The Doris M. Curtis Outstanding Woman in Science Award, also known as the Subaru Outstanding Woman in Science Award is a prize given annually by the Geological Society of America to "...women who have made a significant impact on the geosciences with their Ph.D. research."[1] The award is named in memory of Doris Malkin Curtis, first female president of the GSA,[2] and sponsored by Subaru.
Recipients of the award are listed below.
2018 | Andrea Balbas | California Institute of Technology | Application of cosmogenic nuclides and argon geochronology to paleoclimate, paleomagnetism, and paleohydrology. | [3] | |
2017 | Sonia M. Tikoo | Rutgers University | Planetary geology - the understanding of the paleomagnetism of lunar rocks and impact craters. | [4] | |
2016 | Christine A. Regalla | Pennsylvania State University | Tectonic evolution of northern Japan. | [5] | |
2015 | Priya M. Ganguli | University of California, Santa Cruz | Processes that influence mercury dynamics in coastal ecosystems. | [6] | |
2014 | Ami L. Ricassi | Oak Ridge National Laboratory | Controls on streamwater dissolved and particulate mercury within three mid-Appalachian forested headwater catchments. | [7] | |
2013 | Whitney M. Behr | University of Texas at Austin | Measurement of flow stress in ductilely deformed rocks in the crust in south-eastern California and southern Spain. | [8] | |
2012 | Phoebe A. Cohen | Harvard University | Precambrian paleontology - eukaryotic fossil groups from the Neoproterozoic. | [9] | |
2011 | Naomi E. Levin | Johns Hopkins University | Understanding how landscapes and terrestrial organisms respond to past climate change. | [10] | |
2010 | Kateryna Klotchko | University of Maryland, College Park | Calibration and theoretical understanding of the boron isotope-pH proxy. | [11] | |
2009 | Jaime D. Barnes | University of New Mexico | Chlorine isotope geochemistry of a wide range of geological materials. | [12] | |
2008 | Lorraine E. Lisiecki | University of California, Santa Barbara | Computational approaches to the comparison and interpretation of paleoclimate records. | [13] | |
2007 | Tanja Bosak | California Institute of Technology | Laboratory models to examine microbial biosignatures in carbonate rocks | [14] | |
2006 | Elizabeth S. Cochran | University of California, Los Angeles | Tidal triggering of earthquakes and crustal active fault zone microcracks. | [15] | |
2005 | Michelle Walvoord | New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology | Revision of the understanding of flow processes in desert regions where water tables are greater than 50 meters deep. | [16] [17] | |
2004 | Costanza Bonadonna | [18] | |||
2003 | Marin K. Clark | ||||
2002 | Miriam E. Katz | Micropaleontology | [19] | ||
2001 | Ingrid Hendy | [20] | |||
2000 | Emily E. Brodsky | ||||
1999 | Carrie E. Schweitzer | [21] |