Axel Firsoff


Valdemar Axel Firsoff FRAS was known principally as an amateur astronomer. He was born on 29 January 1912 in Bila Tserkva, Russian Empire, and died on 19 November 1981. He lived in Lochearnhead, Scotland, before moving to Somerset, England, where he settled in Glastonbury.

Biography

Axel Firsoff held an MA degree in languages and worked as a Swedish translator and in the United Kingdom Patent Office. He was a keen mountaineer and skier, as some of his earlier books reveal, and he was a ski instructor for the British Olympic Ski Team in the 1950s. He developed an interest in science, in particular geology and astronomy and this led him to publish numerous books on the moon and inner planets.
Many of his books also touched on extraterrestrial life and the nature of the mind. In Life, Mind and Galaxies, he speculated that "mind seems to be an entity of the same order as energy and matter", an idea well before its time. Firsoff held unorthodox views, for example he did not believe in the expansion of the universe. In other aspects of his work, such as the nature of the lunar craters, which he considered to be of volcanic rather than cosmological origin, he was later proved to be well wide of the mark.
In his book Strange World of the Moon, Firsoff suggested that there are underground oceans on the moon. Astronomer G. Fielder commented in the New Scientist magazine that most astronomers would not accept this view but as the book contains interesting new ideas it is recommended to all students of the moon.
In a 1977 review for Firsoff's book The Solar Planets in the New Scientist, Ian Ridpath commented that "the author queries the now well-established 234-day rotation period of Venus, introduces the concept of superheated steam in that planet's atmosphere, and proposes seas at the Venusian poles. An inexperienced reader, seeking reliable information on our modern knowledge of the Solar System that the book promises, will not know that these views are unorthodox."

Honors

Firsoff crater, located in Meridiani Planum on the planet Mars, is named in Firsoff's honor. Firsoff Crater is located at 2.63° North, 350.58° East.

Selected publications

Ski Track on the Battlefield - 1942The Tatra Mountains - 1942The Unity of Europe - 1947The Cairngorms on Foot and Ski - 1949Arran With Camera and Sketchbook - 1951Our Neighbor Worlds - 1953In the Hills of Breadalbane: Illustrated from the author's photos and drawings - 1954Moon Atlas - 1961The Surface of the Moon - 1961Strange World of the Moon - 1962The Crust Of The Earth - 1962Life Beyond the Earth: A Study in Exobiology - 1963Facing the Universe - 1966Life, Mind and Galaxies - 1967The Interior Planets - 1968The Old Moon and the New - 1969The World of Mars - 1969Gemstones of the British Isles - 1971Life among the Stars - 1974Working with Gemstones - 1974The Rockhound's Handbook - 1975The Solar Planets - 1977At the Crossroads of Knowledge - 1977The New Face of Mars - 1982