Katharina von Salis Perch-Nielsen is a Swissgeologist and orienteering competitor. She is a retired Adjunct Professor at the Department of Earth Sciences at ETH Zurich in Switzerland. She retired 1 October 2001. During her scientific career, as a Professor in the Micropaleontology at the Geological Institute at ETH Zurich, she was highly engaged in promoting gender equality in sciences and active in fighting to improve the position of girls and women in sciences at Swiss universities and high schools. She was at the origin of the Office of Equal Opportunities for Men and Women that exists at ETH Zurich since 1993.
She competed at the very first European Orienteering Championships, in 1962, where she placed 6th in the individual contest. She also won a bronze medal in the unofficial relay, with the Swiss team. At the 1964 European Orienteering Championships, she won a silver medal in the relay for Switzerland, and placed tenth in the individual event. She won a silver medal in the individual event at the 1966 World Orienteering Championships in Fiskars, and finished 4th in the relay event with the Swiss team. She made several climbing first-ascents. However, back then she was not allowed to join the exclusively male Alpine climbing club at the Berne University.
Scientific career
Perch-Nielson started her career as a postdoctoral researcher first in Copenhagen in Denmark and then in Paris. In 1968, she got a lecturer position in Copenhagen where she stayed till 1974. Between 1974 and 1989, she moved with her family to Zurich, Amsterdam, Vienna, The Hague, and London, before coming back to Zurich. During this time, she held academic positions in the Free University Amsterdam and the Naturhistorisches Museum Vienna, but also worked for Shell as a consultant biostratigrapher. In 1989, she was appointed professor at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich.
Awards
Perch-Nielsen was awarded the Steno Medal in 1998, for her work in micropaleontology in Denmark and Greenland, and as a pioneer in the study of coccoliths. In 2003 she was awarded Honorary Membership of the International Nannoplankton Association and in 2007 she got the Prize by the Somazzi Foundation for her work in geology and equal opportunity. In 2008, Perch-Nielsen got the Brady medal for her contribution in the fields of biostratigraphy and palaeobiology and her knowledge on nannofossils.
Personal life
A daughter of Charlotte v. Salis, Perch-Nielsen grew up in Zollikofen, in the canton of Bern in Switzerland. Her grandmother was a painter, mountaineer and a single mother. Her mother was a journalist. She married Danish chemical engineer Jørgen Perch-Nielsen, and has three daughters Nina, Christina and Sabine.
Selected works
Geologische und sedimentologische Untersuchungen in Molasse und Quartär südöstlich Wolhusen
Der Feinbau und die Klassifikation der Coccolithen aus dem Maastrichtien von Dänemark
Revision of Triassic stratigraphy of the Scoresby Land and Jameson Land region, East Greenland