Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_B - Botany Institutions
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 101    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Botany Institutions:     more books (100)
  1. Fine structure of the cortex in the lichen family Parmeliaceae viewed with the scanning-electron microscope (Smithsonian contributions to botany, no. 10) by Mason E Hale, 1973
  2. A study of the tribe Gesnerieae, with a revision of Gesneria (Gesneriaceae, Gesnerioideae) (Smithsonian contributions to botany ; no. 29) by Laurence E Skog, 1976
  3. New records of marine algae from the 1974 R/V Dolphin cruise to the Gulf of California (Smithsonian contributions to botany ; no. 34) by James N Norris, 1976
  4. Morden-Smithsonian Expedition to Dominica: the lichens (Parmeliaceae) (Smithsonian contributions to botany, no. 4) by Mason E Hale, 1971
  5. A monograph of the lichen genus Parmelina Hale (Parmeliaceae) (Smithsonian contributions to botany ; no. 33) by Mason E Hale, 1976
  6. Pollen morphology and phylogenetic relationships of the Berberidaceae (Smithsonian contributions to botany ; no. 50) by Joan W Nowicke, 1981
  7. Commercial timbers of West Africa (Smithsonian contributions to botany, no. 14) by Edward S Ayensu, 1974
  8. Leaf anatomy and systematics of New World Velloziaceae (Smithsonian contributions to botany) by Edward S Ayensu, 1974
  9. A revision of the genus Olyra and the new segregate genus Parodiolyra (Poaceae, Bambusoideae, Olyreae) (Smithsonian contributions to botany) by Thomas R Soderstrom, 1989
  10. The woody bamboos (Poaceae:Bambuseae) of Sri Lanka: A morphological-anatomical study (Smithsonian contributions to botany) by Thomas R Soderstrom, 1988
  11. A revision of American Velloziaceae (Smithsonian contributions to botany ; no. 30) by Lyman B Smith, 1976
  12. A revision of the tribal and subtribal limits of the Heliantheae (Asteraceae) (Smithsonian contributions to botany) by Harold Ernest Robinson, 1981
  13. Revision of Pearcea (Gesneriaceae) (Smithsonian contributions to botany) by Lars Peter Kvist, 1996
  14. Opal phytoliths in Southeast Asian flora (Smithsonian contributions to botany) by Lisa Kealhofer, 1998

61. MBG: Research: Elizabeth E. Bascom Fellowships In Botany For Latin American Wome
scientific institutions in Mexico, Central America, and South America. Committee for the Elizabeth E. Bascom Fellowship in botany for Latin American
http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/Research/bascom/bascomengl.shtml
www.mobot.org Research Home Support MBG Research Search ...
QUICK SEARCH
MO PROJECTS:
Africa

Asia/Pacific

Mesoamerica

North America
...
America
MO RESEARCH:
WL Brown Center

Bryology

GIS

Graduate Studies
... Publications MO DATABASES: Image Index Rare Books Angiosperm Phylogeny ... All Databases INFORMATION: The Unseen Garden What's New? People at MO Visitor's Guide ... Search
Elizabeth E. Bascom Fellowships in Botany for Latin American Women
th Announcement, January 2004 The Missouri Botanical Garden announces the sixth annual competition for the Elizabeth E. Bascom Fellowships in botany for Latin American women. The fellowships were established to honor the memory of Elizabeth E. Bascom and to keep alive her lifelong dedication to the Missouri Botanical Garden and its research and training programs in tropical botany. The Elizabeth E. Bascom fellowships are intended for Latin American women who work in the field of botany. The fellowship program seeks to further the botanical careers of Latin American women by providing financial aid that enables recipients to conduct research at the Missouri Botanical Garden. During their stay at the Garden, Bascom fellows will have access to the herbarium, library, and botanical database of the Missouri Botanical Garden. The fellowship will cover the cost of a round-trip air ticket to St. Louis, lodging in the Garden apartments, and a small stipend for food and miscellaneous expenses in St. Louis for a period of one to three months.

62. CEEB
CEEB COLLECTIONS for ETHNO and ECONOMIC botany curators and holdings of ethno- and economic botany collections from as many institutions as possible
http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/research/diversity/ceeb.htm
Ethnobotany document.write(doSomethingElse('2A')); document.write(doSomethingElse('2B')); document.write(doSomethingElse('2C')); LOCATIONS USEFUL PLANTS ORGANIZATIONS document.write(doSomething(5));
CEEB: COLLECTIONS for ETHNO- and ECONOMIC BOTANY
PLANTS FOR PEOPLE: CEEB PROJECT OVERVIEW
Intellectual Imperatives in Ethnobiology ," sponsored by the NSF and held at the Missouri Botanical Garden in 2002, identified critical community-wide needs and goals for collections; chief among them was to bring collections online and make them available to the public and scientists alike. These defined objectives have served as the basis for a proposed project uniting three institutions with significant CEEB in the US—The Missouri Botanical Garden (MO), The New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) , and The Field Museum of Chicago (F) www.ceeb.info ; grant proposals have been submitted to the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS). Goals of the project include: CEEB Online: A Web site for CEEB will create online databases with information about and images of useful plants with the long-term goal of creating a simultaneously searchable system through a multi-database Application Programming Interface (API). On the website, Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) infringement will be avoided by releasing use data only with the Prior Informed Consent of both governments and traditional groups. Other institutions will be able to use the databases to manage their collections and make information about them more readily available.

63. The Academy Of Natural Sciences - Research - Center For Systematic Biology And E
The botany department curates a world class collection of 1.3 million plant Because the Academy was one of the first scientific institutions in the New
http://www.acnatsci.org/research/biodiv/botany.html
You are in Research Center for Systematic Biology and Evolution / Botany
S E A R C H Center for Systematic Biology and Evolution Departments Collections
Database
Botany
Diatoms
...
Paleontology

Now Available!
Digital images of every plant in the Lewis and Clark Herbarium on CD.
Botany Department

Collections in the Herbarium
Research NEW Herbarium Upgrade What is a herbarium? Visiting the Herbarium Contacts ...
Click here for:

Contacts: Dr. James Macklin Collection Manager Educational Activities Dr. Richard McCourt Dr. A.E. (Ernie) Schuyler McHenry Fellowship and Internships Dr. Lucinda McDade Dr. Richard McCourt Aphelandra impressa (Acanthaceae) The herbarium of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia houses the Academy's collection of botanical specimens. Because the Academy was one of the first scientific institutions in the New World, the herbarium holds some of the oldest and most important plant collections in the Americas. PH (the official, internationally recognized abbreviation for the herbarium at the Academy of Natural Sciences) has about 1.5 million dried, pressed specimens and plays a vital role as a resource for research on plants and on the history of American botany. For a list of recent publications by scientists on PH and its holdings, click here

64. CHAPTER IX. GREGORY R. LONG AND THE NEW POLITICS OF FUND RAISING
This meant a triple crunch on our public institutions in New York City the Traditionally, the NYBG was run by a man with a background in botany.
http://nynjctbotany.org/tbshist/greglong.html
CHAPTER IX. GREGORY R. LONG AND THE NEW POLITICS OF FUND RAISING Hester resigned as NYBG Director in 1989. This set off the search for another director. This was no longer a clear-cut search, for things had changed. In this crisis of funds a new emphasis began to appear in our public institutions. The emphasis suddenly fell on the need for fund raising and fund raisers to acquire the new missing funds. Traditionally, the NYBG was run by a man with a background in botany. But now the need was for someone who had a background in running large public institutions. And it did not matter whether the person had an actual background in the subjects with which the public institutions dealt. What was important was the business acumen to acquire funds. In this world of events for the social and monied elite, there has occurred an increasing prominence of paid presidents. The Gleuck article mentions that just two examples of "once-lusterless" institutions dusted off and given generational turnarounds due to the dynamism of their respective presidents were the New York Botanical Garden and the American Museum of Natural History. From 1989 to the present, Gregory R. Long has been the chief executive officer of NYBG. He was 43 years of age when he took over. Unlike many who have charted the Garden's directions in the past, Long is not a scientist. He was trained as an art historian at New York and Columbia Universities. He worked for the Brooklyn Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (the latter starting in 1969). Then for 16 years he successively headed the development efforts of three other respected institutions, the American Museum of Natural History, the New York Zoological Society and the New York Public Library. At the latter, he is credited with much of the success of a $300 million capital campaign.

