Journal article

Eighteenth-century West African insects in the macleay museum, university of Sydney

D Coleman, R Blackburn

Archives of Natural History | EDINBURGH UNIV PRESS | Published : 2017

Abstract

Henry Smeathman (1742-1786), best known for his essay on the west African termites, travelled to Sierra Leone in 1771 to collect naturalia for a group of wealthy sponsors. One of these sponsors, Dru Drury (1724-1803), was keen on African insects. Drury later described and illustrated many of these in the third volume of his Illustrations of natural history (1782). Two years after Drury died, his collection was auctioned in London. A key purchaser at this sale was Alexander Macleay (1767-1848), later appointed Colonial Secretary to New South Wales. His insects travelled with him to Sydney and are now in the Macleay Museum, University of Sydney. A number of these insects, collected by Smeathma..

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University of Melbourne Researchers