Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Antoine Lacroix

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
French

Fields
  
Mineralogy, Geologist

Role
  
Mineralogist

Name
  
Antoine Lacroix


Antoine Lacroix media2webbritannicacomebmedia41360410045

Notable awards
  
Wollaston Medal (1917) Penrose Medal (1930) Fellow of the Royal Society

Died
  
March 12, 1948, Saone-et-Loire, France

Awards
  
Wollaston Medal, Penrose Medal

Doctoral advisor
  
Ferdinand Andre Fouque

Antoine lacroix tenmin mix electro dance club mars 2013


Antoine François Alfred Lacroix (4 February 1863 – 12 March 1948) was a French mineralogist and geologist. He was born at Mâcon, Saône-et-Loire.

Contents

Work

Lacroix took the degree of D. s Sc. in Paris, 1889, as student of Ferdinand André Fouqué. Fouqué only agreed to the graduation if Lacroix would marry his daughter. In 1893 he was appointed professor of mineralogy at the Jardin des Plantes, Paris, and in 1896 director of the mineralogical laboratory in the École des Hautes Études.

He paid especial attention to minerals connected with volcanic phenomena and igneous rocks, to the effects of metamorphism, and to mineral veins, in various parts of the world, notably in the Pyrenees. In his numerous contributions to scientific journals he dealt with the mineralogy and petrology of Madagascar, and published an elaborate and exhaustive volume on the eruptions in Martinique, La Montagne Pele et ses éruptions (1904).

He also issued an important work entitled Mineralogie de la France et de ses Colonies (1893–1898), and other works in conjunction with Auguste Michel-Lévy. He was President of the volcanology section (1922–1927) of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG). He was elected member of the Académie des sciences in 1904. He was awarded the Penrose Medal in 1930.

A species of Asian snake, Oligodon lacroixi, is named in his honor.

References

Antoine Lacroix Wikipedia