Federico Sacco Explained

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Federico Sacco (February 5, 1864 in Fossano – October 2, 1948 in Trofarello) was an Italian geologist, paleontologist and mycologist.

Biography

He was the son of Giuseppe Antonio, a doctor, and Faustina Maria Quaglia. After his secondary studies in Fossano, Federico Sacco graduated in 1884 in natural sciences at the University of Turin; he was a disciple of Martino Baretti, collaborator and friend of Quintino Sella and Luigi Bellardi, a renowned Piedmontese paleontologist.

For over thirty years, from 1897 to 1935, he held the chair of geology at the Polytechnic University of Turin and, for over forty years, that of paleontology at the University of Turin. He was a member of the Accademia dei Lincei, a member of the Academy of Sciences of Turin and president of the Italian Geological Society. A passionate mountaineer and speleologist, he was an active member of the Italian Alpine Club for most of his life.[1]

He was one of the founders in 1911-12 of the Urania Society, created as the result of a split from the Italian Astronomical Society, for which he directed the publication of Saggi di astronomia popolare, a series of popular texts.

He was the author of over six hundred publications, including volumes, memoirs and articles, of a geomorphological and stratigraphic nature. He made a significant contribution to the Geological Map of Italy, studying and compiling, among others, the geological sheets of the tertiary basin of Piedmont, Abruzzo, Cuneo, Ceva and Genoa, Bologna, Imola - Faenza - Forlì and Rimini, of Ancona - Jesi - Fermo and Macerata, Pesaro, Monte Falterona, Pontremoli.

Two of his most important works are: "Il bacino terziario e quaternario del Piemonte" ("The tertiary and quaternary basin of Piedmont"), complete with all geomorphological, stratigraphic and paleontological indications. And the multi-volume set "I molluschi dei terreni terziari del Piemonte e della Liguria" ("The molluscs of the tertiary lands of Piedmont and Liguria"), his largest work in terms of size and concreteness: completed in 1904, it is divided into 30 volumes and represents thousands of fossil species. The amount of his research and publications by him has no equal in the sectors he studied. He analyzed about 40,000 square kilometers of land and walked a distance equal to the length of the Equator line. Some of his geographical maps, which mainly represent the Alps and the Apennines, are present in the Archive of the Regional Science Museum of Turin.

As far as glaciation is concerned, he researched materials and carried out studies relating, in particular, to various locations in the Apennines and the Alps, with particular reference to Mont Blanc, Monte Rosa, the Matterhorn, Gran Paradiso, Monviso and the Maritime Alps. Appropriate publications he also dedicated to the moraines of the Veneto, Lake Maggiore, Ivrea and Rivoli.[2] He also did research on hydrography, speleology, seismology and cosmology. He also dedicated biographies to illustrious scientists, including Carlo Fabrizio Parona and Giuseppe Mercalli.

Recognition

Above the door of Federico Sacco's house in Fossano, affixed to the wall, there is a plaque commemorating the tenth anniversary of the scholar's death which shows an incorrect date of death and place: Turin, 14 October 1948.

In Fossano there is a school that has been dedicated to the scientist since 2019: the "Istituto Comprensivo Federico Sacco".[3]

Principal works

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Istituto Treccani . Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani . 89. SACCO, Federico . Pietro . Corsi . 17 March 2021 .
  2. L'anfiteatro morenico di Rivoli . 148 . Bollettino del R. Comitato geologico d'Italia . 1887 . Federico . Sacco . 15 March 2022 .
  3. News: L'Istituto comprensivo di Fossano intitolato a Federico Sacco, geologo, paleontologo e micologo . . The comprehensive institute of Fossano named after Federico Sacco, geologist, paleontologist and mycologist . Laura . Serafini . it . 8 June 2019. 15 March 2022 .