Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Franklinia" ¶ 6
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

William and Bartram
It was named after him by his friends and fellow Philadelphians, botanists James and William Bartram.
" Roaring Alligators and Burning Tygers: Poetry and Science from William Bartram to Charles Darwin ".
He admired William Bartram, and Charles Darwin's Voyage of the Beagle.
Portrait of William Bartram by Peale
Explorer and naturalist William Bartram was one of the early visitors to Rabun County.
In 1775 naturalist William Bartram, traveling across Georgia, found a previously unknown plant in Crawford County.
" See The Botanical Explorations of William Bartram in the Southeast by David H. Rembert Jr., Department of Biology, University of South Carolina — article and picture courtesy of Bartram Trail Conference
When explorer and naturalist William Bartram visited in 1774, it was the site of a Seminole village called Cuscowilla.
William Bartram visited Amelia Island in 1776 and noted the presence of several very large tumuli, or mounds, called " Ogeechee mounts " by the English.
Naturalist William Bartram explored the area in the 18th Century.
Explorer and naturalist William Bartram came through the Dividings in May, 1775 while exploring what would later become Rabun County.
* Early American Botanist John Bartram, the father of the even more famous traveler and botanist William Bartram, was born in Darby.
Burke attended a succession of high schools: William Shoemaker Middle School, West Philadelphia High School, Overbrook High School, and the Roman Catholic High School for Boys, where he played American football, and finally John Bartram High School in Philadelphia, where he graduated.
In 1792, William Bartram reported in his botanical book, Travels, a nut tree, Juglans exalata that some botanists today argue was the American pecan tree, but others argue was hickory, Carya ovata.
In a similar book, Travels through North and South Carolina, Georgia, East and West, William Bartram described in great detail the Southern landscape and the Native American peoples whom he encountered ; Bartram's book was very popular in Europe, being translated into German, French and Dutch.
The Chews entertained many visiting dignitaries, such as John Penn, Tench Francis, Jr., Robert, Thomas, and Samuel Wharton, Thomas Willing, John Cadwalader, Chief Justice William Allen and his wife Margaret, daughter of Andrew Hamilton, Dr. William Smith, Provost of the College of Philadelphia, botanist John Bartram, Edward Shippen, III, Edward Shippen, IV, and Peggy Shippen, Thomas Mifflin, later to become Governor of Pennsylvania, and Brigadier General Henry Bouquet, hero of the French and Indian War.
The genus name and the old common name Bartram's Sandpiper commemorate the American naturalist William Bartram.
It was here that he met the famous naturalist William Bartram who developed Wilson's interest in ornithology.
< center > Franklinia alatamaha by William Bartram ( 1782 )</ center >
William Bartram ( April 20, 1739 – July 22, 1823 ) was an American naturalist.
The son of Ann ( née Mendenhall ) and John Bartram, William Bartram and his twin sister Elizabeth were born in Kingsessing, Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia.

William and collected
The Australian War Crimes Section of the Tokyo tribunal, led by prosecutor William Webb ( the future Judge-in-Chief ), collected numerous written reports and testimonies that documented Japanese soldiers ' acts of cannibalism among their own troops, on enemy dead, and on Allied prisoners of war in many parts of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
After the first crude X-ray diffraction images of DNA were collected in the 1930s, William Astbury had talked about stacks of nucleotides spaced at 3. 4 angström ( 0. 34 nanometre ) intervals in DNA.
Bloomfield's initial research on Ojibwe was through study of texts collected by William Jones, in addition to nineteenth century grammars and dictionaries.
On the other hand, an assessment of data collected and analyzed by David Neumark and William Wascher did not initially contradict the Card / Krueger results, but in a later edited version they found that the same general sample had a small negative effect on employment.
Detailed observations of many binary star systems were collected by astronomers such as William Struve and S. W. Burnham, allowing the masses of stars to be determined from computation of the orbital elements.
This was an advantage for William, as it was the only universal tax collected by western European rulers during this period.
A much larger shipment of seed collected ( also in the Calaveras Grove ) by William Lobb, acting for the Veitch Nursery at Budlake near Exeter, arrived in England in December 1853 ; seed from this batch was widely distributed throughout Europe.
* William Cavendish, 1st Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne ( 1592 – 1676 ) was a Cavalier commander in the English Civil War, and collected a succession of increasing titles
The printed and extensively annotated catalogue of this donation is entitled " Bibliotheca Osleriana: a catalogue of books illustrating the history of medicine and science, collected, arranged and annotated by Sir William Osler, Bt.
Entries in the Chronicles of the Picts and Scots, collected by William Forbes Skene, provide the account of Finnguala killing Kenneth II in revenge, but not her affiliation to Constantine or his cousins.
In 1991 William F. Buckley, Jr. wrote a 40, 000-word National Review article discussing anti-Semitism amongst conservative commentators focused largely on Buchanan ; the article and many responses to it were collected in the book In Search of Anti-Semitism ( 1992 ).
They were edited by his brother, William Grylls Adams, and appear in the second volume of the collected Scientific Papers.
Several beautiful examples of her works done in gouache were collected by her cousin, Sherlock Holmes stage actor William Gillette, and may be found today prominently displayed in the permanent collection at his castle in East Haddam, Connecticut.
* William Kurtz Wimsatt, Jr. Verbal Icon: Studies in the Meaning of Poetry ( collected essays including the influential critical essays “ The Intentional Fallacy ” and “ The Affective Fallacy ” cowritten with Monroe Beardsley ).
A number of essays in The Examiner that were written by Hunt and William Hazlitt between 1814 and 1817 under the series title " The Round Table " were collected in book form in The Round Table, published in two volumes in 1817.
The song was first collected in England in its version as " The Unfortunate Rake " by Henry Hammond by a Mr. William Cutis at Lyme Regis, Dorset in March 1906.
* 1973, Greenway edition of collected works ( William Collins ), Hardcover, 256 pp, ISBN 0-00-231187-9
Massinger's independent works were collected by Thomas Coxeter ( 4 vols., 1759, revised edition with introduction by Thomas Davies, 1779 ), by J. Monck Mason ( 4 vols., 1779 ), by William Gifford ( 4 vols., 1805, 1813 ), by Hartley Coleridge ( 1840 ), by Lt. Col. Cunningham ( 1867 ), and selections by Arthur Symons in the Mermaid Series ( 1887 – 9 ).
John Wilson in Blackwood's Magazine 1833 – 1835, collected and commented on the labours of these and other translators, including indifferent attempts of William Hay.
As in Brandenburg, Frederick William ignored the privilege of the Prussian estates to confirm or veto taxes raised by the elector: while in 1656, an Akzise was raised with the estates ' consent, the elector by force collected taxes not approved by the Prussian estates for the first time in 1674.
* 1967, Greenway edition of collected works ( William Collins and Sons / Dodd Mead ), Hardback, 288 pp
* 1976, Greenway edition of collected works ( William Collins ), Hardcover, 251 pp, ISBN 0-00-231014-7
Two specimens were collected by William Anderson between September 30 and October 11, 1777, during Captain Cook ’ s third voyage, but both have since disappeared and the bird became extinct in the nineteenth century.
The Blue-winged Kookaburra was first collected by Sir Joseph Banks in 1770, but was initially overlooked and confused with the Laughing Kookaburra, and was finally officially described by Nicholas Aylward Vigors and Thomas Horsfield in 1826, its specific name commemorating the British zoologist William Elford Leach.
His letters were collected and published in 1576, and went through several editions, the latest at Nuremberg in 1611 ; they were re-titled by William Elstob in 1703.

0.201 seconds.