Dominique Raynaud
0 sources
Dominique Raynaud
Summary
Dominique Raynaud is a human[1]. He was born on 1942[2]. He worked as a glaciologist[3].
Key Facts
- Dominique Raynaud was born on 1942[2].
- Dominique Raynaud held citizenship in France[4].
- Dominique Raynaud worked as a glaciologist[3].
- Dominique Raynaud received the Hans Oeschger Medal[5].
- Dominique Raynaud received the CNRS silver medal[6].
- Dominique Raynaud was a member of Academia Europaea[7].
- Dominique Raynaud is recorded as male[8].
- Dominique Raynaud's instance of is recorded as human[9].
- Dominique Raynaud supervised Patricia Martinerie as a doctoral student[10].
- Dominique Raynaud supervised Philippe Ciais as a doctoral student[11].
- Dominique Raynaud supervised Jérôme Chappellaz as a doctoral student[12].
- Dominique Raynaud supervised Frédéric Parrenin as a doctoral student[13].
- Dominique Raynaud's given name is recorded as Dominique[14].
- Dominique Raynaud's described at URL is recorded as https://comihistocnrs.hypotheses.org/2706[15].
- Dominique Raynaud's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as French[16].
- Dominique Raynaud's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as English[17].
Body
Origins and Family
Dominique Raynaud was born on 1942[2].
Career and Affiliations
Dominique Raynaud worked as a glaciologist[3]. Doctoral students include Patricia Martinerie[10]; Philippe Ciais[11], a physicist[18], b. 1966[19], of France[20], awarded the CNRS silver medal[21]; Jérôme Chappellaz[12], a researcher[22], b. 1964[23], of France[24], awarded the Science Innovation Award[25]; and Frédéric Parrenin[13], a researcher[26], b. 1975[27], awarded the CNRS bronze medal[28].
Recognition
Awards received include Hans Oeschger Medal[5], an award[29] and CNRS silver medal[6], a science award[30], in France[31], founded in 1954[32].
FAQs
What did Dominique Raynaud do for work?
Dominique Raynaud worked as glaciologist[3].
What awards did Dominique Raynaud receive?
Honors received include Hans Oeschger Medal[5] and CNRS silver medal[6].