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Carl Linnaeus - Centuria Insectorum Rariorum - 1763
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Carl Linnaeus - Centuria Insectorum Rariorum - 1763

First edition. The ‘Centuria Insectorum’ (one hundred insects) is a 1763 taxonomic work by Carl Linnaeus, and defended as a thesis by Boas Johansson; which of the two men should be credited with its authorship has been the subject of some controversy. It includes descriptions of 102 new insects and crustacean species that had been sent to Linnaeus from British America, Suriname, Java and other locations. Most of the new names included in the ‘Centuria Insectorum’ are still in use, although a few have been sunk into synonymy, and one was the result of a hoax: a Common Brimstone butterfly with spots painted on was described as the new “species” Papilio ecclipsis. The specimens used by Linnaeus or Johansson in writing Centuria Insectorum include some provided by Dr Alexander Garden, a horticulturist from Charles Town in the Province of South Carolina, by Carl Gustav Dahlberg in Suriname, by Hans Johan Nordgren in Java, and from the collection of Baron Charles De Geer from the Province of Pennsylvania. The work appeared also in the ‘Amoenitates Academicae’. This work is unbound, with some spotting on the pages. pp. 11–14 and 19–22 are almost entirely unattached, making this work ideal for the addition of new covers. A rare and historically significant work. Carl Linnaeus, ennobled in 1761 as Carl von Linné, was a Swedish biologist and physician who formalized binomial nomenclature, the system still used today for naming organisms. He is widely regarded as the 'father of modern taxonomy.' [6], 32 pp.

103228112

Plus disponible
Carl Linnaeus - Centuria Insectorum Rariorum - 1763

Carl Linnaeus - Centuria Insectorum Rariorum - 1763

First edition. The ‘Centuria Insectorum’ (one hundred insects) is a 1763 taxonomic work by Carl Linnaeus, and defended as a thesis by Boas Johansson; which of the two men should be credited with its authorship has been the subject of some controversy. It includes descriptions of 102 new insects and crustacean species that had been sent to Linnaeus from British America, Suriname, Java and other locations. Most of the new names included in the ‘Centuria Insectorum’ are still in use, although a few have been sunk into synonymy, and one was the result of a hoax: a Common Brimstone butterfly with spots painted on was described as the new “species” Papilio ecclipsis. The specimens used by Linnaeus or Johansson in writing Centuria Insectorum include some provided by Dr Alexander Garden, a horticulturist from Charles Town in the Province of South Carolina, by Carl Gustav Dahlberg in Suriname, by Hans Johan Nordgren in Java, and from the collection of Baron Charles De Geer from the Province of Pennsylvania. The work appeared also in the ‘Amoenitates Academicae’. This work is unbound, with some spotting on the pages. pp. 11–14 and 19–22 are almost entirely unattached, making this work ideal for the addition of new covers. A rare and historically significant work. Carl Linnaeus, ennobled in 1761 as Carl von Linné, was a Swedish biologist and physician who formalized binomial nomenclature, the system still used today for naming organisms. He is widely regarded as the 'father of modern taxonomy.'

[6], 32 pp.

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