Leonard John Brass
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leonard John Brass (17 May 1900 – 29 August 1971) was an Australian and American botanist, botanical collector and explorer. He was born at Toowoomba, Queensland. He was trained at the Queensland Herbarium, which he collected plant specimens for from the 1930s to the 1960s, as well as participating in several international expeditions to New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Africa.
From 1939 to 1966 Brass was an associate curator of the Archbold Expedition collections with the American Museum of Natural History, and was also associated with the Archbold Biological Station at Lake Placid, Florida, where he lived between expeditions. In the course of his many expeditions to New Guinea he was a major collector of plant specimens for the Arnold Arboretum in Massachusetts. He was especially interested in the relationship between the floras of Australia and New Guinea.
Brass became a naturalised citizen of the United States in 1947 and received an honorary doctorate from Florida State University at Tallahassee in 1962. In Florida he was active, with Richard Archbold, in the establishment of the Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary in 1955. He retired from the American Museum of Natural History in 1966 and returned to Australia, where he died at Cairns, Queensland in 1971. Brass was married to Maria Schiavone, who died in 1954.
[edit] Expeditions
Expeditions Brass participated in include:
- New Guinea (1925-1926) for the Arnold Arboretum
- Solomon Islands (1932-1933) for the Arnold Arboretum
- New Guinea (1933-1934), first Archbold New Guinea Expedition, plants going to the Arnold Arboretum
- New Guinea (1936-1937), second Archbold New Guinea Expedition, plants going to the Arnold Arboretum
- New Guinea (1938-1939), third Archbold New Guinea Expedition, plants going to the Arnold Arboretum
- Nyasaland (1946), Vernay Nyasaland Expedition, plants going to the New York Botanical Garden
- Cape York Peninsula, Australia (1948), Archbold Cape York Expedition, plants going to the Arnold Arboretum
- Tropical Africa (1949-1950), Upjohn-Penick Expedition
- New Guinea (1953), fourth Archbold New Guinea Expedition, plants going to the Arnold Arboretum
- New Guinea (1956-1957), fifth Archbold New Guinea Expedition, plants going to the Rijksherbarium at Leiden, The Netherlands
- New Guinea (1959), sixth Archbold New Guinea Expedition, plants going to the US National Herbarium at Washington, DC, USA
[edit] References
- Bright Sparcs entry on Leonard J. Brass Accessed 8 April 2007.
- Harvard University Library entry on Leonard J. Brass Accessed 8 April 2007.
- Morse, R. (2000). Richard Archbold and the Archbold Biological Station. University Press of Florida: Gainesville. ISBN 0-8130-1761-0