词条 | J. Dewey Soper |
释义 |
| name= Joseph Dewey Soper | image= The Canadian field-naturalist (1983) (20494303266).jpg| | image_size= | caption = J. Dewey Soper after his return to Cape Dorset, March 1929 | birth_date = May 5, 1893 | birth_place = Guelph, Ontario, Canada | death_date = November 2, 1982 | death_place = Edmonton, Alberta, Canada | education = University of Alberta | occupation = Ornithologist, explorer, zoologist, author | title = Federal Chief Migratory Bird Officer for the Prairie Provinces; Chief Federal Wildlife Officer for Alberta, Northwest Territories and Yukon | spouse = Carolyn Freeman | parents = | children = son, daughter | nationality = Canadian | website = }} Joseph Dewey Soper (May 5, 1893, Guelph, Ontario — November 2, 1982, Edmonton, Alberta) was a widely traveled Canadian Arctic ornithologist, explorer, zoologist, and prolific author. Early yearsSoper was raised near Rockwood, Ontario where he developed an interest in wildlife and natural history. His mother wanted Soper to be a minister; his father wanted Soper to work on the farm. Soper spurned organized religion, and was influenced by Henry David Thoreau's Walden and the works of Ernest Thompson Seton. He attended Alberta College and the University of Alberta where he studied zoology. Soper was first published at age 20. Career
In 1920, W. E. Saunders invited Soper to a naturalist's meeting at Point Pelee, Lake Erie where Soper met Dr. R. M. Anderson who went on to invite Soper to work as a naturalist on the Federal Government's East Arctic Expedition. Soper was commissioned to document the arctic flora and fauna of Baffin Island, Beechey Island, Bylot Island, Devon Island, Ellesmere Island, northern Greenland, and areas of Labrador.
In 1924, the National Museum of Canada retained Soper for an expedition to Baffin Island. Soper headquartered at a Royal Canadian Mounted Police base that was also a Hudson's Bay Company post. During this trip, Soper explored Nettilling Lake, Koukdjuak River, Cumberland Gulf to Foxe Basin, Amadjuak Bay on Hudson Strait, Cape Dorset covering more than {{convert|4000|mi|km}} by dog sled, boat, and canoe.
Soper's biggest accomplishment, with the help of local Inuit, was the successful six-year, 30,000-mile (50,000 km) search on Baffin Island for the blue goose (C. c. caerulescens) nesting grounds on Bluegoose Plain near Bowman Bay in the Foxe Basin in the spring of 1929. The find was featured in Ripley's Believe It or Not!, earning Soper the nickname "Blue Goose Soper".(Martin, 1995)[1][2]
Soper joined the government service in 1934, becoming the first Federal Chief Migratory Bird Officer for the Prairie Provinces in the Canadian Wildlife Service. In 1948, he became the Chief Federal Wildlife Officer for Alberta, Northwest Territories and Yukon. By the end of his career, Soper conducted three Arctic expeditions and published over 130 research papers and articles. His personal records, notebooks, mammal and bird collections, and research materials were bequeath to the University of Alberta.[2] Personal lifeSoper visited his sister in Wetaskiwin, Alberta in 1927 where he met and married the first graduate nurse in the Eastern Arctic, Carolyn ("Carrie") Freeman. Soper took his wife on his travels, and sometimes his young son, Roland. Though Soper was a zoologist, ornithologist, and explorer, he also collected Inuit art, including ivory figures and enjoyed hunting. When he died in 1982, he was survived by his wife, daughter, son, daughter-in-law, and five grandchildren.[3] Honors
Awards
Selected works
References1. ^{{cite web |url=http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Auk/v069n04/p0425-p0428.pdf |title=Hybridization of Canada Geese with Blue Geese in the Wild |publisher=unm.edu |accessdate=2008-01-20 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110614160528/http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Auk/v069n04/p0425-p0428.pdf |archivedate=June 14, 2011 |df= }} 2. ^1 {{cite web |url=http://google.com/search?q=cache:yPyIs-nbmRIJ:pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic36-1-118.pdf+soper+goose+ripley&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us |title=Joseph Dewey Soper |publisher=ucalgary.ca |accessdate=2008-01-20}} 3. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.civilization.ca/tresors/art_inuit/inart36e.html |title=Playthings and curios: historic Inuit art |publisher=civilization.ca |accessdate=2008-01-19}} 4. ^{{cite web|title=Douglas H Pimlott Award Recipients|url=http://naturecanada.ca/about/awards-scholarships/pimlott/|publisher=Nature Canada|accessdate=7 May 2014}} External links
Further reading
12 : 1893 births|1982 deaths|Explorers of Canada|Explorers of the Arctic|Canadian science writers|Canadian zoologists|Canadian ornithologists|Ornithological writers|University of Alberta|People from Guelph|Baffin Island|Royal Canadian Geographical Society fellows |
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