Background
He was born in Napier, New Zealand and studied at a farming college in Invercargill, where he won a bursary to study Agricultural Sciences at the University of New Zealand.
professor of veterinary physiology
He was born in Napier, New Zealand and studied at a farming college in Invercargill, where he won a bursary to study Agricultural Sciences at the University of New Zealand.
After gaining a Bachelor of Science in electrophysiology and neuroscience at the University of Otago in Dunedin, he moved to Aberdeen to join the Rowett Research Institute, an agricultural research facility of the University of Aberdeen. There he was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy for his studies on the vagus nerve of sheep.
There he was awarded a research scholarship to continue his studies in Britain. He moved to Edinburgh in 1954, where he began as a lecturer in physiology at the Medical School of Edinburgh University before accepting the Chair of Veterinary Physiology at the Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies of Edinburgh University in 1962. He played the major role in establishing the school, commonly known as the Dick Vet, into an internationally recognised centre of excellence, before becoming dean of the School.
He remained as professor emeritus of veterinary physiology until his death.
In 1958 he became the first scientist to demonstrate electrical recordings from individual C fibres, the thinnest of the body’s nerves and also defined the function of the various sensory receptors in the skin which detect touch, tickle, heat and pain. One of the receptors is now named after him.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1978 and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. He died in March, 2012.
Royal Society.
Married Betty J. McCurdy in 1952.