Fritz Goro |
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Born | Fritz Gorodiski 1901 (1901)
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Died | 14 December 1986(1986-12-14) (aged 84–85)
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Known for | Inventing macrophotography |
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Fritz Goro (originally Fritz Gorodiski; born 1901 in Bremen, (Germany) – died 14 December 1986 in Chappaqua, New York) was the inventor of macrophotography[1] and a photographer specializing in science, published in the Life magazine and Scientific American.[1] He started his career as a photojournalist in Germany before fleeing from the Nazis in 1933, arriving in the USA in 1936.[1]
Goro documented many major scientific breakthroughs, including pictures of the first plutonium ever produced, the first atomic-bomb test, the advent of microelectronics, the ruby laser, as well as photos of Ali Javan timing the frequency of light at M.I.T. laboratory.[2]
Goro was described by the evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould as "the most influential photographer that science has ever known".[3]
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