Ralph Waldo Emerson MacIvor

Ralph Waldo Emerson MacIvor (c. 1852 – 1 April 1917) was a United Kingdom agricultural chemist, active in Australia, New Zealand and Scotland.[1]

MacIvor was educated in the United Kingdom, he became an Associate of the Institute of Chemistry in 1878 and a Fellow in 1883.[1]

The Australian pastoralist William John Clarke paid MacIvor to lecture on agricultural chemistry in the colony of Victoria.[2]

Publications

  • MacIvor, Ralph W. Emerson, The Chemistry of Agriculture, Stillwell, Melbourne, 1879, 275 pp
  • MacIvor, Ralph Waldo Emerson, 'MacIvor's Improved Method of Disposing of and Utilizing Night-soil, and Extracting therefrom, and Converting the Same into, Merchantable Commodities (Patent: 20 March 1886)', in Index to New South Wales Letters of Registration of Inventions, 1854 to July 1887, Government Printer, Sydney, 1891, p. 27.
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References

  1. "MacIvor, Ralph Waldo Emerson (c. 1852 - 1917)". Retrieved 21 October 2012.
  2. Mennell, Philip (1892). "Clarke, Hon. Sir William John" . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co via Wikisource.

Further reading

  • Collins, David J.; Rae, Ian D. (2008). "R. W. E. MacIvor: Late-nineteenth-century Advocate for Scientific Agriculture in South-eastern Australia". Historical Records of Australian Science. 19 (2): 125. doi:10.1071/HR08007.
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