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Keys For Determining The Names Of The Common Native Trees, Shrubs,
Flowers And Ferns And Most Of The Cultivated Plants Of Iowa,
Tracheata.
Pictured Keys For Determining Many Of The North American Mosses And
Liverworts, With Suggestions And Aids For Their Study.
Pictured Keys For Determining Many Of The North American Mosses And
Liverworts, With Suggestions And Aids For Their Study.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishings Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the worlds literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
PREFACE was affirmed a few years ago, by one of the most eminent of
living biologists, that it is no time to discuss the origin IT of
the Mollusca or of Dicotyledons, while we are not even sure how it
came to pass that rimula o bconica has in twenty-five years
produced its abundant new forms almost under our eyes. To this
statement I venture to demur. I yield to none in my admiration for
the results achieved by the analytical methods introduced by
Mendel, and I do not doubt the possibility that the d ct
experimental study of variations and their inheritance may
eventually play a large part in bringing the tangled . problems of
evolution into the full daylight for which we all hope. But this is
no reason for condemning those countless uncharted routes which may
lead, even if circuitously, to the same goal. Any step towards the
solution of the essentially historical problems of Botany-for
example those concerned with the origin and development of such
morphological groups as the Dicotyledons, or of such biological
groups as the Aquatic Angiosperms-must necessarily contribute some
mite to our conceptions of the course of evolution. These less
direct I methods of approaching the central problem of biology may
perhaps, at the best, bring only a faint illumination to bear upon
it, but in the deep obscurity involving all evolutionary thought at
the present time, we cannot afford to despise the feeblest
rush-light even the glimmering of a glow-worm may at least enable
us to read the compass, and learn in which direction to expect the
dawn. I approached the study of Water Plants with the hope that the
consideration of this limited group might impart some degree of
precision to my own misty ideasof evolutionary processes, Botanists
seem to be universally agreed that the Aquatic Angiosperms are
derived from terrestrial ancestors, and have adopted the water
habit at various times subsequent to their first appearan as
Flowering Plants. The. hydrophytes thus present the great advantage
to the student, that they form a group for whose history there is a
generally accepted foundation. Throughout the present study I have
constantly borne phylogenetic questions in mind, and the first
three Parts of this book may be regarded as a clearing of the
ground for the more theoretic considerations concerning the
evolutionary history of water plants to which the Fourth Part is
mainly devoted. In that section of the book, and sporadically in
the earlier chapters, I have set down such speculations as have
been borni in upon me in the course of a study of water plants with
which I have been occupied more or less continuously for the last
ten years. The literature relating to Aquatic Angiosperms has now
grown to such formidable proportions that I have felt the necessity
of trying to provide some clue to the labyrinth. With this end in
view I have given a bibliography of the principal sources, which
includes a brief indication of the nature and scope of each work,
with page numbers showing where it is cited in the text. For the
convenience of those seeking information about any particular
plant, I have indexed the families and genera named in the titles
enumerated, and in the notes regarding the contents of each
memoir...
PREFACE was affirmed a few years ago, by one of the most eminent of
living biologists, that it is no time to discuss the origin IT of
the Mollusca or of Dicotyledons, while we are not even sure how it
came to pass that rimula o bconica has in twenty-five years
produced its abundant new forms almost under our eyes. To this
statement I venture to demur. I yield to none in my admiration for
the results achieved by the analytical methods introduced by
Mendel, and I do not doubt the possibility that the d ct
experimental study of variations and their inheritance may
eventually play a large part in bringing the tangled . problems of
evolution into the full daylight for which we all hope. But this is
no reason for condemning those countless uncharted routes which may
lead, even if circuitously, to the same goal. Any step towards the
solution of the essentially historical problems of Botany-for
example those concerned with the origin and development of such
morphological groups as the Dicotyledons, or of such biological
groups as the Aquatic Angiosperms-must necessarily contribute some
mite to our conceptions of the course of evolution. These less
direct I methods of approaching the central problem of biology may
perhaps, at the best, bring only a faint illumination to bear upon
it, but in the deep obscurity involving all evolutionary thought at
the present time, we cannot afford to despise the feeblest
rush-light even the glimmering of a glow-worm may at least enable
us to read the compass, and learn in which direction to expect the
dawn. I approached the study of Water Plants with the hope that the
consideration of this limited group might impart some degree of
precision to my own misty ideasof evolutionary processes, Botanists
seem to be universally agreed that the Aquatic Angiosperms are
derived from terrestrial ancestors, and have adopted the water
habit at various times subsequent to their first appearan as
Flowering Plants. The. hydrophytes thus present the great advantage
to the student, that they form a group for whose history there is a
generally accepted foundation. Throughout the present study I have
constantly borne phylogenetic questions in mind, and the first
three Parts of this book may be regarded as a clearing of the
ground for the more theoretic considerations concerning the
evolutionary history of water plants to which the Fourth Part is
mainly devoted. In that section of the book, and sporadically in
the earlier chapters, I have set down such speculations as have
been borni in upon me in the course of a study of water plants with
which I have been occupied more or less continuously for the last
ten years. The literature relating to Aquatic Angiosperms has now
grown to such formidable proportions that I have felt the necessity
of trying to provide some clue to the labyrinth. With this end in
view I have given a bibliography of the principal sources, which
includes a brief indication of the nature and scope of each work,
with page numbers showing where it is cited in the text. For the
convenience of those seeking information about any particular
plant, I have indexed the families and genera named in the titles
enumerated, and in the notes regarding the contents of each
memoir...
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