Harold Clayton Urey
Award Name : National Medal of Science
Year of Award : 1964
Award for : Chemistry
Location : Walkerton, Indiana, United States
Harold Clayton Urey was an
American physical chemist whose pioneering work on isotopes earned him the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1934 for the discovery of deuterium. Born on April
29, 1893 in Walkerton, Indiana, Urey studied thermodynamics under Gilbert N.
Lewis at the University of California. After he received his PhD in 1923, he
was awarded a fellowship by the American-Scandinavian Foundation to study at
the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen. He spent two years as a research
chemist in industry before returning to Montana as an instructor in Chemistry.
In 1921 he entered the University of California to work under Professor Lewis
and he was awarded the degree of Ph.D. in Chemistry in 1923. In 1964 he
received the National Medal of Science. He died at La Jolla, California, and is
buried in the Fairfield Cemetery in DeKalb County, Indiana on January 5, 1981
(aged 87).