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National Museum of Natural History



National Museum of Natural History

Metro: Place Monge

Arrondissement: 5eme

Go Here for Great Hotel Discounts in this Area

Map of the Area

The National Museum of Natural History, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, was formally founded on June 10, 1793, during the French Revolution.

Its origins lie, however, in the Jardin Royal des Plantes Médicinales, the Royal Garden of Medicinal Plants, created by King Louis XIII in 1635, which was directed and run by the royal physicians.

The royal proclamation of the boy-king Louis XV on March 31, 1718, removed its medical function, enabling the garden, which became known simply as the Jardin du Roi, the King's Garden, to focus on natural history.

For much of the eighteenth century (1739–1788), the garden was under the direction of Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, one of the leading naturalists of the Enlightenment, bringing international fame and prestige to the establishment.

Incorporated as the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, the National Museum of Natural History, in 1793, it continued to flourish over the next century, particularly under the direction of chemist Michel Eugène Chevreul. It then rivaled the University of Paris in scientific research.

A decree on December 12, 1891 ended this phase, returning the museum to an emphasis on natural history.

After receiving financial autonomy in 1907, it began a new phase of growth, opening facilities throughout France during the inter-war years.

In recent decades, it has concentrated its research and education efforts on the effects of human exploitation of the environment.

The museum has as its mission both research and public diffusion of knowledge. It is organized into seven research and three diffusion departments.

These research departments are:

  • Classification and Evolution
  • Regulation, Development, and Molecular Diversity
  • Aquatic Environments and Populations
  • Ecology and Biodiversity Management
  • History of the Earth
  • Men, Nature, and Societies
  • Prehistory

The departments for public information are:

The museum includes sites throughout France, including the original location at the Jardin des Plantes, the Garden of Plants, in the fifth arrondissement of Paris (métro Place Monge).

The galleries there include:

  • Gallery of Mineralogy and Geology
  • The Gallery of Comparative Anatomy and Paleontology
  • The Grand Gallery of Evolution (Grande Galerie de l'évolution)

The museum's Menagerie is also located here.

The Museum of Man, the Musée de l'Homme, located in the Palais de Chaillot, houses displays in ethnography and physical anthropology, including artifacts, fossils and other objects.

Two zoos, the Parc Zoologique de Paris (also known as the Zoo de Vincennes), in the Bois de Vincennes in the 12th arrondissement, and the Parc Zoologique de Clères, at a medieval manor in Clères (Seine-Maritime), are included as part of this museum.

For more information, visit the National Museum of Natural History website.

Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon (September 7, 1707 – April 16, 1788) was a French naturalist, mathematician, biologist, cosmologist and author.

Buffon's views influenced the next two generations of naturalists, including Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and Charles Darwin.

Buffon is best remembered for his great work, "Histoire Naturelle, Générale et Particulière" (1749-1788: in 36 volumes, 8 additional volumes published after his death by Lacepede).

It included everything known about the natural world up until that date. In it, Buffon considered the similarities between humans and apes and the possibility of a common ancestry.

Those who assisted him in the production of this great work included Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton. Buffon's work is considered to have greatly influenced modern ecology.

The problem of Buffon's Needle in probability theory is named in his honor.

In, "Les Epoques de la Nature" (1778) Buffon discussed the origins of the solar system, speculating that the planets had been created by comets colliding with the sun.

He also suggested that the age of the earth was much greater than the 6,000 years proclaimed by the church.

Based on the cooling rate of iron, he calculated that the age of the earth was 75,000 years. For this he was condemned by the Catholic Church in France and his books were burned.

Despite his many brilliant insights, he is also known for expounding the theory that nature in the New World was inferior to that of Eurasia.

He argued that the Americas were lacking in large and powerful creatures, and that even the people were far less virile than their European counter parts.

He ascribed this to the marsh odors and the dense forests of the continent.

He was born at Montbard, Côte d'Or. His father, Benjamin Leclerc, was the Lord of Dijon and Montbard. He attended Jesuit College from the age of ten, and then Angers University. He began studying law, but soon began to concentrate on his twin interests of mathematics and science.

He was forced to leave university after becoming involved in a duel, and set off on a grand tour of Europe, returning when his father's remarriage threatened his inheritance.

He first made his mark in the field of mathematics and in Sur le Jeu de Franc-Carreau he introduced differential and integral calculus into probability theory. During this period he corresponded with the Swiss mathematician, Gabriel Cramer.

His translations of works by Isaac Newton and Stephen Hales' vegetable statistics into French heightened his interest in biology.

He moved to Paris, making the acquaintance of Voltaire and other intellectuals.

He joined the French Academy of Sciences at the age of 27. He was Keeper of the Jardin du Roi (later Jardin des Plantes) in Paris from 1739.

During his period in charge he converted it from the King's garden to a research center and museum, and the park was considerably enlarged, with the addition of many trees and plants from around the world.

He was created Comte de Buffon in 1773. He died in Paris 1788.

Buffon performed one of the most comprehensive series of tests that had been undertaken at the time on the mechanical properties of wood.

Included were a series of tests to compare the properties of small clear specimens with those of large members.

After carefully testing more than 1,000 small specimens and being extremely careful to ensure that the specimens contained no knots or other defects, Buffon concluded that it was not possible to predict the properties of full-size timbers containing defects from tests of small specimens, and he began a series of tests on full-size structural members.

His conclusion that tests of small specimens (without further adjustment) cannot be used to predict the properties of full-size members raised a question that was to continue into the 20th century.

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