Illustrations of C. fontinalis and animalcules (figs. 19) from Justin Girod-Chantran’s Recherches Chimiques et Microscopiques (1802).
Featured on PDR in the essay Visions of Algae in Eighteenth-Century Botany
Although not normally considered the most glamorous of Mother Nature's offerings, algae has found itself at the heart of many a key moment in the last few hundred years of botanical science. Ryan Feigenbaum traces the surprising history of one particular species — Conferva fontinalis — from the vials of Joseph Priestley's laboratory to its possible role as inspiration for Shelley's Frankenstein.