「Botany」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 617件
In | botany, a photoassimilate is one of a number of biolo |
In | botany, a host plant is one that supplies food resour |
In | botany, a follicle is a dry unilocular many-seeded fr |
entres being distributed among the new seat of | Botany, a redrawn and renamed seat of Papakura and th |
ng William Jackson Hooker, Regius Professor of | Botany, a competent botanical illustrator, and the ed |
In | botany, a monotypic taxon is a taxon that has only on |
e, with E. O. Campbell, published Agricultural | Botany, a textbook based on this teaching. |
He entered the church, but took up | botany about 1764, after the death of his wife. |
single member electorates, including parts of | Botany, Alexandria, Enmore, Newtown and Redfern for t |
In 1920, parts of the electoral districts of | Botany, Alexandria, Enmore, Newtown and Redfern were |
He displayed an interest in | botany already at an early age, and could often be fo |
In | botany, an infraspecific name is the name for any tax |
He graduated with a degree in | botany and studied at Kochi St. Augustine's School an |
years later was appointed a full professor of | botany and chemistry at the University of Prague. |
s description published in Hooker's Journal of | Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany in 1855. |
one thousand pounds for scholarships, books on | botany and his entomological collection. |
te textbooks in English on geography, history, | botany, and other sciences. |
His scientific and cultural pursuits included | botany and local history: in both fields his publicat |
He specialized in | botany and forestry. |
he was appointed an associate professorship in | botany, and in 1824, became a full professor. |
e contributed to the life sciences, especially | botany and zoology, and to linguistics, folklore, eth |
blished in the Scottish Naturalist, Journal of | Botany, and The Proceedings and Transactions of the P |
ounded in Manchester to encourage the study of | botany and horticulture. |
o paint and draw, held a good understanding of | botany and was apparently fluent in French. |
His primary focus soon turned to | botany, and he began performing extensive investigati |
shes a quarterly botanical journal, Systematic | Botany, and the irregular series Systematic Botany Mo |
ity of Manitoba and was the first Professor of | Botany and Geology at the University of Manitoba, and |
He developed a keen interest in | botany and in 1786 was appointed demonstrator in bota |
He taught himself field | botany and began identifying and photographing Delhi' |
The term's usage differs slightly between | botany and zoology. |
, teaching courses in Latin, Greek, chemistry, | botany, and rhetoric. |
He was college-trained in | botany and science in Copenhagen. |
He studied mathematics, | botany and astronomy at Leipzig and Berlin, studying |
n previously known as the Municipality of West | Botany and the Municipality of Rockdale. |
Edinburgh and obtained a degree in Chemistry, | Botany and Mathematics before furthered his studies i |
at Syracuse University until 1943, as Chair of | Botany and later as Dean of the Graduate School. |
er at DePauw University and became head of the | botany and bacteriology department in 1921 and held t |
The | Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens (2nd ed. |
n important role in enhancing his knowledge of | botany and was an early mentor for him. |
very Channel Young Scientist Challenge for his | botany and zoology project. |
He was Professor of | Botany and Director of the Botanical Gardens at the M |
He published several works on | botany and reports on forestry. |
a degree college with undergraduate courses in | Botany and Commerce. |
Botany and general scientific thinking were part of t | |
Museum from 1901 to 1905 and as a professor of | botany and director of the University Botanical Garde |
His work began in | botany and plant physiology, and he continued this th |
hatever was curious, especially in science, in | botany, and in natural history. |
Edmond S. Meany (1862-1935) was a professor of | botany and history at the University of Washington an |
ord, and then read natural sciences, including | botany and zoology, on an Exhibition at Girton Colleg |
ine in Vienna, and became in 1854 professor of | botany and natural history at the medical and surgica |
atics, Physics and Instrumentation, Chemistry, | Botany and Zoology and three departments under the fa |
