Carl Ludolf Griesbach
Carl Ludolf Griesbach (1847–1903), was a British paleontologist and geologist of Austrian ancestry who worked in East Africa and India.
Life
Carl was born in Vienna on 11 December 1847 to George Ludolph Griesbach. He studied at the University of Vienna and worked with the Geological Survey of Vienna. He joined a German expedition to East Africa in 1869-70 and returned to live in London. He wrote on the geology of Natal, with numerous illustrations made by himself. In 1878 he joined the Geological Survey of India in Calcutta. He was part of the Afghan Boundary Commission between 1884 and 1886. For his work during this period, he was created C.I.E. in February 1887 and awarded the Afghan medal and clasp. He succeeded William King as Director of the Geological Survey of India in 1894.[1][2]
Griesbach discovered fossils of the ammonoid Otoceras which he suggested as marking the earliest Triassic period thus marking the boundary of the Permian and the Triassic. The term Griesbachian is sometimes applied to strata belonging to this early period.[3] Griesbach described what he called the Haimanta System, a series of rocks made of quartz, slate and conglomerate in a layer over the Vaikrita system in the central Himalayas of Kumaon.[4]
Griesbach was elected Fellow of the Geological Society of London in 1874. He married his cousin Emma, daughter of the Reverend W.R. Griesbach, in 1869. They had a daughter and a son and following Emma's death in 1892, Griesbach lived in Graz, Austria, with his daughter. He died on 13 April 1903.[1]
In recognition of his work, Tim Tozer of the Geological Survey of Canada named a creek on northwest Axel Heiberg Island (Canadian High Arctic) after him, and subsequently defined the Early Triassic sub-stage of Griesbachian time at that site.
References
- 1 2 Anon. (1907). "Obituary—Carl Ludolf Griesbach, C.I.E., F.G.S". Geological Magazine. 4 (5): 240. doi:10.1017/S001675680013345X.
- ↑ Flügel, Helmut W. (2013). "Carl Ludolph Griesbach –"eine seltene, eigenartige Persönlichkeit"" (PDF). Berichte der Geologischen Bundesanstalt. 97: 43–121.
- ↑ Tozer, E.T. (1979). "The significance of the ammonoids Paratirolites and Otoceras in correlating the Permian–Triassic boundary beds of Iran and the People's Republic of China". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 16 (7): 1524–1532. doi:10.1139/e79-139.
- ↑ Burrard, S.G.; Hayden, H.H. (1905). A sketch of geography and geology of the Himalaya mountains and Tibet. Part IV. The Geology of the Himalaya. Calcutta: Government Press. p. 252.