Whitney South Sea Expedition.

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The Whitney South Seas Expedition which took place between 1920 and 1940, was sponsored by Harry Payne Whitney and involved several leaders, the most important ones being Rollo H. Beck, Hannibal Hamlin, and Lindsay Macmillan. The main purpose of this expedition was to collect bird specimens.

From the description of Oceania field photographs, 1921-1940. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 155516917

The Whitney South Sea Expedition was hailed as the longest ornithological voyage in history, and the botanical specimens collected were vital to understanding bird habitation patterns. In 1920, the American Museum of Natural History, with the financial aid of Harry Payne Whitney, funded this expedition to islands in the South Pacific. Dr. Leonard C. Sanford—a trustee for the American Natural History Museum—hired Rollo Beck to complete field work with Naturalists Ernst H. Quayle and Charles Curtis. Together they gathered approximately 40,000 birds, plants, and other faunal specimens from over 600 islands. Many articles written about the expedition have shown that “with the exception of certain specimens given to [the Smithsonian Institution and Bishop Museum]…all the specimens collected by the expedition were sent to the American Museum.” Beck, Quayle, Curtis, and the expedition team set sail for the Tahitian island Papeete to establish a base that would enable easier travel to the islands of Eastern Polynesia. Along the way, the naturalists mainly focused on collecting birds. However, after observing that the populations of native people and wildlife were dying off on certain islands, they began studying the flora in hopes of discovering an environmental pattern that could potentially lead them to the cause. No definite connection was found, but an incredible amount of plant specimens were collected. The success of the Whitney expedition provided the American Museum with the largest ornithological collection in the country. Whitney even donated an additional $750,000 to build a separate wing for the museum to house the collection. Beck’s overzealous collecting, however, led to the extinction of several species of birds. The botanical specimens did not create as much controversy as the ornithological specimens, but did provide future botanists with significant new information about the plants of the South Pacific.

Smithsonian Institution Archives Field Book Project: CorporateBody : Description : rid_34_eid_EACE0034

Relation Name
associatedWith American Museum of Natural History. corporateBody
associatedWith American Museum of Natural History. corporateBody
associatedWith Beck, Rollo Howard, 1870- person
associatedWith Beck, Rollo Howard, 1870-1950. person
associatedWith Beck, Rollo Howard, 1870-1950. person
associatedWith Correia, José G. person
associatedWith Hamlin, Hannibal. person
associatedWith Mayr, Ernst, 1904-2005. person
associatedWith Murphy, Robert Cushman, 1887-1973. person
associatedWith Petersen, George E. person
associatedWith Quayle, Ernest H. person
associatedWith Quayle, Ernest H. person
associatedWith Quayle, Ernest H. person
associatedWith Whitney, Harry Payne, 1872-1930. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Vanuatu
Marquesas Islands (French Polynesia)
Tahiti
French Polynesia--Marquesas Islands
Pitcairn Islands
French Polynesia
Papeete
Solomon Islands
Oceania
Samoan Islands
New Hebrides
Galapagos Islands
Subject
Anthropology
Botany
Ornithology
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1920

Active 1940

Active 1920

Active 1932

Active 1920

Active 1929

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