Margulis
to Receive National Medal of Science
|
by Elizabeth
Luciano
News Office staff
|
Feb.
4, 2000
|
President Clinton this week named Lynn
Margulis, Distinguished University Professor in the Department
of Geosciences, one of 12 winners of the 1999 National Medal of
Science. The medal honors the discoveries and lifetime achievements
of the nation's top scientists. Margulis is being cited for "outstanding
contributions to the understanding of the structure and evolution
of living cells, and for extraordinary abilities as a teacher
and communicator of science to the public."
Chancellor David K. Scott said, "With the rapid expansion of
knowledge and the concomitant specialization, it has become harder
to find scholars who cross the boundaries of major fields of knowledge.
"Professor Margulis is a stellar example of such transdisciplinary
intellectuals, making her one of the most respected scientists
in the United States, and in the world. A National Medal of Science
is an appropriate honor for her many contributions. We are fortunate
to have her as a member of the University community."
The new medalists are the last to be named in the 20th century.
They will receive their medals on March 14 at the White House,
along with five awardees of the National Medal of Technology.
Margulis is the third campus faculty member to win the National
Medal of Science. Vladimir Haensel, professor emeritus of Chemical
Engineering, was awarded the medal in 1973. The late Marshall
H. Stone, of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, received
the medal in 1983.
"In addition to her renown as a biologist, professor Margulis
has been devoted to bringing scientific thought to the general
public, particularly through her books, which cover an impressive
range of scientific topics," said Senior Vice Chancellor for Academic
Affairs and Provost Cora Marrett. "It is this sort of outreach
that is part of the mission of a land-grant university, and which
exemplifies the spirit of the National Medal of Science."
Margulis is internationally known for her research on the evolution
of eukaryotic cells - cells that have a nucleus. She is a leading
proponent of the idea that the merger of previously independent
organisms (a process called "symbiogenesis") is of great importance
to evolutionary change. "Life does not merely 'adapt'; life -
with 'will to power' - configures its own environment," Margulis
says. She has also worked to support the Gaia theory, the idea
that the Earth's temperature and chemical composition are actively
regulated as a consequence of the metabolism, growth, death, and
evolution of interacting organisms.
An energetic popularizer of science and spokesperson for environmental
issues, Margulis has written many books on a wide range of scientific
topics, including "Microcosmos: Four Billion Years of Evolution
from Our Microbial Ancestors," "What is Life?" and "Essays on
Gaia, Symbiosis, and Evolution" (co-authored with her science
writer collaborator and son, Dorion Sagan); and "Five Kingdoms:
An Illustrated Guide to the Phyla of Life on Earth" (with co-author
Karlene V. Schwartz).
The National Medal of Science was established by Congress in
1959 and is administered by the National Science Foundation. It
honors contributions by outstanding individuals who have significantly
advanced knowledge in physics, biology, mathematics, engineering,
sociology, and other behavioral sciences. Counting the medalists
named today, there have been 374 medals bestowed on leading U.S.
scientists and engineers. The President's Committee on the National
Medal of Science reviews nominations.
"The contributions of these scientists are so profound, so connected
to our everyday lives and so lasting that these medals go only
a short way to express the gratitude the nation owes them," said
Rita Colwell, director of the National Science Foundation (NSF).
The other 1999 National Medal of Science awardees are: David
Baltimore, president of the California Institute of Technology;
Robert M. Solow, professor emeritus of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology; Kenneth Stevens, of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology; Stuart A. Rice, Leo P. Kadanoff, and James W. Cronin
of the University of Chicago; Jared Diamond of the University
of California at Los Angeles; John Ross of Stanford University;
Susan Solomon of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration;
Felix E. Browder of Rutgers University; and Ronald R. Coifman
of Yale University.
Margulis is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is one of just
three U.S. scientists elected to the Russian Academy of Natural
Sciences. The Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., announced
in 1998 that it plans to permanently archive her papers. Margulis
received her bachelor's degree in liberal arts from the University
of Chicago, her master's degree in genetics and zoology from the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, and her doctorate in genetics
from the University of California Berkeley. She joined the faculty
in 1988 and holds several honorary doctor of science degrees.
|