Yuly Shokalsky
Yuly Mikhailovich Shokalsky (Russian: Юлий Михайлович Шокальский; October 17, 1856 in Saint Petersburg – March 26, 1940 in Leningrad) was a Russian Empire and Soviet oceanographer, cartographer, and geographer.
Career
[edit]A grandson of Anna Kern, Pushkin's celebrated mistress, Shokalsky graduated from the Naval Academy in 1880 and made a career in the Imperial Russian Navy, helping establish the Sevastopol Marine Observatory and rising to the rank of Lieutenant-General in 1912. At the same time, he developed interest in limnology and meteorology and became the most prolific Russian author on the subjects. In the Marine Miscellanies alone, he published some 300 articles.
Shokalsky's most important monograph was Oceanography (1917), a collection of his lectures which examined connection between meteorology and hydrology and emphasized the importance of monitoring marine phenomena in order to understand global changes of climate. Shokalsky insisted on differentiating oceanography and hydrography and coined the term "World Ocean".
In 1904, Shokalsky was elected into the Royal Geographical Society. Ten years later, he was put in charge of the Russian Geographical Society and retained the post until 1931.
Honours
[edit]His name was given to the Shokalsky Strait connecting the Laptev Sea and the Kara Sea, to the large Shokalsky Island in the Kara Sea, and to the ship Akademik Shokalskiy.
See also
[edit]External links
[edit]- (in Russian) Biography
- 1856 births
- 1940 deaths
- Scientists from Saint Petersburg
- Oceanographers
- Cartographers from the Russian Empire
- Geographers from the Russian Empire
- Soviet geographers
- 19th-century explorers from the Russian Empire
- Members of the French Academy of Sciences
- Corresponding Members of the Russian Academy of Sciences (1917–1925)
- Corresponding Members of the USSR Academy of Sciences
- Honorary members of the USSR Academy of Sciences
- Imperial Russian Navy personnel
- Fellows of the Royal Geographical Society
- Soviet oceanographers
- Soviet hydrographers
- Hydrographers from the Russian Empire
- Russian scientists