He founded and directed the department of | botany and the Botanical Garden attached to it (Horto |
Chester in 1826 and published several works on | botany and natural history. |
h Dalton Hooker in 1847 in Hooker's Journal of | Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany based on plant mater |
ve him a taste for natural history, especially | botany and ornithology. |
3 and continued as the Departments of Zoology, | Botany, and Geology. |
ntly he studied Natural History, in particular | botany, and East-Asian languages. |
botanist Carl Meissner in Hooker's Journal of | Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany in 1855, based on pl |
Afterwards he furthered his studies of | botany and medicine in Vienna. |
degree of doctor, and gave private lectures in | botany and anatomy. |
t are his achievements in mineralogy, geology, | botany, and zoology. |
Murray, J.A. (1880) A Handbook to the Geology, | Botany, and Zoology of Sind. |
a degree in chemistry in 1912 and then studied | botany and forestry under William Schilch. |
He had several papers on | botany and natural history published in its Transacti |
plant morphologist and anatomist, historian of | botany and philosopher of biology. |
Cambridge .He became a university lecturer in | Botany and a Fellow of the college. |
However, he relinquished medicine for | botany, and in 1842 was appointed professor of natura |
hood interests began his lifelong concern with | botany and zoology. |
ater years Fletcher gave more and more time to | botany, and did important work on acacias, grevilleas |
r sister Maria Jacson (1755-1829), a writer on | botany and gardening, who were in financial straits c |
However he became increasingly interested in | botany, and began writing papers on the subject. |
ntpellier where in 1883 he became professor of | botany, and in 1890 he founded the Institut de Botani |
the geography, geology, climatology, zoology, | botany, and paleontology of Asia Minor, represents th |
Mitchill taught chemistry, | botany, and natural history at Columbia College from |
He became professor of | botany and plant pathology at the University of Minne |
He joined the faculty of | Botany and Pharmacology at the University of Berlin i |
early career in Dublin, where he also studied | botany and the seashore. |
As a young man, Loudon studied chemistry, | botany and agriculture at the University of Edinburgh |
e in 1934 and during this time he explored the | botany and ornithology of these Burmese regions with |
eded Abraham Vater (1684-1751) as professor of | botany and anatomy at the University of Wittenberg, w |
He was a professor of | botany and became the director of the botanical garde |
ion (composed of Tolomei himself, Professor of | Botany and Chemistry Ettore De Toni as well as the li |
He worked also in mathematics, | botany and medicine and is renowned for his theologic |
ile still a young priest he devoted himself to | botany and made a large collection of plants and of b |
After school in the UK, Bill read | botany and forestry at Balliol College, Oxford. |
erica (1950), and she published extensively on | botany and plant ecology. |
inted to two chairs, that of physiology and of | botany, and made the curator of the University medica |
Botany and Ph.D. Degrees from University Teaching Dep | |
From 1835 to 1836 he was Professor of | Botany, and he was one of the founders of the Faculty |
He earned a Ph.D. degree in | botany and went on to a distinguished career as a col |
with a B.A. in physical science and a B.S. in | botany and zoology. |
physics and chemistry, geology and mineralogy, | botany and zoology, natural philosophy and ethics, pr |
n, mathematics, astronomy, physics, chemistry, | botany, and geology. |
g in 1774, a professor of Chemistry, Pharmacy, | Botany, and Mineralogy at the University of Greifswal |
Pappe wrote numerous articles on South African | botany, and also published a work involving indigenou |
1982 and 1997 she was a university lecturer in | botany and ecology at the Palestinian Birzeit Univers |
He studied marine biology, zoology, | botany, and philosophy, and became a well-known entom |
tre is an interpretative centre displaying the | botany and wildlife of The Burren. |
the Birmingham and Midland Institute to study | botany, and in 1881 published her first volume of poe |
the author of a number of books and papers on | botany and chemistry, and also of an elaborate report |
where he spent most of his life with teaching | botany and doing research at the Mustiala Agriculture |
