Daniel I. Arnon AKA Daniel Israel Arnon Born: 14-Nov-1910 Birthplace: Warsaw, Poland Died: 20-Dec-1994 Location of death: Berkeley, CA Cause of death: Heart Failure
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Biologist, Chemist Nationality: United States Executive summary: Photophosphorylation Military service: US Army Air Corps (1943-46, Maj.) Born in Poland, biochemist Daniel I. Arnon was drawn by the works of Jack London and came to America at the age of 18. He took a Greyhound bus to California and enrolled at Chaffey Junior College of Agriculture, then studied plant nutrition at the University of California at Berkeley. Already in his thirties during World War II, Arnon volunteered to serve in the US Army Air Corps and was stationed on a barren Pacific island, where he developed techniques that grew crops in gravel and water to feed his fellow airmen. Over his career, his research showed the importance of molybdenum, vanadium, and other trace elements in plants and algae, and in 1954 he became the first scientist to complete photosynthesis outside of living cells. He coined the term photophosphorylation (short for photosynthetic phosphorylation), and his work led to breakthroughs in electron flow theory, the understanding of nitrogen fixation and hydrogen evolution, and identification of ferredoxin as a part of photosynthesis. Wife: Lucile Jane Soulé (m. 24-Feb-1940, d. 1986,three daughters, two sons) Daughter: Anne Arnon Hodge Son: Dennis Soulé Arnon (mathematician) Daughter: Nancy Arnon Agnew Daughter: Ruth Soulé Arnon Hanham Son: Stephen S. Arnon (physician)
University: Chaffey College (attended 1931-32) University: BS Biochemistry, University of California at Berkeley (1932) University: PhD Plant Physiology, University of California at Berkeley (1936) Teacher: Cell Physiology, University of California at Berkeley (1941-46) Professor: Cell Physiology, University of California at Berkeley (1946-78) Scholar: Fellowship, Cambridge University (1947-48) Scholar: Fellowship, Max-Planck Institut für Zellphysiologie (1955-56) Scholar: Fellowship, Stanford University (1962-63)
National Medal of Science 1973 Fulbright (1955-56) Guggenheim Fellowship (1947-48) Guggenheim Fellowship (1962-63) American Society of Plant Physiologists President (1952-53)
National Institutes of Health National Science Foundation National Academy of Sciences American Academy of Arts and Sciences American Association for the Advancement of Science Naturalized US Citizen 31-Mar-1941 Polish Ancestry
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