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Henry Georges Fourcade

Henry Georges Fourcade (1865-1948), also known as Henri Georges Fourcade and sometimes Georges Henri Fourcade, was a surveyor, forester, pioneer of photogrammetry and as botanist, a major early collector of the Southern Cape flora.

Henry Georges Fourcade
Born(1865-07-08)8 July 1865
Bordeaux, France
Died19 January 1948(1948-01-19) (aged 82)
Humansdorp, South Africa
Scientific career
FieldsSurveying, forestry, photogrammetry, botany
Signature
Jeanne Marie Fourcade, Henry's elder sister

Early life edit

Henry Georges was born at 16, Rue de Treuils, Bordeaux, the son of Justin Jadé Fourcade and Marie Prat. He had one other sibling, his older sister Jeanne Marie. His father was a general storekeeper, who soon moved to Yokohama, Japan and became an importer of wines and liqueurs, where the family lived at No. 10 on the Bund or waterfront. When he was twelve, he returned to France to finish his secondary school education, obtaining a school-leaving certificate just after turning fourteen, winning the first prize in ethics, as well as a prize in physics and chemistry. The next year he attended technikon and obtained good results in English, French, German, arithmetic, chemistry and commerce. In late-1880, Mrs. Fourcade, for reasons unknown, set sail for Table Bay, in the Cape colony. She returned to France a year or two later, but her children remained in Cape Town. Henry Georges enrolled at the South African College, doing a course in the Theory of Land Surveying.

Forestry edit

In July 1882, having just turned 17, Fourcade took up an appointment with the Cape Colony's Forestry Department, serving under its first Superintendent of Woods and Forests, Médéric de Vasselot de Régné, originally from the French National School of Forestry at Nancy. With de Vasselot, Fourcade studied forest science and management, acquiring knowledge about the climate, soils and indigenous trees.

De Vasselot boasted about the progress shown by his protégé and put Fourcade in charge of the departmental herbarium. A few months later, he was sent to Knysna, with the task of surveying and then sectioning the forest into manageable parts. He performed this job well, training the existing marksmen to comply with new regulations that had come into force and that were designed to make the forest sustainable. This early exposure to the practical side of sawmilling and forest management would become very valuable years later, when he had his own sawmilling business. In an era of indiscriminate felling of trees, he stressed the risks inherent in upsetting the balance of nature by felling one or two species of tree only, pointing out that such selective fellings would undermine the principle of removing mature growth to improve conditions for young growth in the forest. By 1886, the area sectioned under Fourcade amounted to 12 814 hectares, outperforming his colleagues. In his annual report, he proposed a few allotments to be allocated to bona fide wood-cutters near the then new Millwood goldfield.

In 1876, gold had been discovered in the Knysna Forest – see Millwood, South Africa. Prospectors flocked to the area and a town rapidly came into being. It had a post office, six hotels, three newspapers, many shops and a law court. The impact on the forest was quite dramatic. Fourcade had to watch more or less helplessly how up to 600 men lived in the forest, with timber theft rife. The Conservator of Knysna had limited jurisdiction over the forests until the Forest Act of 1888 was passed. In the intervening period, ruination of forest land was tolerated by the Civil Commissioner, a Maximillian Jackson, who many a time found himself at loggerheads with Fourcade. In what was to become a pattern in later life, Fourcade, who did not shy away from confrontation, spoke his mind clearly and once delivered a curt reply so stinging to the Commissioner that it led to accusations of 'insolence and insubordinate conduct'. Despite this, the quality of his work impressed his opponents. Fourcade was punctilious and appeared to have little time for fools. These character traits earned him ample hardships during his long life, but despite this his motivation never flagged. He was very good at written communication and sometimes continued fighting battles long after the other party had conceded defeat. The last round of the clash with the Commissioner was concluded as follows: "I am sure that Mr Jackson has tact enough if he chooses to enable me to avoid further friction" (Storrar 1990a, p. 28). Mr Jackson probably did exercise a lot of tact, as a few years later he invited Fourcade to join him for lunch with the Governor, Alfred Milner and the Mayor of Knysna, an exclusive event for just four people. All that was still in the future. At the time, there was public concern about the depletion of the Natal Colony's forests. A request had been made to the Governor for expert assistance and advice. De Vasselot had wanted to go himself, with Fourcade as his First Assistant, but that plan was scuppered when the Natal Government didn't provide enough funds.

The Report on the Natal Forests edit

In March 1889, Fourcade left for Natal on his own, with a mandate to report on the condition of the indigenous forests on Crown or Trust lands; to advise on the feasibility of creating artificial forests and to report on the supply of timber for use by the railways. Upon arrival at Durban, he was met by the botanist John Medley Wood, who provided him with his analytical key of Natal plants, Colonel Bowker, a keen naturalist and writer, and Richard Vause, co-founder of the Natal Mercury paper and also past Mayor of Durban – all waiting in person. This may well have been the most harmonious period in Fourcade's life. It was certainly the highlight of his career as a forestry officer. He was welcomed by the Natal Government, given transport and made a member of several clubs, introduced to all the magistrates of the districts included in his brief and had the railway workshops at his disposal. He was free to employ his skills and knowledge without hindrance from anyone and quickly demonstrated an immense capacity for hard work. The work included inspecting each forest's climate, average altitude, area and extent, soils, rock, tree species and surface growth. He had to assess the extent of damage by exploitation, fire or sapling depletion (by local hut builders or herders with grazing animals). The quality of the prose in the report shows that he was passionate about the state of the forests. He reconstructed how particular sequences of events had to have happened for forests to be in the state he found them. He took nearly 300 specimens of wood from about 70 species of trees for testing. The Report on the Natal Forests, which was published on 3 December 1889, towers over both the previous and later reports by other authors. It discusses the Natal forests, their utility and protection, management as well as plantations, and organisation of staff and works. It contains a list of 167 species of tree indigenous to Natal; mechanical constants determined by experiment of the hardness, density, elasticity coefficient, elasticity limit, breaking stress; notes on the preparation of wood and railway sleeper manufacture, a list of trees with high bark tannin content, measurements of rates of growth for indigenous trees, timber measurements, recommendations for vegetation from other countries that would be suitable for acclimatisation in Natal as forest vegetation, the altitude ranges at which some 91 species of exotic tree were found, statistics of timber imports for the decade 1880 to 1889 as well as a short extract on 'diminished rainfall' that the Governor had requested, concerning the theory that there might be a link between sunspots and rainfall. All the work was done in 10 months. Fourcade was 24 years old. The report was tabled in Parliament to an enthusiastic response:

Of all the official documents that have been presented to the Legislative Council this session, by far the most interesting is the "Report of the Natal Forests" by Mr. H. G. Fourcade of the Cape Service, who was appointed early last year to perform the work of which this report is the representation and the result .... No one who reads this report will or can doubt his complete competency for the task committed to him. He has produced a monograph of immediate utility, absorbing interest, of abiding value. We have read the 95 pages of the report with unflagging attention, and benefit; and that is more than might be said of most Blue-books. These pages are pregnant with instructive and suggestive matter that it is impossible to take more than a cursory survey of them in this column. To be appreciated and understood, as it deserves to be, the whole report must be read.

— Storrar 1990a, p. 38, quoting from the leading article of the Natal Mercury, 27 May 1890.

Almost all his recommendations were adopted: The appointment of a conservator of forests was approved; a proclamation protected ironwood, stinkwood and yellowwoods; and the forests were shut down for 16 months. Fourcade was offered the new post, but he turned it down and returned to Cape Town. A year later, the report was still in the news, being regarded as the only Government publication that was ever seen to have been taken "on a railway journey to relieve the monotony of travel on the Natal line" (Storrar 1990a, p. 39, quoting from the Natal Witness)

Upon his return, Fourcade's work environment changed as one senior colleague retired and another died. In the ensuing departmental reorganisation, he was promised the post of Conservator in charge of Surveys and accordingly decided to complete his long-deferred Practical Survey examination. This he passed, but the arrangement fell through when a junior colleague was appointed instead and Fourcade returned to Knysna, still not having completed all the requirements of the Land Surveyor's qualification. Fourcade would stay with the Forestry Department for another decade, but as subsequent events show, his career as a Forestry Officer was effectively over.

Surveying edit

In the years 1891–1899, Fourcade was employed essentially as a surveyor, demarcating the Knysna forest area. In March 1892, he had an inspiration to attempt a delicate and skilled exercise in higher surveying. This would normally be permitted only to a very experienced and specially trained surveyor. Fourcade set himself the task of performing the secondary triangulation of the Outeniqua-Zitzikamma area, to test his idea of connecting all forest surveys to the Colony's Geodetic Survey network. He requested books and mathematical tables from the Assistant Commissioner and immersed himself in the work. In the same year, he also presented a modest first paper to the South African Philosophical Society, which had to do with repetitive angle measurements in triangulation work. He soon became a member. The Society (as well as its successor, the Royal Society of South Africa) were to eventually publish 14 of his papers, over a period of 50 years, despite a sometimes strained relationship (Storrar 1990a, p. 50).

Financial Independence edit

  • Farming at Ratel's Bosch
  • The Zitzikamma Saw Mill
  • Witte Els Bosch
  • The Fourcade Bequest

Botany edit

Fourcade had collected sporadically in the 1880s and also during the visit to Natal. Each time however, his specimens were lost. In 1905, he began a personal herbarium and by 1910, he had collected several hundred species, being a keen collector. It was only in 1920, when he was 55, that Fourcade took up Botany seriously, upon invitation by Selmar Schonland, who established the Botany Department at Rhodes University. The next 20 years would see him collaborate with a number of herbaria, build up close professional relationships with the leading botanists of the time and become a major collector of the Southern Cape floristic region.

Botanical species named by Fourcade include:

  • Acanthaceae: Justicia acuta (C.B.Clarke) Fourc., Justicia rubicunda (Hochst.) Fourc.
  • Aizoaceae: Ruschia stenophylla (L.Bolus) L.Bolus ex Fourc.
  • Aloaceae: Haworthia chloracantha var. monticola (Fourc.) Halda, Haworthia monticola Fourc., Haworthia monticola var. asema M.B.Bayer
  • Apiaceae: Centella verticillata (Thunb.) Fourc.
  • Apocynaceae: Carissa cordata (Mill.) Fourc.
  • Asclepiadaceae: Tylophora cordata (Thunb.) Fourc.
  • Asphodelaceae: Bulbine altissima (Mill.) Fourc.
  • Asteraceae: Aster corymbosus (Harv.) Fourc., Aster corymbosus [Dryand.], Aster outeniquae Fourc., Aster venustus Fourc., Aster westae Fourc., Berkheya echinopoda (DC.) Fourc., Elytropappus cernuus (Thunb.) Fourc., Felicia westiae (Fourc.) Grau, Hertia kraussii (Sch.Bip.) Fourc., Ifloga glomerata (Harv.) Fourc., Osteospermum decumbens Fourc., Pentzia pilulifera (L.f.) Fourc., Peyrousea umbellata (L.f.) Fourc., Pteronia teretifolia (Thunb.) Fourc., Senecio denticulatus (Thunb.) Fourc., Senecio dissidens Fourc., Senecio dumosus Fourc., Senecio litorosus Fourc., Senecio othonniformis Fourc.
  • Brassicaceae: Brachycarpaea capensis (L.) Fourc., Heliophila cornigera Fourc.
  • Campanulaceae: Lobelia sylvatica Fourc., Prismatocarpus rogersii Fourc., Prismatocarpus virgatus Fourc.
  • Chenopodiaceae: Arthrocnemum africanum Moss ex Fourc., Arthrocnemum heptiflorum Moss ex Fourc., Arthrocnemum perenne (Mill.) Moss ex Fourc.
  • Convolvulaceae: Cuscuta alpestris Fourc.
  • Crassulaceae: Cotyledon flavida Fourc., Cotyledon leucothrix (C.A.Sm.) Fourc.
  • Cucurbitaceae: Kedrostis angulata (Berg.) Fourc.
  • Cyperaceae: Ficinia dispar (Spreng.) Fourc., Ficinia marginata (Thunb.) Fourc., Ficinia pseudoschoenus (Steud.) Fourc., Scirpus striatus (Nees) Fourc.
  • Frankeniaceae: Frankenia repens (Bergius) Fourc.
  • Geraniaceae: Pelargonium gracillimum Fourc., Pelargonium mollicomum Fourc.
  • Hyacinthaceae: Dipcadi brevifolium (Thunb.) Fourc., Lachenalia haarlemensis Fourc., Lachenalia subspicata Fourc., Massonia modesta Fourc., Ornithogalum capillifolium Fourc., Ornithogalum limosum Fourc., Ornithogalum petraeum Fourc.
  • Hypoxidaceae: Spiloxene alba (L.f.) Fourc., Spiloxene aquatica (L.f.) Fourc., Spiloxene minuta (L.f.) Fourc., Spiloxene trifurcillata (Nel) Fourc.
  • Iridaceae: Anapalina longituba Fourc., Hesperantha linearis (Jacq.) Fourc., Tritonia chrysantha Fourc., Tritoniopsis longituba (Fourc.) Goldblatt
  • Leguminosae: Cyclopia aurea Fourc., Indigofera glabella Fourc., Indigofera grisophylla Fourc., Indigofera pappei Fourc., Indigofera rhodantha Fourc., Psoralea heterosepala Fourc., Vigna debilis Fourc.
  • Orchidaceae: Acrolophia capensis (P.J.Bergius) Fourc., Acrolophia capensis (P.J.Bergius) Fourc. var. lamellata (Lindl.) Schelpe, Herschelia lacera (Sw.) Fourc.
  • Plantaginaceae: Plantago litoraria Fourc.
  • Poaceae: Afrachneria steudelii (Nees) Fourc., Panicum stapfianum Fourc.
  • Polygalaceae: Muraltia mitior (Bergius) Levyns ex Fourc.
  • Proteaceae: Leucadendron album (Thunb.) Fourc., Leucadendron laureolum (Lam.) Fourc., Leucospermum cordifolium (Knight) Fourc., Leucospermum phyllanthifolium (Knight) Fourc., Paranomus reflexus (Phillips & Hutch.) Fourc., Protea eximia (Knight) Fourc., Protea lorifolia (Knight) Fourc.
  • Rafflesiaceae: Cytinus sanguineus (Thunb.) Fourc.
  • Rhamnaceae: Phylica curvifolia (Presl) Pillans ex Fourc.
  • Rutaceae: Agathosma cryptocarpa Fourc., Agathosma phylicoides Fourc., Agathosma puberula (Steud.) Fourc., Agathosma unicarpellata (Fourc.) Pillans, Barosma unicarpellata Fourc.
  • Sapindaceae: Allophylus spicatus (Thunb.) Fourc.
  • Scrophulariaceae: Diascia patens (Thunb.) Grant ex Fourc., Nemesia denticulata (Benth.) Grant ex Fourc., Sutera atrocaerulea Fourc., Sutera tenuifolia (Bernh.) Fourc.
  • Solanaceae: Solanum macowani Fourc.
  • Sterculiaceae: Hermannia lacera (E.Mey. ex Harv.) Fourc.
  • Thymelaeaceae: Lachnaea glomerata Fourc.
  • Urticaceae: Australina caffra (Thunb.) Fourc.

Photogrammetry edit

  • Invention of a stereoscopic method of photographic surveying
  • The Fourcade Correspondence theorem
  • Patents & instruments
  • MI4 and aerial reconnaissance [1]

Honors edit

  • Honorary Doctor of Science, University of Cape Town, 1930.
  • Honorary Doctor of Science, University of South Africa, 1947.
  • Botanical species named after Fourcade:
  • The Fourcade Museum at Witte Els Bosch
  • The Fourcade Trail near Jeffreys Bay
  • Mount Fourcade (latitude: 64° 36' S longitude: 62° 30' W) on the west coast of Graham Land, Antarctica. UK-APC, 1960.

Abbreviation edit

References edit

  1. ^ (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016, retrieved 4 November 2015
  2. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Fourc.
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  • Storrar, Clare D (April 1991). "Further Light on Fourcade". Photogrammetric Record. 13 (77): 753–764. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1991.tb00737.x.
  • Thompson, E H (October 1956). "A method of relative orientation in analytical aerial triangulation". Photogrammetric Record. 2 (8): 145–158. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1956.tb01058.x.
  • Thompson, E H (October 1965). "Review of methods of independent model aerial triangulation". Photogrammetric Record. 5 (26): 72–79. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1965.tb00401.x.
  • Thompson, E H (April 1954). "Thompson-Watts plotting machine". Photogrammetric Record. 1 (3): 5–28. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1954.tb00999.x.
  • Thompson, G H (October 1978). "To the Editor, The Photogrammetric Record Aerial Film Processing". Photogrammetric Record. 9 (52): 573–574. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1978.tb00458.x.
  • Thompson-Watts, E H (March 2004). "Frontispiece: Thompson-Watts Plotter, 50th anniversary". Photogrammetric Record. 19 (105): 2. doi:10.1111/j.0031-868X.2003.00252.x. S2CID 247705481.
  • Thompson-Watts, E H (April 1964). "The Thompson-Watts plotter Model 2". Photogrammetric Record. 4 (23): 337–366. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1964.tb00367.x.
  • Wood, R (October 1970). "Analytical aerial triangulation with angular measurements". Photogrammetric Record. 6 (36): 537–552. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1970.tb00978.x.
  • "The President's medal 1955". Photogrammetric Record. 2 (8): 151–153. October 1956. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1956.tb01059.x.
  • "The President's medal". Photogrammetric Record. 2 (11): 363–364. April 1958. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1958.tb01088.x. S2CID 247672325.
  • "Impressions of the London Congress". Photogrammetric Record. 3 (17): 431–439. April 1961. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1961.tb01307.x.
  • "In Memoriam E. H. Thompson". Photogrammetric Record. 8 (48): 705–707. October 1976. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1976.tb00849.x.
  • "Photogrammetry around the world". Photogrammetric Record. 8 (48): 815–819. October 1976. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1976.tb00858.x.
  • "Photogrammetry around the world". Photogrammetric Record. 9 (51): 427–436. April 1978. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1978.tb00438.x.
  • "Photogrammetry around the world". Photogrammetric Record. 10 (55): 107–112. April 1980. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1980.tb00012.x.
  • "Photogrammetry around the world". Photogrammetric Record. 12 (67): 109–115. April 1986. doi:10.1111/j.1477-9730.1986.tb00547.x.

External links edit

  • Why must taxonomists keep changing the names?
  • The Bolus Herbarium
  • University of Cape Town Libraries: The H. G. Fourcade Bequest
  • Fourcade Trail 4 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Biography of Henry Georges Fourcade at the S2A3 Biographical Database of Southern African Science

henry, georges, fourcade, 1865, 1948, also, known, henri, georges, fourcade, sometimes, georges, henri, fourcade, surveyor, forester, pioneer, photogrammetry, botanist, major, early, collector, southern, cape, flora, born, 1865, july, 1865bordeaux, francedied1. Henry Georges Fourcade 1865 1948 also known as Henri Georges Fourcade and sometimes Georges Henri Fourcade was a surveyor forester pioneer of photogrammetry and as botanist a major early collector of the Southern Cape flora Henry Georges FourcadeBorn 1865 07 08 8 July 1865Bordeaux FranceDied19 January 1948 1948 01 19 aged 82 Humansdorp South AfricaScientific careerFieldsSurveying forestry photogrammetry botanySignatureJeanne Marie Fourcade Henry s elder sister Contents 1 Early life 2 Forestry 2 1 The Report on the Natal Forests 3 Surveying 4 Financial Independence 5 Botany 6 Photogrammetry 7 Honors 8 Abbreviation 9 References 10 External linksEarly life editHenry Georges was born at 16 Rue de Treuils Bordeaux the son of Justin Jade Fourcade and Marie Prat He had one other sibling his older sister Jeanne Marie His father was a general storekeeper who soon moved to Yokohama Japan and became an importer of wines and liqueurs where the family lived at No 10 on the Bund or waterfront When he was twelve he returned to France to finish his secondary school education obtaining a school leaving certificate just after turning fourteen winning the first prize in ethics as well as a prize in physics and chemistry The next year he attended technikon and obtained good results in English French German arithmetic chemistry and commerce In late 1880 Mrs Fourcade for reasons unknown set sail for Table Bay in the Cape colony She returned to France a year or two later but her children remained in Cape Town Henry Georges enrolled at the South African College doing a course in the Theory of Land Surveying Forestry editIn July 1882 having just turned 17 Fourcade took up an appointment with the Cape Colony s Forestry Department serving under its first Superintendent of Woods and Forests Mederic de Vasselot de Regne originally from the French National School of Forestry at Nancy With de Vasselot Fourcade studied forest science and management acquiring knowledge about the climate soils and indigenous trees De Vasselot boasted about the progress shown by his protege and put Fourcade in charge of the departmental herbarium A few months later he was sent to Knysna with the task of surveying and then sectioning the forest into manageable parts He performed this job well training the existing marksmen to comply with new regulations that had come into force and that were designed to make the forest sustainable This early exposure to the practical side of sawmilling and forest management would become very valuable years later when he had his own sawmilling business In an era of indiscriminate felling of trees he stressed the risks inherent in upsetting the balance of nature by felling one or two species of tree only pointing out that such selective fellings would undermine the principle of removing mature growth to improve conditions for young growth in the forest By 1886 the area sectioned under Fourcade amounted to 12 814 hectares outperforming his colleagues In his annual report he proposed a few allotments to be allocated to bona fide wood cutters near the then new Millwood goldfield In 1876 gold had been discovered in the Knysna Forest see Millwood South Africa Prospectors flocked to the area and a town rapidly came into being It had a post office six hotels three newspapers many shops and a law court The impact on the forest was quite dramatic Fourcade had to watch more or less helplessly how up to 600 men lived in the forest with timber theft rife The Conservator of Knysna had limited jurisdiction over the forests until the Forest Act of 1888 was passed In the intervening period ruination of forest land was tolerated by the Civil Commissioner a Maximillian Jackson who many a time found himself at loggerheads with Fourcade In what was to become a pattern in later life Fourcade who did not shy away from confrontation spoke his mind clearly and once delivered a curt reply so stinging to the Commissioner that it led to accusations of insolence and insubordinate conduct Despite this the quality of his work impressed his opponents Fourcade was punctilious and appeared to have little time for fools These character traits earned him ample hardships during his long life but despite this his motivation never flagged He was very good at written communication and sometimes continued fighting battles long after the other party had conceded defeat The last round of the clash with the Commissioner was concluded as follows I am sure that Mr Jackson has tact enough if he chooses to enable me to avoid further friction Storrar 1990a p 28 Mr Jackson probably did exercise a lot of tact as a few years later he invited Fourcade to join him for lunch with the Governor Alfred Milner and the Mayor of Knysna an exclusive event for just four people All that was still in the future At the time there was public concern about the depletion of the Natal Colony s forests A request had been made to the Governor for expert assistance and advice De Vasselot had wanted to go himself with Fourcade as his First Assistant but that plan was scuppered when the Natal Government didn t provide enough funds The Report on the Natal Forests edit In March 1889 Fourcade left for Natal on his own with a mandate to report on the condition of the indigenous forests on Crown or Trust lands to advise on the feasibility of creating artificial forests and to report on the supply of timber for use by the railways Upon arrival at Durban he was met by the botanist John Medley Wood who provided him with his analytical key of Natal plants Colonel Bowker a keen naturalist and writer and Richard Vause co founder of the Natal Mercury paper and also past Mayor of Durban all waiting in person This may well have been the most harmonious period in Fourcade s life It was certainly the highlight of his career as a forestry officer He was welcomed by the Natal Government given transport and made a member of several clubs introduced to all the magistrates of the districts included in his brief and had the railway workshops at his disposal He was free to employ his skills and knowledge without hindrance from anyone and quickly demonstrated an immense capacity for hard work The work included inspecting each forest s climate average altitude area and extent soils rock tree species and surface growth He had to assess the extent of damage by exploitation fire or sapling depletion by local hut builders or herders with grazing animals The quality of the prose in the report shows that he was passionate about the state of the forests He reconstructed how particular sequences of events had to have happened for forests to be in the state he found them He took nearly 300 specimens of wood from about 70 species of trees for testing The Report on the Natal Forests which was published on 3 December 1889 towers over both the previous and later reports by other authors It discusses the Natal forests their utility and protection management as well as plantations and organisation of staff and works It contains a list of 167 species of tree indigenous to Natal mechanical constants determined by experiment of the hardness density elasticity coefficient elasticity limit breaking stress notes on the preparation of wood and railway sleeper manufacture a list of trees with high bark tannin content measurements of rates of growth for indigenous trees timber measurements recommendations for vegetation from other countries that would be suitable for acclimatisation in Natal as forest vegetation the altitude ranges at which some 91 species of exotic tree were found statistics of timber imports for the decade 1880 to 1889 as well as a short extract on diminished rainfall that the Governor had requested concerning the theory that there might be a link between sunspots and rainfall All the work was done in 10 months Fourcade was 24 years old The report was tabled in Parliament to an enthusiastic response Of all the official documents that have been presented to the Legislative Council this session by far the most interesting is the Report of the Natal Forests by Mr H G Fourcade of the Cape Service who was appointed early last year to perform the work of which this report is the representation and the result No one who reads this report will or can doubt his complete competency for the task committed to him He has produced a monograph of immediate utility absorbing interest of abiding value We have read the 95 pages of the report with unflagging attention and benefit and that is more than might be said of most Blue books These pages are pregnant with instructive and suggestive matter that it is impossible to take more than a cursory survey of them in this column To be appreciated and understood as it deserves to be the whole report must be read Storrar 1990a p 38 quoting from the leading article of the Natal Mercury 27 May 1890 Almost all his recommendations were adopted The appointment of a conservator of forests was approved a proclamation protected ironwood stinkwood and yellowwoods and the forests were shut down for 16 months Fourcade was offered the new post but he turned it down and returned to Cape Town A year later the report was still in the news being regarded as the only Government publication that was ever seen to have been taken on a railway journey to relieve the monotony of travel on the Natal line Storrar 1990a p 39 quoting from the Natal Witness Upon his return Fourcade s work environment changed as one senior colleague retired and another died In the ensuing departmental reorganisation he was promised the post of Conservator in charge of Surveys and accordingly decided to complete his long deferred Practical Survey examination This he passed but the arrangement fell through when a junior colleague was appointed instead and Fourcade returned to Knysna still not having completed all the requirements of the Land Surveyor s qualification Fourcade would stay with the Forestry Department for another decade but as subsequent events show his career as a Forestry Officer was effectively over Surveying editIn the years 1891 1899 Fourcade was employed essentially as a surveyor demarcating the Knysna forest area In March 1892 he had an inspiration to attempt a delicate and skilled exercise in higher surveying This would normally be permitted only to a very experienced and specially trained surveyor Fourcade set himself the task of performing the secondary triangulation of the Outeniqua Zitzikamma area to test his idea of connecting all forest surveys to the Colony s Geodetic Survey network He requested books and mathematical tables from the Assistant Commissioner and immersed himself in the work In the same year he also presented a modest first paper to the South African Philosophical Society which had to do with repetitive angle measurements in triangulation work He soon became a member The Society as well as its successor the Royal Society of South Africa were to eventually publish 14 of his papers over a period of 50 years despite a sometimes strained relationship Storrar 1990a p 50 The Outeniqua Zitzikamma Langkloof secondary triangulation The Sandflats Alexandria secondary triangulation The 1904 map of Devil s Peak revisited in 1985 Private Land SurveyingThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Financial Independence editFarming at Ratel s Bosch The Zitzikamma Saw Mill Witte Els Bosch The Fourcade BequestThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Botany editFourcade had collected sporadically in the 1880s and also during the visit to Natal Each time however his specimens were lost In 1905 he began a personal herbarium and by 1910 he had collected several hundred species being a keen collector It was only in 1920 when he was 55 that Fourcade took up Botany seriously upon invitation by Selmar Schonland who established the Botany Department at Rhodes University The next 20 years would see him collaborate with a number of herbaria build up close professional relationships with the leading botanists of the time and become a major collector of the Southern Cape floristic region The Bolus Herbarium Kew GardensBotanical species named by Fourcade include Acanthaceae Justicia acuta C B Clarke Fourc Justicia rubicunda Hochst Fourc Aizoaceae Ruschia stenophylla L Bolus L Bolus ex Fourc Aloaceae Haworthia chloracantha var monticola Fourc Halda Haworthia monticola Fourc Haworthia monticola var asema M B Bayer Apiaceae Centella verticillata Thunb Fourc Apocynaceae Carissa cordata Mill Fourc Asclepiadaceae Tylophora cordata Thunb Fourc Asphodelaceae Bulbine altissima Mill Fourc Asteraceae Aster corymbosus Harv Fourc Aster corymbosus Dryand Aster outeniquae Fourc Aster venustus Fourc Aster westae Fourc Berkheya echinopoda DC Fourc Elytropappus cernuus Thunb Fourc Felicia westiae Fourc Grau Hertia kraussii Sch Bip Fourc Ifloga glomerata Harv Fourc Osteospermum decumbens Fourc Pentzia pilulifera L f Fourc Peyrousea umbellata L f Fourc Pteronia teretifolia Thunb Fourc Senecio denticulatus Thunb Fourc Senecio dissidens Fourc Senecio dumosus Fourc Senecio litorosus Fourc Senecio othonniformis Fourc Brassicaceae Brachycarpaea capensis L Fourc Heliophila cornigera Fourc Campanulaceae Lobelia sylvatica Fourc Prismatocarpus rogersii Fourc Prismatocarpus virgatus Fourc Chenopodiaceae Arthrocnemum africanum Moss ex Fourc Arthrocnemum heptiflorum Moss ex Fourc Arthrocnemum perenne Mill Moss ex Fourc Convolvulaceae Cuscuta alpestris Fourc Crassulaceae Cotyledon flavida Fourc Cotyledon leucothrix C A Sm Fourc Cucurbitaceae Kedrostis angulata Berg Fourc Cyperaceae Ficinia dispar Spreng Fourc Ficinia marginata Thunb Fourc Ficinia pseudoschoenus Steud Fourc Scirpus striatus Nees Fourc Frankeniaceae Frankenia repens Bergius Fourc Geraniaceae Pelargonium gracillimum Fourc Pelargonium mollicomum Fourc Hyacinthaceae Dipcadi brevifolium Thunb Fourc Lachenalia haarlemensis Fourc Lachenalia subspicata Fourc Massonia modesta Fourc Ornithogalum capillifolium Fourc Ornithogalum limosum Fourc Ornithogalum petraeum Fourc Hypoxidaceae Spiloxene alba L f Fourc Spiloxene aquatica L f Fourc Spiloxene minuta L f Fourc Spiloxene trifurcillata Nel Fourc Iridaceae Anapalina longituba Fourc Hesperantha linearis Jacq Fourc Tritonia chrysantha Fourc Tritoniopsis longituba Fourc Goldblatt Leguminosae Cyclopia aurea Fourc Indigofera glabella Fourc Indigofera grisophylla Fourc Indigofera pappei Fourc Indigofera rhodantha Fourc Psoralea heterosepala Fourc Vigna debilis Fourc Orchidaceae Acrolophia capensis P J Bergius Fourc Acrolophia capensis P J Bergius Fourc var lamellata Lindl Schelpe Herschelia lacera Sw Fourc Plantaginaceae Plantago litoraria Fourc Poaceae Afrachneria steudelii Nees Fourc Panicum stapfianum Fourc Polygalaceae Muraltia mitior Bergius Levyns ex Fourc Proteaceae Leucadendron album Thunb Fourc Leucadendron laureolum Lam Fourc Leucospermum cordifolium Knight Fourc Leucospermum phyllanthifolium Knight Fourc Paranomus reflexus Phillips amp Hutch Fourc Protea eximia Knight Fourc Protea lorifolia Knight Fourc Rafflesiaceae Cytinus sanguineus Thunb Fourc Rhamnaceae Phylica curvifolia Presl Pillans ex Fourc Rutaceae Agathosma cryptocarpa Fourc Agathosma phylicoides Fourc Agathosma puberula Steud Fourc Agathosma unicarpellata Fourc Pillans Barosma unicarpellata Fourc Sapindaceae Allophylus spicatus Thunb Fourc Scrophulariaceae Diascia patens Thunb Grant ex Fourc Nemesia denticulata Benth Grant ex Fourc Sutera atrocaerulea Fourc Sutera tenuifolia Bernh Fourc Solanaceae Solanum macowani Fourc Sterculiaceae Hermannia lacera E Mey ex Harv Fourc Thymelaeaceae Lachnaea glomerata Fourc Urticaceae Australina caffra Thunb Fourc Photogrammetry editInvention of a stereoscopic method of photographic surveying The Fourcade Correspondence theorem Patents amp instruments MI4 and aerial reconnaissance 1 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Honors editHonorary Doctor of Science University of Cape Town 1930 Honorary Doctor of Science University of South Africa 1947 Botanical species named after Fourcade Amphithalea fourcadei Compton Aspalathus fourcadei L Bolus Babiana fourcadei G J Lewis Centella fourcadei Adamson Corymbium africanum L subsp scabridum P J Bergius Weitz var fourcadei Hutch Weitz Dianthus basuticus Burtt Davy subsp fourcadei S S Hooper Drosanthemum fourcadei L Bolus Schwantes Erica glandulosa Thunb subsp fourcadei L Bolus E G H Oliv amp I M Oliv previously Erica fourcadei L Bolus Geissorhiza fourcadei L Bolus G J Lewis Gladiolus fourcadei L Bolus Goldblatt amp M P de Vos Gnidia fourcadei Moss Helichrysum fourcadei Hilliard Nemesia fourcadei K E Steiner Oxalis fourcadei T M Salter Phylica debilis Eckl amp Zeyh var fourcadei Pillans Phylica fourcadei Pillans Ruschia fourcadei L Bolus Sebaea fourcadei Marais Selago fourcadei Hilliard Tetraria fourcadei Turrill amp Schonland Trichodiadema fourcadei L Bolus Watsonia fourcadei J W Mathews amp L Bolus The Fourcade Museum at Witte Els Bosch The Fourcade Trail near Jeffreys Bay Mount Fourcade latitude 64 36 S longitude 62 30 W on the west coast of Graham Land Antarctica UK APC 1960 Abbreviation editThe standard author abbreviation Fourc is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 2 References edit History of Photogrammetry PDF archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 retrieved 4 November 2015 International Plant Names Index Fourc Adams L P Peter J C Fieggen A G Taylor A G Van Geems B A Wynchank S October 1998 The Cape Town Stereotactic Pointer A Novel Application of Photogrammetric Theory Photogrammetric Record 16 92 259 270 doi 10 1111 0031 868X 00125 S2CID 130008063 Adams Laurence P October 2001 Fourcade the Centenary of a Stereoscopic Method of Photographic Surveying Photogrammetric Record 17 98 225 242 doi 10 1111 0031 868X 00181 S2CID 128404854 Adams Laurence P October 1987 Fourcade s 1904 map of Devil s Peak accuracy tested Photogrammetric Record 12 70 473 484 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1987 tb00596 x Adams Laurence P April 1975 Henry Georges Fourcade Photogrammetric Record 8 45 287 296 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1975 tb00056 x Adams Laurence P October 1978 To the Editor The Photogrammetric Record The History of Photogrammetry Photogrammetric Record 9 52 574 575 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1978 tb00460 x Amer Fouad April 1962 Digital Block Adjustment Photogrammetric Record 4 19 34 49 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1962 tb00324 x Arthur D W G April 1961 Lunar Cartography and Photogrammetry Photogrammetric Record 3 17 408 443 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1961 tb01306 x Arthur D W G April 1962 Model formation with narrow angle photography Photogrammetric Record 4 19 49 53 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1962 tb00325 x Atkinson K B October 1977 A biographical tribute to Professor E H Thompson Photogrammetric Record 9 50 193 211 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1977 tb00082 x Atkinson K B April 1978 Creators of odd volumes Detached thoughts on the work of Wollaston Wheatstone and Barr Photogrammetric Record 9 51 343 359 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1978 tb00428 x Atkinson K B October 1969 Some recent developments in non topographic Photogrammetry Photogrammetric Record 6 34 357 378 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1969 tb00951 x Atkinson K B April 1980 Vivian Thompson 1880 1917 Not only an officer of the Royal Engineers Photogrammetric Record 10 55 5 38 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1980 tb00002 x Atkinson K B April 1978 Winchester and Wills after half a century Photogrammetric Record 9 51 415 417 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1978 tb00433 x Brown R LI October 1975 Sixty years of transition from manual to automatic operations Photogrammetric Record 8 46 520 527 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1975 tb00814 x Burnside C D April 1994 The Photogrammetric Society Analogue Instrument Project A Second Extract Photogrammetric Record 14 83 769 782 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1994 tb00790 x Burnside C D April 1995 The Photogrammetric Society Analogue Instrument Project A Fourth Extract Photogrammetric Record 15 85 85 90 doi 10 1111 0031 868X 00009 Burnside C D April 1997 The Photogrammetric Society Analogue Instrument Project An Eighth Extract Photogrammetric Record 15 89 791 802 doi 10 1111 0031 868X 00085 S2CID 221897727 Collier Peter June 2006 The Work of the British Government s Air Survey Committee And its Impact on Mapping in the Second World War Photogrammetric Record 21 114 100 109 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 2006 00368 x S2CID 129015121 Collier Peter Inkpen Robert J September 2003 Photogrammetry in the Ordnance Survey from Close to MacLeod Photogrammetric Record 18 103 224 243 doi 10 1111 0031 868X t01 1 00009 S2CID 128555581 Crone D R October 1973 Experiences in photographic surveying Photogrammetric Record 7 42 699 706 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1973 tb01208 x Dowman I J April 1990 Ways of seeing Photogrammetric Record 13 75 375 381 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1990 tb00693 x Eden J A April 1976 Some experiences of air survey in England between the two world wars Photogrammetric Record 8 47 631 645 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1976 tb00834 x Fourcade H G 1889 Report on the Natal Forests Natal Blue Book Pietermaritzburg W Wilson published 3 December 1889 ISBN 9780636012264 OCLC 63327641 Fourcade H G 1893 On the Repetition of Angles Transactions of the South African Philosophical Society vii 63 76 Fourcade H G 1894 The Measurement of Heights with the Barometer Mountain Club Annual 32 41 Fourcade H G 1898 Note on the Three Point Problem or Pothenot s Problem Transactions of the South African Philosophical Society xiv 51 53 Fourcade H G 1903 On a Stereoscopic Method of Photographic Surveying Transactions of the South African Philosophical Society 14 1 28 35 doi 10 1080 21560382 1903 9526015 ISSN 2156 0382 Fourcade H G 10 February 1902 Notes on Professor Turner s recent Paper on Photographic Surveying Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society lxii 5 R A S Observatory 430 Bibcode 1902MNRAS 62 429F doi 10 1093 mnras 62 5 429 Fourcade H G 5 June 1902 A Stereoscopic Method of Photographic Surveying Nature 66 1701 139 141 Bibcode 1902Natur 66 139 doi 10 1038 066139a0 S2CID 5957715 Fourcade H G 1905 On Instruments for Stereoscopic Surveying British Association for the Advancement of Science Report 321 324 Fourcade H G April 1926 The Run of the Micrometer South African Survey Journal 77 82 Fourcade H G 1926 On Instruments for Stereoscopic Surveying Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 14 1 1 50 doi 10 1080 00359192609519620 Fourcade H G 1926 The Optical Transformation of Projections and its application to mapping from Air Photographs Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 14 1 51 78 Bibcode 1926TRSSA 14 51F doi 10 1080 00359192609519621 Fourcade H G 1926 On Some Conditions for the Correct Vision of Stereoscopic Pictures Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 14 1 79 91 Bibcode 1926TRSSA 14 79F doi 10 1080 00359192609519622 Fourcade H G 1926 A New Method of Aerial Surveying Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 14 1 93 112 Bibcode 1926TRSSA 14 93F doi 10 1080 00359192609519623 Fourcade H G September 1927 The Subtense Measurement of Distances South African Survey Journal 312 319 Fourcade H G 1928 A New Method of Aerial Surveying Second Paper Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 16 1 1 11 Bibcode 1928TRSSA 16 1F doi 10 1080 00359192809519651 Fourcade H G 1928 The Principal Point and Principal Distance in Photogrammetry Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 16 1 13 22 Bibcode 1928TRSSA 16 13F doi 10 1080 00359192809519652 Fourcade H G 1928 A New Method of Aerial Surveying Note on the Determination of the Verticals of a Plate Pair Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 17 1 21 22 Bibcode 1928TRSSA 17 21F doi 10 1080 00359192809518765 Fourcade H G 1929 A New Method of Aerial Surveying Third Paper Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 18 3 237 246 Bibcode 1929TRSSA 18 237F doi 10 1080 00359192909518802 Fourcade H G December 1931 The Radial Method of Mapping from Air Photographs South African Survey Journal 47 51 Fourcade H G 1932 Contributions to the Flora of the Knysna and Neighbouring Divisions Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 21 1 75 102 Bibcode 1932TRSSA 21 75F doi 10 1080 00359193209518876 Fourcade H G 1936 The Rectification of Air Photographs Empire Survey Review iii 19 272 277 doi 10 1179 sre 1936 3 19 272 Fourcade H G 1940 A Projection Method of Mapping from Air Photographs Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 27 4 321 367 doi 10 1080 00359193909519796 Fourcade H G June 1941 Some Notes on the Effects of the Incidence of Rainfall on the Distribution over the Surface of Unlevel Ground Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 29 3 235 254 doi 10 1080 00359194209519814 Fourcade H G 1941 Check list of the Flowering Plants of the Divisions of George Knysna Humansdorp and Uniondale Botanical Survey of South Africa Memoir No 20 Pretoria Government Printer OCLC 69432125 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Fourcade H G 1944 Notes on Burchell s Catalogus Geographicus Middle Portion Journal of South African Botany 145 161 Frodin D G 2001 Guide to Standard Floras of the World 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 79077 8 OCLC 183111775 Harley I A April 1963 Some notes on stereocomparators Photogrammetric Record 4 21 194 209 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1963 tb00346 x Harley I A April 1977 Teaching in Photogrammetry Photogrammetric Record 9 49 25 39 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1977 tb00412 x Hotine Martin 1931 The Fourcade Stereogoniometer Professional Papers of the Air Survey Committee No 7 London His Majesty s Stationery Office ISBN 9780636012264 OCLC 184739773 Lamboit P October 1978 To the Editor The Photogrammetric Record The Development of the Photogrammetric Society Photogrammetric Record 9 52 575 577 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1978 tb00461 x Petrie G October 1977 A short history of British stereoplotting instrument design Photogrammetric Record 9 50 213 238 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1977 tb00083 x Proctor D W October 1979 E H Thompson and Analytical Photogrammetry Photogrammetric Record 9 54 787 795 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1979 tb00126 x Robinson G S October 1963 The reseau as a means of detecting gross lack of flatness of film at the instant of exposure Photogrammetric Record 4 22 283 286 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1963 tb00358 x Schwidefsky Kurt 1959 An outline of Photogrammetry Pitman London p 326 p OCLC 9016059 Storrar Clare D 1990a The Four Faces of Fourcade a biography of a remarkable forester land surveyor botanist and photogrammetrist Pinelands Cape Town Maskew Miller Longman ISBN 0 636 01226 3 OCLC 60252900 Storrar Clare D 1990b A portrait of the protean Fourcade botanist extraordinary Veld and Flora 76 4 Cape Town Kirstenbosch 109 111 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Storrar Clare D April 1991 Further Light on Fourcade Photogrammetric Record 13 77 753 764 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1991 tb00737 x Thompson E H October 1956 A method of relative orientation in analytical aerial triangulation Photogrammetric Record 2 8 145 158 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1956 tb01058 x Thompson E H October 1965 Review of methods of independent model aerial triangulation Photogrammetric Record 5 26 72 79 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1965 tb00401 x Thompson E H April 1954 Thompson Watts plotting machine Photogrammetric Record 1 3 5 28 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1954 tb00999 x Thompson G H October 1978 To the Editor The Photogrammetric Record Aerial Film Processing Photogrammetric Record 9 52 573 574 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1978 tb00458 x Thompson Watts E H March 2004 Frontispiece Thompson Watts Plotter 50th anniversary Photogrammetric Record 19 105 2 doi 10 1111 j 0031 868X 2003 00252 x S2CID 247705481 Thompson Watts E H April 1964 The Thompson Watts plotter Model 2 Photogrammetric Record 4 23 337 366 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1964 tb00367 x Wood R October 1970 Analytical aerial triangulation with angular measurements Photogrammetric Record 6 36 537 552 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1970 tb00978 x The President s medal 1955 Photogrammetric Record 2 8 151 153 October 1956 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1956 tb01059 x The President s medal Photogrammetric Record 2 11 363 364 April 1958 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1958 tb01088 x S2CID 247672325 Impressions of the London Congress Photogrammetric Record 3 17 431 439 April 1961 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1961 tb01307 x In Memoriam E H Thompson Photogrammetric Record 8 48 705 707 October 1976 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1976 tb00849 x Photogrammetry around the world Photogrammetric Record 8 48 815 819 October 1976 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1976 tb00858 x Photogrammetry around the world Photogrammetric Record 9 51 427 436 April 1978 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1978 tb00438 x Photogrammetry around the world Photogrammetric Record 10 55 107 112 April 1980 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1980 tb00012 x Photogrammetry around the world Photogrammetric Record 12 67 109 115 April 1986 doi 10 1111 j 1477 9730 1986 tb00547 x External links editFourcade Mount Why must taxonomists keep changing the names The Bolus Herbarium University of Cape Town Libraries The H G Fourcade Bequest Fourcade Trail Archived 4 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Biography of Henry Georges Fourcade at the S2A3 Biographical Database of Southern African Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Georges Fourcade amp oldid 1188149437, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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