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Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at [[:de:Anna Maurizio]]; see its history for attribution. {{Translated|de|Anna Maurizio}} to the talk page. |
Anna Maurizio
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Anna Maurizio in the Bee Research Centre in Liebefeld ca 1960
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Born | 26 November 1900 |
Died | 24 July 1993 |
Known for | studies of bees |
Scientific career | |
Fields | biology |
Anna Maurizio (26 November 1900[1][2][3] – 24 July 1993)[4] was a Swiss biologist who studied bees. She worked for more than three decades in the Department of Bees at the Liebefeld Federal Dairy Industry and Bacteriological Institute, where she developed new methods for determining the amount of polleninhoney.[5]
Maurizio was born in Zurich, the daughter of botanist and cultural historian Adam Maurizio. She studied at a gymnasium in Lviv, then graduated from the high school of agricultureinDubliany (near Lviv) in 1923 and then in biology in 1927 in Lviv.[clarification needed] She began work at the Federal Station of Dairy and Bacteriology in Liebefeld-Bern in 1928 and retired in 1966.[6] She died in Switzerland, aged about 93.
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