This section is from "The American Cyclopaedia", by George Ripley And Charles A. Dana. Also available from Amazon: The New American Cyclopędia. 16 volumes complete..
Edward Desor, a Swiss geologist and naturalist, born at Friedrichsdorf, Hesse-Homburg, Feb. 11, 1811. He studied law at Giessen and Heidelberg, was compromised in the republican movements of 1832-3, and escaped to Paris. Here his attention was drawn to geology; he made excursions with Elie de Beaumont, and in 1837 met Agassiz at a meeting of naturalists in Neufchatel, and with Gressli and Vogt became his active collaborator, contributing the essays for vol. iii. of his Monographic d'echinodermes vivants et fossiles (Neufchatel, 1842). He also published Excursions et sejours dans les glaciers et les hautes regions des Alpes de M. Agassiz et de ses com-pagnons de voyage (Neufchatel, 1844). After spending a few years in the north of Europe, especially in Scandinavia, investigating the erratic phenomena peculiar to that region, he accompanied Agassiz in 1847 to the United States, found employment in the coast survey, and made with Whitney, Foster, and Rogers a geological survey of the mineral district of Lake Superior. Returning to Neufchatel in 1852, he investigated with Gressli the orography of the Jura for industrial purposes, and was appointed professor of geology.
He published subsequently Geologische Beschreibung der neufchateler Jura (with Gressli); Synopsis des echinides fossiles (Paris, 1857-'9); and Be l'orographie des Alpes dans ses rapports avec la geologie (Neufchatel, 1862). Having been made a citizen of the community of Ponts, he was elected a member of the grand federal council, of which he became president. In the winter of 1863 he visited Algeria and the Sahara, and published Aus Sahara und Atlas (Leipsic, 1865). The discovery of the lake dwellings induced him to pursue the study of archaeology, and the results of his researches are given in Les palafittes, ou constructions lacustres du lac de Neufchatel (Paris, 1865; German, Leipsic, 1866). The most important of his recent publications is Echinologie helve-tique (Paris, 1869-'71), prepared in conjunction with Loriol.
 
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