Stanley Miller Medal

The Stanley Miller Medal is an award to be presented by the National Academy of Sciences every five years to promote research and study in the fields of "research on Earth's early development as a planet, including prebiotic chemistry and the origin of life; planetary accretion, differentiation, and tectonics; and early evolution of the atmosphere and oceans". [1]

The award was established in 2008 from a gift by NAS member Stanley Miller. It is linked to the well-established Charles Doolittle Walcott Medal and the two medals will be awarded alternatively and known collectively as the NAS Award in Early Earth and Life Sciences. Each medal is supplemented by a $10,000 award.

Prizewinners

Source: NAS

For his pioneering experiments on the self-sustained replication and evolution of RNA enzymes (ribozymes), which illuminate key conceptual steps in the origin of life.
For his outstanding modelling studies of planetary atmospheres and habitability that constrain the environmental context for the origin of life.
For his seminal contributions to the discovery of catalytic RNAs and his pioneering work on methods for delineating the diversity of life on Earth.
gollark: You should NOT add Extra Planets.
gollark: No, cool as in quite good and interesting, I expect they'll be fairly warm thermally.
gollark: Alder Lake laptops should be imminent and very cool.
gollark: Maybe you somehow copied it wrong.
gollark: The backdoor worked, then.

See also

References

  1. "NAS Award in Early Earth and Life Sciences". National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.