
Hybrid pheasant, lithography from ''A Monograph of the Phasianidae''.
'Daniel Giraud Elliot' (
March 7,
1835 -
December 22,
1915) was an
American zoologist.
Elliot was one of the founders of the
American Museum of Natural History in
New York and the
American Ornithologists' Union. He was also curator of zoology at the
Field Museum in
Chicago.
Elliot used his wealth to publish a series of sumptuous color-plate books on birds and animals. Elliot wrote the text himself and commissioned artists such as
Joseph Wolf and
Joseph Smit, both of whom had worked for
John Gould, to provide the illustrations. The books included ''A Monograph of the Phasianidae (Family of the Pheasants)'' (1870-72), ''A Monograph of the Paradiseidae or Birds of Paradise'' (1873), ''A Monograph of the Felidae or Family of Cats'' (1878) and ''Review of the Primates'' (1913).
The
National Academy of Sciences awards the
Daniel Giraud Elliot medal "for meritorious work in zoology or paleontology published in a three- to five-year period. Established through the Daniel Giraud Elliot Fund by gift of Miss Margaret Henderson Elliot."