Australian Academy of Science

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Shine Dome

The Australian Academy of Science (AAS) was founded in 1954 by a group of distinguished Australians, including Australian Fellows of the Royal Society of London1. The first president was Sir Mark Oliphant. The Academy is modeled after the Royal Society and operates under a Royal Charter1; as such it is an independent body, but has government endorsement. The Academy Secretariat is in Canberra, at the Shine Dome.

The objective of the Academy is to promote science. It does so through a range of activities, including recognizing outstanding contributions to science by issuing awards, education and public awareness though a variety of media, contributing to the formation of science policy, and creating opportunities for international scientific exchange.

Contents

Fellows

The Fellowship of the Australian Academy of Science is made up of about 350 Australian scientists. Scientists judged by their peers to have made an exceptional contribution to knowledge in their field may be elected to Fellowship of the Academy. Sixteen new Fellows may be elected every year.

No more than two Fellows may be elected every three years on the basis of distinguished contributions to science by means other than personal research. A small number of distinguished foreign scientists with substantial connections to Australian science are elected as Corresponding Members.

Fellows are often denoted with the letters FAA (Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science) after their name.

Foundation Fellows

When the Academy was founded in 1954 there were 24 members, known as the Foundation Fellows.

Name Field
Keith Edward Bullen Mathematics and geophysics
Frank Macfarlane Burnet Virology and immunology; Nobel laurate
David Guthrie Catcheside Genetics
Thomas MacFarland Cherry Mathematics
Ian Clunies Ross Parasitology and science administration
Edmund Alfred Cornish Statistics
John Carew Eccles Neuroscience; Nobel laureate
Edwin Sherbon Hills Geology
Leonard George Holden Huxley Physics
Raymond James Wood Le Fèvre Chemistry
Max Rudolf Lemberg Biochemistry
Hedley Ralph Marston Biochemistry
Leslie Harold Martin Physics
David Forbes Martyn Physics
Douglas Mawson Geology
Alexander John Nicholson Entomology
Mark Oliphant Physics
Joseph Lade Pawsey Radiophysics and astronomy
James Arthur Prescott Agricultural science
Albert Cherbury David Rivett Chemistry
Thomas Gerald Room Mathematics
Sydney Sunderland Neuroscience
Oscar Werner Tiegs Zoology
Richard van der Riet Woolley Astronomy

Presidents

Awards

The following medals are awarded annually:

  • Pawsey Medal, to a young physicist;
  • Gottschalk Medal, to a young medical researcher;
  • Fenner Medal, to a young biologist.

Other awards include:

The Shine Dome

The Shine Dome (previously known as Becker House) is a well-known Canberra landmark, notable for its unusual structure. It was designed by architect Sir Roy Grounds, of architectural firm Grounds, Romberg and Boyd. When completed in 1959 its 45.75m-diameter dome was the largest in Australia.

On 1 December 1956, the Academy's building design committee met in Adelaide to look over plans submitted by six architects. The plan accepted involved a 45 ton reinforced concrete dome, which had to be supported by 16 thin supports. The concrete is approximately 60cm thick at the base supports, and 10cm at the top. The dome supports itself, with no internal wall holding it up. It cost 200,000 pounds to build. The foundation stone, laid on 2 May 1958 by Prime Minister of Australia, Robert Gordon Menzies, was originally part of the pier of the Great Melbourne Telescope constructed in 1869 under the supervision of the Royal Society and transferred to Mount Stromlo Observatory in the 1940s.

The building was named Becker House, for benefactor and Fellow of the Academy Sir Jack Ellerton Becker, in 1962. In 2000, it was renamed in honour of Fellow John Shine, who donated one million dollars to renovate the dome.

The interior contains two floors, and the main auditorium, the Ian Wark Theatre, seats 156 people.

Photo Gallery

Other learned Academies

There are three other learned Academies in Australia, those of Humanities (Australian Academy of the Humanities), Social Science (Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia) and Technological Sciences and Engineering (Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering). The four Academies cooperate through the National Academies Forum, formed in 1995.

References

  1. ^ a b "The Charter". Australian Academy of Science. Retrieved on 2008-09-22.

See also

External links

Coordinates: 35°17′1.2″S 149°7′21.4″E / -35.283667, 149.122611

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 25 September 2008, at 07:50.

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