John Miers (botanist)

Summary

John Miers, FRS FLS (25 August 1789 – 17 October 1879. Kensington),[1] knight grand cross of the Order of the Rose,[2] was a British botanist and engineer, best known for his work on the flora of Chile and Argentina.[3]

John Miers (1855)

Miers was born in London to a jeweller from Yorkshire, and showed interest in mineralogy and chemistry from an early age. His first published work was a monograph on nitrogen which appeared in the Annals of Philosophy in 1814. After his marriage in 1818 he travelled to South America to participate in a venture to exploit the mineral resource of Chile, particularly copper. However, after landing in Buenos Aires his wife came down with childbed fever on the trip across country, and he decided not to continue to Chile, instead starting a study of the local flora, which at that time was largely unresearched.

In May 1819 Miers arrived in Santiago, Chile, having arranged the clandestine transport of coin presses, and settled at Concón, near Valparaíso. He developed business ventures with Lord Cochrane, then head of the Chilean Navy.[4] They built a flour mill, developed plans for a ranch at Quintero, and intended becoming the major supplier of salt beef, biscuits and other supplies to the Navy[4][5]

In 1825 he returned to England, and the following year published Travels in Chile and La Plata, the first of several works documenting the plants of South America. Towards the end of the decade he returned to Argentina to work on contracts with the Argentinian mint. Political instability ended this work in 1831 and he moved to Rio de Janeiro to fulfil a similar contract with the Brazilian government, returning to England in 1838. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society and assisted in the editing of the papers of others, as well as editing his own.

His most important work was Contributions to the Botany of South America (1870); other well-known works were On the Apocynaceae of South America (1878) and Illustrations of South American Plants (1789-1879). Several taxa are named in his honour.

In 1826, botanist John Lindley, published Miersia, a plant genus in the Amaryllidaceae.[6] All 5 known species are native to Chile and Bolivia.[7] Then in 1903, botanist Ignatz Urban published a monotypic genus of flowering plants from South America, in the Burmanniaceae as Miersiella also in John Miers's honour.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ "Births, Marriages and Deaths". The Pall Mall Gazette. No. 4574. London. 21 October 1879. p. 3.
  2. ^ Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 1879, Volume 29, xxiii
  3. ^ "Summary of this morning's news". The Pall Mall Gazette. No. 4577. London. 23 October 1879. p. 4.
  4. ^ a b Cubitt, David John (1974). Lord Cochrane and the Chilean Navy, 1818-1823, with an inventory of the Dundonald papers relating to his service with the Chilean Navy. University of Edinburgh. pp. 318–329. hdl:1842/6535. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  5. ^ Vale, Brian (2008). Cochrane in the Pacific: Fortune and Freedom in Spanish America. London: I B Tauris. pp. 82, 172. ISBN 978-1-84511-446-6.
  6. ^ John Lindley. 1826. Botanical Register 12: t. 992
  7. ^ Kew World Checklist of Selected plant families
  8. ^ "Miersiella umbellata (Miers) Urb. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 26 October 2021.
  9. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Miers.

External links edit

  •   Media related to John Miers (botanist) at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to John Miers at Wikispecies
  • On the Apocynaceae of South America : with some preliminary remarks on the whole family.... Ed. Williams and Norgate, London. 1878.