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Daniel Carl Solander : ウィキペディア英語版
Daniel Solander

Daniel Carlsson Solander or Daniel Charles Solander (19 February 1733 – 13 May 1782) was a Swedish naturalist and an apostle of Carl Linnaeus.〔
〕 Solander was the first university educated scientist to set foot on Australian soil.
==Biography==
Solander was born in Piteå, Norrbotten, Sweden, to Rev. Carl Solander〔 a Lutheran principal, and Magdalena née Bostadia.〔 Solander enrolled at Uppsala University in July 1750 and initially studied languages, the humanities and law. The professor of botany was the celebrated Carl Linnaeus who was soon impressed by young Solander's ability and accordingly persuaded his father to let him study natural history. Solander traveled to England in June 1760 to promote the new Linnean system of classification. In February 1763 he began cataloguing the natural history collections of the British Museum, and was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in June following year.
In 1768 Solander gained leave of absence from the British Museum and with his assistant Herman Spöring accompanied Joseph Banks on James Cook's first voyage to the Pacific Ocean aboard the ''Endeavour''.
They were the botanists who inspired the name ''Botanist Bay'' (which later became Botany Bay) for the first landing place of Cook's expedition in Australia.
Solander helped make and describe an important collection of Australian plants while the Endeavour was beached at the site of present-day Cooktown for nearly seven weeks, after being damaged on the Great Barrier Reef. These collections later formed the basis of Banks' Florilegium.
Solander also wrote a manuscript describing all the species collected from New Zealand during the six months the 1768 expedition spent there. It was called ''Primitiae Florae Novae Zelandiae'' ('beginnings of a New Zealand flora'), and was to be illustrated with the plates prepared by Banks. It was never published, but it was available for study by anyone interested, first at Banks' London home, then at the Natural History section of the British Museum.
Solander's return to Britain with Cook and Banks made him the first Swede to circle the globe.
On their return in 1771 Solander resumed his duties at the British Museum but also collaborated with Banks on the Florilegium. In 1772 he accompanied Banks on his voyage to Iceland, the Hebrides and the Orkney Islands. Between 1773 and 1782 he was Keeper of the Natural History Department of the British Museum. In 1773 he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
Solander invented the book-form box known as the Solander box which is still used in libraries and archives as the most suitable way of storing prints, drawings, herbarium materials and some manuscripts.
Solander died at Banks' home in Soho Square of a stroke, aged 49, at 9.30 pm on 13 May 1782. An autopsy was performed the next day, and revealed a brain haemorrhage.〔()〕

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