Print-Friendly Version


"A person has at least the beginning of understanding
the meaning of life when they plant shade trees under
which they know they'll never sit."

SCIENCE HERO:
DR. RICHARD MURPHY
MARINE BIOLOGIST

by Wendy Jewell

Murph and boobies in the Galapagos where species are almost totally unafraid of people because they have no history of harassment. (Richard Murphy)

Dr. Richard C. Murphy, or Murph, is a marine biologist, photographer, writer and a very funny guy. But mostly he is a devoted friend to the ocean and its inhabitants. He grew up two blocks from the ocean in Long Beach, California. His father was one of those original deep-sea divers that you see in old movies…walking around the bottom of the ocean with lead shoes and a metal hard-hat. Murph's father would put him to sleep when he was a kid with stories of his adventures on reefs in remote South Pacific islands. So from a very young age, Murph was hooked on everything to do with the ocean. By the time he became a teenager he knew he would be a marine biologist. Dr. Murphy explains that a marine biologist, "studies the life of the sea. Some of us are teachers, others are scientists working at universities and research institutions and some work to help sustainably manage resources. All of us need to understand basic biology, chemistry and physics and be comfortable using mathematics and computers to manage our data."

Richard Murphy has always embraced life to the fullest and taken advantage of the opportunities placed in front of him. He figures that landing 'the job' 38 years ago with Jacques Cousteau (the co-inventor of SCUBA) and his son, Jean-Michel Cousteau (filmmaker and educator), was made easier, not just because of grades, but because he had done so many things relating to the outdoors. "I had worked for UCLA collecting specimens for an invertebrate lab class, I had been a competitive speed and slalom water skier, I took underwater photographs, I was a surfer and had traveled to a number of other countries." So a job that was supposed to last a few years is going on 34 and Murph feels "extremely lucky to have been paid to travel the world, search for answers to important scientific questions, help educate people about the importance of nature and work on projects to show how we can live without destroying our environment."


Murph with Jean-Michel Cousteau on Mt. Mismi, the headwaters of the Amazon River at 18,600 feet...too high for an ocean guy. (Richard Murphy)

Over these past 33 years, Dr. Murphy has had many adventures while serving as chief scientist and photographer, as well as overseeing research done on filming expeditions to such places as Papua New Guinea, Fiji, Indonesia, The Mekong River in Southeast Asia, the Amazon, Sea of Cortez, Australia and New Zealand. I asked him to tell me a story about life aboard the CALYPSO, the old minesweeper that became an expedition boat for Jacques Cousteau in 1951, 17 years before young Richard Murphy was brought on board. "One story that comes to mind was during my first expedition on the Calypso. I was eating dinner at the long table in the galley and paying careful attention to my manners. It appears that all of the men on my side of the table had held the plastic tablecloth at such an angle, in their laps, that it formed a trough, high at the far end of the table and low at my end. I did not know they were doing this. Then at the far end a guy poured a glass of water in the trough. The water ran down and ended up in my lap. All of a sudden my lap was soaking wet and I had absolutely no idea why. Being new I didn't want to say anything, but obviously my expression changed. Since everyone but me knew what happened they said, "What's wrong, are you all right?" I offered some lame excuse and then the guy next to me looked in my lap and said, "My gosh your lap is wet. Did you have a little problem?" Then everyone laughed and I realized what happened. There were lots of fun things we did to each other on those expeditions." But it wasn't all just fun and games. The voyages of the Calypso are legendary and much was captured on film, (The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau), to the delight of landlocked people all over the planet. These trips also provided crucial scientific data that has helped shape the world's knowledge of life underwater. Murph recalls, "We all had our jobs to do and we all worked very hard. It was great being isolated for a month or so just diving and working. Sharing these adventures made us friends for life. It was also a wonderful feeling to know that we were doing something that would share the wonders of the sea with others and help protect the oceans for the future."

