Transition To Land referrs to animals and degraders include both fungi and bacteria. Web Resources.A quick look at the conquest of land from a botany course in Barbados. http://www2.bc.edu/~strother/GE_146/lectures/20.html
Extractions: Physical factors Biological Factors cuticles: waxy substances are used to cover plant and invertebrate tissues, they help to seal in water and retard dessication tracheids: plants combine a new substance, lignin, with cellulose to produce tracheids. These specialized cells provide structural support and conduct water through the interion portions of the plant body
Plants & Human Affairs Intersession 1997 ENROLLMENT Bio 207 is a course for nonscience majors intended for use in theGER to TEXT Brian Capon, botany for Gardeners, Timber Press, 1992. http://koning.ecsu.ctstateu.edu/Plants_Human/Schedule.I98.html
IB335 Nomenclature Your first takehome lecture assignment, worth up to 2% of your final grade, Four of the six principles of botanical nomenclature, especially http://www.life.uiuc.edu/ib/335/nomenclature.html
Extractions: Page 31 in Class Notes no-men-clature Friday, February 4th. here is a web version you can print out . Your answers should be submitted (neatly, please, for full point consideration) on a separate sheet of paper, keeping the same numbering system and structure as that of your class notes. Include your name and laboratory section (A, C or D). Remember to italicize or underline Latin names. Penalties will be assessed for assignments handed in late (i.e., after class); assignments more than 24 hours late will not be graded. Answers will be posted (on the web) immediately after lecture that day. Graded assignments will be returned in lab. This is the TEXT ONLY version of this file! For the file with images, click here . NOTE: The image version takes longer to load. WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT NOMENCLATURE Binomial system of naming species developed by Linnaeus, which consists of the name of the genus, the specific epithet, and the authority. Capitalize genus, specific epithet always correct in lower case. The name of the genus and the specific epithet should always be underlined or placed in italics.
Botany Home Page Biological Foundations is the botany section of the a three quarter sequence ingeneral It contains 38 lectures with a supporting glossary, photographs, http://www.puc.edu/Faculty/Gilbert_Muth/botsylhome.htm
Extractions: Biological Foundations is the botany section of the a three quarter sequence in general biology for biology majors and pre-professional students. It contains 38 lectures with a supporting glossary, photographs, photomicrographs, diagrams, animations, video clips, self test and set of references. While under construction, it will be undergoing constant revision as feedback comes in from my students who will be using the materials. Because there is no support staff to do the grunt work, this is a labor of love for my students. It would be greatly appreciated if, via e-mail, errors were brought to my attention, URLs of other sites that can supplement this information, or suggestions for improvement were forwarded to me. Send your comments to gmuth@puc.edu Last updated 3-22-99 Textbooks Attendance Policies Grading Policy How Points are Earned ... Class Lecture Schedule Winter Quarter Class Lecture Schedule Spring Quarter PUC Home Page Gilbert Muth Home Page Botany Syllabus Home Page E-mail Gilbert Muth gmuth@puc.edu
Bio 205: Course Syllabus GENERAL botany. BIO 205. Course Syllabus, Spring 1999 A copy of much of thecourse information (tables, lectures, unit outlines, key http://www.resnet.wm.edu/~mcmath/bio205/syllabus.html
Louis Hasbrouck, American Philosophical Society Cite as Louis Hasbrouck, notes from Lectures on Chemistry delivered by Doctor Maclean, John, Two Lectures on Combustion Supplementary to a Course of http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mole/h/hasbrouck.htm
Extractions: (1 vol., 133p.) American Philosophical Society 105 South Fifth Street * Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386 Table of contents Abstract Louis Hasbrouck was in his last year at Princeton in 1796-1797 when he attended the course of chemistry lectures given by John Maclean. In only his second year at Princeton, Maclean was rapidly becoming known for introducing the latest currents in chemical theory, including the system of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, and he was one of the first Americans to insist that students take part in active experimentation. Louis Hasbrouck was in his final year at Princeton in 1796-1797 when he attended John Maclean's lectures on chemistry. His notebook from the second half of that course includes a detailed record of the lectures from January 24-March 14 and June 22-24, 1797, covering Maclean's discussion of the chemistry of metals, "chemical combination," combustion, and botanical chemistry. Although his notes are not complete, Hasbrouck was enrolled at a singularly interesting period in the history of American chemistry. This was only the second time that Maclean had offered his course, in which he introduced the new chemical system of Lavoisier, and it includes a relatively complete version of Maclean's most important lecture, "Of combustion." This devastating attack on Joseph Priestley and phlogistic theory appeared in print in 1797 as