During the 1760s, he used his aristocratic connections to tour mines throughout the
Lowlands and to assemble his own sizeable mineralogical collection. By the mid-1760s, Walker was known as one of Scotland's leading lay naturalists. This motivated the Church of Scotland and the Board of Annexed Estates to send him on exploratory tours of the
Highland and
Hebrides in 1764 and 1771. These tours allowed him to make religious and ethnographic observations for the church and to take scientifically oriented notes on northern Scotland's minerals, plants, animals, and climate. In his 1764 tour, while on visit to the island of
Jura (Deer Island), Walker may have made the first detailed description of
Lyme disease. He gives a good description both of the symptoms (with "exquisite pain [in] the interior parts of the limbs") and of the tick vector itself, which he describes as a "worm" with a body which is "of a reddish colour and of a compressed shape with a row of feet on each side" that "penetrates the skin". Also during this period, he collected samples of the mineral that came to be known as
strontianite from its type locality, thus setting in process the identification and analysis of the new alkaline earth strontium. During the 1770s Walker published articles in
The Scots Magazine and the
Philosophical Transactions. By the middle part of the decade, Robert Ramsay, the University of Edinburgh's ailing professor of natural history, clearly would soon need to be replaced. After securing the support of
William Cullen, Lord Kames, and several other politically savvy intellectuals, Walker competed against
William Smellie, a well-respected natural historian and influential publisher, for the post. After much wrangling, Walker won the contest and was appointed in 1779. He held the position until his death in 1803. == Later life ==