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Whitney South Sea Expedition

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Whitney South Sea Expedition
Location
Sponsor
Affiliation
Participants

The Whitney South Sea Expedition (1920 - 1941[1]) to collect bird specimens for the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH), under the initial leadership of Rollo Beck,[2] was instigated by Dr Leonard C. Sanford and financed by Harry Payne Whitney, a thoroughbred horse-breeder and philanthropist. It was administered by a committee at the AMNH and became a focus for attracting funds for research on the biota of the Pacific islands.

The expedition visited islands in the south Pacific region and eventually returned with over 40,000 bird specimens, many plant specimens and an extensive collection of anthropological items and photographs.

Using the 75-ton schooner France,[3] with many different scientists and collectors participating over more than a dozen years, the expedition visited thousands of islands throughout Oceania, Micronesia, Polynesia and Melanesia.[1] The France was sold in 1932 when funds ran out.

Specimens from the expedition were displayed in a hall at the AMNH funded by Harry Whitney.

Aims of the expedition

[edit]

The expedition's main aim was to collect birds from various South Pacific islands and the Pacific Ocean, on behalf of the American Museum of Natural History. The AMNH cooperated with the Bishop Museum in Hawaii and the United States National Museum, exchanging specimens and data. Museum officials were aware that research in the Pacific was urgent, as species were becoming extinct through various causes: introduced mammals such as pigs, dogs, cats and mongooses; spread of introduced birds including the myna; human activities such as copra processing, pearl diving and beche-de-mer fishing and lifestyle changes brought on by modernisation.[3]

The expedition collected not only bird skins, but also nests, eggs, whole birds preserved in alcohol, and bird stomachs from the skinned birds. Lizards, other reptiles, turtles, small mammals such as bats and rodents, and plants were collected for the AMNH and the Bishop Museum. Expedition members also took many photographs and notes about the wildlife, vegetation, topography and lifestyles of the local people they encountered.[3]

Expedition members

[edit]
Photo of man holding rifle.
Rollo Beck in October 1924

The expedition was led by Rollo H. Beck (1920-1928), Hannibal Hamlin (1928-1930), William F. Coultas (1930-1935), Lindsay Macmillan (1935-1940), and G. Reid Henry (1941).[1]

Beck, an expert bird collector himself, hired Ernest H. Quayle to assist with collecting, including the botanical specimens collected by the expedition. Quayle was a Stanford University graduate with a geology degree.[4] Beck, his wife Ida and Quayle based themselves in Papeete in 1920, and in 1922 Charles Curtis, who had been working on a plantation in Tahiti, joined the expedition as Beck was readying to leave Tahiti in the France. Curtis spent five months with the expedition before returning to his previous job.[5]

José Correia and his wife Virginia joined the Whitney South Sea Expedition in 1922 to replace Ernest Quayle, with Correia acting as expedition leader for six months in 1923 while Beck was away in New York. Correia was a cooper by trade. While on a trip to the Antarctic as a cooper in 1911, he had met Dr Robert Murphy of the AMNH, who taught him how to prepare bird specimens. Correia then took part in other AMNH expeditions as a bird collector. The Correias left the Whitney expedition at the end of 1926 after contracting malaria, and were replaced by Frederick Drowne.[6]

Edwin Bryan, an entomologist from the Bishop Museum in Hawaii, joined the expedition in 1924. He spent ten months collecting plant and insect specimens before returning to his work in Hawaii.[7]

Dr Frederick P Drowne joined the Whitney Expedition as a field researcher in December 1926.[8] He was a medical doctor and ornithologist from Rhode Island, with connections to the AMNH. He had taken part in several scientific expeditions previously, and had first met Beck during an expedition to the Galapagos Islands. Drowne left the expedition in 1928 due to illness. In June 1930, depressed about his ongoing ill health, he shot himself.[9]

In September 1927, Hannibal Hamlin and Guy Richards, both recent Yale graduates, arrived in the Solomon Islands to join the expedition while Drowne was unwell.[10]: 52  Richards left the expedition in 1929 and became a journalist. Hamlin became the expedition leader from March 1928 when Beck left, until January 1930. Coultas then took over and Hamlin left the expedition in August 1930. He returned to Yale and became a neurosurgeon.[11][12]

William Coultas and his friend Walter Eyerdam arrived to join the expedition at the end of August 1929, and in January 1930 Coultas took over from Hamlin as leader.[13] Walter Eyerdam was a mineralogist and skilled collector of molluscs, plants, birds and mammals. He left the Whitney expedition in mid-1930, later taking part in other expeditions.[14] Coultas returned to New York in 1935 to work for the AMNH, and also took part in other expeditions before joining the US Naval Reserve Force in 1942.[15]

Ernst Mayr from the Berlin Museum joined the expedition on its trip to New Guinea and the Solomon Islands in 1929, after Hamlin had replaced Beck as leader. He left the expedition in February 1930 to return to Germany.[13] Mayr was hired by the AMNH to curate the Rothschild collection in 1933, and he continued to work up the material that returned to the AMNH from the Whitney expeditions. He continued at AMNH until 1953 as curator of birds.

