Andrija Mohorovičić and the Mohorovičić Discontinuity

Andrija Mohorovičić and the Mohorovičić Discontinuity.

Andrija Mohorovicic – 1936). On January 23 1857 Croatian meteorologist and seismologist Andrija Mohorovičić was born. He is best known for the eponymous Mohorovičić discontinuity i.e. he boundary between the Earth's crust mantle discovered by him - and is considered a founder of modern seismology. Andrija Mohorovičić proved to be a talented student from early age. By the age of 15, he spoke English French and Italian and learned German Czech Latin and Ancient Greek as well. He enrolled at the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Prague and studies with prominent professors, such as Ernst Mach Afterwards, he was occupied as a teacher at the grammar school in Zagreb and in Osijek. At a nautical school in Bakar near Rijeka he was able to teach mathematics physics and meteorology Mohorovičić established a meteorological station and he maintained continuous meteorological observations. In his observations, he also included the movement of air and the cloud using the nephoscope which he constructed. Mohorovičić defended his dissertation "On the Observation of Clouds and the Daily and Annual Cloud Period in Bakar in 1893 and taught courses in geophysics and astronomy at the Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb. The scientist and teacher also became a member of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts in Zagreb . To one of Mohorovičić's contributions to science belogs the famous Mohorovičić Discontinuity which was discovered around 1910 and it can be described as the boundary between the Earth's crust and the mantle Mohorovičić realized that the velocity of a seismic wave is related to the density of the material that it is moving through and interpreted the acceleration of seismic waves within Earth's outer shell as a compositional change within the Earth Therefore, he concluded, must the acceleration be caused by a higher density material being present at depth. Mohorovičić determined that the basaltic oceanic crust and the granitic continental crust are underlain by a material which has a density similar to an olivine-rich rock such as peridotite . At yovisto, you may more about the Science of Natural Disasters in a video lecture by Dr. David Percovici at Yale University.

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