Aziz Ab'Saber | |
Birth Date: | 1924 10, mf=yes |
Birth Place: | São Luís do Paraitinga, São Paulo, Brazil |
Death Place: | Cotia, São Paulo, Brazil |
Occupation: | Geographer and professor |
Alma Mater: | Universidade de São Paulo |
Aziz Nacib Ab'Sáber (pronounced as /pt/; October 24, 1924 - March 16, 2012) was a geographer and one of Brazil's most respected scientists, honored with the highest awards of Brazilian science in geography, geology, ecology and archaeology. Graduated in geography, he was a president and honorary president of the Sociedade Brasileira para o Progresso da Ciência (Brazilian Society for the Advancement of Science) and Emeritus Professor of the University of São Paulo. He received the Grand Cross in Earth Sciences of the National Order of Scientific Merit, the highest rank. Among the awards, he has received the UNESCO Prize on Science and the Environment in 2001 and the Prize to the Intellectual of Brazil in 2011.
The contributions of Ab'Saber to science range from the first research of oil camps in Brazil's northeast to surveys of Brazil′s natural realms and the restoration of the history of forests, camps and primitive humans over geologic time in South America. He made central contributions to biology, South American archaeology, and to Brazilian ecology, geology and geography. He has published more than 480 works, most of them scientific publications.[1] Among his scientific proposals are FLORAM, the Code of biodiversity and his theory of refuges related to the Amazon.[2]
Ab'Sáber was the first person to classify scientifically the Brazilian and South-America territory in morphoclimatic domains. He also contributed to the "Pleistocene refuge hypothesis", an attempt to explain the distribution of Neotropical taxa as a function of their isolation in forest fragments during glacial periods, which allowed populations to speciate. He died in 2012 following a heart attack.[3] [4]