The selection committee for the 'Martha T. Muse Prize for Science and Policy in Antarctica' announces that the 2014 prize has been awarded to Tim Naish.
The prize, awarded by the Tinker Foundation and administered by the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR), is presented to an individual in the fields of Antarctic science or policy who has demonstrated potential for sustained and significant contributions that will enhance the understanding and/or preservation of Antarctica.
Tim Naish has been awarded the 2014 Muse Prize, for his outstanding research in understanding Antarctica's response to past and present climate change and the role of Antarctica's ice sheets in global sea-level change through time. He led the first season of the ambitious and highly successful Antarctic Drilling Program (ANDRILL) where his international team pioneered innovative drilling technology to obtain sedimentary records of the past 13 million years, paving the way for further successful drilling in previously inaccessible ice-covered areas. As Chair of the ANDRILL Steering Committee, he continued to be actively involved in overseeing the program, including securing funding for the next phase. More recently, he has played an influential role in the process of translating science into policy as a lead author on the Paleoclimate chapter of the 5th Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. He is currently Director of the Antarctic Research Centre, Victoria University of Wellington, which continues to develop and has more than trebled its capacity under his direction.
The prize ceremony will be held during the SCAR 2014 Open Science Conference, which will convene 25-28 August in Auckland, New Zealand.
For more information about Naish and past award recipients, please see the Muse Prize website: http://www.museprize.org/news.html.
For more information about the Martha T. Muse Prize, contact:
Renuka Badhe
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