83,371 results on '"*BOTANY"'
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102. An open letter to seb members, and readers ofEconomic Botany, from the editor in chief
103. Botany and the Taming of Female Passion: Rousseau and Contemporary Educational Concepts of Young Women
104. A Report About the National Seminar on “Contemporary Progress in Plant Sciences” (March 20–21, 2015); Organized by UGC Centre of Advanced Study-Department of Botany, The University of Burdwan
105. Botany: He made plants a profession
106. Potential of wild, underutilized Actinidia callosa and Actinidia strigosa from Northeast India for kiwifruit breeding
107. Pterocarpus santalinus Linn. f. (Rath handun): A review of its botany, uses, phytochemistry and pharmacology
108. Why Alpine Botany?
109. Summer variability, winter dormancy: lichen activity over 3 years at Botany Bay, 77°S latitude, continental Antarctica
110. The Establishment of the Agricultural Landscape of Central Sicily Between the Middle Neolithic and the Beginning of the Iron Age
111. Vertical Hydrochemical Zonation in a Coastal Section of the Botany Sands Aquifer, Sydney, Australia
112. The society for economic botany: Letters and comments
113. Trace Metal Concentrations in Sediments and Oysters of Botany Bay, NSW, Australia
114. Button botany: plasmodesmata in vegetable ivory
115. Mineralogy, chemistry, botany, medicine, geology, agriculture, meteorology, classification,…: The life and times of John Walker (1730–1803), Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh University: Matthew D. Eddy: The language of mineralogy: John Walker, chemistry and the Edinburgh medical school, 1750–1800. Farnham and Burlington: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2008, xxi+309pp, £60.00 HB
116. Twenty-first century botany
117. Application of radiotracers in an exotic field of botany: How to feed carnivorous plants
118. Linkages between seagrass, mangrove and saltmarsh as fish habitat in the Botany Bay estuary, New South Wales
119. Calendar Plants in Southern Vanuatu
120. What is economic botany?
121. Abundance and Biomass of Heterotrophic Flagellates, and Factors Controlling Their Abundance and Distribution in Sediments of Botany Bay
122. Economic Botany and ethnobotany in al-Andalus (Iberian Peninsula: Tenth-fifteenth centuries), an unknown heritage of Mankind
123. The botany, uses and production ofWasabia japonica (Miq.) (Cruciferae) Matsum
124. DNA fingerprinting in botany: past, present, future
125. Julia Morton (1912–1996), whose protégé has been economic botany
126. Celebrating 125 years of Alpine Botany
127. Contributions to the botany and nutritional value of some wild amaranthus species (Amaranthaceae) of Nuevo leon, Mexico
128. Howard Scott Gentry 1903–1993: Distinguished Economic Botanist And President, Society for Economic Botany 1974
129. The Botany, History And Traditional Uses Of Three-Lobed Sage (Salvia Fruticosa Miller) (Labiatae)
130. Task-based small group learning in large classes: Design and implementation in a second year university botany course
131. Betula makes music in Europe: Three birch horns from Kew’s economic botany collections
132. Friedrich Ehrendorfer 70 — a life of pioneering devotion to botany and biosystematics
133. Economic Botany ofSphenostylis (Leguminosae)
134. Plant physiology, genetics, biotechnology and pathology in the Institute of Experimental Botany of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences (1962–1992)
135. Herbert Hurka: Research in Botany, particularly in the evolutionary systematics of Brassicaceae
136. All the evidence: The combination of molecular biology, zoology and botany in forensic science comes as a great help to crime investigators
137. Science academies’ refresher course on Experimental Biology: Orthodox to Modern: 07– 19, November 2016 PG and Research Department of Botany, St.Joseph’s College (Autonomous) Tiruchirappalli, Tamil Nadu 620 002
138. Applications of mass spectrometry imaging in botanical research
139. On some morphological principles in botany arising from mathematical considerations
140. Systematic botany: Science to develop language facility
141. Phenology as a tool to gain more insights into the grass pollen season
142. Society for Economic Botany: Report of the thirty-fifth annual meeting Mexico City, Mexico 20–26 June 1994
143. Botany and horticulture — the twain shall meet
144. Society for economic botany Report of the thirty-first annual meeting Madison, Wisconsin June 10–13, 1990
145. Janusz Błaszkowski (ed); Glomeromycota: W. Szafer Institute of Botany, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków 2012, pp. 303, ISBN 978-83-89648-82-2
146. The Society for Economic Botany, 49th Annual Meeting June 1–5, 2008, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina: Featured Symposium
147. Eduardo S. Brondizio: The Amazonian Caboclo and the Açaí Palm: Forest Farmers in the Global Market: Advances in Economic Botany, Volume 16, Bronx, NY 2008. The New York Botanical Garden Press, 2008. 403 pp, 64 Black & White Illustrations and 8 Color Plates, 10″ × 7″, Paperback, $45.00, ISBN 0893274763
148. The Society for Economic Botany Professor Daniel Zohary 2003 Distinguished Economic Botanist
149. Book reviews, Wild Potatoes (Solanum section Petota; Solanaceae) of North and Central America. D.M. Spooner, R.G. van den Berg, A. Rodriguez, J. Bamberg, R.J. Hijmans and S.I. Lara Cabrera. Systematic Botany Monographs Volume 68, 2004. ISBN 0-912861-68-1, 209 pages; price $40.
150. The society for economic botany: Report by Beryl B.Simpson, Seb President,1999–2000
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