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Wyświetlanie 1-6 z 6
Tytuł:
Opowieści dla przyszłości ludzi i roślin. Performowanie spekulacji w ogrodzie botanicznym
Tales for the future of people and plants. A speculative performance in the botanic garden
Autorzy:
Berendt, Zuzanna
Majewska, Anna
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1944324.pdf
Data publikacji:
2021-03-30
Wydawca:
Narodowe Centrum Kultury
Tematy:
ogród botaniczny
Ogród Botaniczny Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Karolina Grzywnowicz
Biopolis
praktyka spekulatywna
botanic garden
the Botanic Garden of the Jagiellonian University
speculative practice
Opis:
This article describes the residency of the multimedia artist Karolina Grzywnowicz and a research team that accompanied her at the Botanic Garden of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków. In the first section the authors offer a critical analysis of the discourses produced by the Garden and embedded in the modernist paradigm where nature and culture are perceived as separate constructs. This paradigm is juxtaposed with the imagination crisis (in envisaging the spatial scale of ecological crises and their processes) and human responsibility. The second section focuses on a performance tour of the Garden prepared by Grzywnowicz and her team at the end of their two-week-long project. The authors analyse this event using the category of speculative practice proposed by Isabelle Stengers. How does the narrative constructed by the artist resonate within the discourse created by the Garden? Has the artist’s speculative practice resulted in an alternative approach to the human–matter relationship? Has it changed the way in which people think about the Garden?
Źródło:
Kultura Współczesna. Teoria. Interpretacje. Praktyka; 2021, 113, 1; 74-87
1230-4808
Pojawia się w:
Kultura Współczesna. Teoria. Interpretacje. Praktyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Arboretum Ludwika Młokosiewicza, czyli jakie drzewa rosły w majątku słynnego przyrodnika w Łagodechach w Gruzji
Arboretum founded by Ludwik Mlokosevich, or what trees grew at the estate of the famous naturalist in Lagodekhi (Georgia)
Autorzy:
Zgonnikov, Pëtr
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/50115562.pdf
Data publikacji:
2022-05-01
Wydawca:
Polskie Towarzystwo Dendrologiczne
Tematy:
botanic garden
history of botany
plant acclimatization
plant introduction
Poles in Georgia
Opis:
Ludwik Mlokosevich (1831-1909) was a famous naturalist of Polish origin, who lived most of his life in Lagodekhi (Georgia). Based on an analysis of various sources, including, first of all, publications in the Caucasian press of the 19th century, articles and notes by Mlokosiewicz himself, about 70 named trees and other plants planted by him in his botanical garden on the estate and the regimental (military) garden in Lagodekhi for acclimatization, decorative and industrial purposes have been established. The data are of great interest to the history of Polish science abroad, but also for the history of botany and botanical gardens of the 19th and 20th centuries. This information will be used in the project which aims at revitalization of the Mlokosevich Botanical Garden, which is currently being carried out in Lagodekhi by a group of Polish specialists under the auspices of the Council of Botanical Gardens in Poland.
Źródło:
Rocznik Polskiego Towarzystwa Dendrologicznego; 2021, 69; 71-83
2080-4164
2300-8326
Pojawia się w:
Rocznik Polskiego Towarzystwa Dendrologicznego
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
'Pearl in the Crown' Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam Botanic Garden Pamplemousses - Mauritius
Krolewski Ogrod Botaniczny Perla w Koronie w Pamplemousses na wyspie Mauritius
Autorzy:
Dankowska, E.
Baranowski, T.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/878368.pdf
Data publikacji:
2005
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Poznaniu
Tematy:
Pearl in the Crown Botanic Garden
Pamplemousses District
history
botany
plant collection
Mauritius Island
Źródło:
Roczniki Akademii Rolniczej w Poznaniu. Botanika-Steciana; 2005, 08
1896-1908
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Akademii Rolniczej w Poznaniu. Botanika-Steciana
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Biblioteka spektralna gatunków zielnych Ogrodu Botanicznego Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Spectral library of herbaceous species of the University of Warsaw’s Botanic Garden
Autorzy:
Zagajewski, B.
Sędzikowski, Z.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/132245.pdf
Data publikacji:
2009
Wydawca:
Polskie Towarzystwo Geograficzne
Tematy:
biblioteka spektralna
dane hiperspektralne
spektrometry hiperspektralne
ASD
gatunki zielne
Ogród Botaniczny
spectral library
endmembers
Imaging Spectroscopy
field spectrometers
herbaceous species
Botanic Garden
Opis:
An objective of this paper is to form a spectral library of endmembers of the Polish Lowland vegetation species, which were collected in the Botanic Garden of the University of Warsaw, which is one of the oldest (it was founded in 1818) and the smallest (5 ha) botanic gardens in Poland. For the data acquisition ASD FieldSec3 JR, Chlorophyll Content Meter CCM-200 and a digital camera were used. Each spectral library set contains: 300 separate spectrometric measurements (100 dark current, 100 white reference and 100 ASD Plant Probe Leaf Clip); Chlorophyll Content Index and biometric information (e.g. LAI, fAPAR); 3 digital photos, time and localisation data. The spectral library contains 73 characteristics of the most important plant species (from the “red list” of protected plants and the most famous plants of the Polish Lowland Flora). Now all these data will be upgrading the Swiss SPECCHIO library as a local Polish input to the European spectral database.
Źródło:
Teledetekcja Środowiska; 2009, 41; 121-133
1644-6380
Pojawia się w:
Teledetekcja Środowiska
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Connecting with Collections: Research Internships promoting closer collaboration between University Museums
Autorzy:
Lacey, Pippa
Falk, Seb
Jaffer, Aaron
Jelinek, Alana
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/636543.pdf
Data publikacji:
2013
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Jagielloński. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Tematy:
Keywords: University of Cambridge Museums, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge University Botanic Garden, Museum of Classical Archaeology, Fitzwilliam Museum, The Whipple Museum of the History of Science, Museum of Zoology, Early Career Rese
Opis:
During 2013, the University of Cambridge Museums (UCM) introduced an innovative research internship initiative aimed at early career academic researchers. The Connecting with Collections (CwC) scheme offered six interns from British universities the opportunity to gain hands-on museum experience, while working independently on individual research projects within the collections of the UCM consortium. This paper presents: 1. An Overview of Connecting with Connections Scheme: programme rationale, aims and funding, recruitment and project choice. 2. Training and Opportunities: group training sessions, as well as snapshots of individual experiences within the museums and 3. Internship Outputs: including an end-of-internship Symposium and other outcomes for interns. It briefly surveys the six internship projects before drawing some conclusions about the CwC programme and highlighting some of the debates around the future direction of the internship scheme for UCM.
Źródło:
Opuscula Musealia; 2013, 21
0239-9989
2084-3852
Pojawia się w:
Opuscula Musealia
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Historia Ogrodu Botanicznego Uniwersytetu Stefana Batorego w Wilnie (1919–1939)
Autorzy:
Zemanek, Alicja
Köhler, Piotr
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/783458.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Umiejętności
Tematy:
Ogród Botaniczny w Wilnie
Uniwersytet Stefana Batorego w Wilnie
kolekcje roślin
nauczanie botaniki
Jean Emmanuel Gilibert
Konstanty Prószyński (Proszyński)
Franciszek Ksawery Skupieński
Józef Trzebiński
Piotr Wiśniewski
Botanic Garden in Vilna (Wilno, Vilnius)
Stefan Batory University
plant collections
teaching botany
Jean-Emmanuel Gilibert
Opis:
