Amadeus William Grabau | |
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Born |
Cedarburg, Wisconsin, United States |
January 9, 1870
Died | March 20, 1946 Peking, China |
(aged 76)
Cause of death | Internal hemorrhage |
Resting place | compound of the geological department of the National University of Peking |
Monuments | Dorsum Grabau, a wrinkle ridge on the Moon named for him |
Nationality | American |
Other names | the father of Chinese geology |
Education |
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Occupation | Paleontologist |
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Home town |
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Spouse(s) | Mary Antin (m. Oct. 5, 1901) |
Children | one daughter, Josephine Esther |
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Awards | 1936, Mary Clark Thompson Medal |
Notes | |
Amadeus William Grabau (January 9, 1870—March 20, 1946), the father of Chinese geology, was an expatriate American geologist.
Grabau was a German-American paleontologist and geologist, born in Cedarburg, Wisconsin in the United States who died on in Peking, China. His grandfathers had led dissident Lutheran immigrants from Germany to Buffalo, New York. His education began in his father's parochial school in Cedarburg, and then the public high school there. After his father became head of the Martin Luther Seminary in 1885, he finished high school in Buffalo.
He took classes in the evenings while apprenticed to a bookbinder. His interest in local fossils grew. In a correspondence course in mineralogy, he impressed geologist William Otis Crosby enough to hire him at the Boston Society of Natural History in 1890, and arrange his education at Boston Latin, MIT, and Harvard.
He taught at MIT and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute early in his career. In 1901 he became a professor at Columbia University in New York. He married Barnard student Mary Antin on October 5, 1901. She would go on to become a prominent author. The pro-German attitudes during World War I led to an estrangement from his wife, and in 1919 he left Columbia for China.
He was appointed professor at Peking National University in 1919 or 1920. As part of his life's work, he conducted a geologic survey of China, and is now known as the father of Chinese geology.
He was also a prolific author, publishing at least 10 books in the first half of the 20th century. Grabau developed various theories during his lifetime, among them the theory of rhythms concerning the growth of the earth's crust and a theory concerning mountain building and creation. The Dorsum Grabau, a wrinkle ridge on the Moon is named after him.