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Duke Flags Lowered: Biomechanics Pioneer Steven Vogel Dies

Duke biologist Steven Vogel in 2002. Vogel was the author of ten books, on topics ranging from the workings of the circulatory system and the design of leaves to the biomechanics of muscle. Photo by Les Todd, Duke Photography.
Duke biologist Steven Vogel in 2002. Vogel was the author of ten books, on topics ranging from the workings of the circulatory system and the design of leaves to the biomechanics of muscle. Photo by Les Todd, Duke Photography.

Duke biologist Steven Vogel, whose eclectic research interests ranged from flying insects and fluttering leaves to swimming squid and nectar-slurping hummingbirds, died on Nov. 24 at Croasdaile Village in Durham. He was 75.

Vogel is widely regarded as one of the founders of the field of comparative biomechanics, an area of science that 鈥渢ouches on everything from why ants can鈥檛 throw rocks to why a fish can outswim a duck,鈥 Vogel told an audience at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County in 1990.

Vogel studied biological fluid mechanics, or the effects of winds and currents on the squishy, stretchy world of living things. Working at the intersection of biology, mathematics and physics, he investigated everything from the ventilation of prairie dog burrows, to the flows of seawater through marine sponges and air through moth antennae, to how trees and seaweed survive in high winds and crashing waves.

鈥淪teve was such force in our lives and in the field,鈥 said biologist Tom Daniel of the University of Washington, who earned a Ph.D. under Vogel鈥檚 mentorship in 1982.

Vogel was born on April 7, 1940, in Beacon, New York. His parents, Max and Jeanette Vogel, owned a drugstore where Vogel worked after school from ages 14 to 25.

He earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree from Tufts University and a master鈥檚 and doctorate from Harvard University and then joined the Duke faculty in 1966, where he began a research and teaching career that would last more than 40 years.

Vogel was unusual among scientists in opting out of the granting process to raise money for his research, instead funding most of his work with his own salary.

鈥淗e thought pitching science for funding limited creativity,鈥 said Vogel鈥檚 former student Laura Miller, who is now a math and biology professor at UNC.

Vogel was known for designing elegant experiments on a shoestring budget, building devices such as flow tanks and wind tunnels from scrap wood and spare appliance parts he pieced together in the Duke zoology department鈥檚 machine shop.

鈥淚鈥檝e developed a fair contempt for fancy commercial gear,鈥 he wrote in the preface to his textbook, 鈥淟ife in Moving Fluids.鈥

鈥淣obody excelled at getting more science per unit budget than Vogel,鈥 said former colleague and entrepreneur Chuck Pell. 鈥淗e once set himself a budget of five dollars to answer a research question. He did it for less than half of that.鈥

UNC professor Laura Miller still uses one of Vogel鈥檚 contraptions, a screw pump immersed in a vat of syrup that Vogel referred to as the 鈥済lop tank.鈥

鈥淎ll of the companies I called told me they didn鈥檛 have anything that would work. Steve, on the other hand, told me he had just the thing,鈥 Miller said.

A shameless and unapologetic punster, Vogel handed her the tank and said, 鈥渢his will get you into a lot of sticky situations.鈥

For his excellence in teaching, Vogel received the Trinity College Distinguished Teaching Award in 1986.

鈥淲hen I was a graduate student (at Duke in the 1970s), there were very few women in science and very few faculty members who thought we should be there. Vogel was different,鈥 said biologist Mimi Koehl, now a professor at the University of California at Berkeley.

鈥淗e encouraged me to learn to fabricate my research equipment in his machine shop, but often said, 鈥楢 woman using a lathe is a hairy problem.鈥 This was his Vogel-esque 鈥榩un-ishment鈥 when I forgot to tie my hair back before I turned on the motor,鈥 Koehl said.

Former Duke undergraduate Melina Hale, now a biomechanics and neurobiology professor at the University of Chicago, remembers a freshman seminar Vogel taught in the spring of 1989. He brought freshly baked muffins to class every morning, and invited his students to walk inside a giant wind tunnel.

鈥淗e wanted us to experience the physical world of plants and animals firsthand instead of just talking about it,鈥 Hale said. 鈥淚 came away thinking about the world in an entirely different way.鈥

Vogel was the author of ten books and numerous articles admired for their clarity, humor and wit.

Vogel鈥檚 fourth book, 鈥淟ife鈥檚 Devices,鈥 was awarded a $25,000 Irving and Jean Stone Prize for Science Writing for Public Understanding, and his popular writing appeared in magazines such as Natural History and Discover.

鈥淲e called him a one man book-of-the-month club,鈥 Pell said.

Despite officially retiring from Duke in 2006, Vogel continued to write and teach classes until this year. He is survived by his wife, Jane Vogel, a sister, Marjorie Dosik, his son and daughter-in-law Roger and Frances Vogel, and three grandchildren.

Friends and colleagues can express their condolences at .