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You searched for: Year start: 1900✖Place: is exactly 'International'✖Place: International✖Subject: Places✖Subject: Landscape✖
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Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Date | Place | Rights | |
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Ecovillage Suitability Analysis College of the Atlantic |
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| Ecovillage Suitability Analysis College of the Atlantic Description: A case study of the most suitable land parcels for an ecovillage development in the Val d'Espoir region of the Gaspé peninsula. |
Standing Stones and other Megaliths of St Just College of the Atlantic |
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| Standing Stones and other Megaliths of St Just College of the Atlantic Description: A record of the Neolithic and Bronze Age archeological sites and monuments of Saint Just, Brittany. |
Victoria Regia in the River Amazon Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Victoria Regia in the River Amazon Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: Chromolithograph - Plate XI - Artist - Ernst Heign. The Natural History of Plants: Their Forms, Growth, Reproduction and Distribution, by Anton Kerner von Marilaun, Half Volume III, 1895. Printed in Leipzig by the Bibliographisches Institute . Image courtesy of ancestryimages.com - copyright free for non-commercial use. "Those running personal websites dealing with family history, genealogy, or other historical research etc. are most welcome to copy any of the map or print images for their own use, as are charity and non-profit organizations. 1898: "E.S. Rand, commemorated in Victoria Randi, died recently in Para, Brazil. He was an expert plantsman, a private gentleman, and wrote interestingly on various horticultural subjects." - American Gardening, Volume 19, 1898, p. 458. Victoria Regia, as shown in this illustration, does not purport to be variety Randi, but similar to that named for Edward S. Rand. "Victoria Randi, the new Crimson Victoria, is a variety of recent introduction ; very similar to the Victoria Regia, except the vertical edges of the leaves are broader, forming a deeper 'tray' and the flowers, opening white, soon change to a deep crimson." - "Botanical guide through the Phipps conservatories in Pittsburg and Allegheny" by Gustave Guttenbert, Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, 1894. [show more] |
Sandstone Cliffs at Red Head Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Sandstone Cliffs at Red Head Southwest Harbor Public Library |