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Council of Heads of Australasian Herbaria |
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Born in Hamburg, Germany, on 24 September 1874, died in Berlin, Germany, on 30 November 1945.
He took early to botany and studied taxonomy under Engler, and geography under von Richthofen, at Berlin. His doctoral thesis was titled “Vegetation Biology of New Zealand”. He had not at that time visited that country but after graduating began to prepare plans for a tour of the southern hemisphere, with principal emphasis on Western Australia.
Between 1900 and 1902 he and Ernst Pritzel
collected widely in South Africa, Java, eastern and Western Australia and
New Zealand.
They were in Western Australia from October 1900 to December
1901, and collected over 5700 specimens.
Their joint publication Fragmenta
Phytographiae Australiae Occidentalis (Bot. Jahrb. 35, 1905) is one of
the milestones in the description of Western Australian plants. A translation
of Diels' account of the exploration of the Western Australian flora appears
in Diels (transl. Carr, 1981 in People and Plants in Australia).
His
main collection, including many holotypes, went to B, but the Type collection
was destroyed in an air raid on 2 March 1943. Duplicates (including isotypes)
can be found in BM, MEL, NSW and PERTH.
Source: Extracted from: A.E.Orchard (1999) A History of Systematic Botany in Australia, in Flora of Australia Vol.1, 2nd ed., ABRS. [consult for source references]
See this paper on Diels and Pritzel by J.S. Beard in 2001 [PDF]
Data from 31 specimens returned to Australian herbaria from Europe.