One of the most fun times Dr. Murphy had diving was while doing advance scouting for Jean-Michel Cousteau's documentary film team in Papua, New Guinea. "I could go anywhere I wanted to explore new reefs. It was fascinating to see so many different islands, reefs and people who depended on these reefs for food." And I just had to ask this man who has logged thousands and thousands of hours in the ocean about the weirdest thing he had ever seen while in it. His reply? "To me the most strange and fascinating critters in the sea are gelatinous zooplankton (gelatinous = jelly-like, zoo = animal, plankton = drifting). These are mere wisps of life, water alive, delicate living membranes, cosmic works of art. They are jellyfish, snails that never touch the bottom, relatives of the Portuguese man-of-war, worms that give of light and many other weird critters."


Brain Coral (Richard Murphy)

Eco-Tourism. Good or bad? "Eco-tourism by definition is good. 'It is responsible travel to natural areas which conserves the environment and improves the welfare of local people.' This is good because it gives people a better understanding of nature and other cultures. It is good because it helps people in remote places earn a living from their own natural resources and culture in a way that will not harm either nature or culture. Unfortunately, not all tour operators who say they are doing eco-tourism actually protect the environment or local people. So we must pay attention to make sure that we as tourists behave in a way that respects nature and other people's culture."

We hear so much doomsday talk about the state of the planet's environment…do you buy into it? And how does it affect you? "I totally buy into the fact that we humans are having a major impact on the planet. Forests, fisheries, water quality, coral reefs, populations of fish and marine mammals - the health and abundance of all these natural resources are being undermined by humans. The planet depends on nature to keep it healthy and habitable for us. We must protect natural ecosystems and species from over harvest, destruction and pollution because they do important work that we need done. We should see nature as a partner to work with and benefit from. I want people to feel more connected to nature and better understand the value of things we don't eat or sell in the global scheme of things. I think the golden rule is very appropriate in the context of the environment - treat others as you would like to be treated. It's morally right and it's smart."

Dr. Murphy is now Director of Science and Education at the Ocean Futures Society. He and Jean-Michel Cousteau and their organizations are providing a new vision for the next generation. They are also providing ways everyone can participate in that vision. So check out www.oceanfutures.org and learn, join and make your voice heard.

I asked Dr. Murphy what his major priorities were for saving the oceans and how kids and their parents can help.

Dr. Murphy's major concerns for saving the oceans are:

Protect biodiversity with marine protected areas.

Stop overfishing.

Stop global warming that is killing coral reefs around the world.

HOW CAN WE ALL HELP?

Write letters to our leaders to establish more protected areas.

As individuals we can be energy efficient.

Prevent trash and pollution from getting into the sea (i.e., don't litter at the beach!).

Kids can remind their parents about these things when they purchase a new car, build a house or manage their business.

Is there anything you'd like to say that I haven't asked you?

"Yes, I now work almost exclusively with young people; of course at my age almost everyone is young. I am enriched by the enthusiasm of young people and hopeful when they reject the old ways and search for new ways. My generation has made unbelievable advances - space travel, computers, Internet, new medicines, etc. We have also created monumental environmental problems. We now need fresh minds that respect nature and can create new ways to manufacture things to avoid waste and pollution, new ways to manage nature that are sustainable and new ways to think about our deep connections to other species and the planet."


Murph teaching. (Richard Murphy)

Who are Murph's heroes? He has several.

"A hero of mine is Ed Ricketts, known to many as Doc of Cannery Row. He was a marine biologist who looked at nature as a whole system in a different way from most other scientists of his time. He saw each species as important and an interrelated member of a community. He was not a nerdy scientist but enjoyed a wide range of subjects – philosophy, music, poetry and other people. He was intensely curious and enjoyed living a rich and diverse life." Note: Ed Ricketts was “Doc” of John Steinbeck’s Cannery Row. In his own personal memoir about Ricketts, Steinbeck wrote, ”Everyone near him was influenced by him, deeply and permanently. Some he taught to think, others how to see or hear… He taught everyone without seeming to."

"The other is the Dalai Lama because he is very well educated, respects science and is a generous person who does not judge others and other ways of thinking. He does not allow anger to control his emotions and instead has focused his energy on helping other people in a gentle polite way."


I see the coral reef as the most inspirational place to learn from nature. I have written a book called, Coral Reefs - Cities Under the Sea, that explores how the reef functions like a city and offers guidance for us in how to live more gently on the planet. This is the cover photo from that book. (Richard Murphy)

You seem to have a pretty good time on a daily basis…what keeps you laughing?

"My spirits are lifted by a clean head high wave on a sunny day, a fast mountain bike ride through the redwoods, being launched into the sky while kite boarding and hovering spellbound above a reef watching a little cleaner fish tend to its patients who are 'standing on their heads' to get the cleaner's attention. I like sunsets, the smell of kelp on a beach and the sound of waves. I like kids because their laughing makes me laugh. I try to put fun in all of my work."

And what does he think a fish would say if it could talk?

"Dear Human,

I know you like our world but your behavior certainly is confusing. You throw trash in my front yard; you dump chemical waste in my home and kill my family members. We were here first, you know, and we would appreciate it if you remember that we are all relatives. Corals, kelp, sea stars, lobster, fish, dolphins and people - we are all related! And we share the same planet so please treat us like your family members - because we ARE part of the family of life. Come visit, we've got some great things to show you.

Bubble, bubble,

Your fishy friend."

My husband and I had the good fortune of meeting Murph this past summer at the Ambassadors of the Environment Family Camp, which he runs with Jean-Michel Cousteau on Catalina Island off the coast of California. My daughter, Slater, was there to meet her Environmental Hero, Jean-Michel Cousteau, and do a short film about him and his work. That pleasure was expanded by also meeting Dr. Murphy who was warm, funny and very informative. We have never had so much fun in a science lab! I am going to treat myself to Murph's book, Coral Reefs, Cities Under the Sea, then make a cup of tea and dive into the magical world of the oceans he shares with us all. Perhaps his good friend Jean-Michel Cousteau says it best, about Murph's book: "Here is a scientist you can understand, who relates the extraordinary life of a coral reef to the readers' own quality of life. People do not exist outside the domain of nature. Dr. Murphy's book makes us realize that everything is connected in the ocean world, as in the rest of the world. We are all part of nature, and inseparable from it. Our well-being", Cousteau continues, "is linked to the health of our environment."


Written by Wendy Jewell
Photos courtesy of Richard Murphy and Ocean Futures Society
Images created by Richard Murphy and Ocean Futures Society


RELATED LINKS

Ambassadors of the Environment The AOTE program takes place in a natural setting, helping young people reconnect to nature. Students are introduced to the natural wonders of the region’s environment and their residents through slide shows, hikes, skin diving excursions (where appropriate) and discussions. They focus on issues of biodiversity, the unique characteristics of the region, human impact and resource management. They participate in long-term monitoring and restoration programs.

Ocean Futures Society The mission of Ocean Futures Society is to explore our global ocean, inspiring and educating people throughout the world to act responsibly for its protection, documenting the critical connection between humanity and nature, and celebrating the ocean's vital importance to the survival of all life on our planet.

Seafood Watch A program of Monterey Bay Aquarium designed to raise consumer awareness about the importance of buying seafood from sustainable sources. We recommend which seafood to buy or avoid, helping consumers to become advocates for environmentally friendly seafood. We're also partners of the Seafood Choices Alliance where, along with other seafood awareness campaigns, we provide seafood purveyors with recommendations on seafood choices.

Official Website of Richard Murphy Learn more about this amazing man and join his crusade to save the oceans.

EXTRA INFORMATION

This story was made possible by a grant from The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.


