- Richard Dell
Dr Richard Kenneth Dell (
11 July 1920 -6 March 2002 ) was aNew Zealand malacologist.He was born in
Auckland . As a young boy, he took an interest in shells, collecting them from the shores ofWaitemata Harbour . He even managed to start a "museum" in his backyard. He also helped curate theAuckland War Memorial Museum shell collection.Dell went to
Mount Albert Grammar School and later to theAuckland University College . He took a teacher’s course at Auckland Teachers' College, butWorld War II delayed his plans of becoming a teacher. He joined the New Zealand Artillery, serving onNissan Island , theSolomon Islands , in theMiddle East ,Egypt , andItaly .He later published several papers on the
land snail s he had collected in the Solomon Islands.After the war, Dell was offered a job as malacologist at the Dominion Museum, where he started to standardise the cabinets and built up a collection of more than 30,000 specimens. In the meantime, he took a Masters degree in Science at
Victoria University of Wellington , with a pioneering thesis onoctopus es andsquid .His breakthrough came with the
Chatham Islands Expedition of 1954. The results were published in 1956 as "The Archibenthal Mollusca of New Zealand", which was a major contribution to the knowledge ofmollusc an fauna in thebathyal zone of New Zealand waters. This publication earned him a Doctorate in Science in 1956.Soon after, he started to work on Antarctic collections, with among others
Alan Beu andWinston Ponder . In 1964 he published a majormonograph on the Antarcticbivalve s,chiton s andscaphopod s.Dell became first Assistant Director in 1961 and later in 1966, Director of the Dominion Museum, that would become the
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa .He retired in 1980, and started writing again. In 1990 he published his standard work "Antarctic Mollusca with special reference to the Fauna of the Ross Sea".
Dell has published more than 150 papers on
Mollusca (marine, terrestrial and freshwater),crab s andbird s. He also made a major contribution to the Antarcticbiogeography .He was an honoured member of many scientific societies and committees. He won prizes and medals in New Zealand and abroad. He has named many new species of molluscs and several new
crustacean s.Dell was the last of his generation of important New Zealand malacologists, but was an example to younger scientists.
He died, after a long illness, in
Wellington .Selected publications
* "The New Zealand Cephalopoda" (1952)
* "The fresh-water Mollusca of New Zealand", 3 parts (1953 - 1956)
* "The position of systematics in the biological sciences" (1953)
* "The archibenthal Mollusca of New Zealand" (1956)
* "Cephalopoda" (1959)
* "Antarctic and Subantarctic Mollusca, Bivalvia, Amphineura and Scaphopoda "(1964)
* "Antarctic Mollusca with special reference to the Fauna of the Ross Sea" (1990)External links
* [http://www.rsnz.govt.nz/directory/yearbooks/year02/dell.php Biography and photo]
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