, the family moved to Leipzig where he studied | botany and became a gardener at Erfurt. |
merged the section with 'Propagation' to give ' | Botany and cultivation'. |
plants of Lanarkshire, with an introduction to | botany, and a glossary of botanical terms. |
William Francis Ganong, appointed professor of | botany and director of the Botanic Garden in May 1894 |
He became interested in | botany and published a number of books. |
at talent for the natural sciences, especially | botany, and in 1928 was tenured at the school of medi |
nce to the residents of the local area between | Botany and Randwick in areas including: employment la |
ol is run in cooperation with the Institute of | Botany and the Institute of Biochemistry of the Unive |
s native Persian while teaching and writing on | botany and serving on the Academy of Persian Language |
rimaldi, she dedicated herself to the study of | botany, and in 1794 established a private botanical g |
stevedoring operations moved to ports at Port | Botany and Port Kembla, the Government of New South W |
In addition to | botany and ecology, his research interests covered th |
iplinary study of useful plants (i.e. economic | botany and horticulture). |
6) was an English botanist, Royal Professor of | Botany and gardener to Queen Mary. |
Grimshaw was interested mainly | botany and wrote numerous scientific papers, includin |
He became an expert on tropical Asian | botany and on entomology. |
In volume one of his book Illustrations of the | Botany and Other Branches of the Natural History of t |
nry Price used his fortune in the promotion of | botany and has a garden named after him at Kew Garden |
Agardh was appointed professor of | botany and practical economy at Lund University in 18 |
h Dalton Hooker in 1847 in Hooker's Journal of | Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. |
de contributions to the fields of ethnobotany, | botany, and anthropology. |
sis, he decided upon the Department of General | Botany and Plant Phisiology. |
1846, he was offered a chair as professor for | botany and zoology at the University of Karlsruhe as |
While there, he founded the Museum of Economic | Botany and also created subsidiary Gardens at Badulla |
to his first inheritance; turned to studies on | botany and phrenology |
changed the subject and then studied zoology, | botany and anthropology. |
nd this time, he also developed an interest in | botany and attended many scientific conferences in Eu |
es of science, such as chemistry, meteorology, | botany, animal and vegetable physiology, and geology; |
In 1938 he became Professor of | Botany Applied to Pharmacy at the Universidade Federa |
British Phaenogamous | Botany are figures and descriptions of British flower |
Worcestershire, and also pursued interests in | botany as a plant collector and cataloguer. |
This book deals with wartime events, Florida | botany, as well as Seminole language and customs. |
orld War II, Rabinowitch taught and researched | botany as a professor at the University of Illinois a |
ather, he was awarded the chair of anatomy and | botany at the university. |
f the new department of chemistry, zoology and | botany at the University of Rostock. |
In 1865 he was appointed professor of | botany at the University of Bonn and director of the |
He was a professor of | botany at the University of Tartu, and was director o |
From 1947 to 1950, he held the Chair of | Botany at the University of Manchester and from 1950 |
In 1885, he began teaching | botany at Iowa State and in 1889, he moved on to Rutg |
He studied | botany at Berlin University, became assistant to G. H |
enna, and from 1878 to 1889 was a professor of | botany at the University of Innsbruck. |
Museums of Economic | Botany at Kew (1855) |
, and obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in | botany at the Aberystwyth University. |
attended Elmfield College and was Professor of | Botany at University College, Dublin from 1890 to 192 |
He studied medicine and | botany at Leipzig, and in 1831 relocated to Cape Town |
n 1977, she was a curator in the Department of | Botany at the California Academy of Sciences. |
ronet (27 August 1892 - 1978) was Professor of | Botany at University College, Colombo, Sri Lanka, (19 |
While he taught | botany at the university he became librarian and cura |
nal Museum and accepted a post as professor of | botany at the School of Pharmacy of Ouro Preto, in Ou |
He held the Chair of | Botany at Bristol University, and returned to Oxford |