 
RECOMMENDED READING

Coral Reefs: Cities under the Sea

by Richard C. Murphy

The Log from the Sea of Cortez

by John Steinbeck, Edward F. Ricketts


More Featured Earthkeeper Heroes

A Sewer Becomes
a Water Park
 with
floating botanical
gardens that are
helping restore ecological health.
Alan Rabinowitz  started the first ever jaguar preserve.Alexandra Cousteau was honored as an Earth Trustee by the UN in 2007 for her work to protect the oceans.Ansel Adams was an 'artist-activist' whose photographs of nature inspired conservation.
Australian Aborigines
Protecting Wetlands
 by working to conserve the environment around them.
Barry Commoner works to protect the environment and raise awareness about the danger of radio activity.Ben Redclay was an earthkeeper whose legacy lives on through his daughter.Benjamin Kahn involves school children in regrowing coral to help save damaged reefs in the Red Sea.
Beth Rickard
Environmentalist
 is an advocate of solar as the energy of the future.
Bill Roley 
taught children in a Mexican orphanage how to work the land.
CAMPUS CENTER FOR APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY at Humboldt State University.Chico Mendes was a father who gave the ultimate sacrifice in defending rainforests.
Chief Oren Lyons  is an internationally venerated advocate for preserving biodiversity.David Nathan Chain  was killed during a nonviolent protest to save the redwoods.Deland Chan 
started an environmental group
at the YMCA in New
York City.
Dennis Weaver  is an actor and advocate for ecologically sustainable living.
Dian Fossey  worked to protect the endangered Mountain Gorilla.Donald Knaack is a musician whose unique productions inspire people of all ages to explore, create and give back to others.Dr. E.O. Wilson studies the impact that human activity has on the planet.Dr. Elvia Niebla
Soil Scientist
 is dedicated to soil conservation.
Dr. Richard Murphy
Marine Biologist
 educates others about the sea and ways to protect the oceans for the future.
Dr. Robert Ballard
and the JASON project
 bring scientific exploration to children around the world.
Dr. Shirley McGreal  founded the International Primate Protection League.Dr. Vandana Shiva works to preserve biodiversity for the planet.
Envirofit retrofits engines to reduce pollution and enhance energy efficiency in developing countries.Fin Donnelly works to keep our rivers and waters clean.Frances Moore Lappe works to eliminate the injustices that cause hunger.Friends of Nature:
Mr. Liang Congjie
 
is a voice for China's
environment.
Friends of the Sea Lion rescue, treat, and release these mammals back into the ocean.George Schaller   is a world-renowned naturalist.Gerald Durrell  established the Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust for endangered species.Greenpeace works globally to save the environment.
Hayrettin Karaca is known as Grandfather Earth for making our planet brighter, greener and better for future generations.Heather DeWitt 
is a devoted
conservationist.
J.N. (Ding) Darling , conservationist and cartoonist, used his art to raise awareness about the environment.Jack Johnson is a musician who encourages kids to take care of the environment.
Jack Sim has started a worldwide campaign for clean public toilets and better sanitation standards.Jacques Cousteau 
invented the Aqua-Lung, a predecessor to the SCUBA systems used by divers worldwide today.
Jane Goodall  is an authority on wild chimpanzees.Jane Goodall …is a renowned expert on chimpanzees and works to educate people about their own power to improve the environment.
Jean-Michel Cousteau is committed to protecting the ocean for future generations through education and conservation.Jody Williams is a human rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize winner who began a campaign to rid the world of landmines.John McConnell founded Earth Day (March 20) and continues his fight for environmental education and awareness.John Muir advocated preservation, feeling that natural areas promote mental health.
Joseph Ki-Zerbo 
works to help
Africans retain
control of their
country's agriculture.
Julia Hill  brought public attention to deforestation in California.Kaa-Iya
del Gran Chaco
National Park
 is the
only park in the
Americas established
and run by indigenous peoples.
Kory Johnson 
was honored with
the Goldman Environmental
Prize in 1998.
Laurie David is passionately committed to stopping global warming.Lee Myung-Bak is responsible for making Seoul, South Korea 'cleaner and greener' during his tenure as mayor.Marjory Stoneman Douglas worked tirelessly to preserve the Everglades.Mia Siscawati 
teaches people to protect their environment.
Michael Reynolds
Garbage Warrior
 
combines biology and architecture to build sustainable housing.
Mrs. Mei Ng:
Friends of the Earth
(Hong Kong)
 uses education to foster environmental awareness in China
My Trip to Catalina Island Slater, a young environmental and peace activist, meets her hero, Jean-Michel Cousteau.Nicole Dewing and
Curtis McCormack
 joined the Peace Corps and started a waste recycling project in Joal, Senegal.
Ocean Robbins helps organize young people committed to protecting the planet.Prigi Arisandi 
works to educate people on the importance of protecting the rivers of Indonesia
Rachel Carson  was the mother of the environmental movement.Ramani Sankaranarayanan
and Geeta Vaidyanathan
 
