词条 | Peter Simon Pallas |
释义 |
| name = Peter Simon Pallas | image = Pallas PS by Tardier grey.jpg | image_size = | caption = | birth_date = 22 September 1741 | birth_place = Berlin, Prussia | death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1811|9|8|1741|9|22}} | death_place = Berlin, Prussia | residence = Russia | citizenship = | nationality = Prussian | ethnicity = | field = Zoology Botany | work_institutions = | alma_mater = University of Göttingen University of Leiden | doctoral_advisor = | doctoral_students = | known_for = Pallasite meteorite Elevation crater theory[1] | author_abbrev_bot = | author_abbrev_zoo = | influences = Simon Pallas | influenced = | prizes = | religion = | footnotes = | signature = }} Peter Simon Pallas FRS FRSE (22 September 1741 – 8 September 1811) was a Prussian zoologist and botanist who worked in Russia (1767–1810). Life and workPallas was born in Berlin, the son of Professor of Surgery Simon Pallas. He studied with private tutors and took an interest in natural history, later attending the University of Halle and the University of Göttingen. In 1760, he moved to the University of Leiden and passed his doctor's degree at the age of 19. Pallas travelled throughout the Netherlands and to London, improving his medical and surgical knowledge. He then settled at The Hague, and his new system of animal classification was praised by Georges Cuvier. Pallas wrote Miscellanea Zoologica (1766), which included descriptions of several vertebrates new to science which he had discovered in the Dutch museum collections. A planned voyage to southern Africa and the East Indies fell through when his father recalled him to Berlin. There, he began work on his Spicilegia Zoologica (1767–80). In 1767, Pallas was invited by Catherine II of Russia to become a professor at the St Petersburg Academy of Sciences and, between 1768 and 1774, he led an expedition to central Russian provinces, Povolzhye, Urals, West Siberia, Altay, and Transbaikal, collecting natural history specimens for the academy. He explored the Caspian Sea, the Ural and Altai Mountains and the upper Amur River, reaching as far eastward as Lake Baikal. The regular reports which Pallas sent to St Petersburg were collected and published as Reise durch verschiedene Provinzen des Russischen Reichs (Journey through various provinces of the Russian Empire) (3 vols., 1771–1776). They covered a wide range of topics, including geology and mineralogy, reports on the native peoples and their religions, and descriptions of new plants and animals. In 1776, Pallas was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Pallas settled in St Petersburg, becoming a favourite of Catherine II and teaching natural history to the Grand Dukes Alexander and Constantine. He was provided with the plants collected by other naturalists to compile the Flora Rossica (1784–1815), a Russian flora, and started work on his Zoographica Rosso-Asiatica (1811–31), a zoography of Russia and Asia. He also published an account of Johann Anton Güldenstädt's travels in the Caucasus. The Empress bought Pallas's large natural history collection for 2,000 rubles, 500 more than his asking price, and allowed him to keep them for life. During this period, Pallas helped plan the Mulovsky expedition, which was cancelled in October 1787. Between 1793 and 1794, Pallas led a second expedition to southern Russia, visiting the Crimea and the Black Sea. He was accompanied by his daughter (by his first wife who had died in 1782) and his new wife, an artist, servants, and a military escort. In February 1793, they travelled to Saratov and then downriver to Tsaritsyn. They explored the country to the east, and in August travelled along the banks of the Caspian Sea and into the Caucasus Mountains. In September, they travelled to the Crimea, wintering in Simferopol. Pallas spent early 1794 exploring to the southeast, and in July travelled up the valley of the Dnieper, arriving back in St Petersburg in September. Pallas gave his account of the journey in his P. S. Pallas Bemerkungen auf einer Reise in die Südlichen Statthalterschaften des Russischen Reichs (1799–1801). Catherine II gave him a large estate at Simferopol, where Pallas lived until the death of his second wife in 1810. He was then granted permission to leave Russia by Emperor Alexander, and returned to Berlin, where he died in the following year. His grave is preserved in the Protestant Friedhof I der Jerusalems- und Neuen Kirchengemeinde (Cemetery No. I of the congregations of Jerusalem's Church and New Church) in Berlin-Kreuzberg, south of Hallesches Tor. In 1809 he became associate member of the Royal Institute of the Netherlands.[2] {{see also|:Category:Taxa named by Peter Simon Pallas}}PallasiteIn 1772, Pallas was shown a 680-kg lump of metal that had been found near Krasnoyarsk. Pallas arranged for it to be transported to St Petersburg. Subsequent analysis of the metal showed it to be a new type of stony-iron meteorite. This new type of meteorite was called pallasite after him; the meteorite itself is named Krasnojarsk or sometimes Pallas Iron (the name given to it by Ernst Chladni in 1794). CommemoratedSeveral animals were described by Pallas, and his surname is included in their common names, including: Pallas' glass lizard, Pallas' viper,[3] Pallas's cat, Pallas's long-tongued bat, Pallas's tube-nosed bat, Pallas's squirrel, Pallas's leaf warbler, Pallas's cormorant, Pallas's fish-eagle, Pallas's gull, Pallas's sandgrouse, Pallas's rosefinch, and Pallas's grasshopper warbler. Also, he is honoured in the scientific names of animals described by others, including: the Dagestani tortoise (Testudo graeca pallasi),[3] Pallas's pika (Ochotona pallasi), Pallas's reed bunting (Emberiza pallasi), and the Pacific herring (Clupea pallasii). Streets in Berlin and Castrop-Rauxel are named Pallasstraße. Pallasovka, a city in Volgograd Oblast, is named after him, and his monument stands there. An asteroid is named after him: 21087 Petsimpallas. A Belgian astronomer, Eric Elst chose the name "Sarapul 26851" for an asteroid because in Pallas' writings, he mentioned his liking of the city of Sarapul, Russia. {{Botanist|Pall.|Pallas, Peter Simon Pallas|border=0}}Works
References1. ^{{cite book |last=Şengör |first=Celâl|author-link=Celâl Şengör |date=1982|chapter=Classical theories of orogenesis|editor-last=Miyashiro|editor-first=Akiho|editor-link=Akiho Miyashiro|editor-last2=Aki|editor-first2=Keiiti|editor-last3=Şengör|editor-first3=Celâl |title=Orogeny |url= |location= |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |pages=4–5 |isbn=0-471-103764|ref=Sengor1982}} 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.dwc.knaw.nl/biografie/pmknaw/?pagetype=authorDetail&aId=PE00002215 |title=Peter Simon Pallas (1741–1811) |publisher=Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences |accessdate=19 July 2015}} 3. ^1 Beolens B, Watkins M, Grayson M (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. {{ISBN|978-1-4214-0135-5}}. ("Pallas", p. 199). Further reading
External links{{Wikisource1911Enc|Pallas, Peter Simon}}
25 : 1741 births|1811 deaths|German zoologists|German taxonomists|German arachnologists|German botanists|German ornithologists|German non-fiction writers|Explorers of Siberia|Members of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences|Members of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences|Fellows of the Royal Society|Leiden University alumni|People from Berlin|People from the Margraviate of Brandenburg|Russian-German people|Russian scientists|Western writers about Russia|18th-century Latin-language writers|19th-century Latin-language writers|18th-century German scientists|18th-century German zoologists|19th-century German zoologists|18th-century German writers|19th-century German writers |
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