Online Encyclopedia

JOSEPH FREDERICK WHITEAVES (1835– )

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 602 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOSEPH FREDERICK WHITEAVES (1835– )  ,
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British palaeontologist, was born at Oxford, on the 26th of December 1835 . He was educated at private
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schools, and afterwards worked under John Phillips at Oxford (1858–1861); he was led to study the Oolitic rocks, and added largely to our knowledge of the fossils of the
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Great Oolite series,
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Cornbrash and Corallian (Rep . Brit . Assoc . 186o, and
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Ann., Nat . Hist . 1861) . In 1861 he visited
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Canada and made acquaintance with the geology of
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Quebec and
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Montreal, and in 1863 he was appointed curator of the museum and secretary of the Natural
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History Society of Montreal, posts which he occupied until 1875 . He studied the
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land and
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freshwater
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mollusca of
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Lower Canada, and the marine invertebrata of the coasts; and also carried on researches among the older
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Silurian (or Ordovician) fossils of the neighbourhood of Montreal . In 1875 he joined the palaeontological branch of the
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Geological Survey of Canada at Montreal; in the following
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year he became palaeontologist, and in 1877 he was further appointed zoologist and assistant director of the survey . In 1881 the offices of the survey were removed to
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Ottawa . His publications on
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Canadian zoology and palaeontology are numerous and important .

Dr

Whiteaves was one of the
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original fellows of the Royal Society of Canada, and contributed to its Transactions, as well as to the Canadian Naturalist and other
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journals . He received the hon. degree of LL . D. in 1900 from McGill University, Montreal .

End of Article: JOSEPH FREDERICK WHITEAVES (1835– )
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