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Scarpa, Antonio in author 
1780-1789 in date 
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From:
Antonio Scarpa
To:
Sir James Edward Smith
Date:
28 Mar 1788
Source of text:
GB-110/JES/COR/9/13, The Linnean Society of London
Summary:

Requests copy of Smith's "De Generatione". Does Smith know in what [Peter Simon] Pallas published about discovering the hearing organs of crayfish. Has translated [John] Hunter's "Memoir on the Digestion" [(1728-1793), surgeon], as well received as Hunter's "Animal economy" and work on venereal diseases. Plans to publish third, fourth, and fifth volumes of his own "Annotations Anatomiques" this year.

Contributor:
The Linnean Society of London
From:
Antonio Scarpa
To:
Sir James Edward Smith
Date:
12 Sep 1788
Source of text:
GB-110/JES/COR/9/14, The Linnean Society of London
Summary:

Still awaiting the works Smith sent, in addition requests transcription of [Johan Christian] Fabricius' 1783 memoir on the hearing of insects and tracings of the plates for his own work. Congratulations on establishment of Linnean Society, gratified by invitation to join. Highlights errors in [Lazzaro] Spallanzani's [(1729-1799), Italian physiologist] work on digestion by comparing it with [John] Hunter's [(1728-1793), surgeon] memoir on same. Chair of Chemistry and Botany at University of Pavia still vacant since death of [Giovanni Antonio] Scopoli.

[On separate folio] List of plant names, possibly in a different hand, no reference to this in the rest of the letter.

Contributor:
The Linnean Society of London
From:
Antonio Scarpa
To:
Sir James Edward Smith
Date:
7 Nov 1788
Source of text:
GB-110/JES/COR/9/15, The Linnean Society of London
Summary:

Thanks for the tracings from [Johan Christian] Fabricius' 1783 memoir on the hearing of insects; notes that Fabricus does not seem to have looked into the internal structure of the hearing organs of crayfish. Notes a dissertation by Mr Minasi titled "Dissertazione dei Timpanetti dell'udito scoperti nel Granchio Paguro" (1775) that may predate Fabricius' work. [Giovanni Antonio] Scopoli's successor at University of Pavia is Brusatti, previously Professor of Chemistry at the Theresian College in Vienna.

Contributor:
The Linnean Society of London