Prestigious Lowell Thomas awards will be presented for first time in St. Louis

For the first time, the venerable international Explorers Club will present its prestigious Lowell Thomas awards in St. Louis at a gala dinner on October 15.  The awards, established in honor of the journalist and broadcaster who made Lawrence of Arabia famous, have been given in New York since their establishment in 1980.

The St. Louis chapter of the Explorers Club, working closely with St. Louis Academy of Science, is sponsoring the event.  Titled “Exploring the World’s Greatest Mysteries,” the festivities will take place from October 14-16.  The awards dinner and a scientific symposium are open to the public.

“Considering the nearby discovery of Cahokia Mounds, and St. Louis’ role as home base for the Lewis and Clark Expedition, the city is a fitting location for our first awards dinner outside of New York, “ said Lorie Karnath, president of the Explorers Club and Rolex Watch, USA.

Members of the Explorers Club, founded in 1904 by illustrious explorers of the time, have accomplished a number of ‘firsts.’  Among them are firsts to both north and south poles, first to the summit of Mount Everest, and first to the surface of the moon.

Benjamin Hulsey filming in the Mojave desert with a NASA team member
Benjamin Hulsey in the Mojave desert with NASA team member
Photo courtesy of Mary Burke, Explorers Club

Why was St. Louis chosen for the first out-of-New York awards dinner? The St. Louis chapter of the Explorers Club is quite active on the national as well as local levels, explains Benjamin Hulsey, Chairman of both that group and the Academy of Science.  He, for example, is co-chair of the national legal committee.  The organization has only 19 chapters in the United States, and 7 internationally.

Saint Louis Explorers Have Diverse Interests

In order to become members, applicants must have done significant fieldwork or exploration in the course of their travels.

Hulsey works with the NASA Mars project in the Mojave and California deserts. On the supposition that caves will provide necessary shelter if we ever get to Mars, his project maps cave entrances using thermographic imaging.  Thermographic imaging measures the infrared radiation that all living and non-living objects give off, and displays it.  Since there is a temperature gradient at the mouths of caves, NASA could use this technique to distinguish caves from shadows.  He also is a member of a caving group that collects microoganisms from caves, collaborating with a biologist in Arizona who screens their collections for ‘extremeophile’ microorganisms that might live in the extreme climatic conditions of Mars.

Mary Burke in the Grand Tetons
Mary Burke in the Grand Tetons
Photo courtesy of Mary Burke, Explorers Club

Mary Eileen Burke, vice-chair of the St. Louis Explorers Club and Executive Director of the Academy of Science, specializes in outreach.  She directs programs that connect science to the community, both adults and children—60,000 in grades K-12.  Recently she led a group of 80 middle school students through Yellowstone and Grand Teton Parks.

“St. Louis has long been a city filled with explorers.  Not only in the traditional sense of exploration–as the Gateway to the West or the vision of transatlantic flight via the Spirit of St. Louis–but through the exploration of the science and engineering.  James Eads, Henry Shaw and the founders of the Academy of Science of St. Louis recognized that exploration of medicinal plants, climate data, or chemical compounds could open new worlds.  It is this history of scientific exploration at both the macro and micro level that enticed me to join the Explorers Club,” says Burke.

Gretchen Freund uses a camera in her explorations. About 12 years ago, she began photographing the orca pod in Peninsula Valdes, Argentina.  This pod of these most dangerous predators of the ocean come to this area each spring to prey upon the baby seals as they frolic in the water.  One year she met Dr. Ingrid Visser, a prominent orca biologist, who recognized the value of Freund’s photography.  Together they established Punta Norte Orca Research to photo-identify this pod.  Photo-identification is possible because each orca’s fin and saddle patch are unique. Thus they can keep a record of which animals return each year, which are new, and which have disappeared.

Gretchen Freund’s photograph of an Orca about to pounce on a baby seal
Gretchen Freund’s photograph of an Orca about to pounce on a baby seal
Photo courtesy of Gretchen Freund, Punta Norte Orca Research

Because of her work in South America, Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans asked Freund to do the same kind of study in the Arctic.  For the past three years she has spent summers documenting the pod there, in order to find what effect diminishing ice has on the orcas, the narwhals, belugas, and other whales.  Freund emphasizes that she is an amateur helping scientists, but her photos have found their way into many scientific publications.