Thomas Lindsay Macmillan became leader of the expedition in 1935 after Coultas left. He was a farmer, born in Vanuatu to an Australian father, and had lived in both countries. Macmillan and his wife Joy collected and processed birds for the expedition in New Caledonia, the New Hebrides, Papua New Guinea and Queensland, Australia. Macmillan left the expedition in 1940 to join the Australian navy. In later life he and Joy ran a mission station in the Australian outback.[16]

The France

[edit]

At first, the expedition was based in Tahiti and used trading vessels to get around the Pacific, but Beck wanted to be free of other people's schedules. He bought the France in December 1921. The France was a 75 gross ton schooner with a 60 hp motor, built in Papeete around 1918[17] and previously used in the copra trade. The ship was 71 feet long, 25 feet wide and had a draught of 6 feet. Between 1922 and 1932, the expedition used the France to travel all over the Pacific.[1] When the France left Papeete on 1 February 1922 the crew consisted of the captain, mate, engineer, cook, three sailors and a cabin boy, as well as Beck, Quayle and Curtis.[18]: 12–15  Crew members came from around the Pacific.[19]

Captains of the France during the expedition included Marten Nagle (1922-1924);[18]: 12  E A Stenbeck (1924-1926);[20][21] J W R Richmond;[22] Henry (W A?) Burrell (Nov 1929-July 1930)[23][24] A J D McArthur (1930-1932),[25] and Thomas R Lang.[26]: 13 

In 1932 funding for the expedition ran out and Dr Murphy of the AMNH wrote to Coultas to confirm that the France must be disposed of.[26]: 3  The ship was sold to WR Carpenter and Co.[27] Renamed Dawaun, she was wrecked when she ran aground on a reef off the Carteret Islands on 29 October, 1936.[28]

Specimen collection

[edit]
Watercolour of hornbill bird
Hornbill, Solomon Islands. Watercolour by F P Drowne.
watercolour of birds.
Birds from Bougainville Island. Watercolour by F P Drowne.

The expedition collected bird specimens in various ways. On the ocean, their ship might pass by a flock of birds which could be shot from on board. On reaching an island, expedition members would go ashore by rowboat to shoot birds along the coast, or walk and climb into the interior of the island to seek out and shoot land birds and other specimens. On inhabited islands, the team would consult the local people to find out about the types and habits of various birds, and would employ local guides to take them to nesting areas. Local people were also paid to collect specimens for the expedition. Specimens had to be processed quickly before they decomposed. Sometimes the expedition members would set up a base on land and process the birds there,[10]: 176  but otherwise skinning was typically done by the light of benzine lamps in the hold of the France.[29]: 223  Supplies needed for processing birds included arsenic, alum, benzine, cornmeal, needles, bone cutters, cotton wrapping and labels.  "It is certainly an art to accomplish it the way it ought to be done, that is to say removing the skeleton, bones, flesh, intestines and fatty parts, leaving the wings and feathers properly sewed for mounting or museum reference".[10]: 66  "One can wash plumage quite well if blood is removed with water, then the benzine, and dry in corn meal, and this was our usual procedure".[30]: 110  Coultas described how an adult cassowary specimen was prepared:

This bird kept us busy most of the night, skinning and degreasing. Several natives assisted us by holding the skin while we scraped and worked. Once cleaned we washed the whole thing in gasolene, then inserted sticks and bamboos in the neck and body to hold the skin apart so that it might dry more quickly. One cassowary is an 18 hour job for two people. Once cleaned we simply hung it under the roof to dry as expediently as possible.[26]: 249 

Formaldehyde, salt brine or methyl spirit were used to preserve specimens such as frogs and snakes.[30]: 121  Expedition members were expected to work from early morning until late at night collecting and processing specimens. Sundays, supposedly a day off, were the only time available for typing up notes, making sketches, preparing labels and getting ready for the week ahead.[31]: 203 [30]: 73  Crew members on the France also helped to skin and process birds.[29]: 221 

