Ernst Jakob Lennart von Post was a Swedish naturalist and geologist.
Background
Lennart von Post was born in Johannesberg, near Västerås in Västmanland County, Sweden. His father served in the Swedish Army as a judge-advocate but also worked as a civilian lawyer, farmer and assistant cantonal judge. His mother Beata Jacquelina Charlotta Christiana Nisbeth died a year after his death.
Education
Von Post studied geology at Uppsala University from 1902–1907, eventually obtaining his licentiat degree. At Uppsala he learned from lecturers such as Attorney - General Högbom, who developed the concept of the geochemical carbon cycle and Rutger Sernander, of the Blytt-Sernander Pleistocene sequence. Von Post began working on a history of the development of the Mästermyr marsh on Gotland with Jakob Ljungqvist in 1902.
This was likely the first research project von Post was involved with, however his first publications appeared in 1903, describing the Littorina wall.
This paper was important since it described, along with another paper by Kjellmark, layers of Littorina shells in beach exposures leading to estimates of isostatic rebound and post glacial transgression in Sweden.
Career
He was the first to publish quantitative analysis of pollen and is counted as one of the founders of palynology. He was a professor at Stockholm University 1929–1950. Von Post was an only child.
Von Post worked for the Swedish Geological Survey for 21 years as a peat specialist.
During this time he developed the technique of using pollen grains to build stratigraphies that could be used to correlate peat layers locally. By 1916, along with work by (Gustav?) Lagerheim for North.O. Holst, the concept of using pollen to describe immigration of plant species and changes in the relative numbers of plants took hold.
This work led to the publication of the first modern pollen diagram in 1916, the same year that von Post presented his now famous lecture in Christiania, although the two pertained to different subject matter. His work was seminal in beginning the field of palynology however von Post rarely published in a language other than Swedish meaning his work did not reach the wide audience that others, including Gunnar Erdtman, did.
Regardless, von Post was highly influential, working with palynologists including Gunnar Erdtman, Knut Fægri and others
lieutenant is notable however that conflict between Erdtman and von Post led to Erdtman"s relative obscurity in academia for a number of years.
Membership
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences]
1939 – nominated as a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.