Yehuda Leo Picard was born in
Germany in 1900, and studied at universities in
Freiburg and
Berlin, in Germany, and in
Paris and
London, and taught at the
University of Florence,
Italy. Picard visited
Mandate Palestine in 1922 and emigrated there in 1924, where he established the Department of Geology at the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In 1943, he published his book "Structure and Evolution of Palestine", which became a primary book for the study of geology in Israel. Leo Picard was an expert hydrogeologist and an outstanding general geologist. He wrote about paleontology and stratigraphy,
structural geology and tectonics, mineralogy and ore deposits. Well-known is his contribution to the debate on the tectonics of the Dead Sea Rift. Picard was doubtful whether left-lateral offset of some 100 km took place along the Rift, and suggested instead that the rift was developed and constrained by extension. , 1964 In 1955, he was appointed president of the
UNESCO committee of experts for arid areas. Following such appointment, he became an international consultant, and his investigations have assisted the development of many countries in Africa and Latin America. He died in 1997 in
Kibbutz Ginegar in northern Israel. ==Awards and recognition==