|
Robert Lechmere
Guppy had no formal scientific training but his
meticulous approach to research, coupled with his love
of invertebrate palaeontology[1]
and geology, allowed him to publish many papers of
professional quality. His best known contribution to
science was the popularisation of the Guppy fish that
bears his name. Before Guppy, W.C.H. Peters originally
discovered this species and catalogued it in Berlin,
where it was overlooked. It was Guppy, however, who
sent specimens to London, making the fish known to the
English-speaking world.
Robert John
Lechmere Guppy was born on 15th August, 1836 in London,
England. A prodigy from the beginning, he practically
taught himself to read at the age of three. As a young
man, Guppy wanted to explore the world as a scientist
but his uncle wanted him to manage his family’s estate
in England. At the age of 18, he entered Oxford
University but on receiving letters from his uncle
begging him to return home, he ran off to Tasmania. He
was shipwrecked on the coast of New Zealand in 1856,
where he remained among the indigenous Māori people who
had rescued him. During that time, he explored the
island, mapping the area and collecting specimens.
After two years, he joined his parents and brother who
had migrated to Trinidad.
Although his
family lived in San Fernando, Guppy’s job in the
government service compelled him to stay in
Port-of-Spain. Eventually, his zeal for education led
him to being appointed to help organise the education
system as the island’s first Superintendent of Schools.
His earliest
published scientific papers can be dated back to 1863,
when he conducted geological surveys of Trinidad. Guppy
collected samples, made notes and wrote papers in
Trinidad and presented his findings in England, North
America and in the proceedings of The Trinidad
Scientific Association. His 1963 paper of Trinidad
fossil foraminifera[2]
was one of the earliest such publications in the
Western Hemisphere. This, and his subsequent papers on
Trinidad’s fossil foraminifera were the standard
references for the later 20th century
micropalaentological[3]
studies which established the value of this group of
fossils for dating and correlating petroleum deposits
in Trinidad.
During his
surveys, he noticed a fish, which was called the
“millions fish” at the time, but would later be named
the “guppy’”. Intrigued by the small creature, he sent
samples in 1866 to the curator of the British Museum,
the legendary ichthyologist[4], Dr Albert Carl Ludwig Gotthilf Guenther. In
that same year, Guppy and his brother, Francis founded
the Trinidad Almanack - a reference book that was
eventually taken over by the government as the official
yearbook. Guppy was also the founder of the Victoria
Institute (now renamed the National Museum) in
Port-of-Spain at the time of Queen Victoria's Golden
Jubilee in 1887, and he served as the Institute’s
president for years.
Guppy continued
publishing up until his last years. He produced over 30
papers in his lifetime and his scientific work was so
in demand that A reprint of the more inaccessible
palaeontological writings of Robert John Lechmere Guppy
was published in the Bulletins of American
Palaeontology after his death on 5th August, 1916.
1-Invertebrate
palaeontology is the study of the history and
development of spineless multi-cellular animals,
conducted by recovering, identifying and studying their
fossils
2-Foraminifera are marine
micro-organisms with a high rate of reproduction and a
detailed fossil record
3-The palaeontology of
microscopic organisms
4-Ichthyology is the
scientific study of fish
|