This thesis offers a new account of why plant hybridity was controversial in Victorian Britain. Against the received historiography, which depicts a generalised, religiously motivated opposition among botanists to the idea of natural plant hybrids, and treats hybridising—the artificial sexual crossing of species—as a practice used only by horticulturalists and plant breeders, the thesis draws a complex map of interacting but distinctive botanical communities that were all involved in using hybridising to contribute to science. At the centre of the thesis are three episodes focusing on plants—oxlips, willows, and ferns—which employ an object-orientated historiography to highlight for the first time how the transfer of hybridising between t...
Although plant hybrids are under-recorded by botanists, the hybrids of Britain and Ireland are as we...
Gardeners, farmers, natural scientists and Augustinian monks alike have long been interested in the ...
This thesis examines the practices of botanical collectors in nineteenthcentury Van Diemen’s Land, ...
The modern Biotech Age possesses a very particular set of characteristics: the use of recombinant DN...
Following Thomas P. Hughes’s systems approach in the history of technology, and making use of previo...
Following Thomas P. Hughes’s systems approach in the history of technology, and making use of previo...
‘Adam’s laburnum’ (or Cytisus adami), produced by accident in 1825 by Jean-Louis Adam, a nurseryman ...
This paper is about the creation of universals and the maintenance of order in the field of systemat...
Horticultural plant breeding underwent significant development in France in the nineteenth century. ...
Many plant groups are taxonomically complex with species that are difficult to distinguish. The main...
Advocates of ''Mendelism'' early on stressed the usefulness of Mendelian principles for breeders. Ev...
As the independent nation of Norway was at its infancy in 1814, so was also an important change in N...
This study examines instances of imaginary plant life, or ‘cryptobotany’, in the late- nineteenth an...
The two lectures Gregor Mendel gave in the spring of 1865 to the Natural Science Society in Brno can...
For more than a century there has been a fascination with the surprisingly rapid rise and early dive...
Although plant hybrids are under-recorded by botanists, the hybrids of Britain and Ireland are as we...
Gardeners, farmers, natural scientists and Augustinian monks alike have long been interested in the ...
This thesis examines the practices of botanical collectors in nineteenthcentury Van Diemen’s Land, ...
The modern Biotech Age possesses a very particular set of characteristics: the use of recombinant DN...
Following Thomas P. Hughes’s systems approach in the history of technology, and making use of previo...
Following Thomas P. Hughes’s systems approach in the history of technology, and making use of previo...
‘Adam’s laburnum’ (or Cytisus adami), produced by accident in 1825 by Jean-Louis Adam, a nurseryman ...
This paper is about the creation of universals and the maintenance of order in the field of systemat...
Horticultural plant breeding underwent significant development in France in the nineteenth century. ...
Many plant groups are taxonomically complex with species that are difficult to distinguish. The main...
Advocates of ''Mendelism'' early on stressed the usefulness of Mendelian principles for breeders. Ev...
As the independent nation of Norway was at its infancy in 1814, so was also an important change in N...
This study examines instances of imaginary plant life, or ‘cryptobotany’, in the late- nineteenth an...
The two lectures Gregor Mendel gave in the spring of 1865 to the Natural Science Society in Brno can...
For more than a century there has been a fascination with the surprisingly rapid rise and early dive...
Although plant hybrids are under-recorded by botanists, the hybrids of Britain and Ireland are as we...
Gardeners, farmers, natural scientists and Augustinian monks alike have long been interested in the ...
This thesis examines the practices of botanical collectors in nineteenthcentury Van Diemen’s Land, ...