Ernst Weinschenk (1865-1921) a pioneer of microscopy and petrography in Munich (Southern Germany): An explorer of sulfidic ores and graphite deposits in the Moldanubicum
Abstract
Ernst Weinschenk was an excellent teacher at the High School of Technology from 1897 till his death 1921, and at the university in Munich from 1900. His studies of the mineralogy of meteorites and the contact-metamorphic mineralization in the eastern and western Alps and southern Tyrol made him widely known early-on. He successfully determined many new minerals with the aid of the polarizing microscope and the use of mineral and thin rock sections. He attributed the genesis of the sulfidic ore deposit Silberberg at Bodenmais (northern Bavarian Forest) and the graphite deposits near Passau (Lower Bavaria) to the exhalative output of sulphur and carbon during the granite orogenesis (Weinschenk 1914).
- Publication:
-
International Journal of Earth Sciences
- Pub Date:
- April 2009
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2009IJEaS..98..707P
- Keywords:
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- Polarizing microscope;
- Petrography;
- Meteorites;
- Graphite;
- Sulfidic ores;
- Contact metamorphism