Berend George Escher is a leading Dutch geologist and graduate from Delft. [1] He was also a professor at the Dutch Leiden University in the field of geology. [1] Escher himself was born on April 4, 1885 and died in Arnhem on October 11, 1967. [1] Some of the works that made him famous in Indonesia were about Mount Kelud in 1919, Mount Galunggung in 1925, Mount Anak Krakatau in 1928, and Mount Merapi in 1931. [1]
Escher is the son of George Arnold Escher, chief engineer and director of the Department of Public Works. [2] When he was studying in Switzerland, he met his professor, F. Mühlberg, who inspired Escher to pursue a career in the field of geology. [2] He completed his studies at the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich in 1911. [2]
Escher began his career as an assistant to Eugene Dubois, the inventor of Pithecanthropus erectus from the University of Amsterdam and then became a conservator of geological objects at Technological University of Delft. [2] To expand his experience, he joined the Bataafse Petroleum Company as a geologist in Batavia, now called Jakarta.
Escher is the son of George Arnold Escher, chief engineer and director of the Department of Public Works. [2] When he was studying in Switzerland, he met his professor, F. Mühlberg, who inspired Escher to pursue a career in the field of geology. [2] He completed his studies at the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich in 1911. [2]
Escher began his career as an assistant to Eugene Dubois, the inventor of Pithecanthropus erectus from the University of Amsterdam and then became a conservator of geological objects at Technological University of Delft. [2] To expand his experience, he joined the Bataafse Petroleum Company as a geologist in Batavia, now called Jakarta.
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