Friedrich Stohmann

Friedrich Karl Adolf Stohmann (25 April 1832 – 1 November 1897) was a German agricultural chemist.

Biography

He was born in Bremen, and educated at Göttingen and London. He was Thomas Graham's assistant at University College from 1853 to 1855, and afterwards assisted Wilhelm Henneberg at Celle and at Weende-Göttingen.[1] In 1862 he started the station for agricultural experiments at Braunschweig. He was called to Halle in 1865 as an associate professor, and to the University of Leipzig in 1871, where he was director of the physiological institute of agriculture (1871-97). His principal investigations had to do with the nourishment of animals.

From 1892 he was a member of the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina.[1]

Works

References

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