Along with supplies for processing specimens, the expedition needed to carry photography equipment, medical supplies, numerous guns and copious amounts of ammunition in various sizes. Calico and tobacco were carried for use as trade goods.[30]: 110 

Issues and incidents

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Members of the expedition contracted various ailments including dengue fever, malaria and tropical ulcers or "island sores".[30]: 5, 71, 157  Drowne spent time in hospital in the Solomon Islands and had 20 injections of antimony in an attempt to cure his ulcers on his legs, writing that:

"The tropical ulcers are a terrible thing. The cause is probably some specific organism, whether germ or parasite no one seems to know at present. They much resemble the leishmaniasis sores which occur elsewhere. The cause not being known, there are many suggested forms of treatment all of which may do good but none of which seem at all specific".[30]: 71 

There were also personality clashes and periods of low morale on board the France. Seven years into the expedition, Beck was regarded as energetic, curt and eccentric and not well liked by the crew.[10]: 95  Drowne wrote in his journal that Beck was a remarkable success as a bird collector, but a failure as a leader in the field:

"He is unable to work even to the best advantage, or to inspire [the men's] cooperation and loyalty. A feeling of loyalty to the Museum, or to someone else abroad has kept men on this thing, as in the case of sailors a contract, when otherwise they would have made sudden and speedy departure."[30]: 100 

Drowne also believed that it was important to establish friendly relations with the local people when entering their territory.

Watercolour of South Pacific island.
"Whitney Island", 11 miles east of the Shortland Islands. Watercolour by F P Drowne, 1927

In 1923 Beck released three goats on Henderson Island and was criticised for this in a magazine article which said the goats would damage the island's ecosystem.[32] The Governor of Fiji then asked Beck to kill the goats and not release any more. Beck wrote that:

"...this is a desert island with little rainfall and I had in mind shipwrecked sailors who have lived on Henderson and may try to exist there again. Having been shipwrecked once it is possible I have a more fellow feeling for the sailor than for the carping sentimentalist who sits at his desk and writes feelingly of localities of which he knows nothing." He went on: "I do not regret having planted the goats, except as it interferes with the Museum. The bally, blooming shipwrecked English sailors can all starve on the next island they get thrown onto as far as I am concerned, though I am anticipating that experience myself sometime [...] If only I could lead some of these critics about ten feet from the landing place on Henderson, or similar islands here in the Lau group, they would express different opinions regarding the suitability of goats for such conditions."[33]: 26–27, 35–36 

On 8 December 1927 the expedition anchored near a small group of low-lying islets about 11 miles west of the Shortland Islands. Beck and others went ashore to two of the islands and obtained some birds. The islands were unnamed on the expedition's chart, so for purposes of labelling the specimens, they dubbed the islands "Whitney Island". The islets were located at approximately latitude 6 58 S and longitude 155 38 E, a few miles away from an island called Momalufa.[30]: 79 

