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A botánica (often written botanica and less commonly known as a hierbería or botica) is a religious goods store. The name botánica is Spanish and translates as " botany " or "plant store," referring to these establishments' function as dispensaries of medicinal herbs.
Critica Botanica ("Critique of botany", Leiden, July 1737) was written by Swedish botanist, physician, zoologist and naturalist Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778). The book was published in Germany when Linnaeus was 29 with a discursus by the botanist Johannes Browallius (1707–1755), bishop of Åbo.
(1736) Fundamenta Botanica (1736) Bibliotheca Botanica (1736) Musa Cliffortiana (1737) Critica Botanica (1737) Flora Lapponica (1737) Genera Plantarum (1737) Hortus Cliffortianus (1738) Classes plantarum (1740) Orbis eruditi judicium de Caroli Linnaei MD scriptis (1745) Öländska och Gothländska Resa (1745) Flora Svecica (1746) Fauna Svecica
Rzedowski, Jerzy; Calderón de Rzedowski, Graciela; Butanda, Armando. Los principales colectores de plantas activos en México entre 1700 y 1930 (in Spanish). Instituto de Ecología, A.C., Centro Regional del Bajío : Comisión Nacional para el Conocimiento y Uso de la Biodiversidad, Pátzcuaro, Michoacán
Botanica: Earthbound Collector's Edition is the second game in the series released exclusively on Big Fish Games on December 14, 2013. Users can play as two characters, Dr. Ellie Wright and Ian Garrett, as they try to find their way back to earth.
Bibliotheca Botanica ("Bibliography of botany", Amsterdam, 1736, Salomen Schouten; 2nd edn., 1751) is a botany book by Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778). [1] The book was written and published in Amsterdam when Linnaeus was twenty-eight and dedicated to the botanist Johannes Burman (1707–1779).
The first issue, published on 1 February 1787, [2] was begun by William Curtis, as both an illustrated gardening and botanical journal.Curtis was an apothecary and botanist who held the position of Praefectus Horti (Director) and demonstrator of plants at the Chelsea Physic Garden, who had published the highly praised (but poorly sold) Flora Londinensis a few years before.
Stephen Elliott (November 11, 1771 – March 28, 1830) was an American legislator, banker, educator, and botanist who is today remembered for having written one of the most important works in American botany, A Sketch of the Botany of South-Carolina and Georgia. [1]