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Lyman Bradford Smith

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lyman Bradford Smith
BornSeptember 11, 1904
DiedMay 4, 1997(1997-05-04) (aged 92)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materHarvard University
Spouse
Ruth Carlisle Gates
(m. 1929)
[1]
Scientific career
FieldsBotany
InstitutionsSmithsonian Institution
Author abbrev. (botany)L.B.Sm

Lyman Bradford Smith (September 11, 1904 – May 4, 1997) was an American botanist.

Smith was born in Winchester, Massachusetts. He studied botany during the 1920s at Harvard University and received his PhD from Harvard in 1930. Between 1928 and 1929, he worked for the first time in Brazil. Most of his life's work came to involve the taxonomy of the flowering plants of South America, in particular the bromeliads (Bromeliaceae). Smith worked on the Bromeliaceae for the North American Flora published by the American botanist Nathaniel Lord Britton, volume 19, no. 2 (1938). Smith was a world authority on Begoniaceae and also worked with Velloziaceae and numerous other plant families. He was a curator in the Smithsonian Institution's Department of Botany from 1947 until his retirement in 1974, but continued to work in the United States National Herbarium as an emeritus curator almost until his death in Manhattan, Kansas, in 1997.

Works

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This list may be incomplete.
  • The Bromeliaceae of Brazil, 1955
  • The Bromeliaceae of Colombia, 1957
  • Begoniaceae, 1986

References

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  1. ^ Grant, Jason R. (September 1999). "From Harvard to Smithsonian: The Career of Botanist Lyman B. Smith (1904-1997)". Harvard Papers in Botany. 4 (1). Harvard University Herbaria: 7–10. JSTOR 41761280.
  2. ^ International Plant Names Index.  L.B.Sm.
  • Biography: [1]
  • Taxon, Vol. 46(4) (1997): 819–824.
  • Robert Zander, Fritz Encke, Günther Buchheim, Siegmund Seybold (editor): Handwörterbuch der Pflanzennamen. 13th ed. Ulmer Verlag, Stuttgart 1984, ISBN 3-8001-5042-5.
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