Knut Aukland Explained

Knut Aukland
Birth Date:1929 3, df=y
Birth Place:Vigmostad, Norway
Death Place:Storetveit, Norway
Resting Place:Storetveit Cemetery
Nationality:Norwegian
Alma Mater:University of Bergen
Occupation:Physiologist
Awards:Fridtjof Nansen Award of Excellence, 2002
Signature:Knut-Aukland signature.png
Signature Size:200

Knut Aukland (28 March 1929 – 24 January 2014) was a Norwegian physiologist. He made significant contributions to renal physiology, particularly in fields of renal blood flow measurement and regulation and transcapillary fluid balance, through his studies of blood circulation in the kidneys.

Education

Aukland finished his secondary in Mandal in 1948 and took the Candidate of Medicine degree at the University of Bergen in 1954.

Medical career

Knut Aukland began his career as a research fellow at Ullevål Hospital in 1958, and was a researcher the rest of his career, except for a year as a physician from 1961 to 1962. He then worked at the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. Back in Norway he took the Doctor Medicinae degree in 1965 with the thesis Studies on intrarenal circulation with special reference to gas exchange.

Aukland was a professor at the University of Bergen from 1970. He became an honorary member of the American Physiological Society in 1982, fellow of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters from 1986 and won the Fridtjof Nansen Excellent Research Award in Science in 2002.[1]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Knut Aukland. Norsk biografisk leksikon. Gunnar. Nicolaysen. Helle, Knut. Kunnskapsforlaget. Oslo. Norwegian. 4 June 2014.