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Blacker-Wood Collections

Heritage

ԳٰǻܳپDz:The Blacker Wood Natural History Collection is one of the largest and most comprehensive collections of natural history works in North America. The collection consists of rare books, manuscripts, archival material, and original artwork relating to vertebrate zoology, in particular ornithology, with significant materials in mammalogy, ichthyology, and comparative anatomy. In addition, the collection holds important works in the history and philosophy of natural history, evolution, botany, zoogeography, and the records of scientific expeditions.

ٱԳ:The collection consists of over 20,000 volumes and over 10,000 pieces of original artwork.

Types of material: Of the 20,000 volumes, the majority are published works, including monographs and periodicals. However, the collection also includes a significant number of manuscript works, which range from field notebooks, journals, and sketches, to original correspondence written by naturalists like Charles Darwin and John Gould.

The collection is also defined by the over 10,000 pieces of original artwork it contains, which include everything from the sketchbooks that precede published works, to in-depth visual studies of bird’s eggs and shells; along with paintings by , Edward Lear, Johannes Keulemans, and Joseph Wolf; and important contributions to ornithology by women, such as our  by Elizabeth Gwillim.

Blacker Wood is also home to a number of archival collections, such as the papers of the , and the Montreal Zoological Society.

Collection highlights: The collection includes many of the landmark publications in natural history, such as early editions of the works of Albertus Magnus, Conrad Gesner, Ulisse Aldrovandi, and Pierre Belon. One of Blacker Wood’s most impressive and unique items is : a work created in 1618 by the chief gardener of the state of Milan, in which all 156 pages of illustrations are made entirely of bird feathers - making these the oldest biological bird specimens in existence today.

The collection is supplemented by many noteworthy illustrational works, such as the 18th century  of 938 watercolour paintings of birds and animals; a series sketchbooks by René-Gabriel de Rabié documenting the 18th century wildlife of St. Domingo (Haiti); an exquisite large-format edition of Merian Sibylla Merian’s Histoire générale des insectes de Surinam et de toute l'Europe (1771); Samuel Pepys's hand-coloured copy of John Ray's The Ornithology of Francis Willughby (1678); and a first edition of John James Audubon's Birds of America (1827).

Further manuscript highlights include Joseph Banks’ field notes from his voyage to Newfoundland aboard the HMS Niger, along with a meticulous record of the  kept by a British Army captain in the early 19th century. The collection also contains quite a number of , including the original publication in the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London (1858), of the talk given by Darwin and Alfred Russell Wallace, in which they first discuss their theory of natural selection.

Date range: The collection includes material dating from the medieval period right up to the 20th century. Among the oldest works are Arabic manuscripts dating to the 13th century, and Persian manuscripts of the 15th century; along with a number of incunables, such as the Buch der Natur (1497), which contains the earliest printed illustrations of animals in the Western world.

Բܲ/:The collection has published materials in English, Latin, French, Russian, German, Scandinavian and other European languages, Middle Eastern languages, as well as some Asian language material.

Geographic coverage: European countries are well-represented, with a strong focus on Britain. Significant collections of Persian, Arabic, and Indian material, along with works from Central and South America.

ʰDZԲԳ:The collection was established in 1920 by Dr. Casey Wood as the Emma Shearer Wood Library of Ornithology. The Blacker Library of Zoology was established separately in 1920, and in the early 1950s the two collections were amalgamated. The majority of the holdings were purchased for the library by Dr. Wood before his death in 1942, however the collection has continued to be added to ever since.

Access to the collection: Approximately 85% of the Blacker Wood collection is catalogued, and can be requested by researchers via the McGill Library . Uncatalogued material may be requested by contacting the curator. A number of digital collections include material from Blacker Wood, providing access to some digital surrogates: ;;;;;;.

Access

The main collections were integrated with the Life Sciences Library in 2005, with the rare collections housed in Rare Books and Special Collections.

Status

Active

Curator

Lauren Williams, Liaison Librarian

lauren.williams [at] mcgill.ca

514-398-1364

McLennan Library Building
3459 McTavish Street
Montreal, Quebec H3A 0C9

Authority

Dean of Libraries

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