Robert Clayton, award-winning cosmochemist, 1930 to 2017

January 05, 2018

Robert Clayton smiles in front of a chalkboard.

Robert N. Clayton, ‘one of the giants’ of cosmochemistry, 1930-2017

"Prof. Emeritus Robert N. Clayton, whose pioneering research on the chemistry of meteorites and lunar rocks helped shape the field of cosmochemistry, died on Dec. 30. He was 87.

In the foreword of a book dedicated to Clayton, Smithsonian geologist Glenn MacPherson wrote that Clayton “could easily wear the name ‘Mr. Oxygen.’” Clayton pioneered the use of oxygen isotopes as “fingerprints,” creating a relatively simple test to distinguish meteorites from ordinary rocks as well as a revolution in the burgeoning field of cosmochemistry."

Read the full article at UChicago News.

Text by Louise Lerner.