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  1. Michel Adanson (7 April 1727 – 3 August 1806) was an 18th-century French botanist and naturalist who traveled to Senegal to study flora and fauna. He proposed a "natural system" of taxonomy distinct from the binomial system forwarded by Linnaeus .

  2. Michel Adanson (born April 7, 1727, Aix-en-Provence, Fr.—died Aug. 3, 1806, Paris) was a French botanist who devised a natural system of classification and nomenclature of plants, based on all their physical characteristics, with an emphasis on families. In 1749 Adanson left for Senegal to spend four years as an employee with the Compagnie ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Jul 17, 2014 · Letter of August 15, 1749, Lacroix, Michel Adanson au Sénégal, 39–40, and the letter of August 20, 1751: “You will find in my letter . . . two catalogs, the first of which contains species of plants that I send you in herbaria, and the other contains the serial numbers of plants you will receive as seeds,” Lacroix, Michel Adanson au ...

    • Xavier Carteret
    • 2012
  4. May 18, 2018 · Adanson, Michel. ( b. Aix-en-Provence, France, 7 April 1727; d. Paris, France, 3 August 1806) natural history philosophy. Adanson belonged to an Auvergne family that moved to Provence at the beginning of the eighteenth century and to Paris about 1730. He was educated at the Plessis Sorbon, the Collège Royal, and Jardin du Roi.

  5. Aug 3, 2020 · Mind Behind Mutation Today is the anniversary of the death of the 18th-century Scottish-French botanist and naturalist Michel Adanson. Michel created the first natural classification of flowering plants. In fact, Jussieu (“Juice You”) adopted Michel’s methodology to create his masterpiece that defined plant groups called Genera Plantarum (1789). Although today we think mainly of Darwin…

  6. Michel Adanson, né le 7 avril 1727 à Aix-en-Provence et mort le 3 août 1806 à Paris [1], est un naturaliste français d'ascendance écossaise. Il a exploré des régions peu connues des Européens, comme le Sénégal ou les Açores .

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  8. Abstract The French botanist Michel Adanson spent five years in precolonial Senegal in the 1750s, under the auspices of the Compagnie des Indes. This essay follows the archival traces of Adanson’s engagement with African indigo, including experiments conducted in an ad hoc “laboratory” near the French fort of Saint Louis. A reconstruction of these experiments exposes the multifarious ...

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