Hiroko Nagahara
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Hiroko Nagahara
Summary
Hiroko Nagahara is a human[1]. She was born on +1952-00-00T00:00:00Z[2]. She worked as a mineralogist[3]. She ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month, #7,300 of 1,000,298).[4]
Key Facts
- Hiroko Nagahara was born on +1952-00-00T00:00:00Z[2].
- Hiroko Nagahara held citizenship in Japan[5].
- Hiroko Nagahara's professions included mineralogist[3].
- Hiroko Nagahara received the J. Lawrence Smith Medal[6].
- Hiroko Nagahara received the Leonard Medal[7].
- Hiroko Nagahara received the Saruhashi Prize[8].
- Hiroko Nagahara received the Yamazaki Award[9].
- Hiroko Nagahara received the Medal with Purple Ribbon[10].
- Hiroko Nagahara is recorded as female[11].
- Hiroko Nagahara's instance of is recorded as human[12].
- Hiroko Nagahara's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 257394504[13].
- Hiroko Nagahara's NDL Authority ID is recorded as 01242791[14].
- Hiroko Nagahara's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as Japanese[15].
- Hiroko Nagahara's name in kana is recorded as ながはら ひろこ[16].
- Hiroko Nagahara's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/113th29rk[17].
- Hiroko Nagahara's Researchmap ID is recorded as read0007827[18].
- Hiroko Nagahara's J-GLOBAL ID is recorded as 200901085032991312[19].
Body
Origins and Family
Hiroko Nagahara was born on +1952-00-00T00:00:00Z[2].
Career and Affiliations
Hiroko Nagahara worked as a mineralogist[3].
Recognition
Awards received include J. Lawrence Smith Medal[6], a science award[20], in United States[21], founded in 1888[22]; Leonard Medal[7], a science award[23], in United States[24], founded in 1962[25]; Saruhashi Prize[8], an award[26], in Japan[27], founded in 1981[28]; Yamazaki Award[9], an award[29], in Japan[30]; and Medal with Purple Ribbon[10], a grade of an order[31], in Japan[32], founded in 1955[33].
Why It Matters
Hiroko Nagahara ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month, #7,300 of 1,000,298).[4]
FAQs
What did Hiroko Nagahara do for work?
Hiroko Nagahara worked as mineralogist[3].
What awards did Hiroko Nagahara receive?
Honors received include J. Lawrence Smith Medal[6], Leonard Medal[7], Saruhashi Prize[8], and Yamazaki Award[9].