Professor WB Scott, in the columns of Science, says : ' ' Hatcher may be said to have fairly revolutionized the methods of collecting vertebrate fossils, a work which before his time had been almost wholly in the hands of untrained and unskilful men,... Geological Magazine - Page 558edited by - 1904Full view - About this book
| Carnegie Museum, Carnegie Museum of Natural History - Natural history - 1903 - 704 pages
...noble spirit, the sort of man that is vastly appreciated in EngHOLLAND : JOHN BELL HATCHER. 603 land and in Germany, but I fear very little appreciated...museums, which awaken the admiring envy of European paleontologists, are, to a large extent, directly or indirectly due to Hatcher's energy and skill and... | |
| John Michels (Journalist) - Science - 1904 - 966 pages
...to his work, combined to secure for. him a thoroughly well-earned success and a high reputation. He may be said to have fairly revolutionized the methods...had been almost wholly in the hands of untrained and unskilled men, but which he converted into a fine art. The exquisitely preserved fossils in American... | |
| Geology - 1905 - 1010 pages
...microscopic, a dauntless energy and fertility of resource that laughed all obstacles to scorn. * * * He may be said to have fairly revolutionized the methods...had been almost wholly in the hands of untrained and unskilled men, but which he converted into a fine art." In the spring of 1893 Hatcher accepted a call... | |
| Newton Horace Winchell - Geology - 1905 - 482 pages
...microscopic, a dauntless energy and fertility of resource that laughed all obstacles to scorn. * * * He may be said to have fairly revolutionized the methods...had been almost wholly in the hands of untrained and unskilled men. but which he converted into a fine art." In the spring of 1893 Hatcher accepted a call... | |
| John Bell Hatcher - 1905 - 388 pages
...microscopic, a dauntless energy and fertility of resource that laughed all obstacles to scorn. * * * He may be said to have fairly revolutionized the methods...had been almost wholly in the hands of untrained and unskilled men, but which he converted into a fine art." In the spring of 1893 Hatcher accepted a call... | |
| Geological Society of America - Geology - 1905 - 880 pages
...devotion to his work combined to secure for him a thoroughly well earned success and a high reputation. He may be said to have fairly revolutionized the methods...had been almost wholly in the hands of untrained and unskilled men, but which he converted into a fine art. The exquisitely preserved fossils in American... | |
| Carnegie Museum, Carnegie Museum of Natural History - Natural history - 1904 - 688 pages
...noble spirit, the sort of man that is vastly appreciated in EngHOLLAND : JOHN BELL HATCHER. 603 land and in Germany, but I fear very little appreciated...museums, which awaken the admiring envy of European paleontologists, are, to a large extent, directly or indirectly due to Hatcher's energy and skill and... | |
| Geological Society of America - Geology - 1905 - 854 pages
...devotion to his work combined to secure for him a thoroughly well earned success and a high reputation. He may be said to have fairly revolutionized the methods...had been almost wholly in the hands of untrained and unskilled men, but which he converted into a fine art. The exquisitely preserved fossils in American... | |
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