The Nitro Nobel Gold Medal is an explosives industry award given by the Nitro Nobel Company of Sweden (now part of Dyno Nobel).
The medal is gold, and features the same obverse as the Nobel Prize, but a different reverse. The medal has sometimes been confused with the Nobel Prize.
The award has only been given three times since its creation in 1967. The recipients are:
- 1967 — Dr. Robert W. Van Dolah, for the development of a theory he developed to explain the accidental initiation of liquid explosives
- 1968 — Dr. Melvin A. Cook, for the discovery of slurry explosives
- 1990 — Dr. Per-Anders Persson for the invention of the Nonel fuze.
See also
References
- ^ New York Times, 1990-03-05
- "Developing Safer Explosives". Archived from the original on 3 December 2006. Retrieved 28 January 2007.
- "Age Limits Of The Earth's Biosphere". Archived from the original on 31 October 2006. Retrieved 28 January 2007.
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