Timeline of zoology


This is a chronologically organized listing of notable zoological events and discoveries.

Ancient world

  • 28000 BC. Cave paintings in Southern France and northern Spain depict animals such as mammoths in a stylized fashion.
  • 12000–8000 BC. Bubalus Period creation of rock art in the Central Sahara depicting a range of animals including elephants, antelopes, rhinoceros and catfish.
  • 10000 BC. Humans domesticated dogs, pigs, sheep, goats, fowl, and other animals in Europe, northern Africa and the Near East.
  • 6500 BC. The aurochs, ancestors of domestic cattle, were domesticated in the next two centuries if not earlier. This was the last major animal to be tamed as a source of milk, meat, power, and leather in the Old World.
  • 3500 BC. Sumerian animal-drawn wheeled vehicles and plows were developed in Mesopotamia, the region called the "Fertile Crescent." Irrigation was probably done using animal power. Since Sumer had no natural defenses, armies with mounted cavalry and chariots became important which increased the importance of equines.
  • 2000 BC. Domestication of the silkworm in China.
  • 1100 BC. Won Chang, first of the Zhou emperors, stocked his imperial zoological garden with deer, goats, birds, and fish from many parts of the world. The emperor also enjoyed sporting events with the use of animals.
  • 850 BC. Homer wrote the epics Iliad and Odyssey, both of them containing some correct observations on bees and fly maggots, while using animals as monsters and metaphors. Both epics refer to mules.
  • 610 BC. Anaximander was a student of Thales of Miletus. He was taught that the first life was formed by spontaneous generation in the mud. Later animals came into being by transmutations, left the water, and reached dry land. Man was derived from lower animals, probably aquatic. His writings, especially his poem On Nature, were read and cited by Aristotle and other later philosophers, but are lost now.
  • 563? BC. Buddha had gentle ideas on the treatment of animals. He said that animals are held to have intrinsic worth, not just the values they derive from their usefulness to man.
  • 500 BC. Empedocles of Agrigentum reportedly rid a town of malaria by draining nearby swamps. He proposed the theory of the four humors and a natural origin of living things.
  • 500 BC. Xenophanes, a disciple of Pythagoras, first recognized fossils as animal remains and inferred that their presence on mountains indicated the latter had once been beneath the sea. "If horses or oxen had hands and could draw or make statues, horses would represent the forms of gods as horses, oxen as oxen." Galen revived interest in fossils that had been rejected by Aristotle, and the speculations of Xenophanes were again viewed with favor.
  • 470 BC. Democritus of Abdera made dissections of many animals and humans. He was the first Greek philosopher-scientist to propose a classification of animals, dividing them into blooded animals and bloodless animals. He also held that lower animals had perfected organs and that the brain was the seat of thought.
  • 460 BC. Hippocrates, the "Father of Medicine," used animal dissections to advance human anatomy.
  • 440 BC. Herodotus of Halikarnassos treated exotic fauna in his Historia, but his accounts are often based on tall tales. He explored the Nile, but much of ancient Egyptian civilization had already lost to living memory by his time.
  • 427 BC. Plato held that animals existed to serve man, but they should not be mistreated because this would lead people to mistreat others. Others who echoed this opinion are St. Thomas Aquinas, Immanuel Kant, and Albert Schweitzer.
  • 384 BC. Aristotle's books Historia Animalium, De Partibus Animalium, and De Generatione Animalium set the zoological stage for centuries. He emphasized the value of direct observation, recognized law and order in biological phenomena, and derived conclusions inductively from observations. He believed that there was a natural process of animals that ran from simple to complex. He made advances in marine biology, basing his writings on keen observation and rational interpretation as well as conversations with local Lesbos fishermen for two years, beginning in 344 BC. His account of male protection of eggs by the barking catfish was scorned for centuries until Louis Agassiz confirmed Aristotle's description.
  • 323 BC. Alexander the Great collected animals when he was not busy conquering the known world. He is credited with the introduction of the peacock into Europe.
  • 70 BC. Publius Vergilius Maro was a famous Roman poet. His poems Bucolics and Georgics hold much information on animal husbandry and farm life. His Aeneid has many references to the zoology of his time.
  • 36 BC. Marcus Terentius Varro wrote De Re Rustica, a treatise that includes apiculture. He also treated the problem of sterility in the mule and recorded a rare instance in which a fertile mule was bred.
  • 50. Lucius Annaeus Seneca, tutor to Roman emperor Nero, maintained that animals have no reason, just instinct, a "stoic" position.
  • 77. Pliny the Elder wrote his Natural History in 37 volumes. This work is a catch-all of zoological folklore, superstitions, and some good observations.
  • 79. Pliny the Younger, nephew of Pliny the Elder, inherited his uncle's notes and wrote on beekeeping.
  • 100. Plutarch stated that animals' behavior is motivated by reason and understanding.
  • 131. Galen of Pergamum, physician to Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius, wrote on human anatomy from dissections of animals. His texts were used for hundreds of years, gaining the reputation of infallibility.
  • 200 c. Various compilers in post-classical and medieval times added to the Physiologus, the major book on animals for hundreds of years. Animals were believed to exist to serve man, if not as food or slaves then as moral examples.
  • Early third century. Composition of De Natura Animalium by Claudius Aelianus.

