Karl Wilhelm Verhoeff (1867–1945) is a historical figure; there is no current “latest news” about him in the sense of ongoing events. What’s available are biographical and posthumous notes about his life and scientific legacy. If you’d like, I can summarize recent reliable biographical sources and point to where his correspondence and taxonomic work are archived.
What you might want to know
- Who he was: a German zoologist and myriapodologist known for prolific work on millipedes and related groups, with extensive taxonomic descriptions.[2][4]
- Notable life events: born in Soest (1867), earned a zoology doctorate in Bonn (1893), published widely, and died in 1945; his later years were affected by health issues and war-related disruptions.[4][2]
- Legacy: his scientific correspondence and taxonomic materials are part of institutional collections and have been the subject of digitization and transcription projects to preserve biodiversity data.[5][6][7]
If you want, I can:
- Compile a concise, sourced biographical timeline with key publications.
- Highlight where his taxonomic work and correspondence currently reside (e.g., museum collections and digital projects).
- Provide brief citations to the sources above for each fact.
Sources
Verhoeff, Karl W. (Karl Wilhelm), 1867-1945: Einige Mitteilungen über Land-Isopoden. (1901) (page images at HathiTrust) Verhoeff, Karl W. (Karl Wilhelm), 1867-1945: Über die Gonopoden von Odontopyge und eine n.sp.d.G. (1901) (page images at HathiTrust) Verhoeff, Karl W. (Karl Wilhelm), 1867-1945: Ueber die Verfärbung der Coleopteren-Nymphen und Imagines. (Wien, 1897) (page images at HathiTrust) Verhoeff, Karl W. (Karl Wilhelm), 1867-1945: Ueber einige nordafrikanische Chilopoden. (1891) (page...
onlinebooks.library.upenn.eduA considerable amount of biological data is preserved as physical documents, the legacy of former explorers, collectors, researchers, and others. Mobilizing data from handwritten documents has been considered particularly challenging, with well-known cases such as the manual transcription of specimen labels and herbarium sheets by museum staff, or crowdsourced transcription of data card collections through online platforms.Here we present a pipeline of open-source software that can be used...
biss.pensoft.netVerhoeff produced a total of 671 publications. In 1942, he received the Forel Medal and the Forel Prize of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina for his work in the field of Entomology (Sachtleben, 1942).
myriatrix.myspecies.infoBeside a small period between 1900 and 1905, when he was employee at the Zoological Museum of Berlin Verhoeff worked as a private scientist. After his dead on 6th December 1945 his scientific heritage was given to the Zoological State Collection of Bavaria at Munich. In 1962 Gisela Mayermayer published a small book about the life and publications. But up to now, no catalogue of the species described by him or the type material housed in the Zoological State Collection of Bavaria was published.
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