David Freudenberger
0 sources
David Freudenberger
Summary
David Freudenberger is a human[1]. He worked as an ecologist[2].
Key Facts
- David Freudenberger's professions included ecologist[2].
- David Freudenberger was employed by Australian National University[3].
- David Freudenberger was educated at University of New England[4].
- David Freudenberger was educated at University of Canterbury[5].
- David Freudenberger is recorded as male[6].
- David Freudenberger's instance of is recorded as human[7].
- David Freudenberger's ISNI is recorded as 0000000064466820[8].
- David Freudenberger's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 481149294225680521132[9].
- David Freudenberger's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as no98072990[10].
- David Freudenberger's Libraries Australia ID is recorded as 41011231[11].
- David Freudenberger's ORCID iD is recorded as 0000-0002-3585-8600[12].
- David Freudenberger earned the academic degree of Master of Applied Science[13].
- David Freudenberger's BIBSYS ID is recorded as 6086538[14].
- David Freudenberger's academic thesis is recorded as Comparative aspects of copper metabolism in sheep and deer (Cervus elaphus)[15].
- David Freudenberger studied under Andrew Sykes[16].
- David Freudenberger's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as NZThesisProject[17].
- David Freudenberger's OpenAlex ID is recorded as A5016450006[18].
Body
Education
Educated at University of New England[4], a public university[19], in Australia[20], founded in 1954[21], headquartered in Armidale[22] and University of Canterbury[5], a university[23], in New Zealand[24], founded in 1873[25]. David Freudenberger earned the academic degree of Master of Applied Science[13]. He studied under Andrew Sykes[16].
Career and Affiliations
David Freudenberger's professions included ecologist[2]. He was employed by Australian National University[3].
FAQs
What did David Freudenberger do for work?
David Freudenberger worked as ecologist[2].
Where did David Freudenberger go to school?
David Freudenberger was educated at University of New England[4] and University of Canterbury[5].