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Antonin Fritsch

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Nationality
  
Czech

Fields
  
Paleontology

Parents
  
Josef Frantisek Fric

Role
  
Geologist

Name
  
Antonin Fritsch


Antonin Fritsch

Institutions
  
Charles University, National Museum in Prague

Known for
  
contributions on the field of permo-carboniferous ecosystems

Died
  
November 15, 1913, Prague, Czech Republic

Institution
  
Charles University in Prague, National Museum, Prague

Antonín Jan Frič (in German: Anton Johann Fritsch, June 30, 1832 – November 15, 1913) was a Czech paleontologist, biologist and geologist, living during the Austria–Hungary era. Professor at the Charles University and later became director of the National Museum in Prague. He became famous for his contributions on the field of Permo - Carboniferous ecosystems.

He also became known for finding fossils once attributed to dinosaurs - Albisaurus albinus and Ponerosteus exogyrarum and so far the only pterosaur known from the Czech Republic, Cretornis hlavaci. The pterosaur was small with a wingspan of about 1.5 m and lived in the Turonian.

The first true dinosaur known from the Czech Republic was discovered 90 years after Frič's death (in 2003). It is a small ornithopod of Cenomanian age.

Fritsch received the Lyell Medal from the Geological Society of London in 1902.

References

Antonin Fritsch Wikipedia


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