Buch, Englisch, 628 Seiten, Format (B × H): 140 mm x 216 mm, Gewicht: 876 g
Reihe: Cambridge Library Collection - Botany and Horticulture
Buch, Englisch, 628 Seiten, Format (B × H): 140 mm x 216 mm, Gewicht: 876 g
Reihe: Cambridge Library Collection - Botany and Horticulture
ISBN: 978-1-108-07681-4
Verlag: Cambridge University Press
The botanist Robert Brown (1773–1858) is regarded as one of the most significant figures in the advancement of plant science in the nineteenth century. After studying at Aberdeen and Edinburgh, he made the acquaintance of Sir Joseph Banks via William Withering, and in 1801 was appointed as naturalist on Matthew Flinders' expedition to Australia. Brown made extensive collections of animals and minerals, but his 3,400 plant specimens from Australia, Tasmania and Timor were the foundation of his work for the rest of his life, as an active member of the Linnean Society, as Banks's librarian, and as an under-librarian in the British Museum. This two-volume collection of his 'miscellaneous botanical works', edited by John J. Bennett, Brown's assistant at the British Museum, was published in 1866–7. It has not been possible to reissue the accompanying quarto volume of plates. Volume 1 contains 'Geographico-Botanical Memoirs' and 'Structural and Physiological Memoirs'.
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Preface; Part I. Geographico-Botanical Memoirs: 1. The botany of Terra Australis; 2. Plants collected in Abyssinia; 3. The herbarium collected by Professor Christian Smith in the Congo; 4. Plants collected in Captain Ross's voyage; 5. Plants found in Spitzbergen; 6. Plants collected in Melville Island; 7. Plants collected in central Africa; 8. Botany of the Swan River; 9. Botanical appendix to Captain Sturt's expedition; Part II. Structural and Physiological Memoirs: 1. The parts of fructification in mosses; 2. Remarkable deviations from the usual structure of seeds and fruits; 3. A new genus of plants, named Rafflesia; 4. Rafflesia arnoldi and Hydnora africana; 5. Kingia; 6. Particles contained in the pollen of plants; 7. Fecundation in Orchaidaceae and Asclepiadeae (1); 8. Fecundation in Orchidaceae and Asclepiadeae (2); 9. The compound ovarium of plants; 10. The embryos in the seeds of conifera; 11. The gulf-weed; 12. Triplosporite, an undescribed fossil fruit; Index.