Lemberg Medal
The Lemberg Medal, named after Max Rudolf Lemberg, the first president of the Australian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB), is awarded annually to a scientist who has been a member for five or more years and who has "demonstrated excellence in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and who has made significant contributions to the scientific community".[1] The winner presents the Lemberg Lecture at the following ASBMB annual conference.[2]
Recipients
Source: Lemberg Medallists, Australian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology[3]
| Year | Recipient |
|---|---|
| 1968 | Frank William Ernest Gibson |
| 1969 | Norman Boardman |
| 1970 | Alexander George Ogston |
| 1971 | Gordon Leslie Ada |
| 1972 | No award |
| 1973 | Anthony William Linnane |
| 1974 | Marshall Davidson Hatch |
| 1975 | William Herdman Elliott |
| 1976 | George Ernest Rogers |
| 1977 | Lawrence Walter Nichol |
| 1978 | William James Peacock |
| 1979 | Burt Zerner |
| 1980 | D. B. Keech |
| 1981 | Robert Gerard Wake |
| 1982 | No award |
| 1983 | Joan Mary Anderson |
| 1984 | J. F. Williams |
| 1985 | Robert Henry Symons |
| 1986 | Jerry McKee Adams |
| 1987 | J. F. Morrison |
| 1988 | Peter Malcolm Colman |
| 1989 | Julian R. E. Wells |
| 1990 | Thomas John Martin |
| 1991 | Alfred James Pittard |
| 1992 | W. Gerlach |
| 1993 | Graeme Barry Cox |
| 1994 | F. J. Ballard |
| 1995 | Suzanne Cory |
| 1996 | Bruce Ernest Kemp |
| 1997 | Robert Charles Baxter |
| 1998 | Elizabeth Salisbury Dennis |
| 1999 | Philip William Kuchel |
| 2000 | John C. Wallace |
| 2001 | Phillip Nagley |
| 2002 | Philip G. Board |
| 2003 | John Hopwood |
| 2004 | Nicholas Hoogenraad |
| 2005 | Ian Young |
| 2006 | Alan Frederick Cowman |
| 2007 | Colin Wesley Ward |
| 2008 | David Laurence Vaux |
| 2009 | Peter Koopman |
| 2010 | Richard Paul Harvey |
| 2011 | Michael Parker |
| 2012 | Douglas James Hilton |
| 2013 | Sharad Kumar |
| 2014 | Marilyn Anderson |
| 2015 | Christina Anne Mitchell |
| 2016 | Jane Visvader |
| 2017 | John Mattick |
| 2018 | Jamie Rossjohn |
| 2019 | Maria Kavallaris |
| 2020 | Trevor Lithgow |
| 2021 | Merlin Crossley |
| 2022 | Leann Tilley |
| 2023 | Michael T. Ryan |
| 2024 | Anthony S. Weiss[4] |
| 2025 | Michelle Haber[2] |
References
- ^ "Lemberg Medal and Oration". Encyclopedia of Australian Science and Innovation. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ a b "The Lemberg Medal". Australian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Retrieved 2025-04-04.
- ^ "Lemberg Medal Winners". Australian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Retrieved 2025-04-04.
- ^ "Weiss, Anthony Steven – Person". Encyclopedia of Australian Science and Innovation. Retrieved 2025-04-03.