Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Kintarô Okamura
Japanese botanist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Kintaro Okamura (岡村 金太郎, Okamura Kintarō; May 5, 1867 - August 21, 1935) was a Japanese botanist and educationalist (1867 - 1935).
He is the author of important studies about seaweeds. He's also well known for his educational books collection, the Ohraimono.
Okamura is the editor of two exsiccatae, namely An Album of Japanese Bryophyta and Algae Japonicae exsiccatae.[1][2]
Remove ads
Bibliography
- Illustrations of the Marine Algae of Japan. Keigyosha. 1900. OCLC 68692846.
- Nihon sōrui meii (in Japanese). Tōkyō: Keigyōsha. 1902. OCLC 15660662.
- Icones of Japanese algae (in English and Japanese). Okamura Kintarō. 1907. OCLC 6269718. - published between 1907 and 1937, Japanese text with English summary. Total 10 volumes were bound to seven. Reprint in 2016.
- "Some littoral diatoms of Japan". Report of the Imperial Fisheries Institute. 3 (4). Tokyo. 1911. OCLC 38025846.
- Ōraimono bunrui mokuroku (in Japanese) (2 ed.). Tōkyō: Keimeikai Jimusho. 1925.
- The distribution of marine algae in Pacific waters. 1932.
- "On Gelidium and Pterocladia of Japan". Journal of the Imperial Fisheries Institute. 29 (2). Imperial Fisheries Institute. 1934.
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads