Max Britzelmayr

Max Britzelmayr (January 7, 1839 – December 6, 1909) was a German mycologist and lichenologist who was a native of Augsburg.

Max Britzelmayr (1839-1909)

He spent his career as a schoolteacher and Kreisschulinspektor (school district administrator) in Augsburg. He is known for his research of a class of fungi known as Hymenomycetes. He also conducted investigations of lichens native to southern Bavaria, including the Allgäu Alps.[1]

List of Publications

  • Dermini und Melanospori aus Südbayern, (Dermini and Melanspora of southern Bavaria); (1883)
  • Hymenomyceten aus Südbayern, (Hymenomycetes of southern Bavaria); (1894)
  • Zur Hymenomyceten-Kunde, (Study of Hymenomycetes); (1895)
  • Materialien zur Beschreibung der Hymenomyceten, (Materials for the description of Hymenomycetes); (1897). Botanisches Zentralblatt 71: 49–59, 87–96.
  • Die Lichenen der Allgäuer Alpen. (Lichens of the Allgäu Alps); (1900), Bericht der Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereins für Schwaben und Neuburg (A. V.) in Augsburg 34: 73–139.
gollark: I think the more interesting question is what it's actually doing at a high level, i.e. what algorithms the entire accursedly complex mess runs. There might be a relatively nice explanation which covers some parts.
gollark: Neurons are apparently individually about as complex as a large computer "DNN".
gollark: The components aren't really understood either.
gollark: I don't know what you're saying here. It isn't as if all the operational details of the brain are particularly well-understood in any case.
gollark: Devalued how?

References

  1. Lichenology.org Schlechtendalia (biographical information)
  2. IPNI.  Britzelm.
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