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William Kitchen Parker

William Kitchen Parker FRS FRMS (23 June 1823 – 3 July 1890) was a British physician, zoologist and comparative anatomist. From a humble beginning he became Hunterian Professor of Anatomy and Physiology in the College of Surgeons of England.

William Kitchen Parker

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1865, awarded the Royal Medal in 1866. From 1871 to 1873 he was President of the Royal Microscopical Society, and in 1885 he received the Baly Medal of the Royal College of Physicians.

Life edit

Parker was born in the village of Dogsthorpe, near Peterborough in the County of Northamptonshire.[1] His father, Thomas Parker, was a working farmer, living in a thatched house, built in 1635. Thomas was a Wesleyan of the old school: a Methodist-Churchman, God-fearing and courteous, farming his own land. He married the daughter of another farmer, Sarah Kitchen, whose name was also given to their son William.

William Parker was the second son, and six other children in the family died in their infancy.[2] He went to a village dame school early in life, then to parish schools in Werrington and Paston. Schooling was interspersed with farm-work.

After telling his father that farm work was not for him, Parker entered the Peterborough Grammar School[3] for nine months, and then started on the road to medical education. He was articled to a surgeon at Market Overton in 1842, using his spare time to teach himself about the plants of the neighbourhood. His knowledge of botany became remarkably extensive and accurate.

In 1842 he became apprenticed to a country surgeon. During this time he continued educating himself in natural history by reading, looking and doing. The doing consisted of collecting and dissecting birds and mammals, and working up a portfolio of exquisitely beautiful and accurate drawings.

Parker married Elizabeth Jeffery whilst still a student: she was the daughter of the clerk to the Vauxhall Bridge Company. Her mother was the sister of Joseph Prendergast DD (1791–1875), the Headmaster of Colfe's School (1831–1857), and the benefactor of Prendergast School, both in the borough of Lewisham.

William and Elizabeth had seven children, three daughters and four sons. The first son, Thomas Jeffery Parker, became Professor of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy in the University of Otago, New Zealand; the second, William Newton Parker, became Professor of Biology in the University College, Cardiff;[4][5] the third was a draughtsman and lithographer; the fourth was a surgeon.[6] In his work on the vertebrate skull Parker became close to Thomas Henry Huxley, and named one of his sons after him. His first son was sent to study under Huxley, and became in 1872 one of Huxley's demonstrators.[7]

Parker was elected FRS in 1865, and a few years afterwards the Royal Society gave him an annual grant to aid his work, and a generous Wesleyan friend more than once presented £100 towards the cost of publishing some of his plates. Later in life a State pension was awarded.

The honours and appointments Parker gained later in life were due mainly for his work on the vertebrate skeleton and its significance in establishing a "true theory of the vertebrate skull" (Edward Sabine). His Royal Society obituary notice described him as "An unworldly seeker after truth, loved by all who knew him".[8] He is buried in a Wandsworth cemetery under a cross of red granite.

Medical training edit

Parker studied at King's College London from 1844 to 1846, and became a student-demonstrator there to Mr (later Sir) William Bowman, the surgeon, histologist and anatomist. He attended Charing Cross Hospital in 1846–47.[6] He never took notes during lectures, but drew sketches, and claimed he remembered the facts as well as anyone who took notes.[9] He produced sheet after sheet of artistic drawing, all worthy of publication and large numbers of skeletons of birds and mammals. He attended Richard Owen's lectures at the College of Surgeons, and "received with enthusiasm the doctrine of the archetype which he was afterwards to do so much to overturn".[10]

Parker avoided taking exams, and remained for many years with the minimum qualification for running a general medical practice, which in those days was an LSA (Licenciate of the Society of Apothecaries), a qualification of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries.[11] From 1849, Parker ran a general practice in London for many years, at various locations. The income supported his family, but his interest was in zoology, at which he was entirely self-taught. Today he is remembered only as a zoologist, one of a quite a sizeable group – including Thomas Henry Huxley, Richard Owen and Joseph Dalton Hooker – who were qualified in medicine but whose life work was in natural history or one of the newly named biological sciences.

Career in zoology edit

Forams edit

Introduced to the microscope during his medical studies, Parker continued to study the microscopic structure of tissues. It was on a visit to Bognor collecting sand that he encountered Polyzoa and Foraminifera, which he sorted, mounted and studied. Parker became one of the greatest authorities on the Foraminifera, a group containing microscopic single-celled amoeboid protists with calcareous tests (shells). Had he not met Rupert Jones and Crawford Williamson he might have remained an unpublished amateur. It was Jones, mainly, who taught him how to present his considerable knowledge, and together they wrote 34 papers on the forams.[12][13][14]

Morphology of birds edit

At the same time, Parker worked on his dissections, preparations and skeletons of vertebrates, especially birds. He developed, for example, about 300 preparations of bird wings and many complete skeletons. This work resulted in 24 papers on birds, including one on Archaeopteryx. There is a general article on birds in Encyclopædia Britannica, 9th ed.[15][16][17]

Owen's concept of vertebrate anatomy edit

Richard Owen was one of Parker's teachers, yet Parker came to overthrow the master's ideas. Owen's view on anatomy did not derive from evolution, but from German philosophical notions of idealism. These ideas, associated in biology with Goethe and Kant, and developed in anatomy by Oken and Cuvier, were used by Owen in his theoretical expositions. Vertebrate anatomy, in this scheme, was to be seen as variations on an archetype.[18]

From an idea of Goethe's in 1790, Oken developed a theory that the bones of the skull were four modified vertebrae. Oken's exaggeration "The entire man is only a vertebra" was memorable.[19] Oken's ideas were revived and expanded by Owen, and presented to the British Association meeting in 1846.[20]

The weak point in Owen's theory was its basis solely on the more derived and specialised skulls, and even so it took no notice of their embryological development. For example, Owen made no reference to the work of Rathke, who had shown in 1839 that there was no sign of the four vertebrae in the early embryo of snakes.

The assault on Owen's system edit

Huxley was the first man to attack Owen's ideas on the vertebrate skeleton, in his Croonian Lecture to the Royal Society in 1858. He showed from a study of the early stages of lower fish, and also the stickleback and the frog, that the segmentation of the skull in higher vertebrata is a secondary process, and is independent of vertebration. The basis of the work was embryology, but the early history of the skull was known in only a few species.

Parker's distinction was to carry out a careful study of the process in a much wider variety of vertebrates; his ironic comment on the "anatomical suffering caused to fish from their being dragged into harmony with that mischievous piece of work, the vertebrate archetype" shows, from such a gentle man, a surprising vigour in debate. "It is high time for us to have ceased from transcendentalism: of what use is it?" he asked.[21]

Parker on the vertebrate skull edit

From 1865 to 1888 Parker published 36 studies on the vertebrate skull, including a monograph .[22] The entire series comprises nearly 1800 pages of letterpress and about 270 plates. The work was summarised in Francis Balfour's Comparative Embryology of 1881, and settled the fate of Owen's transcendental archetype theory of the vertebrate skull once and for all.

The vertebrate shoulder-girdle edit

Another major vertebrate project was a monograph on the comparative anatomy of the vertebrate shoulder-girdle (pectoral girdle).[23] One of the chief results of this work was, by demonstrating the true homologies of the various bones of the shoulder-girdle in fishes, to overthrow Owen's theory of the nature of limbs. Parker showed (contrary to Owen) that the true shoulder-girdle is from the first totally independent of the skull. In teleost and ganoid fish, the skull and shoulder-girdle are brought into connexion by derivatives of the skin-skeleton, not by bones of the shoulder-girdle. Discoveries like this alerted Parker to the failure of the great system of transcendental anatomy which Owen had done so much to establish.[24]

Royal College of Surgeons edit

In 1873, Professor Flower was invalided, and Parker was asked to step in the breach. He took his MRCS diploma by viva voce, and was appointed Professor. Afterwards, they shared the Hunterian chair jointly.

Difficulty in writing edit

There are many indications that Parker found writing difficult, and avoided it, and when forced to write the result was often scarcely comprehensible. Whatever the reason, he needed, and got, help and advice. Huxley gave him detailed advice more than once, which Parker either ignored or could not put into action.

"He wrote without system, putting down everything as it occurred to him, and continually going off on side issues. He never revised: it was always the first draft of his MS. that went to the printer, and none but minor alterations were made in proof; and such methods of assisting the reader as abstracts, careful descriptions of figures, etc., always seemed to him superfluous."[25]
"But from the purely literary standpoint the case is altered: scattered up and down his writings are passages of great beauty, of true and sincere eloquence, and of quaint whimsical humour."[26]

Although Parker could scarcely write a simple descriptive sentence to save his life, he certainly had a huge grasp of the imagery and poetics of the English language. This is part of one sequence quoted by his son:

"If the Megatherium, or his somewhat more modest-sized relation, the Mylodon (another extinct sloth), did find their supply of food in the way palaeontologists suggest, their mode of dining must have been a sight worth seeing...
"Let us, however, try to imagine a Megatherium waking up after lazily dozing a month or two during the dry season, and then, hungry and wet, in the heavy downpour of the beginning rainy season, setting to work to break his fast. As far as can be judged by the tools he had to work with—paws a yard, and claws a foot, in length—the first thing to be done was to throw a few hundredweights of earth from the roots of some large tree.
"Now he changes his tactics; he has good collar-bones, and well-shaped arms for embracing; so, bear-like, he hugs the tree upon which his desires are set, and, busily digging still, not now with his fore, but with his hind, paws, his great weight resting upon his haunches and his tail, he, with many groans, sways the big tree to and fro; at last with a great crash it falls..."[27]

That is certainly not the prose of the usual science author. At least two of Parker's books were written with help: his Morphology of the skull was written from his dictation and notes by G.T. Bettany, and his 1884 lectures On mammalian descent were written with the help of a friend, Arabella Buckley, who had been Charles Lyell's secretary.[6]

Parker's avoidance of exams also points towards an avoidance of writing, especially since his early career would have been much improved by taking a higher qualification. As far as we know, it was not a lack of money which prevented him taking exams (as it was with Huxley). His father, though not wealthy, was able to give his children a start in life.

Dyslexia is a possible explanation, but it is hard to reconcile with passages such as the above. Perhaps an upbringing in a farmhouse with little reading material apart from the Bible, and little opportunity to practice writing in his early years led to his unusual characteristics as a scientific writer.

References edit

  1. ^ Dogsthorpe was part of the Soke of Peterborough, which is now in Cambridgeshire.
  2. ^ Parker T. Jeffery 1893. William Kitchen Parker FRS. Macmillan, London. p7
  3. ^ there is no school with this name at present
  4. ^ Howes, Thomas George Bond (1895). "Parker, William Kitchen" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 43. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 290–292.
  5. ^ "Parker, William Newton". Who's Who. 59: 1358. 1907.
  6. ^ a b c Anon. 1890. A memoir of William Kitchen Parker FRS. Nature 24 July, 42, 297–299.
  7. ^ Parker, Thomas Jeffery – Biography – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand
  8. ^ Jones T. Rupert and Harting J.E. 1900. William Kitchen Parker. Proc Roy Soc 48 xv–xx.
  9. ^ Parker T.J. William Kitchen Parker FRS. p19
  10. ^ Parker T.J. William Kitchen Parker FRS. p24.
  11. ^ Society of Apothecaries
  12. ^ Parker W.K. and T. Rupert Jones 1865. On some Foraminifera of the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans, including Davis Straights and Baffin Bay. Phil Trans Roy Soc 325–441, 8 plates.
  13. ^ Parker W.K. and T. Rupert Jones 1869. A monograph on the genus Polymorphina. Trans Linnaean Soc 1871, 197–254.
  14. ^ Carpenter W.B. with the assistance of W.K. Parker and T. Rupert Jones 1862. An introduction to the study of the Foraminifera. The Ray Society, London.
  15. ^ Parker W.K. 1862. On the osteology of Balaeniceps rex, Gould (1860). Proc Zool Soc 4, 269–351, 3 plates.
  16. ^ Parker W.K. 1866. On the osteology of the gallinaceous birds and Tinamous. Trans Zool Soc 5, 149–241, 9 plates.
  17. ^ Parker W.K. 1864. Remarks on the skeleton of the Archaeopteryx, and on the relations of the bird to the reptile. Geol Mag 2, 55–57.
  18. ^ Desmond A. 1982. Archetypes and ancestors: palaeontology in Victorian London 1850–1875. Muller, London.
  19. ^ Oken L. 1807. Inaugural dissertation, Jena.
  20. ^ Owen R. 1846. Report on the archetype and homologies of the vertebrate skeleton. British Association.
  21. ^ Parker W.K. 1864, On the sternal apparatus of birds and other vertebrates. Proc Zool Soc 339–341.
  22. ^ Parker W.T. and Bettany G.T. 1872. The morphology of the skull. London.
  23. ^ Parker W.K. 1868. A monograph on the structure and development of the shoulder-girdle and sternum in the vertebrates. Ray Society, London, p237 + 30 tinted plates. The plates were drawn, variously, by Parker and George West, and West was the lithographer. Text diagrams are unsigned, but probably by the same, or by Parker alone.
  24. ^ Parker T.J. William Kitchen Parker FRS. p40 & following.
  25. ^ Parker T.J. William Kitchen Parker FRS. p61
  26. ^ Parker T.J. William Kitchen Parker FRS. p68
  27. ^ Parker T.J. William Kitchen Parker FRS. p71–73

External links edit

  • On Mammalian Descent; the Hunterian Lectures for 1884: being nine lectures ... By William Kitchen Parker
  • "Parker, William Kitchen" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

william, kitchen, parker, people, similar, name, william, kitchin, frms, june, 1823, july, 1890, british, physician, zoologist, comparative, anatomist, from, humble, beginning, became, hunterian, professor, anatomy, physiology, college, surgeons, england, elec. For people of a similar name see William Kitchin William Kitchen Parker FRS FRMS 23 June 1823 3 July 1890 was a British physician zoologist and comparative anatomist From a humble beginning he became Hunterian Professor of Anatomy and Physiology in the College of Surgeons of England William Kitchen Parker He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1865 awarded the Royal Medal in 1866 From 1871 to 1873 he was President of the Royal Microscopical Society and in 1885 he received the Baly Medal of the Royal College of Physicians Contents 1 Life 2 Medical training 3 Career in zoology 3 1 Forams 3 2 Morphology of birds 3 3 Owen s concept of vertebrate anatomy 3 3 1 The assault on Owen s system 3 3 2 Parker on the vertebrate skull 3 3 3 The vertebrate shoulder girdle 3 4 Royal College of Surgeons 3 5 Difficulty in writing 4 References 5 External linksLife editParker was born in the village of Dogsthorpe near Peterborough in the County of Northamptonshire 1 His father Thomas Parker was a working farmer living in a thatched house built in 1635 Thomas was a Wesleyan of the old school a Methodist Churchman God fearing and courteous farming his own land He married the daughter of another farmer Sarah Kitchen whose name was also given to their son William William Parker was the second son and six other children in the family died in their infancy 2 He went to a village dame school early in life then to parish schools in Werrington and Paston Schooling was interspersed with farm work After telling his father that farm work was not for him Parker entered the Peterborough Grammar School 3 for nine months and then started on the road to medical education He was articled to a surgeon at Market Overton in 1842 using his spare time to teach himself about the plants of the neighbourhood His knowledge of botany became remarkably extensive and accurate In 1842 he became apprenticed to a country surgeon During this time he continued educating himself in natural history by reading looking and doing The doing consisted of collecting and dissecting birds and mammals and working up a portfolio of exquisitely beautiful and accurate drawings Parker married Elizabeth Jeffery whilst still a student she was the daughter of the clerk to the Vauxhall Bridge Company Her mother was the sister of Joseph Prendergast DD 1791 1875 the Headmaster of Colfe s School 1831 1857 and the benefactor of Prendergast School both in the borough of Lewisham William and Elizabeth had seven children three daughters and four sons The first son Thomas Jeffery Parker became Professor of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy in the University of Otago New Zealand the second William Newton Parker became Professor of Biology in the University College Cardiff 4 5 the third was a draughtsman and lithographer the fourth was a surgeon 6 In his work on the vertebrate skull Parker became close to Thomas Henry Huxley and named one of his sons after him His first son was sent to study under Huxley and became in 1872 one of Huxley s demonstrators 7 Parker was elected FRS in 1865 and a few years afterwards the Royal Society gave him an annual grant to aid his work and a generous Wesleyan friend more than once presented 100 towards the cost of publishing some of his plates Later in life a State pension was awarded The honours and appointments Parker gained later in life were due mainly for his work on the vertebrate skeleton and its significance in establishing a true theory of the vertebrate skull Edward Sabine His Royal Society obituary notice described him as An unworldly seeker after truth loved by all who knew him 8 He is buried in a Wandsworth cemetery under a cross of red granite Medical training editParker studied at King s College London from 1844 to 1846 and became a student demonstrator there to Mr later Sir William Bowman the surgeon histologist and anatomist He attended Charing Cross Hospital in 1846 47 6 He never took notes during lectures but drew sketches and claimed he remembered the facts as well as anyone who took notes 9 He produced sheet after sheet of artistic drawing all worthy of publication and large numbers of skeletons of birds and mammals He attended Richard Owen s lectures at the College of Surgeons and received with enthusiasm the doctrine of the archetype which he was afterwards to do so much to overturn 10 Parker avoided taking exams and remained for many years with the minimum qualification for running a general medical practice which in those days was an LSA Licenciate of the Society of Apothecaries a qualification of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries 11 From 1849 Parker ran a general practice in London for many years at various locations The income supported his family but his interest was in zoology at which he was entirely self taught Today he is remembered only as a zoologist one of a quite a sizeable group including Thomas Henry Huxley Richard Owen and Joseph Dalton Hooker who were qualified in medicine but whose life work was in natural history or one of the newly named biological sciences Career in zoology editForams edit Introduced to the microscope during his medical studies Parker continued to study the microscopic structure of tissues It was on a visit to Bognor collecting sand that he encountered Polyzoa and Foraminifera which he sorted mounted and studied Parker became one of the greatest authorities on the Foraminifera a group containing microscopic single celled amoeboid protists with calcareous tests shells Had he not met Rupert Jones and Crawford Williamson he might have remained an unpublished amateur It was Jones mainly who taught him how to present his considerable knowledge and together they wrote 34 papers on the forams 12 13 14 Morphology of birds edit At the same time Parker worked on his dissections preparations and skeletons of vertebrates especially birds He developed for example about 300 preparations of bird wings and many complete skeletons This work resulted in 24 papers on birds including one on Archaeopteryx There is a general article on birds in Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th ed 15 16 17 Owen s concept of vertebrate anatomy edit Richard Owen was one of Parker s teachers yet Parker came to overthrow the master s ideas Owen s view on anatomy did not derive from evolution but from German philosophical notions of idealism These ideas associated in biology with Goethe and Kant and developed in anatomy by Oken and Cuvier were used by Owen in his theoretical expositions Vertebrate anatomy in this scheme was to be seen as variations on an archetype 18 From an idea of Goethe s in 1790 Oken developed a theory that the bones of the skull were four modified vertebrae Oken s exaggeration The entire man is only a vertebra was memorable 19 Oken s ideas were revived and expanded by Owen and presented to the British Association meeting in 1846 20 The weak point in Owen s theory was its basis solely on the more derived and specialised skulls and even so it took no notice of their embryological development For example Owen made no reference to the work of Rathke who had shown in 1839 that there was no sign of the four vertebrae in the early embryo of snakes The assault on Owen s system edit Huxley was the first man to attack Owen s ideas on the vertebrate skeleton in his Croonian Lecture to the Royal Society in 1858 He showed from a study of the early stages of lower fish and also the stickleback and the frog that the segmentation of the skull in higher vertebrata is a secondary process and is independent of vertebration The basis of the work was embryology but the early history of the skull was known in only a few species Parker s distinction was to carry out a careful study of the process in a much wider variety of vertebrates his ironic comment on the anatomical suffering caused to fish from their being dragged into harmony with that mischievous piece of work the vertebrate archetype shows from such a gentle man a surprising vigour in debate It is high time for us to have ceased from transcendentalism of what use is it he asked 21 Parker on the vertebrate skull edit From 1865 to 1888 Parker published 36 studies on the vertebrate skull including a monograph 22 The entire series comprises nearly 1800 pages of letterpress and about 270 plates The work was summarised in Francis Balfour s Comparative Embryology of 1881 and settled the fate of Owen s transcendental archetype theory of the vertebrate skull once and for all The vertebrate shoulder girdle edit Another major vertebrate project was a monograph on the comparative anatomy of the vertebrate shoulder girdle pectoral girdle 23 One of the chief results of this work was by demonstrating the true homologies of the various bones of the shoulder girdle in fishes to overthrow Owen s theory of the nature of limbs Parker showed contrary to Owen that the true shoulder girdle is from the first totally independent of the skull In teleost and ganoid fish the skull and shoulder girdle are brought into connexion by derivatives of the skin skeleton not by bones of the shoulder girdle Discoveries like this alerted Parker to the failure of the great system of transcendental anatomy which Owen had done so much to establish 24 Royal College of Surgeons edit In 1873 Professor Flower was invalided and Parker was asked to step in the breach He took his MRCS diploma by viva voce and was appointed Professor Afterwards they shared the Hunterian chair jointly Difficulty in writing edit There are many indications that Parker found writing difficult and avoided it and when forced to write the result was often scarcely comprehensible Whatever the reason he needed and got help and advice Huxley gave him detailed advice more than once which Parker either ignored or could not put into action He wrote without system putting down everything as it occurred to him and continually going off on side issues He never revised it was always the first draft of his MS that went to the printer and none but minor alterations were made in proof and such methods of assisting the reader as abstracts careful descriptions of figures etc always seemed to him superfluous 25 But from the purely literary standpoint the case is altered scattered up and down his writings are passages of great beauty of true and sincere eloquence and of quaint whimsical humour 26 Although Parker could scarcely write a simple descriptive sentence to save his life he certainly had a huge grasp of the imagery and poetics of the English language This is part of one sequence quoted by his son If the Megatherium or his somewhat more modest sized relation the Mylodon another extinct sloth did find their supply of food in the way palaeontologists suggest their mode of dining must have been a sight worth seeing Let us however try to imagine a Megatherium waking up after lazily dozing a month or two during the dry season and then hungry and wet in the heavy downpour of the beginning rainy season setting to work to break his fast As far as can be judged by the tools he had to work with paws a yard and claws a foot in length the first thing to be done was to throw a few hundredweights of earth from the roots of some large tree Now he changes his tactics he has good collar bones and well shaped arms for embracing so bear like he hugs the tree upon which his desires are set and busily digging still not now with his fore but with his hind paws his great weight resting upon his haunches and his tail he with many groans sways the big tree to and fro at last with a great crash it falls 27 That is certainly not the prose of the usual science author At least two of Parker s books were written with help his Morphology of the skull was written from his dictation and notes by G T Bettany and his 1884 lectures On mammalian descent were written with the help of a friend Arabella Buckley who had been Charles Lyell s secretary 6 Parker s avoidance of exams also points towards an avoidance of writing especially since his early career would have been much improved by taking a higher qualification As far as we know it was not a lack of money which prevented him taking exams as it was with Huxley His father though not wealthy was able to give his children a start in life Dyslexia is a possible explanation but it is hard to reconcile with passages such as the above Perhaps an upbringing in a farmhouse with little reading material apart from the Bible and little opportunity to practice writing in his early years led to his unusual characteristics as a scientific writer References edit Dogsthorpe was part of the Soke of Peterborough which is now in Cambridgeshire Parker T Jeffery 1893 William Kitchen Parker FRS Macmillan London p7 there is no school with this name at present Howes Thomas George Bond 1895 Parker William Kitchen In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 43 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 290 292 Parker William Newton Who s Who 59 1358 1907 a b c Anon 1890 A memoir of William Kitchen Parker FRS Nature 24 July 42 297 299 Parker Thomas Jeffery Biography Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand Jones T Rupert and Harting J E 1900 William Kitchen Parker Proc Roy Soc 48 xv xx Parker T J William Kitchen Parker FRS p19 Parker T J William Kitchen Parker FRS p24 Society of Apothecaries Parker W K and T Rupert Jones 1865 On some Foraminifera of the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans including Davis Straights and Baffin Bay Phil Trans Roy Soc 325 441 8 plates Parker W K and T Rupert Jones 1869 A monograph on the genus Polymorphina Trans Linnaean Soc 1871 197 254 Carpenter W B with the assistance of W K Parker and T Rupert Jones 1862 An introduction to the study of the Foraminifera The Ray Society London Parker W K 1862 On the osteology of Balaeniceps rex Gould 1860 Proc Zool Soc 4 269 351 3 plates Parker W K 1866 On the osteology of the gallinaceous birds and Tinamous Trans Zool Soc 5 149 241 9 plates Parker W K 1864 Remarks on the skeleton of the Archaeopteryx and on the relations of the bird to the reptile Geol Mag 2 55 57 Desmond A 1982 Archetypes and ancestors palaeontology in Victorian London 1850 1875 Muller London Oken L 1807 Inaugural dissertation Jena Owen R 1846 Report on the archetype and homologies of the vertebrate skeleton British Association Parker W K 1864 On the sternal apparatus of birds and other vertebrates Proc Zool Soc 339 341 Parker W T and Bettany G T 1872 The morphology of the skull London Parker W K 1868 A monograph on the structure and development of the shoulder girdle and sternum in the vertebrates Ray Society London p237 30 tinted plates The plates were drawn variously by Parker and George West and West was the lithographer Text diagrams are unsigned but probably by the same or by Parker alone Parker T J William Kitchen Parker FRS p40 amp following Parker T J William Kitchen Parker FRS p61 Parker T J William Kitchen Parker FRS p68 Parker T J William Kitchen Parker FRS p71 73External links editOn Mammalian Descent the Hunterian Lectures for 1884 being nine lectures By William Kitchen Parker Parker William Kitchen New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Kitchen Parker amp oldid 1190415508, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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