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Maurice Lugeon

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Nationality
  
Switzerland

Fields
  
Geology

Role
  
Geologist

Name
  
Maurice Lugeon

Known for
  
nappe tectonics


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Notable awards
  
Marcel Benoist Prize (1932) Wollaston Medal (1938) Fellow of the Royal Society Gustav-Steinmann-Medaille (1949)

Died
  
October 23, 1953, Chevilly, Switzerland

Awards
  
Wollaston Medal, Marcel Benoist Prize

Maurice Lugeon FRS(For) HFRSE FGS (July 10, 1870 – October 23, 1953) was a Swiss geologist, and the pioneer of nappe tectonics. He was a pupil of Eugène Renevier. Named for Maurice Lugeon, the lugeon is a measure of transmissivity in rocks, determined by pressurized injection of water through a bore hole driven through the rock. One Lugeon (Lu) is equivalent to one litre of water per minute, injected into 1 metre of borehole at an injection pressure of 10 atmospheres.

Contents

Life

Maurice Lugeon Maurice Lugeon Wikipedia

He was born at Poissy near Paris on 10 July 1870. His family moved to Lausanne in Switzerland in 1876. From the age of 15 he showed a strong interest in geology.

He spent most of his academic life at the University of Lausanne becoming Professor of Geology in 1906. He retired in 1940. He became an expert on dam locations and was consulted widely on this.

He died at Lausanne in Switzerland on 23 October 1953.

Publications

  • Dams and Geology (1933)
  • Family

    He was married to Ida Welti.

    References

    Maurice Lugeon Wikipedia