Curiosity, Discovery Sparked Research Career

There was no single, major event that led Provost Charles F. Zukoski down the career path as a scientific researcher.

Written bySue Wuetcher - University at Buffalo News Office
| 4 min read
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There was no single, major event that led Provost Charles F. Zukoski down the career path as a scientific researcher.

Instead, he told student scientists attending Biomedical Research Day last week at University at Buffalo’s Clinical and Translational Research Center (CTRC), it was “a lifetime of curiosity and discovery, and a series of fortunate events” that influenced his interest in research.

“I stumbled into a life of research largely by developing an interest in the world around me,” said Zukoski, an internationally recognized scholar in chemical engineering.

In high school, he explained, he took a community college class in geology “and we looked at the minerals in rocks and how mountains were formed.”

He also was a Boy Scout and had a scout master who would point to the stars and talk about impossible distances and ask questions about sending robots to Mars and conducting experiments to determine if there was life on that planet.

As an undergraduate physics major at Reed College, a classical liberal arts college in Portland, Ore., Zukoski said he took many humanities courses.

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