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chrisu
Joined: 27 Mar 2009 Posts: 773
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Posted: Sat Dec 21, 2013 9:05 am Post subject: Feedback request: Polygonum rurivagum (40409) |
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This post was made automatically in response to a request for comment on the documentation form. There is more general info about such requests here.
Documented by chrisu on 21st December 2013. Checked by oldnick Edit historyN.B. reporting of the edit history is currently fairly unclear and misleading. Most edits made to specimens appear as a pair of 'add' and 'delete' entries, which may not be together in the list. There are also often 'minor' edits, which are made automatically (rather than due to user activity), for example to merge synonym names. Log-in to edit this sheet.
User comments about this sheet - chrisu wrote
- can anyone read the name of the coal pit?
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oldnick
Joined: 09 Oct 2009 Posts: 5472
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Posted: Sat Dec 21, 2013 9:16 am Post subject: |
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Sounds odd, but I read it as nursery. (not a children's nursery - they would have been working in the pit!) |
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Roger Horton
Joined: 02 Oct 2012 Posts: 1545 Location: Cambridge, UK
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Posted: Sat Dec 21, 2013 10:25 am Post subject: |
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This does look like Nursery but if you could read it as Nunnery there was a pit with that name, site of an accident 3/12/1923. There still is a Nunnery Drive around OS SK375875. |
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chrisu
Joined: 27 Mar 2009 Posts: 773
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Posted: Sat Dec 21, 2013 11:38 am Post subject: |
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I thought nursery too - but Nunnery makes much more sense |
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David Price
Joined: 05 Jul 2007 Posts: 2214
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Posted: Sat Dec 21, 2013 6:39 pm Post subject: |
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The Botanical Locality Record Club Report for 1877 (http://archive.bsbi.org.uk/BEC_1877.pdf) shows as a member for that year Amos CARR of 487 Glossop Road, Sheffield.
Amos Carr (c. 1829-1884), originally of Frant on the Kent-Sussex border, and then of Warwick, lived his later years in Sheffield. As a rural postman, he learned many of the plants of the districts where he worked. In Sheffield, however, he was in trade as a bootmaker and spent his limited spare time in studying the local plants, specialising in roses, brambles and willows. He was evidently active with the Sheffield Naturalists’ Club, leading an excursion up the Rivelin Valley in 1881 (reported in Sheffield Naturalists’ Club Annual Report for 1881). A collection of his plants was presented to Sheffield Museum, now mostly lost. It contained 53 bryophytes (listed in Sheff. Nat. Club Ann. Rep. for 1884). Through his correspondence with F.A. Lees, many of his records appeared in Lees’ Flora of West Yorkshire (1888), and there are some of his bryophytes in Lees’ herbarium at Bradford. [T. Blockeel Bulletin of the British Bryological Society, 38, 38-48 (July 1981)] |
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Chris Liffen
Joined: 08 Oct 2007 Posts: 1850
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Posted: Sat Dec 21, 2013 9:59 pm Post subject: |
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And he was a contributor to Hardwicke's Science Gossip
e.g.
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