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Count Ardito Desio (18 April 1897 – 12 December 2001) was an Italian explorer, mountain climber, geologist, and cartographer. Desio was born in Palmanova, Friuli, Italy. He attended the Middle Schools of Udine and Cividale and the University of Florence (1916 – 1920), graduating with a degree in Natural Sciences (Geology). He made advanced studies in Geology at the same University from 1921 to 1923, and was also assistant in that subject in that university, as well as in those of Pavia (1923 – 1924) and Milan (1924 – 1927). He was Lecturer in Physical Geography, Geology and Paleontology (1928 – 1931), Professor of Geology at the University of Milan, and Applied Geology at the Engineering School of Milan (a position he held from 1932 to 1972). Concurrent to these positions, he served as a consultant geologist for the Edison Company for hydroelectric plants in Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Greece, Turkey and Brazil, and at the same capacity for the Public Power Corporation of Greece. In 1973 he became Professor Emeritus at the University of Milan. Desio began geological investigations into certain areas of the Alps and Apennines in 1920. The following year, he made some exploratory trips to the Dodecanese Islands. He published a volume on the geology of that archipelago in the Italian Geological Survey. In 1926, Desio organized and led a geographical and geological expedition to the Oasis of Al-Jaghbub, in the Libyan Desert. The scientific results of these investigations are published in four volumes by the Royal Geographical Society of Italy, the organization that sponsored the expedition. From 1930 to 1933 he led some geological and geographical expeditions through the hinterland of Libya, including the crossing of the Sahara desert with a large caravan of camels from the Mediterranean seaboard as far as the frontier of Sudan and back through Fezzan, across the Libyan Sahara (summer 1931). The report of this expedition was also published in four volumes. In 1935 and 1936 he further explored the Fezzan, from both the geological and hydrological point of view, and the Tibesti massif in the Central Sahara. From 1936 to 1940, he organized and directed the Libyan Geological Survey, which included research into mining and artesian waters by order of the Government of Libya. Desio discovered in 1938 natural oil in the subsurface of Libya. In the same years he discovered also an exploitable deposit of Carnallite in the Oasis of Marada, and rich artesian aquifers in some zones of Northern Libya, which gave a strong impulse to the development of the agriculture. Further exploration in this region was however halted by the outbreak of World War II. During the winters of 1937 and 1938, Desio explored Wallega and the Benishangul-Gumuz Region in Eastern Ethiopia, both from the point of view of the geology and mining, discovering some new deposits of gold and molybdenite. In 1940
he organized and directed an expedition to Tibesti, employing
automobiles and aircraft. The scientific reports were published in a
volume by the Royal Geographical Society of Italy. In the
same year he organized and directed a mining exploration in Northern
Albania. In 1929
he was a member of the Italian Geographical Expedition to Karakorum,
under
the leadership of the Duke
of
Spoleto, in the capacity of geographer and geologist. On this
occasion he covered Kashmir and Baltistan in Northern India, and
developed his scientific activity in the valleys of Baltoro and Panmah glaciers on the south slope of the
range, and in the Sarpo
Laggo and Shaksgam valleys, between the
Karakorum and the Aghil ranges, the Abruzzi valley climbing, for the
first time, the Conway
Pass. The results of this expedition are contained in a volume,
which was published under the aegis of the Royal Geographical Society
and the Italian Alpine Club in 1936. During
the summer of 1933, Desio led an expedition to Iran.
The
expedition climbed some of the highest peaks of the Zagros
Range including
development of a new route to the summit of Iran's highest peak, Mount
Damāvand (5,771 m).
He
published some scientific reports on this trip. From 1952
to 1955, he led 3 expeditions to the Karakorum Range and Hindu
Kush. The first was a preliminary expedition; the second, the main
expedition for the first ascent of K2 (8,611 m), second
highest peak in the world; the third, for geological, geophysical and
ethnographical researches. The results of the studies carried out
during these expeditions have been published in many papers and more
largely developed in 8 volumes of scientific character. During
the summer of 1961, he led an expedition to Badakhshan and Katagan (North-eastern Afghanistan)
with
a geological and geophysical program, and in the summer of 1962 he
led another expedition to the Karakorum Range, exploring geologically
the upper Hunza valley and the Chogo
Lumba, the Basha and the Hoh
Lumba glacier
valleys. In 1967
and 1968 he carried out geohydrological investigations in the Mu
River basin (Central Burma)
for
a UN irrigation project, while in the 1970 he developed a
geological study in Mindanao (Philippines). Desio in
northern Pakistan carried out three other
geological expeditions during the summers of 1971 (Middle Indus
Valley), 1973 (Gilgit-Skardu)
and
1975 (Punjab and Gilgit). By
invitation of Academia
Sinica, in June 1980, after a scientific symposium in Beijing,
Desio
crossed Southern Tibet under the leadership of
Chinese scientists. In 1989
he planned, organized and realized a permanent high altitude scientific
laboratory-observatory in a prefabricated glass and aluminum pyramid
shaped structure, which was installed at an altitude of 5,050 m at
the base of Mount
Everest. The aim was to grant multidisciplinary scientific
investigations at high quote. The “Pyramid” is still existent, and the
laboratory still works. In
1961,
he was invited by the National
Science
Foundation to
visit Antarctica,
particularly
the stations of McMurdo, Byrd and Amundsen-Scott at the South
Pole, and the Wright
Valley, one of the Dry
Valleys (Victoria
Land). Desio was
President of the Geological
Committee
of Italy, of the Geological Society and is honorary
President of the Paleontology Society, of the National Association of
Italian Geologists. He was the first president of the Italian Order of Geologists. Desio was
a member of the Italian National Academy of Lincei. He was awarded an
honorary degree in Geological Sciences by the University
of
Urbino in 1985.
He
spent
his last four years in Rome,
where
he died in December 2001. He is buried in Palmanova,
his
native town. |