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WAITE, EDGAR RAVENSWOOD (1866-1928), scientist,
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was born at Leeds, England, on 5 May 1866. He received his scientific
education at the Victoria university of Manchester, and in 1888 was appointed
sub-curator of the Leeds museum. He was soon afterwards made curator, but in
1893 became zoologist at the Australian museum, Sydney. His first interest had
been ornithology, but he now extended his studies to other vertebrates, in
particular fishes and reptiles. In 1898 he published his Popular Account of
Australian Snakes. He was with the trawling expedition conducted by the
Thetis and wrote the report on the fishes, and he also reported on the
fishes trawled by the Western Australian government. In 1906 he became curator
of the Canterbury museum at Christchurch, New Zealand, and did some very
valuable work on the fishes of New Zealand. In 1907 he was with the Canterbury
Philosophical Institute's expedition to the sub-antarctic islands of New
Zealand, and he was zoologist on the Aurora in 1912 during the first
sub-antarctic cruise of the Mawson expedition. In March 1914 Waite was appointed
director of the South Australian museum at Adelaide. He did some excellent work
on the fishes collected by the Mawson expedition, and did not neglect other
departments. In 1916 he led an expedition into Central Australia, and he helped
to build up an aboriginal collection at his museum which became one of the best
in the world. Two years later he went on a collecting expedition to New Guinea,
New Britain and New Ireland, and in 1926 spent much time studying European and
American museums. While in New York he arranged the Australian section of the
museum. He had contracted malaria while in New Guinea and at the beginning of
1928 had a recurrence, which led to his death on 19 January while he was at
Hobart attending a meeting of the Australasian Association for the Advancement
of Science. He was married and left a widow and a son.
Though of a somewhat retiring disposition Waite was a man of great
versatility. He was a good linguist and musician, could draw and paint in
water-colour, was an expert modeller, had some knowledge of mechanics, and was a
capable photographer. Most of these things were useful in his work as curator of
a museum, and as such his reputation stood very high. As a scientist his most
important work was on the vertebrates. He was fellow of the Linnean Society from
an early age, and at the time of his death was a vice-president of the Royal
Society of South Australia. He contributed over 200 papers to various scientific
publications. His work on The Fishes of South Australia was published in
1923.
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