Hermann Flohn

Hermann Flohn (19 February 1912 – 23 June 1997) was "one of the world greatest climatologists".[1] Flohn was professor at the University of Bonn and head of the department at the Institute of Meteorology of Bonn University. He produced about 360 publications. Flohn was member in numerous scientific societies such as the Bavarian Academy, the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, the New York Academy of Sciences, and the Royal Academy of Belgium.[2]

Life

Flohn climate classification

Flohn was born in Frankfurt am Main, he studied geography, meteorology, geophysics, and geology at the universities of Frankfurt and Innsbruck. Having obtained his doctorate in 1934, he accepted a position at the newly established German Meteorological Service (Reichswetterdienst). From 1941 he was employed at the meteorological service of the Luftwaffe High Command.

In 1941 Flohn published the first German article concerning anthropogenic climate change. Having returned to the Deutscher Wetterdienst after the war, Flohn from 1950 helped develop the theory of atmospheric circulation. Flohn was one of the first and leading global climate change researchers. From 1961 he worked as a lecturer at the University of Bonn. In 1977 Flohn retired, he died in 1997 in Bonn, aged 85.

Awards

Selected works

References

  1. C.D Craig: Flohn, Hermann. In: The Encyclopedia of World Climatology.2005, p. 379
  2. Obituary, January 1998. Klaus Fraedrich Hermann Flohn. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 124 (546), Part B, p.653
  3. International Meteorological Organization Prize

External links

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