Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T14:35:51.053Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Paul Niggli (1888–1953)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2017

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Obituary
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1954

In the death of Professor Niggli on 13 January 1953 the scientific world lost an outstanding teacher and scientist, and glaciological study a stalwart supporter.

Director of the Mineralogical–Petrographical Department of the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule at Zürich, his text-books on mineralogy and petrography and his numerous papers on a wide range of subjects, including education, politics and the history of science, will be an everlasting memorial to his personality and activity.

It is not so well known that for twenty years Niggli was in close contact with snow and ice research. He wrote the introduction to the first fundamental publication of the Eidgenössisches Institut für Schnee- und Lawinenforschung, Weissfluhjoch, entitled Der Schnee und seine Metamorphose, 1939, outlining the background and the aims of Swiss snow research. For the inauguration of the new Institute in 1943 he gave a most impressive address on the beginning and development of snow and glacier research in the Swiss Alps (Schnee- und Gletscherforschung in der Schweiz, Mitteilung, Nr. 1). With his profound analysis of scientific discovery in the Swiss Alps he freed the new Institute from a merely technical programme and linked it to the uninterrupted tradition of Alpine science.

In the literature of snow Niggli’s name appears but rarely. Nevertheless, a good deal of the work done by the research workers at the Weissfluhjoch profited by his valuable support.

As a member of the Schweizerische Schnee- und Lawinenforschungs Kommission he always emphasized the need for crystallographical investigations, but, never blind to practical requirements, he was always ready with advice upon any “applied problem” including organization, personnel and finance.

Niggli’s intellect was universal, and he was engaged in innumerable tasks and duties. We may wonder, therefore, why the comparatively narrow branch of snow and ice research was honoured in receiving so great a share of his devotion and energy. Niggli’s deep affection for the glacier-covered mountains of his native land was probably the answer.