founded CTxGrEn to show villagers how to turn native materials into fuel for electricity.
Reef Ball Foundation restores damaged coral reef systems around the world.Ric O'Barry works to free captive dolphins around the world.Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is an eco-warrior defending the earth for future generations.Robert Redford established the Sundance Film Festival to effect change in the world.
Rory Stear and Kristine Pearson developed and distribute wind-up and solar powered radios to poor communities around the world. Roxanne Kremer works with the Mestizo Indians of the Peruvian rainforest to save pink dolphins. Ryan Hreljac helps build wells for clean water in Africa.Saint Francis of Assisi was a true example of harmonious existence on Earth
Sandra Postel  believes in the importance of water conservation.Severn Cullis-Suzuki an environmental activist, speaker, television host.Stanislav Petrov averted nuclear disaster, yet remains unknown to most.SUJANA cleans roads in Indonesia to help the environment.
Suryo Wardhoyo Prawiroatmodjo educates people in Indonesia to protect the environment.Sylvia Earle  is a marine biologist and ambassador of the oceans.Terram Foundation brings job growth, community involvement, and local solutions to larger environmental concerns.Theodore Roosevelt worked tirelessly to protect wildlife and the environment.
Wangari Maathai founded the Green Belt Movement that plants trees to help restore the desolate ecosystem in Africa. Wes Jackson was a professor who returned to the land to advance sustainable agriculture practices.William McDonough  designs buildings for ecological sustainability.YouthCaN is a youth-
run organization
promoting environmental awareness through technology.
   
Zander Srodes
and Turtle Talks
 has educated over 5,000 students on sea turtles and marine conservation.
   
