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Odo Deodatus I. Tauern (November 14, 1885 – July 11, 1926) was a German ethnologist, physicist, and inventor from a family of nobility who travelled to Southeast Asia as part of an expedition. He made the oldest known recordings of Balinese music on Edison wax cylinders. He collected for the ethnographic museum in Freiburg. He also made innovations in film and cinematography. Tauern was a son of Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck. He was born illegitimate in New York but was fostered by Countess Luise von Voss in Berlin. He went to Michaelis Gymnasium and became interested in the natural sciences and went on to study at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität, Berlin and the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Breisgau receiving a doctorate in science in 1909 for studies on the
Kerr effect The Kerr effect, also called the quadratic electro-optic (QEO) effect, is a change in the refractive index of a material in response to an applied electric field. The Kerr effect is distinct from the Pockels effect in that the induced index chang ...
(Tauern suggested that double refraction in glass induced by electromagnetic fields could be used to measure high voltages). He was chosen heir by his father Guido Graf Henckel Fürst von Donnersmarck. In 1910 he took part in an expedition to the Moluccas organized by Karl Deninger who led the team which included the zoologist
Erwin Stresemann Erwin Friedrich Theodor Stresemann (22 November 1889, in Dresden – 20 November 1972, in East Berlin) was a German naturalist and ornithologist. Stresemann was an ornithologist of extensive breadth who compiled one of the first and most compreh ...
. He took an interest in ethnology on the expedition while also supporting it technically. He documented the Sakai language of Padang. Tauern married Marie Sophie Berthold, the daughter of a family friend in Berlin, in 1914. The family lived in Freiburg, Breisgau and also spent summers in a cottage in Feldberg, the Black Forest, and raised three children. He was keenly into mountain climbing in the summers and spent winters on skiing trips. He chaired the Academic Ski Club in Freiburg from 1913 to 1920 and founded Berg- und Sport-Film GmbH in Freiburg along with
Arnold Fanck Arnold Fanck (6 March 1889 – 28 September 1974) was a German film director and pioneer of the mountain film genre. He is best known for the extraordinary alpine footage he captured in such films as '' The Holy Mountain'' (1926), '' The White He ...
, Bernhard Villinger and Rolf Bauer. Their film '' he Miracle of the Snowshoe' was among the first to make use of slow-motion. He also patented various innovations in film making including a viewing and editing setup collaborating with Nikolau Lyon who produced the Lyta Kinoskop (Ly for Lyon and ta for Tauern). He died on a climbing accident at Paulkefelsen in the Black Forest.


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Tauern genealogy

History of film editing
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tauern, Odo Deodatus 20th-century German physicists 1885 births 1926 deaths Ethnologists