Ogród Botaniczny Uniwersytetu w Wilnie był łącznie przez ponad 70 lat placówką należącą do botaniki polskiej. Utworzony w 1781 r. przez Jeana Emmanuela Giliberta (1741–1814), w praktyce funkcjonujący od 1782 r., działał do 1842 r., kiedy to został zlikwidowany przez rosyjskiego zaborcę. W 1919 r. założono w nowym miejscu Ogród Botaniczny Uniwersytetu Stefana Batorego (czynny od 1920 r.), pełniący funkcję zakładu pomocniczego dwóch zakładów (katedr) botanicznych. Organizatorem i pierwszym dyrektorem był w latach 1920–1923 fizjolog roślin – Piotr Wiśniewski (1884–1971). W latach 1924–1937 kierownictwo sprawował Józef Trzebiński (1867–1941) – mykolog, jeden z twórców polskiej fitopatologii, a w latach 1937–1939 – Franciszek Ksawery Skupieński (1888–1962) – badacz śluzowców. Dla rozwoju Ogrodu duże zasługi położył główny ogrodnik, czyli inspektor Konstanty Prószyński (Proszyński; 1859–1936), były właściciel ziemski, przyrodnik amator, autor jednej publikacji mykologicznej, zatrudniony w latach 1919–1936. Ogród, obejmujący ok. 2 ha, usytuowany był w zakolu rzeki Wilii zwanym Zakretem (po litewsku Vingis), poza centrum miasta. Mimo trudności finansowych założono tutaj działy roślin analogiczne do istniejących w innych ogrodach botanicznych: systematyki ogólnej, flory krajowej, roślin piaskowych (psammofilnych), roślin uprawnych, ekologii roślin, alpinarium, torfowisko wysokie, a także arboretum oraz gatunki wodne i błotne. W latach 1926–1929 wybudowano szklarnię dla uprawy roślin ciepłych stref klimatycznych. Grupy ilustrujące roślinność różnych typów siedlisk odzwierciedlały rozwój ekologii i fitosocjologii w nauce tego okresu. Liczba uprawianych gatunków wzrastała w miarę upływu czasu: od 1347 w latach 1923/1924 do ok. 2800 w okresie 1936/1937. Począwszy od 1923 r. zaczęto wydawać drukowane katalogi nasion. Prowadzono tutaj doświadczenia do prac naukowych, m.in. z zakresu fitopatologii. Kolekcje roślin wykorzystywano w czasie zajęć ze studentami, a także do edukacji młodzieży szkolnej i szerokiej publiczności. Po przyłączeniu Wilna do Litwy w 1939 r. władze litewskie zamknęły Uniwersytet Stefana Batorego, kończąc tym samym historię polskiego ogrodu botanicznego. Obecnie jego teren jest jednym z działów Ogrodu Botanicznego Uniwersytetu Wileńskiego (dział „Vingis” – Vilniaus universiteto botanikos sodas). Nadal służy studentom i mieszkańcom miasta, a kwitnące rośliny używane są do ozdabiania uniwersyteckich sal i uświetniania uroczystości.
The university in Vilna (Lithuanian: Vilnius), now Vilniaus universitetas, founded in 1579 by Stefan Batory (Stephen Báthory), King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, was a centre of Polish botany in 1780-1832 and 1919-1939. The Botanic Garden established by Jean-Emmanuel Gilibert (1741–1814) in 1781 (or, actually, from 1782) survived the loss of independence by Poland (1795), and a later closure of the University (1832), and it continued to function until 1842, when it was shut down by Russian authorities. After Poland had regained independence and the University was reopened as the Stefan Batory University (SBU), its Botanic Garden was established on a new location (1919, active since 1920). It survived as a Polish institution until 1939. After the Second World War, as a result of changed borders, it found itself in the Soviet Union, and from 1990 – in the Republic of Lithuania. A multidisciplinary research project has been recently launched with the aim to create a publication on the history of science at the Stefan Batory University. The botanical part of the project includes, among others, drafting the history of the Botanic Garden. Obtaining electronic copies of archival documents, e.g. annual reports written by the directors, enabled a more thorough analysis of the Garden’s history. Piotr Wiśniewski (1884–1971), a plant physiologist, nominated as Professor in the Department of General Botany on 1 June 1920, was the organiser and the first director of the Garden. He resigned from his post in October 1923, due to financial problems of the Garden. From October 1923 to April 1924, the management was run by the acting director, Edward Bekier (1883–1945), Professor in the Department of Physical Chemistry, Dean of the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences. For 13 subsequent years, i.e. from 1 May 1924 to 30 April 1937, the directorship of the Garden was held by Józef Trzebiński (1867–1941), a mycologist and one of the pioneers of phytopathology in Poland, Head of the Department of Botany II (Agricultural Botany), renamed in 1926 as the Department of Plant Taxonomy, and in 1937 – the