Royal Society of Queensland
Predecessor | Queensland Philosophical Society |
---|---|
Formation | 1884 |
Purpose | 'Progressing science in Queensland' |
Headquarters | Brisbane, Queensland, Australia |
Membership | Individuals |
President | Dr Ross Hynes |
Website | Official website |
The Royal Society of Queensland was formed in Queensland, Australia in 1884 from the Queensland Philosophical Society, Queensland's oldest scientific institution,[1] with royal patronage granted in 1885.
The aim of the Society is "Progressing science in Queensland". "Science" is interpreted broadly and includes a wide range of learned disciplines that follow scientific method. The Society is a non-partisan, secular, learned society, not an activist lobby group and does not campaign on environmental or planning issues. The Society supports science and scientific endeavour through publication of scientific research, public seminars and other events and maintenance of a substantial scientific library.
The Society is a custodian of scientific tradition and aims to counter the ill-effects of over-specialisation in the academy and shallowness in public debate. Networking between scientists, government, business and the community is a primary activity.
Membership is open to any person interested in the progress of science in Queensland. Although the membership includes a number of eminent and widely respected scientists and public intellectuals, the Society is neither elitist nor exclusive.
The Society hosts a Research Fund, established to sponsor research projects that escape the attention of the mainstream grant programs (such as those of the Australian Research Council). Donations are tax deductible under Australian taxation law.[2]
In 2018 the Society established the Queensland Science Network as an unincorporated collaboration between more than 20 Queensland-focused community-based scientific and naturalists' organisations.[3]
In 2019, the Society, along with co-organisers AgForce (peak body for broadacre agriculture) and NRM Regions Queensland (peak body for the regional natural resource management groups), organised a two-day Dialogue to examine how to transition the broadacre pastoral country (two-thirds of Queensland's area) to sustainability. The Dialogue produced a consensus Rangelands Declaration and a shared commitment to engage in further regional consultations and policy analysis.
Presidents[]
1883-84 | Augustus Charles Gregory | Explorer, Surveyor | |
1884-85 | Joseph Bancroft | Surgeon, Parasitologist | |
1885-86 | Lewis Adolphus Bernays | public servant | |
1886-87 | Albert Norton | Politician, Pastoralist | |
1887-88 | Augustus Charles Gregory | Explorer, Surveyor | |
1888-89 | Charles Walter De Vis | Biologist | |
1889-90 | William Saville-Kent | Marine Biologist | |
1890-91 | Frederick Manson Bailey | Botanist | |
1891 | William Henry Miskin | Lawyer, lepidopterist | |
1891-92 | Albert Norton | Politician, Pastoralist | |
1892-93 | Educationist and scientist[4] | ||
1894 | Robert Logan Jack | Geologist | |
1895 | Walter Taylor | Construction | |
1896 | Joseph Lauterer | Biologist, Doctor, Ethnographer | |
1897 | Microscopist, Bacteriologist[5] | ||
1898 | Sydney Barber Josiah Skertchly | Geologist, Naturalist | |
1899 | Joseph William Sutton | Engineer, Inventor | |
1900 | John Thomson | Army surgeon and colonel | |
1901 | Lawyer, Poet | ||
1902 | John Thomson | unknown | |
1903 | Medicine, Surgeon, Medical technologist[6] | ||
1904 | John Cameron | unknown | |
1905 | Analyst, Food Standards, Public Servant[7] | ||
1906 | unknown | unknown | |
1907 | Alfred Jefferis Turner | Paediatrician, Entomologist | |
1908 | Johannes Christian Brunnich | Chemist | |
1909 | John Frederick Bailey | Botanist | |
1910 | Chemist[8] | ||
1911 | Analyst, Food Standards, Public Servant | ||
1912 | Engineer[9] | ||
1913 | Henry Caselli Richards | Geologist | |
1914 | unknown | ||
1915 | Thomas Harvey Johnston | Biologist, Parasitologist | |
1916 | Ronald Hamlyn-Harris | Entomologist[10] | |
1917 | Agricultural Science, Public Servant | ||
1918 | Arthur Bache Walkom | Palaeobotanist, Museum director | |
1919 | Albert Heber Longman | Naturalist, Museum Curator | |
1920 | unknown | ||
1921 | Cyril Tenison White | Botanist | |
1922 | Henry James Priestley | Mathematician | |
1923 | unknown | unknown | |
1924 | E. O. Marks | Geologist, Ophthalmologist | |
1924-25 | Walter Heywood Bryan | Geologist | |
1925-26 | Roger Hawken | Engineer | |
1926-27 | James Vincent Duhig | Pathologist, Bacteriologist[11] | |
1927-28 | E. J. Goddard | Biologist, Zoologist | |
