What Linnaeus Saw

Home > Other > What Linnaeus Saw > Page 18


  Slezak, Michael. “New Species of Human May Have Shared Our Caves.” New Scientist, December 17, 2015, https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn28687-new-species-of-human-may-have-shared-our-caves-and-beds/ Accessed January 29, 2019.

  Sloane, Sir Hans. A Voyage to the Islands of Madera, Barbadoes, Nieves, St. Christopher’s and Jamaica, vol. 2. Illustrated by Michael van der Gucht. London, 1725.

  Smith, James Edward, ed. A Selection of the Correspondence of Linnaeus and Other Naturalists, from the original manuscripts. Vols. 1 and 2. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1821.

  Stearn, William T. “Carl Linnaeus and the Theory and Practice of Horticulture.” Taxon 25, no. 1 (February 1976): 21–31.

  _____. “Linnaean Classification, Nomenclature, and Method.” Appendix to Wilfrid Blunt, Linnaeus: The Compleat Naturalist. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001. Appendix I, 246–52.

  _____. “The Origin of the Male and Female Symbols of Biology.” Taxon 11, no. 4 (May 1962): 109–13.

  _____, and Gavin Bridson. Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778): A Bicentenary Guide to the Career and Achievements of Linnaeus and the Collections of the Linnean Society. London: Linnean Society of London, 1978.

  Stoever, D. H. The Life of Sir Charles Linnaeus. Translated by Joseph Trapp. Whitefish, MT: Kessinger, 2010.

  Svanberg, Ingvar. “Carl Linnaeus as an Aviculturist.” Avicultural Magazine 122 (2016): 55–58.

  Svenska Linnésällskapets Årsskrift (journal of the Swedish Linnaeus Society), 1956–57, 106–18.

  Vaillant, Sébastien. “Sebastian Vaillant’s 1717 Lecture on the Structure and Function of Flowers.” Translation and commentary by Paul Bernasconi and Lincoln Taiz. Huntia: A Journal of Botanical History 11, no. 2 (2002): 97–128.

  Van Andel, Tinde, Paul Maas, and James Dobreff. “Ethnobotanical Notes from Daniel Rolander’s Diarium Surinamicum (1754–1756): Are these plants still used in Suriname today?” Taxon 61, no. 4 (August 2012): 853–63.

  VanHaelen, Angela. “Local Sites, Foreign Sights: A sailor’s sketchbook of human and animal curiosities in early modern Amsterdam.” RES: Journal of Anthropology and Aesthetics 45 (Spring 2004): 256–72.

  Wheeler, Alwyne. “Peter Artedi, founder of modern ichthyology.” Proceedings of the Fifth Congress of European Icthyologists, 3–10. Stockholm, 1985.

  Williams, R. L. Botanophilia in Eighteenth-Century France: The Spirit of the Enlightenment. Boston: Kluwer Academic, 2001.

  Yoon, Carol Kaesuk. Naming Nature: The Clash Between Instinct and Science. New York: W. W. Norton, 2009.

  Zeveloff, Samuel I. Raccoons: A Natural History. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2002.

  Zorgdrager, Nellejet. “Linnaeus as Ethnographer of Sami Culture.” Tijd-Schrift voor Skandinavistiek 29, nos. 1 and 2, (2008): 45–76.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Linnaeus was a “natural philosopher” (the word “scientist” was not coined until the 1830s). Like other natural philosophers, he had broad interests, so to write this book, I turned to specialists in many fields—botany, science history, zoology, wildlife pathology, ethnology, geology, even glaciology. I am thrilled to thank them all for being part of my hunt for the real Carl Linnaeus, for generously sharing insights and answering questions, and to several for careful critical review of my manuscript. Any mistakes that remain are my own.

  I am most especially grateful to Gunnar Broberg, Lund University, for his thoughtful observations and encouragement, and Ingvar Svanberg, Uppsala University, for emails packed with information, and even translated passages.

  Jesper Kårehed, scientific curator of the Linnaean Gardens, helped me imagine Linnaeus in his gardens. Isabelle Charmantier, head of collections at the Linnean Society of London, showed me Linnaeus’s marginalia and note cards. Staffan Müller-Wille, University of Exeter, shared his expertise, including perspectives on Linnaeus’s paper technologies. Charlie Jarvis, Natural History Museum of London, helped parse botanical particulars. Bengt Jonsell, Uppsala University, fine-tuned the chart of plant classes.

  Carl George, Union College, Schenectady, New York, and Christine Cameron inspire me with their contagious curiosity. Charlotte Tancin at the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, tracked down answers and experts, and allowed me to handle (while wearing protective cotton gloves) books that belonged to Linnaeus and letters he wrote and sealed with his red wax stamp. Doug Holland and staff gave me a tour of the Missouri Botanical Garden’s fascinating rare books collection, a place to stay, and a link to the Biodiversity Heritage Library.

  In Sami, it’s giitu. Thank you to Marie Enoksson, communications officer for the Sami Parliament of Sweden, for her helpful review of the Sápmi chapter; Janet S. Anderson, who translated Linnaeus’s dissection report; pathologists Kevin Hynes and Joe Okoniewski, who allowed me to observe their necropsy of a raccoon; Torbjörn Lindell, Växjö science teacher, who knows all about Linnaeus’s student days; Rev. Dr. Trygve Skarsten, who explained Scandinavian church history; Inger Herland, Stavanger, Norway archive, who translated trial records; and a trio of wonderful women who helped hunt down one important image: Christine Constantine, Frederica Freer, and Gerda Rossel.

  Thank you to Mikael Ahlund, Christina Backman (who convinced me there was a different side to Sara Lisa), Eva Björn, Lynda Brooks, Maria Buhl, Enrico Coen, Andrea Deneau, Gina Douglas, Daniel Douglass (for emailing me about glaciers while standing on one in Iceland), Rebecca Flodin, Anthea Gentry, Håkan Håkansson, Andrea Hart, Marika Hedin, Esther Jackson, Jeannette McDevitt, Steve McLoughlin, Emil V. Nilsson, Eva Nyström, Jeanne L. Osnas, Annika Windahl Pontén, Paula Ivaska Robbins, Mary Sears (for help from the Harvard Library, above and beyond), Jennie Erin Smith (for her generous long-term loan of IK Foundation books), Angela Todd (who kept things light with Linnaean limerick writing) and Vivi Vajda (for reviewing the geology section); as well as scholars from the international C18-L listserv on the Long Eighteenth Century and the Linnaean Correspondence Project.

  The world is a better place thanks to teachers who introduce children to nature—including Theresa Akerley, Alan Fiero, Jean Quattrocchi, and Yusuf Abdul-Wasi Burgess—and librarians who eagerly share their love of nonfiction, as my mother did.

  My writing group by the sea is a talented crew, encouraging but demanding, serious but often side-splittingly funny: Deirdre Callanan, Pauline Grocki, Penny Haughwort, Maureen Hourihan, Sara Pennypacker, Ginny Reiser, and Jack Harrison. I am happy that my world includes terrific friends who give brilliant advice: Ann Foley, Connie Kintner, Steve Sheinkin, and Jennifer Armstrong.

  Now to the publishing world. I am profoundly grateful to my extraordinary editor, Simon Boughton, who saw what this book could be before I did. He guided me in finding the right structure, then used his editorial superpowers on the result. Editorial assistant Kristin Allard (who is always sunshine), copyeditor Allegra Huston (who is always right), and the whole Norton team—William Willis, Rebecca Homiski, Tiani Kennedy, Jen Montgomery, Yang Kim—turned it into such a beautiful book. Heartfelt thanks to my agent, Susan Cohen, who believed in this project from the start and knew just how to shepherd it. Thank you all.

  Special thanks go to my shared sister Patty, John and the ever-growing Figliozzi family for loving care and comedy.

  And of course, my family, my favorite Homo sapiens. How lucky I am. My daughters and their husbands—Kim and Patrick, Kirsten and Dane—inspire and impress me every day. That they care deeply about the environment and the future of wild places keeps me filled with hope. The love in my parents’ greenhouse and garden grows on in them. And Jim, by my side when I first set foot in Linnaeus’s garden and ever since, you are my rock, my panini maker, my best friend, my favorite forester. You had me at Acer saccharum.

  INDEX

  Page numbers listed correspond to the print edition of this book. You can use your device’s search function to locate particular terms in the text.

  Note: Page numbers in italics indi
cate illustrations.

  Adanson, Michel, 161

  animal kingdom, 167-168, 111–14, 112, 113

  See also human vs. animal

  apes. See monkeys and apes

  Arctic adventure, 57–79

  beginning the mission, 58–59

  boating and hiking, 61–65, 64

  courting Sara Lisa, 78–79

  on horseback, 59–61

  leaving Uppsala, 78

  returning from, 74–78

  Sami people, 58, 61–78, 62, 69, 70, 74, 76, 84

  Sápmi region (Lapland), 57–58, 65, 136

  Scandinavian Mountains, 65, 66, 67–69, 70, 71

  Artedi, Peter, 46–47, 55–56, 103–5, 105–6

  banana plant, 91–102

  Amsterdam life, 91–92

  book on, 100–101

  challenge of the, 93–100, 94, 99, 101–2

  estate and greenhouses, 92–95

  origins of, and naming, 100–101

  Banks, Joseph, 206

  bats, classifying, 173–74, 174

  binomial classification, 140, 142, 143–45, 146, 150

  Bontius, Jacob, 180–81

  botanical and scientific terms glossary, 235–36

  botany principles, 105

  Brodersonia, Christina (mother), 32, 34–36, 50

  Browallius, Johan, 159

  Burman, Johannes, 92–93, 95, 98

  Camerarius, Rudolph, 40

  Celsius, Anders, 96–97, 145

  Celsius, Olof, 47–49, 49, 145, 151

  classification of animals. See animal kingdom; human vs. animal

  classification of plants, 117, 128

  See also natural world; plant names

  Clifford, George, 92–97, 94, 99, 100

  Colden, Cadwallader, 126

  Colden, Jane, 126–28, 127

  Collinson, Peter, 18, 127–28, 144–45

  Cook, James, 204–6, 205, 213

  criticism of Linnaeus, 119, 122–23, 167, 168–69, 176–77

  Cuvier, Georges, 186

  Darwin, Charles, 186–87, 225

  Ehret, Georg Dionysus, 95–96, 123, 124, 217, 222

  explorers. See Arctic adventure; student explorers

  fact vs. fiction, 80–90

  “cabinets of curiosities,” 82, 83

  determining, 83–85

  malaria thesis, 90

  Paradoxa, 85–87

  sea monsters, including Kraken, 87–89, 88

  seven-headed hydra, 80–82, 81, 85

  family of Linnaeus

  children, 134–35 (see also Linnaea, Lisa Stina; Linnaeus the Younger)

  father, 22, 24, 26, 32, 33–34, 36, 137, 139

  great-grandmother, 34–35

  mother, 32, 34–36, 50

  siblings, 26, 37

  Swedish name tradition, 26

  wife (see Moraea, Sara Lisa)

  Franklin, Benjamin, 197–98, 199–200, 202

  Fredrik, Adolf, 12, 27, 219

  Fundamenta Botanica (Linnaeus), 105

  gardens, 14, 22–26, 92–93, 221, 221–22

  Genera Plantarum (Linnaeus), 123, 173

  genus name, 142–43

  Gmelin, Johann, 160

  Hammarby farmhouse, 220–23, 221

  Hartekamp estate, 92–93

  human vs. animal, 163–87

  animal classification revisions, 172–74, 173

  animal kingdom, classifying, 166-69, 175-77, 180, 181

  animal menagerie, observing, 182–85

  animals, exotic, observing, 163–65, 164

  binomials, assigning to animals, 150, 174–75

  classification patterns, recognizing, 165–66

  criticism of Linnaeus, 167, 168–69, 176–77

  filling in the gaps, 177–79, 178

  human species, defining and classifying, 167–69, 175–76, 180, 181

  monkeys (pet), observing, 165, 170–71, 171, 183, 185, 185

  monkeys and apes, classifying, 176–77

  scientific theories, evolving, 186–87

  sorting fact from fiction, 179–82

  Humboldt, Alexander von, 203

  humors, four, 35, 180

  hybrid plant theory, 154–60

  insects, studying, 208–10, 212, 227–28

  Kalm, Pehr, 18, 21, 145, 197–204, 201, 203, 227

  Klein, Jacob Theodor, 169

  Lamarck, Jean-Baptiste, 186

  Leclerc, Georges-Louis, 83, 172–73

  linaria mutation. See peloria

  Linnaea, Lisa Stina (daughter), 15, 134, 135, 204, 206, 222

  Linnaeus, Carl Nilsson, 22–42

  early education, 26–33

  elder years of (see professor)

  family names, 26–27, 27

  medical profession, 33–36

  notebook of, 28–31, 29, 36–37, 38

  plant collection, organizing, 37–39, 38

  plant theories, 39–42

  pumpkin plant, 24–26, 25, 41–42, 117–18

  summer house, 22–26, 23

  See also family; Moraea, Sara Lisa (wife)

