• Catherine Alexander (married name Rowe; 8 December 1862 – 17 March 1928) was a New Zealand botanist, and the first known woman to publish a paper in the...
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  • socialite Catherine Alexander, character in The Other Side of Midnight Catherine Alexander (botanist) (1863–1928), New Zealand botanist Katharine Alexander (1898–1981)...
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  • Thumbnail for Myoporum laetum
    to all who are tempted to mock at divinities in their haste. Catherine Alexander (botanist) Wikimedia Commons has media related to Myoporum laetum. "Myoporum...
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  • Jane Colden (category Botanists with author abbreviations)
    female botanist working in America, which ignores, among others, Maria Sibylla Merian or Catherine Jérémie. Colden was respected as a botanist by many...
    17 KB (2,001 words) - 10:44, 30 September 2024
  • This is an incomplete list of botanists by their author abbreviation, which is designed for citation with the botanical names or works that they have...
    25 KB (3,002 words) - 23:39, 12 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for 150 women in 150 words
    Scientific author and social reform campaigner 1840 11 August 1897 Catherine Alexander Botanist, and the first known woman to publish a paper in the Royal Society...
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  • Thumbnail for Alexander Roslin
    Metropolitan Museum of Art. Alexander Roslin was born on 15 July 1718, in Malmö, Sweden, the son of naval physician Hans Roslin and Catherine Wertmüller. After...
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  • called the "Genius Grant", is a prize awarded annually by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to typically between 20 and 30 individuals working...
    83 KB (6,989 words) - 22:30, 5 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Anna Pavlovna of Russia
    Pavlovna of Russia. Following the death of Anna's paternal grandmother, Catherine the Great, in 1796, her father became the emperor, but, was deposed and...
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  • Thumbnail for Catherine McNeur
    Catherine McNeur is a professor of history at Portland State University. An environmental historian, she has focused on the nineteenth-century United...
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  • Grissom, a forensic entomologist, D.B. Russell, an esteemed botanist, and Julie Finlay and Catherine Willows, blood spatter experts with extensive knowledge...
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  • Thumbnail for Alexander Marshal
    polymath, wrote that Marshal had by 1650 produced a florilegium for the botanist and gardener John Tradescant the Younger. It was catalogued as "A Book...
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  • Thumbnail for Charles II of England
    who performed some dissections for the king; Robert Morison as his chief botanist (Charles had his own botanical garden); Edmund Dickinson, a chemist and...
    83 KB (9,758 words) - 12:07, 13 November 2024
  • 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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  • Thumbnail for Joséphine de Beauharnais
    Scottish horticultural expert, another Scottish gardener, Alexander Howatson, the botanist, Ventenat, and the horticulturist, André Dupont. The rose garden...
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  • notable biologists with a biography in Wikipedia. It includes zoologists, botanists, biochemists, ornithologists, entomologists, malacologists, naturalists...
    165 KB (20,781 words) - 15:36, 26 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Complement of HMS Bounty
    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
  • Siebold 1992 SP Philipp Franz von Siebold (1796–1866), German physician, botanist and traveler, who stayed in Japan for six years MPC · 5448 5450 Sokrates...
    172 KB (470 words) - 06:46, 8 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for John Fraser (botanist)
    Fraser, FLS, F.R.H.S., (14 October 1750 – 26 April 1811) was a Scottish botanist who collected plant specimens around the world, from North America and...
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  • recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2001 Robin Wall Kimmerer, botanist, director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment at the State...
    477 KB (35,085 words) - 23:21, 14 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sir Douglas Alexander, 1st Baronet
    Halifax, Yorkshire, on 4 July 1864. He was the son of Andrew Alexander, a horticulturist and botanist. His parents emigrated to Canada when he was a child and...
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  • (1795–1820), botanist Victor Henri (1872–1940), physical chemist and physiologist Charles Hermite (1822–1901), mathematician Catherine Hill (born 1946)...
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  • surname. Notable people with the surname include: Alexander Panton, Australian politician Catherine Panton-Lewis, Scottish golfer David Morrieson Panton...
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  • Thumbnail for List of female scientists in the 20th century
    Katherine Esau (1898–1997), German-American botanist Edna H. Fawcett (1879–1960), American botanist Catherine Feuillet (born 1965), French molecular biologist...
    68 KB (6,311 words) - 05:26, 22 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for John Templeton (botanist)
    Banks tried (unsuccessfully) to tempt him to New Holland (Australia) as a botanist on the Flinders's Expedition with the offer of a large tract of land and...
    28 KB (3,684 words) - 10:44, 8 November 2024
  • Czar Alexander II came to power he changed this. In 1871 he rescinded most of the freedoms the Germans had been granted by Catherine II and Alexander I since...
    57 KB (7,166 words) - 18:29, 6 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for William Heberden
    (1767–1845) Elizabeth Catherine Miller (1775–1812) Thomas Heberden priest (1754–1843) Mary Martin (1763–1849) John Stevens Henslow priest, botanist and geologist...
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  • Thumbnail for John Pitcairn
    (Hamilton) Pitcairn. An older brother, was William Pitcairn, who later became a botanist, doctor and president of the Royal College of Physicians. John Pitcairn...
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  • (EA 1966-78) Adam Alexander Dawson Magnus Magnusson, television presenter, and translator of Icelandic origins, (EA 1935-48) Catherine McQueen, model and...
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  • Thumbnail for Snuff (tobacco)
    tobacco. It was also during the 18th century that an English author and botanist, John Hill, concluded nasal cancer could develop with the use of snuff...
    30 KB (3,350 words) - 07:15, 12 October 2024