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Subsequently, Kils was invited by the [http://www.marine.rutgers.edu INSTITUTE OF MARINE AND COASTAL SCIENCES] at [[Rutgers University]] via an EB1 Visa (for such 4 greencard visa you need a major internationally recognized award, such as a [http://www.foreignborn.com/visas_imm/immigrant_visas/employment_immigration/eb-1.htm Nobel Prize], where he became a tenured associate professor in 1994 helping to set up a [http://marine.rutgers.edu/cool/data.html "Virtual Institute for Marine Sciences"] at [http://marine.rutgers.edu/cool/info/leomap.html Tuckerton] with online underwater cameras via [http://marine.rutgers.edu/mrs/LEO/LEO15.html fibre optic cables]. He programmed the [http://ecoscope.com/cybermic/index.htm virtual microscope] and developed an [[Long-term Ecosystem Observatory|''in situ'' microscope]]. He worked with glasseels and created the web server [http://web.archive.org/web/20001027080113/www.ecoscope.com/eelbase.htm eelBASE].
Subsequently, Kils was invited by the [http://www.marine.rutgers.edu INSTITUTE OF MARINE AND COASTAL SCIENCES] at [[Rutgers University]] via an EB1 Visa (for such 4 greencard visa you need a major internationally recognized prize the same class as a [http://www.foreignborn.com/visas_imm/immigrant_visas/employment_immigration/eb-1.htm Nobel Prize], where he became a tenured associate professor in 1994 helping to set up a [http://marine.rutgers.edu/cool/data.html "Virtual Institute for Marine Sciences"] at [http://marine.rutgers.edu/cool/info/leomap.html Tuckerton] with online underwater cameras via [http://marine.rutgers.edu/mrs/LEO/LEO15.html fibre optic cables]. He programmed the [http://ecoscope.com/cybermic/index.htm virtual microscope] and developed an [[Long-term Ecosystem Observatory|''in situ'' microscope]]. He worked with glasseels and created the web server [http://web.archive.org/web/20001027080113/www.ecoscope.com/eelbase.htm eelBASE].


He still works at high resolution images and develops online projects like Wikiversity [http://de.wikiversity.org/wiki/Institut_Ozeanographie]. His favourite lecture Biology of Antarctica he holds in your house, live, anywhere.
He still works at high resolution images and develops online projects like Wikiversity [http://de.wikiversity.org/wiki/Institut_Ozeanographie]. His favourite lecture "Biology of Antarctica" he holds in your house, live, anywhere.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 14:07, 27 September 2009

Uwe Kils in 1998

Uwe Kils (born July 10, 1951Template:Fn) is a German marine biologist specializing in planktology. He was born July 10 1951 in Flensburg, his mother was a ballerina, his father a master-photographer. He began as bricklayer on the Island of Sylt, Kampen with Hoeft. Next he went to school at Schwarz to become a guitar and violin builder. Next he went to professional photography at his atelier of his father FOTO KILS click on we sail any sea. He left gymnasium towards USA to study informatics and computer sciences. After his return he went back a few weeks to gymnasium to reach the 1.2 neceserity to study biolgy. He finished Biology with Herre and Tischler with an A and was accepted into the Institut for Meereskunde. He finished his diploma with an A. He had already a printed publication out before the diploma was out and he got offered a position to join a payed expedition to antarctica. On 1979 May 16 he reached his Doctor Title in Marine Biology at the age of 29 with a work of behaviour and physiology of krill in antarctica with "summa cum laude" und "opus eximium".

He was fundamental together with Loki Schmidt in raising the funding for the new german polar programm and the POLARSTERN.


Titanium microengeneering and optical raytracing at Menk[1]e and Dynat.


Aquaculture work in Norway and Finland with Kari Rouhunen and Timo Meakkinen. 1987 he received Habilitations and venia legendi in marine biology and fisheries biology from the University of Kiel under Gotthilf Hempel with the highest grades.


His work led to the development of various instruments for in situ observation of the underwater fauna for field research, including the ecoSCOPE[2] and the first video processing software ever. Later work at Kiel included the study of predator-prey interactions of juvenile herring and plankton, for which a floating laboratory was built called ATOLL[3]

Small lecture room on board with international students in a course on aquaculture technology

The ATOLL was composed of three curved fiberglass elements, each 25 m long and having a draught of only 38 cm. For towing, the elements could be assembled in a long S-shape; in operation, the elements would form a horseshoe shape surrounding 150 m² water surface and was developed and deployed in the Bay of Kiel. Work there led to the discovery of severe case of oxygen depletion Template:Inote and to Kils' involvement in an initiative to repopulate the Flensburg Fjord with herring[4] as part of the project "Saubere Ostsee" ("Clean Baltic"). His work was honored by the HEINZ MAIER LEIBNITZ PRIZE, the HEISENBERG PRIZE and the 500 000 BIOSCIENCE PRIZE of the VOLKSWAGEN FOUNDATION. He is founder and president of the private KINDER UNIVERSITYand ELITE UNIVERSITY.

Lectures: Fisheries Biology, Marine Biology, Experimental Fisheries Biology, Aquaculture, Navigation and Orientation in Fish and Oceanography, Professional Photography, Informatics, Computer Sciences.


Subsequently, Kils was invited by the INSTITUTE OF MARINE AND COASTAL SCIENCES at Rutgers University via an EB1 Visa (for such 4 greencard visa you need a major internationally recognized prize the same class as a Nobel Prize, where he became a tenured associate professor in 1994 helping to set up a "Virtual Institute for Marine Sciences" at Tuckerton with online underwater cameras via fibre optic cables. He programmed the virtual microscope and developed an in situ microscope. He worked with glasseels and created the web server eelBASE.

He still works at high resolution images and develops online projects like Wikiversity [5]. His favourite lecture "Biology of Antarctica" he holds in your house, live, anywhere.

References

Footnotes

Template:Fnb Peer evaluation from 1994