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        Council of Heads of Australasian Herbaria |  | 
Born on 19 December 1820 at Cambusnethan, Scotland; he died on 10 March 1898, at Belair near Adelaide, SA.
He was a resident in the pastoral districts 
    of Victoria from 1842. This well-informed, resourceful man interested, himself 
    in a wide range of topics. Among other things, he invented a swing gate for 
    drafting sheep, investigated the pastoral potential of the land between the 
    Lachlan and Darling Rivers, and advocated the introduction of useful animals 
    and agricultural seeds to Victoria. 
In June and July 1861 he made an extensive tour of the Wimmera and Mallee 
    region, basing himself at Pine Plains Homestead, and making trips as far afield 
    as Horsham and Lake Hindmarsh in the south and the Pink Lakes in the north. 
    His account of these travels, published in the Yeoman and Australian Acclimatiser 
    under the title 'Notes on the tour of the Wimmera district', gives a vivid 
    account of his proceedings: the nesting habits of Mallee Fowl, collecting 
    dew for drinking water in the desert, and potential agricultural use of gypsum, 
    and particularly the vegetation he saw. He gave to Mueller the specimens collected 
    on these travels, as well as his later excursions through New South Wales 
    and Queensland. 
      
Extracted from: Flora of Victoria, Vol. 1, Chap 5, 'Botanical Exploration of Victoria', by J.H.Willis & Helen M. Cohn (1993). [consult for source references]
Data from 308 specimens
  
  