More Featured Science Heroes

Abner Peeler is credited with the invention of the first airbrush.Ada Lovelace  was a ninteenth century woman who influenced the computer programming of todayAlan Turing laid the theoretical groundwork for the first computer.Albert Einstein believed in the power of imagination.
Alexander Borodin was an accomplished chemist, composer and staunch advocate of women's rights.Alexander Graham Bell 
was the inventor of the telephone.
Ameen Abdulrasool is a young inventor who developed a portable navigation system for the blind.Amy Charkowski works
on the front lines of protecting Earth's
food supply.
Andrea Mia Ghez is an astrophysicist best known for her discoveries about the black hole at the center of our galaxy.Ariel Ruiz i Altaba
Scientist - Photographer
 combines art and science to research how cells are generated and formed.
Audrey Penn:
Just Do It
 is a medical doctor who has devoted herself to studying diseases that affect muscle control.
Augusta Ada Byron developed the world's first computer program while struggling with her own personal hardships.
Babak Darvish, MD inspires his patients and coworkers with his upbeat attitude and determination.Barbara McClintock was one of the first women geneticists, and a Nobel laureate. Ben Carson 
is the chief of neurosurgery
at Johns Hopkins University Hospital.
Benjamin Franklin was an inventor, diplomat, writer, and a huge influence on American history.
Benjamin Franklin was an inventor, civic leader and founding father of the U.S.Bernard Fantus created the world's first blood bank.Bernardo Houssay was an Argentinean physiologist and Nobel Prize winner.Beth Rickard
Environmentalist
 is an advocate of solar as the energy of the future.
Bill Fenical
"Neptune's Medicine Chest"
 is a pioneer in the hunt for medicines from the ocean to treat cancer and other diseases.
Bonnie Dunbar 
helped start a scholars program to inspire students to pursue careers in aerospace and engineering.
Charles Darwin is the father of modern biology.Chiaki Mukai is the first female Japanese astronaut.
Christiane Nusslein-Volhard is a Nobel Prize winner and pioneer genetic researcher.Claudia Gerwin:
Keeping the Neurons Firing
 researches how nerve cells relay messages to each other.
Clifford V. Johnson is a string theorist who studies the makeup of the smallest particles of the universe.Connie Samaras has created media archives for deep space voyages.
Courtney Schumacher is an atmospheric scientist and educator committed to mentoring young women interested in science.Cristina Diaz:
Biologist
 studies intertidal and tropical sponges.
Dame Cicely Saunders founded the modern hospice to provide compassionate, holistic care to the dying.DAREnet provides open access to Dutch academic research information and findings.
Darlene Cavalier founded ScienceCheerleader.com to promote science literacy.Darlene Ketten studies stranded whales and dolphins.Dean Kamen makes science and technology exciting for young people,Debbye Turner became Miss America and pursued her dream to become a veterinarian.
Dilfuza Egamberdiyeva cares for the Earth's soil, researching ways to produce microbes to control plant diseases.Dr Deepak Acharya is a scientist devoted to protecting India's endangered Patalkot Forest.Dr. Alexander Langmuir Langmuir's work in epidemiology has saved millions of lives.Dr. Barbara Ross Lee became the first African American woman dean of a US medical school.
Dr. Caldicott  has
been a lifelong
anti-nuclear activist.
Dr. Carolyn Mazure founded the Yale Women's Health Program and is a forceful figure in the women's health movement.Dr. Edward Holland
Ophthalmologist
 transplants corneal stem cells to help give people their sight back.
Dr. Edward Jenner discovered the vaccine.
Dr. Elizabeth Kalko
and the Jason Project
 studies bats in the Panamanian rainforest.
Dr. Elvia Niebla
Soil Scientist
 is dedicated to soil conservation.
Dr. Farouk El-Baz 
is an Egyptian space scientist and geologist.
Dr. France Cordova 
is a renowned
astrophysicist who
has broken gender
and cultural barriers.
Dr. Gloria WilderBrathwaite was inspired to provide health care to the poor in the innner city.Dr. Govindappa Venkataswamy 
cares for the eyes
of millions of
people in India.
Dr. Ines Cifuentes
Seismologist
 works to improve science programs for students in Washington, DC.
Dr. Karen Plaut has been a pioneer in animal science research.
Dr. Kay Jamison is both an expert on, and a sufferer of, Bipolar Disorder.Dr. Kristi Curry-Rogers is an accomplished paleontologist who travels the globe in search of dinosaur digs.Dr. Madan Kataria has started a revolution of joy and laughter that is spreading around the world.Dr. Michael DeBakey is the father of modern open-heart surgery.
Dr. Patch Adams 
gives the practice
of medicine a
humorous twist.
Dr. Richard Murphy
Marine Biologist
 educates others about the sea and ways to protect the oceans for the future.
Dr. Robert Ballard
and the JASON project
 bring scientific exploration to children around the world.
Dr. Rosalie Bertell
Anti-Nuclear Nun
 is a renowned scientist, eco-feminist and peace activist.
Dr. Sara W. Lazar
Neuroscientist - Meditator
 researches the effects of meditation on the brain.
Dr. Sue Savage-Rumbaugh is a scientist dedicated to the study and conservation of bonobos.Dr. Susan Love is committed to women's health issues.Dr. Zeda Rosenberg is working to protect women from HIV/AIDS.
Elizabeth Blackwell became the first female doctor and opened the first medical school for women.Enrico Fermi was one of the 20th century's greatest physicists.Envirofit retrofits engines to reduce pollution and enhance energy efficiency in developing countries.Erich Jarvis observes song birds and uses his training with molecular biology to learn about brain behavior.
F. Sherwood Rowland discovered the 'greenhouse effect.'Fati Kirakoya is a researcher committed to finding solutions to end HIV/AIDS.Frederick Banting was the co-discoverer of Insulin.Friends of the Sea Lion rescue, treat, and release these mammals back into the ocean.
Gail Kaaialii:
Biologist
 investigates the origins of life and helps others value all life forms.
Galileo Galilei was the first to use a telescope to observe the stars and planets.George Washington Carver is famous for experimenting with plants.Gertrude B. Elion developed
the AIDS drug, AZT.
Gina Gallant is
an inventor whose
passion is
protecting the
environment.
Grace Murray Hopper was a computer visionary and naval officer.Guglielmo Marconi was an Italian inventor who won a Nobel Prize in Physics for wireless telegraphy.Guion S. Bluford, Jr. 
became the first African-American in space.
Hazel Barton combines her passion for caving with researching microbes.Hib Vaccine Team created an affordable, synthetic vaccine against the bacteria that can cause meningitis and pneumonia.Howard Florey shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine for extracting penicillin.Irene Ayako Uchida helped find the link between radiation and birth defects.
Irene Curie was the second woman in history to win the Nobel Prize in science; the first woman was her mother, Marie.Jack St. Clair Kilby invented
the microchip.
James Burke 
developed a model of discovery called the Knowledge Web to connect information across space and time.
Jane Mt. Pleasant is an agricultural scientist who looks to the past to meet today's farming needs.
Jonas Salk discovered the polio vaccine.Kathy Sullivan was the first American woman to walk in space.Leon Lederman devotes much of his time and energy to improving science education in America.Leonard Adleman improves
lives with his work
in DNA technology.
Leonardo da Vinci was an artist and a scientist ever curious of the world around him.Leslie Thompson is a scientist devoted to finding a cure for Huntington's Disease.Louis Pasteur 's discoveries advanced the practice of medicine.Luz Maria Rodriguez-Fernandez conducts cancer research to help understand the disease process.
Madame Curie received the Nobel Prize for her discovery of Radium.Mae Jemison 
dreamed of going to space since childhood.
Magdalena Hurtado is an anthropologist who studies the Ache people of Paraguay.Margaret Mead 
was a renowned anthropologist who thought in terms of 'the interconnection of all aspects of human life.'
Marie Curie discovered radioactivity as an atomic property, opening the door to 20th century science.Martha Mecartney is a scientist, engineer and professor committed to helping young women interested in the field of science.Meenakshi Wadhwa studies meteorites and the processes involved in their formation.Merieme Chadid is an astronomer from Morocco who did research at the South Pole.
Mohammed Bah Abba invented a refrigeration device that is not dependent on electricity.Neil A. Armstrong 
was the first man to walk on the moon.
Nikola Tesla was
the father of
many modern inventions.
Norman Borlaug saved billions of lives with his agricultural discoveries.
Orville and Wilbur Wright were brothers determined to build a better flying machine.Patrick Nagatani uses photography and colored lights to promote good health.Paul Farmer  has dedicated his life to treating people in the poorest nations in the worldPaul Munsen
Solar Oven Man
 manufactures sun ovens, which harness the sun's rays to provide an environmentally safe source of energy.
Paul Sipiera led an expedition into Antarctica to find meteorites for NASA.Percy Julian was a groundbreaking African American chemist, inventor, and trailblazer.Philo T. Farnsworth was the inventor of the television.Ramani Sankaranarayanan
and Geeta Vaidyanathan
 
