Claude Jourdan

Claude Jourdan

Claude Jourdan (18 June 1803, Heyrieux – 12 February 1873, Lyon) was a French zoologist and paleontologist.

In Lyon he was a professor of zoology to the Faculté des sciences, and a professor of comparative anatomy at the École des Beaux-Arts. From 1832 to 1869 he was director of the natural history museum in Lyon.[1][2]

As a zoologist, he conducted studies of living and extinct vertebrates, including Proboscidea (elephants and their ancestors). In 1840–48 he is credited with uncovering 2000 fossils at various excavation sites in France.[2] As a taxonomist, he described Acerodon, a genus of Old World fruit bats, and Hemigalus, a monospecific genus associated with the banded palm civet, Hemigalus derbyanus. He also classified the following mammal species:

In 1839 Jules Bourcier named the rufous-shafted woodstar, Chaetocercus jourdanii, after him. It is sometimes referred to as "Jourdan's woodstar".[4]

Published works

References

  1. Annales ..., Volumes 50-52 by Société linnéenne de Lyon, Amédée Bonnet
  2. 1 2 Jourdan, Claude (1803-après 1869) Compléments historiographiques, Biographies
  3. Taxon author: Jourdan, 1837 ITIS Search Results
  4. The Eponym Dictionary of Birds by Bo Beolens, Michael Watkins, Michael Grayson
  5. Mémoires by Académie des sciences, belles-lettres et arts, Lyon. Classe des sciences
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