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Johannes Letzmann

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Influences
  
Alfred Wegener

Name
  
Johannes Letzmann


Fields
  
Meteorology

Influenced by
  
Alfred Wegener

Johannes Letzmann httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons11

Born
  
19 July 1885Wenden, Livonianow Cesis, Latvia (
1885-07-19
)

Nationality
  
Born Russianlater Estonianlater German

Institutions
  
University of TartuUniversity of Graz

Alma mater
  
University of TartuUniversity of Helsinki

Known for
  
Tornado damage analysis

Died
  
May 21, 1971, Langeoog, Germany

Education
  
University of Helsinki, University of Tartu

Similar
  
Ruchi Ram Sahni, Antoni Bolesław Dobrowolski, 
Smith Dharmasaroja

Johannes Peter Letzmann (19 July 1885 – 21 May 1971) was an Estonian meteorologist, and a pioneering tornado researcher. His prolific output related to severe storms concepts included: developing tornado damage studies, atmospheric vortices, theoretical studies and laboratory simulations, tornado case studies, and observation programs. It generated extensive analysis techniques and insights on tornadoes at a time when there was still very little research on the subject in the United States.

Biography

From 1906 to 1913 Letzmann attended the University of Tartu in Tartu, Estonia, studying meteorology. His career studying tornadoes began in 1918 when the esteemed visiting scientist Alfred Wegener introduced him to his copious European tornado climatological and other studies. The University of Helsinki awarded Letzmann a PhD in 1924. Most of his studies were done at Dorpat (Tartu), but he did travel with Wegener for a year in 1928 to the University of Graz. He was a professor of meteorology at the University of Graz from 1939 (or 1940) to 1945. There he built a "Forschungsstelle für atmosphärische Wirbel" (Research Center for atmospheric whirls). After the war he lost his chair, but he remained in Graz, Austria. In 1962, he elected to retire to a hostel established for former Baltic Germans at Langeoog, an island off the North Sea coast of Germany. Letzmann's antebellum work remained forgotten for decades until rediscovery beginning in the 1990s

References

Johannes Letzmann Wikipedia