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Bjorn Helland Hansen

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Citizenship
  
Norwegian

Name
  
Bjorn Helland-Hansen

Residence
  
Norway

Awards
  
Alexander Agassiz Medal

Nationality
  
Norwegian

Role
  
Oceanographer

Fields
  
Oceanography

Bjorn Helland-Hansen httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Institutions
  
Geophysical Institute, University of Bergen

Known for
  
Atlantic Ocean "Helland-Hansen Photometer

Died
  
September 7, 1957, Bergen, Norway

Books
  
The Sea West of Spitsbergen

Notable awards
  
Alexander Agassiz Medal (1933), Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography (1941)

Bjorn Helland-Hansen (16 October 1877 – 7 September 1957) was a Norwegian pioneer in the field of modern oceanography. He studied the variation patterns of the weather in the northern Atlantic Ocean and of the atmosphere.

He developed the "Helland-Hansen Photometer" in 1910, which was carried on board Michael Sars. It was operated for the first time close to the Azores at a depth between 500 and m. In 1915 he became Professor of oceanography at the Bergen Museum, and in 1917 director of the Geophysical Institute, University of Bergen.

In 1933 he was awarded the Alexander Agassiz Medal. In 1939 he became President of the International Geodesic and Geophysical Union. He was a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences and a member of the Member of the Academy of Sciences of the German Democratic Republic (DDR).

Helland-Hansen trained Alexander Kuchin, the Russian oceanographer who went to Antarctica with Roald Amundsen. An island in the Russian Arctic, east of the Geiberg Islands, has been named Gellanda-Gansena after Helland-Hansen.

References

Bjorn Helland-Hansen Wikipedia


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