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Carl Akeley

Carl Ethan Akeley (May 19, 1864 – November 17, 1926) was a pioneering American taxidermist, sculptor, biologist, conservationist, inventor, and nature photographer, noted for his contributions to American museums, most notably to the Milwaukee Public Museum, Field Museum of Natural History and the American Museum of Natural History. He is considered the father of modern taxidermy.[1] He was the founder of the AMNH Exhibitions Lab, the interdisciplinary department that fuses scientific research with immersive design.

Carl Akeley
BornMay 19, 1864
DiedNovember 17, 1926 (aged 62)
Spouses
(m. 1902; div. 1923)
(m. 1924)
AwardsJohn Scott Medal (1916)
Scientific career
FieldsTaxidermy
InstitutionsMilwaukee Public Museum, Field Museum of Natural History, American Museum of Natural History, the Smithsonian Institution

Career edit

 
"Muskrat Group", one of Akeley's early works for the Milwaukee Public Museum

Akeley was born to Daniel Webster Akeley and Julia Glidden[2] in Clarendon, New York, and grew up on a farm, attending school for only three years. He learned taxidermy from David Bruce in Brockport, New York, and then entered an apprenticeship in taxidermy at Ward's Natural Science Establishment in Rochester, New York. While at Ward's Akeley also helped mount P.T. Barnum's Jumbo after the latter was killed in a railroad accident.[3]

In 1886 Akeley moved on to the Milwaukee Public Museum (MPM) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Akeley remained in Milwaukee for six years, refining "model" techniques used in taxidermy.[4] At the Milwaukee Public Museum, his early work consisted of animals found in Wisconsin prairies and woodlands. One of these was a diorama of a muskrat group, which is sometimes referred to as the first museum diorama; however, such dioramas, and dioramas depicting "habitat groups," dated back well into the early 1800s, and were quite popular with taxidermists in Victorian England.[5] He also created historical reindeer and orangutan exhibits.

 
"Fighting African Elephants" on display in Stanley Field Hall, The Field Museum, Chicago

Akeley left the Milwaukee Public Museum in 1892 and set up a private studio from which he continued to do contract work, including three mustangs for the Smithsonian Institution for exhibition at the World's Columbian Exposition.[6] In 1896, he joined the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago,[7] where he developed his innovative taxidermy techniques, notably the creation of lightweight, hollow, but sturdy mannequins on which to mount the animals' skins.[8] His techniques, which involved sculpting the realistic musculature of the animals in active poses before mounting the skin, were also notable for their life-like representation. Akeley was the Field Museum's chief taxidermist from 1896-1909 and prepared more than 130 mounted specimens and dioramas. His most famous creations include the "Fighting African Elephants" in the central hall of the Field Museum, killed by Akeley and his wife Delia Akeley before being brought to Chicago for mounting and first put on display in 1909.[9]

He was also a prolific inventor, perfecting a "cement gun" to repair the crumbling facade of the Field Columbian Museum in Chicago (the old Palace of Fine Arts from the World's Columbian Exposition.[10] He is today known as the inventor of shotcrete, or "gunite" as he termed it at the time.[11] Akeley did not use sprayable concrete in his taxidermy work, as is sometimes suggested.[12] Akeley also invented a highly mobile motion picture camera for capturing wildlife, started a company to manufacture it, and patented it in 1915. The Akeley "pancake" camera (so-called because it was round) was soon adopted by the War Department for use in World War I, primarily for aerial use, and later by newsreel companies, and Hollywood studios, primarily for aerial footage and action scenes.[13] F. Trubee Davison covered these and other Akeley inventions in a special issue of Natural History magazine.[14] Akeley also wrote several books, including stories for children, and an autobiography In Brightest Africa (1920). He was awarded more than 30 patents for his inventions.

Akeley specialized in African mammals, particularly the gorilla and the elephant. As a taxidermist, he improved on techniques of fitting the skin over a carefully prepared and sculpted form of the animal's body, producing very lifelike specimens, with consideration of musculature, wrinkles, and veins. He also displayed the specimens in groups in a natural setting. Many animals that he preserved he had personally collected.

The Akeley Method edit

First and foremost, Akeley believed and was obsessively committed to the idea that taxidermy could produce mounted animals that look not just lifelike, but alive. Akeley was equally committed to presenting mounts in the context of their scientifically accurate environments and social interactions.

 
Gorilla diorama is one of Akeley's dioramas, which is on display in the American Museum of Natural History.

Akeley's techniques resulted in anatomically accurate, skinless manikins of an animal in lifelike actions and postures. The mannequin was extremely lightweight and hollow and made primarily of papier mache and wire mesh. Akeley based the mannequin on precise field measurements and photographs as well as his understanding of the animal's anatomy and behavior in its natural environment. After creating the mannequin, the hide and hooves were meticulously attached.

The steps to the Akeley Method:

  1. Akeley first sculpted a detailed and precise 1/12th scale clay model of his ultimate mount
  2. He then built an armature using: skeletal bones, wood, metal rods, wire, and wire mesh
  3. Akeley then covered the armature with plaster and then clay, which he sculpted to produce an exact model of the living animal
  4. He then coated the clay model with plaster. When dry, the plaster mold was removed from the clay in sections and resulted in a perfect mold of the sculpted model
  5. Papier mache pulp and supportive mesh wire was applied to the inside of the plaster mold and when dried produced a full-scale hollow mannequin in the exact form of the original sculpture
  6. The mannequin was clothed with the original pelt and sewn up so that not a seam is discernible[4][15]

African expeditions edit

 
Carl Akeley and the leopard he killed barehanded.

Akeley first traveled to Africa in 1896 when he was invited by Daniel Elliot, Curator of the Zoology Department in the new Columbian Field Museum, on an eight month expedition to Somaliland. It was on this trip that Akeley came face to face with a deadly 80-pound leopard which he strangled with his bare hands.[16] Akeley collected hundreds of animal specimens including: hartebeest, gazelles, hyenas, kudus, oryx, and lions. The process of collecting specimens included: killing, measuring, photographing, skinning, de-boning, preserving, and packing them for shipment back to Chicago.

In 1905, Marshall Field funded Akeley’s next trip to Africa which lasted twelve months and brought back two bull elephants which he would later mount for display.[17] Akeley took nearly 1,000 glass plate photos and collected 17 tons of material including: 400 mammal skins, 1200 small mammal skins, 800 bird skins, and a fair number of bird and mammal skeletons. In addition to zoologic material he also collected more than 900 anthropological specimens and crates of leaves that he would use as models for his dioramas.[18]

In 1909, Akeley accompanied Theodore Roosevelt on a year-long expedition in Africa funded by the Smithsonian Institution and began working at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, where his efforts can still be seen in the Akeley Hall of African Mammals. Akeley joined the Explorers Club in 1912, having been sponsored by three of the Club's seven Charter Members: Frank Chapman, Henry Collins Walsh, and Marshall Saville. For qualifying, Akeley wrote only, "Explorations in Somaliland and British East Africa." He became the Club's sixth president serving from 1917–1918.

 
"The Old Man of Mikeno", bronze bust of a mountain gorilla by Carl Akeley

In 1921, eager to learn about gorillas to determine if killing them for museum dioramas was justified, Akeley led an expedition to Mt. Mikeno in the Virunga Mountains at the edge of the then Belgian Congo. At that time, gorillas were quite exotic, with very few even in zoos, and collecting such animals for educational museum exhibitions was not uncommon. In the process of "collecting" several mountain gorillas, Akeley's attitude was fundamentally changed and for the remainder of his life he worked for the establishment of a gorilla preserve in the Virungas. In 1925, greatly influenced by Akeley, King Albert I of Belgium established the Albert National Park, (since renamed Virunga National Park). It was Africa's first national park. Opposed to hunting them for sport or trophies, he remained an advocate of collection for scientific and educational purposes.[19]

Akeley began his fifth journey to the Congo with the start of the dry season in late 1926. He died on November 18 of dysentery and was buried in Africa, just miles from where he encountered his first gorilla, the "Old Man of Mikeno".

Personal life edit

His wife, Mary Jobe Akeley, married him two years before he died. He had previously been married to Delia J. Akeley (1875–1970) for nearly 20 years. Delia Akeley accompanied him on two of his biggest and most productive safaris to Africa in 1905 and again in 1909. Delia later returned to Africa twice under the auspices of the Brooklyn Museum of Arts and Sciences. She organized and led both trips and lived for several months in the Ituri Forest with Pygmies.

Legacy edit

 
Lion Spearing in Africa (1926) Field Museum, Chicago; Bronze sculpture by Carl Akeley.[20]

The World Taxidermy & Fish Carving Championships awards gold medallions that bear Carl Akeley's likeness—based on a photograph he had taken at Stein Photography in Milwaukee—to its "Best in World" winners. There is also a Carl Akeley Award for the most artistic mount at the World Show. The medallions were sculpted by Floyd Easterman of the Milwaukee Public Museum. The Akeley Hall of African Mammals of the American Museum of Natural History and the Akeley Memorial Hall at The Field Museum are named for him.[21]

Further reading edit

  • Akeley, Carl. In Brightest Africa, Garden City Publishers, 1920.
  • Akeley, Delia J. Jungle Portraits, Macmillan, 1930.
  • Akeley, Mary Jobe. Carl Akeley's Africa: The account of the Akeley-Eastman-Pomeroy African Hall Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History, Dodd, Mead, 1929.
  • Akeley, Mary Jobe. The Wilderness Lives Again: Carl Akeley and the Great Adventure, Dodd, Mead, 1940
  • Andrews, Roy Chapman Beyond Adventure: The Lives of Three Explorers, Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1954.
  • Bodry-Sanders, Penelope. Carl Akeley: Africa's Collector, Africa's Savior, Paragon House, 1991.
  • Bodry-Sanders, Penelope. African Obsession, The Life and Legacy of Carl Akeley (2nd ed.), Jacksonville, FL:Batax Museum Publishing, 1998. ISBN 0-9629759-9-0
  • Kirk, Jay. Kingdom Under Glass, Henry Holt and Company, 2010. ISBN 978-0-8050-9282-0.
  • (video) , Jay Kirk, C-SPAN, October 27, 2010.
  • Haraway, Donna Jeanne. Primate Visions: Gender, Race, and Nature in the World of Modern Science. New York: Routledge, 1989

Notes edit

  1. ^ Keir Brooks Sterling (1997). Biographical Dictionary of American and Canadian Naturalists and Environmentalists. pp. 12–13. ISBN 9780313230479. Retrieved January 21, 2008.
  2. ^ Wedge, Eleanor F. (2000). Akeley, Carl Ethan. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1300019. ISBN 978-0-19-860669-7. Retrieved November 13, 2022. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  3. ^ Akeley, Carl E. (1920). "The autobiography of a taxidermist". The World's Work: 177–195.
  4. ^ a b "In brightest Africa". Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Page & Co. 1923.
  5. ^ Lucas, Frederic A. (1914). "The Story of Museum Groups". American Museum Journal. 14 (1 and 2).
  6. ^ Kirk, Jay (2010). Kingdom Under Glass. Holt. pp. 60–66. ISBN 9780805092820.
  7. ^ "The Time Carl Akeley Killed a Leopard With His Bare Hands". May 19, 2016. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
  8. ^ Kirk, Jay (2010). Kingdom Under Glass. Henry Holt. ISBN 978-0-8050-9282-0.
  9. ^ "Carl Akeley". Field Museum of Natural History. November 29, 2011. Retrieved April 16, 2020.
  10. ^ Teichert, Pietro (Summer 2002). (PDF). Shotcrete: 10–12. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 29, 2019. Retrieved April 13, 2014.
  11. ^ Allentown Equipment, History of Gunite/Shotcrete February 7, 2006, at the Wayback Machine (URL accessed March 25, 2006)
  12. ^ Dewey, C.L. (December 1927). "My Friend 'Ake.'". Nature Magazine. 10: 387–91.
  13. ^ Alvey, Mark (Spring 2007). "The Cinema as Taxidermy: Carl Akeley and the Preservative Obsession". Framework. 48 (1): 23–45. doi:10.1353/frm.2007.0000. S2CID 192181171.
  14. ^ Davison, F. Trubee (March–April 1927). "Akeley, the inventor". Natural History. XXVII (2): 124–129.
  15. ^ "CONTENTdm". cdm17032.contentdm.oclc.org. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  16. ^ Moag, Jeff (July 12, 2019). "Killing a Leopard With His Bare Hands Was Only the Beginning for This Badass". Adventure Journal. Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  17. ^ grings (November 29, 2011). "Carl Akeley". Field Museum. Retrieved May 12, 2020.
  18. ^ Field Museum of Natural History; History, Field Museum of Natural (1968). Bulletin /. Vol. v. 39 (1968). [Chicago]: The Museum.
  19. ^ Milwaukee Public Museum Exhibit: Samson Remembered
  20. ^ "Akeley Statues at the Field Museum, Chicago, Illinois – Travel Photos by Galen R Frysinger, Sheboygan, Wisconsin".
  21. ^ American Museum of Natural History: Akeley Hall of African Mammals June 30, 2009, at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  Media related to Carl Akeley at Wikimedia Commons

  • Google Patents US1310776
  • Works by or about Carl Akeley at Internet Archive
  • Guide to Carl Akeley resources at the Field Museum Library
  • The Carl Ethan Akeley papers, A.A31, at Rare Books, Special Collections, and Preservation, River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester.

carl, akeley, carl, ethan, akeley, 1864, november, 1926, pioneering, american, taxidermist, sculptor, biologist, conservationist, inventor, nature, photographer, noted, contributions, american, museums, most, notably, milwaukee, public, museum, field, museum, . Carl Ethan Akeley May 19 1864 November 17 1926 was a pioneering American taxidermist sculptor biologist conservationist inventor and nature photographer noted for his contributions to American museums most notably to the Milwaukee Public Museum Field Museum of Natural History and the American Museum of Natural History He is considered the father of modern taxidermy 1 He was the founder of the AMNH Exhibitions Lab the interdisciplinary department that fuses scientific research with immersive design Carl AkeleyBornMay 19 1864Clarendon New York USDiedNovember 17 1926 aged 62 Mt Mikeno Belgian CongoSpousesDelia Akeley m 1902 div 1923 wbr Mary Jobe Akeley m 1924 wbr AwardsJohn Scott Medal 1916 Scientific careerFieldsTaxidermyInstitutionsMilwaukee Public Museum Field Museum of Natural History American Museum of Natural History the Smithsonian Institution Contents 1 Career 2 The Akeley Method 3 African expeditions 4 Personal life 5 Legacy 6 Further reading 7 Notes 8 External linksCareer edit nbsp Muskrat Group one of Akeley s early works for the Milwaukee Public MuseumAkeley was born to Daniel Webster Akeley and Julia Glidden 2 in Clarendon New York and grew up on a farm attending school for only three years He learned taxidermy from David Bruce in Brockport New York and then entered an apprenticeship in taxidermy at Ward s Natural Science Establishment in Rochester New York While at Ward s Akeley also helped mount P T Barnum s Jumbo after the latter was killed in a railroad accident 3 In 1886 Akeley moved on to the Milwaukee Public Museum MPM in Milwaukee Wisconsin Akeley remained in Milwaukee for six years refining model techniques used in taxidermy 4 At the Milwaukee Public Museum his early work consisted of animals found in Wisconsin prairies and woodlands One of these was a diorama of a muskrat group which is sometimes referred to as the first museum diorama however such dioramas and dioramas depicting habitat groups dated back well into the early 1800s and were quite popular with taxidermists in Victorian England 5 He also created historical reindeer and orangutan exhibits nbsp Fighting African Elephants on display in Stanley Field Hall The Field Museum ChicagoAkeley left the Milwaukee Public Museum in 1892 and set up a private studio from which he continued to do contract work including three mustangs for the Smithsonian Institution for exhibition at the World s Columbian Exposition 6 In 1896 he joined the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago 7 where he developed his innovative taxidermy techniques notably the creation of lightweight hollow but sturdy mannequins on which to mount the animals skins 8 His techniques which involved sculpting the realistic musculature of the animals in active poses before mounting the skin were also notable for their life like representation Akeley was the Field Museum s chief taxidermist from 1896 1909 and prepared more than 130 mounted specimens and dioramas His most famous creations include the Fighting African Elephants in the central hall of the Field Museum killed by Akeley and his wife Delia Akeley before being brought to Chicago for mounting and first put on display in 1909 9 He was also a prolific inventor perfecting a cement gun to repair the crumbling facade of the Field Columbian Museum in Chicago the old Palace of Fine Arts from the World s Columbian Exposition 10 He is today known as the inventor of shotcrete or gunite as he termed it at the time 11 Akeley did not use sprayable concrete in his taxidermy work as is sometimes suggested 12 Akeley also invented a highly mobile motion picture camera for capturing wildlife started a company to manufacture it and patented it in 1915 The Akeley pancake camera so called because it was round was soon adopted by the War Department for use in World War I primarily for aerial use and later by newsreel companies and Hollywood studios primarily for aerial footage and action scenes 13 F Trubee Davison covered these and other Akeley inventions in a special issue of Natural History magazine 14 Akeley also wrote several books including stories for children and an autobiography In Brightest Africa 1920 He was awarded more than 30 patents for his inventions Akeley specialized in African mammals particularly the gorilla and the elephant As a taxidermist he improved on techniques of fitting the skin over a carefully prepared and sculpted form of the animal s body producing very lifelike specimens with consideration of musculature wrinkles and veins He also displayed the specimens in groups in a natural setting Many animals that he preserved he had personally collected The Akeley Method editFirst and foremost Akeley believed and was obsessively committed to the idea that taxidermy could produce mounted animals that look not just lifelike but alive Akeley was equally committed to presenting mounts in the context of their scientifically accurate environments and social interactions nbsp Gorilla diorama is one of Akeley s dioramas which is on display in the American Museum of Natural History Akeley s techniques resulted in anatomically accurate skinless manikins of an animal in lifelike actions and postures The mannequin was extremely lightweight and hollow and made primarily of papier mache and wire mesh Akeley based the mannequin on precise field measurements and photographs as well as his understanding of the animal s anatomy and behavior in its natural environment After creating the mannequin the hide and hooves were meticulously attached The steps to the Akeley Method Akeley first sculpted a detailed and precise 1 12th scale clay model of his ultimate mount He then built an armature using skeletal bones wood metal rods wire and wire mesh Akeley then covered the armature with plaster and then clay which he sculpted to produce an exact model of the living animal He then coated the clay model with plaster When dry the plaster mold was removed from the clay in sections and resulted in a perfect mold of the sculpted model Papier mache pulp and supportive mesh wire was applied to the inside of the plaster mold and when dried produced a full scale hollow mannequin in the exact form of the original sculpture The mannequin was clothed with the original pelt and sewn up so that not a seam is discernible 4 15 African expeditions edit nbsp Carl Akeley and the leopard he killed barehanded See also Akeley Derscheid Expedition Akeley first traveled to Africa in 1896 when he was invited by Daniel Elliot Curator of the Zoology Department in the new Columbian Field Museum on an eight month expedition to Somaliland It was on this trip that Akeley came face to face with a deadly 80 pound leopard which he strangled with his bare hands 16 Akeley collected hundreds of animal specimens including hartebeest gazelles hyenas kudus oryx and lions The process of collecting specimens included killing measuring photographing skinning de boning preserving and packing them for shipment back to Chicago In 1905 Marshall Field funded Akeley s next trip to Africa which lasted twelve months and brought back two bull elephants which he would later mount for display 17 Akeley took nearly 1 000 glass plate photos and collected 17 tons of material including 400 mammal skins 1200 small mammal skins 800 bird skins and a fair number of bird and mammal skeletons In addition to zoologic material he also collected more than 900 anthropological specimens and crates of leaves that he would use as models for his dioramas 18 In 1909 Akeley accompanied Theodore Roosevelt on a year long expedition in Africa funded by the Smithsonian Institution and began working at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City where his efforts can still be seen in the Akeley Hall of African Mammals Akeley joined the Explorers Club in 1912 having been sponsored by three of the Club s seven Charter Members Frank Chapman Henry Collins Walsh and Marshall Saville For qualifying Akeley wrote only Explorations in Somaliland and British East Africa He became the Club s sixth president serving from 1917 1918 nbsp The Old Man of Mikeno bronze bust of a mountain gorilla by Carl AkeleyIn 1921 eager to learn about gorillas to determine if killing them for museum dioramas was justified Akeley led an expedition to Mt Mikeno in the Virunga Mountains at the edge of the then Belgian Congo At that time gorillas were quite exotic with very few even in zoos and collecting such animals for educational museum exhibitions was not uncommon In the process of collecting several mountain gorillas Akeley s attitude was fundamentally changed and for the remainder of his life he worked for the establishment of a gorilla preserve in the Virungas In 1925 greatly influenced by Akeley King Albert I of Belgium established the Albert National Park since renamed Virunga National Park It was Africa s first national park Opposed to hunting them for sport or trophies he remained an advocate of collection for scientific and educational purposes 19 Akeley began his fifth journey to the Congo with the start of the dry season in late 1926 He died on November 18 of dysentery and was buried in Africa