• Source: Harland G. Wood
    • Harland Goff Wood (September 2, 1907 – September 12, 1991) was an American biochemist notable for proving in 1935 that animals, humans and bacteria fixed carbon from carbon dioxide in the metabolic pathway to succinate.
      (Previously CO2 fixation had been thought to occur only in plants and a few unusual autotrophic bacteria.)


      Awards and honours


      Wood was a recipient of the National Medal of Science.
      He was on the President's Science Advisory Committee under Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard Nixon.
      He was also a member of the National Academy of Sciences, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and of the Biochemical Society of Japan.
      He was also first director of the department of biochemistry at the School of Medicine and dean of sciences, Case Western Reserve University.


      Chronology


      1907: born in Delavan, MN, to Inez Goff and William Clark Wood
      1931: B.A. Macalester College
      1935: Ph.D. Iowa State University
      1936-1943: taught Bacteriology at Iowa State University
      1943-1946: taught Physiology at the University of Minnesota
      1946-67: director of the Department of Biochemistry at the School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University


      References

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