Document information
Physical location:
Acc. 541, AN 3, 271/1887, Surveyor General's Department, State Records Office of WA, Perth. 87.01.25Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Henry Ranford, 1887-01-25. R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells (eds), Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, <https://vmcp.rbg.vic.gov.au/id/87-01-25>, accessed April 21, 2025
1
MS annotation: '5 Feb'.
The plants, which you so kindly collected, dear Mr Ranford, were brought to me yesterday
by Mr Nyulasy, and I beg to send you herewith the list of names,
as you may wish perhaps to append it to your report. It is delightful, gradually to
see the vast extent of Australia also phytologically explored, and it is a great credit
to your honorable chief, that he fostered this line of extra-researches also in his
Department, and that his officers are interested in this work also
2
List not found.
West Australia is the richest part of Australia in numerical amounts of different
species of plants, and large additions to the records will have to be made yet, while
surveys and settlements proceed. I wish very much, that your colony and South-Australia
would combine, to send Mr Giles
out, to explore the country N. W. of Lake Amadeus,
where large tracts are likely to yield a revenue to the two colonies; and it seems
a pity, that such country should remain unknown and so long be withheld from utilisation.
If each of the two colonies, who are directly interested in this, would grant £500,
the exploration could be carried out
this
season, as Sir Thomas Elder with his usual generosity would likely give the loan of
Camels. Could you kindly bring this proposition under the favorable notice of the
W.A. Government?
It would save S. A. & W. A. much expense, sooner or later to be incurred anyhow.
When you write to the Hon. John Forrest, pray, give him my best salutation.
3
Ernest Giles.
4
NT.
5
Could you … Government?
has been underlined.
6
The WA Government considered M's proposal but decided not to take it up; see M. Fraser
to M, 7 March 1887, and J. Brooking to M, 10 March 1887. See also postscript to M to J. Brooking, 20 March 1887.
As you so thoughtfully ask for suggestions, how collecting of plants during the Survey
Expeditions might be made most valuable for science, I would beg to observe, that
the aim should be, to get together
as many different
species as ever possible; the minutest plants count for science-purposes as much as
the largest, the insignificantly looking as much as the showy. Then
fruiting
specimens are as valuable as flowering ones, and often more so. Waterplants should
also be included; indeed from regions, not yet carefully traversed by Botanists,
any
kind of plant is valuable for record of locality. To expedite drying plants, put into
sheets of papers, they (plants and paper) should be spread in thin sets on the air, and the sets occasionally
halved
, which brings the wet inside outside, and dry outside inside quickly. On Sundays
the specimens (so far as dry) can be closely packed, to get much of the paper empty
again and each parcel be kept by itself, probably not too large to be sent by successive
mails.
Regardfully your
Ferd. von Mueller