Background
He was born at Hohenheim in Württemberg, on December 19, 1831.
He was born at Hohenheim in Württemberg, on December 19, 1831.
He first went to the University of Tübingen, where he graduated with a Doctor of Philosophy in 1853.
The results of his work was published in Die Juraformation Englands, Frankreichs and des südwestlichen Deutschlands (1856–1858). He went to the Palaeontological Museum at Munich in 1858 and became an assistant there. lieutenant was in 1860 that he became the Professor of Palaeontology at the University of Munich.
Then, a year later, he became the director of the Palaeontological Collection.
Of his later works, it can be said that the most important was Paläontologische Mittheilungen aus dem Museum des Königlichen Bayerischen Staates (1862–1865). He died on 23 December 1865 at the age of 34.
The wrinkle ridge Dorsum Oppel on the Moon is named after him, as is the fossil prawn genus Albertoppelia. Oppel devoted his life to the study of fossils and the examination of the strata of the Jurassic period deposits.
He is considered to have founded the study of zone stratigraphy and the use of index fossils, a term which he created, to compare the different strata.
He also established the Tithonian stage, for strata (mainly equivalent to the English Portland and Purbeck Bedfordshire) that occur on the borders of Jurassic and Cretaceous.
Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities.