Wilbur Olin Atwater (May 3, 1844, Johnsburg, New York — September 22, 1907, Middletown, Connecticut) was an American chemist known for
his studies of human nutrition and metabolism.
Atwater grew up in the New England area. He opted not to fight in the American Civil
War and instead to pursue an undergraduate degree at Wesleyan University in
Connecticut. In 1868, Atwater's interest in civil
engineering and agricultural chemistry led him to enroll in
Yale University's Sheffield Scientific
School, where he analyzed agricultural fertilizers for specific mineral content. After obtaining his PhD in agricultural
chemistry, Atwater spent two years in Leipzig and Berlin, where
he visited agricultural experiment stations. Atwater also spent time traveling throughout Scotland, Rome, and Naples, where he reported his
findings in local newspapers distributed where he lived back in the United States. Atwater later returned to the United States to
teach at East Tennessee University and later Wesleyan as its first Professor of
Chemistry.[1]
Scientific advancement
Atwater is best known for his studies of human nutrition. He studied respiration and metabolism in animals and in humans. He
invented and utilized a machine called the respiration calorimeter. With annual costs
exceeding ten thousand dollars, this piece of equipment was considered a dream project for the nineteenth century. The
calorimeter aided studies in food analysis, dietary evolution, work energy consumption, and digestible foods. It measured the
human metabolism balance by analyzing the heat produced and metabolic
rate by a person performing certain physical activities. With this machine, the dynamics of metabolism could be quantified
and the balance between food intake and energy output could be measured.[2]
The results from Atwater’s calorimetry study influenced many areas of American life. Most importantly, the calorimeter was a
great influence to the growing awareness of the food calorie as a unit of measure both in
terms of consumption and metabolism. Atwater reported on the weight of the calorie as a means of which to measure the efficiency
of a diet. He stated that different types of food produced different amounts of energy. He stressed the importance of a cheap and
efficient diet that included more proteins, beans, and vegetables in place of carbohydrates. Atwater also studied the effect of
alcohol on the body. His findings showed that humans generated heat from
alcohol much like it would generate heat from a carbohydrate.[2] At a time where the Scientific Temperance
Federation and the WCTU doubted the nutritional value of
alcohol, Atwater proved that alcohol could be oxidized in the body and used as fuel for the human motor. Information gained from
Atwater’s experiments was used by the liquor trade in the promotion of alcohol.
Continuation of study
After completing his study, Atwater concluded that Americans consumed too much fat and
sweets and did not exercise enough. His successor, Francis Benedict (1870-1957), continued down Atwater’s path using the respiration calorimeter to
further measure metabolism and other bodily processes. Benedict studied the varying metabolism rates of infants born in two
hospitals in Massachusetts, athletes, students, vegetarians, Mayans living in the Yucatan, and normal adults. He even developed a
calorimeter large enough to hold twelve girl scouts for an extended period of time. His biggest improvement was the invention of
portable field respiration calorimeters. In 1919, Francis Benedict published a metabolic standards report with extensive tables
based on age, sex, height, and weight.[2]
References
External link
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