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A Naturalist in Western China with Vasculum, Camera and Gun : Being Some Account of Eleven Years' Travel

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Botany and Horticulture series
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Ernest Henry Wilson (1876–1930) was introduced to China in 1899 when, as a promising young botanist, he was sent there by horticulturalist Henry Veitch (1840–1924) to collect the seed of the handkerchief tree, Davidia involucrata, for propagation in Britain.

Subsequent trips saw Wilson bringing back hundreds of seed samples and plant collections, introducing many Chinese plants to Europe and North America.

He wrote extensively about his travels in China: this two-volume work was published in 1913.

Although much of the text is concerned with plant life, Wilson also gives a great deal of attention to the wider landscape around him.

In addition, Wilson took a camera, and these volumes contain photographs of parts of China rarely seen by Europeans in the early twentieth century.

In Volume 2 Wilson examines how people in western China use their plants in medicine and agriculture, including the important tea industry.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108030467 / 9781108030465
Paperback / softback
581.951
07/07/2011
United Kingdom
344 pages, 44 Plates, black and white; 1 Maps
140 x 216 mm, 440 grams