Background
Sam Epstein was born in Kobryn, Belarus, then part of Poland, and as a child his family emigrated to Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Biogeochemist university professor
Sam Epstein was born in Kobryn, Belarus, then part of Poland, and as a child his family emigrated to Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Bachelor of Science, University Manitoba, Canada, 1941. Master of Science, University Manitoba, Canada, 1942. Doctor of Philosophy in Physical Chemistry, McGill University of Canberra, 1944.
Doctor of Laws (honorary), University Manitoba, 1980.
He was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1977, and a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1997. After receiving a Bachelor of Science in Geology and Chemistry (1941) and a Master of Science His thesis focused on the synthesis and reaction kinetics of high explosives, including RDX and HMX. Epstein subsequently worked for the Canadian Atomic Energy Project for several years.
In 1947, Epstein moved to the United States to begin a research fellowship with Harold Urey"s group at the University of Chicago.
While at Chicago, Epstein, along with Ralph Buchsbaum, Heinz A. Lowenstam, C. R. McKinney and others developed the carbonate-water isotopic temperature scale, allowing ancient ocean temperatures to be determined from precise measurements of 18O/16O in geological samples of calcium carbonate. This method is still the most widely used geochemical climate proxy for locations and times not sampled in ice core records.
Epstein joined the faculty of the California Institute of Technology in 1952, and continued to explore the new field of stable isotope geochemistry. He and his students used mass spectrometry to study natural variations in the isotopic abundances of hydrogen, carbon, oxygen and silicon, with applications to archeology, biochemistry, climatology, and geology.
He was awarded the Wollaston Medal of the Geological Society of London in 1993.
Epstein remained at Caltech as a Professor and Professor Emeritus until shortly before his death on September 17, 2001. The European Association of Geochemistry quinquennially awards a Science Innovation Award medal named in his honour for work in isotope geochemistry.
Fellow American Academy Arts Sciences, American Geophysical Union, European Union Geophysical Society (honorary gdn., Urey medal 1995), Royal Society of Canada (foreign fellow). Member National Academy of Sciences, Geological Society of America (Arthur L. Day medal 1978), Geochem. Society (Goldschmidt medal 1977).