65. Among The Top Institutions - Ethiraj College
When one thinks of leading educational institutions for women in Chennai, botany; Zoology; Chemistry; Physics. M.Phil. Zoology; Economics
http://www.chennaionline.com/education/2000/ethiraj.asp
document.write(code); Astrology Chat Cityscape Classifieds ...
Download Tamil Fonts
Among the top institutions - Ethiraj College Education When one thinks of leading educational institutions for women in Chennai, Ethiraj College is certainly among those at the top of the list. This assessment would indeed make its founder very proud. Eminent barrister V.L. Ethiraj was convinced of the need to educate women and gave his life's earnings for the cause. He donated Rs.10 lakh (a stupendous amount at that time) and the title deeds of two bungalows on Whites Road. The college was started in 1948 with 169 students for the then Intermediate course (a two-year stint of study between today's X standard and degree courses) and B.A. Economics and moved to its present campus in 1951. The initial years witnessed the start of many undergraduate programmes in Botany, Chemistry, Zoology, History and English. The accompanying infrastructure requirements were fulfilled simultaneously. Between 1968-78, the college grew in all directions with the introduction of many B.A. courses and a few at the PG level as well. A significant development in the next phase 1978-88 was the thrust on research. The faculty members took to research and the introduction of M. Phil and Ph.D. programmes followed suit. The present decade saw it rise to the very top, with the introduction of a variety of job-oriented self-financing courses like the BBM, BBA, Biochemistry and Microbiology. Today, the institution has nearly 5000 students (3000 in day college and 2000 in evening college), with extensive buildings to house its various faculties.

66. - Experimental Botany
University of Hohenheim institutions; short name Experimentelle Botanik; Experimental botany. University of Hohenheim (210_2) · D70593 Stuttgart
http://www.uni-hohenheim.de/i3ve/00000700/00637041.htm
University of Hohenheim Faculties Faculty of Natural Sciences (100) Institute of Botany (210)
- Experimental Botany University of Hohenheim (210_2) · D-70593 Stuttgart
Number of Institution Visiting Address
D-70599 Stuttgart
Research Projects
Members of Staff Publications
powered by
Responsible: - Experimental Botany Last update: 08.09.2005

67. .:.GC University, Lahore
The herbarium aims to offer every possible support to institutions and organizations in the field of botany by making available variety of plant material in
http://www.gcu.edu.pk/Botn.htm
Tutorial System Endowment Fund Key Contacts Tenders ... Online Quick Links
Department of Botany
Introduction Facilities Courses Faculty Introduction The Department of Botany is one of the pioneer departments of the GC University Lahore, imparting instructions at postgraduate level in Botany. It offers a wide range of teaching and research opportunities to all those who are all ached to it in one capacity or another. The contributions of the Ravian Botanists towards the progress and development of the country have been noteworthy through out the years. The old students of the Botany department are working as Heads in various National and International research organizations such as PARC, NIBGE and 010. It is in consideration of these achievements, that the Department is recognized as a Center of Excellence and enjoys an international repute. The Botany Department is striving to meet the challenges of the modem times and offers facilities to all its students to update their skills and knowledge.
Some of the prominent chairpersons of the department over the past years were Prof. A H. Zafar, Dr. Hafez Utah, Prof. A., R. Zafar, Prof. M. H. Bokhari, Prof. Jawad, A. Khan, Prof. Masud-ul-Hassan, Dr. M., Yaqoob and Dr. R.A Mirza., Dr. A. U. Khan is the present chairperson of the department. He did his masters in Ecology from Aberdeen and Doctorate from Imperial College of Science and Technology, London. His fields of expertise include Ecology and Conservation Biology. Presently he is teaching and supervising research work of M.Sc., M.Phil and Ph.D, students in the fields of Conservation Biology, Environmental Impact Assessment and Environmental Pollution.

68. Institution Authentication Form
OhioLINK access to Systematic botany , published by BioOne. should contact their own libraries for access to Systematic botany. OhioLINK institutions
http://rave.ohiolink.edu/ejournals/issn/0363-6445
Catalog All Databases Express Links Site Search ... Help
Institution Selection Form
OhioLINK Off-Campus Authentication For Access to Services Please select your institution: Antioch College Ashland University Athenaeum of Ohio Baldwin-Wallace College Belmont Technical College Bluffton University Bowling Green State University Capital University Case Western Reserve University Cedarville University Central Ohio Technical College Central State University Cincinnati Bible College and Seminary Cincinnati State Technical and Community College Clark State Community College Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland State University College of Mount Saint Joseph College of Wooster Columbus College of Art and Design Columbus State Community College Cuyahoga Community College Defiance College Denison University Edison Community College Franciscan University of Steubenville Franklin University Heidelberg College Hiram College Hocking College Jefferson Community College John Carroll University Kent State University Kenyon College Lakeland Community College Lorain County Community College Lourdes College Malone College Marion Technical College Marietta College Medical College of Ohio Mercy College Miami University Mount Carmel College of Nursing Mount Union College Mount Vernon Nazarene University Muskingum College Myers University North Central State College Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine Northwest State Community College Notre Dame College of Ohio Oberlin College Ohio Dominican University Ohio Northern University Ohio State University

