Geoffrey Emett Blackman, 17 April 1903 - 8 February 1980

1981 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
pp. 45-82 ◽  

Geoffrey Blackman was born on 17 April 1903 at Scarsdale Villas, Kensington. His father, Vernon Herbert Blackman (elected F.R.S. in 1913), was then an assistant in the Mycological section of the British Museum (Natural History) where he was responsible for the collections of fungi and the accession of new material. His mother, Edith Delta née Emett, who came from a Gloucestershire family, was at the time of her marriage engaged in preparing wax models of biological subjects for the museum. Sir Ray Lankester sent her to see Blackman for advice on the scientific accuracy of her work, and they married in 1901

1985 ◽  
Vol 63 (11) ◽  
pp. 2703-2706 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil Cumberlidge

Liberonautes chaperi (A. Milne-Edwards, 1887) n. comb. is redescribed from the holotype from Ivory Coast and from new material from Ghana. The present study introduces 12 newly discovered specimens, including 4 males, from the collection of the British Museum (Natural History), London. New evidence from comparisons of gonopod structure leads to a suggested reassignment of this species to the genus Liberonautes Bott, 1955. A key to distinguish between the species of the genus Liberonautes is provided.


Professor Teilhard de Chardin (1927)* has called attention to the need of a revision of the British specimens of the genus Hyracotherium . As far back as the year 1901, Depéret also made a statement that there exist “interprétations diverses et parfois inexactes relativement aux charactères au limites des genres,” and that “ces divergences provenaient soit d’une fausse interprétation des types, soit de l’état encore incomplet des documents sur quelques-unes de ces formes animales.” The present account of the very few known English specimens of Hyracotherium has been undertaken in an endeavour to fulfil Professor Teilhard de Chardin’s request and, further, to record details of a specimen in the collection of the Sedgwick Museum at Cambridge and some new material recently acquired by the British Museum (Natural History), none of which has been so far described.


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