Ad
related to: steyermark's flora of missouri art center catalog request free
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Julian Alfred Steyermark was born in St. Louis, Missouri as the only child of the businessman Leo L. Steyermark and Mamie I. Steyermark (née Isaacs). [2] He studied at the Henry Shaw School of Botany at Washington University in St. Louis, where he completed his Ph.D. in 1933.
It includes flora taxa that are native to Missouri. Taxa of the lowest rank are always included. Higher taxa are included only if endemic. For the purposes of this category, "Missouri" is defined in accordance with the World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions. That is, the geographic region is defined by its political boundaries.
The genus name of Steyermarkia is in honour of Julian Alfred Steyermark (1909–1988), an American botanist. [3] The Latin specific epithet of guatemalensis means coming from Guatemala, where the plant was found. Both the genus and the species were first described and published in Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. Vol.22 on page 216 in ...
Lemp Neighborhood Arts Center: Benton Park: Art: Community arts center Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum: St. Louis: Art: Part of Washington University in St. Louis, collections include 19th, 20th, and 21st-century European and American paintings, sculptures, prints, installations, and photographs Henry Miller Museum: JeffVanderLou: Labor history
In 1913, Nelson Cunliff became Commissioner of Parks and Recreation for St. Louis City. Public floral conservatories gained popularity in the city in the 1910s, when pollution and smog threatened much of the city's flora. Due to high levels of smoke and soot within the city, he began a survey to determine which plants could survive the ...
Steyermarkina is a genus of South American plants in the tribe Eupatorieae within the family Asteraceae. [1] [3]The genus name of Steyermarkina is in honour of Julian Alfred Steyermark (1909–1988), an American botanist.
Geobotanically, Missouri belongs to the North American Atlantic region, and spans all three floristic provinces that make up the region: the state transitions from the deciduous forest of the Appalachian province to the grasslands of the North American Prairies province in the west and northwest, and the northward extension of the Mississippi embayment places the bootheel in the Atlantic and ...
Center staff also actively documented Missouri’s traditional arts and maintained a working archive of fieldwork materials. Staff and affiliated scholars curated traveling exhibits and smaller exhibitions for display in Conley House. The Center served, too, as a lending library of key books and essays associated with its research topics. In ...