Department of Taxonomy and Geography of Plants. From May 1937 to 1939, his successor as director was Franciszek Ksawery Skupieński (1888–1962), a researcher of slime moulds. Great credit for the development of the Garden is due to the Inspector, i.e. Chief Gardener, Konstanty Prószyński (Proszyński) (1859–1936) working there from 1919, through his official nomination in 1920, until his death. He was an amateur-naturalist, a former landowner, who had lost his property. Apart from the work on establishing and maintaining the Garden’s collection, as well as readying seeds for exchange, he published one mycological paper, and prepared a manuscript on fungi, illustrated by himself, containing descriptions of the new species. Unfortunately, this work was not published for lack of funds, and the prepared material was scattered. Some other illustrations of flowering plants drawn by Prószyński survived. There were some obstacles to the further development of the institution, namely substantially inadequate funds as well as too few members of the personnel (1–3 gardeners, and 1–3 seasonal workers). The area of the Garden, covering approx. 2 hectares was situated on the left bank of the Neris river (Polish: Wilia). It was located on sandy soils of a floodplain, and thus liable to flooding. These were the reasons for the decision taken in June 1939 to move the Garden to a new site but the outbreak of the Second World War stood in the way. Despite these disadvantageous conditions, the management succeeded in setting up sections of plants analogous to these established in other botanical gardens in Poland and throughout the world, i.e. general taxonomy (1922), native flora (1922), psammophilous plants (1922), cultivated plants (1924/1925), plant ecology (1927/1928), alpinarium (1927–1929), high-bog plants (1927–1929), and, additionally – in the 1920s – the arboretum, as well as sections of aquatic and bog plants. A glasshouse was erected in 1926–1929 to provide room for plants of warm and tropical zones. The groups representing the various types of vegetation illustrated the progress in ecology and phytosociology in the science of the period (e.g. in the ecology section, the Raunkiaer’s life forms were presented). The number of species grown increased over time, from 1,347 in 1923/1924 to approx. 2,800 in 1936/1937. Difficult weather conditions – the severe winter of 1928 as well as the snowless winter and the dry summer of 1933/34 contributed to the reduction of the collections. The ground collections, destroyed by flood in spring of 1931, were restored in subsequent years. Initially, the source of plant material was the wild plant species collected during field trips. Many specimens were also obtained from other botanical gardens, such as Warsaw and Cracow (Kraków). Beginning from 1923, printed catalogues of seeds offered for exchange were published (cf. the list on p. ... ). Owing to that, the Garden began to participate in the national and international plant exchange networks. From its inception, the collection of the Garden was used for teaching purposes, primarily to the students of the University, as well as for the botanical education of schoolchildren and the general public, particularly of the residents of Vilna. Scientific experiments on phytopathology were conducted on the Garden’s plots. After Vilna was incorporated into Lithuania in October 1939, the Lithuanian authorities shut down the Stefan Batory University, thus ending the history of the Polish Botanic Garden. Its area is now one of the sections of the Vilnius University Botanic Garden (“Vingis” section – Vilniaus universiteto botanikos sodas). In 1964, its area was extended to 7.35 hectares. In 1974, after establishing the new Botanic Garden in Kairenai to the east of Vilnius, the old Garden lost its significance. Nevertheless, it still serves the students and townspeople of Vilnius, and its collections of flowering plants are often used to decorate and grace the university halls during celebrations.
Źródło:
Studia Historiae Scientiarum; 2016, 15; 301-345
2451-3202
Pojawia się w:
Studia Historiae Scientiarum
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-6 z 6

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