Alexander Bittner
Alexander Bittner (16 March 1850, in Friedland – 31 March 1902, in Vienna) was an Austrian paleontologist and geologist.

Grave of Alexander Bittner at the Wiener Zentralfriedhof
Following graduation from the University of Vienna in 1873, he remained in Vienna as an assistant to Eduard Suess. In 1874-76 he conducted geological research in Italy and Greece, followed by an internship at the Imperial Institute of Geology in Vienna (1877). In 1897 he was appointed chief geologist of the institute.[1][2]
Bittner is known for his stratigraphic-paleontological research of the eastern Alps, especially studies involving brachiopods from the Alpine Triassic Period.[1][2] He was among the first scientists to study the effects of the Belluno earthquake that occurred in northern Italy on 29 June 1873.[3]
Selected works
- Vorschläge für eine Normirung der Regeln der stratigraphischen Nomenclatur, 1879 - Proposal for a normalization of rules for stratigraphic nomenclature.
- Die geologischen verhältnisse von Hernstein in Niederosterreich und der weiteren umgebung, 1882 - Geological conditions of Hernstein in Lower Austria, etc.
- Beiträge zur Kenntniss tertiärer Brachyuren-Faunen, 1884 - Contribution to the knowledge of Tertiary Brachyura.
- Brachiopoden der Alpinen Trias, 1890 - Brachiopods of the Alpine Triassic.
- Neue Koninckiniden des alpinen Lias, 1893 - New Koninckiniden of the Alpine Lias.
- Lamellibranchiaten der Alpinen Trias, 1895 - Lamellibranchia of the Alpine Triassic.[4]
References
- Bittner, Alexander @ NDB/ADB Deutsche Biographie
- Bittner, Alexander @ AEIOU Encyclopedia
- Google Books The founders of seismology
- OCLC Classify (publications)
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.