Hintze, Lehi F.
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person
Hintze, Lehi F.
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Name :
Hintze, Lehi F.
Hintze, L. F.
Name Components
Name :
Hintze, L. F.
Hintze, L. F. (Lehi F.)
Name Components
Name :
Hintze, L. F. (Lehi F.)
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Biographical History
Lehi F. Hintze graduated from the University of Utah in the spring of 1941 in Geology. He was a lieutenant in the U.S. Army Field Artillery during WWII from 1941 to 1945. He returned and received his Ph.D at Columbia. Dr. Hintze has spent a lifetime committed to studying, mapping, writing and teaching about the geology of Utah. Hintze joined the faculty at BYU in 1955, where he served as a professor of geology until he retired in 1986. He also served as chair of the Department of Geology from 1962 to 1969. He has published more than 100 geologic quadrangle maps on Utah Geology and has compiled geologic maps of the entire state at several different scales. In addition, Hintze's book, "Geologic History of Utah," has become the standard reference work on the geology of Utah for geologists from around the world. He is now working on a revision of this book that he says will be an alternative for the tourist that attempts to tell the same story in more user-friendly terms. Dr. Hintze was awarded the first "Lehi Hintze Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Geology of Utah," presented by the Utah Geological Survey and the Utah Geological Association in October 2003. The Department of Geology is one of seven departments in the College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences. The faculty of the Department of Geology consists of 15 (tenure-track) professors and a varying number of adjunct and part-time faculty members representing the core of the earth and environmental sciences. The Department has about 80 undergraduate majors and 30 graduate students. Women comprise about 45% of the undergraduate students and about 30% of the graduate students in the Department.
Lehi F. Hintze graduated from the University of Utah in the spring of 1941 in Geology. He was a lieutenant in the U.S. Army Field Artillery during WWII from 1941 to 1945. He returned and received his Ph.D at Columbia. Dr. Hintze has spent a lifetime committed to studying, mapping, writing and teaching about the geology of Utah. Hintze joined the faculty at BYU in 1955, where he served as a professor of geology until he retired in 1986. He also served as chair of the Department of Geology from 1962 to 1969. He has published more than 100 geologic quadrangle maps on Utah Geology and has compiled geologic maps of the entire state at several different scales. In addition, Hintze's book, "Geologic History of Utah" (1972), has become the standard reference work on the geology of Utah for geologists from around the world. Its third edition, published in 2009, whas co-authored with Dr. Bart J. Kowellis. Dr. Hintze was awarded the first "Lehi Hintze Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Geology of Utah," presented by the Utah Geological Survey and the Utah Geological Association in October 2003. The Department of Geological Sciences is one of seven departments in the College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences. The faculty of the Department of Geology consists of 15 (tenure-track) professors and a varying number of adjunct and part-time faculty members representing the core of the earth and environmental sciences. The Department has about 80 undergraduate majors and 30 graduate students. Women comprise about 45% of the undergraduate students and about 30% of the graduate students in the Department.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/50518920
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80026685
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n80026685
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eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Geology
Geology
Geology
Geology
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Utah
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Nevada
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Oregon
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Utah
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Nevada
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Colorado
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Oregon
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