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Peter Barrett (researcher)

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Name
  
Peter Barrett


Peter barrett clever classrooms oslo 15 june 2015 summary


Peter Barrett, NZAM, is a geologist who first rose to fame for discovering the first tetrapod fossils in Antarctica in 1967.

Contents

Barrett first went to the Antarctica with the University of Wisconsin in 1962, but it was during his PhD with the Institute of Polar Studies at Ohio State University in 1966 and 1968 that Barrett discovered the early Triassic period tetrapod remains. After finishing his PhD, he took up a postdoctoral fellowship at Victoria University of Wellington to run an Antarctic expedition. Recent research has been core sampling in the Antarctic to determine historical conditions.

He is currently professor in the Antarctic Research Centre at Victoria University of Wellington and was director of the ARC from its founding in 1972 until 2007. One of his PhD students was Nancy Bertler. For many years he was the New Zealand representative on Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research.

Awards and honors

  • 2004 the Marsden Medal for his lifetime contributions to science in New Zealand. In 2006 he received the SCAR President's Medal for Outstanding Achievement in Antarctic Science.
  • 2006 the SCAR President's Medal for Outstanding Achievement in Antarctic Science.
  • 2010 the New Zealand Antarctic Medal.
  • 2011 made an Honorary Fellow of the Geological Society.
  • References

    Peter Barrett (researcher) Wikipedia


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