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#BotanicMonday For centuries there was a close relationship between art and science. An example is #ScientificExpeditions in past centuries, in which artists were essential to show the animals and plants overseas as faithfully as possible. #SciArt #Birds #Butterflies #Museums
Les #houx de toutes espèces sont d'un effet admirable, non seulement à cause de leurs feuilles luisantes mais aussi par leurs #fruits qui restent sur l'arbre une partie de l'#hiver.
Et ils décorent très bien nos chaumières pour #Noêl #BotanicMonday
➡️ https://t.co/2Cj18Ui2YX
Some plants grown for food are important food for moth caterpillars.
Eyed hawk-moth caterpillars eat apple leaves. Buff arches caterpillars eat bramble leaves & mint moth caterpillars eat mint leaves! #mothweek #BotanicMonday @savebutterflies
The "unofficial" British rose, so called because its root was said to cure a bite from a mad dog, courtesy of Diana Ruth Wilson (1886-1969) #BotanicMonday @Dorset_Hour @wildflower_hour #VisitSherborne
Born on this day 1886 at The Green, Sherborne, the pioneering botanical artist Diana Ruth Wilson. Shown with her younger sister Patience outside her home. #BotanicMonday #DorsetHour #wildflowerhour #VisitSherborne #womensart
Celebrating the height of spring flowering with Diana Ruth Wilson's artistry (1886-1969) this morning.#BotanicMonday #VisitDorset #Dorsethour #wildflowerhour #Bluebells
#BotanicMonday For centuries there was a close relationship between art and science. An example is scientific expeditions in past centuries, in which the artists were essential to show the animals and plants overseas as faithfully as possible. #SciArt #Birds #Butterflies #Museums
Variations on a theme of primula this morning, from the Diana Ruth Wilson botanical collection #BotanicMonday #wildflowerhour #primrose #VisitDorset #VisitSherborne
Selection of cheery yellows from our botanical art collection by Diana Ruth Wilson (1886-1969) #wildflowerhour #BotanicMonday #yellowflowers #VisitSherborne @Dorset_Hour
Good day to everyone, but especially to this little horse made of seaweed. #BotanicMonday from: https://t.co/vt8q50ZCdL. #herbarium #botanical #botany
Marking the #WinterSolstice on #BotanicMonday with two native evergreens historically used to decorate homes on the shortest day of the year
Have you got some hanging up this year? Share your photos with us!
📷 Holly (Ilex aquifolium) and Ivy (Hedera helix) collected in Wales
Autumnal hedgerow fruits from our collection of botanical watercolours by Diana Ruth Wilson (1886-1969) #BotanicMonday #Dorsethour #wildflowerhour #wildflowerID #VisitSherborne #VisitDorset
Some beautiful heathland plants from our botanical art collection by Diana Ruth Wilson (1886-1969)#BotanicMonday #wildflowerhour #DorsetHour #VisitSherborne
Selection of colourful seasonal fruits from our wonderful collection of botanical watercolours #BotanicMonday #wildflower #VisitDorset #VisitSherborne
An oleander plant (Nerium oleander): flowering stem. Coloured lithograph, c. 1850, after A. Bétrérnieux (?). From @ExploreWellcome @WellcomeLibrary. #BotanicMonday #HistSciArt #BotanicalIllustration
Peacock's Tail (Padina pavonica)
A brown seaweed that is rare in Wales, where it reaches its northern limit.
This specimen @Museum_Cardiff was collected from Jersey in the 1880s.
#BotanicMonday
#BotanicMonday Centaurea amblensis was described by Graells in 1859. It differs well from other centaureas for its numerous flowers pink, which in the other species are scarce and yellow. The drawing of the species was made by #Graells, a former director of #MNCN. #Botany #SciArt
#BotanicMonday Tulipa javana Rumph "Juan de Cuéllar's expedition to the Philippines" (1786-1794); botanical determination: Crinum amabile. #Botany #18thcentury #Archives #ScientificIllustration #SciArt #NatHist #Museums @RJBOTANICO
Feeling blue?
Let these amazing illustrations of blue flowers from the botany collections @Museum_Cardiff lift your mood. Artists include Ainslie Ensom and Alister Mathews #BotanicMonday #SciArt #MuseumFromHome
"Alpenflora" (1905), by Gustav Hegi & Gustav Dunzinger, offers a comprehensive account of the botany of the mountainous Alpine regions, particularly Bavaria, Austria and Switzerland. Explore the work in #BHLib thanks to @NYBG ➡️ https://t.co/OTcZbywBeV
#BotanicMonday