• John Hutchinson, OBE, FRS (7 April 1884 Blindburn, Northumberland – 2 September 1972 London) was an English botanist, taxonomist and author. The standard...
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  • and 1973 John Hutchinson (botanist) (1884–1972), English botanist John Hutchinson (surgeon) (1811–1861), surgeon and inventor of spirometer John Irwin Hutchinson...
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  • Thumbnail for Primula chasmophila
    Primula chasmophila (category Taxa named by John Hutchinson (botanist))
    Primula chasmophila is a species of flowering plant in the Primulaceae family. It is endemic to Bhutan. Bhutan Endemic Flowering Plants Workshop (2017)...
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  • Leucadendron galpinii (category Taxa named by John Hutchinson (botanist))
    Leucadendron galpinii, the hairless conebush, is a flowering shrub in the family Proteaceae that is native to Africa. The shrub grows to a height of 3 m...
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  • Thumbnail for Muelleranthus
    Muelleranthus (category Taxa named by John Hutchinson (botanist))
    Muelleranthus is a genus of flowering plants in the legume family, Fabaceae. It includes four species of herbs and shrubs native to Australia. Habitats...
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  • Thumbnail for Dalbergia oligophylla
    Dalbergia oligophylla (category Taxa named by John Hutchinson (botanist))
    Dalbergia oligophylla is a species of legume in the family Fabaceae. It is native to Cameroon, and naturalized in certain parts of the Caroline Islands...
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  • Adenodolichos paniculatus (category Taxa named by John Hutchinson (botanist))
    Adenodolichos paniculatus is a plant in the legume family Fabaceae, native to tropical Africa. The specific epithet means 'with panicles', referring to...
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  • Thumbnail for Paranomus tomentosus
    Paranomus tomentosus (category Taxa named by John Hutchinson (botanist))
    Paranomus tomentosus, the hairy-leaf tree sceptre, is a flower-bearing shrub that belongs to the genus Paranomus and forms part of the fynbos. The plant...
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  • Mediusella bernieri (category Taxa named by John Hutchinson (botanist))
    Resurrection and taxonomic revision of the genera Mediusella (Cavaco) Hutchinson and Xerochlamys Baker (Sarcolaenaceae)" (PDF). Adansonia. 3. 31 (2). Paris:...
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  • Protomegabaria stapfiana (category Taxa named by John Hutchinson (botanist))
    Protomegabaria stapfiana is a species of plant in the family Phyllanthaceae. It is native to western tropical Africa. P. stapfiana can be found in Angola...
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  • replacing cork bottle stoppers Hutchinson system, a system of plant taxonomy created by botanist John Hutchinson Hutchinson Internment Camp, based on the...
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  • Thumbnail for John McEwan Dalziel
    John McEwan Dalziel (1872–1948) was a British physician, botanist, and plant collector. He was born in Nagpur, India in 1872. He served as a medical missionary...
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  • known as a plant collector and botanist. He may be confused with several distant family members, including Rev. John Clayton who served as minister at...
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  • Thumbnail for Emma Hutchinson
    science Thomas Hutchinson was nephew of Mary, the wife of William Wordsworth. He served at Kimbolton for 62 years from 1841. He was a botanist, whose herbarium...
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  • Thumbnail for John Cotton (minister)
    Hutchinson and Vane followed the teachings of Cotton, but both of them also held some views that were considered unorthodox, and even radical. John Wheelwright...
    84 KB (11,430 words) - 02:01, 27 August 2024
  • relatively well-off elderly spinster Southern belles, Mamie (pilot, Josephine Hutchinson, (1903-1998); series, Helen Kleeb, 1907-2003), is more sensible and grounded...
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  • botanist and ecological pioneer Ione Virginia Hill Cowles (1858–1940), American clubwoman, social leader John Cowles Sr. (1898–1983), publisher John Cowles...
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  • This is a list of botanists who have Wikipedia articles, in alphabetical order by surname. The List of botanists by author abbreviation is mostly a list...
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  • David H. Valentine (category Articles with Botanist identifiers)
    February 1912 in Salford – 10 April 1987 in Manchester) was a British botanist and plant taxonomist. Valentine was born in Higher Broughton, Salford,...
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  • Ronald William John Keay (20 May 1920 – 7 April 1998) was a British botanist, who did much of his work in tropical Africa. Keay was educated at the University...
    6 KB (556 words) - 09:06, 13 October 2023
  • notable biologists with a biography in Wikipedia. It includes zoologists, botanists, biochemists, ornithologists, entomologists, malacologists, naturalists...
    165 KB (20,781 words) - 15:28, 11 September 2024
  • Edward Hutchinson Synge (1890–1957), inventor of the near-field optical microscope John Lighton Synge (1897–1995), Irish mathematician and physicist John Millington...
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  • known as geobotany. Von Humboldt was accompanied on his expedition by the botanist Aimé Bonpland. In 1856, the Park Grass Experiment was established at the...
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  • Thumbnail for Pierre Cusson
    Pierre Cusson (category Articles with Botanist identifiers)
    study in his absence, discarding his entire collection. In 1967, botanist John Hutchinson published Neocussonia, a genus of flowering plants from southern...
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  • (2013–2023), HD-133 (2005–2013), HD-113 (2003–2005), HD-133 (1993–2003) Shelly Hutchinson, HD-106 (2023–present), HD-107 (2019–2023) Derrick Jackson, HD-68 (2023–present)...
    650 KB (48,203 words) - 12:37, 14 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Royal Indian Engineering College
    Henry Marsh (first capped 1873) John Davidson (first capped 1873) Josiah Edward Paul (first capped 1875) W. C. Hutchinson (first capped 1876) P. L. A. Price...
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  • Thumbnail for Frederick Manson Bailey
    Frederick Manson Bailey (category Articles with Botanist identifiers)
    Bailey was born in London, the second son of John Bailey (horticulturist and first Colonial Botanist of South Australia) and his wife, née Manson. Frederick...
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  • Thumbnail for National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)
    Nationalism: Critical Concepts in Political Science, Vol. IV p. 1257. John Hutchinson and Anthony D. Smith, eds. London and New York: Routledge 2000. Octavio...
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  • Thumbnail for HMS Erebus (1826)
    New Zealand, 1875. The revised edition of Gray (1846) (1875). The future botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker, then aged 23, was assistant-surgeon to Robert McCormick...
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    those aboard were Royal Navy personnel; the exceptions were two civilian botanists engaged to supervise the breadfruit plants Bounty was tasked to take from...
    37 KB (3,890 words) - 01:34, 8 July 2024