Biography:Donald Wilhelms
Don Edward Wilhelms | |
---|---|
Born | Los Angeles, California, U.S. | July 5, 1930
Alma mater | Pomona College |
Awards | G.K. Gilbert Award, Shoemaker Distinguished Lunar Scientist Award |
Scientific career | |
Fields | geology |
Institutions | United States Geological Survey |
Don Edward Wilhelms (born July 5, 1930) is a former United States Geological Survey geologist who contributed to geologic mapping of the Earth's moon and to the geologic training of the Apollo astronauts.[1] He is the author of To a Rocky Moon: A Geologist's History of Lunar Exploration (1993),[2] The geologic history of the Moon (1987),[3] and he co-authored the Geologic Map of the Near Side of the Moon (1971) with John F. McCauley.[4] Wilhelms also contributed to Apollo Over the Moon: A View from Orbit (NASA SP-362).[5] He has also contributed to the study of Mars (including Mariner 9), Mercury, and Ganymede.
Biography
He was born July 5, 1930. Wilhelms was the recipient of the G. K. Gilbert Award in 1988. He received the Shoemaker Distinguished Lunar Scientist Award in 2010 at the Ames Research Center.[6]
References
- ↑ https://www.aip.org/history-programs/niels-bohr-library/oral-histories/5064
- ↑ To a Rocky Moon: A Geologist's History of Lunar Exploration. Don E. Wilhelms, University of Arizona Press (1993). ISBN:978-0816510658
- ↑ The geologic history of the Moon, 1987, Wilhelms, Don E.; with sections by McCauley, John F.; Trask, Newell J. USGS Professional Paper: 1348. (online)
- ↑ Geologic Map of the Near Side of the Moon, USGS I-703, Don E. Wilhelms and John F. McCauley, 1971 (L&PI web version)
- ↑ Apollo Over the Moon: A View from Orbit (online version) (NASA SP-362), 1978
- ↑ http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/news/releases/2010/10-61AR.html
External links
- Interview with Donald Wilhelms for NOVA series: To the Moon WGBH Educational Foundation, raw footage, 1998
- To A Rocky Moon, 1993, PDF version available from L&PI
- The geologic history of the Moon, 1987, PDF version available from USGS
- Astrogeology Science Center page on Wilhelms