Erling Porsild Explained

Alf Erling Porsild
Birth Date:17 January 1901
Birth Place:Copenhagen, Denmark
Nationality:Danish-Canadian
Death Place:Vienna, Austria
Field:Botany
Work Institution:National Museum of Canada
Known For:Flora of the Arctic, coining the word pingo
Prizes:Massey Medal for 1966

Alf Erling Porsild (1901–1977) was a Danish-Canadian botanist.

Biography

He was born in Copenhagen as a son of the botanist M.P. Porsild. He grew up on the Arctic Station in Qeqertarsuaq, West Greenland, where he acted as assistant to his father.

Between 1936 and 1945, he was curator at the National Museum of Canada, Ottawa, and from 1945 to 1967 he was head of the department of botany there. He authored over 100 scientific articles on the flora of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and of the Rocky Mountains, as well as numerous popular papers and books, including important flora of Canada's Arctic and northern regions.

He made over 25,000 plant collections (numbers), resulting in over 100,000 specimens which are deposited in the National Herbarium of Canada (CAN) at the Canadian Museum of Nature, Ottawa, and in other herbaria around the world.

Porsild was hired to take part in the Canadian Reindeer Project to bring reindeer-herding to the indigenous populations of northern Canada in the hopes of building a sustainable industry.[1]

He borrowed the term pingo from the Inuit and made it a scientific and vernacular term (first used in 1938). Porsild Pingo in Tuktoyaktuk is named in his honor, as well as Mount Porsild in the Yukon Territory. Porsild's starwort (Stellaria porsildii), a plant native to mountains in Arizona and New Mexico, is also named in his honor.[2]

Legacy

The Canadian Botanical Association awards annually the 'Alf Erling Porsild Award', in recognition of the best paper published in the field of systematics and phytogeography that year by a graduate student in a Canadian university or a Canadian student in a foreign university.

Porsild was awarded the Massey Medal by the Royal Canadian Geographical Society in 1966. He was awarded the George Lawson Medal by the Canadian Botanical Association in 1971.[3]

He was portrayed by Colm Feore in Peter Lynch's 1998 documentary film The Herd.[4]

Selected works

References

Soper, J.H. and W.J. Cody. 1978. Alf Erling Porsild, M.B.E., F.R.S.C. (1901-1977). Canadian Field-Naturalist 92: 298–304.

External links

Book: Dathan, Wendy. The Reindeer Botanist: Alf Erling Porsild, 1901-1977. 2012. University of Calgary Press. 9781552385876. [This is an open access book]

Notes and References

  1. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1786857 "The Reindeer Industry and the Canadian Eskimo"
  2. Chinnappa, C.C. 1992. Stellaria porsildii, sp. nov., a new member of the S. longipes Complex (Caryophyllaceae). Systematic Botany 17(1): 29–32.
  3. Web site: Past Recipients of the Lawson Medal. Canadian Botanical Association/L'Association Botanique du Canada.
  4. Bonnie Malleck, "A stirring look at the Arctic; TV tonight; The Herd traces the true story of six-year trek". Hamilton Spectator, October 4, 2001.