Marlatt wrote in his 1907 journal article that the earliest published account of the periodical cicada which had come under his observation appeared in a 1666 issue of the journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, The account stated: A great Observer, who hath lived long in
New England, did upon occasion, relate to a Friend of his in
London, where he lately was, That some few Years since there was such a swarm of a certain sort of Insects in that
English Colony, that for the space of 200 Miles they poyson'd and destroyed all the Trees of that Country; there being found innumerable little holes in the ground, out of which those Insects broke forth in the form of
Maggots, which turned into
Flyes that had a kind of taile or sting, which they struck into the Tree, and thereby envenomed and killed it. (Elaborating on an observation that Marlatt had reported in 1907, However, a reprint of ''Bradford's History of Plymouth Plantation: 1606-1646'' contains a different account of that emergence.) Historical accounts cite reports of 15- to 17-year recurrences of enormous numbers of noisy emergent cicadas ("locusts") written as early as 1733.
John Bartram, a noted
Philadelphia botanist and
horticulturist, was among the early writers that described the insect's life cycle, appearance and characteristics. On May 9, 1715, Andreas Sandel, the pastor of Philadelphia's "Gloria Dei" Swedish
Lutheran Church, described in his journal an emergence of Brood X.
Pehr Kalm, a
Finnish naturalist visiting Pennsylvania and New Jersey in 1749 on behalf of the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, observed in late May another emergence of that brood. When reporting the event in a paper that a Swedish academic journal published in 1756, Kalm wrote: Kalm then described Sandel's report and one that he had obtained from
Benjamin Franklin that had recorded in Philadelphia the emergence from the ground of large numbers of cicadas during early May 1732. He noted that the people who had prepared these documents had made no such reports in other years. stating: Based on Kalm's account and a specimen that Kalm had provided, in 1758
Carl Linnaeus named the insect
Cicada septendecim in the
tenth edition of his Systema Naturae. Moses Bartram, a son of John Bartram, described the next appearance of the brood (Brood X) that Kalm had observed in 1749 in an article entitled
Observations on the cicada, or locust of America, which appears periodically once in 16 or 17 years that he wrote in 1766. Bartram's article, which a London journal published in 1768, noted that upon hatching from eggs deposited in the twigs of trees, the young insects ran down to the earth and "entered the first opening that they could find". He reported that he had been able to discover them below the surface, but that others had reportedly found them deep. In 1775,
Thomas Jefferson recorded in his "Garden Book" Brood II's 17-year periodicity, writing that an acquaintance remembered "great locust years" in 1724 and 1741, that he and others recalled another such year in 1758 and that the insects had again emerged from the ground at
Monticello in 1775. He noted that the females lay their eggs in the small twigs of trees while above ground. The 1780 emergence of the Brood VII cicadas (also known as the Onondaga brood) during the
American Revolutionary War, coincided with the aftermath of the military operation known as the
Sullivan Expedition which devastated the indigenous
Onondagan communities and destroyed their crops. The sudden arrival of such a substantial quantity of the cicadas provided a source of sustenance for the Onondaga people who were experiencing severe food insecurity following the Sullivan campaigns and the subsequent brutal winter. The seemingly miraculous arrival of the cicadas is commemorated by the Onondaga as though it were an intervention by the Creator to ensure their survival after such a traumatizing, catastrophic event. (May 31, 2021) In April 1800,
Benjamin Banneker, who lived near
Ellicott's Mills, Maryland, wrote in his record book that he recalled a "great locust year" in 1749, a second in 1766 during which the insects appeared to be "full as numerous as the first", and a third in 1783. He predicted that the insects (Brood X) "may be expected again in they year 1800 which is Seventeen Since their third appearance to me". Describing an effect that the pathogenic fungus,
Massospora cicadina, has on its
host, Banneker's record book stated that the insects:... begin to Sing or make a noise from first they come out of the Earth till they die. The hindermost part rots off, and it does not appear to be any pain to them, for they still continue on Singing till they die. In 1845, Dr. D.L. Pharas of
Woodville, Mississippi, announced the 13-year periodicity of the southern cicada broods in a local newspaper, the
Woodville Republican. Walsh's and Riley's paper, which
Scientific American reprinted with some revisions in January 1869, illustrated the interior and exterior characteristics of the nymphs' emergence holes and raised turrets. Their articles, which did not cite Pharas' reports, were the first to describe the southern cicadas' 13-year periodicity that received widespread attention. In 1998, an emergence contained a brood of 17-year cicadas (Brood IV) in western Missouri and a brood of 13-year cicadas (Brood XIX) over much of the rest of the state. Each of the broods are the state's largest of their types. As the territories of the two broods overlap (converge) in some areas, the convergence was the state's first since 1777. In 2007 and 2008, Edmond Zaborski, a research scientist with the
Illinois Natural History Survey, reported that the oak leaf gall mite ("itch mite") (
Pyemotes herfsi) is an ectoparasite of periodical cicada eggs. While investigating with the help of others the mysterious itchy welts and rashes that people were developing in
Chicago's suburbs after the end of a 2007 Brood XIII emergence, he attributed the event to bites by mites whose populations had quickly increased while parasitizing those eggs. Similar events occurred in
Cincinnati after a Brood XIV emergence ended in 2008, in
Cleveland and elsewhere in northern and eastern
Ohio after a Brood V emergence ended in 2016, in the
Washington, D.C., area after a Brood X emergence ended in 2021, and again in the Chicago area after the next Brood XIII emergence ended in 2024. ==Use as human food==