Alexander Agassiz Medal
The Alexander Agassiz Medal is awarded every three years by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences for an original contribution in the science of oceanography. It was established in 1911 by Sir John Murray in honor of his friend, the scientist Alexander Agassiz.Recipients
Source:
- Johan Hjort
- Albert I, Prince of Monaco
- Charles D. Sigsbee
- Otto S. Pettersson
- Wilhelm Bjerknes
- Max Weber
- Vagn W. Ekman
- J. Stanley Gardiner
- Johannes Schmidt
- Henry B. Bigelow
- Albert Defant
- Bjørn Helland-Hansen
- Haakon H. Gran
- T. Wayland Vaughan
- Martin Knudsen
- Edgar J. Allen
- Harald U. Sverdrup
- Frank R. Lillie
- Columbus Iselin II
- Joseph Proudman
- Felix A. Vening Meinesz
- Thomas G. Thompson
- Harry A. Marmer
- H. W. Harvey
- Maurice Ewing
- Alfred C. Redfield
- Martin W. Johnson
- Anton F. Bruun
- George E. R. Deacon
- Roger R. Revelle
- Sir Edward Bullard
- Carl H. Eckart
- Frederick C. Fuglister
- Seiya Uyeda
- John H. Steele
- Walter H. Munk
- Henry M. Stommel
- Wallace S. Broecker
- Cesare Emiliani
- Joseph L. Reid
- Victor V. Vacquier
- Walter C. Pitman, III
- Charles Shipley Cox
- Klaus Wyrtki
- James R. Ledwell
- Sallie W. Chisholm
- David M. Karl
- Dean Roemmich