- Laurence McKinley Gould
Infobox Scientist
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birth_date =August 22 1896
birth_place =Lacota, Michigan
death_date =June 21 1995
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nationality = American
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field =geology polar exploration
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footnotes =Laurence McKinley Gould (
August 22 1896 -June 21 1995 ) was an Americangeologist ,educator , andpolar explorer .Gould was born in
Lacota, Michigan on August 22, 1896. After completing high school inSouth Haven, Michigan in 1914, he went toBoca Raton, Florida and taught grades 1 to 8 in a one-room school for two years, while saving money for college. He enrolled at theUniversity of Michigan in 1916, but interrupted his education the following year to enlist in theU.S. Army following U.S. entry intoWorld War I . He served in the Army until 1919, when he returned to the university to resume his studies.After graduating in 1921 with a B.S. degree in geology he joined the University of Michigan faculty as a geology instructor while continuing his studies there. During his undergraduate days, he was the founder of the Beta Tau Chapter of the
Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity. He also was an active member in the university Society of Les Voyageurs. He received an M.A. degree in 1923 and a D.Sc. degree in 1925, with adissertation on the geology ofUtah 'sLa Sal Mountains , and he advanced to assistant professor in 1926, and to associate professor in 1930.In the summer of 1926 Gould undertook his first trip to the
Arctic , serving as assistant director and geologist with the University of MichiganGreenland Expedition. The following summer he was geographer and topologist forGeorge P. Putnam 's expedition to survey the coast ofBaffin Island in Arctic Canada.During 1928 to 1930 he accompanied Admiral Richard E. Byrd on Byrd's first expedition to
Antarctica , serving as the expedition's chief scientist and second-in-command. On November 4, 1929 Gould and five companions began a grueling 2-1/2 month, 1500-mile dog-sledge journey into theQueen Maud Mountains , with the primary purpose of providing ground support and possible emergency assistance for Byrd's historic first airplane flight over theSouth Pole and a secondary purpose of conducting the first geological and glaciological survey of an area that Gould called "a veritable paradise for a geologist."cite web
title=Laurence McKinley Gould Online Exhibit
publisher=Carleton College
accessdate=2007-08-16
url=http://www.acad.carleton.edu/campus/archives/exhibit/Gould/] After the successful flight over the Pole in November 1929, Gould and his companions climbedMount Fridtjof Nansen to investigate its geology. The layered sandstones that Gould found in outcrops at the mountain's peak helped confirm that Antarctica was linked geologically to the Earth's other continents.The expedition's progress had been reported regularly in the news media, and when the members of the expedition returned to the United States on July 19, 1930, they received a hero's welcome. Recognitions that Gould received upon his return included a
Congressional Gold Medal , the 1930David Livingstone Gold Medal of theAmerican Geographical Society , and a Medal of the Mayor's Committee of theCity of New York .On August 2, 1930, two weeks after returning from Antarctica, Gould was married to Margaret ("Peg") Rice in
Ann Arbor, Michigan . She had been a student in one of his classes at the University of Michigan, .In the months and years after returning from Antarctica, Gould traveled around the country giving lectures on the experience. His 1931 book "Cold: the Record of an Antarctic Sledge Journey" described the dog-sledge trek, recalling blinding
blizzard s,snow bridge s that collapsed into deep crevasses, and weather so cold that it nearly froze a person's eyelids shut. Additionally, he published several scientific articles about the findings of the Byrd expedition.In 1932 Gould accepted a position as full professor and chairman of the geology department at
Carleton College , so the Goulds moved toMinnesota . "Larry" Gould was a popular professor at Carleton and was named president of the college in 1945, holding that position until 1962. In 1963 he retired to Tucson, Arizona and taught Glaciology at the University of Arizona.He also served as
President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science .During his lifetime, Gould was the recipient of 26 honorary degrees.cite web
title=Laurence McKinley Gould Online Exhibit
publisher=Carleton College
accessdate=2007-08-16
url=http://www.acad.carleton.edu/campus/archives/exhibit/Gould/] In 1995 Carleton College renamed its college library the "Laurence McKinley Gould Library" in his honor. The R/V Laurence M. Gould, a 76-m-long ice-strengthened research ship built in 1997 for theNational Science Foundation and designed for year-round polar operations, is named in his honor.cite web
publisher=National Science Foundation
accessdate=2007-08-16
url=http://www.nsf.gov/od/opp/support/gould.jsp
title=R/V Laurence M. Gould]Bibliography
*Gould, Laurence M. "Cold: the Record of an Antarctic Sledge Journey". Brewer, Warren & Putnam, 1931.
References
External links
*Hillemann, Eric. [http://www.acad.carleton.edu/campus/archives/exhibit/Gould/ "Laurence McKinley Gould Online Exhibit"] . Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota. Retrieved November 26, 2006.
*National Science Foundation, Office of Polar Programs. [http://www.nsf.gov/od/opp/support/gould.jsp "R/V Laurence M. Gould"] . Retrieved November 26, 2006.
*University of Michigan Department of Geological Sciences. [http://www.geo.lsa.umich.edu/geonews/archive/9512/129502.html "Laurence M. Gould-a great alumnus"] . "Geoscience News", December 1995. Retrieved November 26, 2006.
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