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  1. Daniel Carlsson Solander or Daniel Charles Solander (19 February 1733 – 13 May 1782) was a Swedish naturalist and an apostle of Carl Linnaeus. Solander was the first university-educated scientist to set foot on Australian soil.

  2. 24 de dez. de 2023 · Daniel Solander was a Swedish naturalist who accompanied James Cook on his first voyage around the world in 1768-1771. He applied Linnaeus's binomial nomenclature to his botanic collections and observed a planetary transit of Venus. Learn more about his life, work and legacy at the Natural History Museum.

    • Daniel Solander1
    • Daniel Solander2
    • Daniel Solander3
    • Daniel Solander4
  3. Prêmios. membro da Royal Society (1764) Empregador (a) Universidade de Uppsala, Joseph Banks, Museu Britânico. Causa da morte. acidente vascular cerebral. [ edite no Wikidata] Daniel Carlsson Solander ( Piteå, província de Norrbotten, 19 de fevereiro de 1733 – Londres, 16 de maio de 1782) foi um botânico sueco .

    • Suécia
    • 13 de maio de 1782 (49 anos), Londres
  4. 12 de jan. de 2021 · Paradise Lost: Daniel Solanders Legacy is a touring exhibition from the Embassy of Sweden, Canberra, and the Solander Gallery, Wellington, New Zealand. It is showing at the museum until 14 February.

  5. Daniel Solander is the most portrayed among the seventeen apostles. He is also internationally well known for the reason of his participation in James Cook’s first circumnavigation and close friendship to Joseph Banks.

  6. Daniel Solander (1733-1782), naturalist, was born on 19 February 1733 at Piteä in Norrland, Sweden, the son of Rev. Carl Solander and Magdalena, née Bostadia. Although baptized Daniel, Solander later adopted his father's name with the suffix 'son' as an extra Christian name and he recorded his signature accordingly.

  7. Daniel Solander: born 1773 in Piteå, Sweden, student in Uppsala 1750-59, emigrated to England 1760, honorary doctor of medicine in Oxford 1763, librarian at British Museum 1763, honorary doctor of laws in Oxford 1771, curator of the botanical department at British Museum 1773, dead 1782 in London.