What do you think when you hear the word weather? Of course, most people are thinking about the weather. Some people are more than just "weather". The same people think about the weather and tie it to storms, news, and global disasters. People who are connected are called meteorologists. I am very happy to talk to meteorologist Mark Stevens. Mark works for Herald Argus, and we are forecasting it weekly. Not only he predicted, he was also a storm chaseman.
Earlier this week, I asked NCAR scientists about the factors that influenced the weather options. She did not hesitate that this was a professor who talked about this field while entering Alabama University in Huntsville. On the same day he also influenced another woman. Two young women continue encouraging each other in search of university courses, now scientists, but still best friends. The professor never taught any of them, but he definitely influenced their career path.
Alfred Wegener (1880-1930) (Figure 10.1) got a doctorate in astronomy from the University of Berlin in 1904, but he was interested in geophysics and meteorology and was engaged in meteorology. In 1911, he published a scientific publication describing the matching of the Permanent Permanent Land Fossils in South America, Africa, India, Antarctica and Australia (Figure 10.2). Wegner firmly pursues his theory, looking for evidence to support it, locating the library, negotiating with colleagues, and observing it. He depends greatly on the geological model comparable to the sea, such as the sedimentary layer of South America, the geological pattern of Africa, the mountainous region of North America, the mountains of northern Europe. Lock type
Alfred Wegener was born in Berlin on 1 November 1880. He studied natural science at the University of Berlin and in 1944 received a doctorate in astronomy. However, although he was not engaged in astronomy work, he relied on meteorology, telegraph and the Atlantic cable TV and radio to promote the rapid development of storm tracking and forecasting. In 1905, Wegner visited the Royal Prussian Air Observatory near Berlin where he studied the upper atmosphere with kites and balloons. He also flew to hot air balloons; in fact, in 1906, he and his brother Kart broke the endurance record of the world by staying at a high altitude above 52 hours.
Bengtsson was born in 1935 in Trollhättan, Sweden. He has a doctorate in meteorology from the University of Stockholm (1964). His long-term productive career later served as Director of the Mid-Range Weather Forecast Center in Reading, England, (1976-1990), and director of the Max Planck Meteorological Institute (1991 - 2000) in Hamburg It was. Bengtsson is currently a senior fellow of the Center for Environmental Systems Science at the University of Reading and is an honorary director of Max Planck Meteorological Research Institute.