Shigeyasu Tokunaga
Shigeyasu Tokunaga | |
---|---|
徳永重康 | |
Born | Shigeyasu Yoshiwara (吉原重康) 20 August 1874[1] |
Died | 8 February 1940[1] | (aged 65)
Nationality | Japanese |
Known for | Palaeontology |
Parents |
Shigeyasu Tokunaga | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Japanese name | |||||||||||
Hiragana | とくなが しげやす | ||||||||||
Shinjitai | 徳永重康 | ||||||||||
|
Shigeyasu Tokunaga (徳永重康) (1874–1940) was a Japanese zoologist, geologist, and palaeontologist.[2] His family name by birth was Yoshiwara (吉原) and some of his papers were published under this name.[2]
Biography
[edit]Shigeyasu Tokunaga was born in Atago, Tokyo on 20 August 1874 (Meiji 7).[1] His father was a private secretary to the Shimazu clan, while his paternal grandfather had served the Satsuma Domain in Edo.[2] His maternal grandfather was the pharmacologist Shibata Shōkei , his maternal uncle the chemist Shibata Yūji .[2]
In 1894, Shigeyasu enrolled as a student in the Department of Zoology at the Imperial University, Tokyo, where he also attended lectures and classes in the Department of Geology.[2] As a graduate student at Tokyo Imperial University, he studied under Bunjirō Kotō, Yokoyama Matajirō , and Jinbo Kotora , among others.[2]
His 1902 paper coauthored with Jūzō Iwasaki (岩崎重三) on the fossil skull[3] to which in 1914 they would give the name Desmostylus japonicus[4] was the first description of a Japanese Miocene mammal.[5]: 314 He went on to conduct geological surveys of Karafuto, the Ryūkyū Islands, Taiwan, Korea, and China, with coal a particular specialism.[1][2] From 1910 he was professor in the Faculty of Science and Engineering at Waseda University.[2] In 1936 he became chairman of the Paleontological Society of Japan and in 1937 of the Geological Society of Japan .[1]
Tokunaga was a devotee of Noh: he studied under the sōke of the Hōshō school and performed on stage over three hundred times, particularly in plays of the fourth and fifth categories, appearing in later life also in elderly female roles in plays including Sotoba Komachi.[1][2] His wife edited volumes of tanka, while their eldest son Tokunaga Yasumoto was a specialist in Hungarian literature and professor at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.[2] Tokunaga died on 8 February 1940 (Shōwa 15).[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h Tokunaga, Shigemoto (1985). 徳永重康小伝 [Life of Dr. Shigeyasu Tokunaga]. Journal of Geography (Chigaku Zasshi) (in Japanese). 94 (3): 194–196. doi:10.5026/jgeography.94.3_194.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ōmori, Masae [in Japanese] (2007). 徳永重康一動物学科に籍を置き地質学を専攻した異彩の研究者一 [Dr. Tokunaga Shigeyasu: Prodigy geologist graduated the course of zoological sciences of the Tokyo Imp. Univ.]. Earth Science (Chikyū Kagaku) (in Japanese). 61 (1): 73–75. doi:10.15080/agcjchikyukagaku.61.1_73.
- ^ Yoshiwara, Shigeyasu; Iwasaki, Jūzō (1902). "Notes on a New Fossil Mammal". Journal of the College of Science, Imperial University of Tokyo. 16 (6): 1–13.
- ^ Tokunaga, Shigeyasu; Iwasaki, C. (1914). "Notes on Desmostylus japonicus". The Journal of the Geological Society of Japan. 21 (255): 33. doi:10.5575/geosoc.21.255_33.
- ^ Tomida Yukimitsu; Nakaya Hideo; Saegusa Haruo; Miyata Kazunori; Fukuichi Akira (2013). "Miocene Land Mammals and Stratigraphy of Japan". In Wang Xiaoming; Flynn, Lawrence J.; Fortelius, Mikael (eds.). Fossil Mammals of Asia: Neogene Biostratigraphy and Chronology. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 314–333. doi:10.7312/columbia/9780231150125.003.0012. ISBN 978-0-231-15012-5.