founded CTxGrEn to show villagers how to turn native materials into fuel for electricity.
Ray Kurzweil is an inventor who uses technology to restore health.Reef Ball Foundation restores damaged coral reef systems around the world.Richard Feynman shared the Nobel Prize in Physics for work in the field of quantum electrodynamics. Robert Koch was an important medical researcher of the 19th century.
Rokhaya Gueye treats malaria and
raises awareness about women's health issues in Senegal.
Saeed Awan  
developed a new carpet loom that reduces child labor in Pakistan.
Sandra Begay-Campbell is a Native American engineer who brings solar-powered energy to the Navajo reservation.Shannon Hackett studies the genetic diversity and evolution in tropical birds.
Sir Alexander Fleming saved millions of lives with his discovery of penicillin.Srinivasa Ramanujan made groundbreaking contributions to mathematics.Stephanie Jenouvrier is a population ecologist researching the effects of climate change on emperor penguins.Stephen Hawking is a renowned theoretical physicist who writes about 'black holes'.
Tania Ruiz is an astrophysicist committed to science education and helping women reach their goals.Thais Corral  gives women a voice in their communities through access to communication technology.Therese Koutnik is an inspiration to her sister and a role model for girls who would like to become engineers.Thomas Alva Edison holds the record for number of patents filed.
Thomas Alva Edison 
is considered one of the world's greatest inventors.
Tim Berners-Lee 
invented the World Wide Web.
Tom Chau
Biomedical Engineer
 uses science and technology to maximize opportunities for people with disabilities.
Tom Dibblee is a legendary geologic mapper.
Usha Varanasi is the first woman to lead a Fisheries Science Center. Vint Cerf , Internet pioneer, passionately believes that all people should benefit from the information revolution.Vladimir Kosma Zworykin is called
'The Father of Television'.
Wes Jackson was a professor who returned to the land to advance sustainable agriculture practices.
 
Wilson Bentley was the first person to photograph a single snowflake.XIV Argonauts broadcasted their explorations of the Channel Islands.Zohra Ben Lakhdar is a physicist from Africa who does research on atomic spectroscopy. 

 

Last changed on:3/18/2006 9:12:25 AM