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Charles Chilton (1860–1929) was a New Zealand zoologist, the first rector to be appointed in Australasia [1], and the first person to be awarded a D.Sc. degree in New Zealand [2]. Chilton was born on 27 September 1860 in England (at Little Marstone, Pencombe [3], near Leominster, Herefordshire [4]), but emigrated with his family to New Zealand in 1862. They settled on a farm at East Eyreton, North Canterbury [5]. He was troubled by his hips from an early age, and had his left leg amputated, using an artificial leg and a crutch thereafter [2]. He entered Canterbury College in 1875 as an unmatriculated student, and matriculated three years later. In 1881, he gained an M.A., with first class honours, having been taught by Frederick Wollaston Hutton, who inspired him to take up biology, especially the study of crustaceans, which had been little studied in New Zealand up to that time [4]. Chilton's first scientific publication followed that same year, when he described three new species of crustacean (two crabs and one isopod) from Lyttelton Harbour and Lake Pupuke [6]. He surprised the scientific world later that year by describing four species of amphipod and isopod from groundwaters at the family farm in Eyreton [7][8]. He went on to discover the isopod Phreatoicus typicus in the same location [9], the first example ever described of the suborder Phreatoicidea [7], the "earliest derived isopod[s]" [10]. Chilton gained the first B.Sc. degree from the University of New Zealand in 1887 [4], and married in 1888 [3]. In 1893, he gained the first D.Sc. awarded in New Zealand, but in 1895, the family moved to Edinburgh, where Chilton studied medicine in an attempt to improve his career. He specialised in ophthalmic surgery, working at The Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, before travelling to study at Heidelberg, Vienna and London in 1900. In 1901, he returned to New Zealand and in 1903 took on the Chair of Biology at the University of Canterbury. From 1904 to 1911, the Chilton family lived at Llanmaes, a house built by Francis Petre in central Christchurch [1]. In 1915, Frank Chilton, the couple's only child, a second-year medical student and a lieutenant in the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, was killed in the Battle of Gallipoli [5]. Charles Chilton became rector of Christchurch University College in 1921, the first time such a post had been granted in Australia or New Zealand [3]. Chilton died on 25 October 1929 of a sudden attack of pneumonia, before he could collect his life's work into a single monograph [3]. He had published 130 papers on crustaceans, mostly amphipods, isopods and decapods, from all around the world, but especially from New Zealand, subterranean and sub-Antarctic waters [3]. [edit] See also[edit] References
Categories: New Zealand zoologists | Carcinologists | 1860 births | 1929 deaths | New Zealand amputees | People from Herefordshire | People from Canterbury, New Zealand | University of Otago alumni | University of Canterbury faculty | Alumni of the University of Edinburgh | Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders officers |
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