Related Items
Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Willard Libby

Windows Live® Search Results

  • Willard Libby - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Willard Frank Libby (December 17, 1908 – September 8, 1980) was an American physical chemist, famous for his role in the 1949 development of radiocarbon dating, a process which ...

  • Willard F. Libby - Biography

    Biography. Willard Frank Libby was born in Grand Valley, Colorado, on 17th December, 1908, to Ora Edward Libby and his wife Eva May (née Rivers).

  • Willard Frank Libby

    A Biography of the Anthropologist Willard Frank Libby ... 1908 - 1980 . Willard Libby was an American Chemist, best known for his development of Carbon 14 (radiocarbon) dating ...

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results

Willard Libby

Encyclopedia Article
Multimedia
Willard Frank LibbyWillard Frank Libby

Willard Libby (1908-1980), American chemist and Nobel laureate, who developed the carbon-14 dating method. Willard Frank Libby was born in Grand Valley, Colorado, and educated at the University of California at Berkeley. With the outbreak of World War II he became engaged in research on the atomic bomb project. From 1945 to 1954 he was a Professor of Chemistry at the University of Chicago as well as a staff member of the Institute of Nuclear Studies. For the next five years Libby was a member of the United States Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), but he returned to teaching in 1959 when he became a Professor of Chemistry at the University of California at Los Angeles. He was a member of the general advisory committee of the AEC from 1960 until 1962, when he became Director of the Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics.

Libby is best known for having perfected, in 1947, the carbon-14 dating technique, a method of determining the approximate age of prehistoric organic remains. For this work Libby was awarded the 1960 Nobel Prize for Chemistry. His work also includes the study of the heavy-hydrogen isotope tritium.

Find in this article
View printer-friendly page
E-mail




© 2009 Microsoft