Carolus Linnaeus named wolf canis lupus in 1758.
Carolus Linnaeus used Binomial Nomenclature to classify organisms, It is still used today. He named around 400 species which was a lot for him, other scientists may classify about 2,000.
Carolus in fact did have a pet racoon. He adored his pet raccoon Sjupp, who had an affinity for "eggs, almonds, raisins, sugared cakes, sugar and fruit of every kind," who mugged students carrying such treats, and who never forgave anybody who refused him anything. But after a dog mauled the raccoon to death, Linnaeus promptly dissected it.
The butterfly was named by Carolus Linnaeus in 1758. In the same year Linnaeus published a book called "Systema Natura". He used classical mythology and specific names to specify his work. In the first group was Equites or knights. The Ulysses butterfly is named in the second group, the Achaen Army.
Carolus Linnaeus, a Swedish botanist, is often credited with inventing modern taxonomy in the 18th century. He developed the system of binomial nomenclature, where organisms are named using a two-part Latin name, which is still used in biology today.
Linnaeus named the Animalia and Plantae Kingdoms. Linnaeus named two kingdoms by the names Animalia and Plantae kingdoms. He also ordered them from the largest to the smallest.
Every organism named by the Linnaeus system has a genus name and species name. Organism belong to a specific kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and most specifically, species. The Linnaeus system gives them a "first name" of their genus and a "last name" of their species. This system allows biologists from all over the world to call organisms by the same name, which gets rid of confusion.
No traditional museums has been named after Steve Jobs. (yet)
Linnaeus recognized the plant kingdom (Plantae) and the animal kingdom (Animalia).
Linnaeus named the plant kingdom "Plantae" in his classification system.
The Celsius scale is named after the Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius who developed it in 1742. This scale originally had 0 as the boiling point and 100 as freezing point, but these values were later reversed by Carolus Linnaeus.
Carl von Linné a.k.a. Carolos von Linnaeus named it in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae.