Online Encyclopedia

OSWALD MEER (1809–1883)

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 199 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OSWALD MEER (1809–1883)  , Swiss geologist and naturalist, was born at Nieder-Utzwyl in Canton St Gallen on the 31st of August 1809 . He was educated as a clergyman and took
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holy orders, and he also graduated as doctor of philosophy and
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medicine . Early in
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life his
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interest was aroused in entomology, on which subject he acquired
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special knowledge, and later he took up the study of
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plants and became one of the pioneers in
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palaeobotany, distinguished for his researches on the
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Miocene
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flora . In 1851 he became professor of botany in the university of Zurich, and he directed his attention to the
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Tertiary plants and
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insects of
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Switzerland . For some time he was director of the botanic garden at Zurich . In 1863 (with W . Pengelly, Phil . Trans., 1862) he investigated the plant-remains from the lignite-deposits of Hovey Tracey in Devonshire, regarding them as of Miocene age; but they are now classed as Eocene . Heer also reported on the Miocene flora of Arctic regions, on the plants of the
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Pleistocene lignites of Diirnten on lake Zurich, and on the cereals of some of the lake-dwellings (Die Pflanzen der Pfahlbauten., 1866) . During a
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great
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part of his career he was hampered by slender means and
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ill-
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health, but his services to science were acknowledged in 1873 when the
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Geological Society of
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London awarded to him the Wollaston medal . Dr Heer died at
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Lausanne on the 27th of September 1883 . He published Flora Tertiaria Helvetiae (3 vols., 1855–1859); Die Urwelt der Schweiz (1865), and Flora fossilis Arctica (1868–1883) .

End of Article: OSWALD MEER (1809–1883)
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