Expedition timeline

[edit]
date location
Sep 1920 Commencement of the expedition: Rollo and Ida Beck and Ernest Quayle leave San Francisco for Tahiti.[34]
1920–1923 Expedition is based at Papeete in Tahiti, and travels to various places via trading vessels or ships transporting copra and other cargo.[3] Specimens are collected from the Society Islands, Tuamotu, the Marquesas and Pitcairn Island.[35]
Dec 1921 Expedition buys schooner France at Papeete. The ship is fitted out, and departs Papeete on 1 February 1922.[3][18]: 5 
Dec 1923 Expedition shifts its base to Samoa.[35]
23 Apr 1924 Arrival at Apia, Samoa.[36]
28 May 1924 Expedition departs for Fiji, arriving at Suva on 7 June 1924.[37]
1 Jul 1924 Departure from Suva for Tonga, returning to Suva on 19 July 1924.[37]
Jul–Oct 1924 Visiting many Fijian islands, returning to Suva on 29 October 1924.[37]
4 June 1925 France leaves Suva for Tonga, while Beck stays a little longer in Fiji.[38]
26 Oct 1925 France departs Suva for New Zealand, via Kermadec and Norfolk Island.[39][40]
11 Dec 1925 Arrival at Auckland, New Zealand.[41]
12 Jan 1926 Departure from Auckland on a loop around New Zealand, stopping at Chatham, Bounty, Antipodes, Campbell and Auckland Islands.[42]
27 Jan 1926 France visits Lyttelton for supplies, ignoring international code signals.[19][17]
3 Feb 1926 France departs Akaroa for Stewart island, but due to gale force winds cannot reach there and instead goes to the Chatham Islands.[43]
25 Mar 1926 France arrives at Auckland and the ship is overhauled.
20 Apr 1926 Departure from New Zealand for Norfolk Island and the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu).[44]
1926–1928 Based in Solomon Islands for 17 months[35]
early 1928 To Bismarck Archipelago. [35]
June 1928 Beck leaves the expedition at the Solomons in June 1928 and is en route to the United States when he receives a message asking him to collect specimens In Papua New Guinea.[45]
9 Dec 1928 France arrives at Port Moresby under the leadership of Hannibal Hamlin.[46]
1929 Beck returns to the US.[35]
Jul 1930 France travels from the Solomons to Samarai. Coultas replaces Hamlin as expedition leader. 18 month trip to Carolines planned.[47][48]
Aug 1930 Hamlin returns to US.[49]
mid 1935 Coultas returns to New York.[50]
1935-1940 Expedition is led by Lindsay MacMillan, who with his wife sources specimens in New Caledonia, the New Hebrides, Papua New Guinea and Queensland, Australia. Macmillan leaves the expedition in 1940 to serve in World War 2.[51]
1941 The expedition pauses for a time due to the war, then is led by G Reid Henry, based in Australia, until it officially ends in 1941.[1]

Controversy in New Zealand

[edit]

Early in 1925, the New Zealand Government declined a request by the expedition to collect bird specimens from the Cook Islands, saying that although the government supported the aims of the expedition, it believed that "the interests of science are being better served by a policy of strict preservation of the living birds".[52]

In July 1925 the New Zealand Native Bird Protection Society warned the government that the expedition's goal of observing New Zealand's birds actually meant observing "over the sight of a shot gun".[53] The Society asked the government to put an observer on board the France, but the government went ahead and issued a permit for the expedition to collect 846 birds, without requiring that an observer to be present. This was vigorously protested by Val Sanderson of the Native Bird Protection Society. He stated that he had heard that Harvard University's Museum of Comparative Zoology believed that all New Zealand's native birds were "doomed" and should therefore be collected before they became extinct. After the Society protested, a museum officer was sent to accompany the expedition. Sanderson wrote to the Minister of Internal Affairs:

"That an extensively equipped foreign collecting expedition on such a scale and with permission to kill the extravagant number of birds allowed should be given entirely unrestricted liberty, except by a few valueless written conditions, amongst our birds, some of which are on the verge of extinction, is unthinkable, a slur on the regard which the people of New Zealand are evincing in the welfare of their heritage, the care of which is entrusted to your department. Your action is also a slight to the operations of this society, and it seems idle and hypocritical for us to continue further work and collect subscriptions from school children and others in the face of such departmental lassitude. We think, moreover, it would only have been courtesy had you consulted us before issuing permits to destroy any of the extremely rare species included in the list to be killed, as, for instance, the Chatham Island bell bird, Auckland Island duck, Chatham Island fern bird and pigeon, sand plover (ten is out of all reason), Chatham Island snipe, Southern Merganser, and half a dozen other species which are on the verge of extinction and should not have been allowed to be killed under any circumstances whatever. Some little scientific information of interest to a few may he gleaned, but at the possible extermination of some species the skins of which will be then of more monetary value to the Americans, in whose possession they will be. The numbers permitted to be destroyed are quite in excess of scientific requirements, and clearly indicate the purpose for which they are required."[53]

The Minister later decided that in future permits would only be issued on the condition that an official would accompany any expedition collecting native birds. Beck responded to criticism that the expedition was a commercial enterprise that was killing rare birds.[54] He noted that all the specimens collected were sent to the non-profit National Museum of Art and History in New York, where students from all over the world could study them. Regarding suggestions that rare birds were killed, he stated:

"All this talk about exterminating rare and protected birds is not new to me. I have heard it all before, in different places, and notably in my own country, California. The average layman never seems to be able to appreciate the fact that specimens of birds are most valuable from a scientific point of view. There is a very great deal yet to be discovered concerning the habits of the birds, and it is only by means of the facts ascertained and the specimens obtained by an expedition such as this, that scientists can arrive at the truth."[55]

