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    Intricate 18th-century illustrations of beautiful wildlife

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    The tough inexperienced snake (Opheodrys aestivus)

    Bodleian Library Publishing, College of Oxford, 2024

    These outstanding and complicated illustrations are the work of Mark Catesby, an English naturalist and artist who made quite a few visits to North America within the early 18th century, recording the wildlife he noticed on his travels.

    His work is collected in a brand new e book, Catesby’s Pure Historical past by Stephen A. Harris, an exploration of the naturalist’s landmark treatise, The Pure Historical past of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands. “Catesby presented his readers with illustrations of a wide diversity of plants and animals that were being discovered by Europeans in North America and the Caribbean,” says Harris. “Many of these were illustrated for the first time – Catesby became the de facto authority on them.”

    134 left Giant hermit crab (Petrochirus diogenes); probably angular sea whip (Pterogorgia anceps) (vol. 2, t. 34)

    Large hermit crab (Petrochirus diogenes)

    Bodleian Library Publishing, College of Oxford, 2024

    That includes greater than 400 species, a few of which at the moment are extinct, a number of plates depict a plant and an animal in a single picture, such because the tough inexperienced snake (Opheodrys aestivus), proven high, curling round an American beautyberry shrub (Callicarpa americana). In an analogous vein, an enormous hermit crab (Petrochirus diogenes) sits on high of what, writes Harris, is “probably” an angular sea whip (Pterogorgia anceps), proven above.

    125 Mutton snapper (Lutjanus analis) (vol. 2, t. 25)

    Mutton snapper

    odleian Library Publishing, College of Oxford, 2024

    Pictured above is a vibrant mutton snapper (Lutjanus analis), and the deciduous plant Spanish jasmine (Plumeria rubra) is pictured under.

    192 above Spanish jasmine (Plumeria rubra) (vol. 2, t. 92)

    Spanish jasmine (Plumeria rubra)

    Bodleian Library Publishing, College of Oxford, 2024

    Catesby “hoped to stimulate curiosity in natural history – beyond the confines of the library”, says Harris. “His work speaks to modern themes of landscape and habitat change, changing species’ distributions and extinction and the value of traditional knowledge held by Indigenous people.”

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