249 MOLODENSKH 



Bibliography: 



Scientific Basis of Processing Feed in Silos. 2nd ed. 

 Mo scow -Leningrad: 1933. 



Course on Agricultural Microbiology. Moscow-Leningrad: 

 1934. 



Ecologic -Geographic Change of Soil Bacteria. Moscow - 

 Leningrad: 1947. 



Thermophilic Microorganisms in Nature and Practice. 1950. 

 and M. L Pertsovskaya . Microorganisms and Self- 

 purification of Soil. Moscow: 1954. 



Microorganisms and the Fertility of Soil. Moscow: 1956. 

 Office: Institute of Microbiology of the USSR Academy of 



Sciences 

 Leninskii Prospekt, 33 

 Moscow, USSR 

 Residence: Leninskii Prospekt, 13 



Moscow, USSR 

 Telephone: V2 58 78 



MOLODENSKH, MIKHAIL SERGEEVICH (Geophysicist) 



M. S. Molodenskii was born June 16, 1909. Upon graduating 

 from Moscow University in 1932, he worked at the Central 

 Scientific Research Institute of Geodesy, Aero Photography and 

 Cartography. In 1946 he worked at the U.S.S.R. Academy of 

 Sciences Geophysical Institute, and in 1956, at the U.S.S.R. 

 Academy of Sciences Institute of Terrestrial Physics. He was 

 awarded a Stalin Prize in 1946 and 1951. In 1946 he became a 

 Corresponding Member of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. 



Molodenskii worked out a theory on utilization of measure- 

 ments of the gravitational field of the earth for geodesic pur- 

 poses. He proposed a method of astronomic -gravimetric level- 

 ling, a new method of determining the shape of the earth. He 

 designed the first spring gravimeter in the U.S.S.R. He in- 

 vestigated the elastic properties of the earth and the earth's 

 core. 

 Bibliography: 



Main questions on geodesic gravimetrics. Works of the 

 Central Scientific Research Institute of Geodesy, Aero 

 Photography and Cartography, 1945, #42. 

 Methods of simultaneous treatment of gravimetric and geo- 

 desic materials in studying the gravitational field of the 

 earth and its shape. Works of the Central Scientific Re- 

 search Institute of Geodesy, Aero Photography and Cartogra- 

 phy, 1951, #86. 