d to German botanist Johannes Vogel, Keeper of | Botany at the Natural History Museum, since 2003, wit |
He became professor of | botany at Uppsala University in 1939, a position he h |
He also taught | botany at the University of Cambridge. |
) is a German botanist, who has been Keeper of | Botany at the Natural History Museum in the United Ki |
afer was appointed Custodian in the Section of | Botany at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and |
appointed the first professor of agricultural | botany at Cambridge, a post he held till 1931. |
In 1884, he was appointed professor of | botany at the University of Nebraska and became head |
r the following nine years he was Professor of | Botany at North Texas State Normal College at Denton. |
He enrolled for undergraduate studies in | Botany at the Maharaja's College, Ernakulam, followin |
He was Professor of | Botany at the University of Hamburg, and a director o |
Wager was first a lecturer in | botany at the Yorkshire College, then at Victoria Uni |
He became an assistant in the Department of | Botany at the Natural History Museum, succeeding Will |
Due to his father's post as Professor of | Botany at Edinburgh, the young Balfour was able to vi |
He studied for an undergraduate degree in | botany at Aberdeen University and obtained his doctor |
He was appointed to the Regius Chair of | Botany at Glasgow University in 1962, leaving six yea |
He was the Head of the Department of | Botany at the University of Minnesota from 1924 to 19 |
ng Station in Budapest from 1896, Professor of | Botany at the Budapest University from 1927 and membe |
and Freiberg, and later became a professor of | botany at the Universities of Strasbourg (1869), Nanc |
In 1849 he took up a post of a lecturer in | botany at Bonn. |
867, he became professor of materia medica and | botany at the College. |
In 1836 he was named professor of | botany at the University of Graz and also taught at t |
He was the founding head of Agricultural | Botany at Massey and this was his core teaching area. |
He obtained the chair of | botany at the University of Cambridge in 1861 and wro |
From 1879 to 1884 he taught classes in | botany at the Bussey Institute. |
stant to Knud Jessen, who was the professor of | botany at the University of Copenhagen and director o |
bridge, and was a Fellow there and Lecturer in | Botany at the University. |
Carolus Clusius becomes Professor of | Botany at Leiden University, taking charge of the Hor |
In 1786, he was appointed professor of | botany at the Jardin des Plantes, replacing Lemonnier |
I., and in 1902 became associate professor of | botany at the University of North Carolina. |
He obtained a doctorate in | botany at the University of Ghent in 1908. |
uring the following year became a professor of | botany at the University of Innsbruck. |
He was a professor of | botany at the University of Greifswald. |
In 1907 he became a professor of | botany at the University of Halle. |
In 1875 he studied cryptogamic | botany at the University of Strasbourg under Anton de |
James Sutherland was the first professor of | botany at the University of Edinburgh, from 1676-1705 |
In 1905, Lindman was appointed Professor of | Botany at the Swedish Museum of Natural History and f |
He was a University Lecturer in | Botany at Oxford University (1959-88). |
eum at King's College, London, and lecturer on | Botany at St Mary's Hospital Medical School from 1867 |
He began studies of medicine and | botany at the University of Copenhagen in 1788, but l |
He studied | botany at the University of Edinburgh and later studi |
tland he became lecturer in materia medica and | botany at Edinburgh and also superintendent of the bo |
Jeffrey Harborne (1928-2002), a Professor of | botany at the University of Reading |
e Potamogeton, and after becoming Professor of | Botany at Amherst, began preparing A Catalogue of Pla |
lant ecologist, biogeographer and Professor of | Botany at Syracuse University, was the first dean of |
In 1907 he was named associate professor of | botany at the University of Chicago. |
He was professor of | botany at the Eastern Illinois State Normal School fr |
In 1855 he was a lecturer of | botany at the University of Berlin, and six years lat |
stralia for a number of years as a lecturer in | botany at the University of Sydney and in 1961 he was |
In 1918 he was appointed to the Chair of | Botany at the Technical University of Braunschweig, w |
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