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George Sturgeon, inorganic chemistry; vice chair

Mark A. Griep, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
George D. Sturgeon, University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Copyright 2026, Mark Griep. Used by permission.

Abstract

Dr. George Sturgeon was a chemistry professor at the University of Nebraska -Lincoln for 39 years, from 1964 to 2003. During his time at UNL, he spent 15 years as the vice chair. Something in his youth must have sparked an interest in chemistry because he earned a bachelor’s in that subject from the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks. Then, he traveled 870 miles east to Michigan State University in East Lansing where he earned his doctorate. Immediately after graduating, he joined the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 1964 as an assistant professor but was soon promoted to associate professor. His lab studied metal fluoride compounds, including xenon difluoride.