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Kyoto: Shinju-an : 2 items: Joseon Diplomatic Documents 朝鮮国書 Chōsen tsūshinshi kankei shiryō: 1607-17: Kyoto: Kyoto University (kept at The Kyoto University Museum (京都大学総合博物館)) 3 items
FHI - Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria Herbarium (Ibadan, Nigeria), BNRH - National Herbarium of Rwanda (Kigali, Rwanda), BR - University of Cape Town Herbarium (Cape Town, South Africa), EA - East African Herbarium (Nairobi, Kenya), FHO - University of Ghana Herbarium (Legon, Ghana), K - National Herbarium of Malawi (Blantyre, Malawi), MO - National Herbarium of Tanzania (Arusha ...
The Kyoto University Museum (京都大学総合博物館, Kyōto Daigaku Sōgō Hakubutsukan) opened in Kyōto, Japan, in 2001.It exhibits materials from the collection of some 2,600,000 objects built up by Kyoto University since its foundation as Kyoto Imperial University in 1897.
Nepenthes peltata was formally described by Shigeo Kurata in the January 2008 issue of the Journal of Insectivorous Plant Society. [1] The herbarium specimen Koshikawa 44 is the designated holotype, and is deposited at the herbarium of the Botany Department of Kyoto University (KYO) in Kyoto, Japan. [3]
Herbarium book which dates from 1633. Made by the Flemish Bernardus Wynhouts. [1] A herbarium (plural: herbaria) is a collection of preserved plant specimens and associated data used for scientific study. [2] The specimens may be whole plants or plant parts; these will usually be in dried form mounted on a sheet of paper (called exsiccatum, plur.
Institute for Oriental Culture was established in Tokyo [2] and Kyoto in 1929. The establishment was one of the governmental cultural projects [ 3 ] undertaken by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs . The building is the current main building, which was completed in November 1930.
Kyoto University (京都大学, Kyōto daigaku), or KyotoU (京大, Kyōdai), is a national research university located in Kyoto, Japan. Founded in 1897, it is one of the former Imperial Universities and the second oldest university in Japan.
The oldest extant collection was established in 1823 at the University of Leningrad, and by the middle of the century they had been established in many European countries. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Australia now houses 12 xylaria holding 11% of the world's wood specimens, [ 4 ] while the Oxford Forestry Institute's xylarium holds about 13%.