Naming the Rainbow: Coccineum / Scarlet
A close cousin of the color rubrum, coccineum (Latin for scarlet) is…
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A close cousin of the color rubrum, coccineum (Latin for scarlet) is…
Alas, the Latin name of the sweet orange that makes orange juice…
In an etymological twist, the color violet takes its name from the violet…
The deep color purpura, Latin for purple, is commonly used to indicate…
In the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden there are over 30,000…
For decades, Studio Ghibli Inc. has been revered as one of the…
Women in ScienceFocus on Science
Ethel Zoe Bailey (1889–1983), was the first curator of the Bailey Hortorium…
Sarah “Sadie” Frances Price (1849-1903) was one of Kentucky’s most esteemed botanical…
Caroline Coventry Haynes (1858-1951) is best known for her significant contributions to…
Gertrude Simmons Burlingham (1872-1952) was an American mycologist who specialized in the…
As scientific perspectives of the Enlightenment movement fostered enthusiasm surrounding the acquisition…
Josephine Elizabeth Tilden (1869-1957) was one of few women allowed a faculty…
The work and dedication of Elke Mackenzie (1911-1990) is critical to our…
Clara E. Cummings (1855-1906) was a cryptogamic botanist who focused primarily on…
Many culinary delights that Americans enjoy today, especially in the Southern United…
The New York City neighborhood of Harlem is a center for Black…
Every year, botanists describe hundreds of new plant, fungal, and lichen species from…
Labels are as important to a herbarium specimen as the plant, alga, or…
Set foot in El Yunque, the beautiful tropical rain forest in eastern Puerto…
Did you know that some plants lack chlorophyll? Often confused for a…
If you enjoy spending time outdoors, you surely have heard the age-old…
On a geological time scale, barrier islands are by definition impermanent, ever-changing,…
Focus on ScienceSpecimen Stories
Botanists have probably described and named 99% of the plants native to…
The United States entered the Spanish American War in April of 1898.…
New York Botanical Garden led around 136 botanical expeditions between 1898 and 1918.…
Unlike flowering plants, ferns reproduce with spores instead of seeds. Fern spores…
While digitizing specimens for the Texas and Oklahoma Regional Consortium of Herbaria,…
When the Garden began a series of expeditions to the Caribbean during…
Elizabeth Knight Britton’s grandfather James Knight owned a sugar plantation and a…
Elizabeth Gertrude Knight Britton’s career as a bryologist and her central role…
Elizabeth Knight Britton went on to complete her schooling at the Normal…
Arvolyn Hill is the Family Programs Coordinator at the Everett Children’s Adventure…
Dr. Thomas Walter Gaither (1938 - ) was born in Great Falls, South…
In this most wonderful time of the year, Christmas is naturally on…
Evergreen trees and mistletoe both come to mind when we decorate with holiday…
In an age of growing efforts to engage the public in research…
In February 1906, Nathaniel and Elizabeth Britton, founders of The New York…
Whether naturally brown, or turning brown during the preservation steps needed to create herbarium…
The word "cultivar" is a blend of the words "cultivated" and "variety".…
Cabinet of CuriositiesSpecimen Stories
Oak trees are a familiar sight to people all around the world,…
Companion planting is the technique of growing plants closely together for mutual…
For thousands of years, the indigenous people of Peruvian Amazon have used…