Botany
Welcome to the Botany section. Here, you may find and purchase Botany posters for any taste.
Accurately selected Botany posters decorate rooms, create cosiness and comfort. The most pleasant thing about posters is that you may choose any topic and color solution to your liking. Our Botany gallery features posters of various color and topical solutions.
Kenneth O. Peck dies; headed education programs at Missouri Botanical Garden - STLtoday.com |
Kenneth O. Peck dies; headed education programs at Missouri Botanical GardenSTLtoday.comKenneth O. Peck, who headed education programs at the Missouri Botanical Garden for 24 years, died Thursday (Feb. 2, 2012) of complications of Parkinson's disease at Friendship Village in Chesterfield. He was 80. Mr. Peck worked at the garden from 1957 ... |
Joseph J. Higgins, USDA botanist - Washington Post |
Joseph J. Higgins, USDA botanistWashington PostJoseph J. Higgins, a US Department of Agriculture botanist who studied climate effects on plant growth, died Jan. 12 at the Collingswood nursing facility in Rockville. He was 87. He had complications from a stroke, said his companion, Diane Lewis. |
Botany a target for Canadian fund - Sydney Morning Herald  Sydney Morning Herald |
Botany a target for Canadian fundSydney Morning HeraldOpportunity knocks ... the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board is planning to bid for the multibillion-dollar lease on Port Botany. Photo: Peter Rae HE RUNS one of the world's largest investment funds, has partnerships with Australian investors ...Canada pension fund invests $C5bn in Australia, says DenisonThe Australianall 5 news articles » |
More mysteries in the gardening world: weather and vocabulary - Kansas.com  Kansas.com |
More mysteries in the gardening world: weather and vocabularyKansas.com“The new chatter is in chemicals and molecules,” Laurence Dorr, one of three Latinists in the Smithsonian Institution's botany department, is quoted as saying in the story. When I asked readers for their favorite plant names, one man had them at the ... |
Father figure to the colony - Sydney Morning Herald  Sydney Morning Herald |
Father figure to the colonySydney Morning HeraldIn 1786, when Phillip was appointed to command the First Fleet for Botany Bay, the Admiralty thought him quite unsuitable. But Sydney, who had already shown himself to be a good judge of subordinates, considered the multilingual, discreet, ...and more » |
Half of species found by 'great plant hunters' - PhysOrg.com  PhysOrg.com |
Half of species found by 'great plant hunters'PhysOrg.comThe age of great botanical explorers, such as Sir Joseph Banks and Alexander von Humboldt, might appear to have passed. But the study, led by Oxford University scientists, found that modern botany has its own 'great plant hunters' – individuals whose ...and more » |
Heritage hot spots: History, nature, art, environment - Irish Times  Irish Times |
Heritage hot spots: History, nature, art, environmentIrish TimesThe National Botanic Gardens are both a sanctuary within easy reach of Dublin city centre and a living reference library for gardeners, horticulturists and botanists. The Royal Dublin Society was granted land in Glasnevin to establish a public botanic ... |
Karachi customs delay for Edinburgh botany books - BBC News  BBC News |
Karachi customs delay for Edinburgh botany booksBBC NewsThe Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh has appealed to the Pakistani government to release more than 4000 copies of a botany text book destined for Afghanistan. The 10 tonnes of books have been held at customs in Karachi for the past year.and more » |
Royal mess: 4000 botany textbooks held up at customs - The Express Tribune  The Express Tribune |
Royal mess: 4000 botany textbooks held up at customsThe Express TribuneThe Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh, Scotland has appealed to the Pakistan government to release 4000 botany textbooks, which have been held up at the Karachi Customs for a year. The books are supposed to be distributed to schools, universities and ...and more » |
Botanists agree to loosen Latin's grip - Washington Post |
Botanists agree to loosen Latin's gripWashington PostFor at least 400 years, botanists across the globe have relied on Latin as their lingua franca, but the ardor has cooled. Scientists say plants will keep their double-barreled Latin names, but they have decided to drop the requirement that new species ... |
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