Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)
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Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)
Summary
Siboga Expedition (1899-1900) is a research expedition[1]. Siboga Expedition (1899-1900) draws 5 Wikipedia views per month (research_expedition category, ranking #55 of 114).[2]
Key Facts
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s field of work was zoology[3].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s field of work was botany[4].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s field of work was geology[5].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s field of work was hydrography[6].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s field of work was algae[7].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900) is in the country of Dutch East Indies[8].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s route map is recorded as De route der Siboga expeditie.jpg[9].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s route map is recorded as Karte Siboga-Expedition.jpg[10].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s image is recorded as COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Zeilvis (Histiopterus orientalis of mal. ikan layer) 2.68 m. lang gevangen aan boord van het schip H.M. Siboga te Banda TMnr 10006545.jpg[11].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s instance of is recorded as research expedition[12].
- Hr.Ms. Siboga is named after Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)[13].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 264574527[14].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 1550145856972022920644[15].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s Commons category is recorded as Siboga Expedition[16].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s archives at is recorded as Naturalis Biodiversity Center[17].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s archives at is recorded as Naturalis Biodiversity Center[18].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s archives at is recorded as National Museum of World Cultures[19].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s archives at is recorded as University of Amsterdam[20].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s archives at is recorded as Stadsarchief Amsterdam[21].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s country of origin is recorded as Netherlands[22].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s start time is recorded as +1899-03-07T00:00:00Z[23].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s end time is recorded as +1900-02-26T00:00:00Z[24].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09ggt1v[25].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s participant is recorded as Max Wilhelm Carl Weber[26].
- Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s participant is recorded as Anna Weber-van Bosse[27].
Body
Leadership
Siboga Expedition (1899-1900)'s director / manager is recorded as Max Wilhelm Carl Weber[28].
Industry
Fields of work include zoology[3], a branch of biology[29]; botany[4], an academic discipline[30]; geology[5], a branch of science[31]; hydrography[6], an academic discipline[32]; and algae[7], an organisms known by a particular common name[33].
Why It Matters
Siboga Expedition (1899-1900) draws 5 Wikipedia views per month (research_expedition category, ranking #55 of 114).[2] Siboga Expedition (1899-1900) has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34]