1928-1929 | Thomas Parnell (scientist) | Physicist | |
1929-30 | J. P. Lowson | Medical Psychologist | |
1930-31 | J.B. Henderson | unknown | |
1931-32 | Desmond A. Herbert | Botanist | |
1932-33 | Thomas Gilbert Henry Jones | Chemist | |
1933-34 | Raphael Cilento | Medicine | |
1934-35 | Engineer | ||
1935-36 | Robert Veitch | unknown | |
1936-37 | Jack Keith Murray | Agricultural science | |
1937-38 | Biochemistry | ||
1938-39 | Henry Caselli Richards | Geologist | |
1939-40 | Albert Heber Longman - also recorded "H.A. Longman" | Naturalist, Museum Curator | |
1940-41 | Frederick William Whitehouse | Geologist | |
1941 | Veterinarian | ||
1942 | Medicine | ||
1943 | Medical doctor | ||
1944 | Entomologist | ||
1945 | Anatomist | ||
1946 | Geologist | ||
1947 | unknown | ||
1948 | Physicist | ||
1949 | Dorothy Hill | Geologist, Palaeontologist | |
1950 | Medicine | ||
1951 | Herbert John Hines | Biochemist | |
1952 | Ian Murray MacKerras | Zoologist | |
1953 | Stanley Thatcher Blake | Botanist | |
1954 | Engineer | ||
1955 | Physicist | ||
1956 | Entomologist, Public Servant | ||
1957 | George Mack | Ornithologist | |
1958 | Elizabeth Nesta Marks | Entomologist | |
1959 | Animal Health | ||
1960 | Alan Knox Denmead | Geologist | |
1961 | Selwyn Everist | unknown | |
1962 | John O'Hagan | Biochemist | |
1963 | Geologist | ||
1964 | Physiologist | ||
1965 | Clive Selwyn Davis | Mathematician | |
1966 | Geologist, Ecologist | ||
1967 | Geography | ||
1968 | Professor | ||
1969 | Professor | ||
1970 | Alan Bartholomai | Geologist, Palaeontologist, Museum Curator | |
1971 | Marine scientist | ||
1972 | Botanist | ||
1973 | Entomologist, Conservationist, Public Servant | ||
1974 | Parasitologist | ||
1975 | Professor | ||
1976 | Veterinarian | ||
1977 | Ecologist | ||
1978-79 | Environmental physicist, Soil science | ||
1979-80 | Anthropologist | ||
1980-81 | R.G. Everson | unknown | |
1981-82 | Botanist | ||
1982-83 | Biologist, phycologist | ||
1983-84 | Geologist | ||
1984-85 | unknown | ||
1985-86 | Ecologist, Public Servant | ||
1986-87 | unknown | ||
1988 | Geologist | ||
1989 | Ecologist, Public Servant | ||
1990 | M.G. Le Grand | unknown | |
1991 | unknown | ||
1992 | unknown | ||
1993 | Chemistry | ||
1994 | Botanist | ||
1995 | Herpetologist, Museum Curator | ||
1995-97 | Geologist | ||
1998-99 | Botanist | ||
2000-01 | Geneticist | ||
2002 | Geneticists | ||
2003 | Julia Playford | Geneticist | |
2004-12 | Craig Walton | Public Servant | |
2013-19 | Ecologist, Policy Analyst | ||
2020 | Ross Hynes | Ecologist |
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Marks, Elizabeth N. (1960). A history of the Queensland Philosophical Society and the Royal Society of Queensland from 1859-1911 (PDF). Brisbane: Royal Society of Queensland. Repr. from Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland; vol. 72 no. 2 (Aug. 1960). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 March 2011. Retrieved 10 August 2012.
- ^ "Research". The Royal Society of Queensland. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
- ^ "Queensland Science Network". Queensland Science Network. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
- ^ Marks, E. N. Shirley, John (1849–1922). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.
- ^ Angus, Beverley M. Pound, Charles Joseph (1866–1946). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
- ^ Leggett, C. A. C. Love, Wilton Wood Russell (1861–1933). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Archived from the original on 10 September 2017.
- ^ Gibbney, H. J. Henderson, John Brownlie (1869–1950). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Archived from the original on 25 January 2017.
- ^ "Chemist who went on to be insect expert". Morpeth Herald. 5 October 2014. Archived from the original on 10 September 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
- ^ "PERSONAL". The Brisbane Courier (18, 912). Queensland, Australia. 29 August 1918. p. 9. Retrieved 10 September 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Marks, E. N. Hamlyn-Harris, Ronald (1874–1953). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Archived from the original on 28 September 2015.
- ^ Leggett, C. A. C. Duhig, James Vincent (1889–1963). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Archived from the original on 10 September 2017.
External links[]
- Royal Society of Queensland
- 1884 establishments in Australia
- Organizations established in 1884
- Science and technology in Queensland
- History of science and technology in Australia
- Learned societies of Australia