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  1. Ornithology. Author abbrev. (zoology) Latham. John Latham (27 June 1740 – 4 February 1837) was an English physician, naturalist and author. His main works were A General Synopsis of Birds (1781–1801) and General History of Birds (1821–1828). He was able to examine specimens of Australian birds which reached England in the last twenty ...

  2. Jun 27, 2018 · Learn about John Latham, who described many exotic birds from Captain Cook's voyages and used English names before Linnaean system. See his plates, drawings and the bird named after him.

  3. online in 2006. John Latham (1740-1837), ornithologist, was born on 27 June 1740 at Eltham, Kent, England, son of John Latham, a surgeon. He was educated at Merchant Taylors' School, studied anatomy under the radical surgeon John Hunter, and after completing his medical education at London hospitals practised medicine for many years at Dartford.

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  4. John Latham was an ornithologist and was one of the founding members of the Linnean Society. Famous for his two ten-volume histories of birds A General Synopsis of Birds (1781-5) and A General History of Birds (1821-8), Latham had his own collection of bird specimens from which he drew and etched the plates for the works. Latham’s works are notable for their naming of several species new to ...

  5. John Latham was an English physician, naturalist and author. His main works were A General Synopsis of Birds (1781–1801) and General History of Birds (1821–1828). He was able to examine specimens of Australian birds which reached England in the last twenty years of the 18th century, and was responsible for providing English names for many of them. He named some of Australia's most famous ...

  6. Learn about John Latham, an English ornithologist who studied Australian birds brought to England by James Cook. See images of his illustrations from A general synopsis of birds and A general history of birds.

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  8. Latham’s A General Synopsis was able to expand the number of bird species identified, from Linnaeus’s 444 in 1758 to 3000 in 1802, the year the final volume of Index Ornithologicus was published. ANNA WELCH The La Trobe Journal No. 100 September 2017 John Latham, A General Synopsis of Birds ... , London, printed for Benj. White, 1781–1802.

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