R. Edward Earll

R. Edward Earll (August 24, 1853 – March 19, 1896)[1][2] was an American ichthyologist and museum curator.

R. Edward Earll
Born(1853-08-24)August 24, 1853
DiedMarch 19, 1896(1896-03-19) (aged 42)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materNorthwestern University
Scientific career
Fields
InstitutionsUnited States Fish Commission, London International Fisheries Exhibition,
United States National Museum, Smithsonian Institution

Biography

Earll was born on August 23, 1853 in Waukegan, Lake County, Illinois to Robert Cunningham Earll. In 1877, he graduated from Northwestern University. Subsequently, he began work at the United States Fish Commission as fish culturist—which he retained for only a year—and then became a member of the Commission. Beginning from 1879 to 1882 he worked for Tenth United States Census, at which he collected the data and statistics for fisheries in Middle Atlantic, New England, and Southern states. He was a member of Commission for the London International Fisheries Exhibition in 1883. When he returned he was appointed as Chief of the Division for the Fisheries of Fish Commission and received an honorary curator position in the United States National Museum. He spent a good deal of his life working on the expositions for the Smithsonian Institution and National Museum in 1888. He was an editor of the proceedings and of the Bulletin of the Museum, a position that he kept from 1893 to 1896.[3]

gollark: Rust is annoyingly inflexible and slow to compile and dependencyuous. Nim has a bad ecosystem and is kind of unpolished.
gollark: There are no good programming languages, sadly.
gollark: I would either use Rust or Nim. But both are annoying in some ways.
gollark: The project is currently shelved due to the caching interacting poorly with dynamic sites and the lack of programming languages sufficient to contain the power it wields.
gollark: I could also make live-updating things, make the theming actually good, A/B-test unsuspecting users, and make achievements work better.

See also

References

  1. Ancestry.com. U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current (database on-line). Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
  2. Ancestry.com. U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970 (database on-line). Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.
  3. "Biography". Smithsonian Institution Archives. Retrieved April 21, 2012.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.