E-An Zen Chinese-American professor
Dr. E-An Zen (Chinese : 任以安; pinyin : Rén Yǐ'ān ) was born in Peking , China , May 31, 1928, and came to the U.S. in 1946. He became a citizen in 1963 and from 1990 was an adjunct professor at the University of Maryland .[ 1] He died on March 29, 2014, at the age of 85.[ 2]
He contributed articles to professional journals and was a fellow of the Geological Society of America (Councillor, 1985–88, 1990–93; President, 1991–92); the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the American Academy of Arts and Sciences , the Mineralogical Society of America (Council, 1974–77;Pres., 1975–76). He was a member of the Geological Society of Washington (Pres. 1973), the National Academy of Sciences , and the Mineralogical Association of Canada .[ 3] Zen was active in programs to bring geological knowledge to the general public.
Career
Research fellow at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution , 1955–56; and a research associate, 1956–58. From 1958 to 1959 he was a visiting assistant professor at the University of North Carolina . Geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey from 1959 to 1980, and a Research geologist, 1980–89. Visiting associate professor at the California Institute of Technology , 1962; Crosby Visiting Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , 1973; Harry Hess Senior Visiting Fellow, Princeton University , 1981; and Visiting Fellow, Australian National University , 1991.[ 3]
Zen worked primarily in the northern Appalachians , especially on paleogeographic reconstructions and the origins of exotic terranes in New England . John McPhee once remarked that Zen was "approximately as exotic as the rock he studies."[ 4]
Awards
He received the Arthur L. Day Medal , Geological Society of America , 1986; Roebling Medal, Mineralogical Society of America, 1991; John Coke Medal, Geological Society of London , 1992; and the Distinguished Service Medal, U.S. Department of the Interior , 1979. He was also honored for outstanding contributions to public understanding of geology (American Geological Institute , 1994) and with the Thomas Jefferson Medal, Virginia Museum of Natural History , 1995.[ 3]
External links
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