Jonathan Salt (1759–1815) was a cutler and local naturalist who catalogued plants growing in the Sheffield area. [1] [2]
He created a herbarium between 1773 and 1809, which provided the specimens for his Flora Sheffieldiensis. [3] Although being used extensively by Frederick Arnold Lees in his The Flora of West Yorkshire with a sketch of the climatology and lithology in connection therewith (1888), the catalogue only existed in manuscript form until its publication in The Story of South Yorkshire Botany in 2011. [2]
Lees referenced a number of plants first identified by Salt: [4] Some are listed here:
Jonathan Salt (1759–1815) was a cutler and local naturalist who catalogued plants growing in the Sheffield area. [1] [2]
He created a herbarium between 1773 and 1809, which provided the specimens for his Flora Sheffieldiensis. [3] Although being used extensively by Frederick Arnold Lees in his The Flora of West Yorkshire with a sketch of the climatology and lithology in connection therewith (1888), the catalogue only existed in manuscript form until its publication in The Story of South Yorkshire Botany in 2011. [2]
Lees referenced a number of plants first identified by Salt: [4] Some are listed here: