Biographical Memoirs - NAS (original) (raw)

Featured Memoir
Thomas M. Donahue by Donald M. Hunten and James G. Anderson
“The explosion of scientific thought and innovation, propelled by the development of new experimental and computational strategies following World War II, expanded the frontiers of physics and chemistry to the outer reaches of the Earth’s atmosphere and subsequently to the planets of our Solar System. Thomas M. Donahue was a central figure in this new scientific discipline of aeronomy, and he remained a potent, creative catalyst for innovation throughout his life.”
About the Series
Published since 1877, Biographical Memoirs provide the life histories and selected bibliographies of deceased National Academy of Sciences members. Colleagues familiar with the subject’s work write these memoirs and as such, the series provides a biographical history of science in America.
The Online Collection includes approximately 1,900 memoirs, including those of famed naturalist Louis Agassiz; Joseph Henry, the first secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; Thomas Edison; Alexander Graham Bell; noted anthropologist Margaret Mead; and psychologist and philosopher John Dewey.
View the current list of Biographical Memoirs or search for specific memoirs: