The Journal of Foraminiferal Research; October 2006; v. 36; no. 4;
p. 391-393; DOI: 10.2113/gsjfr.36.4.391
© 2006 Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research
LES PLANCHES INÉDITES DE FORAMINIFÈRES DALCIDE DORBIGNYÀ LAUBE DE LA MICRO-PALÉONTOLOGIE. THE UNPUBLISHED PLATES OF FORAMINIFERA BY ALCIDE DORBIGNYTHE DAWN OF MICROPALEONTOLOGY.
By Marie-Thérèse Vénec-Peyré, 2005, Des planches et des Mots, No. 2, p. 1302. July 18, 2005. Publications Scientifiques du Muséum, Muséum national dHistoire naturelle, CP 3957, rue de Cuvier, F-75231, Paris Cedex 05. ISBN 2-85653575-5.
62.00 (VAT included for European Union purchasers);
58.77 (VAT excluded). www.mnhn.fr/publication/dpdm/index.html, diff.pub@mmhn.fr.
Jere H. Lipps
Museum of Paleontology, Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-4780
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Alcide Dessalines dOrbigny, the prodigious French naturalist and paleontologist of the first half of the 19th Century, published over three hundred works on natural history, geology, anthropology, linguistics, and the taxonomy and paleontology of every major phylum of animals, many plants, and a single protist group, the Foraminifera (Barta-Calmus 2002). His work on foraminifera was mostly descriptive, but he first named the group (although in the French vernacular so he is not credited with the systematic use of the name), used new techniques of explanation, amassed a huge collection of specimens and samples, and published seven major contributions on them, which included descriptions of nearly 1500 new species.
dOrbigny is well known to all foraminiferal workers today and in the past. Indeed, as the Englishman Edward Heron-Allen first noted in 1917, dOrbigny established the field of micropaleontology with his descriptions and stratigraphic documentation of foraminifera. Later, the Frenchwoman Yolande Le Calvez (1974) called dOrbigny "the father of micropaleontology" while the American J. J. Galloway (1933) considered dOrbigny the "greatest student of foraminifera" of all time. A review of dOrbignys more than 300 titles suggests that he could be considered the "father", or at least the "uncle", of many fields, including biostratigraphy, invertebrate paleontology, and French paleontology, and he was recognized as the "greatest" documenter ever of many groups of organisms (ammonites, bivalves, gastropods, rudists, and many others). Darwin, for example, called dOrbignys 9-volume Voyage dans lAmérique méridionale "one of the monuments of the science of the 19th century" (Vénec-Peyré, 2002). His work and collections are still used and cited by botanists, zoologists, anthropologists, . . . [Full Text of this Article]
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