Melvin Calvin Born: 8-Apr-1911 Birthplace: St. Paul, MN Died: 8-Jan-1997 Location of death: Berkeley, CA Cause of death: Heart Failure
Gender: Male Religion: Jewish Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Chemist Nationality: United States Executive summary: Deciphered photosynthesis Melvin Calvin showed how to use the radioactive isotope carbon-14 as a tracer to study complex organic chemical systems, detailing the path of carbon in photosynthesis, laying out the what is now called the Calvin cycle of carbon movements through a plant. In his experiments, plant cells were allowed to absorb carbon dioxide that had been marked with the radioisotope carbon-14, then immersed in boiling alcohol, allowing the synthesized compounds to be identified. His work, first published in 1950, changed the scientific understanding of photosynthesis, establishing that sunlight causes a reaction in a plant's chlorophyll (not in its carbon dioxide as was previously believed) to manufacture organic compounds.
He won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1961, and also conducted respected research into brain chemistry, chemical carcinogenesis, the chemical evolution of life, the feasibility of using oil-producing plants as a renewable source of energy, moon rock analysis, organic geochemistry, radiation chemistry, and the role of chlorophyll in quantum conversion. His parents were Russian immigrants who ran a neighborhood grocery store in Detroit, and Calvin said he first became intrigued with chemistry by wondering at the chemical make-up of the soaps and breads on the shop's shelves. His college education was delayed by the Great Depression, during which he dropped out of college and worked for several years at a brass factory in Detroit. Sister: Sandra Davis Wife: Genevieve Elle Jemtegaard (m. 4-Oct-1942, d. 1987 cancer, two daughters, one son) Daughter: Elin Sowle Daughter: Karole Campbell Son: Noel
University: Central High School, Detroit, MI (1927) University: BS Chemistry, Michigan College of Mining and Technology (1931) University: PhD Chemistry, University of Minnesota (1935) Scholar: University of Manchester (1935-37) Teacher: Chemistry, University of California at Berkeley (1937-47) Administrator: Chemical Biodynamics Lab, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (1946-63) Professor: Chemistry, University of California at Berkeley (1947-63) Professor: Molecular Biology, University of California at Berkeley (1963-71) Professor: Chemistry, University of California at Berkeley (1971-80)
Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, 1935-37 Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1961 Davy Medal 1964 Priestley Medal 1978 American Institute of Chemists Gold Medal 1979
ACS Oesper Award 1981
National Medal of Science 1989 Manhattan Project American Academy of Arts and Sciences American Chemical Society President, 1971 American Philosophical Society American Society of Plant Physiologists President, 1963-64
German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina Foreign Member
The Japan Academy Foreign Member
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory National Academy of Sciences National Defense Research Committee
Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences Foreign Member
Royal Society Foreign Member Society for General Systems Research Member of the Board of Dow Chemical
Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society Lithuanian Ancestry (paternal)
Russian Ancestry
Heart Attack 1949 Heart Attack 8-Jan-1997 (fatal)
Author of books:
The Theory of Organic Chemistry (1940, non-fiction) Isotopic Carbon (1949, non-fiction) The Chemistry of Metal Chelate Compounds (1952, non-fiction) The Path of Carbon in Photosynthesis (1957, non-fiction) The Photosynthesis of Carbon Compounds (1962, non-fiction; with James Bassham) Following the Trail of Light: A Scientific Odyssey (1992, memoir)
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