69. Institution Authentication Form
OhioLINK access to Journal of Experimental botany , published by Oxford staff, and faculty of OhioLINK institutions, 84 Ohio colleges and universities,
http://rave.ohiolink.edu/ejournals/issn/0022-0957
Catalog All Databases Express Links Site Search ... Help
Institution Selection Form
OhioLINK Off-Campus Authentication For Access to Services Please select your institution: Antioch College Ashland University Athenaeum of Ohio Baldwin-Wallace College Belmont Technical College Bluffton University Bowling Green State University Capital University Case Western Reserve University Cedarville University Central Ohio Technical College Central State University Cincinnati Bible College and Seminary Cincinnati State Technical and Community College Clark State Community College Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland State University College of Mount Saint Joseph College of Wooster Columbus College of Art and Design Columbus State Community College Cuyahoga Community College Defiance College Denison University Edison Community College Franciscan University of Steubenville Franklin University Heidelberg College Hiram College Hocking College Jefferson Community College John Carroll University Kent State University Kenyon College Lakeland Community College Lorain County Community College Lourdes College Malone College Marion Technical College Marietta College Medical College of Ohio Mercy College Miami University Mount Carmel College of Nursing Mount Union College Mount Vernon Nazarene University Muskingum College Myers University North Central State College Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine Northwest State Community College Notre Dame College of Ohio Oberlin College Ohio Dominican University Ohio Northern University Ohio State University

70. Botany Of Plane Trees
A short basic botany of the genus Platanus in cultivation. Naming according to some standard works and institutions;. Platanus x acerifolia European
http://www.chengappa.demon.co.uk/planes/text/botany.html
Botany of plane trees
Description
Plane trees, genus Platanus L., form the only genus in the dicotyledon family Platanaceae, in the order Hamamelidales. The order and genus arose early in the evolution of flowering plants, and fossil specimens are known from the earlier Cretaceous period, over 100 million years ago. The trees are deciduous and bisexual (both sexes borne on the same tree.) There are about 6-7 species, all trees from the northern hemisphere, mostly in temperate regions. Platanus kerrii is found in Indochina, Platanus orientalis in West Asia and South Europe, and Platanus occidentalis, P. racemosa, P. wrightii, P. lindeniana are from North America. Some aids to identifying the distinct varieties can be found here. All plane trees are large, generally 20-50m high. Flaking bark that peels away in thin sheets, often leaving a dappled trunk is a common characteristic. However forms occur in which the bark is retained. Leaves are borne alternately on the stem. They are always simple (not split into leaflets). In most species they are palmately lobed and veined, (in P. kerrii leaves are unlobed, pinnately serrate and pinnately veined). The axillary bud on the shoot is covered completely during the growing season by the base of the petiole, which may be swollen to accomodate it. The shoots and young leaves are covered by hairs or a fine down when young, this is probably to protect the young tissue from sunlight and water loss. The hairs are usually shed as the leaves mature, but sometimes they are partially retained on the underside of the leaves. Stipules are often present, part of each stipule forming a tube around the shoot, the rest of it forming a leafy extension.

71. SFSU Botany Undergraduate Program
Owing to the extensive and wellbalanced curriculum in botany, maintains cordial relationships with other institutions in the San Francisco Bay Area,
http://www.sfsu.edu/~puboff/programs/undergrad/botany.htm
Botany
College of Science and Engineering Undergraduate Programs
The Botany program at San Francisco State University is designed to provide students with a broad background in biology of plants and their interrelationships with other organisms. Owing to the extensive and well-balanced curriculum in botany, students working toward the Bachelor of Science: Concentration in Botany have opportunities to study structural, physiological, ecological, and evolutionary aspects of plants. Interested students are encouraged to combine or supplement their studies with pertinent course-work in zoology, microbiology, or molecular biology. Upon graduation from SFSU with the B.S. in Biology: Concentration in Botany, students will be well-prepared for occupations in botanical fields or for graduate study in Botany. Faculty
The faculty in Botany at SFSU have diverse research and teaching interests, including plant physiology and metabolism, anatomy, morphology, taxonomy and evolution, ecology, conservation, mycology, and molecular biology.

