Show
65 citations
related to Economic botany; Plant cultivation; Horticulture
Show
65 citations
related to Economic botany; Plant cultivation; Horticulture as a subject or category
Description Term used untill 1999
Article
Young, James A.
(1988)
The public response to the catastrophic spread of Russian thistle (1880) and halogeton (1945).
Agricultural History
(pp. 122-130).
(/isis/citation/CBB000061106/)
Article
Zeven, A.C.; Brandenburg, W.A.
(1986)
Use of paintings from the 16th to 19th centuries to study the history of domesticated plants.
Economic Botany
(pp. 397-408).
(/isis/citation/CBB000031963/)
Article
Nelson, Marie Clark; Svanberg, Ingvar
(1986-87)
Lichens as food: Historical perspectives on food propaganda.
Svenska Linnésällskapets Årsskrift
(pp. 7-51).
(/isis/citation/CBB000033318/)
Article
Overton, Mark
(1985)
The diffusion of agricultural innovations in early modern England: Turnips and clover in Norfolk and Suffolk, 1580-1740.
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers
(pp. 205-221).
(/isis/citation/CBB000065310/)
Book
Hobhouse, Henry
(1985)
Seeds of change: Five plants that transformed mankind.
(/isis/citation/CBB000028823/)
Article
Mylechreest, Murray
(1984)
Thomas Andrew Knight and the founding of the Royal Horticultural Society.
Garden History
(pp. 132-137).
(/isis/citation/CBB000016204/)
Article
Emerson, Roger L.
(1982)
The Edinburgh Society for the Importation of Foreign Seeds and Plants, 1764-1773.
Eighteenth-Century Life
(pp. 73-95).
(/isis/citation/CBB000000890/)
Article
Osborne, Michael A.
(1982 (pub. 1985))
The system of colonial gardens and the exploitation of French Algeria, 1830-1852.
Proc. Fr. Colonial Hist. Soc.
(pp. 160-168).
(/isis/citation/CBB000059613/)
Article
Manks, Dorothy S.
(1982)
Some early American horticultural writers and their works, II: William Coxe, and John Gardiner and David Hepburn.
Huntia
(pp. 125-132).
(/isis/citation/CBB000024228/)
Article
Rembert, David H., Jr.
(1979)
The indigo of commerce in colonial North America.
Economic Botany
(pp. 128-134).
(/isis/citation/CBB000003659/)
Book
Erichsen-Brown, Charlotte
(1979)
Use of plants for the past 500 years.
(/isis/citation/CBB000008479/)
Article
Turner, James
(1978)
Ralph Austen [c. 1612-1676], an Oxford horticulturist of the 17th century.
Garden History
(pp. 39-45).
(/isis/citation/CBB000021324/)
Article
Nelson, E. Charles
(1978)
“To protect and promote the science of gardening”: The origins and early history of the Royal Horticultural Society of Ireland, 1816-30.
Garden History
(pp. 65-71).
(/isis/citation/CBB000008720/)
Article
Ewan, Joseph
(1977)
Plant resources in Colonial America.
Environmental Review
(pp. 44-55).
(/isis/citation/CBB000011015/)
Article
Schultes, Richard Evans
(1977)
Albert Frederick Hill and economic botany.
Economic Botany
(pp. 378-382).
(/isis/citation/CBB000017319/)
Book
Harlan, Jack R.
(1976)
Origins of African plant domestication.
(/isis/citation/CBB000004580/)
Article
Rea, Mary-Alice F.
(1975)
Early introduction of economic plants into New England.
Economic Botany
(pp. 333-356).
(/isis/citation/CBB000021463/)
Article
Chakravarthy, R.S.
(1975)
Watt's Dictionary: A landmark in the study of the economic plants of India.
Economic Botany
(pp. 31-38).
(/isis/citation/CBB000020287/)
Book
American Plant Studies Delegation,
(1975)
Plant studies in the People's Republic of China: A trip report of the American Plant Studies Delegation.
(/isis/citation/CBB000004584/)
Article
Harvey, John H.
(1975)
Leonard Gurle's nurseries and some others.
Garden History
(pp. 42-49).
(/isis/citation/CBB000017492/)
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