Thomas Southwell (zoologist)

Dr Thomas Southwell FRSE FZS (18791962) was a 20th century British zoologist and parasitologist.

Life

He was born in Cornholme in Yorkshire on 4 October 1879. Although keen to study Medicine, he was unable to do this and instead studied Zoology.[1]

In 1906 he began work in the Pearl Fisheries Department in Ceylon. In 1911 he moved to the Fisheries Department in India. In 1919 he returned to Britain to begin lecturing in Parasitology and Helminthology at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.

In 1929 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were James Hartley Ashworth, John Mclean Thompson, Sir John Arthur Thomson, and John Stephenson.[2]

He retired in 1939 and died in Todmorden in Lancashire on 11 June 1962.

gollark: Given that even rednet repeat, a simple thing of barely 100 lines, only had three different vulnerabilities noticed in it when I examined it in great detail, this rule is problematic.
gollark: Including craftOS, even.
gollark: It also covers literally any complex program.
gollark: Yes, it's overcovering.
gollark: Anyway, it's a hyperbolic tesselation.

References


  1. RSE Yearbook 1962
  2. Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0 902 198 84 X.
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