Harrison Schmitt was presented the NSS Gerard K. O'Neill Memorial Award for Space Settlement Advocacy for his book Return to the Moon: Exploration, Enterprise, and Energy in the Human Settlement of Space.
Harrison Schmitt
has the diverse experience of a geologist, pilot, astronaut, administrator,
businessman, writer, and United States Senator. He studied at Caltech,
as a Fulbright Scholar at Oslo, and at Harvard, receiving his Ph.D.
in geology in 1964 based on earlier field studies in Norway. Schmitt
received Air Force jet pilot wings in 1965 and Navy helicopter wings
in 1967.
Selected as the Scientist-Astronaut program in 1965, Schmitt organized
the lunar science training for the Apollo Astronauts, managed much of
the development of hardware and procedures for lunar surface exploration,
and oversaw the final preparation of the Apollo Lunar Module Descent
Stage. He was designated Mission Scientist in support of the Apollo
11 mission. After training as back-up lunar Module Pilot for Apollo
15, Schmitt served in the same capacity on Apollo 17 — the last Apollo
mission to the Moon. In 1972, he landed in the Valley of Taurus-Littrow
as the only scientist and the last of 12 men to step on the Moon.
In 1975, after two years managing NASAs Energy Program Office, Schmitt
fulfilled a long-standing personal commitment by entering politics in
1976. He served in the U.S. Senate from 1977 through 1982, representing
his home state of New Mexico.
Dr. Schmitt consults, speaks, and writes on business, public, and governmental
initiatives, particularly in the fields of space, risk, geology, energy,
technology, and policy issues of the future. He also contributes non-fiction
articles on space and the American Southwest to numerous books and magazines.
Schmitt served as Chair of NASA Advisory Council, which counsels the NASA administrator, from November 2005 until October 2008.
Schmitt serves as Adjunct Professor in the Department of Engineering Physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, as a research consultant with the Fusion Technology Institute, and as founder and Chairman of Interlune-Intermars Initiative, Inc.
Harrison Schmitts honors include 1973 Arthur S. Fleming Award, 1973
Distinguished Graduate of Caltech, 1973 Caltech Sherman Fairchild Scholar,
NASA Distinguished Service Award, Fellow of the AIAA, Honorary Member of the
Norwegian Geographical Society and Geological Society of Canada, 1989 Lovelace
Award (space Biomedicine), 1989 G.K. Gilbert Award (planetology), 1996
Ohio State University Bownocker Lecturer, and Honorary Fellow of the
Geological Society of America, American Institute of Mining, and Geological
Society of London. Dr. Schmitt has also received several honorary degrees.