Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Geoscientist left immeasurable legacy

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Geoscientist left immeasurable legacy

    Geoscientist left immeasurable legacy

    Yale Daily News (New Haven, Connecticut)
    Monday, March 25, 2013

    Karl Turekian, a giant in the field of geology who brought dynamism
    and energy to the Geology and Geophysics Department for over half a
    century, died of cancer in Branford, Conn., on March 15. He was 85.

    Geologists and geochemists interviewed credited Turekian with
    overseeing the coming of age of modern geochemistry - a field that
    drew little attention before Turekian began teaching and researching
    oceanography at Yale in 1956. During his 57-year career at the
    University, Turekian, a Sterling Professor of geology and geophysics,
    collected countless accolades and participated in some of the most
    significant scientific research of the 20th century, including the
    study of the first lunar samples collected during the Apollo space
    mission - and colleagues said Turekian's research brought him to the
    pinnacle of achievement in his field.

    `The world has lost one of the greatest geoscientists who ever lived,'
    said Jay Ague, the current chair of Yale's Department of Geology &
    Geophysics, in an email to the department dated March 15. `His
    influence is so large it is impossible to measure.'

    Turekian's research brought him to the frontiers of discovery
    regarding the origin of the solar system, the extinction of dinosaurs
    and climate change, among other issues. William Graustein GRD '81, a
    former student of Turekian's, said the professor was never intimidated
    by the scope and importance of the problems he confronted, adding that
    Turekian guided his lab to approach =80=9Cthe big questions.' Former
    students said Turekian was known for saying that `one good data point'
    could change the world.

    During his illustrious research career, Turekian edited eight
    scientific journals, published hundreds of papers, authored five books
    and received awards including the V. M. Goldschmidt Medal of the
    Geochemical Society and the Maurice Ewing Medal of the American
    Geophysical Union. He chaired the Department of Geology and Geophysics
    during the 1980s and also served as president of the Geochemical
    Society and a member of the National Academy of Sciences.

    Raised in an Armenian immigrant family and overcoming financial
    hardship, Turekian went on to receive one of the first doctorates in
    geochemistry at Columbia University in 1955 and become one of the
    first geoscientists to teach at Yale. His intellectual brilliance took
    him to academic heights, but he never forgot the humility instilled in
    him through his blue-collar upbringing, said his wife Roxanne.

    Turekian's wealth of scientific achievement was paralleled only by his
    `larger-than-life charisma,' said his son Vaughan.

    `His science never got in the way of his humanity, and his humanity
    never got in the way of his science,' Graustein said.

    Since his death, Turekian's family members said they have received an
    outpouring of condolences from the generations of geoscientists that
    Turekian taught and mentored around the world.

    For Turekian's 70th birthday in 1997, many of his former students
    returned to campus to visit him, and each student brought a coffee mug
    from his or her respective institution - a reference to Turekian's
    `coffee hours,' in which he would invite students and faculty of all
    levels to gather and discuss cutting-edge research.

    `He made you feel that you were the center of the world,' his daughter
    Karla said. `He was like that with the students, believing in you when
    you didn't necessarily believe in yourself.'

    Karla said she felt she had `won the lottery' with Turekian as a
    father. Turekian's wife, Roxanne, said Turekian was a devoted husband
    during their 51-year marriage.

    Turekian is survived by his wife Roxanne, his children Karla and
    Vaughan, and two grandchildren, Aleena and Charles.


    Photo Caption: Yale geochemist Karl Turekian, whose groundbreaking
    research delved into everything from the extinction of dinosaurs to
    the origin of the solar system, died on March 15. Photo by Vaughan
    Turekian.

Working...
X