Dorete Bloch
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University of Lund
Dorete Bloch | |
|---|---|
Tombstone of Bloch and her husband | |
| Born | 14 June 1943 |
| Died | 28 February 2015 (aged 71) Tórshavn, Faroe Islands, Denmark |
| Alma mater | Aarhus University University of Lund |
| Spouse | Ólávus Danielsen |
| Children | Jónas Bloch Danielsen, Jóannis Bloch Danielsen |
| Scientific career | |
| Institutions | University of the Faroe Islands |
| Thesis | Pilot Whales in the North Atlantic: Age, Growth and Social Structure in Faroese Grinds of the Long-Finned Pilot Whale, Globicephala melas (1994) |
Dorete Bloch, married name Dorete Bloch Danielsen, (14 June 1943 in Rungsted – 28 February 2015 in Tórshavn) was a Danish zoologist, former director of Náttúrugripasavnið (the Faroes Natural History Museum), editor of Fróðskaparrit and author of numerous books on the animals and plants of the Faroe Islands. Bloch was born in Rungsted but moved to the Faroe Islands in 1974, where she remained for the rest of her life. She published studies on pilot whales, gaining a D.Phil in their study in 1991, covering aspects such as their migration patterns, diving behaviour and their importance on Faroese society.
Dorete Bloch was born in Rungsted and attended Viborg Katedralskole until 1962 and then Aarhus University. After graduating in 1970 with an MSc in zoology, she worked at the university's Wildlife Research Station at Kalø, where she conducted research into hares and mute swans.[1]
On 15 October 1974 she moved to the Faroe Islands, where she settled for the rest of her life.[2] She was appointed a lecturer at the University of the Faroe Islands.[3] In 1980, she was promoted to be the director of the zoology department. She was awarded a D.Phil. by the University of Lund in 1994 for her thesis Pilot Whales in the North Atlantic. Age, Growth and Social Structure in Faroese Grinds of the Long-Finned Pilot Whale, Globicephala melas. In 1995, she was made director of the Faroe Natural History Museum, a position she held until 2009.[4] At the same time, from 2001, she was appointed as a professor of zoology at the University of the Faroe Islands.[5] She was also editor of the journal Fróðskaparrit.[4]
Bloch's research has involved various Faroese animals, including bottlenose whales and mountain hares.[6] Much of her work has been into pilot whales, covering aspects of their behaviour and their impact on Faroese society.[7][8] Between 2000 and 2004, she was part of a project using tagged long-finned pilot whales to track their movements via satellite.[9]
She has assisted in studies of birds of the islands and was bird consultant for Vágar Airport.[4][1] Her interests are not restricted to animals. Amongst her publications are also descriptions of the flowers of the Faroe Islands, which was called a "labour of love". Her writing was described as "lively and imaginative.[10]
Private life
Bloch married Ólávus Danielsen (1927–1997). They lived in Velbastaður, in Tórshavn Municipality and had one son, Jónas Bloch Danielsen, a musician who established Studio Bloch on the harbour in Tórshavn, the first recording studio in the islands.[11] Bloch died on 28 February 2015.[12]