G Hepburn Wilson - meaning and definition. What is G Hepburn Wilson
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What (who) is G Hepburn Wilson - definition

AMERICAN ASTRONOMER (1918-2012)
A. G. Wilson; A.G. Wilson

G. Hepburn Wilson         
  • Dance instructor George Hepburn Wilson (b. 1875) with his niece, Doris Durling
AMERICAN DANCE WRITER
George Hepburn Wilson (June 17, 1875 – ?) was an American dance instructor and an author and editor of Modern Dance magazine.
Bonaventure Hepburn         
SCOTTISH PHILOLOGIST AND MINIM FRIAR (1573-1620)
James Bonaventure Hepburn; James Hepburn (philologist); Bonaventure Hepburn (philologist)
Bonaventure Hepburn (born James Hepburn; 14 July 1573, East Lothian – October 1620 or 1621, Venice, Italy) was a Scottish Roman Catholic linguist, lexicographer, philologist and biblical commentator. He was a scholar of some renown and rose to the post of Keeper of Oriental Books and Manuscripts at the Vatican.
Nerida Wilson         
ZOOLOGIST
Nerida G. Wilson; Nerida Gaye Wilson
Nerida Gaye Wilson is an invertebrate marine molecular biologist at the Western Australian Museum who has interests in diversity, systematics, phylogeny, phylogeography and behavior. Wilson has been instrumental in demonstrating the level of marine cryptic species complexes in Antarctic waters, testing the circumpolar distribution paradigm with molecular data, and using interdisciplinary approaches to show how Antarctic diversity may have been generated.

Wikipedia

Albert George Wilson

Albert George Wilson (July 28, 1918 – August 27, 2012) was an American astronomer and a discoverer of minor planets.

He was born in Houston, Texas. He received his Ph.D. in mathematics from Caltech in 1947; his thesis title was Axially Symmetric Thermal Stresses in a Semi-Infinite Solid advised by Harry Bateman.

In 1949 he accepted a job at Palomar Observatory, and led the Palomar Sky Survey. In 1953 he became assistant director of Lowell Observatory, and served as director from 1954 to 1957. He later worked at Rand Corporation and other private sector positions. In 1962 he became founding editor of the astronomical magazine Icarus. In 1966, he accepted the position of associate director of McDonnell-Douglas Corporation Advanced Research Laboratories (DARL), which he held from 1966 until 1972. Wilson then became an adjunct professor at USC, teaching courses in philosophy and science until his retirement. After retiring Wilson was associated with the Institute on Man and Science and the Institute of the Future, lecturing and consulting for both groups.

He discovered a number of asteroids, and also co-discovered the periodic comet 107P/Wilson–Harrington with Robert George Harrington. The object is also known as the minor planet 4015 Wilson–Harrington.