Tolmachev, A. I.

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Tolmachev, A. I.
Other forms of name
Tolmachev, Aleksandr Innokentʹevich
Tolmatchev, A. I
Tʻo-erh-ma-chʻiao-fu
Date of birth
1903-09-21
Date of death
1979-11-16
Occupation
Biologists
Associated Language
rus
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 79256236
Wikidata: Q1976970
Library of congress: n 80135269
Sources of Information
  • His Severnye poli︠a︡rnye strany, 1935.
  • Arkticheskai︠a︡ flora SSSR, 1983:t.p. (A. I. Tolmacheva; obit.)
  • Adresnai︠a︡ kniga chlenov Vsesoi︠u︡znogo botanicheskogo ob-va, 1958:p. 118 (Tolmachev, Aleksandr Innokentʹevich; b. 1903; dokt. biol. nauk; head, Kafedra vysshykh rasteniĭ, Leningradskiĭ un-t, 1925- )
  • Info. converted from 678, 2012-10-02(b. 1903)
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Wikipedia description:

Alexandr Innokentevich Tolmatchew, also transliterated Tolmachev (Russian: Александр Иннокентьевич Толмачёв) was a twentieth century Russian and Soviet botanist and phytogeographer who was a leading expert in the flora of Russia's Arctic. He is the editor of the important multi-volume set Flora Of The Russian Arctic - A Critical Review Of The Vascular Plants Occurring In The Arctic Region Of The Former Soviet Union, edited by J. G. Packer and translated into English by G. C. D. Griffiths. Tolmatchew was an expert in the family Juncaceae, and the West Siberian species Luzula tolmatchewii (now called Luzula nivalis) was named after him by Russian Arctic and subarctic botanist Vladimir Borisovich Kuvaev. He was also an expert in some areas of the Brassicaceae (mustard) family, the Caryophyllaceae (carnation) family, the Papaveraceae (poppy) family and the Ranunculaceae (buttercup) family. Tolmatchew had broad interests in the natural history of the Arctic including its insects, birds and soils. He was appointed head of the USSR's Academy of Sciences Office for the Studies of the Northern Areas in Arkhangelsk in 1939 after serving for a few years as head of its botanical section. He transferred during World War II to the Stalinbad USSR Academy of Sciences offices in Tajikistan, then worked in the early 1950s in the Sakhalin office of the USSR Academy of Sciences, before returning to and settling in Leningrad. Tomatchew is the son of Russian and Siberian mammoth hunter and paleobotanist Innokenty Pablovich Tolmachoff, who immigrated to the United States in 1918 in the company of American inventor Vladimir K. Zworykin. The difference in spelling of the surnames is due to the time of transliteration, as the son remained in the Soviet Union after his father's emigration.

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