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Alfred Wegener

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Alfred Wegener and Rasmus Villumsen during a German expedition in Greenland in 1930, dressed in warm winter clothing for their research station.

Alfred Lothar Wegener was a German climatologist, geologist, geophysicist, meteorologist, and polar researcher. He was born on 1 November 1880 and passed away in November 1930.

Wegener is best known for proposing the continental drift idea in 1912. He suggested that continents slowly move around the Earth. At the time, many scientists did not agree with him. It was not until the 1960s, with new discoveries like palaeomagnetism, that his idea was accepted. These discoveries helped create the modern understanding of plate tectonics.

Before the jet stream was well known, Wegener joined several trips to Greenland. These trips studied polar air circulation. During the trips, people made important weather observations. They were the first to spend winter on the inland Greenland ice sheet and also the first to drill ice cores on a moving Arctic glacier.

Biography

Alfred Wegener was born in Berlin on 1 November 1880. He grew up near Rheinsberg, where his family had a vacation home.

Wegener studied physics, meteorology, and astronomy. He worked at an observatory and helped develop weather balloons to study the sky. In 1906, he joined his first trip to Greenland, where he set up the first weather station.

Commemorative plaque on Wegener's former school in Wallstrasse

In 1912, Wegener shared his idea that continents slowly move around Earth. This idea, called continental drift, was not accepted by many scientists at first.

During World War I, Wegener worked on weather for the army. After the war, he kept studying weather and climate. He also wrote about his continental drift theory in books.

Wegener made many trips to Greenland to study ice and weather. On his last trip in 1930, he was trying to set up weather stations. Wegener set out to bring supplies but never came back. He died on the journey, and his body was later found in the ice.

Continental drift theory

Alfred Wegener noticed that the world's large landmasses almost fit together like pieces of a puzzle. The edges of the Americas match closely with Africa and Europe. Antarctica, Australia, India, and Madagascar also fit next to Southern Africa. In 1912, Wegener shared his idea called continental drift. He studied rocks, structures, and fossils on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean and found many similarities.

Original world maps created by Wegener showing Pangaea and the continents drifting apart. Its spatial and temporal classification corresponds to his conception at that time, not to the later proven positions and geological epochs.

Wegener believed all continents were once joined together in one big landmass and later moved apart. He thought forces like Earth's rotation or the movement of the ocean floor might cause this drift. In 1915, he wrote a book sharing his theory, naming the ancient supercontinent "Urkontinent" (similar to "Pangaea"). He added more evidence in later editions of his book.

Some scientists supported Wegener's ideas, but many geologists were skeptical at first. They questioned how the continents could move. Over time, especially after Wegener's death, more discoveries helped prove his theory. It wasn't until the 1960s that most scientists accepted continental drift as part of the theory of plate tectonics.

Modern developments

In the early 1950s, a new science called paleomagnetism began to support Alfred Wegener's idea. Scientists at the University of Cambridge and Imperial College found evidence that matched his predictions. By 1953, samples from India showed the country was once in the Southern Hemisphere, just as Wegener thought.

The 1960s brought big changes in how we understand the Earth. Discoveries like seafloor spreading and Wadati–Benioff zones helped bring back Wegener's idea in a new way called plate tectonics. Maps of the ocean floors made by Marie Tharp and Bruce Heezen were very important for this change in thinking. Wegener was honored after his death for starting one of the biggest scientific changes of the 20th century.

In 1993, with the Global Positioning System (GPS), scientists could finally measure how continents move directly.

Awards and honours

The Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Bremerhaven, Germany, was made in 1980 to honor Wegener. It gives out the Wegener Medal in his memory. There are also places named after him, like a crater on the Moon, a crater on Mars, the asteroid 29227 Wegener, the Wegener Peninsula in Eastern Greenland, and a peninsula in Western Greenland where he died.

The European Geosciences Union gives an Alfred Wegener Medal & Honorary Membership to scientists who have done important work in atmospheric, hydrological, or ocean sciences.

Selected works

Alfred Wegener wrote many important books and articles. Some of his most famous works include:

  • Thermodynamics of the Atmosphere (1911)
  • A paper called "The Formation of Major Landforms of the Earth’s Crust (Continents and Oceans) on Geophysical Basis" presented in 1912
  • The Origin of Continents and Oceans (1922), which was later updated and published in several editions

Wegener also worked with others on books about past climates and wrote about his trips to Greenland.

Images

A plaque in Marburg commemorating Alfred Wegener, who developed the theory of continental drift during his time there from 1908 to 1919.
Historical snowplanes used during a German Greenland expedition in 1930, showcasing early polar exploration technology.
A group of explorers from an early 20th-century German expedition preparing for winter in Greenland
Beautiful white cumulus clouds floating in a clear blue sky.
A stunning view of our planet Earth from space, showing Africa, Antarctica, and the Arabian Peninsula.
A stunning view of Earth rising over the lunar horizon, captured by astronauts during the Apollo 8 mission.
A colorful diagram showing the planets in our solar system, including Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, as captured by NASA spacecraft.
Portrait of Alfred Wegener, a scientist known for his theory of continental drift.
An artist's depiction of HE 1523-0901, one of the oldest stars in our galaxy, located about 7,500 light-years from Earth.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Alfred Wegener, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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