Marlies Teichmüller

Marlies Teichmüller born Marie-Luise Barbara Köster (1914 – 12 September 2000) was a German coal petrologist and geologist. She studied the formation of coal through petrology and was a founding member of the International Committee for Coal Petrology in 1953, which was responsible for standardization of nomenclature and analysis techniques for coal.

Teichmüller was born in Herne, Westphalia, and she studied natural sciences. She went to Humboldt University in Berlin, majoring in geology in 1937, after which she went to the United States and worked with Reinhardt Thiessen at the U.S. Bureau of Mines in Pittsburgh. In 1937, she met geologist Rolf Teichmüller and married him. Thiessen died from a heart attack and she continued to examine the main question on the nature of coal under Thiessen's successor George C. Sprunk. Her doctoral thesis of 1941 under Eric Stach at Berlin was on using transmitted and reflected light for microscope studies of coal. She also studied with Walther Gothan (1879–1954). Marlies visited the US in 1963 and 1967, visiting the Everglades and other coal-forming environments that were being studied by Professor William Spackman. She concluded that it was similar to the Köln Miocene brown-coal deposits. She pioneered fluorescence microscopy in coal studies and discovered the minerals fluorinite and exudatinite. Along with her husband she examined the application of reflectance to study the extent of coal formation.[1][2][3][4]

References

  1. ^ Lyons, Paul C. (2002). "Memorial to Marlies Teichmüller 1914–2000" (PDF). Geological Society of America Memorials. 32: 27–30.
  2. ^ Mohr, Barbara; Vogt, Annette (2006). "Marlies Teichmüller (1914-2000): A Successful Woman Geologist and the Berlin School of Organic Petrology". Earth Sciences History. 25 (1): 117–139. doi:10.17704/eshi.25.1.3013051666286146. ISSN 0736-623X.
  3. ^ Lyons, Paul C.; Cross, Aureal T. (2005). "Marlies Teichmüller (1914–2000), pioneering genetic coal petrologist: some paleobotanical, palynological, and botanical influences on her research". International Journal of Coal Geology. 62 (1–2): 71–84. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2004.01.006.
  4. ^ Littke, Ralf (2001). "Marlies Teichmüller (1914–2000)". Organic Geochemistry. 32 (1): 1–2. doi:10.1016/S0146-6380(00)00163-7. ISSN 0146-6380.