Middle Ages

  • 600. Isidorus Hispalensis wrote Origines sive Etymologiae, an encyclopedic compendium of ancient knowledge including information on animals that served until the rediscovery of Aristotle and Pliny. Full of errors, it nevertheless was influential for hundreds of years. He also wrote De Natura Rerum.
  • 781. Al-Jahiz, a scholar at Basra, wrote on the influence of environment on animals.
  • 901. Horses came into wider use in those parts of Europe where the three-field system produces grain surpluses for feed, but hay-fed oxen were more economical, if less efficient, in terms of time and labor and remained almost the sole source of animal power in southern Europe, where most farmers continued to use the two-field system.
  • 1225–1244. Thomas of Cantimpré‚ wrote Liber de Natura Rerum, a major 13th-century encyclopedia.
  • 1244–1248. Frederick II von Hohenstaufen wrote De Arte Venandi cum Avibus as a practical guide to ornithology.
  • 1244. Vincentius Bellovacensis wrote Speculum Quadruplex Naturale, Doctrinale, Morale, Historiale, a major encyclopedia. This work comprises three huge volumes, of 80 books and 9,885 chapters.
  • 1254–1323. Marco Polo provided information on Asiatic fauna, revealing new animals to Europeans. "Unicorns" were reported from southern China, but fantastic animals were otherwise not included.
  • 1255–1270. Albertus Magnus of Cologne wrote De Animalibus. He promoted Aristotle but also included new material on the perfection and intelligence of animals, especially bees.
  • 1304–1309. Petrus de Crescentii wrote Ruralum Commodorum, a practical manual for agriculture with many accurate observations on insects and other animals. Apiculture was discussed at length.
  • 1492. Christopher Columbus arrives in the New World. New animals soon begin to overload European zoology. Columbus is said to have introduced cattle, horses, and eight pigs from the Canary Islands to Hispaniola in 1493, giving rise to virtual devastation of that and other islands. Pigs were often set ashore by sailors to provide food on the ship's later return. Feral populations of hogs were often dangerous to humans.
  • 1519–1520. Bernal Diaz del Castillo, chronicler of Cortez's conquest of Mexico, commented on the zoological gardens of Aztec ruler Montezuma, a marvel with parrots, rattlesnakes, and other animals.
  • 1523. Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés, appointed official historiographer of the Indies in 1523, wrote Sumario de la Natural Historia delas Indias. He was the first to describe many New World animals, such as the tapir, opossum, manatee, iguana, armadillo, anteaters, sloth, pelican, and hummingbirds.

Modern world

  • 1551–1555. Pierre Belon wrote L'Histoire Naturelle des Estranges Poissons Marins and La Nature et Diversité des Poissons. This latter work included 110 animal species and offered many new observations and corrections to Herodotus. L'Histoire de la nature des oyseaux avec leurs descriptions et naïfs portraicts was his picture book, with improved animal classification and accurate anatomical drawings. In this he published a man's and a bird's skeleton side by side to show the resemblance. He discovered an armadillo shell in a market in Syria, showing how Muslims were distributing the finds from the New World.
  • 1551. Conrad Gessner wrote Historia animalium and gained renown. This work, although uncritically compiled in places, was consulted for over 200 years. He also wrote Icones animalum and Thierbuch.
  • 1552 Edward Wotton published De Differentiis Animalium, a work that influenced Gessner.
  • 1554–1555. Guillaume Rondelet wrote Libri de piscibus marinis and Universe aquatilium historia. He gathered vernacular names in hope of being able to identify the animal in question. He did go to print with discoveries that disagreed with Aristotle.
  • 1578. Jean de Lery was a member of the French colony at Rio de Janeiro. He published Voyage en Amerique avec la description des animaux et plantes de ce pays with observations on the local fauna.
  • 1585. Thomas Harriot was a naturalist with the first attempted English colony in North America, on Roanoke Island, North Carolina. His Brief and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia describes the black bear, gray squirrel, hare, otter, opossum, raccoon, skunk, Virginia and mule deer, turkeys, and horseshoe crab.
  • 1589. José de Acosta wrote De Natura Novi Orbis Libri duo and Historia Natural y Moral de las Indias, describing many animals from the New World previously unknown to Europeans.

17th century

18th century

19th Century

20th century

1901–1950

1951–2000

21st century