In April 1926, a list of 385 birds taken by the expedition in New Zealand waters was published. Most of Beck's specimens were collected on the 'high seas', and he claimed that he could take any birds as long as he was more than three miles from land and did not bring the birds to New Zealand. However, as Walter Oliver from the Dominion Museum pointed out, Beck had also discovered during the expedition that birds that breed in New Zealand may migrate as far as Chile or California. Such species had been collected from all over the Pacific, so any list of New Zealand birds taken did not represent the total number of New Zealand-breeding sea birds collected by the expedition.[56]

Legacy

[edit]

In 1929, Sanford asked the Whitneys to fund a new wing for the American Museum of Natural History, which would house the many specimens being collected by the South Sea expedition and other expeditions in Africa and South America. Construction of the Whitney Wing began with ground breaking in 1931, but was interrupted by World War 2.[57] The Whitney Hall of Oceanic Birds finally opened in the new wing in 1952, with 18 windows showing dioramas of over 400 species of birds from the Pacific region in their natural habitats. In 1998, 10 of the 18 dioramas in the Whitney Hall were covered up to make way for the installation of a butterfly conservatory.[58] The butterfly exhibit was supposed to be temporary but has remained in place, and most of the bird displays are not viewable.[59]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Whitney South Sea Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History (1920-1941) (amnhc_2000164)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2018-07-10.
  2. ^ Whitney South Sea Expedition. Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e Murphy, Robert Cushman The Whitney South Sea Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History, Science, pp. 701-2. Science. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
  4. ^ Quayle, Ernest H., 1891–1956, Social Networks and Archival Context, socialarchive.iath.virginia.edu
  5. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Curtis, Charles Cutler (amnhp_1002472)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-14.
  6. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Correia, José G., 1881-1954 (amnhp_1000443)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-15.
  7. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Bryan, E. H. (Edwin Horace), 1898-1985 (amnhp_1002474)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-14.
  8. ^ "South Sea Specimens". The Sun. No. 5013. New South Wales, Australia. 30 November 1926. p. 14 (FINAL EXTRA). Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Drowne, Frederick P. (amnhp_1002469)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-10.
  10. ^ a b c d Richards, Guy (1930). "Journal and notes of Guy Richards, Whitney South Sea Expedition, 1927-1928". Open Library. Retrieved 2024-08-12.
  11. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Hamlin, Hannibal, d. 1982 (amnhp_1000899)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-14.
  12. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Richards, Guy, 1905- (amnhp_1002471)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-14.
  13. ^ a b Bryan, E. H. (1969). Chronological summary and guide to Whitney Expedition journals. American Museum of Natural History Library.
  14. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Eyerdam, Walter J. (Walter Jakob), 1892-1974 (amnhp_1002470)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-20.
  15. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Coultas, William F. (amnhp_1000447)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-20.
  16. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Macmillan, Lindsay (amnhp_1002475)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-20.
  17. ^ a b "Code signals ignored by schooner". The Press. 28 January 1926 – via Papers Past.
  18. ^ a b c Curtis, Charles (1930). "Whitney South Sea Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History: Journal based upon the letters of Charles Cutler Curtis January 10 - July 4, 1922". Open Library. Retrieved 2024-08-12.
  19. ^ a b "Friendly call from South Sea Expedition". Star [Christchurch]. 27 January 1926 – via Papers Past.
  20. ^ "AMERICAN SCIENTIFIC EXPEDITION". The Brisbane Courier. No. 20, 730. Queensland, Australia. 2 July 1924. p. 16. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  21. ^ "Pacific bird life". New Zealand Herald. 12 December 1925 – via Papers Past.
  22. ^ "SOUTH SEA ISLANDS". The Sydney Morning Herald. No. 27, 727. New South Wales, Australia. 16 November 1926. p. 12. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  23. ^ "EVERYDAY AND EVERYBODY". The Labor Daily. No. 1857. New South Wales, Australia. 14 November 1929. p. 4. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  24. ^ "PERSONAL". The Sydney Morning Herald. No. 28, 871. New South Wales, Australia. 17 July 1930. p. 10. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  25. ^ "A world cruise". The Press. 1 September 1932 – via Papers Past. Captain McArthur, who has spent two or three years in the East...
