Georges Deicha


Georges Deicha was a French geologist and mineralogist, known for his pioneering work on fluid inclusions.
Deicha was a student in Paris at the Sorbonne when he started to investigate the crystallization of gypsum in the Paris basin. He wrote his first doctoral thesis on this topic and on the study and interpretation of primary fluid inclusions in minerals and rocks, an area that had until then received little study.
Deicha worked for his scientific career in the CNRS. He retired with the title "Directeur de recherche de classe exceptionnelle".

Fluid inclusions

In the Laboratory of Applied Geology of Paris, Deicha developed various technical means for detecting, monitoring and analyzing inclusions such as crushing rock under a microscope.
In 1960, at the International Geological Congress in Copenhagen, Deicha founded, together with Edwin W. Roedder and Nikolai P. Ermakov, the Commission on Ore-Forming Fluids in Inclusions. In 1962, he participated in the development of electronic fractography. The term "Deicha's method" became standard, in particular in Russian literature.

Recognition

Artistic activity

Deicha, besides his scientific work, was a sculptor, mainly using bas-relief technique. Deicha created medals representing V. Agafonov, P. Milyukov, Leon Bertrand, Ami Boué, Louis Barrabe, Pierre Pruvost, and Raymond Furon. Most of these medals are used as awards by the French Geological Society.