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Wilhelm Gottlieb Rosenhauer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wilhelm Gottlieb Rosenhauer (11 September 1813 – 13 June 1881) was a German physician and zoologist who specialized in entomology. He was a professor at the University of Erlangen.

Rosenhauer studied medicine and then moved to the natural sciences, particularly zoology and received a doctorate for studies on ground and diving beetles in 1838. In 1843 he became a curator of the zoological and mineralogical collections at the University of Erlangen, becoming a lecturer in 1852 and associate professor in 1858. In 1856 he described the animals collected on a trip to Andalusia in a major work. He collected beetles in the Tyrol and in Hungary and from a descriptive approach he moved to study biology.[1][2]

References

  1. ^ Kraatz, G. (1881). "Necrologe. Dr. med Wilh. Gottlob Rosenhauer". Deutsche entomologische Zeitschrift: 342–343.
  2. ^ Katter, F. (1881). "Nekrolog". Entomologische Nachrichten. 7 (11): 231–232.

External links

This page was last edited on 28 November 2023, at 03:29
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