- Tanager Expedition
The 1923 "Tanager" Expedition, under Captain Samuel Wilder King of the USS "Tanager", was a survey of the
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands and their plant [cite book
last = Christophersen
first = Erling
coauthors = Caum, Edward L.
title = Vascular plants of the Leeward Islands, Hawaii
publisher = Bishop Museum Press
series = Bernice P. Bishop Museum Bulletin No. 81; Tanager Expedition Publication No. 7
date = 1931-07-01
location = Honolulu, Hawaii
isbn = ] and animal life, as well as their geology. They then traveled to the Marshall andLine Islands . ArchaeologistKenneth Emory who later worked at theBishop Museum for sixty years, was a member of the expedition, as was the noted herptologistChapman Grant .Over 100 archaeological sites were found and documented, including ancient religious sites and houses on
Nihoa andNecker Island . Numerous new species were discovered and named, such as theLaysan Finch . Many specimens of endangered species were captured and brought back to laboratories as well. The crew also were one of the few people in history to witness a species extinction. When they spent a month onLaysan studying the endemicLaysan Apapane , a violent and sudden storm ravaged the island. After the storm, the crew concluded that the last three specimens of theApapane had been killed in the storm.The expedition also exterminated the last of the rabbits that devoured vegetation and caused extinction on Laysan.
Crew
"This list is incomplete"
*E. H. Bryan, Jr.
*Edward L. Caum (botanist)
*Erling Christophersen (botanist)
*Kenneth Emory (archaeologist)
*Chapman Grant (herptologist)
*C. S. Judd (cartographer)
*Gerrit P. Wilder (botanist)References
Further reading
*Emory, Kenneth P. (2002). "Archaeology of Nihoa & Necker Islands". Mutual Publishing. ISBN 1566475651
External links
* [http://www.bishopmuseum.org/research/nwhi/tanager.shtml Bishop Museum]
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