Wilkening's research focused on comets, meteorites, and Moon rocks. As a doctoral student, she studied Rock Number 17, one of the first lunar samples released from quarantine.[1][7] She coedited a textbook, Comets (1982), with Mildred Shapley Matthews.[10][11][12] Wilkening sat next to Jimmy Carter at the White House to watch the first images from the Voyager mission.[1][13] She was vice-chair of the National Commission on Space,[13] chair of the Space Policy Advisory Board,[14] and vice-chair of the Advisory Committee on the Future of the U.S. Space Programs.[15] She served on the board of The Planetary Society.[16] In 2001, she recorded an oral history interview for the NASA Headquarters Oral History Project.[1] Asteroid 75562 was named for Wilkening in 2013.[16]
University work
Wilkening taught chemistry and planetary science at the University of Arizona beginning in 1973,[17] and from 1981 was head of the Planetary Science department and director of the university's Lunar & Planetary Laboratory. She also served as the university's acting dean of sciences, and vice-president for research.[13] While she was at Arizona, she helped to found the Women's Studies program, and made a statistical report on pay equity on the campus. She later gave over $100,000 to the university's Women's Plaza of Honor project.[18]
Wilkening retired from academic work in 1998,[22][23] and ran a vineyard in Elgin, Arizona with her husband in her later years.[16] In 2005, the University of California, Irvine dedicated the Laurel L. Wilkening Rose Garden on campus. In 2009, Wilkening received the UCI Medal.[16]
Personal life
Wilkening married fellow planetary chemist and former Carmelite friar,[24] Godfrey T. Sill.[25] She was widowed when Sill died in 2007. She died in 2019, aged 74 years, in Arizona.[16][19] Some of her papers are in the University Archives at UCI.[26]
^"Dr. Laurel L. Wilkening, 1944 - 2019". Lunar and Planetary Laboratory & Department of Planetary Sciences | The University of Arizona. June 7, 2019. Retrieved January 10, 2020.