Thorild Wulff

Thorild Wulff (born April 1, 1877 in Gothenburg, died late August or early September 1917 in Northwest Greenland[1]) was a Swedish botanist and polar explorer.

Thorild Wulff

Career

He obtained his doctorate degree from Lund University in 1902 based on observation he had made during a Swedish-Russian geodesy expedition to Svalbard.[2]

Wulff was research assistant in horticulture ("Centralanstalten för försöksväsendet på jordbruksområdet") 1905–09, docent of botany at Stockholm University College 1909–13. In 1911 he travelled to Iceland with his friend the author Albert Engström who gave an account of the journey ("Åt Häcklefjäll" 1913).

He participated in the Second Thule Expedition led by Knud Rasmussen from Thule to Cape Bridgman in the northeastern corner of Peary Land. On the return trip, the expedition suffered from bad weather and insufficient supplies, resulting in casualties, one of them being Wulff. He died from fatigue near Cape Agassiz off the Humboldt Glacier.

Honours

The Greenlandic plant species Braya thorild-wulffii (Brassicaceae) was named after him in 1923. The Wulff Land peninsula in Northern Greenland is similarly named for him.

gollark: “All problems can be solved by a sufficient concentration of electrical and magnetic waves.”
gollark: “setting the trees on fire is oddly therapeutic”
gollark: “In yet another sentence of mine that will in no way be taken out of context later: the answer is always murder”
gollark: “If you are Kzinti and you can read this, you are too close.”
gollark: I have my own quotedb.

References

  1. Den digitale Slæderejse Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Wulff, T. (1902). Botanische Beobachtungen aus Spitzbergen [Botanical Observations from Spitsbergen] (in German). Lund: Malmström. Contains four parts: I. Über die Transpiration der arktischen Gewächse; II. Über das Auftreten von Antocyan bei den arktischen Gewächsen; III. Der Polygonboden (Kjellman's "Rutmark"); IV. Floristische Notizen
  3. IPNI.  T.Wulff.
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