  26. ^ a b c Coultas, William F. (1932–1933). Whitney South Sea Expedition. Journal and letters of William F. Coultas. American Museum of Natural History.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  27. ^ "BUTTER SHIPMENTS". The Courier-mail. No. 430. Queensland, Australia. 14 January 1935. p. 3. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  28. ^ "Ocean voyage in open boat after island wreck". The Sun News-pictorial. No. 4410. 6 November 1936. p. 15. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  29. ^ a b Hamlin, Hannibal (1927–1928). Whitney South Sea Expedition. Journal and notes of Hannibal Hamlin. American Museum of Natural History.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h Drowne, Frederick P (1928). Whitney South Sea expedition of the American Museum of Natural History: Letters and Journal of Frederick P Drowne, MD (PDF). USA: American Museum of Natural History.
  31. ^ Correia, José G. (1923–1925). Whitney South Sea Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History. Letters and journal of José G. Correia. American Museum of Natural History.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  32. ^ Mailliard, Joseph (July 1923). "How is this for conservation of wildlife?" (PDF). Condor. XXV: 125–126.
  33. ^ Beck, Rollo Howard (1923–1928). Whitney South Sea Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History. Letters and journal of Rollo H. Beck, 1923-1928. American Museum of Natural History.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  34. ^ Murphy, Robert Cushman (1922). "The Whitney South Sea Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History". Science. 56 (1460): 701–704. ISSN 0036-8075.
  35. ^ a b c d e "The Pacific Voyages of Rollo Beck". 2010-12-05. Archived from the original on 2010-12-05. Retrieved 2024-08-05.
  36. ^ "Bird-survey vessel at Apia". Samoanische Zeitung. 2 May 1924 – via Papers Past.
  37. ^ a b c Evenhuis, Neal L, ed. (April 2007). Field Notes of E.H. Bryan, Jr. on the Whitney South Seas Expedition (February–November 1924): Technical Report 37 (PDF). Honolulu, Hawaii: Pacific Biological Survey, Bishop Museum. ISSN 1085-455X.
  38. ^ "Fijian Affairs". Auckland Star. 11 June 1925 – via Papers Past.
  39. ^ The Pacific voyages of Rollo Beck states that this section of the trip took place in 1924, but other sources show that it was 1925.
  40. ^ "Studying bird life". Auckland Star. 11 December 1925 – via Papers Past.
  41. ^ "Whitney Expedition". Evening Star. 11 December 1925 – via Papers Past.
  42. ^ "Yacht France returns". Auckland Star. 25 March 1926 – via Papers Past.
  43. ^ "Safety of Schooner". Taranaki Daily News. 6 March 1926 – via Papers Past.
  44. ^ "Shipping News". Auckland Star. 20 April 1926 – via Papers Past.
  45. ^ "BIRDS OF PARADISE". Townsville Daily Bulletin. Vol. LII, no. 20. Queensland, Australia. 23 January 1930. p. 3. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  46. ^ "Local and General News". Papuan Courier. Vol. 18, no. 50. 14 December 1928. p. 8. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  47. ^ "SAMARAI NEWS". Papuan Courier. Vol. 20, no. 29. 18 July 1930. p. 10. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  48. ^ "YACHT MISSING". The Maitland Daily Mercury. No. 18, 548. 17 August 1930. p. 5. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  49. ^ "Personal". The Sydney Morning Herald. 18 August 1930. p. 8. Retrieved 6 August 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  50. ^ "Adds new chapters to natural history". The New Holland Clarion. 26 July 1935. p. 7 – via Newspaper Archive.
  51. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: Macmillan, Lindsay (amnhp_1002475)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-07.
  52. ^ "Despatches from the Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs to the Governor-General of New Zealand". Appendices to the Journals of the House of Representatives. Session 1, A2: 4. 16 February 1925 – via Papers Past.
  53. ^ a b "Good-bye to our birds". Evening Star. 16 March 1926 – via Papers Past.
  54. ^ "American bird-collecting expedition". Otago Daily Times. 15 March 1926 – via Papers Past.
  55. ^ "N.Z. bird life". Evening Post. 27 March 1926 – via Papers Past.
  56. ^ "The France expedition". Otago Witness. 13 April 1926 – via Papers Past.
  57. ^ "American Museum of Natural History Research Library: American Museum of Natural History. Whitney Memorial Hall of Oceanic Birds. (amnhc_4000088)". data.library.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
  58. ^ Meiburg, Jonathan (22 August 2013). "Inside the American Museum of Natural History's Hidden Masterpiece". theappendix.net. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
  59. ^ "Whitney Hall of Oceanic Birds, 1945, New York, NY, United States — Google Arts & Culture". artsandculture.google.com. Retrieved 2024-08-04.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Chapman, Frank M. (1935). The Whitney South Sea Expedition. Science 81: 95–97.
  • Murphy, R.C. (1922). Science 56: 701–704.
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