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Melbourne: a focal point for early botanical activity
Page 1
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Politics and the purchase of private herbaria by the National Herbarium of Victoria
Page 5
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The history of the herbarium, School of Botany, University of Melbourne
Page 13
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History of early Western Australian herbaria
Page 23
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History of the Waite Arboretum and Waite Herbarium
Page 29
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Botanical contributions overlooked: the role and recognition of collectors, horticulturists, explorers and others in the early documentation of the Australian flora
Page 37
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Early impressions of the vegetation of the Sydney region: exploration and plant use by the First Fleet Officers
Page 87
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William Baeuerlen — a ‘circumspect and zealous’ collector
Page 97
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Retracing the route taken by Robert Brown and company in a portion of the Flinders Ranges
Page 105
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The 1851 botanical excursion of Ferdinand Mueller to the Flinders Ranges, South Australia
Page 109
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Carl Wilhelmi, the seedsman from Dresden: his botanical endeavour in South Australia and Victoria
Page 115
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The contribution of the Russian botanist Turczaninov to Australian plant taxonomy
Page 121
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The Western Australian collecting localities of J. A. L. Preiss
Page 131
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Cunningham’s collecting localities while botanist on Lieutenant Phillip Parker King’s survey of coastal Australia, December 1817 to April 1822
Page 137
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Alexander Morrison (1849-1913) and Edinburgh’s botanical connections with Australia
Page 149
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Moving mountains — Allan Cunningham and the mountains of southern Queensland
Page 157
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Domin and Daneš in Java and Australia 1909-1910
Page 159
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Retracing the botanical steps of Leichhardt and Gilbert in June 1845
Page 165
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Hugo Flecker and the North Queensland Naturalists’ Club
Page 171
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Ronald Campbell Gunn 1808-1881
Page 179
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Explorers, institutions and outside influences: botany north of Thursday
Page 193
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Mary Strong Clemens: a botanical collector in New Guinea (1935-1941)
Page 217
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The botanical collections of John Buchanan F.L.S
Page 231
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A comparison of the approach to taxonomic botany by T. F. Cheeseman and L. Cockayne
Page 235
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The lean legacy of freshwater phycology in Victoria
Page 239
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Type specimens of bryophytes in Australian herbaria
Page 247
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Aspects of Australian mycology: 1800-1900
Page 253
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History of systematic mycology in Australia
Page 259
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History of the study of Australian Agaricales
Page 265
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Australian plants cultivated in England, 1771-1800
Page 273
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'… and flowers for our amusement': the early collecting and cultivation of Australian plants in Europe and the problems encountered by today’s taxonomists
Page 285
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Early Austrian influence on Australian botany
Page 297
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Early art work as a source of botanical information in South Australia
Page 305
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Documenting botanical art collections in Australia
Page 307
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Building a bibliography: some difficulties, with special reference to Taxonomic Literature, ed. 2
Page 311
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History is now
Page 317
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Index
Page 319