Karl Ledersteger (11 November 1900, in Vienna – 24 September 1972, near Vienna) was an important geodesist and geophysicist.
After studies of astronomy, mathematics and geodesy he worked in Germany and later in the National Survey of Austria. Later he set up the scientific department of the Federal Office for Metrology and Survey (BEV), Vienna. In the 1950s he was appointed as a professor of geodesy and astrometry at the Technical University of Vienna. He was head of many research projects, and author of about 200 scientific articles. Still a standard work of astronomical and physical geodesy is his textbook of Erdmessung (Vol. V of the series Handbuch der Vermessungskunde, 871 p.) published 1969.
In 1958/59, Ledersteger was the first geodesist in Central Europe who published on the future fields of satellite geodesy. Other topics of his research were:
Ledersteger was in intensive contact with the scientific community of whole Europe, US and Russia (e.g. Viktor Ambartsumian, B. Gutenberg, F. Hopfner, W. Heiskanen, M. Kneissl, Sir Harold Jeffreys, Vening Meinesz, H. Moritz, A. Prey, H. H. Schmid, E. Wiechert and S. Zhongolovitch). For almost 20 years he was chair of ÖKIE (Austrian Commission for international Geodesy) and a member of many international commissions and research groups, e.g. in IUGG, DGK and scientific academies of Austria, Germany and Hungary.
Ledersteger received many prizes, several doctorates honoris causa and calls to universities. In Vienna he was asked to begin geodetic lectures immediately after World War II, but his professorship was postponed for 10 years because of his participation in Nazi surveys 1940–1945. He translated several works including a textbook of Magnizki & Browar on theoretical geodesy.