Gustava Aigner Explained

Gustava Kahler
nee Aigner
Birth Name:Hollis Dow Hedberg
Birth Date:29 April 1906
Birth Place:Salzburg
Children:3 daughters
Spouse:Franz Kahler

Gustava Kahler, née Aigner, (29 April 190622 March 1987) was an Austrian geologist and palaeontologist. She was noted in particular for her work with Franz Heritsch and with her husband, Franz Kahler. In recognition of her discovery of graptolites in the northern greywacke zone, her former fellow student, Ida Peltzmann, named two species for her.

Life and career

Gustava Aigner was born on 29 April 1906 in Salzburg. Her parents were Gustav Aigner, a lawyer, andMaria, née Melbler. She was educated at the Mädchen-Reform-Realgymnasium and then studied geology, paleontology, mineralogy and petrography at the University of Graz. She was only the second woman to study geology at an Austrian university. She earned her PhD in July 1929, when she was only 23 years old, with a dissertation entitled "Die Productiden des Karbons von Nötsch im Gailtal".[1] Her dissertation was the first to reflect a redirection of study in the field away from mineralogy and crystallography and towards stratigraphy and palaeontology.[1]

She then taught for five years at the Realgymnasium for girls in Salzburg. She had originally planned to study botany; her interest in geology was sparked by Franz Heritsch, and in 1935 she married the banker Franz Kahler, a fellow geology student of Heritsch's who had completed his doctorate in 1931. Kahler worked as a geologist in Klagenfurt, in Norway and finally in Carinthia, where he was appointed state geologist in 1947.[1] She co-authored many papers both with Heritsch and with her husband, whom she assisted in a systematic study of the Fusulinida. Their study and publications covered the Late Palaeozoic stratigraphy of the Carnic Alps.[1] [2] In 1937, Aigner and Kahler subdivided the genus Pseudoschwagerina into five subgroups; they then proposed a subgeneric name, Zellia for one of the groups.[3] After the end of World War II in 1945, she and her husband restarted their career and established links with the world.[1]

In June 1979, the University of Graz ceremonially renewed her doctorate and she was presented the Badge of Honour by the Association of academics.[1] In June 1980, the Verband der Akademikerinnen (Association of Women Scholars) honoured her. In recognition of her having made the first discovery of graptolites in the northern Greywacke zone, her former fellow student, Ida Peltzmann, named two species for her.[1]

Gustava Kahler-Aigner had three daughters; her first daughter was born in 1937. She underwent three serious operations and died on 22 March 1987 after a long illness.[1]

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Flügel . Helmut W. . Gustava Kahler-Aigner (1906 - 1987) . Naturwissenschaftlicher Verein für Kärnten, Oberösterreichisches Landesmuseum . PDF . 21 June 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141105195424/http://www.landesmuseum.at/pdf_frei_remote/CAR_177_97_00XIV-0XVIII.pdf . 5 November 2014 . dead .
  2. Book: Jongmans, W. J.. Compte Rendu. Deuxieme Congres pour l'avancement des etudes de stratigraphie Carbonifere. Heerlen, Septembre 1935. Tome 1. 23 June 2013. Alexander Doweld. 483.
  3. Book: Japanese Journal of Geology and Geography. 23 June 2013. 1939. Science Council of Japan. 72.
  4. Book: Kauffman, Erle Galen. Concepts and methods of biostratigraphy. 1977. Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross. 978-0-87933-246-4. 596.
  5. Book: Henschke, Ekkehard. Landesherrschaft und Bergbauwirtschaft.: Zur Wirtschafts- und Verwaltungsgeschichte des Oberharzer Bergbaugebietes im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert.. 1975. Duncker & Humblot. 978-3-428-43124-3. 159–.