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  1. 2 days ago · Meanwhile, a 13th edition of the entire Systema appeared in parts between 1788 and 1793 under the editorship of Johann Friedrich Gmelin. It was through the Systema Vegetabilium that Linnaeus's work became widely known in England, following its translation from the Latin by the Lichfield Botanical Society as A System of Vegetables (1783–1785).

    • 7
    • Uppsala University
  2. May 6, 2024 · The 8th Edition of the Gmelin Handbook of Inorganic and Organometallic Chemistry is the most extensive printed compilation of information and data on metallic chemical elements and their compounds and alloys. It was compiled by the Gmelin Institute, part of the Max Planck Institute, and published in over 400 volumes between 1924 and 1998 by ...

    • David Flaxbart
    • 2016
  3. May 13, 2024 · Description. Into the Hinterlands of the Mother of all Hinterlands... Johann Georg Gmelin, born into a famous family of German scientists, came to St. Petersburg at the age of 18 (in 1727) and 6 years later took off with German historian Gerhard Friedrich Müller and French astronomer Louis Delisle on a long, difficult, but ultimately extremely ...

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  5. 2 days ago · When the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin revised and expanded Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae in 1788 he included the yellow-crested cockatoo based on the accounts of earlier naturalists. He placed it with the parrots in the genus Psittacus and coined the binomial name Psittacus sulphureus . [12]

    • C. sulphurea
    • Cacatua
  6. Apr 29, 2024 · In the 18th century, Johann Friedrich Gmelin discovered phytosiderophores, organic acids that help plants absorb iron from the soil. This was an important discovery, as iron is an essential...

  7. May 9, 2024 · Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (born May 11, 1752, Gotha, Ger.—died Jan. 22, 1840, Göttingen) was a German anthropologist, physiologist, and comparative anatomist, frequently called the father of physical anthropology, who proposed one of the earliest classifications of the races of mankind.

  8. May 14, 2024 · The red-tailed hawk was formally described in 1788 by German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin under the binomial name Falco jamaicensis. Gmelin based his description on the "cream-coloured buzzard" described in 1781 by John Latham in his A General Synopsis of Birds. The type locality is Jamaica.

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