-
James Petiver (c. 1665 – c. 2
April 1718) was a
London apothecary, a
fellow of the
Royal Society as well as London's
informal Temple Coffee House Botany...
- in Madras; and two
members of the
Royal Society, the
apothecary James Petiver and the
naturalist John Ray.
Kamel died at the age of 45 from a disease...
- fine
botanical drawings and
herbarium specimens to the
botanist James Petiver, a
London apothecary and
Fellow of the
Royal Society.
According to Jon...
-
Historia Insectorum – John Ray (1710)
Papilionum Brittaniae icones –
James Petiver (1717) 1758–1900 was the era of the
gentleman scientist.
Following Linnaeus'...
- sent with this
Hindi name from
Madras by
surgeon Edward Bulkley to
James Petiver, who
first described the
species (Ray, Synops. Meth. Avium, p. 197). This...
- and
sailors began bringing lemurs back to Europe, at
which time
James Petiver, an
apothecary in London,
described and
illustrated the
mongoose lemur...
-
missionary J.G. Camel's
description given to J.
Petiver of an
animal said to have come from the Philippines.
Petiver published Camel's
description in 1705 and...
-
volume lacked plates, so Ray's ****istant, the
apothecary James Petiver,
published Petiver's Catalogue,
effectively a
supplement containing the plates, in...
- Guy-Crescent ****on,
French physician and
botanist (born 1638)
April –
James Petiver,
English naturalist and
apothecary (born c. 1665)
December 9 – Vincenzo...
- was in use
among James Petiver, Adam
Buddle and
other naturalists in
England for the
closely related Vanessa cardui.
Petiver had
described it as "Papilio...