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The
14th edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica (1929) notes that
Louis Agassiz was a Swiss-American naturalist and geologist whose
catalog (of all the names applied to all the genera of animals)
had a practical value that can hardly be overestimated. His study
of glaciers was the most important of all his works, which included
Lake Superior (1850) and Contribution to the Natural
History of the United States. As a professor of zoology at
Harvard, he was the ablest scientist America had known. He said,
The book of nature is always open. Strive to interpret what
really exists. His attitude toward Darwinism all his lifetime
was cold and unsympathetic.
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