Lukas Hottinger Explained

Lukas Hottinger (25 February 1933, Düsseldorf – 4 September 2011, Basel) was a paleontologist, biologist and geologist. Hottinger collaborated with the Natural History Museum of Basel (Switzerland).

Hottinger was one of the major experts on present-day and fossil larger foraminifera. In 1997 he obtained the Cushman Award from the Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research (Journal of Foraminiferal Research, vol. 28/1, 1–2) for his lifetime contributions to foraminiferal research.Professor Hottinger completed his PhD thesis on Paleocene and Eocene Alveolina in 1959 under the direction of Professor Manfred Reichel. His thesis on Paleogene Alveolina included genus and species definitions and changes through time, the concept of phylogenetic lineages, and their use in zonal biochronology. Published as a double volume of Mémoires Suisse de Paléontologie in 1960, this remains the authoritative work on these unique foraminifera. From 1959 to 1964 he lived in Morocco working for the geological survey under the direction of Georges Choubert and Anne Faure-Muret, a time that was essential for his formation. His bibliography, widely respected by the international scientific community, comprises over 120 papers and six monographs. These contributions range far over the geological landscape, including topics as diverse as stratigraphy, paleoecology, and evolution, and spanning the globe from Indo-Pacific and Africa to the northeast Atlantic and the Mediterranean Sea.Besides being a member of the Swiss Academy of Natural Sciences, in 1993 Professor Hottinger was honored with membership in the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, and in 1997 was awarded the Doctor Honoris Causa by the Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona (Spain).[1]

Some references

Bibliography 1959–1990 (selected). Since 1991 complete, selection with'

Hottinger, L. (2006). The significance of biogenous carbonate production in reef ecology and its experimental confirmation by anthropogenous eutrophication in Mauritius, Indian Ocean. Abstract p. 27.Hottinger, L. (2006). Zeev Reiss' contributions to structural analysis and comparative anatomy of the foraminiferan shell. Abstract p. 28

Boix, C., Villalonga R. and Hottinger, L. (2006). Rotaliids from the Late Cretaceous Western Tethys. Abstract. Anurario do Instituto deGeosciencias – UFRJ, 29/1: 677.Hottinger, L. (2006). Scales in space, time and taxonomy in the research for the history of life. Abstract. Anuario do Instituto de Geosciencias- UFRJ 29/1: 682–683.Hottinger, L. and Caus, E. (2006). Meandropsinids, an ophthalmidid family of Late Cretaceous K-strategists endemic in the Pyrenean Gulf. Abstract. Anuario do Instituto de Geosciencias UFRJ 29/1: 684–685.Hottinger, L., Tyszka, J., and Topa, P. (2006). "Glossary" and "e-Forams": free, rapid access to the current basic knowledge on foraminifera. Abstract. Anuario do Instituto de Geosciencias 29/1: 385 -386.

Ornelas-Sanchez, M. and Hottinger, L. (2006). Upper Jurassic Lituolids in the Sierra de Chiapas (Mexico) and their relation to the Tethys. Abstract. Anuario do Instituto de Geosciencias – UFRJ, 29/1: 351–352.

Vicedo, V., Hottinger, L., Caus, E. and Aguilar, M. (2006). Fusiform and laterally compressed alveolinids from both sides of the Late Cretaceous Atlantic. Abstract. Anuario do Instituto de Geosciencias – UFRJ, 29/1: 695–696.

Species and Genera dedicated to Lukas Hottinger

Hinte J.E. van 1966. Orbitoides hottingeri n.sp. from Northern Spain. Proc. Konink. Neder. Akad. Wet. Serie B, 69, 388–402.

Rahhali I. 1970. Foraminifères benthoniques et pélagiques du Crétacé supérieur du synclinal d'El Koubbat (Moyen Atlas Maroc). Notes et Mémoires du Service géologique du Maroc, 30 (225), 51–98.

Drobne K. 1975. Hottingerina lukasi n. gen., n. sp. (Foraminiferida) iz srednjega paleocena v severozahodni Jugoslaviji (Hottingerina lukasi n. gen., n. sp. Slovenian: italic=no|(Foraminiferida) du Paléocène moyen provennant du Nord-Ouest de la Yougoslavie). Razprave, 4.razr. Slovenska akademija znanosti in umetnosti SAZU 18, 242–253, 10 pls, Ljubljana.

Drobne K. 1977. Alvéolines paléogènes de la Slovénie et de l’Istrie. Schweizerische Palaontologische Abhandlungen 99, 1–132.

Caus E. 1979. Fabularia roselli n.sp., et Pseudolacazina n.gen., foraminiferes de I'Eocene moyen du Nord-Est de I'Espagne. Geobios, 12, 29–45.

Schaub H.P. 1981. Nummulites et Assilines de la Téthys Paléogène: taxonomie, phylogénèse et biostratigraphie. Schweiz Palaeontol Abhand 104–106: 1–236.

Rahaghi A. 1983. Stratigraphy and faunal assemblage of Paleocene-Lower Eocene in Iran. Ministry of Oil, National Iranian Oil Companies, Geological Laboratoires, 10, 1–73.

Langer M.R. 1992. New Recent foraminiferal genera and species from the lagoon at Madang, Papua New Guinea. Journal of Micropalaeontology, 11(1): 85–93.

Johnson E. 1993. Some imperforate larger foraminifera from the Paleogene of Jamaica and the Nicaragua rise. Journal of Foraminiferal Research, 23, 47–65.

Sirel E. 1997. The species of Miscellanea Pfender, 1935 (Foraminiferida) in the Thanetian-Ilerdian sediments in Turkey. Revue de Paleobiologie, 16(1), 77–99.

White M.R. 1997. A new species of Somalina (Somalina hottingeri) with partially vacuolate lateral walls from the Middle Eocene of Oman. Micropalaeontology, 16, 131–135.

Sirel E. 1999. Four new genera (Haymanella, Kayseriella, Elaziella and Orduella) and one new species of Hottingerina from the Paleocene of Turkey. Micropaleontology, 45 (2), 113–137.

References


Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20211020143029/https://academic.microsoft.com/author/1584948384/publication/search?q=Lukas%20Hottinger&qe=Composite(AA.AuId%253D1584948384)&f=&orderBy=0 Lukas Hottinger