Vening Meinesz Medal
The Vening Meinesz Medal is an annual award for outstanding research in geodesy.
Background
[edit]The medal, inaugurated in 1994, has been awarded by the European Geosciences Union (EGU) since 2004, and before that by the European Geophysical Society (EGS).[1] The medal is named in honor of Felix Andries Vening Meinesz, a Dutch geophysicists and geodesist, famous for his invention enabling precise measurements of gravity at sea.[2] The portrait medal was designed by the Hungarian artist József Kótai ,[1] renowned for his work as a medalist, goldsmith, and silversmith.
The medal should not be confused with the NWO Vening Meinesz Prijs, a prize given, every two years, to outstanding young scientists who work in the geosciences and are employed in the Netherlands.[3]
Recipients
[edit]- 1998 Reiner Rummel
- 1999 Anny Cazenave
- 2000 Ivan I. Mueller
- 2002 Georges Balmino
- 2002 Christoph Reigber
- 2003 Véronique Dehant
- 2004 John M. Wahr
- 2005 Martine Feissel-Vernier
- 2006 Gerhard Beutler
- 2007 Thomas A. Herring
- 2008 Carl Christian Tscherning
- 2009 Susanna Zerbini
- 2010 Philip L. Woodworth
- 2011 Harald Schuh
- 2012 Che-Kwan Shum
- 2013 Zuheir Altamimi
- 2014 Reinhard Dietrich
- 2015 Geoffrey Blewitt
- 2016 Srinivas Bettadpur
- 2017 Isabella Velicogna
- 2018 Markus Rothacher
- 2019 Tonie van Dam
- 2020 Willi Freeden
- 2021 Christopher Jekeli
- 2022 Peter J. G. Teunissen
- 2023 Jürgen Müller
- 2024 Jeffrey T. Freymueller[4]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Vening Meinesz Medal". Awards & medals, European Geosciences Union (EGU).
- ^ Vlaar, Nicolaas Jacob (1966). Vening Meinesz, a Pioneer in Earth Sciences, AGU Geophysical Monograph 60. International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG). pp. xi–xvi. (reprinted at EGU website)
- ^ "Vening Meinesz Prijs". Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NWO).
- ^ "EGU announces its 2024 awards and medals!". News, European Geosciences Union (EGU). 16 November 2023.