The Odd Couple of Protistology: Edward Heron-Allen (1861-1943) and Arthur Earland (1866-1958)

Type : ACL
Nature : Production scientifique
Au bénéfice du Laboratoire : Oui
Statut de publication : Publié
Année de publication : 2023
Auteurs (1) : DOLAN John,r
Revue scientifique : European Journal of Protistology
Volume : 91
Fascicule :
Pages :
DOI : 10.1016/j.ejop.2023.126023
URL : https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0932473923000688
Abstract : Edward Heron-Allen and Arthur Earland were among the last great amateur foraminifera researchers. Their partnership began in 1907 and ended in 1932. While close in age to one another, they shared little more than a fascination for forams and a lack of any university training. In most other aspects, the two men were completely different. Heron-Allen was a famous upper class polymath, expert not only on forams, but also on the Persian language, violins, palm reading, history, asparagus, and barnacles. He was also an accomplished novelist and poet, who frequented literary circles. In contrast to the flamboyant Heron-Allen, Earland was a discrete civil servant who admitted to working on forams as a relief from the monotony of his job. Hence, the two were improbable partners. However, together they produced 39 substantial works on forams. Their studies concerned assemblages from Southern Ocean to the North Sea and they are today credited with the original description of 186 species. Here the distinct lives of the two men are presented, and their contributions to protistology, as partners as well as individuals, are reviewed. The case is made for considering Earland's work as neglected relative to that of Heron-Allen, except perhaps by foram taxonomists.
Mots-clés : amateur microscopy; foraminifera; history of protistology; second author
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Citation :
Dolan JR (2023) The Odd Couple of Protistology: Edward Heron-Allen (1861-1943) and Arthur Earland (1866-1958). Eur J Protistol 91 | doi: 10.1016/j.ejop.2023.126023