The Royal Society of South Australia (RSSA) is a learned society whose interest is in science, particularly, but not only, of South Australia. The major aim of the society is the promotion and diffusion of scientific knowledge, particularly in relation to natural sciences. The society was originally the Adelaide Philosophical Society, founded on 10 January 1853. The title "Royal" was granted by Queen Victoria in October 1880 and the society changed its name to its present name at this time. It was incorporated in 1883. It also operates under the banner Science South Australia.

History

Royal Society of South Australia building on North Terrace, behind the SA Museum.

The origins of the Royal Society are related to the South Australian Literary and Scientific Association, founded in August 1834, before the colonisation of South Australia, and whose book collection eventually formed the kernel of the State Library of South Australia.

The Society had its origins in a meeting at the Stephens Place home of J. L. Young (founder of the Adelaide Educational Institution) on the evening of 10 January 1853. Members inducted to the new "Adelaide Philosophical Society" were Messrs. John Brown, John Howard Clark, Davy, Doswell, Charles Gregory Feinaigle, Gilbert, Gosse, Hamilton, D. Hammond, W. B. Hays, Jones, Kay, Mann, W. W. R. Whitridge, Williams, Wooldridge and John Lorenzo Young. J. Howard Clark was elected secretary. On 15 September rules were adopted and His Excellency the Governor Sir Henry Young was elected president, with Benjamin Herschel Babbage and Matthew Moorhouse as vice-presidents. T. D. Smeaton has also been credited with helping found the Society. Its aim was "the diffusion and advancement of the Arts and Sciences", and one of its earliest subjects of discussion was the formation of a museum showing the natural history of the Colony.

At the time of its first Annual General Meeting membership had risen to 35, and in 1859 the Society was incorporated under the South Australian Institute Act. The establishment of the University of Adelaide in 1875 revitalised the Society, which had flagged for some years before.

It received royal patronage, becoming the Royal Society of South Australia late in 1880, following the nomenclature used in other Australian colonies, and perhaps hoping to emulate their success.

The Field Naturalists Society of South Australia was formed as a section of the Society in 1883. In 1943 Constance Eardley became the first woman to be elected to the Council of the Society.

Membership

There are five classes of members:

  • Honorary Fellows
  • Sustaining Fellows
  • Fellows
  • Associate Fellows
  • Student Fellows

Awards and medals

The society awards:

Publications

The RSSA has published the journal Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia since 1879, previously (from 1877–1878) Transactions and proceedings and report of the Philosophical Society of Adelaide. From 2004, the journal partnered with the South Australian Museum in the Southern Scientific Press, amalgamating their two journals. From 2005, the journal has been available in electronic form only, via Taylor & Francis Online.

In June 2020 an annotated list of 95 Australian bird fossils was published in the Transactions, the first such list since 1975, contributing to the documented knowledge of bird extinctions. The list includes three species of huge flamingos from the Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre and Lake Frome areas of South Australia, which were estimated to inhabit the area for 25 million years before becoming extinct about 140,000 years ago, most likely from drought. There were also penguins measuring about 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) tall, which lived between about 60 million and 30 million years ago, dying out in the Oligocene.

List of presidents

Royal Society of South Australia presidents:

TermName
1853–1854Sir Henry Young
1855Benjamin Babbage
1856–1861Sir Richard MacDonnell
1862–1868Sir Dominick Daly
1869–1872James Ferguson
1877Sir William Jervois
1878–1879Ralph Tate
1880–1881Sir Samuel Way
1882Sir Charles Todd
1883H. T. Whittell
1884Sir Horace Lamb
1885Henry Mais
1886–1889Edward Rennie
1889Sir Edward Stirling
1890–1891Thomas Blackburn
1892–1894Ralph Tate (2nd term)
1895–1896Walter Howchin
1897–1899William Lennox Cleland
1900–1903Edward Rennie (2nd term)
1903–1921Sir Joseph Verco
1921Richard Sanders Rogers
1922–1924Robert Henry Pulleine
1925Sir Douglas Mawson
1926Theodore Osborn
1927Frederic Wood Jones
1927–1928Sir John Cleland
1929–1930Leonard Keith Ward
1931Charles Fenner
1932Thomas Harvey Johnston
1933James Arthur Prescott
1934John McConnell Black
1935Thomas Draper Campbell
1936Cecil Madigan
1937Herbert Mathew Hale
1938James Davidson
1939Henry Fry
1940Ralph W. Segnit
1941Sir John Cleland (2nd term)
1942Joseph Garnett Wood
1943William Ternent Cooke
1944Herbert Womersley
1945Sir Douglas Mawson (2nd term)
1946Clarence Sherwood Piper
1947Hugh Christian Trumble
1948D. C. Swan
1949Norman Tindale
1950A. W. Kleeman
1951Bernard Charles Cotton
1952H. G. Andrewartha
1953S. B. Dickinson
1954J. K. Taylor
1955R. V. Southcott
1956C. G. Stephens
1957I. M. Thomas
1958Leslie Wedgwood (Lee) Parkin
1959–1960T. R. N. Lothian
1961R. V. Southcott (2nd term)
1962Nelly Hooper Ludbrook
1963J. T. Hutton
1964Arthur Richard Alderman
1965S.J. Edmonds
1966Brian Daily
1967Hugh Bryan Spencer Womersley
1968K. R. Miles
1969F. J. Mitchell
1970C. B. Wells
1971W. Grant Inglis
1972Helmut Wopfner
1973K. E. Lee
1974G. F. Gross
1975J. W. Holmes
1976Charles Rowland Twidale
1977Bruce Phillip Webb
1978J. J. H. Szent-Ivany
1979John Kynaston Ling
1980Scoresby A. Shepherd
1981Warren Bonython
1982–1983D. W. P. Corbett
1984John S. Womersley
1985–1986Mike Tyler
1987T. D. Scott
1988–1989G. M. E. Mayo
1990–1992N. A. Locket
1992–1994William David (Bill) Williams
1994–1996Margaret M. Davies
1996–1998T. C. R. White
1998–2000Martin Anthony Joseph Williams
2000–2002Neville F. Alley
2002–2004O. W. Wiebkin
2004–2006Rob W. Fitzpatrick
2006–2008Allan Pring
2008–2010John T. Jennings
2010–2012Nicholas J. Souter
2012–2014Craig R. Williams
2014–2016C. Michael Bull
2016–2019John A. Long
2019–2024Sabine Dittmann
2024–PresentWayne Harvey

Verco Medal

The Sir Joseph Verco Medal, also known as the Verco Medal, was established in 1928, with the first medal awarded in 1929. The medal is named in honour of Joseph Verco, who was president from 1903 to 1920.

"The medal shall be awarded for distinguished scientific work published by a Fellow of the Royal Society of South Australia. It is the highest honour that the Society can bestow on one of its Fellows. Only those who have made a significant, outstanding contribution to their field(s) of study receive the award."

Previous winners include:

YearNameSource
1966Arthur Richard Alderman
2004Neville F. Alley
1962Herbert Andrewartha
1996Mike Archer
2011A. Austin
2001R. V. Baudinette
1989Ian Beveridge
1991A.F. Bird
1930John McConnell Black
2003John Bowie
2017Corey Bradshaw
1994P.F. Brownell
2009M. Bull
1933John Burton Cleland
2013Alan Cooper
2015D. Day
1992Patrick De Deckker
1982S. J. Edmonds
1960Hedley Herbert Finlayson
1999Rob Fitzpatrick
1970Martin Glaessner
1979G. F. Gross
1946Herbert Mathew Hale
1978J. W. Holmes
1929Walter Howchin
1976J. T. Hutton
1986W. Grant Inglis
1987R. K. Johns
1935Thomas Harvey Johnston
1990R. T. Lange
1985K. E. Lee
2018Mike Lee
2014John A. Long
1963Nelly Hooper Ludbrook
1945Cecil Madigan
1931Douglas Mawson
2012Brian McGowran
1971Charles P. Mountford
1983K. H. Northcote
1972Leslie Wedgwood (Lee) Parkin
1995P. A. Parsons
1957Clarence Sherwood Piper
1998W. V. Preiss
1938James Arthur Prescott
2002J. R. Prescott
2005Allan Pring
1967L. D. Pryor
1981Rupert William Roye Rutland
2008Scoresby A. Shepherd
2010Mike Smith
1965R. V. Southcott
1961R. L. Specht
1968Reg Sprigg
1959C.G. Stephens
1974P. M. Thomas
1975B. P. Thomson
1956Norman Tindale
1977Charles Rowland Twidale
1980Michael J. Tyler
1955Leonard Keith Ward
1993G. F. Watson
2025Chris H.S. Watts
2000Tom White
2007Martin Anthony Joseph Williams
1988William David (Bill) Williams
1997Joseph Tony Wiskitch
1943Herbert Womersley
1969Hugh Bryan Spencer Womersley
1944Joseph Garnett Wood
1973Helmut Wopfner
1932not awarded
1934not awarded
1936–1937not awarded
1939–1942not awarded
1947–1954not awarded
1958not awarded
1964not awarded
1984not awarded
2006not awarded
2016not awarded
2019–2024not awarded

Notable members

Notable members of the Royal Society of South Australia have included:

See also

Further reading

External links

  • , The Register News-Pictorial (Adelaide, SA), 22 March 1929, p. 13