Heinrich Vater

Heinrich August Vater (5 September 1859 in Bremen 10 February 1930 in Dresden) was a German soil scientist and forestry scientist. Vater was a pioneer in the areas of forest soil science, land evaluation, and forest fertilization.

In 1884 he received his doctorate at Leipzig with the dissertation Die fossilen Hölzer der Phosphoritlager des Herzogthums Braunschweig. He was an employee of the Royal Saxon Geological Survey, and in 1886 qualified as a lecturer of mineralogy and geology at the Polytechnic Institute in Dresden. During the following year, he became a professor at the Academy of Forestry in Tharandt. In 1898 he became a member of the Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina.[1]

Selected publications

  • Die Bewurzelung der Kiefer, Fichte und Buche, Berlin : P. Parey, 1927.
  • Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Humusauflage von Fichte und Kiefer, Berlin : P. Parey, 1928.[2]
gollark: I mean, look at something something continuous chaotic systems.
gollark: Aren't discreteness and small changes causing big differences somewhat separate, though?
gollark: True.
gollark: DNA is sort of kind of a digital storage system, and it gets translated into proteins, which can turn out really differently if you swap out an amino acid.
gollark: Real-world evolution works fine with fairly discrete building blocks, though.

References


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