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From today's featured article
Meinhard Moser (1924–2002) was
an Austrian mycologist. His work
principally concerned the taxonomy,
chemistry, and toxicity of gilled
mushrooms (Agaricales), especially
the genus Cortinarius.
Moser
completed his doctorate at the
University of Innsbruck in 1950, then
briefly worked in England. He joined
Austria's Federal Forestry Research
Institute in 1952, conducting research on the use of
mycorrhizal fungi in reforestation. He began lecturing at
Innsbruck in 1956, becoming a professor in 1964. He
became the inaugural head of Austria's first Institute of
Microbiology in 1972. He remained with the Institute
until his retirement in 1991, and his scientific studies
continued until his death in 2002. He was an influential
mycologist, describing around 500 new fungal taxa and
publishing several important books. In particular, his
1953 book on European mushrooms, published in
English as Keys to Agarics and Boleti, saw several
editions both in German and in translation.
(Full article...)
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On this day
Did you know ...
June 18
... that Plácido Zuloaga
trained more than two
hundred artists to make
damascened artworks
(example pictured)?
Fonthill Casket, from the
... that a group of escaped
Khalili Collection of
German prisoners
Spanish metalwork
established a short-lived
Nazi state in the Dutch East Indies?
... that in the 1980s, textile conservator Martand
Singh organized a series of exhibitions to rekindle
interest in the weaving and dyeing traditions of
India?
... that the Laguna Creek watershed debouches
into the San Francisco Bay near the site of the ghost
town of Drawbridge?
... that the board of directors of Canadian
cooperative television station CFVO-TV refused to
860 – A fleet of
about 200 Rus'
vessels sailed
into the Bosporus
and started
pillaging the
suburbs of
Rus' forces under the walls
Constantinople
of Constantinople
(depicted).
1858 – Charles Darwin received a
manuscript by fellow naturalist Alfred
Russel Wallace on natural selection,
which encouraged Darwin to publish his
theory of evolution.
1940 – World War II: Charles de Gaulle
gave his Appeal of 18 June speech,
often considered to be the origin of the
French Resistance.
accept the resignation of its president so that he
could negotiate a loan?
... that the abduction of the Georgian demoness
Samdzimari and her subsequent conversion to
goddess may have been derived from the Christian
story of Saint George and the Dragon?
... that the composition of the 1st Wyoming
Territorial Legislature was entirely Democratic?
... that the Soviet Union women's national rugby
union team bartered smuggled vodka and caviar to
cover their living expenses at the 1991 Women's
Rugby World Cup?
1983 – Iranian teenager Mona
Mahmudnizhad and nine other women
were hanged in Shiraz because of their
membership in the Baháʼí Faith.
2012 – Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
was appointed crown prince of Saudi
Arabia.
William Cobbett (d. 1835) · Alice T. Schafer
(b. 1915) · Isabella Rossellini (b. 1952)
More anniversaries: June 17 · June 18 ·
June 19
Today's featured picture
The
brown-eared
bulbul
(Hypsipetes
amaurotis) is a medium-sized bulbul native to
eastern Asia. Reaching a length of about 28
cm (11 in), it is grayish-brown, with brown
cheeks (the "brown ears" of the common
name), a small spiky crest and a long tail. A
bird of the forest canopy, it is also found in
plantations, parks and gardens. During the
summer, the bird feeds primarily on insects,
but in the winter the diet consists mainly of
fruits and seeds. In addition, it feeds on nectar
from Camellia flowers, becoming dusted with
pollen in the process. This brown-eared bulbul
was photographed in Tennōji Park in Osaka,
Japan.
Photograph credit: Laitche
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