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  1. 29 de set. de 2017 · John Stevens Henslow was a brilliant botanist and geologist, an ordained priest in the Church of England and a generous philanthropist. He spent the former part of his working life in Cambridge, and made a lasting contribution within the city and the University. He made his name in the wider world as mentor to Charles Darwin.

  2. Henslow no resignó a su cátedra, y continuó dando conferencias, fijando y examinando, y participando de los asuntos universitarios. Sin embargo, su influencia allí fue, naturalmente, reducida. Fuentes. John Stevens Henslow . Consultado: 20 de febrero del 2019 ¿BUENA SUERTE O DESTINO? . Consultado: 20 de febrero del 2019

  3. 21 de mai. de 2018 · Henslow, John Stevens [1](b. Rochester, Kent, England, 6 February 1796; d. Hitcham, Suffolk, England, 16 May 1861)botany.Henslow was the eldest of eleven children of John Prentis Henslow, a solicitor.

  4. 10 de abr. de 2024 · John Stevens Henslow (1796–1861) was a botanist and geologist. As teacher, mentor and friend to Charles Darwin, it was his introduction that secured for Darwin the post of naturalist on the voyage of the Beagle. While Professor of Botany, Henslow established the Cambridge University Botanic Garden as a resource for teaching and research.

  5. John Stevens Henslow was a naturalist, a Cambridge academic, most remembered as a friend and mentor of Charles Darwin, inspiring him with a passion for natural history, proposing him to sail on the HMS Beagle as the naturalist on its five-year voyage, and promoting Darwin’s work as he developed his theory of evolution.

  6. 24 de mar. de 2024 · Plant specimens collected by Charles Darwin on the famous Voyage of the Beagle between 1831 and 1836, rarely seen for 200-years, are being shown by Cambridge University researchers and curators as part of a new TV series with Susan Calman exploring Darwin’s relationship with Professor John Stevens Henslow.

  7. Extracts from Letters to Henslow, taken from ten letters Charles Darwin wrote to John Stevens Henslow from South America during the second survey expedition of HMS Beagle, were read to the Cambridge Philosophical Society on 16 November 1835 by Henslow and Adam Sedgwick, followed on 18 November by geological notes from the letters which Sedgwick read to the Geological Society of London.