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Michel Adanson

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.

Michel Adanson
Michel Adanson
Born(1727-04-07)7 April 1727
Died3 August 1806(1806-08-03) (aged 79)
NationalityFrench
Scientific career
FieldsNaturalist
InstitutionsJardin des Plantes
Author abbrev. (botany)Adans.

Personal history edit

Adanson was born at Aix-en-Provence. His family moved to Paris in 1730. After leaving the Collège Sainte-Barbe he was employed in the cabinets of R. A. F. Réaumur and Bernard de Jussieu, as well as in the Jardin des Plantes, Paris.[1] He attended lectures at the Jardin du Roi and the Collège Royal in Paris from 1741 to 1746. At the end of 1748, funded by a director of the Compagnie des Indes, he left France on an exploring expedition to Senegal. He remained there for five years, collecting and describing numerous animals and plants. He also collected specimens of every object of commerce, delineated maps of the country, made systematic meteorological and astronomical observations, and prepared grammars and dictionaries of the languages spoken on the banks of the Sénégal.[1]

After his return to Paris in 1754 he made use of a small portion of the materials he had collected in his Histoire naturelle du Senegal (1757).[1] Sales of the work were slow, and after the publisher's bankruptcy and the reimbursement to subscribers, Adanson estimated the cost of the book to him had been 5,000 livres, beginning the penury in which he lived the rest of his life.[2] This work has a special interest from the essay on shells, printed at the end of it, where Adanson proposed his universal method, a system of classification distinct from those of Buffon and Linnaeus. He founded his classification of all organised beings on the consideration of each individual organ. As each organ gave birth to new relations, so he established a corresponding number of arbitrary arrangements. Those beings possessing the greatest number of similar organs were referred to one great division, and the relationship was considered more remote in proportion to the dissimilarity of organs.[1]

Familles naturelles des plantes edit

In 1763 he published his Familles naturelles des plantes. In this work he developed the principle of arrangement above mentioned, which, in its adherence to natural botanical relations, was based on the system of Joseph Pitton de Tournefort, and had been anticipated to some extent nearly a century before by John Ray. The success of this work was hindered by its innovations in the use of terms, which were ridiculed by the defenders of the popular sexual system of Linnaeus; but it did much to open the way for the establishment, by means principally of Antoine Laurent de Jussieu's Genera Plantarum (1789), of the natural method of the classification of plants.

In 1774 Adanson submitted to the consideration of the French Academy of Sciences an immense work, extending to all known beings and substances. It consisted of 27 large volumes of manuscript, employed in displaying the general relations of all these matters, and their distribution; 150 volumes more, occupied with the alphabetical arrangement of 40,000 species; a vocabulary, containing 200,000 words, with their explanations; and a number of detached memoirs, 40,000 figures and 30,000 specimens of the three kingdoms of nature. The committee to which the inspection of this enormous mass was entrusted strongly recommended Adanson to separate and publish all that was peculiarly his own, leaving out what was merely compilation. He obstinately rejected this advice; and the huge work, at which he continued to labour, was never published.[1]

Evolution edit

Adanson was an early proponent of the inheritance of acquired characters and a limited view of evolution.[3][4] Historian of science Conway Zirkle has noted that "Adanson was Lamarck's predecessor at the Jardin Royal, and Lamarck could hardly have remained unfamiliar with Adanson 's publications. Adanson not only described evolution in his "Familles de plantes," published in 1763 when Lamarck was a young man of twenty, but also suggested that the changes in specific characteristics were produced through the inheritance of acquired characters."[3]

In an article for the Histoire and Memoires de l'Academie Royale des Sciences of 1769, Adanson used the term "mutations" to refer to small changes that could bring about new variations in individuals.[5] Despite being described as a "precursor of evolutionism" by historians, Adanson rejected the concept of species, preferring to focus on individuals and denied the transmutation of species.[6][7]

Adanson made a serious attempt to classify fungi based on their fruit body complexity. He was the first botanist to classify lichens with fungi. [8]

Later life edit

He had been elected a member of the Academy of Sciences in 1759, and he latterly subsisted on a small pension it had conferred on him. Of this he was deprived in the dissolution of the Academy by the Constituent Assembly in 1793, and was consequently reduced to such a depth of poverty as to be unable to appear before the French Institute when it invited him to take his place among its members. (It is said that he possessed neither a white shirt, a coat nor a whole pair of breeches.)[citation needed] Afterwards he was granted a pension sufficient to relieve his simple wants.[1]

Death and legacy edit

He died in Paris after months of severe suffering, requesting, as the only decoration of his grave, a garland of flowers gathered from the fifty-eight families he had differentiated – "a touching though transitory image," says Georges Cuvier, "of the more durable monument which he has erected to himself in his works."

Besides the books already mentioned he published papers on the ship-worm, the baobab tree (whose generic name Adansonia commemorates Adanson), the origin of the varieties of cultivated plants, and gum-producing trees.[1]

His papers and herbarium remained in his family's hands for over a century and a half, finally coming to the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, in 1961–62.[9] Subsequently, the Hunt Institute republished his Familles des plantes in two volumes (1963–64), under the editorship of George H. M. Lawrence.[10]

A species of turtle, Pelusios adansonii, is named in his honor.[11]

In literature edit

In The Reverse of the Medal, the eleventh novel in the series and, again, in The Commodore, the seventeenth novel of Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey-Maturin series, Stephen Maturin makes reference to Adanson. He elaborates on Adanson's botanical work in Senegal, the prodigious volume of his written output and his penurious circumstances at the time of his death.[12]

Stephen Maturin:

"He was a very great naturalist, as zealous, prolific and industrious as he was unfortunate. I knew him in Paris when I was young, and admired him extremely; so did Cuvier. At that time he was very kind to us. When he was little more than a youth he went to Senegal, stayed there five or six years, observing, collecting, dissecting, describing and classifying; and he summarised all this in a brief but eminently respectable natural history of the country, from which I learnt almost everything I know of the African flora and fauna. A valuable book, indeed, and the outcome of intense and long sustained effort; but I can scarcely venture to name it on the same day as his maximum opus – twenty seven large volumes devoted to a systematic account of created beings and substances and the relations between them, together with a hundred and fifty volumes more of index, exact scientific description, separate treatises and a vocabulary: a hundred and fifty volumes, Jack, with forty thousand drawings and thirty thousand specimens. All this he showed to the Academy. It was much praised but never published. Yet he continued working on it in poverty and old age, and I like to think he was happy in his immense design, and with the admiration of such men as Jussieu and the Institute in general.

David Diop's novel La porte du voyage sans retour (The door of the voyage without return) was inspired by and is about Adanson's experiences in Senegal.[13]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Adanson, Michel". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 183.
  2. ^ Adanson, Michel Adanson : the Bicentennial of Michel Adanson's Familles des Plantes. Part one. The Hunt botanical library Carnegie Institute of Technology. Pittsburgh, 1963:49.
  3. ^ a b Zirkle, Conway. (1935). The Inheritance of Acquired Characters and the Provisional Hypothesis of Pangenesis. The American Naturalist 69: 417–445.
  4. ^ Cornell, John F. (1983). From Creation to Evolution: Sir William Dawson and the Idea of Design in the Nineteenth Century. Journal of the History of Biology 16: 137–170.
  5. ^ Adanson: Adanson, the man, by J. P. Nicolas. Adanson and his Familles des plantes, by F. A. Stafleu. The Adanson collection of botanical books and manuscripts, by W. D. Margadant. Hunt Botanical Library, Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1963. p. 168
  6. ^ Mayr, Ernst. (1982). The Growth of Biological Thought: Diversity, Evolution, and Inheritance. Belknap Press. p. 260. ISBN 978-0674364462
  7. ^ Delumeau, Jean; O'Connell, Matthew. (2000). History of Paradise: The Garden of Eden in Myth and Tradition. University of Illinois Press. p. 222. ISBN 978-0252068805
  8. ^ Ainsworth, C. G (1976). Introduction to the History of Mycology. Cambridge University Press.
  9. ^ Adanson papers Archived 10 July 2012 at archive.today
  10. ^ National Library of Medicine Bibliography of the History of Medicine, p. 1205, at Google Books
  11. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Adanson", pp. 1–2).
  12. ^ Excerpted from The Commodore, pp. 227–228, Patrick O'Brian, ISBN 978-0-00-649932-9
  13. ^ Marivat, Gladys (18 September 2021). "Rentrée littéraire 2021 : la sélection du « Monde Afrique »". Le Monde (in French). Retrieved 29 October 2021.
  14. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Adans.

Bibliography edit

  • Eiselt, J. N. 1836 Geschichte, Systematik und Literatur der Insectenkunde, von den ältesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart. Als Handbuch für den Jünger und als Repertorium für den Meister der Entomologie bearbeitet. Leipzig, C. H. F. Hartmann : VIII+255 p.
  • Nicolas, J.P. (1970). "Adanson, Michel". Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 58–59. ISBN 0-684-10114-9.
  • A Voyage to Senegal, the Isle of Goree, and the River Gambia, 1759—Translation of Histoire naturelle du Sénégal

michel, adanson, april, 1727, august, 1806, 18th, century, french, botanist, naturalist, traveled, senegal, study, flora, fauna, proposed, natural, system, taxonomy, distinct, from, binomial, system, forwarded, linnaeus, born, 1727, april, 1727aix, provencedie. 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 Michel AdansonMichel AdansonBorn 1727 04 07 7 April 1727Aix en ProvenceDied3 August 1806 1806 08 03 aged 79 NationalityFrenchScientific careerFieldsNaturalistInstitutionsJardin des PlantesAuthor abbrev botany Adans Contents 1 Personal history 2 Familles naturelles des plantes 3 Evolution 4 Later life 5 Death and legacy 6 In literature 7 See also 8 References 9 BibliographyPersonal history editAdanson was born at Aix en Provence His family moved to Paris in 1730 After leaving the College Sainte Barbe he was employed in the cabinets of R A F Reaumur and Bernard de Jussieu as well as in the Jardin des Plantes Paris 1 He attended lectures at the Jardin du Roi and the College Royal in Paris from 1741 to 1746 At the end of 1748 funded by a director of the Compagnie des Indes he left France on an exploring expedition to Senegal He remained there for five years collecting and describing numerous animals and plants He also collected specimens of every object of commerce delineated maps of the country made systematic meteorological and astronomical observations and prepared grammars and dictionaries of the languages spoken on the banks of the Senegal 1 After his return to Paris in 1754 he made use of a small portion of the materials he had collected in his Histoire naturelle du Senegal 1757 1 Sales of the work were slow and after the publisher s bankruptcy and the reimbursement to subscribers Adanson estimated the cost of the book to him had been 5 000 livres beginning the penury in which he lived the rest of his life 2 This work has a special interest from the essay on shells printed at the end of it where Adanson proposed his universal method a system of classification distinct from those of Buffon and Linnaeus He founded his classification of all organised beings on the consideration of each individual organ As each organ gave birth to new relations so he established a corresponding number of arbitrary arrangements Those beings possessing the greatest number of similar organs were referred to one great division and the relationship was considered more remote in proportion to the dissimilarity of organs 1 Familles naturelles des plantes editIn 1763 he published his Familles naturelles des plantes In this work he developed the principle of arrangement above mentioned which in its adherence to natural botanical relations was based on the system of Joseph Pitton de Tournefort and had been anticipated to some extent nearly a century before by John Ray The success of this work was hindered by its innovations in the use of terms which were ridiculed by the defenders of the popular sexual system of Linnaeus but it did much to open the way for the establishment by means principally of Antoine Laurent de Jussieu s Genera Plantarum 1789 of the natural method of the classification of plants In 1774 Adanson submitted to the consideration of the French Academy of Sciences an immense work extending to all known beings and substances It consisted of 27 large volumes of manuscript employed in displaying the general relations of all these matters and their distribution 150 volumes more occupied with the alphabetical arrangement of 40 000 species a vocabulary containing 200 000 words with their explanations and a number of detached memoirs 40 000 figures and 30 000 specimens of the three kingdoms of nature The committee to which the inspection of this enormous mass was entrusted strongly recommended Adanson to separate and publish all that was peculiarly his own leaving out what was merely compilation He obstinately rejected this advice and the huge work at which he continued to labour was never published 1 Evolution editAdanson was an early proponent of the inheritance of acquired characters and a limited view of evolution 3 4 Historian of science Conway Zirkle has noted that Adanson was Lamarck s predecessor at the Jardin Royal and Lamarck could hardly have remained unfamiliar with Adanson s publications Adanson not only described evolution in his Familles de plantes published in 1763 when Lamarck was a young man of twenty but also suggested that the changes in specific characteristics were produced through the inheritance of acquired characters 3 In an article for the Histoire and Memoires de l Academie Royale des Sciences of 1769 Adanson used the term mutations to refer to small changes that could bring about new variations in individuals 5 Despite being described as a precursor of evolutionism by historians Adanson rejected the concept of species preferring to focus on individuals and denied the transmutation of species 6 7 Adanson made a serious attempt to classify fungi based on their fruit body complexity He was the first botanist to classify lichens with fungi 8 Later life editHe had been elected a member of the Academy of Sciences in 1759 and he latterly subsisted on a small pension it had conferred on him Of this he was deprived in the dissolution of the Academy by the Constituent Assembly in 1793 and was consequently reduced to such a depth of poverty as to be unable to appear before the French Institute when it invited him to take his place among its members It is said that he possessed neither a white shirt a coat nor a whole pair of breeches citation needed Afterwards he was granted a pension sufficient to relieve his simple wants 1 Death and legacy editHe died in Paris after months of severe suffering requesting as the only decoration of his grave a garland of flowers gathered from the fifty eight families he had differentiated a touching though transitory image says Georges Cuvier of the more durable monument which he has erected to himself in his works Besides the books already mentioned he published papers on the ship worm the baobab tree whose generic name Adansonia commemorates Adanson the origin of the varieties of cultivated plants and gum producing trees 1 His papers and herbarium remained in his family s hands for over a century and a half finally coming to the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation at Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh in 1961 62 9 Subsequently the Hunt Institute republished his Familles des plantes in two volumes 1963 64 under the editorship of George H M Lawrence 10 A species of turtle Pelusios adansonii is named in his honor 11 In literature editIn The Reverse of the Medal the eleventh novel in the series and again in The Commodore the seventeenth novel of Patrick O Brian s Aubrey Maturin series Stephen Maturin makes reference to Adanson He elaborates on Adanson s botanical work in Senegal the prodigious volume of his written output and his penurious circumstances at the time of his death 12 Stephen Maturin He was a very great naturalist as zealous prolific and industrious as he was unfortunate I knew him in Paris when I was young and admired him extremely so did Cuvier At that time he was very kind to us When he was little more than a youth he went to Senegal stayed there five or six years observing collecting dissecting describing and classifying and he summarised all this in a brief but eminently respectable natural history of the country from which I learnt almost everything I know of the African flora and fauna A valuable book indeed and the outcome of intense and long sustained effort but I can scarcely venture to name it on the same day as his maximum opus twenty seven large volumes devoted to a systematic account of created beings and substances and the relations between them together with a hundred and fifty volumes more of index exact scientific description separate treatises and a vocabulary a hundred and fifty volumes Jack with forty thousand drawings and thirty thousand specimens All this he showed to the Academy It was much praised but never published Yet he continued working on it in poverty and old age and I like to think he was happy in his immense design and with the admiration of such men as Jussieu and the Institute in general David Diop s novel La porte du voyage sans retour The door of the voyage without return was inspired by and is about Adanson s experiences in Senegal 13 The standard author abbreviation Adans is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 14 See also editArboretum de Balaine Adanson system Category Taxa named by Michel AdansonReferences edit a b c d e f g nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Adanson Michel Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 183 Adanson Michel Adanson the Bicentennial of Michel Adanson s Familles des Plantes Part one The Hunt botanical library Carnegie Institute of Technology Pittsburgh 1963 49 a b Zirkle Conway 1935 The Inheritance of Acquired Characters and the Provisional Hypothesis of Pangenesis The American Naturalist 69 417 445 Cornell John F 1983 From Creation to Evolution Sir William Dawson and the Idea of Design in the Nineteenth Century Journal of the History of Biology 16 137 170 Adanson Adanson the man by J P Nicolas Adanson and his Familles des plantes by F A Stafleu The Adanson collection of botanical books and manuscripts by W D Margadant Hunt Botanical Library Carnegie Institute of Technology 1963 p 168 Mayr Ernst 1982 The Growth of Biological Thought Diversity Evolution and Inheritance Belknap Press p 260 ISBN 978 0674364462 Delumeau Jean O Connell Matthew 2000 History of Paradise The Garden of Eden in Myth and Tradition University of Illinois Press p 222 ISBN 978 0252068805 Ainsworth C G 1976 Introduction to the History of Mycology Cambridge University Press Adanson papers Archived 10 July 2012 at archive today National Library of Medicine Bibliography of the History of Medicine p 1205 at Google Books Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Adanson pp 1 2 Excerpted from The Commodore pp 227 228 Patrick O Brian ISBN 978 0 00 649932 9 Marivat Gladys 18 September 2021 Rentree litteraire 2021 la selection du Monde Afrique Le Monde in French Retrieved 29 October 2021 International Plant Names Index Adans Bibliography editEiselt J N 1836 Geschichte Systematik und Literatur der Insectenkunde von den altesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart Als Handbuch fur den Junger und als Repertorium fur den Meister der Entomologie bearbeitet Leipzig C H F Hartmann VIII 255 p Nicolas J P 1970 Adanson Michel Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 1 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 58 59 ISBN 0 684 10114 9 A Voyage to Senegal the Isle of Goree and the River Gambia 1759 Translation of Histoire naturelle du Senegal nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Adanson Michel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michel Adanson amp oldid 1161527497, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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