Vous êtes ici
Prof. John McConnell
Affiliation: York University
Keywords: Air quality, climate change, planetary science, ozone layer
Deceased Date: 2013-07-29
[contact]
John (Jack) McConnell is an eminent Atmospheric Modeller who has made contributions to knowledge of the processes taking place in the atmospheres of the earth and planets. He is internationally recognized for his contributions on the physics and chemistry of the atmospheres of Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus and on the chemistry and dynamics of the earth's atmosphere, the formation of stratospheric ozone holes, and problems relating to the pollution of the troposphere.
Dr. Ernest McCulloch
Affiliation: University of Toronto
Deceased Date: 2011-01-19
[contact]
Dr. McCulloch has attracted international scientific recognition primarily for his work on the detection and quantitation of stem cells of the blood-forming system. He played a major role in the development of the spleen colony technique for measuring the capacity of primitive normal and neoplastic cells to multiply and differentiate. With his colleagues, he has used this technique to explore many of the fundamental properties of stem cells, and the role of various factors involved in the regulation of stem cell functions. The methods pioneered by Dr. McCulloch and his co-workers are now being used very widely to obtain important information about the normal formation of blood cells, the source and development of immunologically competent cells, the patterns of growth of cancer cells in mice, and the mode of action of chemotherapeutic agents used in the treatment of leukemia.
Dr. McCulloch's work has been characterized by a successful combination of a talent for basic research and a deep interest in its practical applications.
Dr. Charles McDowell
Affiliation: The University of British Columbia
Deceased Date: 2001-09-23
[contact]
Charles A. McDowell's many publications have contributed significantly to three main fields: ionization and dissociation of molecules by electron impact, mechanisms of gas-phase oxidation reactions, and electron spin resonance spectroscopy of free radicals. His determinations of the energy levels and electronic structures of molecular ions provided the first experimental assessment of theories of the electronic structure of molecules. His work clarified the nature of hydrocarbon oxidations. He has identified the radicals formed in organic crystals subjected to radiation. He came to Canada from Britain in 1955, and his vigorous leadership has contributed greatly to the development of chemistry at the University of British Columbia.
Dr. James McDunnough
Deceased Date: 1962-02-23
[contact]
Dr. William McFarlane
Deceased Date: 1975-03-14
[contact]
Dr. Tom McFeat
Affiliation: University of Toronto
Deceased Date: 2004-11-22
[contact]
Tom McFeat is a Canadian ethnologist of originality and distinction. His interest in traditional ethnology has been linked to sociology and social psychology in the tradition of the Harvard Laboratory of Social Relations. As Chief Ethnologist of the National Museum of Canada from 1959 to 1963, and in university positions, he has stimulated the understanding of the Indian cultures of North America, by his writing and his firm encouragement of the work of others. His work linking ethnography to the theory and method of other disciplines has culminated in his recent book on "Small Group Cultures". This demonstrates that the remote and controlled experiments of the small group laboratory can be applied with insight to the analysis of real situations from those of the army in sophisticated action to the complexities of tribal culture. Tom McFeat's work, widely respected, is daring, provocative, and yet carefully disciplined.
Dr. Edith McGeer
Affiliation: The University of British Columbia
Keywords: Alzheimer, parkinson, microglia, cytokines, complement
Deceased Date: 2023-08-28
[contact]
Patrick and Edith McGeer's neurological research is recognized worldwide as responsible for many signal advances in the understanding of Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease, and for the important kainic acid model of Huntington's disease. Their groundbreaking hypotheses on neuroinflammation in neurodegenerative diseases and anti-inflammatory therapy are now strongly supported and part of the main focus for research into Alzheimer's disease.
Dr. Patrick McGeer
Affiliation: The University of British Columbia
Keywords: Neuroscience, neuroinflammation, Alzheimer Disease, Parkinsonism
Deceased Date: 2022-08-29
[contact]
Patrick and Edith McGeer's neurological research is recognized worldwide as responsible for many signal advances in the understanding of Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease, and for the important kainic acid model of Huntington's disease. Their groundbreaking hypotheses on neuroinflammation in neurodegenerative diseases and anti-inflammatory therapy are now strongly supported and part of the main focus for research into Alzheimer's disease.
Dr. Harold McGerrigle
Deceased Date: 1970-11-09
[contact]
Dr. Malcolm McGregor
Deceased Date: 1989-11-10
[contact]
Dr. J. G. McGregor
[contact]
Dr. Earle McHenry
Deceased Date: 1961-12-20
[contact]
Dr. Thomas McIlwraith
Deceased Date: 1964-03-29
[contact]
Dr. William McInnes
Deceased Date: 1925-03-10
[contact]
Dr. Douglas McIntosh
[contact]
Dr. Robert McIntosh
Deceased Date: 1996-07-10
[contact]
Dr. R. C. McIvor
Deceased Date: 1996-06-20
[contact]
Dr. Alexander McKay
Affiliation: McMaster University
Keywords: Contributing editor: classical journal, Vergilius
Deceased Date: 2007-08-31
[contact]
A graduate of Toronto, Yale and Princeton and sometime Secretary of the Classical Association of Canada, Dr. McKay has been an outstandingly successful teacher at Princeton and Pennsylvania as well as Canadian universities. He is a specialist in classical literature and art, has published four books and had two others accepted for publication, is the author of numerous articles and reviews and serves on the editorial boards of American classical periodicals. His international reputation is attested by the Vergilian Society's repeated appointment of him as director of its summer school at Cuma (Italy) and by his many invitations to lecture at American and British universities.
Dr. Arthur McKay
[contact]
Arthur Ferguson McKay, Vice-President, Research and Development, Monsanto Canada Limited, is an outstanding organic chemist. For his prolific work in the field of organic nitrogen derivatives he has won international recognition. A native of Nova Scotia, with degrees form McGill, Dalhousie, and Toronto, he held appointments at Queen's University and the Defence Research Board before becoming Director of Research and Development for Monsanto in 1954. He has done remarkable work in the field of steroids, the stereochemistry of fatty acids, amino acids, explosives, and physiologically active substances. The more than one hundred papers he has published, and the ten patents he has acquired, are eloquent testimonials to his successful work.
Dr. Andrew McKellar
Deceased Date: 1960-05-06
[contact]
Dr. Paul McKibben
Deceased Date: 1941-11-11
[contact]
Dr. Donald William McKinley
[contact]
Dr. Alastair McKinnon
Affiliation: McGill University
Deceased Date: 2016-11-06
[contact]
Alastair McKinnon, Macdonald Professor of Moral Philosophy, McGill University, has gained international recognition by three major contributions: first, through his substantial studies of Kierkegaard's thought; second, through the development and application of computer-based research on chronological and literary problems in philosophical texts, resulting in valuable works on Aristotle, Descartes, Leibnitz, and Wittgenstein; third, through his contributions to the Philosophy of Religion, culminating in his "Falsification and Belief", which attacks misconceptions of the language of religion and the nature of religious faith. His powerful originality, his diligence and range mark him as a leader in his field.
Dr. Jack McLachlan
Deceased Date: 2010-12-13
[contact]
An innovator and leader in the study of seaplants. Dr. McLachlan has applied the tecniques of taxonomy, ecology, biogeography, physiology, cytology, and laboratory cultivation to develop our understanding of marine algal biology. He pioneered in the cultivation of marine algae through their life cycle in the laboratory and his work has been of prime importance in establishing industrial cultivation, utilization, and conservation of seaweeds as a major natural resource. Dr. McLachlan is recognized internationally as a leader in the field of marine phycology, and has been involved for many years in international phycological discussions and in the organization of the International Seaweed Symposia.