Emil Bessels
Emil Bessels (2 June 1847 – 30 March 1888) was a German zoologist, entomologist, physician, and Arctic researcher who is best known for his controversial role in the attempted but ill-fated Polaris expedition to the North Pole in 1871. Circumstantial evidence strongly points to Bessels as the most likely suspect in the death of the expedition's commander, American explorer Charles Francis Hall, by arsenic poisoning.
Emil Bessels | |
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Bessels in 1880 | |
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Died | 30 March 1888 40) Stuttgart, Kingdom of Württemberg, German Empire | (aged
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Scientific career | |
Fields | Medicine, entomology, zoology |
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Bessels spent much of his scientific career at the Smithsonian Institution.
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