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  1. Henry Bryant Bigelow (October 3, 1879 – December 11, 1967) was an American oceanographer and marine biologist . He is the grandson of Henry Bryant who was an American physician and naturalist . After graduating from Harvard in 1901, he began working with famed ichthyologist Alexander Agassiz.

  2. NOAA Ship Henry B. Bigelow is a fisheries survey vessel built specifically for NOAA to support the study and monitoring of marine fisheries and marine mammals. Homeported in Newport, Rhode Island, Henry B. Bigelow operates along the northeast and mid-Atlantic coast, from Maine to North Carolina.

  3. HENRY BRYANT BIGELOW was an accomplished systematic zool- ogist, being a recognized authority on both the coelenter-ates and fishes. His 1911 paper on the siphonophores was considered to be the most useful report on this group that had ever been written.

  4. Henry B. Bigelow is a state-of-the-art fisheries survey ship that studies a wide range of marine life and ocean conditions along the U.S. East Coast. The ship's primary mission is to study and monitor fish stocks.

  5. Mar 9, 2021 · Henry Jacob Bigelow (1818–1890). Portrait by J.H. Lazarus. Courtesy of the Trustees of the Boston Medical Library. Among his colleagues, Bigelow was an early proponent who was the driving force behind the implementation of anesthesia in surgical practice.

  6. About Henry Bryant Bigelow. Founding Director of WHOI (1930-1939) Henry Bryant Bigelow was a pioneering oceanographer and marine biologist. He is credited with describing 110 new species for science and authoring some 100 scientific papers over the course of his career.

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  8. Overview. Henry Bryant Bigelow (1879-1967) was an oceanographer and zoologist who served on the faculty of Harvard and at the Museum of Comparative Zoology for 62 years. His research focused on the interdependence of physics, chemistry, and biology in oceanography. The collection contains Bigelow’s personal and professional correspondence. Dates.