72. Virtual Library Plant-Arrays (arrays, Microarrays, Macroarrays
WWW Virtual Library(botany) PlantArrays institutions. Plant Research Projects in Academic or Government Labs Using Array Technology
http://www.univ-montp2.fr/~plant_arrays/

73. DSMZ - Abbreviations Of Collections And Institutions
DSMZ Abbreviations of Collections and institutions ETH, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule, Institute for Special botany, Zürich, Switzerland
http://www.dsmz.de/species/abbrev.htm
DSMZ - Abbreviations of Collections and Institutions ACAM Australian Collection of Antarctic Microorganisms, Hobart, Australia ACM Australian Collection of Microorganisms, Department of Microbiology, University of Queensland ACTU see FAT AGAL Australian Government Analytical Laboratories, Pymble, Australia AJ Ajinomoto Company, Inc., Central Research Laboratories, Kawasaki, Japan AMC Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, D.C., USA AMIF American Meat Institute Foundation, Chicago, Ill., USA AMNH American Museum of Natural History, New York, USA AMRC Institute of Medical Microbiology, Arhus University, Denmark ARCH see HACC AS CGMCC-China General Microbiological Culture Collection Center, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China ASIB Institute of Botany, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, R.O.C. ATCC American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, Virginia, USA ATHUM Culture Collection of Fungi, University of Athens, Department of Biology, Section of Ecology and Systematics, Athens, Greece ATU see FAT AUCM see VKM AWI Alfred-Wegener-Institut BAFF BGA Bundesgesundheitsamt, Berlin, Germany

74. HighWire Press Journal Information
American Journal of botany plans to publish approximately 2100 pages in 2005 Do institutions have access to all content, or does it exclude certain
http://highwire.stanford.edu:4141/cgi/journalinfo?qNum=all&journal_set=amjbot&se

75. UTCC: University Of Toronto Culture Collection Of Algae And Cyanobacteria
and related services to educational institutions, government and commercial laboratories. 19972005 Department of botany Revised Jan 7, 2005
http://www.botany.utoronto.ca/utcc/
Counter as of May 20, 2003 W elcome to the homepage of UTCC. As Canada's national service collection of freshwater algae and cyanobacteria the collection provides research quality cultures and related services to educational institutions, government and commercial laboratories. It is housed in the University of Toronto in the Department of Botany which also provides support services. The UTCC is financially supported partly by a Major Facilities Access (MFA) grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council (NSERC) , which has provided funding since 1988. The support of both organizations is gratefully acknowledged and will enable us to further diversify the collection and continue to improve the quality of our services to the international scientific community. We are pleased to announce that the UTCC now accepts both MasterCard and Visa as payment for cultures and services. Further information is available from the curator of UTCC. There are 2 new publications available on our

76. LII - Results For "botany"
Some 4000 botany related links are organized into 18 subject categories. Also provides links to information about member institutions.
http://www.lii.org/search?searchtype=subject;query=Botany;subsearch=Botany

77. AMOL National Guide Institution Listing
of the Newcastle Regional Museum National guide to collecting institutions Museum of Economic botany logo or photo A carpological collection is
http://amol.org.au/guide/instn.asp?ID=S041

78. Department Of Botany, Charles University In Prague
taxonomic studies of research workers and students of the Department of botany. CCF offers its strains to other nonprofit institutions and industrial
http://botany.natur.cuni.cz/en/structure/fungi.php?print=y

79. Institute Of Botany SAS
Biologia, section botany. Links. Other botanical institutions in Slovakia Interesting adresses. Searching. Find a person Find a word Search www
http://ibot.sav.sk/page/
Institute of Botany SAS, Bratislava wellcome Dúbravská cesta 14, 845 23 Bratislava
tel: 00421 2 5477 3507, fax: 00421 2 5477 1948
e-mail

The Administration of the Institute
Show all people at the institute Departments of
Plant Physiology
Geobotany

Non-vascular plants

Taxonomy of vascular plants
... Library Magazines
Exchange list
New books in library
Publications Technical and economical department Printed Publications Flora of Slovakia
Plant communities of Slovakia Checklist of non-vascular and vascular plants of Slovakia Database of the phytocenological data Projects Present Previous Working Groups Laboratory of Plant Stress Analyses Geobotany Working Group MYCORES - Mykological Research Group Slovak Botanical Society Slovak Mycological Society Jan Futak - Botanical Association From the history st A brief characteristics of the Institute Scientific activities of the Institute are concentrated on two main subjects. The first one is the research on plant cover of the territory of Slovakia as related to the flora and vegetation of the Central Europe. The key projects are multi-volume works Flora of lower and higher plants of Slovakia, and Survey of plant communities of Slovakia. The second subject is research on structure and physiological functions of plant roots, and on stress physiology. The Institute is active in under- and postgraduate training in the fields of botany mycology , and plant physiology . The international journal Biologia - Section Botany is issued by the Institute. The Institute possesses

80. Algae Links / Botany, NMNH, Smithsonian Institution
from the Department of botany, Smithsonian Institution, by Ellen Farr and Gea Zijlstra, Editors. Internet Directory for botany
http://www.nmnh.si.edu/botany/projects/algae/Alg-Link.htm
WWW LINKS TO SITES OF RELATED INTEREST
World Wide Web Sites:

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 101    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter