Show results per page.
Search Help New search
Sort by
Results 1-5 of 5 for « +text:durando +(+name:darwin +name:charles +name:robert) »
    Page 1 of 1. Go to page:    
100%
EH88202575    Note:    1839--1882   Charles Darwin's Address Book.   Text   Image
-1929), geologist and palaeontologist. Darwin G. at J. Tatham 6. New St. Lincolns Inn George Howard Darwin, studied law with Charles Meaburn Tatham. Durando Ecole de Médecine Rue René Caillié Algiers Gaetano Leone Durando. Listed above. Druitt Th. U. Bank 66 Charing Cross. (S.W.) Thomas Druitt (1823/4-1886), Manager of the Union Bank of London, Charing Cross branch. Darwin's bank. See some of his cheques here. Dohrn Dr Anton, Palazzo Torlonia Mergellina, Naples Felix Anton Dohrn (1840-1909
86%
CUL-DAR78.122-131    Note:    [1866]--1871   Candytuft crimson — Iberis umbellata var Kermesiana [crossed vs   Text   Image
(Iberis) (During summer of 1870 seed of crimson candy-tuft (Iberis umbellata) from Carters sowed in Essex were grown, were allowed spont to self-fertilise themselves; several young flowers were carefully crossed by pollen from flower of plants raised from seed sent me by Dr Durando, raised in Algiers, where probably plants had grown for some generation. — The var. was pale red, but did not otherwise differ from English var. — The English plants which spont. were self-fertilise produced very
57%
F1249    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1876. The effects of cross and self fertilisation in the vegetable kingdom. London: John Murray.   Text   Image   PDF
another nursery garden, and raised plants from them. Some of these plants were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously under a net; others were crossed by pollen taken from plants raised from seed sent me by Dr. Durando from Algiers, where the parent-plants had been cultivated for some generations. These latter plants differed in having pale pink instead of crimson flowers, but in no other respect. That the cross had been effective (though the flowers on the crimson mother-plant had not
49%
F1265    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1877. Des effets de la fécondation croisée et de la fécondation directe dans le règne végétal. Ouvrage traduit de l'anglais et annoté avec autorisation de l'auteur, par le Dr Édouard Heckel. Paris: C. Reinwald et Cie.   Text   Image   PDF
sous une gaze, et d'autres furent croisées par le pollen provenant de plantes issues de graines qui m'avaient été envoyées par le docteur Durando, d'Alger, où les plantes génératrices avaient été cultivées pendant plusieurs générations. Ces derniers plants différèrent des premiers à un seul point de vue : ils avaient des fleurs colorées de rose pâle au lieu de cramoisi. Quoique les fleurs de la plante-mère [* oubli : cramoisie] n'eussent pas été châtrées, il fut bien prouvé, au moment de la
57%
F1251    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1878. The effects of cross and self fertilisation in the vegetable kingdom. 2d ed. London: John Murray.   Text   Image   PDF
obtained seeds of the same crimson variety of I. umbellata from another nursery garden, and raised plants from them. Some of these plants were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously under a net; others were crossed by pollen taken from plants raised from seed sent me by Dr. Durando from Algiers, where the parent-plants had been cultivated for some generations. These latter plants differed in having pale pink instead of crimson flowers, but in no other respect. That the cross had been
    Page 1 of 1. Go to page: