Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus' famous book about his new system for classifying plants was called "Systema Naturae". Linnaeus' work led to his becoming known as the father of modern taxonomy.
Swedish botanist, zoologist and physician Carl Limmaeus published at least four known books. They were Systema Naturae, Species Plantarum, Genera Plantarum, and Philosophia Botanica.
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the latin word for nervous system is systema nervosum
to create a universal communication system for organisms and to divide them into groups based off their characteristics to describe them..also to avoid confusion and to know about different types of species and their variations.
its a book writen by Carolus Cinnaeus in 1735
"Systema Naturae" was written by Swedish botanist, zoologist, and physician Carl Linnaeus in 1735. It was a pioneering work that introduced a standardized system for naming and classifying species, known as binomial nomenclature, which is still used in biology today.
Its not provided who discovered but this species was first described by Linnaeus in his Systema naturae in 1758 under its current scientific name.
From Wikipedia it looks like 'Systema Naturae'.
Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus' famous book about his new system for classifying plants was called "Systema Naturae". Linnaeus' work led to his becoming known as the father of modern taxonomy.
Carl von Linné a.k.a. Carolos von Linnaeus named it in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae.
Carolus Linnaeus included kraken as cephalopods with the scientific name Microcosmus in the first edition of his Systema Naturae (1735.)Please note the kraken is a legendary sea monster out of Icelandic/Norse myth and saga.
Swedish botanist, zoologist and physician Carl Limmaeus published at least four known books. They were Systema Naturae, Species Plantarum, Genera Plantarum, and Philosophia Botanica.
σύστημα [systema] is system
Academia Secretorum Naturae was created in 1560.
Carolus Linnaeus included kraken as cephalopods with the scientific name Microcosmus in the first edition of his Systema Naturae (1735); but not the story, Erik Pontoppidan, bishop of Bergen, in his "Natural History of Norway" (Copenhagen, 1752-3) did more, but even before them there were accounts in Icelandic sagas and sea stories.
I believe he is a botanist.AnswerCarolus LinnaeusThe 1735 publication of Systema naturae established the fame of Linnaeus with an organized classification structure for all living things. The binomial system of nomenclature, now the basis for naming and classifying all organisms, was first introduced by Linnaeus in 1749. In his Species plantarum in 1753 Linnaeus attempted to name and describe all known plants, calling each kind a species and assigning to each a two-part Greek or Latin name consisting of the genus (group) name followed by the species name. Many of his names of flowering plants survive with little if any change -- for example, Quercus Alba for white oak. The 1758 edition of Systema naturae extended binomial classification to animals.Above retrieved from Answers.comViper1