Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Eville Gorham

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Residence
  
USA

Name
  
Eville Gorham

Doctoral advisor
  
W. H. Pearsall

Citizenship
  
Canada, US


Eville Gorham cbsumnedusitescbsumnedufilespublicimages

Born
  
15 October 1925 (age 98) Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada (
1925-10-15
)

Institutions
  
University of Minnesota

Known for
  
Acid rain, peatland biogeochemistry, radioactive fallout

Notable awards
  
Benjamin Franklin Medal G. Evelyn Hutchinson Award Lifetime achievement award, Society of Wetland Scientists

Alma mater
  
Dalhousie University, University College London

Fields
  
Ecology, Limnology, Biogeochemistry

Institution
  
University of Minnesota

Eville Gorham (PhD LlD DSc FAAAS FRSC MNAS FESA) is a Canadian-American scientist whose focus has been understanding the chemistry of fresh waters and the ecology and biogeochemistry of peatlands. In the process, Gorham made a number of practical contributions that included discovering the influence of acid rain in lake acidification, plus the importance of the biological magnification of radioactive fallout isotopes in northern food chains. The former led to legislation and redesign of the power plants of the world to scrub sulfur, and the latter was an early step toward the establishment of an atmospheric nuclear test ban treaty.

Contents

Gorham emphasizes that discovery in science is often the result of chance and serendipity, and encourages students to watch for the opportunities that chance provides. He was recognized by the National Academy of Sciences as a renaissance scholar and has influenced the careers of others.

Life and career

Gorham grew up in Halifax, Nova Scotia, an avid reader drawn to the classroom. His life and career are outlined in a 2015 essay. Briefly, he attended Dalhousie University from 1942 to 1947, receiving a BSc degree in biology and an MSc degree in zoology. His thesis showed the effects of temperature difference in the development of salmon embryos, of later significance for studies of thermal pollution.

At this point, Gorham decided to avoid experimentation that involved harming animals. In 1947, he received an Overseas Science Research Scholarship from the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 and was accepted as a doctoral student of plant ecology at University College, London. In 1948, he married Ada MacLeod, whom he had met while she was researching child nutrition at Dalhousie.

Gorham began his doctoral work studying mineral content of plants in the Lake District and became interested in the acidification of ecosystems. After his PhD, he spent a postdoctoral year in Sweden conducting a project on the waters of a Swedish peatland. After returning to England, he worked for the Freshwater Biological Association in the English Lake District. It was here that he made some of his most significant discoveries regarding acid rain and nuclear fallout.

After the death of his father, Gorham and family returned to Canada, where he took a position in the botany department position at the University of Toronto. With Alan Gordon, he studied the effects of smelter pollution on the forests and lakes around Sudbury. Then in 1962, he accepted a position at the University of Minnesota. It was here that Gorham took up environmental activism and developed courses on the ecological effects of pollution upon ecosystems. Gorham served on multiple environmental committees, including the joint Canadian-U.S. scientific commission under President Carter, and took part in many environmental projects, such as those sponsored by the Royal Society of Canada and U.S. Academy of National Sciences.

Selected works

  • [1]
  • References

    Eville Gorham Wikipedia