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Geerat J. Vermeij is one of the world's preeminent scientists in ecology,
malacology and biology. Born in Holland, he came to America, lived in Nutley
and graduated from Nutley High School in the Class of 1965. He whizzed through
Princeton University in three years. His next destination was Yale University
where he received his Ph.D. He taught at the University of Maryland, beginning
as an instructor and advancing to Professor of Zoology. He is presently Professor
of Geology at the University of California at Davis.
Dr. Vermeij, in his autobiography Privileged Hands: A Scientific Life, describes
in vivid and entertaining prose just how he broke out of the bonds of society
as a blind person and into the world of ecology, malacology, and biology. Dr.
Vermeij has held a number of teaching positions in scientific institutions around
the world. He served as the President of the Society of Naturalists in 1997
and is a member of scientific associations such as the Society for the Study
of Evolution, the Ecological Society of America, the Paleontology Society, the
Netherlands Malacology Society and the Institute of Malacology.
Dr. Vermeij is the author of major scientific publications including Biogeography and Adaptation: Patterns of Marine Life, Evolution and Escalation: An Ecological History of Life and Natural History of Shells.
He is the recipient of honors such as the J. S. Guggenheim Memorial Fellow, the Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal from the National Academy of Sciences and the MacArthur Award.
Brian Buhrow, Chairman of the National
Foundation of the Blind, Research and Development Committee, in reviewing Vermeij’s
book, Privileged Hands: A Scientific Life, wrote, “What makes this [Vermeij]
journey interesting, however, is not so much how he was able to break into a
new scientific field in the mid 1960’s, but rather that blindness was
not, and should not have been, his overriding concern. For every page Vermeij
spends discussing aspects of the way blindness affected his progress into and
through his career, he spends at least ten times that many discussing the various
theories, questions, scientific puzzles, and his own personal development as
an Academic in the process of becoming a full-fledged professor.”
Source: Nutley Hall of Fame, Panel of Judges