just miles from where he encountered his first gorilla the Old Man of Mikeno Personal life editHis wife Mary Jobe Akeley married him two years before he died He had previously been married to Delia J Akeley 1875 1970 for nearly 20 years Delia Akeley accompanied him on two of his biggest and most productive safaris to Africa in 1905 and again in 1909 Delia later returned to Africa twice under the auspices of the Brooklyn Museum of Arts and Sciences She organized and led both trips and lived for several months in the Ituri Forest with Pygmies Legacy edit nbsp Lion Spearing in Africa 1926 Field Museum Chicago Bronze sculpture by Carl Akeley 20 The World Taxidermy amp Fish Carving Championships awards gold medallions that bear Carl Akeley s likeness based on a photograph he had taken at Stein Photography in Milwaukee to its Best in World winners There is also a Carl Akeley Award for the most artistic mount at the World Show The medallions were sculpted by Floyd Easterman of the Milwaukee Public Museum The Akeley Hall of African Mammals of the American Museum of Natural History and the Akeley Memorial Hall at The Field Museum are named for him 21 Further reading editAkeley Carl In Brightest Africa Garden City Publishers 1920 Akeley Delia J Jungle Portraits Macmillan 1930 Akeley Mary Jobe Carl Akeley s Africa The account of the Akeley Eastman Pomeroy African Hall Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History Dodd Mead 1929 Akeley Mary Jobe The Wilderness Lives Again Carl Akeley and the Great Adventure Dodd Mead 1940 Andrews Roy Chapman Beyond Adventure The Lives of Three Explorers Duell Sloan and Pearce 1954 Bodry Sanders Penelope Carl Akeley Africa s Collector Africa s Savior Paragon House 1991 Bodry Sanders Penelope African Obsession The Life and Legacy of Carl Akeley 2nd ed Jacksonville FL Batax Museum Publishing 1998 ISBN 0 9629759 9 0 Kirk Jay Kingdom Under Glass Henry Holt and Company 2010 ISBN 978 0 8050 9282 0 video Kingdom Under Glass Jay Kirk C SPAN October 27 2010 Haraway Donna Jeanne Primate Visions Gender Race and Nature in the World of Modern Science New York Routledge 1989 An Elephant s Tale Notes edit Keir Brooks Sterling 1997 Biographical Dictionary of American and Canadian Naturalists and Environmentalists pp 12 13 ISBN 9780313230479 Retrieved January 21 2008 Wedge Eleanor F 2000 Akeley Carl Ethan Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 1300019 ISBN 978 0 19 860669 7 Retrieved November 13 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Akeley Carl E 1920 The autobiography of a taxidermist The World s Work 177 195 a b In brightest Africa Garden City N Y Doubleday Page amp Co 1923 Lucas Frederic A 1914 The Story of Museum Groups American Museum Journal 14 1 and 2 Kirk Jay 2010 Kingdom Under Glass Holt pp 60 66 ISBN 9780805092820 The Time Carl Akeley Killed a Leopard With His Bare Hands May 19 2016 Retrieved October 25 2017 Kirk Jay 2010 Kingdom Under Glass Henry Holt ISBN 978 0 8050 9282 0 Carl Akeley Field Museum of Natural History November 29 2011 Retrieved April 16 2020 Teichert Pietro Summer 2002 Carl Akeley a tribute to the founder of Shotcrete PDF Shotcrete 10 12 Archived from the original PDF on January 29 2019 Retrieved April 13 2014 Allentown Equipment History of Gunite Shotcrete Archived February 7 2006 at the Wayback Machine URL accessed March 25 2006 Dewey C L December 1927 My Friend Ake Nature Magazine 10 387 91 Alvey Mark Spring 2007 The Cinema as Taxidermy Carl Akeley and the Preservative Obsession Framework 48 1 23 45 doi 10 1353 frm 2007 0000 S2CID 192181171 Davison F Trubee March April 1927 Akeley the inventor Natural History XXVII 2 124 129 CONTENTdm cdm17032 contentdm oclc org Retrieved May 13 2020 Moag Jeff July 12 2019 Killing a Leopard With His Bare Hands Was Only the Beginning for This Badass Adventure Journal Retrieved April 10 2022 grings November 29 2011 Carl Akeley Field Museum Retrieved May 12 2020 Field Museum of Natural History History Field Museum of Natural 1968 Bulletin Vol v 39 1968 Chicago The Museum Milwaukee Public Museum Exhibit Samson Remembered Akeley Statues at the Field Museum Chicago Illinois Travel Photos by Galen R Frysinger Sheboygan Wisconsin American Museum of Natural History Akeley Hall of African Mammals Archived June 30 2009 at the Wayback MachineExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Carl Akeley at Wikimedia Commons Google Patents US1310776 Works by or about Carl Akeley at Internet Archive Guide to Carl Akeley resources at the Field Museum Library The Carl Ethan Akeley papers A A31 at Rare Books Special Collections and Preservation River Campus Libraries University of Rochester Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carl Akeley amp oldid 1171569410, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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