John McCraw was an Earth scientist who began working as a pedologist with Soil Bureau, DSIR, then became the Foundation Professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Waikato in Hamilton, inspiring a new generation to study and work in Earth sciences, a discipline he introduced into the tertiary education system in New Zealand. In retirement, he was an author and historian with a special emphasis on Central Otago as well as the Waikato region. Throughout his career, marked especially by meritorious leadership, accomplished administration, and commitment to his staff and students at the University of Waikato, John McCraw also contributed widely to the communities in which he lived through public service organizations and as a public speake...
Following night school study at Seddon Memorial Technical College in Auckland, Brian Challinor quali...
I attended my first conference of the New Zealand Society of Soil Science in December, 1979. It was ...
Many Quaternarists, tephrochronologists, and soil scientists mourned the passing in New Zealand of C...
John McCraw was an Earth scientist who began working as a pedologist with Soil Bureau, DSIR, then be...
John McCraw was an Earth scientist who began working as a pedologist with Soil Bureau, DSIR, then be...
We outline teaching and research activities relating to pedology and soil survey, and some other soi...
The formation of a broad geosciences department, rather than a conventional department of geology or...
This year we are celebrating 50 years since the first soil/ permafrost scientific expedition in the ...
Donald Elvery Hogg, a former member of the New Zealand Society of Soil Science, died on 21 November ...
John Mulvaney joined ANU in 1965, and was Professor of Prehistory in the Faculty of Arts from 1971 t...
Janet Wilmshurst is an internationally eminent palaeoecologist whose impressive research centres on ...
In September, the Department of Earth Sciences of the University of Waikato was pleased to host a so...
After an uninspired schooling, in which the only thing he excelled at was Latin (although he did ev...
Petrus Johannes Jozef Kamp, or simply Peter Kamp to his many friends and colleagues, retired on 30 J...
Following night school study at Seddon Memorial Technical College in Auckland, Brian Challinor quali...
I attended my first conference of the New Zealand Society of Soil Science in December, 1979. It was ...
Many Quaternarists, tephrochronologists, and soil scientists mourned the passing in New Zealand of C...
John McCraw was an Earth scientist who began working as a pedologist with Soil Bureau, DSIR, then be...
John McCraw was an Earth scientist who began working as a pedologist with Soil Bureau, DSIR, then be...
We outline teaching and research activities relating to pedology and soil survey, and some other soi...
The formation of a broad geosciences department, rather than a conventional department of geology or...
This year we are celebrating 50 years since the first soil/ permafrost scientific expedition in the ...
Donald Elvery Hogg, a former member of the New Zealand Society of Soil Science, died on 21 November ...
John Mulvaney joined ANU in 1965, and was Professor of Prehistory in the Faculty of Arts from 1971 t...
Janet Wilmshurst is an internationally eminent palaeoecologist whose impressive research centres on ...
In September, the Department of Earth Sciences of the University of Waikato was pleased to host a so...
After an uninspired schooling, in which the only thing he excelled at was Latin (although he did ev...
Petrus Johannes Jozef Kamp, or simply Peter Kamp to his many friends and colleagues, retired on 30 J...
Following night school study at Seddon Memorial Technical College in Auckland, Brian Challinor quali...
I attended my first conference of the New Zealand Society of Soil Science in December, 1979. It was ...
Many Quaternarists, tephrochronologists, and soil scientists mourned the passing in New Zealand of C...