Illustration of C. fontinalis (fig. 3) from Johann Jacob Dillenius’s Historia muscorum (1741).

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.

C. Fontinalis

Artist

Date

1741

From

Historia muscorum


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights

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