Dr. Sherman Silber, another member of the St. Louis Explorers chapter, is known as a world expert on human fertility and has an extremely active medical practice.  But 40 years ago, when he was with the Public Health Service, he became interested in what happens when so-called primitive cultures are juxtaposed with western culture.  At that time he was in the far north working with Aleuts, Eskimos, and Inuit Indians. He found a systemic problem with alcoholism.  When he has worked with Hadzi bushmen in Africa or Australian aborigines he also documented alcohol abuse.  These groups are not genetically related, but all showed the same syndrome when their culture met western culture.

Dr. Sheldon Silber in tails and tie to match the Antarctic penguins
Dr. Sheldon Silber in tails and tie to match the Antarctic penguins
Photo courtesy of Dr. Sheldon Silber

When the far north natives were out on the ice, living as their grandfathers did, they were happy and did not misuse alcohol. But when they came back to their little village, they turned on the TV, got out a beer, and got drunk.  They said they were happiest living the way their grandparents lived—but they chose the ‘comfortable’ lifestyle.  “People will always give up joy for comfort,” he says.

2011 Lowell Thomas Awards Go to Varied Group

During the upcoming weekend, St. Louis Explorers will meet the distinguished recipients of the 2011 Lowell Thomas awards.  Award winners will give presentations at the symposium on October 14. Robert Archibald, president of the Missouri Historical Society, will moderate.

The honorees represent a wide range of disciplines:

  • Edmundo R. Edwards, Patricia Vargas Casanova, Claudio P. Cristino study the culture of Eastern Polynesia, and the enigmatic moai that stand on the shores of Easter Island.
  • Albert Yu-Min Lin, Ph.D., is a research scientist attempting to find the tomb of Genghis Khan and protect a sacred region of Mongolia.
  • Thomas E. Levy, Ph.D., has revolutionized the dating of the Biblical land of Edom, pushing the sequence some 500 years earlier than the scholarly consensus – and brought researchers closer than ever before to testing for the potential existence of “King Solomon’s Mines.”
  • Brent S. Stewart, Ph.D., J.D., is a senior research scientist praised for studies of the mysterious whale shark and other migratory marine species.
  • William C. Stone, Ph.D., is one of the world’s foremost expeditionary cavers and a proponent of using technology to help explorers survive and thrive as they challenge new frontiers.
  • Kenneth R. Wright and Ruth M. Wright, J.D., are partners whose work on water conservation has brought enduring benefits to the environment, water resources, and communities in both North and South America.

Several of the honorees shared some thoughts about receiving this award.

Edmundo Edwards wrote, “ As I live in the most isolated place on earth (our closest neighbor is Pitcairn Island, home of the descendants of HMS Bounty mutineers, 2000 miles westwards, population 50) it is very exhilarating to receive such a unexpected honor and an invitation to visit again the USA.”  He wrote further, “Through my travels I have learned, that most of us share that yearning to learn more about the world in which we live, not just its archaeological past, but also the cultural motivations that led people to become who they are. We are all explorers of a world we still barely know.”

His colleague Claudio Cristino, along with Edwards, looks forward to spending time with friend and collaborator Peter Raven.

Albert Lin, whose research is in Mongolia, echoes Edwards as he writes, “

With  Lowell Thomas award comes the responsibility to honor the legacy of the past recipients.   They have instilled in all of us the desire to seek the unknown, stand at its banks, and venture in. I am humbled and incredibly honored to be a part of that group.”

Ken Wright of Boulder, CO, praised the choice of St. Louis as the first city to host the awards outside of New York. “The Explorers Club has made an inspired choice by hosting this award named after an esteemed explorer in the hometown of another intrepid explorer, Charles Lindbergh.  Ruth and I feel very honored to be included.”

Tickets to the symposium, held at the St. Louis Racquet Club, are $25, or $10 for students with ID.  Tickets to the dinner at the Missouri Historical Museum begin at $200.  Both can be ordered on the Lowell Thomas Awards Dinner website.

 

This article was originally published in the St. Louis Beacon.