  Linnaeus, Nils Ingemarsson (father), 22, 24, 26, 32, 33–34, 36, 137, 139

  Linnaeus the Younger (son), Carl, 162, 206, 216, 224

  Linnean Society of London, 225

  Löfling, Pehr, 137, 139, 140, 206, 208

  Mammalia order, 173

  medical profession and practice, 34-35, 90, 132

  mineral kingdom, 114–15

  monkeys and apes

  classifying, 176–77

  observing, 163, 165, 170–71, 171, 183, 185, 185

  Monson, Anne, 129

  Moraea, Sara Lisa (wife)

  children of, 134–35

  Linnaeus courting, 78–79

  marriage and house, 26–27, 132, 133, 183–84

  as widow, 220, 224–25

  Musa Cliffortiana (Linnaeus), 99, 100–101

  mutation, linaria. See peloria

  naming systems. See binomial classification; plant names

  natural world, 103–29

  animal kingdom, 111–14

  botany, popularizing, 123, 125

  classifying species, 106–8

  criticism of system, 119, 122–23

  friend Artedi, 103–6

  mineral kingdom, 114–17

  naming dilemma, 129–32

  naming plants, 119, 122, 127–29

  natural vs. artificial classification, 128

  organizing, with charts, 108–11, 112–13

  plant kingdom, 117–19, 118, 120–21, 124

  scientific correspondence, 125–29

  three kingdoms, 110–11, 112–13

  peloria, 151–62

  controversial theory, 154–60

  linaria mystery, 151–56, 153

  evolutionary ideas, 160–62

  update on, 161

  plant names, 130–50

  binomial classification, 140, 142, 143–45, 146, 150

  crisis of, 130–32

  current changes in, 150

  farm study, 135–37, 138, 139–40, 141

  Linnaeus’s marriage and family, 132, 133, 134–35

  Linnaeus’s return to Sweden, 132–33

  name complexity, 133–34

  name inspiration, 144–45

  naming system, 146, 150

  paper technology and storage, 147, 148, 148, 149

  See also Species Plantarum

  Primates class, 173–74, 176

  the professor, 219–28

  fall semester, 219–20

  Hammarby farmhouse, 220–23, 221

  Knighthood of the Polar Star, 27, 219, 223

  legacy of Linnaeus, 226–28

  life changes and death, 224

  personal collections sold, 224–25

  pumpkin plant, 24–26, 25, 41–42, 117–18

  Ray, John, 39–40, 53–54

  Rivinus, Augustus, 53, 54

  Roberg, Lars, 44–45, 56

  Rothman, Johan, 30–31, 33–34, 36, 39, 41, 43–44

/>   Rudbeck the Younger, Olof, 44–45, 50, 52, 53, 132, 145

  science vs. religion, 107–8, 116–17, 155, 157, 159, 162, 168–69, 176–77

  scientific correspondence, 125–29, 225

  scientific description, 109–10

  Seba, Albertus, 80–81, 83, 104, 105–6

  sexual reproduction, plant, 39–41, 119, 122

  Siegesbeck, Johann, 122–23

  Sjupp (pet raccoon), 11–21

  classifying, 17–18

  death and dissection of, 15–17

  Linnaeus’s dream, 19–20

  as mysterious pet, 11–15, 19

  raccoon update, 21

  Smith, James Edward, 225

  species

  book revisions of, 110–11

  Creation beliefs on, 107–8, 155, 157, 159, 162

  discovering other, 144–45, 177–79, 193–94

  extinct human, 182

  missing, 177–79

  naming and describing, 109–10, 133, 142–43, 146, 150, 174–75

  new species,160-162, 186-187

  subdividing, 180

  unreliable reports about, 179–82, 179

  Species Plantarum (Linnaeus), 142–43, 150

  student explorers, 188–218

  an “army of botanists,” 188–91

  Anders Sparrman, 213–16

  Carl Peter Thunberg, 217, 218, 224–25

  Christopher Tärnström, 195

  Daniel Rolander, 188, 208–12, 208, 211

  Daniel Solander, 204–6

  Pehr Forsskål, 212–13

  Pehr Kalm, 18, 21, 145, 197–204, 201, 203

  Pehr Löfling, 206, 208

  scientific expeditions, 193–96, 195

  university lectures, 191–93

  Systema Naturae (Linnaeus), 110–11, 149, 150, 160, 161, 172–76, 174, 175, 212

  temperature, measuring, 96–97, 203

  Thunberg, Carl Peter, 217, 218, 224–25

  timeline, historical, 229–34

  Tournefort, Joseph Pitton de, 37–39, 38, 40–41, 53, 54, 117, 138

  Tyson, Edward, 179, 181–82

  Uppsala University, 43–56

  Artedi friendship, 46–47, 55–56

  botany demonstrations, 50, 55

  classifying kingdoms, 55–56

  enrolling in, and studies, 43–45, 44, 46, 51

  leaving, 78

  medical professors, 44–45, 49–50, 52, 53

 

‹ Prev