Global Information Lookup Global Information

Megatherium Club information


Robert Kennicott, Henry Ulke, William Stimpson, and Henry Bryant of the Megatherium Club, circa 1863.

The Megatherium Club was a group of Washington, D.C.-based scientists who were attracted to that city by the Smithsonian Institution's rapidly growing collection, meeting from 1857 to 1866. It was founded by William Stimpson.

Many of the members had no formal education, but came by their expertise through extensive direct observation. They spent their weekdays in the rigorous and exacting work of describing and classifying species. But their nights were spent in revelry.[1] They particularly enjoyed partaking in ale, oysters, eggnog, and whatever other fineries their meager budgets could afford.[2] On Sundays, however, they recuperated from the week's stresses and excesses with long nature hikes.

The club was named for the Megatherium, an extinct genus of giant ground sloth.

The leading spirit of the club was marine biologist William Stimpson, who hosted its earliest meetings in his home. Members dubbed the place "The Stimpsonian."[1] By 1863, though, Stimpson and others had taken up residence in the castle of the actual Smithsonian.[1]

Club members were encouraged by Spencer Fullerton Baird, the institution's assistant secretary. And they attracted a variety of learned speakers to their meetings, including Louis Agassiz, John Torrey, and John Cassin. But they were eventually thrown out of their castle suites by the institution's secretary, Joseph Henry, who disapproved of the way members held sack races in the Great Hall and periodically serenaded his daughters.[3]

Membership was transitory as individuals undertook independent studies abroad, sometimes for years at a time. Formal meetings ceased about the year 1866 when Stimpson moved to Chicago to oversee that city's Academy of Sciences.

Several other "Megatherium Clubs" exist; one formed of overseas Smithsonian researchers, yet another only in fiction, supposedly located in London, United Kingdom.

  1. ^ a b c "The Megatherium Club". Smithsonian Institution.
  2. ^ "Partying like it's 1855". Smithsonian Institution Mobile Website. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  3. ^ "Partying like it's 1855". Smithsonian Institution Mobile Website. Retrieved 27 April 2017.

and 25 Related for: Megatherium Club information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8501 seconds.)

Megatherium Club

Last Update:

The Megatherium Club was a group of Washington, D.C.-based scientists who were attracted to that city by the Smithsonian Institution's rapidly growing...

Word Count : 409

Megatherium

Last Update:

Megatherium (/mɛɡəˈθɪəriəm/ meg-ə-THEER-ee-əm; from Greek méga (μέγα) 'great' + theríon (θηρίον) 'beast') is an extinct genus of ground sloths endemic...

Word Count : 5121

Theodore Gill

Last Update:

zoology at George Washington University. He was also a member of the Megatherium Club at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. Fellow members frequently...

Word Count : 462

Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden

Last Update:

back to Cheyenne. About this time, he also became identified with the Megatherium Club at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. To measure distances...

Word Count : 1714

Robert Kennicott

Last Update:

several young naturalists, including William Healey Dall. He joined the Megatherium Club and studied specimens in Hudson Bay. The Western Union Telegraph Expedition...

Word Count : 1625

Smithsonian Institution

Last Update:

young scientists from 1857 to 1866, who formed a group called the Megatherium Club. The Smithsonian played a critical role as the US partner institution...

Word Count : 7312

Henry Ulke

Last Update:

well as Samuel D. Ingham (1893). Ulke was a member of the Smithsonian Megatherium Club, and collected beetles. His beetle collection has been called "one...

Word Count : 602

Fielding Bradford Meek

Last Update:

a palaeontologist. About this time, both he and Hayden joined the Megatherium Club at the Smithsonian Institution. In 1867, he was elected as a member...

Word Count : 441

Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum

Last Update:

Academy of Sciences". Encyclopedia of Chicago. Retrieved 2006-01-08 "The Megatherium Club". Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on 2010-12-10...

Word Count : 710

Glyptodon

Last Update:

from Uruguay, though many were incorrectly referred to the ground sloth Megatherium by early paleontologists. The type species, G. clavipes, was described...

Word Count : 12942

William Stimpson

Last Update:

Megatherium Club at the Smithsonian Institution. At the Smithsonian, he was named the director of the department of invertebrates. When fellow club member...

Word Count : 794

Buenos Aires Province

Last Update:

discovery of a well-preserved fossilized skull of the giant ground sloth Megatherium near San Eduardo del Mar, Province of Buenos Aires. According to paleontologists...

Word Count : 4138

Doedicurus

Last Update:

media related to Doedicurus. Megatherium Panochthus Titanis The calculated speed is based on the assumption that the club is a point mass—the entire mass...

Word Count : 3230

Alexander von Humboldt

Last Update:

at the Wayback Machine – Darwin, C. R. to secretary of New York Liberal Club", [after 13 Aug 1874] Darwin Correspondence Project " Letter 13277 Archived...

Word Count : 21333

Crystal Palace Park

Last Update:

other extinct animals in the park. The park was also given a gift of a megatherium skull by Charles Darwin. The rebuilt Crystal Palace was opened by Queen...

Word Count : 2962

List of Cage of Eden characters

Last Update:

accidentally eats some of Masanori's instant glue, making it leave the beach. Megatherium The biggest sloth in history. A group of them appears to feed from the...

Word Count : 4370

Syms Covington

Last Update:

there, including a find of rhea eggs, and giant fossil bones of the megatherium which were collected and sent to England. It is not clear if he was assisting...

Word Count : 1559

Second voyage of HMS Beagle

Last Update:

of the Megatherium" but could only extract a few broken fragments. The next day, he visited a nearby house and bought "a head of a Megatherium which must...

Word Count : 16799

Charles Darwin

Last Update:

on local armadillos. From a jaw and tooth he identified the gigantic Megatherium, then from Cuvier's description thought the armour was from this animal...

Word Count : 15891

Woolly mammoth

Last Update:

belong to a green sea turtle (it had also been claimed to belong to Megatherium). The researchers concluded that the dinner had been a publicity stunt...

Word Count : 18331

Henry Augustus Ward

Last Update:

and sold them to colleges and museums. He published: Notices of the Megatherium Cuvieri (1863) Descriptions of the Most Celebrated Fossil Animals in...

Word Count : 402

Rhinoceros

Last Update:

ISBN 978-0-8122-4736-7. Pimentel, Juan (2017). The Rhinoceros and the Megatherium: An Essay in Natural History. p. 88. "The Refusal of Time". Harvard Magazine...

Word Count : 7544

Killing Bites

Last Update:

tired quickly). In a second moment, Shidō injected her even the DNA of a megatherium, the prehistoric ancestor of the sloth, making her both the first hybrid...

Word Count : 2583

Fun on a Bun

Last Update:

attendees of Oktoberfest with woolly mammoths, a woolly rhinoceros, and a Megatherium (which moves slowly towards Hermes). Bender uses the chaos of the attack...

Word Count : 1044

Timeline of extinctions in the Holocene

Last Update:

ancient bison. Mounted skeleton of Glyptodon asper. Mounted skeleton of Megatherium. Tracings of male and female Irish elk cave art from Cougnac. Tracing...

Word Count : 18521

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net