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15 Facts About Filippo Bonanni

facts about filippo bonanni.html1.

Filippo Bonanni created the earliest practical illustrated guide for shell collectors in 1681, for which he is considered a founder of conchology.

2.

Filippo Bonanni published a study of lacquer that has been of lasting value since his death.

3.

Filippo Bonanni used his lenses to create his own microscope and to develop scientific studies of a number of specimens.

4.

From Rome, Filippo Bonanni was sent to teach in the Jesuit Colleges of Orvieto and Ancona.

5.

In 1698, years after Kircher's death, Filippo Bonanni was appointed curator of the well-known collection installed in the Roman College, which had been under Kircher's care up to that point.

6.

Filippo Bonanni followed Aristotle in believing in theories of spontaneous generation.

7.

In critiquing the experimental work of Francesco Redi, Filippo Bonanni defended the Aristotelian view.

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Francesco Redi
8.

Nonetheless, in early writing about the nature and origins of fossils, Filippo Bonanni admitted doubts about whether theories of transport could account for the numbers and distribution of fossils.

9.

Filippo Bonanni created the earliest practical illustrated guide for shell collectors, Recreatione dell'occhio e della mente.

10.

Filippo Bonanni's work is significant for his careful attempts to precisely describe shell morphology.

11.

Zoological taxonomies of the time were based on visual characteristics, and Filippo Bonanni paid special attention to both form and color, and showed details of the creatures inside the shells.

12.

Several later Linnaean names were based on Filippo Bonanni's work, including the name of the class Bivalvia, which he introduced.

13.

In 1720, Filippo Bonanni published his studies in Trattato sopra la vernice detta communemente cinese, or Treatise on the Varnish commonly called Chinese.

14.

Filippo Bonanni made excellent observations, which are embodied in several works:.

15.

Filippo Bonanni was a shell collector and was the author of the first book devoted solely to seashells, published in Rome in 1681.