{"title":"2014年Joseph a. cushman奖给Stephen j. culver","authors":"M. Buzas","doi":"10.2113/GSJFR.45.1.1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Stephen J. Culver is the 2014 recipient of the prestigious Joseph A. Cushman Award for Outstanding Achievement in Foraminiferal Research. Stephen is the quintessential foraminiferalogist. His contributions range temporally from Early Cambrian to Recent, environmentally from the intertidal to the abyss and geographically from the Atlantic Coastal Plain of the United States to Malaysia. His contributions (over 150 publications) range from detailed studies on very specific topics to broad insightful reviews to the geology of entire countries (Sierra Le-one). Steve has accumulated knowledge first hand from extensive field work ranging from the Outer Banks of North Carolina to Africa, as well as in the deep-diving submersible, Alvin . The prerequisites for becoming a successful geologist/paleontologist appeared early on when he was a boy. He loved collecting and learning about fossils and was fascinated by maps. After earning his Ph.D. in 1976 at the age of 24 from the University of Wales at Swansea, U.K., he taught for two years at the University of Sierra Leone. As a post-doctoral fellow at the Smithsonian Institution from 1978–81, Stephen undertook and completed one of the most ambitious foraminiferal projects ever attempted. Using all the data (691 papers from 1839–1979) ever published, catalogs on the distribution of Recent foraminifera on the continental margins of North America were compiled on a primitive mainframe computer. The data were transmitted from the Cushman Collection, Todd Library, and card catalogs over a phone line using a teletype machine. At one point, after months of data entry, the entire file went missing. After a few hours of utter anguish, Culver was relieved to find out that the file had …","PeriodicalId":0,"journal":{"name":"","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2015-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.2113/GSJFR.45.1.1","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"2014 JOSEPH A. CUSHMAN AWARD TO STEPHEN J. CULVER\",\"authors\":\"M. Buzas\",\"doi\":\"10.2113/GSJFR.45.1.1\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Stephen J. Culver is the 2014 recipient of the prestigious Joseph A. Cushman Award for Outstanding Achievement in Foraminiferal Research. Stephen is the quintessential foraminiferalogist. His contributions range temporally from Early Cambrian to Recent, environmentally from the intertidal to the abyss and geographically from the Atlantic Coastal Plain of the United States to Malaysia. His contributions (over 150 publications) range from detailed studies on very specific topics to broad insightful reviews to the geology of entire countries (Sierra Le-one). Steve has accumulated knowledge first hand from extensive field work ranging from the Outer Banks of North Carolina to Africa, as well as in the deep-diving submersible, Alvin . The prerequisites for becoming a successful geologist/paleontologist appeared early on when he was a boy. He loved collecting and learning about fossils and was fascinated by maps. After earning his Ph.D. in 1976 at the age of 24 from the University of Wales at Swansea, U.K., he taught for two years at the University of Sierra Leone. As a post-doctoral fellow at the Smithsonian Institution from 1978–81, Stephen undertook and completed one of the most ambitious foraminiferal projects ever attempted. Using all the data (691 papers from 1839–1979) ever published, catalogs on the distribution of Recent foraminifera on the continental margins of North America were compiled on a primitive mainframe computer. The data were transmitted from the Cushman Collection, Todd Library, and card catalogs over a phone line using a teletype machine. At one point, after months of data entry, the entire file went missing. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
Stephen J. Culver是2014年著名的Joseph A. Cushman有孔虫研究杰出成就奖的获得者。斯蒂芬是典型的有孔虫学家。他的贡献从时间上的早寒武纪到近代,从环境上的潮间带到深渊,从地理上的美国大西洋沿岸平原到马来西亚。他的贡献(超过150篇出版物)范围从对非常具体的主题的详细研究到对整个国家(塞拉利昂)的地质的广泛而深刻的评论。史蒂夫从广泛的野外工作中积累了第一手的知识,从北卡罗来纳的外海岸到非洲,以及在深潜潜水器“阿尔文”号上。成为一名成功的地质学家/古生物学家的先决条件在他还是个孩子的时候就已经出现了。他喜欢收集和学习化石,并对地图着迷。1976年,24岁的他在英国斯旺西的威尔士大学获得博士学位后,在塞拉利昂大学任教两年。1978年至1981年,作为史密森学会的博士后研究员,斯蒂芬承担并完成了有史以来最雄心勃勃的有孔虫项目之一。利用所有已发表的数据(1839-1979年间的691篇论文),在一台原始的大型计算机上编制了北美大陆边缘最近有孔虫分布的目录。这些数据来自库什曼收藏、托德图书馆和卡片目录,通过电话线使用电传打字机传送。在输入了几个月的数据后,整个文件一度消失了。经过几个小时的极度痛苦,卡尔弗终于松了一口气,因为他发现那份文件……
Stephen J. Culver is the 2014 recipient of the prestigious Joseph A. Cushman Award for Outstanding Achievement in Foraminiferal Research. Stephen is the quintessential foraminiferalogist. His contributions range temporally from Early Cambrian to Recent, environmentally from the intertidal to the abyss and geographically from the Atlantic Coastal Plain of the United States to Malaysia. His contributions (over 150 publications) range from detailed studies on very specific topics to broad insightful reviews to the geology of entire countries (Sierra Le-one). Steve has accumulated knowledge first hand from extensive field work ranging from the Outer Banks of North Carolina to Africa, as well as in the deep-diving submersible, Alvin . The prerequisites for becoming a successful geologist/paleontologist appeared early on when he was a boy. He loved collecting and learning about fossils and was fascinated by maps. After earning his Ph.D. in 1976 at the age of 24 from the University of Wales at Swansea, U.K., he taught for two years at the University of Sierra Leone. As a post-doctoral fellow at the Smithsonian Institution from 1978–81, Stephen undertook and completed one of the most ambitious foraminiferal projects ever attempted. Using all the data (691 papers from 1839–1979) ever published, catalogs on the distribution of Recent foraminifera on the continental margins of North America were compiled on a primitive mainframe computer. The data were transmitted from the Cushman Collection, Todd Library, and card catalogs over a phone line using a teletype machine. At one point, after months of data entry, the entire file went missing. After a few hours of utter anguish, Culver was relieved to find out that the file had …