When botanist Leonard Cockayne (1855 1934) first received an invitation from the German publisher Engelmann to write an account of the botany of New Zealand, much of it was still unknown. He spent the period from 1904 to 1913 immersed in fieldwork, and his first edition was not published until 1921. In this 1928 second edition Cockayne extensively updates the text, adding the results of further research from the intervening years. This work gives detailed descriptions of New Zealand's plant life, but Cockayne also considers the history of botanical study of the islands, from Captain Cook's...
When botanist Leonard Cockayne (1855 1934) first received an invitation from the German publisher Engelmann to write an account of the botany of New Z...
Written by Swiss born geologist and explorer Louis Agassiz (1807 73), this 1850 publication was the first detailed scientific account of the natural phenomena of Lake Superior. Agassiz, who became a professor at Harvard and later founded the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology, was the first scientist to suggest that the earth had experienced an ice age. In the summer of 1848 he led an expedition of his students to Lake Superior, to examine the northern shores, which had previously received very little attention from scientists. The artist James Elliot Cabot (1821 1903), who was included in...
Written by Swiss born geologist and explorer Louis Agassiz (1807 73), this 1850 publication was the first detailed scientific account of the natural p...
David Douglas (1799 1834), the influential Scottish botanist and plant collector, trained as a gardener before attending Perth College and Glasgow University. His genius for botany flourished and his talents came to the attention of the Royal Horticultural Society. With the society's backing he went to North America in 1823, beginning his life-long fascination with the region's flora. He discovered thousands of new species and introduced 240 of them to Britain, including the Douglas fir. Douglas continued to explore and discover plant species until his death in the Sandwich Islands...
David Douglas (1799 1834), the influential Scottish botanist and plant collector, trained as a gardener before attending Perth College and Glasgow Uni...
Published in 1898, just months after the death of Charles Dodgson (1832 98), the Oxford don better known by his pseudonym of Lewis Carroll, this biography investigates the imaginative genius of the writer, mathematician and photographer. Carroll's nephew, Stuart Dodgson Collingwood, had access to his subject's private papers and thirteen volumes of his private diary. He draws upon these materials in this memoir of the man who revolutionised writing for children, presenting a detailed account of Carroll's family origins, his eccentricities, artistic life, unorthodox friendships and his special...
Published in 1898, just months after the death of Charles Dodgson (1832 98), the Oxford don better known by his pseudonym of Lewis Carroll, this biogr...
Published in 1858, this memoir recounts the life and work of the natural historian and geologist Hugh Edwin Strickland (1811 53). Written by his father-in-law, the Scottish naturalist Sir William Jardine (1800 74), the book covers Strickland's early childhood, his education at Oxford, his involvement in and influence upon the establishment of the Ray Society and his notable academic pursuits in natural history before his life was tragically cut short by a freak railway accident in 1853, when he was just forty-two. The reader will gain an insight into Strickland's character, his scientific...
Published in 1858, this memoir recounts the life and work of the natural historian and geologist Hugh Edwin Strickland (1811 53). Written by his fathe...
Richard Owen, F.R.S. (1804 92) was a controversial and influential palaeontologist and anatomist. Originally from Lancaster, he studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh and at London's St Bartholomew's Hospital. He grew interested in anatomical research and, after qualifying as a surgeon, became assistant conservator in the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, and then superintendent of natural history in the British Museum. He became an authority on comparative anatomy and palaeontology, coining the term 'dinosaur' and founding the Natural History Museum. He was also a fierce...
Richard Owen, F.R.S. (1804 92) was a controversial and influential palaeontologist and anatomist. Originally from Lancaster, he studied medicine at th...
Richard Owen, F.R.S. (1804 92) was a controversial and influential palaeontologist and anatomist. Originally from Lancaster, he studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh and at London's St Bartholomew's Hospital. He grew interested in anatomical research and, after qualifying as a surgeon, became assistant conservator in the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, and then superintendent of natural history in the British Museum. He became an authority on comparative anatomy and palaeontology, coining the term 'dinosaur' and founding the Natural History Museum. He was also a fierce...
Richard Owen, F.R.S. (1804 92) was a controversial and influential palaeontologist and anatomist. Originally from Lancaster, he studied medicine at th...
The Scottish geologist Andrew Crombie Ramsay (1814 91), best remembered for his work on glaciation, made his name with this study, which originated in holiday visits to Arran. Encouraged by John Nichol of Glasgow University, Ramsay had prepared a geological map of the island for the British Association's visit in 1839, and was to have led a field excursion and lectured to the delegates there, but missed the boat. Nichol arranged for Ramsay's work to be published the following year. It attracted the attention of Roderick Murchison, who found him employment with the Geological Survey, and...
The Scottish geologist Andrew Crombie Ramsay (1814 91), best remembered for his work on glaciation, made his name with this study, which originated in...
Alfred Russel Wallace (1823 1913) was a British biologist and explorer whose theories of evolution, arrived at independently, caused Darwin to allow their famous joint paper to go forward to the Linnean Society in 1858. Considered the nineteenth century's leading expert on the geographical distribution of animals, Wallace carried out extensive fieldwork in areas as diverse as North and South America, Africa, China, India and Australia to document the habitats, breeding, migration and feeding behaviour of thousands of species around the world, and the influence of environmental conditions on...
Alfred Russel Wallace (1823 1913) was a British biologist and explorer whose theories of evolution, arrived at independently, caused Darwin to allow t...
Alfred Russel Wallace (1823 1913) was a British biologist and explorer whose theories of evolution, arrived at independently, caused Darwin to allow their famous joint paper to go forward to the Linnean Society in 1858. Considered the nineteenth century's leading expert on the geographical distribution of animals, Wallace carried out extensive fieldwork in areas as diverse as North and South America, Africa, China, India and Australia to document the habitats, breeding, migration and feeding behaviour of thousands of species around the world, and the influence of environmental conditions on...
Alfred Russel Wallace (1823 1913) was a British biologist and explorer whose theories of evolution, arrived at independently, caused Darwin to allow t...