F&M Stories
Leading Environmental Expert from F&M Elected to National Academy of Sciences
The recently elected Dorothy Merritts, the Harry W. and Mary B. Huffnagle Professor of Geoscience in Franklin & Marshall College's Department of Earth and Environment.
Merritts is F&M's first faculty member ever accepted into the ranks of the prestigious academy, a private, nonprofit society of distinguished scholars that was established in 1863 by an act of Congress signed by President Abraham Lincoln.
NAS is charged with providing independent, objective advice to the nation on matters related to science and technology. On May 2, the academy in recognition of their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research.
Merritts' extensive research and knowledge includes streams, rivers, other landforms, and the impact of geologic processes, climate change, and human activities on the form and history of Earth's surface.
Her primary research focus is the Appalachian mid-Atlantic region, where her groundbreaking investigative work demonstrated the role human activities have had in transforming the upland woodlands and valley bottom wetland meadows of eastern North America to a predominantly agricultural, industrial and urban landscape since European settlement.
Her encompasses the past 25,000 years of landscape change that documents continuous permafrost was widespread in Pennsylvania and Maryland during the last full glacial episode.
Scientists are elected annually by peers to NAS for outstanding contributions to research. This year's cohort brings the total number of active NAS members to 2,512 and the total number of international members to 517.
Approximately 500 current and deceased NAS members have won Nobel Prizes, and the , founded in 1914, is today one of the premier international journals publishing the results of original research.
Related Articles
May 14, 2026
Reflections on Leadership: Board Chair Eric Noll ’83, P’09
Eric Noll’s relationship with F&M began on a gorgeous spring day in 1978. Almost 50 years later, the alumnus will complete his role as Chair of the Board of Trustees on June 30. “F&M continues to evolve, but its core values have remained the same,” Noll says. “I’d say, without apologies, that serving as Board Chair for this college is one of the great honors of my life.”
May 5, 2026
New Documentary Explores the Science and Impact Behind F&M’s Leading Environmental Research Efforts
On April 30, more than 100 members of the Franklin & Marshall and Lancaster communities gathered on campus to view the premiere of a new documentary film that showcases the work that F&M faculty and students are leading to better understand and mitigate water quality and erosion issues affecting the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries.
April 28, 2026
Names Matt Thomas '10 to Lead Ware Institute for Civic Engagement as College Renews Commitment to Lancaster Community
has appointed Matt Thomas '10 as Executive Director of the Ware Institute for Civic Engagement. Thomas, an F&M alumnus and longtime member of the College community, will provide strategic leadership for the Ware Institute as it evolves into an integrated hub connecting co-curricular service and leadership programs with a growing portfolio of community-based learning.
