The Milutin Milankovic Medal is an annual award in Earth science presented by the European Geosciences Union (EGU). The award was introduced in 1993 by the European Geophysical Society (EGS). After a merger with the European Union of Geosciences in 2003, the award has been given by the Climate: Past, Present and Future Division. The medal is awarded to scientists for outstanding research in the field of long-term climate change and modeling. It is named after the Serb geophysicist Milutin Milanković in recognition of his academic and editorial services.[1]
Milutin Milankovic Medal | |
---|---|
Awarded for | For outstanding research in long-term climatic changes and modelling |
First awarded | 1993 |
Website | Milutin Milankovic Medal |
Recipients
edit- 1993: Bert R. J. Bolin
- 1994: André L. Berger
- 1995: Jean-Claude Duplessy
- 1996: Lennart Bengtsson
- 1997: Jean Jouzel
- 1998: Syukuro Manabe
- 1999: Sir Nicholas J. Shackleton
- 2000: Robert Sadourny
- 2001: John E. Kutzbach
- 2002: I. Colin Prentice
- 2003: George Kukla, John Imbrie
- 2004: Frederik Hilgen
- 2005: Martin Claussen
- 2006: Michael Sarnthein
- 2007: Wang Pinxian
- 2008: William Richard Peltier
- 2009: Pascale Braconnot
- 2010: James D. Hays
- 2011: Andrey Ganopolski
- 2012: Wolfgang Berger
- 2013: Didier Paillard
- 2014: Maureen E. Raymo
- 2015: Paul J. Valdes
- 2016: James C. Zachos
- 2017: Axel Timmermann
- 2018: David A. Hodell
- 2019: Jacques Laskar
- 2020: Valérie Masson-Delmotte
- 2021: Ayako Abe-Ouchi
- 2022: Hai Cheng
- 2023: Bette L. Otto-Bliesner
References
edit- ^ "EGU - Awards & medals - Milutin Milankovic Medal". European Geosciences Union. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
This medal was established by the Climate: Past, Present & Future Division in recognition of the scientific and editorial achievements of Milutin Milankovic. It is awarded to scientists for their outstanding research in long-term climatic changes and modelling.