Johann Karl (or Carl) August (Friedrich Wilhelm) Müller (16 December 1818 in Allstedt, Saxony – 9 February 1899, Halle, Saxony) was a German bryologist and science popularizer.[1]
Karl Müller | |
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Born | (1818-12-16)December 16, 1818 Allstedt, Saxony, Kingdom of Prussia |
Died | February 9, 1899(1899-02-09) (aged 80) Halle (Saale), Kingdom of Prussia |
Nationality | German |
Alma mater | University of Halle |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Bryology |
Prior to 1843 he worked as a pharmacist at several locations in Germany (Kranichfeld, Jever, Detmold and Blankenburg am Harz),[2] followed by studies in botany at the University of Halle (1843 to 1846). In 1843 he became an assistant editor of Botanische Zeitung. Together with Otto Ule and Emil Adolf Rossmässler, Müller founded the Die Natur which remained for decades the flagship journal of popular science in Germany. He authored several books to reach lay audiences in his attempt to spread an aesthetically imbued image of nature.[3]
During his career he amassed a moss herbarium consisting of 12,000 bryological species.[2] Pyrrhobryum parramattense is one of the many species he described.[4] In 1898, Müller was a elected a member of the Leopoldina science academy.[5]
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