Hans Kinzl

Hans Kinzl (1899–1979) was an Austrian geographer and mountain researcher.

The plaza of Chacas. Photo taken by Hans Kinzl during his stay in Ancash, Peru in 1928.

Life

Hans Kinzl was born in Upper Austria in 1899. After his studies of geography at the University of Innsbruck he became assistant of his mentor Johann Sölch—disciple of Albrecht Penck—in Innsbruck. He then followed Sölch—who succeeded Alfred Hettner in Heidelberg—but returned to the University of Innsbruck where he became a professor of geography.[1]

Research

Apart from the European Alps, his focus was on the Peruvian Andes where he conducted glaciological, geomorphological, agricultural and population research. Hans Kinzl is best known for his 1930's maps of the Cordillera Blanca mountain range located in Peru. He later became the head of the Geographical Department of the University of Innsbruck.

gollark: It would be like something which electrocutes you whenever you make a compile error. You don't want to make compile errors in the first place, and making them worse is not very helpful.
gollark: If you have some accident and get injured horribly, you probably won't *learn* much, just... get horribly injured, you don't want the accident anyway.
gollark: And if there was a convenient not-too-bad way to reduce injuries with knives, they would probably be used. I imagine chefs have something.
gollark: Yes, but it's harder.
gollark: Not really.

References

  1. Penz, Hugo (1997): Hans Kinzl (1898-1979) und das Institut für Geographie der Universität Innsbruck. Gedanken und Erinnerungen zu seinem hundertsten Geburtstag. Innsbrucker Jahresbericht 14, pp. 5–29. PDF Archived 2007-01-11 at the Wayback Machine
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