of security… security through obscurity ≈ apioformic.
gollark: It's very esolangs to use the primes thing unnecessarily.
References
- Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0 902 198 84 X.
- "Deaths". The Times (58565). 29 August 1972. p. 20.
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