Harry Clay Yeatman


Harry Clay Yeatman (born June 22, 1916 in Ashwood, Tennessee) is an American biologist and zoologist. Curriculum vitae

He studied at the Baylor University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where in 1939 he obtained the Bachelor of Science degree in the field of zoology, and then in 1942, the doctor of philosophy in the field of zoology. During World War II, he was a paramedic in the rank of staff sergeant. From 1950 he lived in Sewanee, where he was an assistant professor in the Faculty of Biology and assistant professor, biology, zoology, comparative anatomy, vertebrate embryology, histology, parasitology, ecology and botany. In 1954 he became an associate professor, in 1967 he was a visiting professor at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science in Gloucester Point, where he lectured in marine biology. He participated in scientific expeditions to Iran, where he conducted research on copepods and their larvae, which are carriers of guinea pigs. He collaborated with the World Health Organization, trained scientists from South-East Asia in the prevention of parasitic diseases transmitted by small animals, including copepods. He worked as a consultant at the Smithsonian Institution, Science Applications, Inc., La Jolla, California, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Duke Energy in Charlotte, North Carolina and at Helminthic Disease Branch.

In 1981 he retired, in 2010 he was the first winner of the Trilliums Environmental Education Award. Bibliography

wiki

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pupo Román

Myrmex Indikos

Names of streets and squares