James Jenkins Simpson Explained

James Jenkins Simpson
Birth Date:24 November 1881
Birth Place:Elgin, Moray, Scotland
Death Place:Aegean Sea
Occupation:Entomologist
Marine biologist
Known For:Studying animal species in West Africa and Turkey

James Jenkins Simpson (24 November 1881 – 10 November 1936) was a British entomologist and marine biologist who worked in West Africa and Turkey.

Background

Simpson was the son of a gardener from Elgin; he studied at Elgin West End School and Aberdeen Free Church Training College before graduating M.A. from Aberdeen University in 1904. He was a Carnegie Research Scholar and Fellow at Aberdeen. He joined the British Indian government to study pearl oyster fisheries in southern Burma in 1906 and then worked in East Africa with the Nyassa Company.

In 1909 an Entomological Research Committee was formed to study ticks of economic importance in Africa. Simpson and Sheffield Airey Neave were appointed travelling entomologists and he collected mosquitoes, Tabanids, bed-bugs, fleas, lice and ticks in Nigeria in 1910 followed by visits to the Gold Coast and Sierra Leone. In 1919 Simpson joined the National Museum of Wales as Keeper of Zoology and in 1926 became Curator of the Public Museums of Liverpool.

He then took up a position in Turkey to head the Department of Oceanography and Marine Biological Research. Travelling from Greece on the ship Kyrenia, he was found missing from his cabin, last seen on the morning of 10 November 1936 and presumed drowned.[1] [2]

See also

Publications

Notes and References

  1. News: Aberdeen Journal. 1 December 1936. Scientist Lost at Sea. Dr J.J. Simpson, Graduate of Aberdeen University.. 8. British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  2. 20–27. Two naturalists in Africa: Sheffield Airey Neave (1879-1961) and James Jenkins Simpson (1881-1937) with particular reference to their work on insects and ticks from 1910 to 1915. Baker, R.A.. Bayliss, R.A.. The Linnean. 2009. 25. 1. 2016-02-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305174411/http://cas-tls.edcdn.com/Documents/Publications/The-Linnaen/Lin%20Vol%2025_%20no%201_%20Jan%202009.pdf. 2016-03-05. dead.