He received international attention for his investigations into the touch organs of crocodilians, particularly American alligators and Nile crocodiles with Duncan Leitch.
John Kenneth Galbraith | Kenneth Branagh | Catania | Kenneth McClintock | Kenneth Grahame | Kenneth Cole | Kenneth Burke | Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds | Kenneth Williams | Kenneth Noland | Kenneth Clarke | Kenneth T. Jackson | Kenneth Rexroth | Kenneth Hayne | Kenneth Cranham | Kenneth Cole Productions | Kenneth Cockrel, Jr. | Kenneth Anger | Kenneth Tynan | Kenneth Kaunda | Kenneth Baker, Baron Baker of Dorking | Kenneth Armitage | Kenneth More | Kenneth Goldsmith | Kenneth Frampton | Kenneth Fisher | Kenneth Connor | Kenneth Rogoff | Kenneth R. Miller | Kenneth Patchen |
She is noted for discovering, with her then-husband Kenneth C. Brugger, the location of the overwintering sites of the Monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus L.
On January 9, 1975, Kenneth C. Brugger and his wife Catalina Trail (then known as Cathy Aguado) finally located the first known wintering refuge on a mountaintop in Michoacán, Mexico, more than 4,000 kilometers from the starting point of their migration.
Other such communities existed also in the provinces of Catania (for example, in Paternò, Bronte and Randazzo), Syracuse (Ferla, Buccheri, Cassaro) and Palermo (Corleone).
Brugger's search and discovery is dramatized in the IMAX film Flight of the Butterflies.
The titles were initially inspired by Sam Cooke's song "Wonderful World", with the lyrics, "Don't know much about history" or "geography," etc.
A majority of his works are either based on Irish myths and legends, or else are original stories involving concepts, and sometimes characters, from Irish mythology.
In 1975 he joined the faculty of West Virginia University and the next year received his Ph.D. in geography from the University of Michigan, studying under political geographer George Kish.
Kenneth C. Dahlberg, American engineer and businessman who is CEO of SAIC
Kenneth C. Smith (born 1932), Canadian electrical engineering professor
Davis, Kenneth C. Two-Bit Culture: The Paperbacking of America, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1984.
Effective September 21, 2009, Havenstein succeeded Ken Dahlberg as the CEO of Science Applications International Corporation, a company with over $10 billion in revenue.